Tag: liam forde

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #9: Best Performances and Ensembles in Plays in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #9: Best Performances and Ensembles in Plays in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #9: Best Performances in Musicals in Professional Theaters in DC, MD, and VA Are:

    Gassan Abbas in I Shall Not Hate at Mosaic Theater Company of DC.

    Lizzi Albert as Anne Boleyn in Anne of the Thousand Days at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Megan Anderson as Stella in A Streetcar Named Desire at Everyman Theatre.

    Megan Anderson as Susan, Wait Until Dark at Everyman Theatre.

    Mari Andrea as Mrai in Force Continuum at Cohesion Theatre.

    Malcolm Anomnachi as Father in Force Continuum at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Laura Artesi as Dawn in Lobby Hero at 1st Stage.

    Stori Ayers as Alma in Yellowman at Anacostia Playhouse.

    Audrey Bertaux as Halo in Girl in the Red Corner at The Welders.

    Audrey Bertaux and Chris Dinolfo in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe at Adventure Theatre.

    Jonathan Bock as Louis Ironson in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Kathleen Butler as Marjorie in Marjorie Prime at Olney theatre Center.

     Caitlin Carbone as Hamlet in Hamlet at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Nicolas Carra as Santiago Nasar in Chronicle of a Death Foretold at GALA Hispanic Theatre.

    Evan Casey as Sam in The Flick at Signature Theatre.

    Teresa Castracane as Kate Jerome in Broadway Bound at 1st Stage.

    Staceyann Chin in MotherStruck at The Studio Theatre.

    Avery Clark as Drew in Straight White Men at The Studio Theatre.

    Caroline Stefanie Clay as Elizabeth in The Christians at Theater J.

    Caroline Stefanie Clay as Mrs. Jennings in Sense & Sensibility at Folger Theatre.

    Alina Collins Maldonado as China in El Paso Blue at GALA Hispanic Theatre.

    Felicia Curry as Betty 5 in Collective Rage: A Play in Five Boops, at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Mike Daisey as Himself in The Trump Card at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Andy De as Lt. J.G. Daniel Kaffee in A Few Good Men at Off the Quill.

    Ross Destiche as Alan Strang in Equus at Constellation Theatre Company.

    Cori Dioquino as Lady Door in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Michael J. Dombroski as Lt. Col. Nathan Jessup in A Few Good Men at Off the Quill.

    Maggie Donnelly as Gina in Girl in the Red Corner at The Welders.

    Shannon Dorsey and Erika Rose as Minnie and Dido in An Octoroon at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Shannon Dorsey as Betty in Cloud Nine at The Studio Theatre.

    Shannon Dorsey as Hadeel in Kiss at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Suzzanne Douglas as Marquise de Merteuil in Les Liaisons Dangereuses at Center Stage

    David Dubov as Anton Chekov in The Lady with the Little Dog at Quotidian Theatre Company.

    Joe Duquette as Stalin in Collaborators at Spooky Action Theater.

    Cassandra Dutt as Hunter in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Liam Forde as Jason in Hand to God at The Studio Theatre.

    Rick Foucheux as Big Daddy in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Round House Theatre.

    Danny Gavigan as Stanley in A Streetcar Named Desire at Everyman Theatre.

    Edward Gero as Sims in The Nether at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Edward Gero as Alonso the King of Naples in The Tempest at Shakespeare Theatre Company.

    Kimberly Gilbert as Harper Pitt in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Dominic Gladden as Othello in The Complete Deaths of William Shakespeare at Baltimore Shakespeare Factory and Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Melanie Glickman as The Angel Islington/The Fop with No Name, Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre.

    Karen Grassle as Daisy Werthan in Driving Miss Daisy at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts.

    Jonas David Grey as Marquis de Carabas in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre.

    Jonas David Grey as Zombie Shakespeare in The Complete Deaths of William Shakespeare at Baltimore Shakespeare Factory/Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Annie Grier as Jenny in The Christians at Theater J.

    Bill Grimmette as Hoke Colburn in Driving Miss Daisy at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts.

    Jose Guzman as Iago in Othello at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Brent Harris as Vicomte de Valmont in Les Liaisons Dangereuses at Center Stage.

    Christian Harris as Mother/Tamra Jane/Tina in Force Continuum at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Laura Harris as Rose in The Flick at Signature Theatre.

    Deborah Hazlett as Sharon in The Roommate at Everyman Theatre.

    Mitchell Hébert in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Mitchell Hébert as Lou in Under the Skin at Everyman Theatre.

    Ron Henegan as King Henry VIII in Anne of the Thousand Days at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Bobby Hennenberg as Flip in Force Continuum at Cohesion Theatre.

    Bobby Hennenberg as Mr. Vandemar in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Alan Hoffman as Boolie Werthan in Driving Miss Daisy at Riverside Center for the Performing Arts.

    Sharon Hope as Dot in Dot at Everyman Theatre.

    Beth Hylton as Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire at Everyman Theatre.

    Beth Hylton as Robyn in The Roommate at Everyman Theatre.

    Elliott Kashner as Roderigo in Othello at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Saleh Karaman as Shavi in I Call My Brothers at Forum Theatre.

    Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan as Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Round House Theatre.

    Thomas Keegan as Joe Pitt in in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan as Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Round House Theatre.

    Thomas Keegan as Dan O’Brien and Eric Hissom as Paul Watson  in The Body of an America at Theater J.

    Emily Kester as Kia in The Last Schwartz at Theater J.

    Carolyn Faye Kramer as Anne Frank in The Diary of Anne Frank at Olney Theatre Center. 

    Deidra LaWan Starnes as Myrna in Milk Like Sugar at Mosaic Theater Company of DC.

    Brianna LaTourneau as Eliza in What We’re Up Against at The Keegan Theatre.

    Briana Manente as Emilia in Othello at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Lolita Marie as Dr. Judith B. Kaufman in An American Daughter at The Keegan Theatre.

    Lolita Marie as Lena in brownsville song (b-side for tray) at Theater Alliance.

    Sarah Marshall as Hannah Pitt and Ethel Rosenberg in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Jason B. McIntosh as Othello in Othello at Chesapeake Shakespeare Company.

    Eric M. Messner as Mike in Wait Until Dark at Everyman Theatre.

    Vaughn Ryan Midder as Malik in Milk Like Sugar at Mosaic Theater Company of DC.

    Dylan Morrison Meyers as Henry in When the Rain Stops Falling at 1st Stage.

    Paul Morella as Otto Frank in The Diary of Anne Frank at Olney Theatre Center. 

    Alan Naylor as The Angel in Going to a Place Where You Already Are at Theater Alliance.

    Bruce Randolph Nelson as Roat in Wait Until Dark at Everyman Theatre.

    Luz Nicolas as Catalina in Cervantes: The Last Quixote at GALA Hispanic Theatre.

    Luz Nicolas as Elizabeth Arden in Senorita y Madame at GALA Hispanic Theatre.

    Jon Hudson Odom as Belize in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    John Hudson Odom as BJJ, George, and M’Closky in An Ocotoroon at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

    Sasha Olinick as Herb in The Last Schwartz at Theater J.

    Patrick Page as Prospero in The Tempest at the Shakespeare Theatre Company.

    Tom Patterson as Roland and Lily Balatincz as Marianne in Constellations at The Studio Theatre.

    Matthew Payne as Mr. Croup in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Madeleine Potter as Amanda Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie at Ford’s Theatre.

    Paul Reisman as Bullgakov in Collaborators at Spooky Action Theater.

    Maria Rizzo as Betty and Rachel Zampelli as Kendra in The Gulf at Signature Theatre.

    Jonno Roberts as Iago in Othello at Shakespeare Theatre Company.

    Susan Rome as Marjorie in Hand to God at Studio Theatre.

    Susan Rome as Gorgeous in The Sisters Rosensweig at Theater J.

    Michael Russotto as Pastor Paul in The Christians at Theater J.

    Michael Russotto as Mervyn in The Sisters Rosensweig at Theater J.

    Noah Schaefer as Eugene Jerome in Broadway Bound at 1st Stage.

    Jeymee Semiti as The Stagehand-in-Charge in Straight White Men at The Studio Theatre.

    Tia Shearer as Matt and Katie Jeffries as Ben in Matt & Ben at Flying V.

    Stan Shulman as “Gramps” Ben Epstein in Broadway Bound at 1st Stage.

    Ashley Smith as Tony Wendice in Dial ‘M’ for Murder at Olney Theatre Center.

    Robert Bowen Smith as ‘Him’ and Ian Le Valley as ‘Me’ in Rameau’s Nephew at Spooky Action Theater.

    Matthew Sparacino as Bill in Lobby Hero at 1st Stage.

    Tom Story in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Tom Story in Fully Committed at MetroStage.

    Nisi Sturgis as Margot for Dial ‘M’ for Murder at Olney Theatre Center.

    Ryan Swain as Paul in Six Degrees of Separation at The Keegan Theatre.

    Sara Dabney Tisdale as Gabrielle York in When the Rain Stops Falling at 1st Stage.

    Sara Topham as Ariel in The Tempest at Shakespeare Theatre Company.

    Tony Tsendeas as The Master, Mrs. Grose, and Miles in The Turn of the Screw at Annapolis Shakespeare Company.

    Dawn Ursula as The Angel in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center.

    Dawn Ursula as Shelly in Dot at Everyman Theatre.

    William Vaughan as Dreaming Man and Skylar in The Flick at Signature Theatre.

    Tyasia Velines as Keera in Milk Like Sugar at Mosaic Theater Company of DC.

    Alan Wade as Inspector Hubbard in Dial ‘M’ for Murder at Olney Theatre Center.

    Justin Weaks as Associate Pastor Joshua in The Christians at Theater J.

    Gillian Williams as Presidente de Tourvel in Les Liaisons Dangereuses at Center Stage.

    Craig Wallace in District Merchants at Folger Theatre.

    Craig Wallace as Louis Armstrong in Satchmo at Mosaic Theatre Company of DC.

    Michael Willis as Elder Jay in The Christians at Theater J.

    Michael Willis as Jon in Marjorie Prime at Olney Theatre Center.

    Wendy Wilmer as the Mother in The Pelican at Arcturus theater Company.

    Renee Elizabeth Wilson as Talisha in Milk Like Sugar at Mosaic Theater Company of DC.

    Gregory Wooddell as Brick in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Round House Theatre.

    BEST OF 2016 ENSEMBLES OF A PLAY IN DC/MD/VA

    A Few Good Men at Off The Quill: Peter Orvetti, Andy De, Adrian Vigil, Leanne Dinverno, James Heyworth, Donald R. Cook, Roderick Bradford, and Michael J. Dombroski.

    Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika Co-Produced by Round House Theatre and Olney Theatre Center: Jonathan Bock, Kimberly Gilbert, Mitchell Hébert, Thomas Keegan, Sarah Marshall, Jon Hudson Odom, Tom Story, Dawn Ursula.

    Equus at Constellation Theatre Company: Michael Kramer, Karina Hilleard, Kathleen Akerley, Ross Destiche, Michael Tolaydo, Laureen E. Smith, Ryan Tumulty, Colin Smith, Emily Kester, Tori Bertocci, Gwen Grastorf, Ashley Ivey, Ryan Alan Jones, and Emily Whitworth.

    Promised Land at Mosaic Theater Company of DC: Audrey Bertaux, Aaron Bliden, Gary-Kayi Fletcher, Awa Sal Secka, Brayden Simpson, and Kathryn Tel.

    The Critic and The Real Inspector Hound at Shakespeare Theatre Company: John Ahlin, John Catron, Robert Dorfman, Naomi Jacobson, Charity Jones, Hugh Nees, Robert Stanton, Sandra Struthers, and the voice of Brit Herring. 

    The Sisters Rosensweig aTheater J: Josh Adam, Edward Christian, Susan Lynskey, Susan Rome, Michael Russotto, Kimberly Schraf, James Whalen, and Caroline Wolfson.

    The Flick at Signature Theatre: Laura C. Harris, Thaddeus McCants, Evan Casey , and William Vaughan.

    When the Rain Stops Falling at 1st Stage: Scott Ward Abernethy, Kari Ginsburg, Sara Dabney Tisdale, Amy McWilliams, Dylan Morrison Myers, Frank Britton, Teresa Castracane.

    ____

    HOW WE SELECTED OUR HONOREES

    DCMetroTheaterArts writers were permitted to honor productions and concerts, dance, and operas that they saw and reviewed and productions and concerts and dance performances that they saw but did not review. Every honoree was seen. These are not nominations. There is no voting.

    The staff is honoring productions, performances, direction, and design in professional, community, university, high school, and children’s theatres, and are also honoring the same in musical venues. We are honoring work in Washington, DC, Maryland, Virginia, Philadelphia, PA, New Jersey, and Delaware.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #5: Best Plays In Community Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #6: Best Plays in Professional Theaters in Philadelphia, New York, Delaware, and New Jersey.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #7: Best Performances and Ensembles in Musicals in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #8: Best Performances in Musicals in Community Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #9: Best Performances and Ensembles in Plays in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

  • “It’s Our Most Jewish Play This Season”: A Q&A With Adam Immerwahr About ‘The Christians’ at Theater J

    “It’s Our Most Jewish Play This Season”: A Q&A With Adam Immerwahr About ‘The Christians’ at Theater J

    For the second show in his first season as artistic director of Theater J, the nation’s largest and most prominent Jewish theater,  Adam Immerwahr picked a play with the counterintuitive title The Christians. Written by Lucas Hnath, who grew up in an evangelical Christian church and at one time considered becoming a minister like his mother, The Christians is set in a megachurch (a congregation with 2,000 or more souls).

    All of this piqued my interest, not least because I too grew up in a Christian church, I’m a seasons-long fan of Theater J, and I dig audacious programming. So I asked Immerwahr if he would explain some things to me.  His answers surprised me as much as his choice of the play.

    John: Reading The Christians was like rocking a world I grew up in. It lays bare so much stuff about the institutionalization of Christian belief in America that for someone like me who was raised in the Christian church, it’s like someone spiked the communion wine with truth serum. It’s a play that would rattle the foundations of Christian faith and practice staged anywhere in the country. And you’ve gone and programmed it into your first season at Theater J. Like, boom. What were you thinking?

    Theater J's Artisitic Director Adam Immerwahr. Photo courtesy of Theater J.
    Theater J’s Artisitic Director Adam Immerwahr. Photo courtesy of Theater J.

    Adam: That’s an interesting read on it, because I read it and I think: This play is about the institutionalization of religion in America. The things that this play is exploring are not actually, fundamentally, only about Christianity, though the very specific scriptural argument being made in the play is a fundamentally Christian scriptural argument. The topics that are being explored—the clergy’s role as a public and private person; houses of worship as businesses and also faith-based institutions; how a religion can divide itself over a difference in doctrine; how we come to believe the things that we believe and how we hold on to those beliefs; in a conservative congregation of any sort, of any stripe, of any denomination, how we adjust to change; how religion can pull us apart or bring us together—I feel like these are all as relevant to someone who’s Christian as they are to someone who’s Jewish as they are to any other faith. The play itself is about religion and about what happens when our beliefs change.

    I can see that you see that. When I look at it, I hear pitch-perfect rendering of the language of Christianity. The ministers I grew up hearing talked like that.

    Sure, because every play is both particularistic and universal. And in many ways that’s the secret of Theater J. If the only way into a play was because you feel personally identified with it and connect with the religion, then Theater J’s plays wouldn’t on average reach the larger audience as much as we know they do. And it’s because you can see an incredible play that’s about Judaism and Jewish people, and for those who are Jewish it feels pitch-perfect authentic and for everyone else it feels like a gripping, exciting story.

    I’m the everyone else in that sentence.

    You’re the everyone else in that sentence, and for The Christians, now you’re on the inside of that experience. But it’s really just a slight adjustment of what Theater J has always done, which is explore how faith works inside of our communities, explore how religion operates to drive us apart or pull us together—these are all questions Theater J has come to over and over again. And The Christians does it so beautifully. It just happens to be set inside a nondenominational megachurch.

    Did you get pushback?

    None to speak of. More fundamentally there’s been a lot of excitement about it. The play is not a critique of Christianity, as you know having read it. It’s not a critique of Christians. It’s not mocking. It’s an incredible exploration of a fictional church. And the play is a tragedy, in the Greek sense. It’s structured on Antigone. It follows that pattern beautifully. Emotionally the journey of it is exquisite. This play is built on such a strong foundation dramaturgically that it lands and delivers in an extraordinary way.

    In an interview about The Christians with Washington Jewish Week, you said, “To me this seems like our most Jewish play, perhaps.” How did you mean this is Theater J’s “most Jewish play”?

    Oh gosh, I don’t remember saying perhaps.

    It’s there.

    Well, now I would say it’s our most Jewish play this season because it hits themes that are going to resonate for our Jewish audiences even deeper and more connectedly than some of our more legibly Jewish plays will, because it’s so on the nose about what happens when we go to a place to pray. Jews, we daven. But who we daven with, how we go about the business of faith, how we go about the practice of faith— You know, congregations of all denominations have been transformed in my lifetime over their relationship to female clergy, to gay marriage. These are extraordinary shifts in our culture that have also been shifts in religion that have torn congregations apart, have caused people to lose jobs. They’ve illustrated and exposed the way that faith in America is politics and spirituality and business. That’s what The Christians explores.

    The playwright Lucas Hnath was raised in the Christian faith but does not disclose publicly whether that’s his belief today. He may be in some un-Christian closet, I don’t know, and I don’t care, because his script makes plain on every page that he has deeply sympathetic insider eyes and they’re wide open.

    His play has just five characters but in a telling stroke of theatrical authenticity he calls for “a full choir—the bigger the better.” How is Theater J achieving that?

    We’re doing it in a way that so far as I can tell is the first time anyone’s done it. We’re partnering with a series of churches, community choirs, educational choirs throughout the DC metropolitan area, each performing once or twice on a different night of the show. So one night you may get the Baptist choir, the next night you might get a youth choir from the Performing Arts High School, another night you might get the Catholic choir, or the Methodist Jubilee Singers. Right before the show starts each choir will sing two of their greatest hits that they choose, and then once the show starts they’ll sing the songs that are within the play. Each choir is going to sound different and feel different. It’s going to change the mood of the play completely from night to night. And it’s going to really be an exciting way to welcome a lot of people into our space and into our building and say, You’re part of making art here, you belong here.

    That’s a goosebumps staging concept.

    Good.

    One of the things that drives the drama in The Christians is whether there’s eternal damnation after death. When I interviewed Liam Forde about his role in Studio Theatre’s Hand to God, he pointed me to a video of a Christian bishop who says hell is an invention of the church to control people with fear.

    https://youtu.be/LkaH3hEmV3M

    Whether there’s a hell is actually a real question going on in Christianity right now. And Lucas Hnath’s play, which is set in “a really big church,” shows us that theological fissure slicing into a congregation. We witness the fallout, which is wrenching and riveting. The argument plays out in some shocking ways, both emotionally and conceptually. 

    In the Jewish faith, so far as I’m aware, one need not wring one’s hands about whether there’s a hell. There’s plenty to angst about, just not that. Is that your understanding too? 

    I’m hardly an expert on Jewish theology of the afterlife—

    Okay, it’s what I’ve read. Google tells me that the notion of eternal damnation after death is not in Judaism.

    That’s my understanding as well.

    I just wanted to check in on that because it is a significant plot point in the play

    Absolutely.

    So for those who come to see The Christians from a non-Christian background, how do you expect the play’s persistent questioning about hell’s existence to “read,” or mean, or play in the mind?

    Well, you’ve just said it; it’s the words persistent questioning. For the Jewish audience, that’s what we do with our religion. We interrogate, we examine, we study the Talmud, we debate it, we read the Torah, we discuss it. There are synagogues all over the region where after the rabbi’s sermon there’s a healthy debate that happens right there in the congregation, and it’s exciting and thrilling and intellectually stimulating. Jews question, we wrestle, and we examine. The Jewish religion has a body of literature that is essentially arguments rabbis have made about the Torah and its meaning. For the Jewish audience, scriptural analysis is the heart of our religion; we totally get this. And even if what is being argued about is in a Christian context, the way it is done is fundamentally Jewish.

    So even if hell is not at issue for somebody, there’s plenty to relate to and identify with.

    Absolutely.

    And why should someone with a background in the Christian faith want to see this play at Theater J?

    Well, leaving aside for a moment the thematic  merits and arguments of the play, you’ve got a top-tier cast—Caroline Clay, Annie Grier, Michael Russotto, Justin Weaks, and Michael Willis—doing one of the most searing pieces of drama written in the last ten years. The hit of New York when it was premiered at Playwrights Horizons. Enormous success at Actors Theatre of Louisville before that. It’s an extraordinary, moving, powerful piece of theater.

    You’re going to get to experience one of the best community choirs from throughout our region, and perhaps be introduced to something you’ve never heard before or a choir you’ve never met before. You’re going to experience this act of a community coming together to tell a story together—always a wonderful thing to see on stage.

    And lastly you’ve got the powerful poetry of this play, which is deeply poetic in the way that it examines so much about how religion works in our society, how religion works in our community, how religion works on us, how our beliefs shape us, how we change over time, how congregations change. These are things that so many people identify with and will find their own way in to this particular story because it has truly universal impact.

    What conversation do you hope will be inspired by this play?

    christians

    I hope people will look at the play and start to think about their own relationship to their beliefs, their own relationship to their practice, their experiences with religion or not. I hope people will look at this play and think about why they make the choices we make, how our morality is driven, what is motivating us to be good people in the world, to heal the world.

    Also, leaving all the religion aside, as a Greek tragedy structurally, it is a play about how one man can make a choice that can have effects that he had never imagined, and how he might discover those effects as they unfold and change a whole community. That’s a universal idea—how we made decisions, how those decisions can have impact, and how we discover the importance and meaning of those impacts. That resonates with anyone.

    ____

    Theater J has programmed a series of conversations during the run of The Christians. Hot-button topics include theology as both divider and unifier (November 17th), religious institutions as business enterprises (December 10th), and what happens when the private lives of clergy become public (December 11th). The full schedule of these free special events is online.

    The Christians plays November 16 to December 11, 2016, at Theater J at The Edlavitch DCJCC’s Aaron & Cecile Goldman Theater –1529 16th Street, NW (16th and Q Streets), in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 777-3210, or purchase them online.

     

     

    The Christians plays November 16 to December 11, 2016, at Theater J at The Edlavitch DCJCC’s Aaron & Cecile Goldman Theater –1529 16th Street, NW (16th and Q Streets), in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 777-3210, or purchase them online.

  • ‘Take A Bow’ Part 3: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 3: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances

    Here’s Part 3 of the staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ favorite Spring/Summer 2016 performances. To our honorees: TAKE A BOW!

    bow

    _____

    Christopher Broughton, DeMoya Watson Brown, DeWitt Fleming, Jr., V. Savoy McIlwain, Olivia Russell, Joseph Monroe Webb, and Stephen Scott Wormley: Ensemble and Dancers in Jelly’s Last Jam at Signature Theatre.

    Christopher Broughton, DeWitt Fleming Jr, DeMoya Watson Brown, Joseph Monroe Webb, Olivia Russell. Photo by Christopher Mueller.
    Christopher Broughton, DeWitt Fleming Jr, DeMoya Watson Brown, Joseph Monroe Webb, Olivia Russell. Photo by Christopher Mueller.

    The ensemble and incredible dancers rocked the house with let-the-good-times-roll energy, sizzling shim sham shimmy, flying Lindy Hop swing-outs and dazzling rhythm tap solos in several big dance production numbers in Jelly’s Last Jam. Tap dance and jazz with their simpatico improvisational and syncopated beat merged brilliantly to tell the compelling story of Jelly Roll Morton – thanks to these talented tap dancers in the crowd ensemble of this exciting production.-Ramona Harper.

    _____

    Julia Coffey as Hedda Gabler in Hedda Gabler at The Studio Theatre.

    Shane Kenyon and Julia Coffey. Theatre. Photo by Allie Dearie.
    Shane Kenyon and Julia Coffey. Theatre. Photo by Allie Dearie.

    Watching Julia Coffey’s feline and feral performance in the title role of Studio Theatre’s sleek and stark staging of Hedda Gabler is to witness the trainwreck that is Ibsen’s enigmatic character in a blazing new light. Such is her gracefully seductive presence that one cannot take one’s eyes off her—nor, with credible good reason, can the men in the play, whose heartstrings she manipulates as if plucking idly at harp strings. Would Ibsen, if he witnessed Coffey’s thoroughly modern Hedda, be rolling in his grave or offering a prone ovation? It matters not. The Coffey’s phenomenal performance creates an indelible Hedda as ravishing as she is self-absorbed and a character absolutely revelatory for right now.-John Stoltenberg.

    _____

    Andy De as Lieutenant J.G. Daniel Kaffee in A Few Good Men at Off The Quill. 

    Peter Orvetti (Capt. Whitaker), Andy De (Lt. JG Daniel Kaffee), Adrian Vigil (Lt. JG Sam Weinberg). Photo by Katie Wanschura.
    Peter Orvetti (Capt. Whitaker), Andy De (Lt. JG Daniel Kaffee), Adrian Vigil (Lt. JG Sam Weinberg). Photo by Katie Wanschura.

    Throughout Off the Quill’s production of Aaron Sorkin’s modern classic, Andy De delivers a performance that can make you tear up just as easily as he can make you crack up. He shines in a way that feels authentic, deftly showing a wave of emotions as his character struggles with his own personal feelings about this divisive case. On his own he’s outstanding and as a lead he’s supportive, allowing his costars to make the most out of their scenes together. As Daniel Kaffee, De carries this show in the best way possible.-Vanessa Berben.

    _____

    Michael J. Dombroski as Lieutenant Colonel Nathan Jessup in A Few Good Men at Off the Quill.

    (standing) Michael J. Dombroski as Lt. Col. Nathan Jessup, and (sitting) Donald R. Cook (Capt. Matthew Markinson). Photo by Katie Wanschura.
    (standing) Michael J. Dombroski as Lt. Col. Nathan Jessup, and (sitting) Donald R. Cook (Capt. Matthew Markinson). Photo by Katie Wanschura.

    As the frightening villain in Off the Quill’s production of the Aaron Sorkin classic, Dromboski chews up every scene he’s in as the Colonel who may or may not have ordered one of his soldiers to be hazed. He conveys a ferocious logic that is not to be questioned and his rapid-fire back-and-forth during courtroom scenes is exhilarating to watch. Dromboski delivers a masterful performance that needs to be seen.-Vanessa Berben.

    ____

    Liam Forde as Jason (and the puppet Tyrone) in Hand to God at The Studio Theatre.

    Liam Forde in ‘Hand to God’ at Studio Theatre. Photo by Amy Horan.
    Liam Forde in ‘Hand to God’ at Studio Theatre. Photo by Amy Horan.

    Liam Forde plays a troubled teen whose left hand is possessed by a demonic puppet. It is a dual role requiring split-second switching between a puppeteer character and a puppet character who behave like Jekyll and Hyde as conjoined twins. One character is a young man aching with longing and loneliness; the other is a growling, goading rogue. By some breath-taking bifurcation of his prodigiously focused acting instrument, Forde delivers a performance that is utterly transfixing—by turns tender and crude, anguished and hilarious.-John Stoltenberg.

    _____

    Ari Goldbloom-Helzner as Billy Bigelow in Carousel at The Theatre Lab of the Dramatic Arts.

    Billy Bigelow (Ari Goldbloom-Helzner) woos Julie Jordan (Sarah Goleman-Mercer.) Photo by Ryan Maxwell.
    Billy Bigelow (Ari Goldbloom-Helzner) woos Julie Jordan (Sarah Goleman-Mercer.) Photo by Ryan Maxwell.

    What marks Carousel is the performances. Billy Bigelow is remarkably portrayed by Ari Goldbloom-Helzner who sings “Soliloquy” with a powerful voice and impeccable dynamics. He even gets some comedy into the act when he realizes that his “son” could be a girl. And, when he joins in to sing “If I Loved You” with Sarah Goleman-Mercer – it is pure romance.-Barbara Braswell and Paul Bessel.

    _____

    Randy Graff in Barbara Cook’s Spotlight:  Randy Graff at The Kennedy Center’s Terrace Theater.

    Randy Graff. Photo courtesy of The Kennedy Center.
    Randy Graff. Photo courtesy of The Kennedy Center.

    Randy Graff is utterly unique and surprising in her fresh and spontaneous delivery of the most well-known standards.  As she cascaded through a set of twelve songs, the sheer range of her resonant and piercingly vibrant voice was a pleasure to hear. They should be writing original musicals for this prodigious talent!-David Friscic.

    _____

    Karen Lange, James Finley, Rebecca Speas, Brittany Alyse Willis, and Rebecca Phillips Accompanied by Dead Men’s Hollow (Amy Nazarov, Belinda Hardesty, Caryn Fox, Jared Creason, Marcy Cochran, and Mike Clayberg), in Over Her Dead Body at Pinky Swear Productions at The 2016 Capital Fringe Festival.

     Belinda Hardesty, Brittany Alyse Willis, Rebecca Speas, Karen Lange, Rebecca Phillips, and Jared Creason. Photo by Ryan Maxwell Photography.
    Belinda Hardesty, Brittany Alyse Willis, Rebecca Speas, Karen Lange, Rebecca Phillips, and Jared Creason. Photo by Ryan Maxwell Photography.

    Pinky Swear Productions’ performance of Over Her Dead Body walked away from this year’s Capital Fringe Festival receiving both the Best Musical Theatre or Opera award and the coveted Best Overall Show. Through rip-roaring numbers and haunting renditions this “Bluegrass Benediction” makes each of us question how we have personally responded to violence against women in our own lives. From the moment the cast hits the stage you feel strangely exhilarated, knowing you’ve discovered a work that manages to be fun and electrifying while at the same time chillingly thought provoking.-Vanessa Berben.

    __

    Siobhan O’Loughlin in Broken Bone Bathtub at Submersive Productions.
    Siobhan O'Loughlin. Photo by Jason Speakman.
    Siobhan O’Loughlin. Photo by Jason Speakman.

    Siobhan O’Loughlin‘s strange, comforting and magical solo show that she performs in a bathtub for an audience of 12 in a bathroom in a private home is unlike anything you have ever experienced. This dynamic performer has the ability to make the mundane extraordinary and make strangers bare their souls (and wash her hair). But the setting is no gimmick and her story about a bike accident and a broken arm and finding compassion and connection in a world that spins too fast left me tremendously moved and deliriously hopeful.-David Gersten.

     _____

    Kiandra Richardson as Whitney Houston in Born for This: The BeBe Winans Story at Arena Stage.

    Juan Winans (from left) (BeBe), Kiandra Richardson (Whitney Houston), and Deborah Joy Winans (CeCe). Photo by Greg Mooney.
    Lto R: Juan Winans (BeBe), Kiandra Richardson (Whitney Houston), and Deborah Joy Winans (CeCe). Photo by Greg Mooney.

    In a cameo role as Whitney Houston, Kiandra Richardson gives a star-power performance with astounding vocals as she warns BeBe and CeCe Winan not to live for the applause of fame. When Kiandra belts out “Applause” center stage, she brings the house down, eerily looking and sounding a lot like the beautiful superstar.-Ramona Harper.

    LINKS:
    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 1: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 2: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 3: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 4: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 5: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

  • Magic Time! Left-Handed Complement: Liam Forde on Acting With a Puppet in ‘Hand to God’ at Studio Theatre

    Magic Time! Left-Handed Complement: Liam Forde on Acting With a Puppet in ‘Hand to God’ at Studio Theatre

    Studio Theatre’s fourth floor has been turned into an amazing facsimile of a Lutheran church basement, complete with inspirational posters on the walls and seating at folding tables as if for a confirmation class or potluck supper. I dropped in there yesterday, and I can report that for someone whose upbringing included exactly such places and circumstances, it was an eerie déjà vu.

     This is the immersive scenic design for Studio’s production of Robert Askins’ Hand to God, an irreverent and libidinous comedy that was a hit on Broadway and is having its regional premiere in DC. The play takes place in Texas in the context of a Christian puppet ministry (which is a real thing), and in it three teenagers along with the mother of one of them are assigned by the pastor to put on an edifying puppet show for parishioners at next Sunday’s service. Things go wildly off scriptural script, however, as a puppet named Tyrone becomes, hilariously, a loud-mouth, foul-mouthed little demon.

     Liam Forde, who plays Jason in Hand to God at Studio Theatre, with his Tyrone rehearsal puppet. Photograph by John Stoltenberg.
    Liam Forde, who plays Jason in ‘Hand to God’ at Studio Theatre, with his Tyrone rehearsal puppet. Photograph by John Stoltenberg.

    New York–based actor Liam Forde plays Jason, the teen whose left hand is possessed by Tyrone. I was curious to know how Liam has been handling, ahem, this dual role—a puppet character and a puppeteer character who are like Jekyll and Hyde as conjoined twins. Liam kindly made time before a rehearsal so that we could have what turned into a fascinating chat—during which we were joined by Tyrone.

    John: The last time I saw you at Studio was in Jumpers for Goalposts, a play I loved.

    Liam: Thanks, me too.

    And your performance was fantastic.

    Oh, thank you.

    You were playing Luke, a shy, introverted, socially awkward, young gay man. Now, in Hand to God, you’re playing Jason, an on-the-make straight guy who gives voice to Tyrone, his demonic puppet. What’s that been like for you?

    Something about Luke felt very true to me. Jason is more of a stretch. He’s living in this world where he feels the need to be a certain way. Luke could only be what he was, because he didn’t know how to be anything else. But Jason feels the need—from the world around him, from the church and from his peers, and from his father—that he has to be manly. To be a man. He has to be strong. For his mom. He has to be her rock. So there’s a lot more resistance with Jason—resistance to anything that’s traditionally thought of as weak or effeminate. It’s this hyper-masculine world where things are black and white, and there’s a lot more pressure piled on Jason.

    Puppets have always been big in kids shows; now generations who grew up with Sesame Street are used to seeing puppets in adult-themed shows like Avenue Q and Hand to God. Why do you think that is?

    Like any art form, it’s growing, and people are realizing that puppets can be used to tell stories in a variety of ways instead of just something that’s kind of cartoony. I’m thinking of The Woodsman, a play in New York that had puppets, and you’ve got those amazing puppets in War Horse.

    Plus in Hand to God and Avenue Q, the puppets can be pottymouth.

    Right [indicates a bag beside him with a puppet in it]. I’ve been rehearsing with this Tyrone, and he’s adorable. I’m going to get my new Tyrones tomorrow. I can’t wait.

    Can I see?

    Sure [taking puppet out of the bag]. This is rehearsal Tyrone. He’s a little bit more Muppet-y looking than he’s going to be. He’s filthy and he’s falling apart ’cause I’ve been using him so much. But he’s going to be made of a more sock-like material. Our puppet designer Chelsea Warren is sewing, sewing, sewing. Here he is. [As Tyrone:] Hey!

    [Tyrone claims Liam’s left hand for the rest of the interview.]

    What’s your own background with puppets? Did you play with them as a kid?

    No, I didn’t.

    Ever?

    I watched Sesame Street, but I have no experience with puppetry at all.

    So he’s your—

    He’s my introduction to puppets.

    This is like going into the deep end then?

    Oh, it’s terrifying, yeah.

    Jason/Tyrone is a split role. You’re playing two characters at once. You have to flip back and forth fast. How do you do it?

     A lot of practice. I got this part in late March, and I’ve been working on it every day since. It’s still really hard.

    What have been your biggest challenges doing this role?

    There are so many. I can’t believe we’re starting tech tomorrow, ’cause I feel like I need another month of rehearsal. But I also think that’ll be part of the challenge. Thank God for Joanie Schultz, our director. I honestly don’t know how I could do this without her. Most actors will tell you they keep working on their part until closing. But I’m really feeling it on this one because oftentimes Tyrone’s trying to help Jason realize something, something dark that maybe Jason doesn’t want to admit, about his father, about who Jason wants to be. And while Jason is making these dark discoveries, Tyrone’s over here like [laughs mockingly as Tyrone]. So it’s very, very difficult to stay with Jason while Tyrone is going after a different goal.

    What about breakthroughs?

    A lot of the time Tyrone is trying to free Jason, so even though it’s scary, it feels good to finally to express things that Jason was told his whole life—from the church, from Mom and Dad—you can’t feel these things, you can’t say these things, because that’s bad.

    I’m intrigued by what’s going on between Jason and Tyrone regarding religion and repression.

    I think it’s absolutely something that the play is addressing and that Tyrone’s prolog and epilog refer to. In many ways Tyrone is the voice of reason. Even though he’s saying it in the most aggressive way, Tyrone is right about so many things. He doesn’t have to be so rude. But he’s right, he’s absolutely right.

    I was watching a video (Watch it below) of a bishop who was saying religion is in the control business.

    https://youtu.be/LkaH3hEmV3M

    If you have a good paradise that you’re rewarded with if you do everything you’re supposed to do and a fiery scary place when you don’t do the things you’re supposed to do, then you have control over the population. And that’s part of what this play is about: Jason’s freedom. He’s getting set free.

    The prolog Tyrone delivers sets the play up like a fable or a parable. It’s about the day that someone invented right and wrong. Right is for all of us. And wrong is for just you. So it’s isolating.

    For being a fun and sometimes silly comedy, it’s got a lot of depth.

    You know, when you’re inside of this play as Jason, there’s not one funny thing about it. I’ve never done a comedy like this. I know it’s funny. I saw it on Broadway three times. It’s one of the funniest things I’ve ever seen. I was crying with laughter. But it’s not funny seen from inside Jason’s life.  It’s the most unfunny comedy. Tyrone, however, thinks he’s hilarious. He’s a huge ham.

    How as an actor did you find Tyrone’s character?

    For some reason the Tyrone character came a little bit easier to me. He’s hyper-masculine. He’s kind of like a college bro. But he also has a lot of knowledge on all kinds of show-business routines. He’s a stand-up comedian, bully, philosopher, and life coach all rolled into one. But he’s not as tough as he acts; he’s just a great actor. And the question the audience has to decide is: Are Jason and Tyrone different?

    I’m also intrigued by what’s going on between Jason and Tyrone about masculinity and sexuality. You said earlier that Jason has pressures on him to be a certain way, having to do with his sexuality, his relationships. How is Tyrone part of that pressure—or is he part of the release?

    It’s a very complicated, nuanced relationship between these two. I would say Tyrone wants Jason to go about it in a different way. In the bedroom scene, Tyrone wants Jason to toughen up. He wants Jason to tell everybody that they’re full of shit. He wants Jason to hurt the guy who’s making fun of him. He wants Jason to fuck the girl he likes. Does Jason want those things or does Tyrone want those things? Sometimes they’re the same, sometimes they’re not.

    It goes back to resistance. Jason can’t want those things. That’s bad, he’ll go to hell, his mom will be disappointed in him. The pastor says good men don’t do that. And Jason just makes big, big discoveries with the help of Tyrone.

    You’re not only an actor but also a singer and vocal coach. And I have some idea from watching videos that Tyrone has vocal demands.

    You ain’t just whistlin’ Dixie.

    So what vocal coaching do you give yourself to give the little devil his due?

    Well, my voice training has helped a lot with this. I met with a voice coach at Juilliard before I came here, basically for reassurance that I was going to be okay. When I’m in New York, I also work with my singing teacher once a week, and she’s been enormously helpful. Zach Campion, our dialect coach, has helped a lot too. I’m steaming before and after every show. Warm up and cool down every day. Lots of hydrating. I don’t talk a lot during the day. I can’t go out for drinks after a show, because the vocal demands of this are insane.

    This is a very intense role.

    I can’t believe I’m doing it.

    Hand to God plays July 7-August 7, 2016, at The Studio Theatre’s Studio X –1501 14th Street NW, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 332-3300, or purchase them online.

    LINK:
    Tyrone’s Instagram page

  • Spine: ‘Jumpers for Goalposts’ at The Studio Theatre

    Spine: ‘Jumpers for Goalposts’ at The Studio Theatre

    Life’s endless struggles — from the daily variety, like getting your mates to behave appropriately, to the emotionally cataclysmic, like the death of a loved one — such is the subject of Tom Wells’ Jumpers for Goalposts, now playing at the Studio Theatre.

    John Stoltenberg’s review is here.

    Liam Forde (Luke), Kimberly Gilbert (Viv), Zdenko Martin (Danny), and Michael Glenn (Joe) in 'Jumpers for Goalposts' at The Studio Theatre. Photo by Igor Dmitry.
    Liam Forde (Luke), Kimberly Gilbert (Viv), Zdenko Martin (Danny), and Michael Glenn (Joe) in ‘Jumpers for Goalposts’ at The Studio Theatre. Photo by Igor Dmitry.

    “What else is new?” you might ask. “Aren’t such struggles the subject of all theatre?” Well, yes … and no.

    Wells walks us into a locker room, that place of male and female competition, or at least its before and after moments. His locker room is, however, inhabited by people defined, not by their high hopes and unlimited ambition and desire for success, but by their ordinary hopes and their oh so ordinary ambitions and desire for little success stories.

    You will find no Hollywood mark on these characters’ foreheads, no expectation of glorious happy endings or of fame and fortune. Wells’ characters are rooted not in Rags to Riches or Manifest Destiny or American Exceptionalism, but in — how shall I say this? — a simple humanity that makes them shine like stars in a country sky — one of millions, perhaps, but stars nonetheless.

    And that simple joy, with its multitude of sufferings and its lovely triumphs, infinitesimal in comparison yet brilliantly experienced, is what makes Jumpers for Goalposts an absolute delight.

    Liam Forde (Luke), Kimberly Gilbert (Viv), Michael Glenn (Joe), Jonathan Judge-Russo (Beardy Geoff), and Zdenko Martin (Danny) are the five-member ensemble that brings this delightfully intimate portrait of human vulnerability to life on stage.

    What one recognizes almost immediately about this collection of characters are their incredible flaws. In no way imaginable, are these characters idealized or romanticized.

    Their flaws do not consist of the judgmental variety, however; they are all too human in shape and origin.

    Luke is an unbearably shy, 19-year-old library worker, who lives at home but who wants more than anything to love. He joins the soccer team because he is unbearably attracted to Danny.v>

    Danny is a young man in training to be a coach. A recent breakup has made him vulnerable; he cannot allow himself any more hurt.

    Beardy has difficulty taking anything seriously; yet, a recent assault in an alley left him with a serious scar and doubts about his life.

    Zdenko Martin (Danny), Liam Forde (Luke), Jonathan Judge-Russo (Beardy Geoff), Michael Glenn (Joe), and Kimberly Gilbert (Viv) in 'Jumpers for Goalposts' at Studio Theatre. Photo by Igor Dmitry.
    Zdenko Martin (Danny), Liam Forde (Luke), Jonathan Judge-Russo (Beardy Geoff), Michael Glenn (Joe), and Kimberly Gilbert (Viv) in ‘Jumpers for Goalposts’ at Studio Theatre. Photo by Igor Dmitry.

    Joe seems content just getting through the day. Approaching his 40th birthday, the recent death of the love of his life lingers in his memory.

    Viv, the team’s tough-girl coach, is unable to bear witness to the death of her older sister, Joe’s wife.

    They are, in a word, human beings, not the always happy, endlessly successful representations of humanity to whom we have grown so accustomed in American culture.

    “Now,” you might say, “there are a lot of characters like these in America’s panorama of cultural representations.” Well yes … and no.

    What’s so different about these characters is that they are given to us without condescension. Director Matt Torney, does not create a comical or farcical world for them to inhabit. And Wells does not taint them with condescension, as if to say “how could anyone love these misfits?”

    Director and playwright, and actors, give us authenticity and sincerity, trusting most of all that the humanity of the characters will be the “entertainment” the theatregoing audience seeks.

    That trust pays off in a remarkable production, one in which all the veneer of showbiz has been removed, one in which the simple grace of sharing an embrace, a hand, a kind word, or a supportive shoulder is miracle enough to give audiences hope for the future.

    Jumpers_DCTB_728x90

    Jumpers for Goalposts plays through June 21, 2015 at Studio Theatre’s Metheny Theatre – 1501 14th Street NW, in Washington, DC. For tickets, call the box office at (202) 332-3300, or purchase them online.