Tag: The Lion in Winter

  • Review: ‘The Lion in Winter’ at 4615 Theatre Company

    Review: ‘The Lion in Winter’ at 4615 Theatre Company

    The Lion in Winter, written by James Goldman and directed by Jordan Friend, opened this weekend at The Highwood Theatre in Silver Spring; it is being performed in repertory with King John. The play is presented by 4615 Theatre Company, which has found a permanent home at The Highwood. The group often performs Shakespeare paired with a play written in that era, but this time picked a contemporary written play about the same historical time. Several actors play the same character at different times of their lives in the two productions.

    Nick Torres and Peg Nichols. Photo by Anne Donnelly.

    The theater itself is intimate and unusual for such powerful drama. However, it works, giving the audience the feeling that they are right there in the castle observing the action. I imagine that the servants of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine felt much like I did watching the plots and twists unfold.

    The play is based on the story of Henry II and Eleanor and three of their sons. History supports Goldman’s recounting that the sons, along with their mother, conspired against Henry II; each had their own agenda – to gain power and, perhaps, determine who became heir to the throne. Eleanor is being held by her husband under house arrest. This kept her away from her sons for many years and is also historically accurate.

    Henry and Eleanor have a marriage filled with strife and conflict. Some of this is due to the king’s philandering and a series of mistresses, some of whom he loved more than his wife. As the plot moves along, we are privy to the wheeling and dealing of Henry, Eleanor, the three princes – Richard, Geoffrey, and John – as well as that of King Philip II of France and Philip’s sister, Alais, who is betrothed to Prince Richard – and is also Henry’s mistress.

    As soon as it seems one of these wins this familial contest, that character is trumped by the machinations of Henry or Eleanor. Both use sibling rivalry to motivate their sons to do exactly what the parental monarchs desire. Both the king and queen often seem to do this just to hurt each other, which leaving us wondering if they love or hate each other. The play may not be always true to the facts we know about the Plantagenet reign, but this is a universal story of the struggles of power, love and family.

    James Allen Kerr, as Prince Richard the Lionheart – who later became King Richard I – is the perfect older brother. His portrayal of the well-educated prince who is Eleanor’s favorite has wonderful nuances. We wonder if he loves his mother or hates her, if he wants his father’s approval or scorn, if he wants to marry Alais, or does he love her brother, the handsome young French monarch. Kerr creates a wonderful character that remains regal but also full of petty jealousy.

    Charlie Cook is the often-forgotten brother Geoffrey. He captures all the angst of middle child syndrome in the role. Much like his parents in some ways, he connives to insure his own fortune and safety. Cook could easily have us like him too much. Instead, we often detest him as much as his brothers and parents. Just when we feel sorry for him, Cook unveils to us his villainy.

    The cast of The Lion in Winter. Photo by Anne Donnelly.

    Seth Rosenke plays the more hapless brother, John, who later became King John of Magna Carta fame. John is the youngest and, in this play, the dullest and most ungainly of the group. Rosenke does an excellent job conveying his awkward youth and vulnerability to us without being too juvenile. John is only about 16 at the time of the action. At one point, he carries a toy while trying to become heir to throne.

    Morgan Sendek is Alais, who is in love with Henry in this story. (There are historical disputes about her role.) Sendek allows her Alais to be manipulated, but also remains strong. She is, in some ways, the most torn character. She has strong allegiances to her brother, the King of France, but strong ties to the English royal family. She loves Henry, but is angry with him for trying to use her as a marriage pawn with his sons. Most effectively, Sendek shows us how emotionally ripped the young maiden is in her relationship with Eleanor. In this play, Eleanor had been Alais’ surrogate mother and now the young maid is the mistress of Eleanor’s husband.

    Brendan McMahon is the French King who, at 17, must take on the 50-year-old Henry. McMahon’s stature and posture make him regal, but McMahon exposes us to the boy behind the man when Henry outmatches his efforts of conspiracy.

    But this is play is really about the strange relationship between Henry II and Eleanor. Peg Nichols is a strong, powerful queen. We see her go from high points, where she seems all powerful, to lows, when she seems lost and broken. We are never sure if she loves Henry and her children or detests them all. Even when she shows affection to Alais, Nichols makes us wonder if it is sincere. She plays this complex character to perfection.

    Nick Torres is Henry II every moment he is on stage. He is strong and fiery. He loves passionately and hates just as strongly. We admire him and despise the way he treats his wife and sons. We care about him but realize this is a very complex man who has become very wise with age. The scenes between Torres and Nichols are meant to be the most powerful, and these two fine actors have made them riveting. We are transfixed by the two when they are together as they duel each other for power over their realm and their family.

    Jordan Friend’s concept of intimate drama is well-structured. He uses actors to move a very sparse amount of set, just some furniture and a few props against a black background with an impressionistic panel in the middle. As I stated, it brings us right into the drawing room and cellar of this medieval castle. His tight direction keeps this a heavy-hitting drama and not a melodramatic soap opera. He keeps this a royal chess match and we wonder if anyone will call out checkmate.

    This minimalist set lends a Shakespearean feel to the production and credit goes to Nathaniel Sharer for making this work. Lighting Design is done by E-hui Woo and the lights create much of the mood of the play. The period costumes were designed by Jeanette Christiensen, and they worked well in helping create the characters – from the brocades of King Philip to the gauzy nightgowns of Alais.

    The play makes us realize that sibling rivalry, plays for power, broken marriages, duplicity in diplomacy, and parental shortcomings were as much a part of the human condition then as they remain today.

    Roar on down to The Highwood Theatre to see 4615 Theatre Company’s powerful and well acted take on this modern classic.

    Running Time: Two hours and 20 minutes, with one intermission.

    The Lion in Winter plays through August 5, 2017 in repertory with Shakespeare’s King John at 4615 Theatre Company performing at The Highwood Theatre – 914 Silver Spring Avenue, in Silver Spring, MD. For tickets, call (301) 928-2738 or purchase them online.

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  • Best of 2016 #15: Best Performances in Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA

    Best of 2016 #15: Best Performances in Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #15: Best Performances in Plays and Ensembles in Community Theaters in DC/MD/VA Area Area

    Mark T. Allen as John Barrymore in I Hate Hamlet at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Lisa Anne Bailey as Maria Callas in Master Class at Reston Community Players.

    Debbie Barber-Eaton as Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?  at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Nancy Blum as Veronica/Miss Witherspoon in Miss Weatherspoon at Silver Spring Stage.

    Tori Boutin as Mash in Stupid Fucking Bird at Silver Spring Stage.

    Caity Brown as Jacie in Comic Potential at McLean Community Players.

    Julia Buhagiar as Constance Weber in Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Linae C. Bullock as Mandy in Time Stands Still at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Shawn g. Byers playing various roles in The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Claire Carberry as Sarah in Time Stands Still at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Gayle Carney as Francine/Lena in Clybourne Park at Silver Spring Stage.

    Ben Carr as Mike in Good People at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Keith Cassidy as Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing at Silver Spring Stage.

    Pooja Chawla as Maryamma in Miss Weatherspoon at Silver Spring Stage.

    Joseph Coracle as Felix Humble in Humble Boy at Silver Spring Stage.

    Rosalie Daelemans as Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Ernest at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Paul Davis as Ryan in kinK at Wolf Pack Theatre Company.

    Reed DeLisle as Andrew Rally in I Hate Hamlet at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Hans Dettmar playing various roles in The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Erich DiCenzo as Michael in Snakebit on Dominion Stage.

    Gary Bernard DiNardo as Emory in The Boys in the Band at Dominion Stage.

    Samuel Dye as Bert in All My Sons at Vagabond Players.

    John Davis DuRant, Jr. as Dillard in Foxfire at Bowie Community Theatre.

    Carol Conley Evans as Ethel in Moon Over Buffalo at Vagabond Players.

    Patrick David as Frank Keller in Red Herring at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Paige Fridell as Lindsey/Betsy in Clybourne Park at Silver Spring Stage.

    Phil Gallagher as Karl Marx Marx in Soho at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Matthew P. Gallant as Karl/Steve in Clybourne Park at Silver Spring Stage.

    Ron Giddings as Nick in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Rebecca Gift as Gretchen in Boeing Boeing at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Tony Gilbert as Ebenzer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Michaela Haber as Daphna in Bad Jews at Greenbelt Arts Center.

     Susan Holliday as Flora Humble in Humble Boy at Silver Spring Stage.

    Bill Hurlbut as George Pye in Humble Boy at Silver Spring Stage.

    Kathryn Huston as Annie Nations in Foxfire at Bowie Community Theatre.

    Julie Janson as Rhonda/Waitress in Almost Maine at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Natasha Joyce as Helen in The Cripple of Inishmaan at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Elizabeth Keith as Hope in Almost Maine at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Malcolm Lee as Bernard in The Boys in the Band at Dominion Stage.

    Jack Leitess as Billy in The Cripple of Inishmaan at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Matt Leyendecker as Christopher Wren in The Mousetrap at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Joe Mariano as George in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Melissa McGinley as La Marquise de Merteuil  in Les Liaisons Dangereuse at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Lynda McClary as Mrs. Levinson in The Divine Sister at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Jeff Mocho as Thomas in Venus in Fur at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Brendan Murray as Leo in The Emperor of North America at Silver Spring Stage.

     Jeff Murray as Joe Keller in All My Sons at Vagabond Players.

    Liz Mykietyn as Maggie Pelletier in Red Herring at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Natalie Nankervis as Vanda in Venus in Fur at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Cece McGee Newbrough as Berthe in Boeing Boeing at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Gayle Nichols-Grimes as Mama/Thelma in ‘night, Mother at Dominion Stage.

    Pamela Northrup as Mrs. Graves in Enchanted April at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Pamela Northrup as Sylvia (and more) in The Emperor of North America at Silver Spring Stage.

    Sam Nystrom as Clifford Anderson and Zell Murphy as Sidney Bruhl in Death Trap at The Arlington Players.

    Kristen Page-Kirby as Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing at Silver Spring Stage.

    Shirley Panek as Margaret Good People at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    JC Payne as Con in Stupid Fucking Bird at Silver Spring Stage.

    Rich Potter as The Creator of the Universe in God: The One-Man Show at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Brendon Quinn as Jonathan in Snakebit at Dominion Stage.

    Matthew Randall as Michael in The Boys in the Band at Dominion Stage.

    Henry Reisinger, Jr. as Howard in Moon Over Buffalo at Vagabond Players.

    Julie Rogers as Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Mary Rogers as Bella in Lost in Yonkers at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Mike Rudden as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    John Sadowsky as Sir Toby Belch in Twelfth Night at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Daniel Schall as Mr. Darcy Pride and Prejudice at Laurel Mill Play house.

    Sarah Scott as Melody in Bad Jews at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Connie Shabshab as Jessie Cates at ‘night, Mother at Dominion Stage.

    Michelle Shader as Grace Bradley in Best Christmas Pageant Ever at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Josh Shoemaker as The Stage Manager in Our Town at Vagabond Players.

    Steven Shriner as Mother Superior in The Divine Sister at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Steven Shriner as Ned Weeks in The Normal Heart at Vagabond Players.

    Thom Eric Sinn as William Gillette in The Game’s Afoot (Holmes for the Holidays) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Lyle Blake Smythers as Hector in The History Boys at Dominion Stage.

    Eric C. Stein as King Henry II of England in The Lion in Winter at Vagabond Players.

    Sandra True as Cassandra in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Kay-Megan Washington as Madame de Volanges in Les Liaisons Dangereuse at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Bobby Welsh as Venticelli 1 and Debora Crabbe as Venticelli 2 in Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    David Whitehead as Antonio Salieri in Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Sarah Wade as Honey in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?  at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Cherie Weinert as Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter at Vagabond Players.

    Jeffrey Westlake as Hector in The History Boys at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Andrew Wilkin as Simon Bright in The Game’s Afoot (Holmes for the Holidays) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Dave Wright playing various roles in The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Kelsey Yudice as Shelby in Steel Magnolias at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    BEST ENSEMBLES:

    All My Sons at Vagabond Players: David Shoemaker, Rachel Roth, Sean Kelly, Barbara Madison Hauck, Carol Evans, Nick Cherone, Jeff Murray, Thom Sinn, and Kathryn Falcone.

    ____

    Bad Jews at Greenbelt Arts Center: Sarah Scott, Michaela Habe, Jason Kanow, and Marlowe Vilchez.

    ____

    Dinner with Friends at Greenbelt Arts Center: Brian Lewandowski, Jenna Jones Paradis, Jim Adams, and Michelle Johncock.

    ____

    Steel Magnolias at The Little Theatre of Alexandria: Brenda Parker, ,Kelsey Yudice, Patricia Spencer Smith, Susan Smythe, Carla Crawford, and Alana Dodds Sharp.

    ____

    The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria: Hans Dettmar, Dave Wright, and Shawn g. Byers.

    ____

    The Emperor of North America at Silver Spring Stage: Ted Culler, Brendan Murray,  Pamela Northrup, Lena Winter, and Lenora Spahn.

    ____

    The Laramie Project at Kensington Arts Theatre: Taylor Bono, Francisco Borja, Lynnette Franklin, Natalie McManus, Brianne Taylor, Elizabeth Weiss, Shaquille Stuart, Stuart Rick, Zoe Bulitt, Lena Winter, and Bob Harbaum. 

    ____

    The Normal Heart at Vagabond Players: Jeff Murray, Ryan Cole, Tom Burns, Steven Shriner, Eric C. Stein, Tony Viglione, David Shoemaker, and Justin Johnson. 

    ___

     The Whipping Man at Fells Point Corner Theatre, Michael Joseph Donlan, Percy Thomas, and Ian Smith. 

    ____
    Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf at Colonial Players of Annapolis.
    Joseph Mariano, Sarah Wade, Debbie Barber-Eaton, and Ron Giddings.
    ____

    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.

    LINKS:
    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #1: Best Musicals in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #2: Best Musicals In Community Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    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.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #10: Best Direction in Musicals in Professional Theatres in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #11: Best Performances and Ensembles in Plays and Musicals in Philadelphia, New York, Delaware, and New Jersey.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #12: Best Direction of Plays in Professional Theater in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #13: Best Direction in Musicals and Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #14: Best Design in Professional and Community Theaters in DC/VA/MD.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #15: Best Performances in Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA.

    The Complete List of The ‘Best of 2015’ Honorees on DCMetroTheaterArts.

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #13: Best Direction and Musical Direction in Musicals and Best Direction of Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #13: Best Direction and Musical Direction in Musicals and Best Direction of Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA

    The staff of DCMetroTheaterArts Best Direction and Musical Direction in Musicals and Best Direction of Plays of 2016 in Community Theatres in DC/VA/MD Are:

    BEST DIRECTION AND MUSICAL DIRECTION IN MUSICALS IN COMMUNITY THEATRES IN 2016 IN DC/MD/VA ARE:

    Director Kevin Sockwell and Musical Director Arielle Bayer for A Grand Night for Singing at Montgomery Playhouse and Arts on the Green.

    Director Susan Thornton and Musical Director Lisa Dodson for for Anything Goes at Other Voices Theatre.

    Director Michael Hartsfield and Musical Directors Billy Georg and Mimi Kuhn McGinnis for Assassins at the Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Director Eric C. Stein and Musical Director Stephen M. Deininger for Avenue Q at Vagabond Players.

    Director Kirk Bowers and Musical Director Pete Myers for Babes in Arms at The FrederickTowne Players.

    Director Lanny Warketien and Musical Director Sarah Jane Scott for Bat Boy: The Musical at Prince William Little Theatre.

    Director Stephanie Lynn Williams and Musical Director Tiffany Underwood Holmes for Bring It On at Drama Learning Center.

    Director Craig Pettinati and Music Director Stuart Y. Weich for Cabaret at Kensington Arts Theatre.

    Director and Music Director Matt Scarborough on Cabaret at Prince William Little Theatre.

    Director Keith Tittermary and Music Director Sam Weich for Children of Eden at Damascus Theatre Company.

    Director Greg Bell and Music Director Michael W. Tan for DAS BARBECÜ at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Director Christopher Gerken and Music Director LeVar Betts for Dreamgirls at Tantallon Community Players.

    Director Fuzz Roark and Musical Director Michael W. Tan for Evita at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Director Stephanie Lynn Williams and Musical Director Tiffany Underwood Holmes for First Date at Drama Learning Cent er.

    Director Shaun Moe and Music Director Lori Roddy for Footloose at McLean Community Players.

    Director Christopher Dykton and Musical Director Leah Koscis for Grey Gardens at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Debbie Barber-Eaton and Musical Director Sandy Melson Griese for Guys and Dolls at 2nd Star Productions.

    Director Paul Tonden and Musical Director Mitch Bassman for Gypsy at Reston Community Players.

    Director Suzanne L Donohue and Musical Director William V. Derr for Hairspray at Port Tobacco Players.

    Director Jane B. Wingard and Music Director Joe Biddle for H.M.S. Pinafore at 2nd Star Productions.

    Director Susan Thornton and Music Director Jonas Dawson for I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change at Other Voices Theatre.

    Director Rob Tessier and Musical Director by Chris Zavadowski for Into the Woods at Upper Room Theatre Ministry.

    Director John Waldron and Musical Director James Schader for Into the Woods, Jr. at Aldersgate Church Community Theater.

    Director Susan Thornton and Musical Director Jonas Dawson for La Cage aux Folles at Other Voices Theatre.

    Director Jared Shamberger and Musical Director LeVar Betts for Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Director Evelyn Rice and Music Directors Evelyn Rice and Alanna Mensing for Legally Blonde: The Musical at Fauquier Community Theatre.

    Director Clare Shaffer and Musical Director Paige Austin Rammelkamp for Man of La Mancha at The Arlington Players.

    Director Daniel Douek and Musical Director Mimi McGinniss for Man of La Mancha at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Director Wade Corder and Musical Directors Dana and Jim Van Slyke for Mary Poppins at Reston Community Players.

    Director William Leary and Musical Director Stanley Livengood for Memories & Legends at Wolf Pack Theatre Company.

    Director Steven Fleming and Musical Director Scott AuCoin for Next to Normal at Silhouette Stages.

    Director John K. Monnett and Musical Director Steve Przybylski for Nice Work If You Can Get It at The Arlington Players.

    Directors Ashley Kinney and Kim VanArtsdalen and Musical Director Colin Taylor for Oliver! at The Sterling Playmakers.

    Director Stephanie Lynn Williams and Music Director Tiffany Underwood Holmes for Parade at Drama Learning Center.

    Director Paul Loebach and Musical Director Marci Shegogue for Quilters at Rockville Musical Theatre and Arts on The Green.

    Director Bill Kamberger and Musical Directors Tim Viets and Gregory Merle Satorie-Robinson for Ragtime at The Memorial Players.

    Director Andy Scott and Musical Director Paige Austin Rammelkamp for Rent at Annapolis Summer Garden Theatre.

    Director Rochelle Horn and Music Director John Marlowe for Rent at Rockville Musical Center.

    Director Gregory Scott Stuart and Musical Director Joseph Sorge for Robin Hood at Victorian Lyric Opera.

    Director Jon Gardner and Musical Director Mac Fancher for Seussical at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Director Annie O’Neill Galvin and Musical Director John Edward Niles for 1776 at McLean Community Players.

    Director Christine Callsen and Musical Director Jay Frost for Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street at St. Mark’s Players.

    Director Kristina Friedgen and Musical Director Brandon Scott Heishman for The Drowsy Chaperone at Damascus Theatre Company.

    Director Lisa Anne Bailey and Musical Director Kirsten Boyd for The Music Man at Fairfax Theatre Company.

    Director Anthony Scimonelli and Musical Director Mayumi Baker Griffie for The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at Arts Collective@HCC.

    Director Lois Evans and Musical Director Wendy Baird for The Secret Garden at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Director Lee Michele Rosenthal and Musical Director Marci Shegogue for Shrek at Rockville Musical Theatre.

    Director Jillian Locklear Bauersfeld and Musical Director Michael W. Tan for Tick, Tick…BOOM! at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Director Susan Devine and Musical Director Francine Krasowska for West Side Story at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Directors Ruben Vellekoop and Carlotta Capuano and Musical Director Marci Shegogue for The Who’s Tommy at Kensington Arts Theatre.

    Director Tommy Malek and Musical Director Nathan C. Scavilla for Young Frankenstein at Silhouette Stages.

    Director and Musical Director Jeff Lesniak for Zombie Prom at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    BEST DIRECTION IN PLAYS:

    Michael Byrne Zemarel for All My Sons at Vagabond Players.

    Julie Janson and Music Director Kyle Keene for Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

     Michael J. Baker, Jr. for A Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

     Bob Kleinberg for Bad Jews at Greenbelt Arts Center.

     Liz Mykietyn for Best Christmas Pageant Ever at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Scott Nichols for Boeing Boeing at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Erin DeCaprio for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Castaways Repertory Theatre.

    Chip Gertzog for Almost Maine at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Seth Ghitelman for Clybourne Park at Silver Spring Stage.

    Robert Sams for Comic Potential at McLean Community Players.

    Andrew JM Regiec for Deathtrap at The Arlington Players.

    Bob Kleinberg for Dinner With Friends at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Pauline Griller-Mitchell for Enchanted April at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Frank Pasqualino for Foxfire at Bowie Community Theatre.

    Elena Day for God: The One-Man Show at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Edd Miller for Good People at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Karen Fleming for Humble Boy at Silver Spring Stage.

    Ilene Chalmers for I Hate Hamlet at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    William Leary for kinK at Wolf Pack Theatre Company.

    Erin Riley for Les Liaisons Dangereuse (‘Dangerous Liaisons’) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Ken Kienas for Lost in Yonkers at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Sherrionne Brown for Marx in Soho at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Rosemary Hartman for Master Class at Reston Community Players.

    Malcolm Edwards for Merlin at The British Players.

    Kevin O’Connell for Miss Weatherspoon at Silver Spring Stage.

    Michael Byrne Zemarel for Moonlight & Magnolias at Spotlighters Theatre.

    John Desmone for Moon Over Buffalo at Vagabond Players.

    Andrew Greenleaf for Much Ado About Nothing at Silver Spring Stage.

    Jennifer Lyman for night, Mother at Dominion Stage.

    Alana D. Sharp for Our Town at Reston Community Players.

    Eric C. Stein for Our Town at Vagabond Players.

    Larry Simmons for Pride and Prejudice at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

     Beth Hughes-Brown for Red Herring at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Paul Valleau for Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Sara Joy Lebowitz for Snakebit at Dominion Stage.

    Sharon Veselic for Steel Magnolias at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Ricky Drummond for Stupid Fucking Bird at Silver Spring Stage.

    Rosemary Hartman for The Boys in the Band at Dominion Stage.

    Dave Carter from The Cripple of Inishmaan at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Joanna Henry for The Complete Works of William Shake Joanna Henryspeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Steve Goldklang for The Divine Sister at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Scott Bloom for The Emperor of North America at Silver Spring Stage.

    Fuzz Roark for The Game’s Afoot (Holmes for the Holidays) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Haley Murphy for The History Boys at Dominion Stage.

    Frank D. Shutts ll for The History Boys at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Rocky Nunzio for The Importance of Being Ernest at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    John Nunemaker for The Laramie Project at Kensington Arts Theatre.

    Steve Goldklang for The Lion in Winter at Vagabond Players.

    Randy Barth for The Mousetrap at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Howard Berkowitz for The Normal Heart at Vagabond Players.

    Barry Feinstein for The Whipping Man at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Barry Feinstein for Time Stands Still at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Joshua McKerrow for Twelfth Night at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Jessie Roberts for Unnecessary Farce at McLean Community Players.

    Estelle Miller for Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Jim Gallagher for Venus in Fur at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Craig Allen Mummey for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    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.

    LINKS:
    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #1: Best Musicals in Professional Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #2: Best Musicals In Community Theaters in DC/MD/VA.

    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.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #10: Best Direction in Musicals in Professional Theatres in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #11: Best Performances and Ensembles in Plays and Musicals in Philadelphia, New York, Delaware, and New Jersey.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #12: Best Direction of Plays in Professional Theater in DC/MD/VA.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #13: Best Direction in Musicals and Plays in Community Theatres in DC/MD/VA.

    The Complete List of The ‘Best of 2015’ Honorees on DCMetroTheaterArts.

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

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

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2016 #5: Best Plays In Community Theaters. And the honorees are:

    Almost Maine at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    All My Sons at Vagabond Players.

    Amadeus at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    A Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Bad Jews at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Best Christmas Pageant Ever at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Boeing Boeing at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Castaways Repertory Theatre.

    Clybourne Park at Silver Spring Stage.

    Comic Potential at McLean Community Players.

    Deathtrap at The Arlington Players.

    Dinner With Friends at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Enchanted April at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Foxfire at Bowie Community Theatre.

    God: The One-Man Show at Greenbelt Arts Center.

    Good People at The Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Humble Boy at Silver Spring Stage.

    I Hate Hamlet at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    kinK at Wolf Pack Theatre Company.

    Les Liaisons Dangereuse (‘Dangerous Liaisons’) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Lost in Yonkers at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Marx in Soho at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Master Class at Reston Community Players.

    Merlin at The British Players.

    Miss Weatherspoon at Silver Spring Stage.

    Moonlight & Magnolias at Spotlighters Theatre.

    Moon Over Buffalo at Vagabond Players.

    Much Ado About Nothing at Silver Spring Stage.

    night, Mother at Dominion Stage.

    Our Town at Reston Community Players.

    Our Town at Vagabond Players.

    Pride and Prejudice at Laurel Mill Play house.

    Red Herring at Providence Players of Fairfax.

    Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Snakebit at Dominion Stage.

    Steel Magnolias at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    Stupid Fucking Bird at Silver Spring Stage.

    The Boys in the Band at Dominion Stage.

    The Cripple of Inishmaan at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    The Divine Sister at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    The Emperor of North America at Silver Spring Stage.

    The Game’s Afoot (Holmes for the Holidays) at Spotlighters Theatre.

    The History Boys at Dominion Stage.

    The History Boys at The Little Theatre of Alexandria.

    The Importance of Being Ernest at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    The Laramie Project at Kensington Arts Theatre.

    The Lion in Winter at Vagabond Players.

    The Mousetrap at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    The Normal Heart at Vagabond Players.

     The Whipping Man at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Time Stands Still at Fells Point Corner Theatre.

    Twelfth Night at Laurel Mill Playhouse.

    Unnecessary Farce at McLean Community Players.

    Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike at Prince George’s Little Theatre.

    Venus in Fur at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf at Colonial Players of Annapolis.

    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.

  • ‘Take A Bow’ Part 7: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 7: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances

    Here’s Part 7 of the staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ favorite Spring/Summer 2016 performances. To our honorees: TAKE A BOW!

    _____

    Caitlin Carbone as Hamlet in Hamlet at Cohesion Theatre Company.

    Caitlin Carbone. Photo by Shealyn Jae Photography.
    Caitlin Carbone. Photo by Shealyn Jae Photography.

    Caitlin Carbone’s Hamlet at Cohesion Theatre Company was outstanding. She speaks Shakespearean English like it’s her native tongue and she is so physically expressive, you could probably understand 90% of her part even if she didn’t speak at all.-Patricia Mitchell

    ____
    Matthew Payne as Mr. Croup and Bobby Hennenberg as Mr. Vandemaras in Neverwhere at Cohesion Theatre Company.
    Matthew Payne (Mr. Crou) and Bobby Hennenberg (Mr. Vandemar). Photo by Shealyn Jae Photography.
    Matthew Payne (Mr. Crou) and Bobby Hennenberg (Mr. Vandemar). Photo by Shealyn Jae Photography.

    I will clarify that I mean it as a great compliment when I say that Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandemar felt like the roles that Matthew Payne and Bobby Hennenberg were born to play. I’ve seen both of these actors perform before and while they were always good, there seems to be something about these characters that made these men shine. Their performances as the torture-loving, blood-thirsty agents of misery were absolutely brilliant.-Patricia Mitchell

    LINKS: Interviews from London Below: Inside Cohesion Theatre’s ‘Neverwhere’: Part 4: Matthew Lindsay Payne by Patricia Mitchell.

    Interviews from London Below: Inside Cohesion Theatre’s ‘Neverwhere’: Part 5: Bobby Henneberg by Patricia  Mitchell.

     ______
    DeJeanette Horne  as Harmond Wilks in Radio Golf at Hard Bargain Players.
    The cast of ‘Radio Golf’: L to R: Mack Leamon (Sterling Johnson); Baakari Wilder (Roosevelt Hicks); DeJeanette Horne (Harmond Wilks); Lolita Marie (Mame Wilks); and John Askew (Elder Joseph Barlow). Photo by Timagnus Traylor.
    The cast of ‘Radio Golf’: L to R: Mack Leamon (Sterling Johnson); Baakari Wilder (Roosevelt Hicks); DeJeanette Horne (Harmond Wilks); Lolita Marie (Mame Wilks); and John Askew (Elder Joseph Barlow). Photo by Timagnus Traylor.

    DeJeanette Horne was fantastic as the ambitious Pittsburgh mayoral candidate Harmond Wilks in playwright August Wilson’s Radio Golf. In a powerful study of Black men with two different approaches to progressing in a country ruled by Whites, Horne played Wilks’ emotional journey, and objectives, to perfection. Wilson’s work is challenging and has a history all its own, which Horne mastered and enlivened in one of the year’s better performances.-William Powell

    LINK: Meet the Cast of Hard Bargain’s ‘Radio Golf’: Part 3: DeJeanette Horne by Joel Markowitz.

    _____

    Cherie Weinert as Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter at Vagabond Players.

    Cherie Weinert and Michael Zemarel in 'The Lion in Winter.' Photo by Tom Lauer.
    Cherie Weinert and Michael Byrne in ‘The Lion in Winter.’ Photo by Tom Lauer.

    Cherie Weinert was astoundingly good, and totally in the moment, moment by moment, throughout her performance as Eleanor of Aquitaine in the medevial drama The Lion in Winter. Eleanor’s husband Henry had Eleanor imprisoned for the past ten years, yet nothing could keep her beaten:“I am the Earth; there is no way around me.” Weinert’s was living-and-breathing acting, of the highest magnitude.-William Powell

    _____

    Roz White as Alberta “Pearl” Johnson in Black Pearl Sings at MetroStage.

    Roz White in 'Black Pearl. 'Photo by Chris Banks
    Roz White as Alberta ‘Pearl’ Johnson. Photo by Chris Banks

    Roz White not only performed great theater the way it is supposed to be performed, her powerful vocals helped bring the story of a prisoner in Depression-era Texas, who must literally sing her way out of bars, to life. Pearl’s songs were spot on, including the standout-spiritual numbers “Troubles So Hard” and “Reap What You Sow.” White is an incandescent star!-William Powell

    LINK: Roz White and Teresa Castracane on Appearing in ‘Black Pearl Sings!’ at MetroStage by Joel Markowitz.

    ______
    ALL THE ‘TAKE A BOW’ ARTICLES AND HONOREES:

    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. (Coming).

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

    ‘Take A Bow’ Part 6: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

    Take A Bow’ Part 7: The Staff of DCMetroTheaterArts’ Favorite Spring/Summer 2016 Performances.

  • Review: ‘The Lion in Winter’ at Vagabond Players

    Review: ‘The Lion in Winter’ at Vagabond Players

    The Lion in Winter’ reaches the pinnacle of high entertainment

    Vagabond Players’ The Lion in Winter, expertly directed by Steve Goldklang is a show any theater lover, nay any lover of art must see. The show is spectacular beyond words. This show proves the theorem that theater is a support system for life.

    The cast: Front: John Posner, Eric C. Stein, Barbara Madison Hauck. Rear: Michael Zemarel, Cherie Weinert, David Shoemaker, and Nick Huber. Photo by Tom Lauer.
    The cast: Front: John Posner, Eric C. Stein, Barbara Madison Hauck. Rear: Michael Byrne, Cherie Weinert, David Shoemaker, and Nick Huber. Photo by Tom Lauer.

    The play follows the “ups and downs” of King Henry II of England (Eric C. Stein), his three sons, his mistress and his wife as he decides, King Lear-like, which son will succeed him on the throne around Christmas, 1183 at his castle in Chinon, France. It comes down to a horse race between Richard Lionheart (David Shoemaker) and John (John Posner). King Henry backs John; his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine (Cherie Weinert) backs Richard. If the play was a present day night-time soap opera, there would no doubt be hashtags and memes on Social Media supporting Team Richard or Team John.

    Mucking things up to a higher degree is the relationship between King Henry and his mistress Alais (Barbara Madison Hauk), half-sister of King Phillip II of France (Nick Huber). And then there’s Henry’s other son, scheming, black-clad, Malvolio-like Geoffrey (Michael Byrne), whispering in John’s ear various intrigues and stirring up Cain. Underneath all that is the fact that Richard loves King Phillip II (who is the son of Eleanor’s ex-husband, Louis VII of France).

    Ostensibly, the play is about two Kings hashing out a treaty, in this case, a treaty to be sealed by Alais and King Philip getting married. The machinations get murkier from there, with various let’s-make-a-deals for the throne; as you follow them, they may make your brain hurt a little, but it all makes sense in the end. It’s all quite Shakespeare-like.

    Cherie Weinert and Eric C. Stein. Photo by Tom Lauer.
    Cherie Weinert and Eric C. Stein. Photo by Tom Lauer.

    King Henry and Eleanor’s marriage-in-name-only is pain writ large. Their relationship is a study in lovelessness, which yet still holds an ember of love. Henry had had Eleanor imprisoned for the past ten years, yet nothing can keep Eleanor down: “I am the Earth; there is no way around me.” Eleanor’s scheming leads Henry down a dark, regrettable path. After he disowns and imprisons his sons, he’s an “old man in an empty place.”

    The performances were astoundingly good, with each actor being in the moment, moment by moment, every moment. More living-and-breathing acting, of the highest magnitude, you will rarely see. Between Stein and Weinert, it’s impossible to say who the “star” is or who “stole the show.” Such platitudes are not applicable here. The cast, individually and collectively was first class.

    David Shoemaker and Nick Huber. Photo by Tom Lauer.
    David Shoemaker and Nick Huber. Photo by Tom Lauer.

    The costumes by Mary Bova and A.T. Jones Costumers were Hollywood-worthy. Eleanor of Aquitaine looked regal and very much the Queen of England and France (she was both in real life). The three brothers and Philip looked courtly, and King Henry was bedecked in a doublet and looked every bit a king—down to his knee-high boots. If King Henry did die in battle, the first thing his enemies would do is grab those boots.

    Ah, Roy Steinman and Moe Conn’s set! It looked exactly like the set of The Lion in Winter should: with faux-stone gray walls, period furniture and a regal, intimidating wooden throne. The efficient tech crew moved the walls between scenes to create various rooms and a dungeon to great effect.

    This show is a jewel in the crown of local community theater, as is Vagabond Players; the theater is celebrating its 100th year. (The late James Goldman’s play is 50 years old and this is also the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s passing.)

    Vagabond Players’ The Lion in Winter reaches the pinnacle of high entertainment. See it, see it, please see it.

    Running Time: Two hours and 15 minutes, with a 15-minute intermission.

    The Lion in Winter  plays through May 8, 2016 at Vagabond Players – 806 South Broadway, in Baltimore, MD. For tickets, call the box office at (410)-563-9135, or purchase them online.

    RATING: FIVE-STARS-82x1555.gif

  • Meet The Director and Cast of PWLT’s ‘Julius Caesar’: Part 2: Scott Olson, Matthew Scarborough, and Jay Tilley

    Meet The Director and Cast of PWLT’s ‘Julius Caesar’: Part 2: Scott Olson, Matthew Scarborough, and Jay Tilley

    In Part 2 of a series of interviews with the director and cast of Prince William Little Theatre’s production of Julius Caesar – set in the Soviet Union during the August Coup of 1991 – meet Scott Olson (Julius Caesar), Matthew Scarborough (Antony), and Jay Tilley (Brutus).

    Scott Olson. Photo by David Harback.
    Scott Olson. Photo by David Harback.

    Joel: Please introduce yourself and tell our readers where they may have seen you perform on our local stages. What shows and roles you have played?

    Scott: I’m Scott Olson, I’ve performed recently as the Monster in Young Frankenstein, and I’ve directed shows like Shrek, Legally Blonde, and Nunsense. I’ve been doing theatre in all aspects in the region for the past 25 years.

    Matthew: My name is Matthew Scarborough. I’ve been involved with a smattering of area productions. My previous roles with Prince William Little Theatre in particular include co-music director for The Who’s Tommy, music director for The Musical Of Musicals: The Musical! and Charles Condomine in Blithe Spirit, which was also directed by Mary-Anne Sullivan.

    Jay: My name is Jay Tilley and I have been acting in the DC area theatre scene for over 16 years now. I’m guessing I’ve appeared in over 80 productions to this point, ranging from light operas and musicals to contemporary dramas and comedies to classical theatre, including Shakespeare. I’ve dabbled in some local TV, film and voice over work and have appeared at The Maryland Renaissance Festival as well. I currently appear in the web series Shotgun Mythos and occasionally stretch my improv legs with ComedySportz and The Blue Show in DC as well as with a troupe called The StageCoach Bandits. So, I guess you can say I stay pretty busy!

    Have you performed in a Shakespearean production before and/or in Julius Caesar before? 

    Scott: This is my first spoken part in a Shakespeare production. I was in Richard III as a guard in the 80s. The next closest thing to that would be The Lion in Winter for The British Embassy Players in the 90s.

    Matthew Scarborough. Photo by David Harback.
    Matthew Scarborough. Photo by David Harback.

    Matthew: This is my first time doing Shakespeare, and I can’t think of a better inaugural experience than the whimsical, lighthearted romp that is Julius Caesar. LOL!

    Jay: I appeared as Brutus in Julius Caesar nearly a decade ago with a group called Vpstart Crow in Manassas, VA. With Vpstart Crow, I also appeared in Romeo and Juliet (Friar Laurence), Touchstone in As You Like It with the Reston Community Players, The Taming of the Shrew (Petruchio), The Merchant of Venice (Shylock) and The Merry Wives of Windsor (Falstaff). I’ve appeared in Hamlet twice – first as Polonius with Grain of Sand Theatre in an abridged version called Hamlet: Reframed for the Capital Fringe Festival and, second, as Guildenstern at The Maryland Renaissance Festival. I also appeared in Richard III (Buckingham) with Tapestry Theatre Company and in The Comedy of Errors (Jailer) at the Maryland Renaissance Festival.

    Who do you play in this production and how do you relate and not relate to your character?

    Scott: I play Julius Caesar. I definitely DO NOT relate to the character. His tremendous ego and god complex is incomprehensible to me. It’s been hard work to bring my acting to this level of ego.

    Matthew: I play Marc Antony. We are alike in that I love plays and hear music as he does, but I do not share his military acumen/expertise or the overwhelming stamina/tenacity that he brings to the art of womanizing.

    Jay: I have the pleasure of playing Brutus again. Brutus and I actually have a lot in common. We’re both loyal, dependable, thoughtful and generally well-liked. We both tend to brood over things and to be workaholics. We’re both passionate about things and we both have bad tempers at times! Probably the biggest difference between Brutus and I is that he tends to keep his emotions in check, while I tend to wear my heart on my sleeve. Plus, Brutus is former military and a politician. Although I’ve had many friends and family in politics and the military, I cannot personally relate to those occupations.

    What is the play about from the point of view of your character?

    Scott: He has ruled strongly for a long time and he’s solid in his belief that he should be the supreme ruler of everything. Yet he doesn’t trust anyone to be on his side, yet loves those who show loyalty to him.

    Matthew: My character ultimately fantasizes about a second triumvirate consisting of himself, Caesar and an as-of-yet undetermined third wheel. When Caesar is assassinated (spoiler alert!), I snap and my goal becomes to avenge his murder and carry out his legacy myself.

    Jay Tilley. Photo by David Harback.
    Jay Tilley. Photo by David Harback.

    Jay: Caesar is becoming far too powerful for the greater good. He must be stopped. He won’t step down and go quietly. Thus, he must die. There is no other way, but he must die in the most honorable way possible and he must be the only one who dies, otherwise the people will turn against him and his fellow conspirators and their just cause will be lost before it begins. Brutus doesn’t want to do this. He HATES to do this. And he wishes someone else could do it. But it has fallen on him because of fate or because he’s in the best position to pull it off or a little of both. Not that it matters, it’s his duty to his country, his people and his family, so it must be done.

    How did you prepare for your role?

    Scott: I read about him and watched some movies and certain political candidates that seem to be like him and learned I could do that. Thank God I’m not like that!

    Matthew: Marcus Antonius was significant enough of a historical figure that we know a great deal about him, so most of my preparation was learning his timeline up until the events in the play as well as how it informed my relationships with each individual character in the show (as well as characters that do not appear in the show, such as his wife at the time). Most of this preparation was spurred on by Mary-Anne, who typically calls for a great deal of thought and consideration into each character before the actors even set foot onstage.

    Jay: Having played Brutus before, I was already familiar with Shakespeare’s version as well as the historical Marcus Junius Brutus, but since that was 10 years ago, I definitely had to brush up on both. And this time, I was able to dig a little deeper into both. The new challenge was adapting what Shakespeare and history gives us and adjusting it to the 1991 Soviet Union setting. Mary-Anne was a huge help to me and the entire cast in that regard. She also really challenged us to examine our characters’ emotions, motivations, relationships and situations in every single moment of every scene. I think that will help us have a much deeper and richer retelling of Julius Caesar.

    What lines and scene were the most difficult for you to perform and memorize and why?

    Scott: In Act 2, there is a scene with Calpurnia that runs the gambit of emotions in less than 5 minutes. Fear, love, rage, loathing and total mistrust. It will wear a guy out!

    Matthew: Antony’s “cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war” speech is difficult for me to perform because I have to convey genuine emotion rather than simply “chew the scenery.” Antony’s “Friends, Romans, countrymen” speech is difficult to perform because the ensemble and I both have to be in complete lockstep to make it work.

    Jay: Without a doubt, the scene where Brutus is informed that his wife Portia is dead. He receives word of her suicide while on the run and preparing for the final battle with forces led by Antony and Octavius. And Shakespeare only gives me a few lines to convey a wide range of emotions. It’s a difficult scene, but it’s probably my favorite because of the challenge and the ultimate emotional payoff for me and for the audience.

    What does Julius Caesar have to say to modern audiences? What recent events parallel the events that occur in this play?

    Scott: Treating people with respect is the only way to deal with people. You can’t just run over them like a freight train and not expect repercussions. I see the political climate in the world right now full of potential Caesars. I think the audience will see that not only can history repeat itself, but will continue until real change happens.

    Matthew: I leave this one to my fellow cast and crew folks, who are more articulate about this kind of thing than I am.

    Jay: Oh I think we see have seen Caesar-like leaders throughout history and I think we see them in today’s world. And I think we also see men and women who would do just about anything to undermine their leaders and the dangers of both. Julius Caesar teaches us that we have to listen to each other, work together and sometimes even compromise rather than take drastic measures for the greater good. Shakespeare’s classic is more relevant than ever before in my opinion.

    How did your director help you to shape your performance and what were some of the challenges you faced and how did the director solve them for you?

    Scott: Mary Anne has a background that runs deep into the motivations of humanity. She can bring out performances in you that you would never have thought possible because she understands what you need to become someone else of a type you would not normally be. It’s like being a comedian and being able to do hard core drama and nobody would have expected that the comedian could have done it.

    Matthew: Mary-Anne helped shape my performance by having very clear ideas in her head from the get-go about Antony, allowing me to take my own stab at his characterization and then working with me to pinpoint an ideal place along the resulting spectrum.

    Jay: Mary-Anne is a great director because she doesn’t let good enough be good enough. She challenges you to not settle for good when you can be great, to not settle for great when you can be excellent, to not settle for excellent when you can be phenomenal. She pushes you to focus on the little nuances, reactions, emotions, motivations and moments that can sometimes get lost in an epic play like Julius Caesar. And she’s very clear about what she wants, but she also is great about letting her actors play and have their own input. She’s always open to ideas and the entire creative process. Probably the biggest help to me personally was getting me to really focus on how Brutus’ physicality differs from my own.

    What’s next for you on the stage?

    Scott: I’m thinking of a drama, a musical and/or a comedy. With me you never know … until I’m cast that is! LOL!

    Matthew: I will be involved in some way, shape or form in Prince William Little Theatre’s next two productions: Sherlock Holmes & The West End Horror (March 2016) and Cabaret (July 2016). In the future, I would love to reprise the role of Marc Antony in a production of Antony & Cleopatra, one of my favorite Shakespeare plays.

    Jay: I will be reprising another favorite Shakespeare character of mine – Falstaff! I previously played Falstaff in The Merry Wives of Windsor and in January, I will be playing him again in Henry IV Part 1 with a group called Britches and Hose Theatre Company in Vienna, VA.

    11181763_10156016953750453_844260876312571497_nJulius Caesar plays from October 16 through October 25, 2015 at Prince William Little Theatre performing at the Gregory Family Theater at the Hylton Performing Arts Center on the George Mason University Campus – 10960 George Mason Circle, in  Manassas, VA. For tickets, purchase them online, or at the box office.

    LINKS:
    Meet The Director and Cast of PWLT’s ‘Julius Caesar’: Part 1: Director Mary-Anne Sullivan.

    Meet The Director and Cast of PWLT’s ‘Julius Caesar,’: Part 2: Scott Olson, Matthew Scarborough, and Jay Tilley.

  • The Vagabond Players Announces Its 100th Season for 2015-2016

    The Vagabond Players Announces Its 100th Season for 2015-2016

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    The Vagabond Players is happy to announce its historic 100th consecutive season for 2015-16.  The centennial season is made up of revivals of past successful Vagabond productions. The Vagabonds first opened in 1916 as a part of the Little Theatre Movement that was sweeping the country at the time. Whereas most of those theatres eventually closed or went dark for several seasons, The Vagabonds has produced a season for 100 consecutive years earning it the title: America’s Oldest Continuously Operating Little Theatre.

    The staff of DCMetroTheaterArts congratulates Vagabond Players on this momentous occasion, and we thank you for a millenium of great theater!

    ______

    The Vagabond Players 100th Season

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    Greater Tuna

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    September 4 – 27, 2015

    By  Jaston Williams, Joe Sears, and Ed Howard

    Directed by Anthony Lane Hinkle

    Off-Broadway premiere in 1982; Vagabond production in our 81st Season, 1996-97.

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    Something’s Afoot

    Somethings-Afoot-Playbill-06-76

    October 16 – November 15, 2015

    Book, Music, and Lyrics by James McDonald, David Vos, and Robert Gerlach

    Directed by Eric Potter.

    Broadway premiere in 1976; Vagabond production in our 62nd Season, 1977-78.

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    Our Town

    playbill_1078513565

    January 8 – February 7, 2016

    by Thornton Wilder

    Directed by Eric C. Stein

    Broadway premiere in 1938; Vagabond productions in our 31st (1946-47) and 53rd (1968-69) Seasons.

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    The Normal Heart

    The-Normal-Heart-Playbill-04-11

    February 26 – March 20, 2016

    By Larry Kramer

    Directed by Howard Berkowitz

     Off-Broadway premiere in 1985; Vagabond production in our 74th Season, 1989-90.

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    The Lion in Winter

    The-Lion-in-Winter-Playbill-03-66

    April 8 – May 8, 2016

    By James Goldman

    Directed by Steve Goldklang

     Broadway premiere in 1966; Vagabond production in our 73rd Season, 1988-89

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    Moon Over Buffalo

    Moon-Over-Buffalo-Playbill-10-95

    May 27 – June 26, 2016

    By Ken Ludwig

    Directed by John Desmone

     Broadway premiere in 1995; Vagabond production in our 83rd Season, 1998-99.

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    100th Season Brochure, Subscriptions
    Our 100th Season brochure will be mailed in June, with Season subscriptions available at that time.
    *Plays and schedule subject to change, depending on rights availability.

    vagabond players banner_thumb[1]All shows will be performed at 806 South Broadway, in Fells Point, in Baltimore, MD 21231. For more information, call (410) 563-9135. 806

    For more information, go to The Vagabond Players’ website.

  • A Tribute to Tana Hicken From Friends, Colleagues, and Admirers-Tributes to be Held on Monday, September 15th at Everyman Theatre and on Monday, September 29th at 7 PM at The Studio Theatre

    A Tribute to Tana Hicken From Friends, Colleagues, and Admirers-Tributes to be Held on Monday, September 15th at Everyman Theatre and on Monday, September 29th at 7 PM at The Studio Theatre

    Tana Hicken. Photo courtesy of Tana Hicken and Studio Theatre.
    Photo courtesy of Tana Hicken and Studio Theatre.

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    Two Tributes are Scheduled for Tana Hicken:

    on Monday, September 15th at 7 PM at Everyman Theatre – 315 West Fayette Street, in Baltimore, MD 21201.

    AND

    and on Monday, September 29th at 7 PM at The Studio Theatre – 1501 14th St NW, in Washington, DC 20005. 

    ______

    Joy Zinoman

    Founding Artistic Director

    The Studio Theatre

    “Tana Hicken was a singular artist. A great actress. A citizen with true beliefs. A beautiful woman deeply loved by her husband, Donald.

    He has asked Holly Twyford and I to organize a tribute to Tana for our community. It will be on Monday, September 29th at 7:00 p.m. at the Studio Theatre.

    All are welcome.”

    ______

    Gail Beach

    Costume Designer

    “Most of my more recent contact has been through designing shows with Donald. Tana was in several shows at Center Stage when I was just our of grad school and worked in the costume shop. Frosine was the only costume I worked on that I can remember being for Tana, but Donald once told me it was one of her favorites. Donna Granada was the designer.”

    ______

    Linda Elyse Bryce

    Theater Volunteer

    “I feel as though Tana Hicken has always been a part of my theatre life in DC since the early years at Arena Stage. As a volunteer for several theatre companies, I was fortunate to meet her informally and like her for her modesty and self-deprecating wit, but my favorite memory is of the night I introduced my children to Arena and her performance enchanted them. Over the next three decades, they were always happy to attend any play, reading, or even reception where Tana was. I shared that affection with them and we are all going to miss her.”

    ______

    Diane Carroad

    Theater Volunteer

    “Although I did not know Tana Hicken personally, I was stunned and saddened to hear of her sudden passing. It seemed just a short while ago that I marveled and laughed at her witty and wiley performance in The Studio Theatre’s production of 4000 Miles by Amy Herzog. Prior to that play at the same theatre, I witnessed her precision and passion in Athol Fugard’s The Road to Mecca.

    In recent years, I had missed seeing her act as frequently as she had when I first came here so these two poignant performances were special ones. I never imagined that they would be my last chances to see this mesmerizing actress on the stage – and I now understand that her role as a socialist grandmother was appropriate

    I moved to the DC area from NYC in 1980 and ushered at and attended innumerable productions over the years. Immediately, I knew that this actress was quite a unique force who would transform herself countless times before my eyes. When I first saw her at Arena Stage, Tana Hicken impressed me as a talented, wise, gutsy, powerful, down-to-earth yet graceful and agile actress and that perception remains. Regardless of the role, it was obvious that she had an uncanny ability to take on a new persona totally convincingly with incredible naturalness. The deft and compelling energy that Tana Hicken shared in a classic or modern play hit me hard at every performance and I looked forward to hearing and watching her each time.

    I just learned that she loved nature and was involved in significant social issues – and that fits perfectly with my image of her.

    My sincere condolences to her family and close friends. May they treasure knowing that she gave me and others immense joy and a myriad of opportunities to wonder.”

    ______

    Tana Hinken and Marni Penning Coleman in 'Lorenzaccio' at Shakespeare Theatre Company in 2004. "With the incomparable Tana Hicken playing my mother."
    Tana Hinken (Marie de Medici) and Marni Penning (Catherine de Medici) in ‘Lorenzaccio’ at Shakespeare Theatre Company in 2004. “With the incomparable Tana Hicken playing my mother.”

    Marni Penning Coleman

    Actress

    “Tana was so incredibly kind to me when we worked together at The Shakespeare Theatre in Lorenzaccio in 2004. She played my mother and had several scenes together, so we always ended up offstage at the same time, hanging out, knitting/crocheting, and chatting. She really took me under her wing, invited me to her house, went on meal breaks with me, introduced me to Donald, and to her friends. During the run of the show she would host me in her Lansburgh apartment and we would talk and talk. She was a totally fierce presence, as well, and taught me the secret to good negotiation: “You have really *not* want the part. Then you can ask for what you want and not be upset if they don’t give it to you – you can just walk away.”

    I absolutely loved her and we got to work together at The Shakespeare Theatre again in 2005 for Comedy of Errors; she was the Abbess and I was Luciana. The women all shared a dressing room, and since the Abbess is only on at the end of the show, Tana was always there when we came offstage, and we had a grand time chatting and creating crafts for friends. I’ve always wished we could have spent more time together. I tried writing her a couple postcards over the years, and even sent her a note backstage at one of her shows, but we kept missing each other. The final performance of Comedy was the last time we ever spoke together. I miss her terribly, and will never, ever forget her.”

    ______
    Grant Harrison and Tana Hicken in '4000 Miles' at The Studio Theatre. Photo by Scott Suchman.
    Grant Harrison and Tana Hicken in ‘4000 Miles’ at The Studio Theatre. Photo by Scott Suchman.

    Grant Harrison

    Actor

    “My name is Grant Harrison. I played opposite Tana in 4000 Miles at the Studio last spring. I am saddened by this loss and Tana has been on my mind since I got news of her passing.I tried to write a tribute a few days ago but couldn’t find the words. Tonight I looked over a monologue from 4000 Miles that I recited to Tana probably close to 50 times and each night we would cry together and share in the catharsis of loss through the tradition of theater. I was immediately filled with those feelings and memories, it was now the right time to write my tribute:

    I’m still trying to process this loss, as I’m sure all of us are. Tana played my Grandmother in Amy Herzog’s play 4000 Miles last spring at The Studio Theatre and it was only until tonight, looking over my script for that production and reading the words we spoke to each other that grief shook me and this loss began to make its way in. Tana gave of herself as an artist and as a friend, and I learned from her how to become a consistently good actor, but more importantly, I learned how our friendship fostered the art we created together. I will always be impressed by Tana’s stories as a young freedom marcher on Washington and I admire the socially conscious life she lived. She was so passionate when telling those stories and it was wonderful to listen. There are so many things we will all miss about her and I will always remember her laughter. There are those private moments actors share only with one another just before the curtain rises and the audience settles in… it was a privilege to have shared those moments with a woman so humbled, giving and effortlessly graceful. Looking back on it, it’s difficult to fully recall where our friendship off stage separated from our life together onstage…I’d like to think they became one.

    I send my love to her family. -Leo.”

    ______

    Helen Hedman

    Actress

     “The only way for me to describe it is to say that either being on stage with Tana, or watching her incandescent performances, drew me directly to the very personal place inside me that drew me to theatre in the first place. 

    Wife, mother, actress, salt of the earth, anarchist. We were so very lucky to have Tana in our midst. I encourage people to look up the stunning breadth of Tana’s career.”

    Ruth Draper, speaking on the experience of live theatre, once said that an actor is an artist who sculpts in snow. But as I write this and think of all that Tana gave me, I have no doubt it will stay with me always.

    Oh, I will miss her so much.”

    ______

    Everyman Theatre Remembers Tana Hicken:

    Embedded image permalink

    The following tributes are posted on Everyman Theatre’s facebook page. I thank Laura Weiss for allowing us to republish them here.

    ______

    Vincent Lacisi

    Founder and Artistic Director, Everyman Theatre

    “Tana Hicken was quite possibly the finest stage actress I’ve witnessed in my entire life. Her ability to transform completely was truly astonishing. She was deeply committed to her craft and to humanity. Tana was such a principled person forever adopting wayward and abandoned dogs, cats, and people for that matter. She was a tireless advocate for the underprivileged and for her profession. She was generous in so many ways. She donated performances to Everyman Theatre in its fledgling days when it couldn’t afford to pay her. She baked brownies and cookies to sell at our little concessions table to help Everyman keep the lights on.

    As a student at Catholic University in the 1980’s, Tana mesmerized me with stunning performances at Arena Stage as Mary Tyrone in Long Day’s Journey, Hedda in Hedda Gabler, Mrs Alving in Ghosts, among many others. In many ways, her work and the work of the resident company at Arena Stage were the genesis or inspiration for me to found a professional theatre here in Baltimore with our own resident company. Watching her work at Everyman Theatre creating her Eleanor of Acquitane in The Lion in Winter, Amanda Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie, Miss Helen in Road to Mecca, and Emily Dickinson in The Belle of Amherst, I learned about her tireless pursuit of the truth in performance. I received a master class in actingt. I saw how a great performance was crafted moment by moment, every word of text explored, every bit of subtext mined, every iota of symbolism lifted off the page forever etched in the minds and imaginations of the audience. She was extraordinary.

    Photo courtesy of Everyman Theatre.
    Photo courtesy of Everyman Theatre.

    Everyman owes a great debt to Tana Hicken and her family. This photo was taken at the performance honoring Donald’s great contributions to Everyman as a director. Caitlin too has contributed to Everyman as its first Education Director. We hold you close to our hearts Donald and Caitlin as we remember and pay our respects to Tana Hicken.

    Rest in Peace Tana, Rest in Peace.”

    ______

    Maia DeSanti

    Actor

    “Dear Tana,

    It’s incredible to me that we sent you happy birthday wishes not even two months ago and are now sending our remembrances…

    I had the honor of sharing a stage with you twice and still count those productions among my favorite theatrical experiences for how I felt myself grow, artistically, professionally, personally. Which was much to do with you – your wonderful talent, your wisdom and experience, your opinions and principals, your generous encouragement…

    10565051_10152422185043598_9156079581011500640_n

    You welcomed Scott and me – and many of us – into your homes on numerous occasions, sharing laughter, delicious food and wonderful stories in rooms and gardens that seemed to bubble over with creative energy and friendship and animals and work and love and the joy of living…

    For all these happy times and lovely memories, onstage and off, and for your sparkling talent and passionate spirit and generosity, you will always have my deep gratitude and affection and love. I shall miss you very much…

    May the Blessings Be.”

    ______

    Bruce Randolph Nelson 

    Resident Company Member

    “I had long been a devoted follower of Tana as a company member at Arena Stage. She was very much an icon in regional theatre and we were so fortunate to have her right on our doorstep. Then, when I had the chance to work with her in 2001 on Watch on the Rhine. I could not believe my great good luck. Sharing the stage with this mountain of a performer was astonishing. Mind blown for sure.”

    ______

    Kyle Prue

    Director of Production

    “Tana’s deep pool of emotional truth, finely honed theatrical intellect, and unceasing demand for the truth of the moment not only made her artistry mesmerizing – they raised the caliber of the work of all the artists around her.

    10626491_10152420511658598_3882582890431701653_n

    I had the privilege of acting with Tana several times, and on two occasions she played my mother – as Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter and as Amanda in The Glass Menagerie. They are two of the most profound artistic experiences of my career. I will truly miss her artistry…. I will miss her warmth, her grace, and her spirit much, much more. 

    Goodbye dear Eleanor…
    Goodnight sweet mother….
    Godspeed lovely Tana…”

    ______

    Deborah Hazlett

    Resident Company Member

    10269383_10152420499868598_2834931329084502081_n

    “Tana was an extraordinary and brilliant truth teller. She taught me how to fight for truth in every moment on stage, and to have the courage to be vulnerable enough to let that truth come through me. I will never forget her beauty, strength, and courage.”
    ______

    Jay Herzog

    Lighting Designer

    “It has been a great pleasure to have worked on a number of plays with Tana Hicken’s provocative acting and with Donald Hicken’s meticulous directing. The Glass Menagerie is my favorite play and Tana’s portrayal of Amanda was memorizing. Her ability to move through such a complex assortment of emotion from moment to moment demonstrated such powerful skills.

    10624595_10152420061508598_3725261458381874066_n

    My other favorite role, in a play that I was fortunate enough to collaborate on, was The Road to Mecca. Miss Helen is a difficult character and based on a South African woman of great inspiration. Tana too was an inspiration for so many theatre artists and audiences.”

    ______

    Joel Markowitz

    Fan and Admirer

    “I am still shocked about the sad news that Tana Hicken has passed away. Here was an actress whose work touched me so deeply, so I pondered what to do on this website. Should I write an obituary? Should I write an article about her life and work? Others have done both already since her untimely passing. So I decided to reach out and ask her friends and colleagues to speak from their hearts. And they did and I thank them so much for doing so.

    And so as a fan and admirer:

    Tana,

    I will miss you on the stage. You touched me and so many other theatregoers and we will miss you immensely. Your performances will live on forever in our hearts and memories.

    And to Donald and the Hicken family:

    Thank you for sharing her with us.”

    ______

    Ari Roth

    Artistic Director, Theater J

    “We lost one of the great ones in the Baltimore/Washington area last night, Tana Hicken, who past away in her sleep. A friend reports that Tana contracted a rare degenerative muscular disease last month that attacked her lungs. Tana starred in only one show at Theater J, but what a performance it was: Jerry Whiddon’s production of Neil Simon’s Pulitzer Prize winner, Lost in Yonkers.

    Others in the community will have certainly worked longer with this great veteran actress, former company member at Arena Stage back when they had a company (and I certainly remember her from the first days of developing Born Guilty back in 1990 — a production she was unable, ultimately, to take part in, but she left an indelible impression all the same; and how moving when we reconnected many years later.)

    Tana Hicken as Grandma Kurnitz and Holly Twyford  (Bella) in 'Lost in Yonkers' at Theater J. Photo by Stan Barouh.
    Tana Hicken as Grandma Kurnitz and Holly Twyford (Bella) in ‘Lost in Yonkers’ at Theater J. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    There wasn’t a more fiercely realized performance in her estimable career than what she shared with us in her portrayal of Neil Simon’s flinty Grandma Kurnitz, seen here with Holly Twyford (photos courtesy of Stan Barouh).

    May her memory be a blessing and an inspiration to all of us…”

    ______

    John Sadowsky

    Playwright

    “I distinctly remember every role that I had the wonderful pleasure of seeing her perform, from the early years in the Arena Stage resident company, through performances at Round House, Studio, Everyman, CenterStage, Rep Stage, and such masterful work in The Glass Menagerie, The Road to Mecca, The Lion in Winter, Dancing at Lughnasa, etc., etc., and, of course, the brilliant Belle of Amherst. She not only dazzled and entertained, but was a true lesson in acting, creating, sustaining, completely inhabiting, and owning a character. My life was enriched in having the opportunity to watch her bring things to life on the stage.”

    ______

    Kyle Schliefer

    Actor

    “Tana Hicken was an extremely giving actor. She was someone who was so good at what she does that playing off her was so easy. She always gave me so much to work with in a scene and all I ever wanted to do was to try and give it back to her as much as I could. She elevated Lost In Yonkers because she was so in command of the work she was doing and so sure of who that character was and how she related to everyone else in the piece. If I could steal anything from her it would be the confidence she had in her work and the level of skill she had in producing it. Off stage she was sweet as can be, nothing like her character. She was always willing to give advice when I asked. I was extremely lucky as a young actor to get the time I did with one of the greats in DC.”

     Max Talisman (Artie), Tana Hicken (Grandma Kurnitz), and Kyle Schliefer (Jay) in 'Lost in Yonkers' at Theater J. Photo by Stan Barouh.
    Max Talisman (Artie), Tana Hicken (Grandma Kurnitz), and Kyle Schliefer (Jay) in ‘Lost in Yonkers’ at Theater J. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    Max Talisman

    Actor

    “In my short career, I have been lucky enough to work with many great actors from show to show -people who inspire you to work harder and become a better actor and person. But there are few who inspire you in the way Tana Hicken inspired me. When I worked with her on Lost in Yonkers at Theater J, I was young (a Sophomore in High School) and I was very intimidated by the two female forces I was going to be sharing the stage with.

    I walked into the first reading of the play with many fears and trepidations. Not only would I be working with Tana, but Holly Twyford was playing the role of Bella in the play. Tana introduced herself to me that first day. She took the time to ask me about who I was, where I came from and what I wanted to be. She kept doing this throughout the rehearsal process, these check-ins. But they were more than that. I have never worked with someone who was so genuinely interested in my hopes, my aspirations, and my future.

    One day, I got to the theater about three hours before a show and the first hour it was just me backstage, on my laptop doing school work. But Tana came about two hours early and she came in and saw I was there. We talked and talked for about an hour, until everyone else came in and filled the dressing rooms and joined in our conversation. She was so full of joy and honest appreciation for the people around her and what they brought to the world. She had an interest in them. That’s what was so incredible about Tana to me. Even in the later stages of her career she was still so interested in people, and still studying them.

    Working with her and Holly every night was more than a masterclass for me on stage, and it was a joy, and absolute privilege. I have never learned more while being on stage but I’ve also rarely had as much fun or joy as performing with Tana and the cast. She was an incredible actress, but more than that she was a beautiful person who taught me what it meant to appreciate life in the theater.”
    ______
    [Editor’s Note: If you would like to send in your tribute, please send it to dcmetrotheaterarts@gmail.com and I will add it to this tribute.]

    LINKS

    Obituary in The Washington Post by Emily Langer on August 20, 2o14.

    ‘4000 Miles’ star Tana Hicken: ‘This may be my last play’ by Nelson Pressley in The Washington Post on March 22, 2013.

    A Tribute to Tana Hickens by Bill Largess on theatreWashington.

  • An Interview with Colonial Players’ Bat Boy: Ron Giddings

    Hold me, Bat Boy! Touch me, Bat Boy! Bring me to the light of Colonial Players’ edgy production of the cult classic Bat Boy: The Musical. In a behind the scenes look, I’ve captured area actor Ron Giddings and asked him to give us the insider’s track to playing the title role of this rocker “out-there” show.

    Ron Giddings. Photo courtesy of Amanda Gunther.
    Ron Giddings. Photo courtesy of Amanda Gunther.

    The last thing you did in the area, something that our readers might recognize you in, in case the ears and the makeup disguise your appearance a little too well?

    Ron: The last thing I did at Colonial Players was 1776 where I played Rutledge, the villainous one with the pompadour wig. I only really get to do one or two shows a year because I work full time at an Arts Magnet school in Anne Arundel County as the creative writing teacher. I teach sixth, seventh, and eighth grade creative writing. I work at St. Paul’s after school in the fall as well; I’m the Musical Director for their musicals. I just The Wiz with them, we’ve also done The Music Man, Urinetown, and we’re doing The Mystery of Edwin Drood in the fall, which I’m thrilled about! And the last thing I directed was Shipwrecked at Colonial Players a while back. Shipwrecked actually won Best Play at the Ruby Griffith Awards and was also nominated for six WATCH awards that year, including Best Director and Best Play. We did win two WATCH awards – one for Outstanding Featured Actor (Robert Tucker), and the other for Outstanding Featured Actress (Christina Enoch Kemmerer).

    What is it about Bat Boy: The Musical that made you want to audition to be a part of it?

    There is a whole long story behind that, actually. I’m not sure how much of it you want to publish. I only wanted to spend my bio thanking the people that helped to make it happen because it has taken a ton of people to get Bat Boy the character up on his feet. When I was in middle school I can remember seeing the Weekly World News article behind my English teacher’s desk, and he was a big mentor of mine in becoming a creative writing teacher. I needed to thank him because of the experience I had with him which put this thing in my mind, and that was 20 years ago. Now that was just the phenomenon itself, I had no idea it was a musical until much later when I went on a scuba-diving trip up to Pennsylvania with a friend. He played the musical on the drive up there and I was “This is great! I’ve never heard of this!” So I thanked him in my bio too.

    Before Colonial Players launches their season they do this preview sort of event where people who have sort of adopted the show— not necessarily the person that will be directing that particular show for the season— will do a little seven to ten minute reading or presentation of the show for all the creative design people and actors who turn up at this event to experience; it’s a great way for performers and designers alike to see what projects are available to become involved with for the upcoming season. So when that happened for this season, David Thompson who is on the artistic team for this show, asked me to be a part of the ‘reading team’ for the previewed segment of Bat Boy. And when I came into sing for it, I think that was the moment when I became truly hooked.

    I love the piece. The music is very much fit to what I like to sing and I think it sits on my voice well. So that is a big draw for me. Then of course, the arch of this character, it doesn’t get any bigger than this. I can’t really compare this to what I’m about to compare it to, but when I was a senior in college I played Alan Strang in Equus and the enormous character arch that he has reminds me of Edgar’s character arch. It has that similar notion of “from catatonic to explosive” the way that Bat Boy does. It also reminds me of playing in John and Jen. That was in 2008 or 2009, it’s an Andrew Lippa piece, and in the first act I go from ages 4 to 17 and the same age spurt in the second act but as a different character. So that extreme and sudden growth reminds me of Edgar as well.

    How is the Bat Boy/Edgar role similar or different to other roles you’ve played, and do you find yourself relating to him more or less easily than other roles?

    I play the villain a lot. I don’t know why but they’re fun. I love them so much. I’ve played Jeffrey in The Lion in Winter and he’s arguably the one with the best one-liners and zingers that just bite at people, and of course Rutledge from 1776  is the same way. I just love playing those secondary villainous type roles. So it’s a nice and interesting change of pace getting to play an anti-hero. Ever since I left high school I’m not the romantic lead, which is totally fine since I find them somewhat boring. I think I’m drawn to roles that are out of my comfort zone. I really enjoy the challenge of “can I do this role?” I’m constantly looking to push myself. And this is definitely a role, and pardon the pun, but it’s a role that I can really sink my teeth into because there is so much there.

    I love Edgar so much as a character. His looks are deceiving, well maybe not deceiving -because that sounds so cliché -but his looks betray his character. He looks so freakish but he’s so nice. He doesn’t cope well once he learns all the things he learns, certainly not the best response in handling his anger and those other strong emotions that he has. He’s so good-hearted, and that makes for a really great juxtaposition against his freakish looks. I play up his kindness and it creates this disparity that’s just great.

    What sort of preparation and commitment and sacrifices are you talking about for this role?

    So the physical part of it was a big part of it. Immediately I went to the gym. I got a trainer. And I thought, “If I’m going to sacrifice all of the stuff that needs to be sacrificed for this role, I want it to be 110%.” At that point I didn’t know if I was going to be a part of the production or not but I was preparing for it like I was, I couldn’t come in unprepared. It started with a trainer at the gym last February. I spent two months in Europe over the summer, and while it was great to get away it was not great to be away from the gym for two solid months. I got back in September and from the moment I got back I was hitting the gym six days a week; six months of six days a week to get Bat Boy into shape.

    I was talking to somebody about the physicality during the show and I ended up saying, “You know it’s not that hard,” and they countered with, “Well of course not you’ve spent six months preparing at the gym!” It was hellacious in the gym, doing all the body weight exercises, the squats, jumping up on things and hanging on things. But once I got into the space, save for a couple of cuts and bruises, I was pretty much ready to go. With all the conditioning I put myself through I think it really helped. Do I like bouncing around the whole time on 33-year-old knees? No. But have I been practicing it so that it now feels like second nature? Absolutely. I took a big chance because who knows who’s going to be cast in the show. I didn’t find out until the middle of this January that I was going to actually do the role, but I guess I thought all along ,“Worst case, I’ll be in good shape.”

    Another big part of it was thanks to David Merrill. He is a phenomenal Musical Director so he really helped me get a lot of the sound that Edgar has and he helped me put that all together. It’s been a long process with a lot of people to really get me to where I am now with the character.

    Ron Giddings (Bat Boy) and Wendy Baird (Mamma Meredith).
    Ron Giddings (Bat Boy) and Wendy Baird (Mamma Meredith).

    Where do you draw your inspiration for these two very different characters that you play in this production?

    There are two parts to it, I think. The physical theatre stuff is something that I’ve loved for a while. That comes just from training and thinking about how to be as small as I possibly can. I’m tall and at the audition when they asked me how tall I was and I told them six feet, I thought that meant that I didn’t get it. You know what I mean? You’re almost expecting this impish sort of Bat Boy. I tried to make him as small as I could. I didn’t want to give him ‘wings’ but I did want to indicate something that represented the timid and coldness of her persona and I really wrapped that up in making myself as tight and small as possible for his “uncivilized phase” as you’re calling it— which I’m totally fine with— so that I could juxtapose that against the elongated stature of Edgar.

    I watched a lot of Downtown Abbey for Edgar. The scene with “Show Them a Thing or Two” is really a show-stopper. It’s this great transformation where he goes from Bat Boy to Edgar. He goes from squatting and down to cartwheels and splits. But the scene after that is more telling, I think. You don’t have to be as on-point with that song because the audience is so mesmerized by the tricks. The part that I think seals the deal, and it gets a laugh every time, but when I come out polished in my suit and Shelly says, “Oh you look so great,” and then I say “You’re looking splendid yourself, Shelly” which I do in the accent. And to have the totally proper British posture and accent I think it really keys people into that moment of “Oh, this is how it’s going to go from here on.” They may even miss the fact at first that he has an accent because it comes out during the song, there’s even a line about the BBC language tapes.

    A big part of both characters for me were the feet and the hands. Even when he becomes “proper” when he gets into nervous situations he starts wringing his hands, pulling on his fingers and his hands physically revert to that internalized gesturing that Bat Boy had when he was what he was before he became Edgar. It’s a lot of fun, but it can’t be too much, so I focused on body parts. People pay attention to the extremities and posture. So I focused on those. He sort of reverts back once that big shocker is revealed to him near the end of the show; his first response is to immediately crouch back on the ground. He has a Jekyll and Hyde moment and a lot of that stems from the physicality. So working the balance of those two characters physically and going back and forth with them, it really was just so much fun.

    What were some of the challenges you had with preparing for the role?

    I am a dancer, so the choreography was fine. Jamie Erin Miller, our choreographer, is fantastic and incredible to work with. She’s a great choreographer for proscenium or the round, really just anything she does. She and I are friends so working with her for the big “trick number” was really easy. She said send me a list of tricks you can do. I had jumped over a cane before during Pippin, I can do a split without using my hands to get back up, and so both of those got used. We took all these things I came up with and started working them into that number and she really helped get them in a good working order so that the song would flow correctly. It was very collaborative.

    I will tell you what I have struggled with since before we opened and I am going to continue to struggle with it until we close. Not the quick changes on stage, because those are fun and not a big deal. But this show is written so tightly that I have quick changes backstage that are an absolutely nightmare. I go from “Dance With Me Darling” where I get thrown up against the cage with blood all over me, and then have to rush back stage, get all the blood off of me, reapply makeup to where all the blood was, and change into the double layer of clothes, which is the tuxedo underneath and the 70’s shirt and outfit on top. I do that number, where they strip all that off, and then quickly change into the proper polished outfit. There is no time. I am literally running. I have three dressers in the back. The same thing happens at the end. There is a 20 second change where I run off-stage after the big shocker reveal, and have to run back stage, get covered in blood effectively and run back on-stage with the cow, and then sing a three minute aria. Wait, not an aria, that sounds pretentious. But a crazy three-minute singing solo that has all this emotion packed into it after all that rushing around.

    It’s great that it’s written so tightly because the second act really just flies, but it makes it so tough for me. Even though I’m not on stage the entire time, I’m running like a madman backstage. People are actually concerned for me because I’m sweating so profusely at times from the rushing. It is just non-stop. I almost go on-stage just to take a break. It’s easier to go on stage just to breathe. I’ll be frantically dashing through my changes backstage and if a sock gets turned inside out I have a panic moment of “I’m not going to make it back on-stage for my cue!”

    The other thing that I’ve struggled with for this show— and I had mentioned this early on in the rehearsal process, I had this thought of how it would be really interesting to play this role and have Bat Boy look completely normal, no special effects or makeup, and just use my acting to play out his freak-like nature. Of course that isn’t how we handled this and mad props to our make-up designer, Eddie Hall, for the way he handled this. He made the make-up work in such a way that I really love the effect, but it is a huge time consuming effort. That’s a big challenge for me because I have to get to the theatre three hours before we start. For an 8 pm show I get there at 5:00 pm and it takes me two hours to get all the make-up on, and then another hour for the ear prosthetics and the teeth and getting my costumes on. I can’t eat in the teeth. I don’t want to break one. I’m worn out by the time the show starts. Then we do two hours and 20 minutes of show, and then it takes me another hour to get everything off.

    Tell us a little more about the concept behind the physical look of Bat Boy and how that evolved to the final product we see on stage.

    It is a big deal. We went back and forth with all these notions of “do we just do the face or do we do the whole body.” It is so effective to do the whole body. I sat back and said “I’m shaving my head, I’ve been working out forever, I’m vocally practicing, so at this point I want to do the full body make-up.”The ears were a great collaboration between Beverly and I, we shopped around for quite a few pairs. We really had to ask ourselves, what size do we want? If you look at bats their ears are sticking out of their heads by like two times the length of their actual head. But we knew we had to be practical, at the same time we didn’t want to go Vulcan. We wanted really cute and kind of sad. Think Gizmo if he were bald and gray. I think that they really work.

    With this show, more than any other show that I’ve done in the Annapolis area, I have really felt the involvement of the community. I went to Doctor Ehmann (of Kathryn Ehmann & Associates dental practice) about the teeth and she said, “We’ll do them for free in exchange for an ad in the program and some comp tickets.” We’ve been advertizing for her, she’s been advertizing for us, thank you for mentioning her in the review; we really appreciate her involvement in this. It wasn’t just like I showed up to her office once, I had about five visits with her where she was resizing things, fixing things. They gave us two sets just in case one broke like it did the first Thursday of the run. I was upside down and I was not concentrating and when I did “Home for You” I went running, and then pulled myself up and flip upside down, I think I must have clenched my teeth and the right side cracked and went somewhere into the audience. We did not find it.

    Premier Fitness, where I train, my trainer put stuff on their Facebook page and at their location so they’ve been doing this reciprocal thing with them because we got such a response after me talking about working out there for so long. They’ve really been great. All of those things that made me look the way I look as Bat Boy— the teeth, the physique, all came from community support. And I think that is so great because that is just a missing piece of community theatre. When you think “community theatre” your mind immediately creates this idea of “amateur actors who live in the area.” And I think there is so much more that can be there. It really is about getting the community involved. Sure, Dr. Ehmann is a dentist and maybe she doesn’t act, but she loves the theatre. She was thrilled to be asked to help us. I think a lot of people get immediately discouraged because they think,“Oh gosh, we can’t do real fangs because that would cost us a thousand dollars.” And then you get these plastic Halloween vampire fangs and it looks awful, but right here in our own community we had someone who was thrilled to donate her services! How exciting is that to have the support of the community, which makes us able to put on a better quality show for the community?

    We’ve had such a great response from the community and it has just been so great to have that support and involvement. We can ask for help and people are totally willing.

    How’s the blood. I noticed a lot of it. Is it tasty? Let’s talk about the blood, ’cause you know everyone’s going to want to read about the blood.

    Haha! Oh my God! It’s a lot of blood! It is a pain in the butt! It is a total mess. It is slippery as crap. And as soon as it’s not slippery it’s sticky as crap. Beverly wanted a lot of blood. That wasn’t a surprise, that was made clear in the beginning it wasn’t like they just showed up for tech week with gallons of blood. It’s really challenging with the make-up because the blood is super staining. If it doesn’t come right off it’s on forever. I dip my head in the head in the bowl in that one scene; the blood goes up my nose and it doesn’t taste great, it tastes a little bit like metallic mint. I’m spitting the blood out constantly, I’m so glad I don’t have to swallow it because it’s disgusting. That’s thicker and gross. But the other blood has to be thinner, more runny; the stuff in the rabbit and the stuff in the bowl and the stuff on everybody is homemade. That is easily washable, to some extent, with Oxy-clean.

    It’s a little unpredictable. Opening night I flung my head back after the rabbit and all the blood ran down my face and into my eyes. That was awful because I had to try and ignore it because I had to hurry up and sing. At least it was just one note, but you know, singing one note with eyes full of blood, can’t say I’d ever done that before. The blood that’s in the cow is absolutely disgusting and it gets on everything. It’s all over the floor. It’s all over everyone. It’s in Shelly’s hair, it’s everywhere. That stuff does not come off. So when I go out and greet people at the end of the show, as you saw, it is stained. I go home and take a shower and wash my face and it’s still stained. The blood has been a challenge; it’s just so unpredictable you don’t know where it’s going to go. I try really hard not to get it on the furniture or on my clothes but it can’t be helped.

    Do you have a moment or song in the show that really stirs up your passion?

    Amanda Gunther and  Ron Giddings. Photo courtesy of Amanda Gunther.
    Amanda Gunther and Ron Giddings. Photo courtesy of Amanda Gunther.

    Yes, I do. I’ll tell you the number that sold me on the show is “Joyful Noise Reprise,” the revival where I get to scream and yell on top of the bench. But I also love “Apology to a Cow.” It’s really fun to sing. It’s quiet, it’s bombastic, it’s all over the place. I’m running across the stage, it gets a great reaction. I feel like it is so clever and yet it’s serious. It has jokes written into it, I mean the first line is basically “I shouldn’t work my problems out with food” while I’m holding this huge cow head. It’s kind of the epitome of the show for me because even though there are those two funny lines about “don’t kill Mrs. Taylor’s kids” and “you can’t raise cows on the side of a mountain,” that’s all wrapped up by this song of regret and teaching a lesson. Laurence O’Keefe is just so intelligent in the way it’s written.

    “Joyful Noise Reprise” is just so much fun to do as well, the whole cast is on stage at that point. I was talking to Debbie, who plays the mayor, and I’ve worked with her tons of times before, and I mentioned to her that I don’t really get to interact with the ensemble at all except for in this number. It’s the first time I really get to address them. I’ve never done a show that’s really that segregated before; my character is either with the family or alone, and never really with the others. It’s interesting to me because I do know and have worked with so many of the people that are in the show.

    What would you say to people who are skeptical about enjoying this show to entice them to come and see it?

    I think that the music is incredibly catchy. I think the characters are all very relatable. Even if you don’t know the show a lot of the archetypes are there. A lot of the musical theatre themes are there. I think that there are enough lively musical theatre sounding numbers— like “Dead Cow” and “Show Them a Thing or Two” that people can really latch onto. I do lots of theatre and I know a lot of people who want to come and support because they’re good friends but don’t think they’ll like it because they’re not “theatre people.” But this is a show that you do not need to be a theatre person to really appreciate because it is so diverse and so funny.

    It’s not one of the standard Rodgers and Hammerstein or Sondheim musicals that only theatre people really enjoy; you know, “theatre people love theatre people.” This isn’t that. I think that it’s sort of the musical for everyone. It’s “R” rated and that’s a fun, adult night out. But it’s not that cutesy, tap-dancing “Anything Goes” sort of feel that people always assume go hand in hand with musical theatre. I don’t personally feel that it’s “edgy” since it’s been around for a while.

    It’s worth taking a chance on because there are enough relatable things for people to connect with in this show. It’s not one of those “out there” musicals that’s sole purpose in existing is to offend people. I actually don’t think there’s anything in there that’s really designed specifically to offend anyone. Maybe “Children, Children.” At least that scene happens during an intense fog. There was actually zero fog the first two nights we opened, and I think the tech crew just decided “we’re going to hold the button until the place is smoked out” on the third performance, so there was a lot of fog by then.

    Paige, who plays Shelly, and I had actually both been saying “come on, guys, we’re both totally fine with this scene.” It’s supposed to be in shadow, or under a sheet, or in a tent or something. I mean, I can live with it being in the middle of the floor, but then we had no fog those first two nights. So after we mentioned it I think they went overboard, and we had so much fog, I couldn’t even see her face. That was definitely a compensation thing.

    I like all kinds of musical theatre. I will do Sweeney Todd, I will do Urinetown, and I will do Oklahoma!. I think that this is just one for everybody. I honestly think that even if you don’t go to see theatre, you will honestly love this show. Some musicals are honestly just torture if you don’t love musical theatre, but this is definitely an amazing piece to enjoy. There is a lot of humor in this show. It’s not just dark humor. There’s slapstick, and there’s physical comedy, there’s ad-libbed and improv-style comedy. There are great one-liners, and that Neil Simon style of ‘set up and deliver.’ There are a lot of styles of comedy in the show.

    This show is out of the ordinary for Colonial Players and has been described as a ‘risky show’ to put into the season, what are your thoughts on this?

    I think it’s great that Colonial Players is taking a risk on a show like this. They did do Annie, and I mean, you can pretty much do anything after you do Annie. But I think that this is a message, to Colonial Players first and then to other theatres in the area that this is musical is packing the house. We were sold out opening night and opening Saturday. It was pouring down raining on opening Sunday and we were still pretty full. We are sold out for a good portion of the run. And up until it opened it was talked about as the “huge risk” and there were concerns that it wasn’t going to draw the crowds. Now that it’s open and we’ve had huge audiences, I think that speaks pretty clearly about the show.

    It says that there is just as much of an audience for Bat Boy as there is for Annie at Colonial Players. I am against Annie? No. Absolutely not. But I want to see a season that has both Annie and Bat Boy in it; I’m seeing it right now. That gets everyone to the theatre. You can’t get much more diversity than that. I don’t want to see a season that is middle of the road all the way through and there is no way to get passion behind that sort of season. I think this season at Colonial Players is so driven, so passionate, and having Bat Boy as their second musical was such a smart choice.

    Bat Boy is often seen as a sacrifice type of show. If we do Bat Boy we have to do this, this, and this really ‘safe’ show to make up for it. And it’s really interesting because this show is really moving; it’s selling out despite being swept under a little bit. There are eight out of ten board members involved with this show somehow, and how successful this show has been, again, that really just speaks for itself that it was a good decision for this season and for this theatre.

    2014_03_bat_boy_showing

    Bat Boy: The Musical plays through April 19, 2014 at Colonial Players—The Colonial Players of Annapolis—108 East Street in Annapolis, MD. For tickets, call the box office at (410) 268-7373, or purchase them online.

    LINK

    Amanda Guntrher’s review of Bat Boy: The Musical on DCMetroTheaterArts.

  • ‘A Whole Lot of Night Music at the WATCH Awards’ by Heather Friedman

    When I was cast in The Arlington Players’ production of A Little Night Music last spring, I had been out of the DC theatre scene for so long that I had never experienced the WATCH Awards, and thus I was unfamiliar with the odd sensation of reviving a musical number from a show that closed many months earlier. So when I first learned that my entire cast would be performing at this year’s ceremony, I immediately thought of those recurring theatre anxiety dreams that I am sure my fellow performers understand all too well. You know, the ones in which you are inexplicably asked to reprise your role in some show you did back in high school, and just as you start to protest that you don’t exactly remember any of the lines and blocking, someone in the wings hands you a prop and shoves you onto the stage, assuring you that it will ‘all come back to you?’

    Madame Armfeldt (Jennifer Strand), reflects on her long line of lovers during 'Liaisons' with Fredrika (Camille McDermott). Photo courtesy of The Arlington Players.
    Madame Armfeldt (Jennifer Strand), reflects on her long line of lovers during ‘Liaisons’ with Fredrika (Camille McDermott). Photo courtesy of The Arlington Players.

    Well, I guess the good news is that it does come back to you, at least with a little script review and some brush-up rehearsals! And last night’s 13th Annual WATCH Awards ceremony at The Birchmere was certainly filled with rousing and memorable musical performances. My cast of A Little Night Music opened the awards show with the act one finale, “A Weekend in the Country,” and several hours later, we were rewarded with a thrilling win for Best Musical. Along the way, the audience was treated to four more tremendous performances from the other nominees in that category.

    First came the Port Tobacco Players’ enchanting Von Trapp family singing “Do Re Mi.” Decked out in their dirndls and lederhosen, the children executed both their music and choreography with admirable finesse. (Personally, I found myself marveling at the good fortune that Friedrich’s voice had not suffered the indignities of puberty since the show closed in December. His sweet soprano sounded very much intact!)

    Later in the evening, the Tantallon Community Players’ cast of The Color Purple performed that show’s title song, a soaring gospel number. The strong ensemble had a lush sound, and as Celie, Andrea Gerald’s fabulous voice was rivaled only by her radiant smile, both of which seemed to fill the room with Celie’s sunny optimism. It was a sublime moment.

    When Ryan Burke and Farrell Parker sang “Move On” from Kensington Arts Theatre’s Sunday in the Park with George, some of the emotional weight of the number may have understandably been lost when the nuanced characters of George and Dot were removed from the context of the show. Still, their performance showcased some lovely vocals that blended beautifully during the full, sustained harmonies, while echoing one another with quiet precision in the moments of counterpoint.

    Desiree ( Heather Friedman) and Fredrik (Brent Stone) confront their muddled pasts. Photo courtesy of The Arlington Players.
    Desiree ( Heather Friedman) and Fredrik (Brent Stone) confront their muddled pasts. Photo courtesy of The Arlington Players.

    The final performance of the night included the lead cast members of Dominion Stage’s Dreamgirls in the boisterous confrontation scene that leads into Effie’s inimitable “And I’m Telling You I’m Not Going.” It was a treat to hear some outstanding voices showcased during the group sequence, and when it came time for the showstopper, Shawnee Louise Coleman-Lining and her powerful instrument did not disappoint. She seemed to belt the lyrics straight from the core of her body, which certainly sold the song dramatically as well as musically.

    It will come as no surprise to musical theatre lovers that the shows of Stephen Sondheim were frequently at the top of the winners’ list last night. In addition to five wins for TAP’s A Little Night Music and three for KAT’s Sunday in the Park with George, the Little Theatre of Alexandria’s Sweeney Todd was also honored with a win for Jennifer Lyons Pagnard as Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical. Perhaps the highlight of all this Sondheim love was the tie for Outstanding Direction of a Musical between Sunday’s Craig Pettinati and Night Music’s Chris Dykton. That these veteran directors would share the glory of the win seemed a fitting outcome for two such strong shows that were both recognized in a variety of performance and technical achievement categories.

    In the category of unusual wins, Gayle Nichols-Grimes was the first nominee of the night who managed the neat trick of simultaneously winning and losing in the same category. She was awarded Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play for the role of Vernadette Simms in The Dixie Swim Club at Port City Playhouse, thereby defeating herself for her other nominated performance as Mattie Fae Aiken in Reston Community Players’ August Osage County. Although I am not familiar with either role, just the character names themselves conjure up a certain image – one that seemed well suited to the velvety smooth Southern drawl with which Gayle graciously accepted her award.

    This year's WATCH AWARDS winners.
    This year’s WATCH AWARDS winners.

    Soon thereafter, John-Michael d’Haviland upped the ante with a double loss to himself, as his award for Outstanding Music Direction of A Little Night Music beat out his other nominations for Dreamgirls and Spring Awakening at Dominion Stage. Certainly the odds were in his favor to win something with three out of five nominations in that category. Still, as JM quipped apologetically in his very brief acceptance speech, “I know. I’m sorry. I’m over me, too.”

    In addition to the Von Trapps, a few other moments of the night belonged to parents and children. Stephen Deininger, who won Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical for his turn as Tateh in Laurel Mill Playhouse’s Ragtime, spoke about the importance of family before bringing his daughter up to the podium for a shout-out to Mama. Later, the father/son duo of Chip and Jimmy Gertzog accepted their joint win for Outstanding Sound Design in a Play for Sideman at the Providence Players of Fairfax. Jimmy gushed with gratitude to his father and the production team for his first learning opportunity, while his dad returned the favor with a heartfelt “thanks to the kid.” Chip, clearly an experienced technician at PPF, also won for Outstanding Lighting Design and shared the award for Outstanding Set Design for the same show, as well as sharing Outstanding Set Decoration for You Can’t Take It With You. All told, PPF walked away with an impressive eight awards for technical achievement in a play, evenly split between those two shows.

    The biggest surprise of the evening was orchestrated by Fred Nelson, who served as an affable (if loquacious) Master of Ceremonies for the evening. Near the end of the night, he earned himself even more time in the spotlight when he won Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical for his turn as Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof at 2nd Star Productions. After promising the audience that his acceptance speech would be the most memorable of the evening, he pulled out a red velvet box and asked Sascha Anzano to marry him in front of 500 dropped jaws. (She said YES!!) It was a sweet moment, although when the ring came out and the house lights magically came up right on cue, one did have to wonder whether anyone involved had received advanced notice that this proposal opportunity would arise. I can only assume that, had the outcome of that award category been different, the groom-to-be simply would have found another moment to ask his all-important question. Theatre is important, of course, but we cannot have entire marriages becoming contingent upon the whim of the WATCH judges!

    I discovered last night that, unlike those pesky anxiety dreams, reviving a musical number for WATCH is hardly the same thing as a faithful reenactment of the original. Sadly, we were not wearing our fabulous “country white” costumes and turn-of-the-century wigs, and we weren’t standing in the breathtaking Kogod Cradle at Arena Stage with a 16-piece orchestra behind us. We were, in fact, crammed on a small carpeted stage with two hazardous podiums (podia?) trying to steal focus on stage right and left. Even so, for a few wonderful moments, my dear friends and I were a cast again, standing shoulder to shoulder and singing our hearts out, caught up in the delight of Sondheim’s glorious music, and grinning in spite of ourselves with that irrepressible joy that can only come from creating live theatre.

    Heather Friedman.
    Heather Friedman

    Heather Friedman began singing and performing in musical theatre more than 25 years ago. She was very active in the Virginia theatre scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s, during which time she met her husband Darrin – in a show, shockingly. First came love, then came marriage, then came the all-too-common “parenting sabbatical,” which took both of them out of the performance arena for almost a decade. In the past 12 months, Heather has returned to the stage with a vengeance in TAP’s A Little Night Music and Dominion’s Avenue Q … and already her eldest child has now caught the performing bug. Eventually she hopes to drag Darrin back to the stage so that they can found their own Von Friedman family singers (albeit with far fewer children than the Von Trapps). Before she began filling the dual roles of full-time parent and glamorous stage queen, Heather’s professional life used to involve editing health-related content for medical organizations. And one day, it will again.

  • Here are the Winners of the 13th Annual WATCH Awards

    Here are the winners of the The 13th Annual Washington Area Theatre Community Honors (THE WATCH AWARDS). There were 126 productions (43 musicals, 83 plays) that were adjudicated in 2012. Thirty-three community theater companies participated in WATCH adjudication.

    THE WINNERS HAVE AN * AND ARE BOLDED.

    And now for the WINNERS!!

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical 
    Bill Brown & Chad Wheeler – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    Matt Karner – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk & Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Russell Kopp – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    *John Merritt, Ryan Mudd, Ben Simpson – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play
    John Coscia – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    John Downing – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    *Raedun Knutsen & Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Jane B. Wingard – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical 
    Matt Karner & Joel Richon – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk & Kirk Noé – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Jim Korte & Bill Rippey – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    *Ryan Mudd – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Joe Stine & John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play 
    John Coscia – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    *John Downing – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Chip Gertzog et al – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Bernie Gmiter, Bob Schroth, Bill Glikbarg – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Timothy Hinton & David Johnson – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    John Merritt –  To Kill A Mockingbird – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical 
    *Nancy Daugherty et al – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Jill Hanger, Rhonna Johnson, Betsy Stevens – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Jane B. Wingard – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Jane B. Wingard – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play 
    Erin Cumbo et al – Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me – Port City Playhouse
    Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Mary Hutzler – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    *Jane B. Wingard – Bloody Murder – 2nd Star Productions
    Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Musical 
    Sheila Draper – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Lindsey Hays – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    *Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Maria Littlefield – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Play 
    *Lisa Church & Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Edd Miller – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Kathy White – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Dinnie Whitson, Cathy Farnsworth, Christine Whitson – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical
    Avery Burns – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Terri Fortney-Beinert – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Maria Littlefield – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    *Richard Perryman et al – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Joanne D. Wilson – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Properties in a Play 
    Emily Besuden, Jerry Gideon, Dick La Porte – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Mary Jo Ford & Alexandra Lee – August Osage County – Reston Community Theatre
    Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    *Susan Kaplan – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Robbie Snow et al – Sleuth – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Joanne D. Wilson – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Musical 
    *Kevin Boyce – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Garret R. Hyde – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Ben Levine – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    B. Keith Ryder – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Tommy Scott – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Play 
    Ken & Patti Crowley  – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Ken & Patti Crowley – Cantorial – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Frank Florentine & Shirley Panek – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    *Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Bob Zeigler – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical 
    Keith Bell – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    *Kevin Garrett – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Matt Rowe – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Gerhard Straub – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play 
    Chris Alpiar – Equus – Taking Flight Theatre Company
    Jamie Coupar – The Beauty Queen of Leenane – Silver Spring Stage
    *Jimmy Gertzog & Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Stan Harris – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Janice Rivera – Cantorial – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical 
    Pat Brennan – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Pat Brennan – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    *Eleanor Dicks – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Grant Kevin Lane – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Susan Noé & Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play
    Patricia Kratzer et al – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Jean Schlichting & Kit Sibley – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    *Robbie Snow – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Linda Swann – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions
    Beth Terranova – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Beth Terranova – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical 
    Heather Bauer & Kaitelyn Bauer – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Eric Jones – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    *Tim Kirk & Rebecca Carver – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Larissa Norris – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play
    Laurie T. Freed & Cast – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Beth Harrison – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    *Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Sheila Hyman & Shemika Berry – The Taming of the Shrew – Castaways Repertory Theatre
    Sue Pinkman – Lend Me A Tenor – Reston Community Players

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical 
    Shemika Berry – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Malca Giblin – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Malca Giblin – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    *Bette Williams – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play
    *Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Chanukan Jane Lilburne – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Robin Parker & Hannah Wolf – All the King’s Women – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Gina Quaye – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Arthur Rodger – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Bette Williams – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Special Effects
    John Decker & Kevin Boyce – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical Kensington Arts Theatre
    Chip GertzogYou Can’t Take It With YouProvidence Players of Fairfax
    Tim KirkInto the Woods Fauquier Community Theatre
    Keith Linville, Joe Stine, John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz Port Tobacco Players
    *Jordan Rose & Doe B. Kim – Sunday in the Park with GeorgeKensington Arts Theatre

    Nominations for outstanding performances by an actor or actress.

    Outstanding cameo in a musical (A TIE)
    Joseph Aquilina as “Kyle” – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    *Chrissy Barnett Miller as “Jolene Oakes” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels – Damascus Theatre Company
    Karen Batra as “Marge MacDougall” – Promises, PromisesThe Arlington Players
    Erica Drezek as “Berthe” – PippinGreenbelt Arts Center
    *Brenda Parker as “Church Soloist” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding cameo in a play
    Katherine Bisulca as “Sales Girl” – Red Scare on Sunset – Prince William Little Theatre
    Bob Burnett as “Beverly Carlton” – The Man Who Came to Dinner – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Carleigh Jones as “Doris” – The Hollow – Laurel Mill Playhouse
    Stuart Orloff as “Teen Charlie” – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Yvonne Paretzky as “Addie” – The Little Foxes – Rockville Little Theatre
    Shelley Rochester as “Mrs. Winsley” – Stop Kiss – Silver Spring Stage
    *Mark Yeager as “Beverly Weston” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players

    Outstanding featured actress in a musical
    *Annie Coffman as “Anne Egerman” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Amy Dolan as “The Mother Abbess” – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Annie Ermlick as “Sister Mary Amnesia” – Nunsense – The Alliance Theatre
    Shanice Jones as “Sofia” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Molly Hicks Larson as “Paulette Buonofuonte” – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    Anne Marie Pinto as “Petra” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding featured actor in a musical 
    *Stephen Deininger as “Tateh” – Ragtime – Laurel Mill Playhouse
    Michael J. Galizia as “Jud Fry” – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Production Malcolm Lee as “Jimmy Early” – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Gary Saddon as “Ali Hakim” – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Productions
    Stephen Yednock as “Nicely-Nicely Johnson” – Guys and Dolls – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding featured actress in a play
    Monica Garcia as “Mother McGee” – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Lorraine Magee as “Virginia” – Clean House – Elden Street Players
    Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Mattie Fae Aiken” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    *Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Vernadette Simms” – The Dixie Swim Club – Port City Playhouse
    Shelley Rochester as “Costanza” – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Lois A. Stanziani as “Helga ten Dorp” – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players

    Outstanding featured actor in a play
    Chuck Dluhy as “Roma” – Glengary Glen Ross – Elden Street Players
    Michael Kharfen as “Levene” – Glengary Glen Ross – Elden Street Players
    Stuart Rick as “Benjamin Hubbard” – The Little Foxes – Rockville Little Theatre
    *John Shackelford as “Max Levene” – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Kevin Wallace as “Victor Fleming” – Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding lead actress in a musical
    Madeline Botteri as “Monica” – Rooms, A Rock Romance – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Shawnee Louise Coleman-Lining as “Effie Melody White” – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Andrea Gerald as “Cellie” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    *Jennifer Lyons Pagnard as “Mrs. Lovett” – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Farrell Parker as “Dot/Marie” – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre

    Outstanding lead actor in a musical 
    Ryan Burke as “Georges/George” – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Eric Jones as “Ian” – Rooms, A Rock Romance – Kensington Arts Theatre
    *Fred Nelson as “Tevye” – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Gabriel T. Potter as “Freddy Benson” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels – Damascus Theatre Company
    Brent Stone as “Fredrik Egerman” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding lead actress in a play
    *Lolita-Marie as “May N’Kame” – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Heather Quinn as “Dr. Cora Gage” – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Lee Slivka as “Barbara Fordham” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Mary Suib as “Violet Weston” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Jo Sullivan as “Jennie Malone” – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding lead actor in a play
    Dann Alagna as “Zed” – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    *Matt Baughman as “Charlie Gordon” – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Phil Hosford as “Ralph Wantage” – Frozen – Rockville Little Theatre
    Sandy Irving as “Richard Nixon” – Frost/Nixon – Greenbelt Arts Center
    Ryan Manning as “Max Levene” – Lend Me A Tenor – Reston Community Players

    Nominations for outstanding achievement in overall production.

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography 
    Steve Lada – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Steve Lada – Equus – Taking Flight Theatre Company
    *Carl Brandt Long – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Carl Brandt Long – Man of La Mancha – McLean Community Players
    Kevin Robertson – The Taming of the Shrew – Castaways Repertory Theatre

    *Outstanding Choreography
    Richelle “Rikki” Howie – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    *Taurean Maray Barber – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Vincent Musgrave – A Chorus Line – Rockville Musical Theatre
    Corinne Shumaker – The Music Man – Fauquier Community Theatre

    Outstanding Music Direction
    LaVar Betts – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    *John-Michael d’Haviland – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    John-Michael d’Haviland – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    John-Michael d’Haviland – Spring Awakening – Dominion Stage
    David Rohde – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical 
    Brian Douglas – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    *Christopher Dykton – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    *Craig Petinatti – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Joshua Redford – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    Charla Rowe – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding Direction of a Play
    Gloria DuGan – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Jimmy Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Ron Giddings – Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    *Edd Miller – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Andrew JM Regiec – August Osage County – Reston Community Players

    Outstanding Musical
    *A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Play
    August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    *Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax

    WINS BY THEATRE

    2ND STAR PRODUCTIONS (2)

    Bloody Murder

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play, Jane B. Wingard.

    Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical, Fred Nelson as “Tevye.”

    THE ARLINGTON PLAYERS (5)

    A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical, Christopher Dykton.

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical, Annie Coffman as “Anne Egerman.”

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical, Bette Williams.

    Outstanding Music Direction, John-Michael d’Haviland.

    Outstanding Musical

    COLONIAL PLAYERS (3)

    Going to St. Ives

    Outstanding Direction of a Play, Edd Miller.

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play, Lolita-Marie as “May N’Kame.”

    Outstanding Play

    DAMASCUS THEATRE COMPANY (1)

    Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical, Chrissy Barnett Miller as “Jolene Oakes”

    ELDEN STREET PLAYERS (1)

    Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play, Matt Baughman as “Charlie Gordon”

    FAUQUIER COMMUNITY THEATRE (4)

    Into the Woods

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical, Tim Kirk

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical, Richard Perryman & Peter Fakoury

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical, Tim Kirk

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical, Nancy Daugherty

    KENSINGTON ARTS THEATRE (5)

    Night of the Living Dead, The Musical

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical, Kevin Boyce.

    Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical, Eleanor Dicks.

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical, Craig Pettinati.

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical, Kevin Garrett.

    Outstanding Special Effects, Jordan Rose & Doe B. Kim.

    LAUREL MILL PLAYHOUSE (1)

    Ragtime

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical, Stephen Deininger as “Tateh.”

    THE LITTLE THEATRE OF ALEXANDRIA (3)

    Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, John Shackelford as “Max Levene.”

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play, John Downing.

    Sweeney Todd

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical, Jennifer Lyons Pagnard as “Mrs. Lovett.”

    MCLEAN COMMUNITY PLAYERS (1)

    Deathtrap

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography, Carl Brandt Long.

    PORT CITY PLAYHOUSE (1)

    The Dixie Swim Club

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Vernadette Simms.”

    PORT TOBACCO PLAYERS (2)

    The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical, Ryan Mudd.

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical, John Merritt, Ryan Mudd, and Ben Simpson.

    PROVIDENCE PLAYERS (8)

    Side Man

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play, Chip Gertzog.

    Outstanding Properties in a Play, Susan Kaplan.

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play, Raedun Knutsen and Chip Gertzog.

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play, Jimmy Gertzog and Chip Gertzog.

    You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play, Robbie Snow.

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play, Beth Harrison.

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play, Beth Harrison.

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play, Lisa Church and Chip Gertzog.

    RESTON COMMUNITY PLAYERS (1)

    August Osage County

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play, Mark Yeager as “Beverly Weston.”

    TANTALLON COMMUNITY THEATRE (2)

    The Color Purple

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical, Brenda Parker as “Church Soloist.”

    Outstanding Choreography, Taurean Maray Barber.

  • WATCH AWARDS Winners Are Being Announced Birchmere

    We are updating the winners so check back after 7:30 PM.

    Here are the winners of the The 12th Annual Washington Area Theatre Community Honors‘ (THE WATCH AWARDS) being awarded tonight at The Birchmere in Alexandria, VA. There were 126 productions (43 musicals, 83 plays) that were adjudicated in 2012. Thirty-three community theater companies participated in WATCH adjudication.

    And now for the NOMINATIONS:

    watch awards 2012

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical (5)
    Bill Brown & Chad Wheeler – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    Matt Karner – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk & Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Russell Kopp – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    John Merritt, Ryan Mudd, Ben Simpson – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play (5)
    John Coscia – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    John Downing – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Raedun Knutsen & Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Jane B. Wingard – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical (5)
    Matt Karner & Joel Richon – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk & Kirk Noé – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Jim Korte & Bill Rippey – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    Ryan Mudd – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Joe Stine & John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play (7)
    John Coscia – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    John Downing – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Chip Gertzog et al – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Bernie Gmiter, Bob Schroth, Bill Glikbarg – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Timothy Hinton & David Johnson – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    John Merritt –  To Kill A Mockingbird – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical (5)
    Nancy Daugherty et al – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Jill Hanger, Rhonna Johnson, Betsy Stevens – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Jane B. Wingard – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Jane B. Wingard – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play (5)
    Erin Cumbo et al – Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me – Port City Playhouse
    Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Mary Hutzler – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Jane B. Wingard – Bloody Murder – 2nd Star Productions
    Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Musical (5)
    Sheila Draper – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Lindsey Hays – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Maria Littlefield – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Play (5)
    Lisa Church & Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Edd Miller – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Kathy White – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Dinnie Whitson, Cathy Farnsworth, Christine Whitson – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical (5)
    Avery Burns – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Terri Fortney-Beinert – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Maria Littlefield – Meet Me in St. Louis – Damascus Theatre Company
    Richard Perryman et al – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Joanne D. Wilson – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Properties in a Play (6)
    Emily Besuden, Jerry Gideon, Dick La Porte – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Mary Jo Ford & Alexandra Lee – August Osage County – Reston Community Theatre
    Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Susan Kaplan – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Robbie Snow et al – Sleuth – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Joanne D. Wilson – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Musical (6)
    Kevin Boyce – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Garret R. Hyde – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Ben Levine – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    B. Keith Ryder – A Little Night Music – Arlington Players
    Tommy Scott – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Play (5)
    Ken & Patti Crowley  – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Ken & Patti Crowley – Cantorial – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Frank Florentine & Shirley Panek – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Bob Zeigler – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical (5)
    Keith Bell – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Kevin Garrett – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Matt Rowe – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Gerhard Straub – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play (5)
    Chris Alpiar – Equus – Taking Flight Theatre Company
    Jamie Coupar – The Beauty Queen of Leenane – Silver Spring Stage
    Jimmy Gertzog & Chip Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Stan Harris – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Janice Rivera – Cantorial – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical (5)
    Pat Brennan – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Pat Brennan – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Eleanor Dicks – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Grant Kevin Lane – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Susan Noé & Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play (6)
    Patricia Kratzer et al – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Jean Schlichting & Kit Sibley – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Robbie Snow – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Linda Swann – The Lion in Winter – 2nd Star Productions
    Beth Terranova – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Beth Terranova – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical (5)
    Heather Bauer & Kaitelyn Bauer – The Wizard of Oz – Port Tobacco Players
    Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Eric Jones – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Tim Kirk & Rebecca Carver – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Larissa Norris – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play (5)
    Laurie T. Freed & Cast – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Beth Harrison – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Sheila Hyman & Shemika Berry – The Taming of the Shrew – Castaways Repertory Theatre
    Sue Pinkman – Lend Me A Tenor – Reston Community Players

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical (5)
    Shemika Berry – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Malca Giblin – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Malca Giblin – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Bette Williams – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play (6)
    Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take It With You – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Chanukan Jane Lilburne – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Robin Parker & Hannah Wolf – All the King’s Women – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Gina Quaye – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Arthur Rodger – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Bette Williams – Witness for the Prosecution – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Special Effects (5)

    John Decker & Kevin Boyce – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical Kensington Arts Theatre
    Chip GertzogYou Can’t Take It With YouProvidence Players of Fairfax
    Tim KirkInto the Woods Fauquier Community Theatre
    Keith Linville, Joe Stine, John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz Port Tobacco Players
    J
    ordan Rose & Doe B. Kim – Sunday in the Park with GeorgeKensington Arts Theatre

    Nominations for outstanding performances by an actor or actress.

    Outstanding cameo in a musical (5)
    Joseph Aquilina as “Kyle” – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    Chrissy Barnett Miller as “Jolene Oakes” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels – Damascus Theatre Company
    Karen Batra as “Marge MacDougall” – Promises, PromisesThe Arlington Players
    Erica Drezek as “Berthe” – PippinGreenbelt Arts Center
    Brenda Parker as “Church Soloist” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding cameo in a play (7)
    Katherine Bisulca as “Sales Girl” – Red Scare on Sunset – Prince William Little Theatre
    Bob Burnett as “Beverly Carlton” – The Man Who Came to Dinner – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Carleigh Jones as “Doris” – The Hollow – Laurel Mill Playhouse
    Stuart Orloff as “Teen Charlie” – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Yvonne Paretzky as “Addie” – The Little Foxes – Rockville Little Theatre
    Shelley Rochester as “Mrs. Winsley” – Stop Kiss – Silver Spring Stage
    Mark Yeager as “Beverly Weston” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players

    Outstanding featured actress in a musical (6)
    Annie Coffman as “Anne Egerman” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Amy Dolan as “The Mother Abbess” – The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players
    Annie Ermlick as “Sister Mary Amnesia” – Nunsense – The Alliance Theatre
    Shanice Jones as “Sofia” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Molly Hicks Larson as “Paulette Buonofuonte” – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    Anne Marie Pinto as “Petra” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding featured actor in a musical (5)
    Stephen Deininger as “Tateh” – Ragtime – Laurel Mill Playhouse
    Michael J. Galizia as “Jud Fry” – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Production Malcolm Lee as “Jimmy Early” – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Gary Saddon as “Ali Hakim” – Oklahoma – 2nd Star Productions
    Stephen Yednock as “Nicely-Nicely Johnson” – Guys and Dolls – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding featured actress in a play (6)
    Monica Garcia as “Mother McGee” – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Lorraine Magee as “Virginia” – Clean House – Elden Street Players
    Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Mattie Fae Aiken” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Vernadette Simms” – The Dixie Swim Club – Port City Playhouse
    Shelley Rochester as “Costanza” – Enchanted April – Silver Spring Stage
    Lois A. Stanziani as “Helga ten Dorp” – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players

    Outstanding featured actor in a play (5)
    Chuck Dluhy as “Roma” – Glengary Glen Ross – Elden Street Players
    Michael Kharfen as “Levene” – Glengary Glen Ross – Elden Street Players
    Stuart Rick as “Benjamin Hubbard” – The Little Foxes – Rockville Little Theatre
    John Shackelford as “Max Levene” – Heaven Can Wait – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Kevin Wallace as “Victor Fleming” – Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding lead actress in a musical (5)
    Madeline Botteri as “Monica” – Rooms, A Rock Romance – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Shawnee Louise Coleman-Lining as “Effie Melody White” – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Andrea Gerald as “Cellie” – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Jennifer Lyons Pagnard as “Mrs. Lovett” – Sweeney Todd – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    Farrell Parker as “Dot/Marie” – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre

    Outstanding lead actor in a musical (5)
    Ryan Burke as “Georges/George” – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Eric Jones as “Ian” – Rooms, A Rock Romance – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Fred Nelson as “Tevye” – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Gabriel T. Potter as “Freddy Benson” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels – Damascus Theatre Company
    Brent Stone as “Fredrik Egerman” – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players

    Outstanding lead actress in a play (5)
    Lolita-Marie as “May N’Kame” – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Heather Quinn as “Dr. Cora Gage” – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Lee Slivka as “Barbara Fordham” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Mary Suib as “Violet Weston” – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Jo Sullivan as “Jennie Malone” – Chapter Two – Colonial Players of Annapolis

    Outstanding lead actor in a play (5)
    Dann Alagna as “Zed” – Cinderella Waltz – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Matt Baughman as “Charlie Gordon” – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Phil Hosford as “Ralph Wantage” – Frozen – Rockville Little Theatre
    Sandy Irving as “Richard Nixon” – Frost/Nixon – Greenbelt Arts Center
    Ryan Manning as “Max Levene” – Lend Me A Tenor – Reston Community Players

    Nominations for outstanding achievement in overall production.

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography (5)
    Steve Lada – August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Steve Lada – Equus – Taking Flight Theatre Company
    Carl Brandt Long – Deathtrap – McLean Community Players
    Carl Brandt Long – Man of La Mancha – McLean Community Players
    Kevin Robertson – The Taming of the Shrew – Castaways Repertory Theatre

    Outstanding Choreography (5)
    Richelle “Rikki” Howie – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    Martha Lynch – Into the Woods – Fauquier Community Theatre
    Taurean Maray Barber – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    Vincent Musgrave – A Chorus Line – Rockville Musical Theatre
    Corinne Shumaker – The Music Man – Fauquier Community Theatre

    Outstanding Music Direction (5)
    LaVar Betts – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    John-Michael d’Haviland – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    John-Michael d’Haviland – Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage
    John-Michael d’Haviland – Spring Awakening – Dominion Stage
    David Rohde – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical (5)
    Brian Douglas – Fiddler on the Roof – 2nd Star Productions
    Christopher Dykton – A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Craig Petinatti – Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    Joshua Redford – Legally Blonde – Reston Community Players
    Charla Rowe – The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players

    Outstanding Direction of a Play (5)
    Gloria DuGan – Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Jimmy Gertzog – Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax
    Ron Giddings – Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Edd Miller – Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Andrew JM Regiec – August Osage County – Reston Community Players<

    Outstanding Musical (5)
    A Little Night Music – The Arlington Players
    Dreamgirls – Dominion Stage<
    Sunday in the Park with George – Kensington Arts Theatre
    The Color Purple – Tantallon Community Players
    The Sound of Music – Port Tobacco Players

    Outstanding Play (5)
    August Osage County – Reston Community Players
    Flowers for Algernon – Elden Street Players
    Going to St. Ives – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Moonlight and Magnolias – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    Side Man – Providence Players of Fairfax

    NOMINATIONS BY THEATRE

    2ND STAR PRODUCTION (14)
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Jane B. Wingard – Bloody Murder

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Brian Douglas – Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Fred Nelson as “Tevye” – Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Garret R. Hyde – Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Joanne D. Wilson – Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard – Fiddler on the Roof

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Michael J. Galizia as “Jud Fry” – Oklahoma

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Gary Saddon as “Ali Hakim” – Oklahoma

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard – Oklahoma

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Linda Swann – The Lion in Winter

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Joanne D. Wilson – The Lion in Winter

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – Jane B. Wingard – The Lion in Winter

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Jane B. Wingard et al – The Lion in Winter

     ALLIANCE THEATRE (1)
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Annie Ermlick as “Sister Mary Amnesia” – Nunsense

    ARLINGTON PLAYERS (14)
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Grant Kevin Lane – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Christopher Dykton – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Annie Coffman as “Anne Egerman” – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Anne Marie Pinto as “Petra” – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Bette Williams – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Brent Stone as “Fredrik Egerman” – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – B. Keith Ryder – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Music Direction  – John-Michael d’Haviland – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Musical  – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Avery Burns – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Lindsey Hays – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Russell Kopp  – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Keith Bell – A Little Night Music

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Karen Batra as “Marge MacDougall” – Promises, Promises

    CASTAWAYS REPERTORY THEATRE (2)
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Sheila Hyman & Shemika Berry – The Taming of the Shrew

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Kevin Robertson – The Taming of the Shrew

     COLONIAL PLAYERS (15)
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Jo Sullivan as “Jennie Malone” – Chapter Two

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Frank Florentine & Shirley Panek – Chapter Two

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Edd Miller – Chapter Two

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Beth Terranova – Cinderella Waltz

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Monica Garcia as “Mother McGee”

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Dann Alagna as “Zed” – Cinderella Waltz

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Beth Terranova – Going to St. Ives

    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Edd Miller – Going to St. Ives

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Gina Quaye  – Going to St. Ives

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Lolita-Marie as “May N’Kame”

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Heather Quinn as “Dr. Cora Gage”

    Outstanding Play – Going to St. Ives

    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Ron Giddings – Moonlight and Magnolias

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Kevin Wallace as “Victor Fleming”

    Outstanding Play – Moonlight and Magnolias

    DAMASCUS THEATRE COMPANY (6)
    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Chrissy Barnett Miller as “Jolene Oakes” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Gabriel T. Potter as “Freddy Benson” – Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Maria Littlefield  – Meet Me in St. Louis

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Jim Korte & Bill Rippey – Meet Me in St. Louis

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Maria Littlefield  – Meet Me in St. Louis

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Bill Brown & Chad Wheeler  – Meet Me in St. Louis

    DOMINION STAGE (8)
    Outstanding Choreography – Richelle “Rikki” Howie – Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Malcolm Lee as “Jimmy Early”- Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Malca Giblin – Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Shawnee Louise Coleman-Lining as “Effie Melody White” – Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Larissa Norris – Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Music Direction  – John-Michael d’Haviland  – Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Musical –  Dreamgirls

    Outstanding Music Direction  – John-Michael d’Haviland  – Spring Awakening

    ELDEN STREET PLAYERS (10)
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Lorraine Magee as “Virginia” – Clean House

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Stuart Orloff as “Teen Charlie” – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Gloria DuGan – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Arthur Rodger – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Matt Baughman as “Charlie Gordon” – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Play – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Stan Harris – Flowers for Algernon

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Chuck Dluhy as “Roma” – Glengary Glen Ross

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Michael Kharfen as “Levene” – Glengary Glen Ross

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – James Villarubia  – Rooms, A Rock Romance

    FAUQUIER COMMUNITY THEATRE (13)
    Outstanding Choreography – Martha Lynch – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Susan Noe & Martha Lynch  – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Tim Kirk – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Tim Kirk & Rebecca Carver

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Richard Perryman et al – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Tim Kirk & Kirk Noe – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Tim Kirk – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Tim Kirk & Martha Lynch – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Nancy Daugherty et al – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Tim Kirk – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Special Effects – Tim Kirk – Into the Woods

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Bob Burnett as “Beverly Carlton” – The Man Who Came to Dinner

    Outstanding Choreography – Corinne Shumaker – The Music Man

    GREENBELT ARTS CENTER (2)

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Sandy Irving as “Richard Nixon” – Frost/Nixon<

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Erica Drezek as “Berthe” – Pippin

    KENSINGTON ARTS THEATRE (18)
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Kevin Boyce – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Matt Rowe – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical

    Outstanding Special Effects – John Decker & Kevin Boyce  – Night of the Living Dead, The Musical

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Eric Jones as “Ian” – Rooms, A Rock Romance

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Madeline Botteri as “Monica” – Rooms, A Rock Romance

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Eleanor Dicks – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Craig Pettinati – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Malca Giblin – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Ryan Burke as “Georges/George” – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Farrell Parker as “Dot/Marie” – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Ben Levine – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Eric Jones – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Music Direction – David Rohde – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Musical – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Matt Karner & Joel Richon – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Matt Karner – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Kevin Garrett – Sunday in the Park with George

    Outstanding Special Effects – Jordan Rose & Doe B. Kim – Sunday in the Park with George

    LAUREL MILL PLAYHOUSE (2)
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Stephen Deininger as “Tateh” – Ragtime

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Carleigh Jones as “Doris” – The Hollow

    LITTLE THEATRE OF ALEXANDRIA (15)
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Robin Parker & Hannah Wolf – All the King’s Women

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Ken & Patti Crowley – Cantorial

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Janice Rivera – Cantorial

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Jean Schlichting & Kit Sibley – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – John Shackelford as “Max Levene” – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Chanukan Jane Lilburne – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Downing – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Downing – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Mary Hutzler – Heaven Can Wait

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Jennifer Lyons Pagnard as “Mrs. Lovett” – Sweeney Todd

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Kristina Friedgen – Sweeney Todd

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Bette Williams – Witness for the Prosecution

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Downing – Witness for the Prosecution

    MCLEAN COMMUNITY PLAYERS (7)
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Lois A. Stanziani as “Helga ten Dorp” – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Bob Zeigler – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Emily Besuden, Jerry Gideon, Dick La Porte – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Bernie Gmiter, Bob Schroth, Bill Glikbarg  – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Dinnie Whitson, Cathy Farnsworth, Christine Whitson – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Carl Brandt Long – Deathtrap

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Carl Brandt Long – Man of La Mancha

    PORT CITY PLAYHOUSE (2)
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Erin Cumbo et al – Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Vernadette Simms” – The Dixie Swim Club

    PORT TOBACCO PLAYERS (17)
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Pat Brennan – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Amy Dolan as “The Mother Abbess” – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Tommy Scott – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Musical – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Terri Fortney-Beinert – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Ryan Mudd – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Sheila Draper – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – John Merritt, Ryan Mudd, Ben Simpson – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Jill Hanger, Rhonna Johnson, Betsy Stevens – The Sound of Music

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Pat Brennan – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Heather Bauer & Kaitelyn Bauer – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Joe Stine & John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Ronna Johnson – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Gerhard Straub – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Special Effects – Keith Linville, Joe Stine, John Merritt – The Wizard of Oz

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Merritt – To Kill A Mockingbird

    PRINCE WILLIAM LITTLE THEATRE (1)
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Katherine Bisulca as “Sales Girl” – Red Scare on Sunset

    PROVIDENCE PLAYERS (19)
    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Jimmy Gertzog – Side Man

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Chip Gertzog – Side Man

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Beth Harrison – Side Man

    Outstanding Play – Side Man

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Susan Kaplan – Side Man

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Chip Gertzog et al – Side Man

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Kathy White – Side Man

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – Raedun Knutsen & Chip Gertzog  – Side Man

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Chip Gertzog – Side Man

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Jimmy Gertzog & Chip Gertzog – Side Man

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Robbie Snow et al – Sleuth

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Robbie Snow – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Beth Harrison – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Coscia – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Lisa Church & Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Coscia – You Can’t Take it With You

    Outstanding Special Effects – Chip Gertzog – You Can’t Take it With You

    RESTON COMMUNITY PLAYERS (15)
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Mark Yeager as “Beverly Weston” – August Osage County

    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Andrew JM Regiec – August Osage County

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Gayle Nichols-Grimes as “Mattie Fae Aiken” – August Osage County

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Lee Slivka as “Barbara Fordham” – August Osage County

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Mary Suib as “Violet Weston” – August Osage County

    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Ken & Patti Crowley – August Osage County

    Outstanding Play – August Osage County

    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Mary Jo Ford & Alexandra lee – August Osage County

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Timothy Hinton & David Johnson  – August Osage County

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Steve Lada – August Osage County

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Joseph Aquilina as “Kyle” – Legally Blonde

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Joshua Redford  – Legally Blonde

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Molly Hicks Larson as “Paulette Buonofuonte” – Legally Blonde

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Ryan Manning as “Max Levene” – Lend Me A Tenor

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Sue Pinkman – Lend Me A Tenor

    ROCKVILLE LITTLE THEATRE (3)
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Phil Hosford as “Ralph Wantage” – Frozen

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Yvonne Paretzky as “Addie” – The Little Foxes

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Stuart Rick as “Benjamin Hubbard” – The Little Foxes

    ROCKVILLE MUSICAL THEATRE (1)
    Outstanding Choreography – Vincent Musgrave – A Chorus Line

    SILVER SPRING STAGE (5)
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Jamie Coupar – Beauty Queen of Leenane

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Patricia Kratzer et al – Enchanted April

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Shelley Rochester as “Costanza” – Enchanted April

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Laurie T. Freed & Cast – Enchanted
    April

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Shelley Rochester as “Mrs. Winsley” – Stop Kiss

    TAKING FLIGHT THEATRE COMPANY (2)
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Chris Alpiar – Equus

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Steve Lada  – Equus

    TANTALLON COMMUNITY THEATRE (9)
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Stephen Yednock as “Nicely-Nicely Johnson” – Guys and Dolls

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Brenda Parker as “Church Soloist” – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Choreography  – Taurean Maray Barber – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Charla Rowe – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Shanice Jones as “Sofia” – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Shemika Berry – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Andrea Gerald as “Cellie” – The Color Purple

    Outstanding Music Direction – LaVar Betts – The Color PurpleOutstanding Musical  – The Color Purple