Tag: The Most Happy Fella

  • Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at Catholic University: Part 5: Bobby Cook Gallagher

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at Catholic University: Part 5: Bobby Cook Gallagher

    In Part 4 of a series of interviews with the cast of Catholic University’s The Most Happy Fella, meet Bobby Cook Gallagher.

    Joel: Introduce yourself to our readers and tell them where they may have seen you perform on the stage or in other local venues.

     Bobby Cook Gallagher.
    Bobby Cook Gallagher.

    Bobby: My name is Bobby Cook Gallagher and I am a graduating senior at CUA! Currently, I am on tour with the National Broadway Chorus. This summer I worked at Imagination Stage as the understudy for Arnold in Double Trouble and I was in the Overtures 2015 program at Signature Theatre

    Why did you want to be in The Most Happy Fella at CUA? What did you sing at your audition?

    I wanted to be in the Most Happy Fella because the characters have so many dimensions that we see over the course of the story. I sang “Asking for You” from DO RE MI as my audition piece

    Who do you play in The Most Happy Fella and how do you relate to him or her? What do you admire about your character and what do you not admire?

    I am Pasquale. I am the head chef of Tony’s vineyard. I relate to Pasquale’s natural tendencies for creating a spectacle while maintaining an honest and caring connection with those around him. I admire his extremely refined ability to control his surroundings. I don’t admire how he is a narrow-minded person.

    Which character that you are not playing is most like you and how and why?

    Definitely Rosabella. She desires real relationships and wants more from her surroundings. She is not a pushover and is willing to risk anything to find real happiness and love. I relate to her desire for honesty and her drive to get what she wants. Also, she is extremely adaptable.

    How would you describe the score that Frank Loesser has written for this show?

    It is a very demanding score. I’ve never been in a show that has as many different thematic motifs and styles such as the Most Happy Fella. Lesser takes influences from Classical genres as well as western and European styles of composition. This score will keep you on your feet with all of its complex textures and layers. It’s a vocal workout for sure.

    What is your favorite song that you are not performing?

    “Big D.” It’s a full-out hoedown and the energy is limitless with everyone’s performance! I can’t watch that number without a huge grin on my face. Pasquale is preparing more food for party and isn’t in this scene.

    What have been the challenges you have encountered while preparing for your role and how were those challenges overcome?

    My biggest challenge was efficiently combining the physical and vocal demands of this role. Pasquale’s part rests on high G’s and A’s for roughly 90% of the show. That’s pretty intense considering the length of this show. On top of being in the upper register of my voice, Pasquale is an extremely physical person. I had to pace myself during the rehearsal process because I am literally singing High A’s while simultaneously doing classical ballet, holding a bouquet of flowers, holding a wheel of cheese, and while throwing pies across the stage. It’s a blast!

    Marc Pavan, Bobby Cook Gallagher, and Kenneth Lautz. Photo by Daniel Weaver.
    Marc Pavan, Bobby Cook Gallagher, and Kenneth Lautz. Photo by Daniel Weaver.

    How would you describe Pauline Grossman’s choreography and which song’s choreography is your favorite, and which was the hardest to learn?

    Pauline Grossman’s choreography focuses on the story of the music. Her choreography is physically demanding and integrates high level choreography into each piece. Pauline’s choreography in “Sposalizio” is my favorite. The hardest piece I learned was her choreography for Abbodanza, our first trio.

    What are your solos in the show and what do we learn about your character when you sing them?

    Pasquale and my two right hand chefs Giuseppe and Ciccio have two trios, “Abbodanza” and “Benvenuto,” and a reprise of “Abbodanza” towards the end of the show. We learn that these guys know how put on a show and throw a HUGE party. They care deeply about the happiness of others and show their love through food and wine with a lot of flare and class!

    What does The Most Happy Fella have to say today’s theatergoer and what themes from the show are still relevant today?

    I’d say the theme of finding true happiness through adversity and struggles is extremely relevant in todays’ society.

    What have you learned about yourself – the actor and singer – during this whole process?

    I really stretched myself vocally with this role and it has been insanely rewarding. Pasquale has been such a joy to explore and I have grown immensely as a performer, in all areas. 

    Why do you think The Most Happy Fella is a ‘hidden treasure’ of musical theater history and why should more theater companies mount productions of it.

    I think it’s a hidden treasure because of the heartwarming story arch that focuses on the core of what makes people happy. I think more theatres should do this show because it has something for everyone to identify with and love.

    What advice would you give another actor who is preparing to play your role in another production of The Most Happy Fella?

    With the over-the-top nature of Pasquale’s songs and story, it is easy to make flashy choices for the sole purpose of being flashy and hyper dramatic. Every single movement and moment is rooted in honesty. Try to find a balance between the extravagance of this character and the honest connection to the people and story of this show.

    What do you want audiences to take with them after seeing The Most Happy Fella and your performance?

    Life rarely goes according to plan. You have to take risks and adapt to your situation while pursuing your hopes and aspirations. Love and true happiness come when you least expect it. And finally, an open mind and heart will take you on a journey you’ll never forget!

    bb-ax-Happy-FellaThe Most Happy Fella plays from October 23-25, 2015 at the Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, purchase them at the box office or online.

    LINKS:
    Chuck Leonard’s review of The Most Happy Fella on DCMetroTheaterArts.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 3: Drew Stairs.

    Meet the Cast of ‘Carousel’ at Catholic University: Part 4: Meet Harrison Smith.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at Catholic University: Part 5: Bobby Cook Gallagher.

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre.

  • Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 4: Harrison Smith

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 4: Harrison Smith

    In Part 4 of a series of interviews with the cast of Catholic University’s The Most Happy Fella, meet Harrison Smith.

    Harrison Smith.

    Joel: Introduce yourself to our readers and tell them where they may have seen you perform on the stage or in other local venues.

    Hi. I’m Harrison Smith. Recently, readers may have seen me in Dogfight at The Keegan Theatre, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at MCSDT, and Unlimited: The Music and Lyrics of Stephen Schwartz here at CUA, or at La-Ti-Do.

    Why did you want to be in The Most Happy Fella  at CUA? What did you sing at your audition?

    The Most Happy Fella is a big, classic, beautiful show with music far ahead of it’s time. I am always looking to take on shows and roles that really stretch me. After hearing the show was a three hour musical-operetta hybrid with huge dance numbers and lots of different musical styles, I was interested in the challenge. I sang “Oh’ What a Beautiful Mornin” from Oklahoma! at my audition.

    Who do you play in The Most Happy Fella and how do you relate to him? What do you admire about your character and what do you not admire?

    I play Herman, who in a lot of ways I see as Frank Loesser’s warm up to writing Finch in How to Succeed. He possesses a lot of the same determination and charm as Finch does but with a much more carefree attitude. I can’t help but admire a character that is just so inherently good natured towards everybody and everything he does. This did prove to be frustrating in the room when trying to justify everyone pushing this great, sweet guy around for no reason.

    How would you describe the score that Frank Loesser has written for this show?

    Expansive, maybe? It’s almost 400 pages on paper and he wrote all of it. Every single thing people will hear when they see the show is Frank’s. The score, the book, the orchestrations, it’s all him. There are so many styles in the show: opera, classical musical theater, barbershop quartet, Western influence, and of course, Italian influence.

    What is your favorite song that you are not performing and why?

    I love “The Most Happy Fella.” It’s my favorite staging in the show, the ensemble is having the best time in the world, it sounds amazing, it’s a fun fun song, and it’s the first appearance of our amazing Tony.

    What have been the challenges you have encountered while preparing for your role and how were those challenges overcome?

    It was challenging in lots of ways. First, the role requires a fair amount of dancing which is a challenge, I haven’t really been faced with yet. Our choreography team was amazing with me in the process so that made that challenge less. The role is also very vocally demanding. Herman is one of the few roles in the show written to be sung in several different styles. It took a bit of time to figure out where all the songs would live stylistically and how I was going to sing through this massive score. Tom Pedersen, our music director and my voice teacher, helped me greatly. Listening to other Loesser shows to figure out how people take on his complex melodies and rangy vocals was also very helpful.

    How would you describe Pauline Grossman’s choreography and which song’s choreography is your favorite, and which was the hardest to learn?

    Pauline has such a love and knowledge for a lot of Frank Loesser’s work and the “musical gifts” he has left us in the score that it had made her choreography feel very natural. I love the choreography in “Big D” the most. The dance break in the song is wild with the style shifting between western, jazz, and ragtime. I just love the way it builds and involves so many different styles. It was also probably the hardest of the dances for me to learn.

    What are your solos in the show and what do we learn about your character when you sing them?

    Most of my solo songs are songs that more so than most of the characters in the show really sum up who Herman is. You learn about his favorite activity “Standing on the Corner,” where he is from and the sense of pride he has for his home “Big D,” and he sums up his general easy going philosophy on life in “I Like Everybody.” Loesser’s writing of these songs made my job as the actor incredibly simple as he gives you everything you need in the text. (I also have another solo at the end of the show but the title would spoil it.)

    What does The Most Happy Fella have to say to today’s theatergoers and what themes from the show are still relevant today?

    It’s a show about love. It has a lot to say for almost every aspect and consequence of love. Joey and Rosabella represent lust, Herman and Cleo represent fresh love, and Tony and Rosabella represent a nurturing developed love for each other as man and wife. It’s a show about overlooking the obvious faults in people and diving deeper past the shell to find the heart of a person. I think anyone could use that from their theater right now.

    Harrison Smith (Herman) and Mackenzie Newbury (Cleo) in 'The Most Happy Fella.' Photo by Daniel Weaver
    Harrison Smith (Herman) and Mackenzie Newbury (Cleo) in ‘The Most Happy Fella.’ Photo by Daniel Weaver

    What have you learned about yourself – the actor and singer- during this whole process?

    I’ve just learned to keep going. Putting up a show like this in 4 weeks is something that I love about the training here at Catholic. We are thrown into high octane environments with limited rehearsal time, difficult material, and on top of that a full course load. It really conditions you to learning shows quickly and making choices in the room quickly no matter if they remain in the final product of not.  It’s has been great preparation for the fast rehearsal process of professional theater. I also love getting to stretch myself vocally. I love that while typically I have done more contemporary shows in my life, CUA has allowed and trained me to be ready and able to jump into rehearsals for a massive 1956 three hour musical-opera less than a week after closing a 2012 Pasek and Paul show. It’s just something I find really unique about the training here is that we can take classes like classical choral singing as well as a pop and rock workshop. It allows us to do a Schwartz review in the same calendar year as this….and it’s pulled off beautifully.

    What advice would you give another actor who is preparing to play your role in another production of The Most Happy Fella?

    Rest and drink water like crazy. The role is so vocally demanding and you are moving so much that you will dry out really fast. Herman is a great guy, but he’s my no means a loser. I’ve seen a lot of productions where he’s often played as a loser but don’t feel restricted to that. He’s gotta get this girl to fall for him somehow.

    What do you want audiences to take with them after seeing The Most Happy Fella and your performance?

    I want people to leave with their heart so full of us!

    bb-ax-Happy-FellaThe Most Happy Fella plays from October 23-25, 2015 at the Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, purchase them at the box office or online.

    LINKS:

    Chuck Leonard’s review of The Most Happy Fella on DCMetroTheaterArts.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 3: Drew Stairs.

    Meet the Cast of ‘Carousel’ at Catholic University: Part 4: Meet Harrison Smith.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at Catholic University: Part 5: Bobby Cook Gallagher.

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre.

  • ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University

    Be ready for a big production when you see The Most Happy Fella at The Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre. A 27-piece orchestra, lavish staging, more than 30 actors, gorgeous singing, and delightful dance numbers are part of a three act show that runs close to 3 hours. The show has a little dialogue and a lot of music, some of which is in the style of show tunes and some distinctly more operatic. All of it is sung beautifully and when sound levels were adjusted after the first act, the audience was treated to standout performances.

    A story of a mail-order bride set in 1927 may seem out of date, but there are similarities to modern searching-for-love options, such as online dating. Both serve as means for singles to find someone who fill their perceived need for an intimate life partner. Frank Loesser, who also composed the musical Guys and Dolls, sets the majority of the story in a Napa Valley winery owned by sweet, but aging, Tony Esposito.

    “Happy To Make Your Aquaintance” was my favorite romantic song by the leads, Emma Nadine Onasch as Rosabella and Gustavo Ahualli as Tony. The less operatic delivery of this piece, as they light-heartedly corrected each other, provided the first time I saw reasons why Rosabella would start to fall in love with Tony. Onasch delivers a beautiful “Somebody Somewhere” and Ahualli’s “Mamma, Mamma/Rosabella” is also a gorgeous song and both numbers reflect what they each hope for from love.

    Emma Onasch (Rosabella) and Gustavo Ahualli (Tony). Photo by Daniel Weaver.
    Emma Onasch (Rosabella) and Gustavo Ahualli (Tony). Photo by Daniel Weaver.

    What I missed was the building up of the love that the story is trying to tell. This production doesn’t show well enough the emotional shift behind Rosabella’s passion for a former love and the claim that she loves Tony and his kindness. Ahuelli’s Tony is too embarrassed at being old and not smart, and at having sent a photograph of someone else and claiming it was him. He is too constricted (physically and emotionally) to his wheelchair and then a cane to allow himself to connect emotionally with his new bride. Prior to her declaring she loved him, I didn’t see why she should.

    The vocal leads, who generally sing music that is operatic, also include Drew Stairs as Joe (who delivers a passionate “Joey, Joey, Joey”), Tony’s charming foreman, and Katie Rey Bogdan, who fieplays Tony’s controlling sister.

    Harrison Smith (Herman) and Mackenzie Newbury (Cleo). Photo by Daniel Weaver.
    Harrison Smith (Herman) and Mackenzie Newbury (Cleo). Photo by Daniel Weaver.

    Most of the less operatic comic numbers, which are priceless, go to Cleo (Mackenzie Newbury) who is Rosabella’s best friend from her past waitressing life, and Herman (Harrison Smith),  who works for Tony. Newbury is great in “Ooh, my Feet” and “I Don’t Like This Dame,” while Smith’s “I Like Everybody” and “I Made a Fist” showed his comic chops. Their duet, “The Big D” is a show-stopping number and Newbury and Smith both bring compelling acting to their songs.

    Pauline Grossman’s choreography was stylish and sharp, funny and evocative. It reveals the subtext of the characters and is endlessly charming. The performance of “Abondanza,” in which a fabulous trio of chefs, sing and dance prior to the wedding feast, was appropriately a crowd favorite. Kenneth Lautz, Bobby Cook Gallagher, and especially Marc Pavan, as Giuseppe, were fantastic. Larger crowd dances, such as in the “Vineyards” or the “Hoedown” fill the stage with groupings dancing inventively, portraying the youthful joys of the moment. While it had simpler choreography, “Standing on the Corner” allowed a terrific male quartet, led by Harrison Smith’s hapless Herman, to strut for the ladies they saw and reveal how crestfallen they were when their posing was fruitless.

    Marc Pavan, Kenneth Lautz, aand Bobby Cook Gallagher. Photo by Daniel Weaver.
    Marc Pavan, Bobby Cook Gallagher, and Kenneth Lautz. Photo by Daniel Weaver.

    Set Designer Katherine Wujcik and Production Manager/Lighting Designer Jonathan A. Weinberg offered some gorgeous spectacle. Among my favorite moments were hanging lights in the wine cellars as Rosabella’s welcome feast was prepared, as well as a starscape-lit backdrop. Set changes flew by and sometimes were finished well before the orchestra, masterfully directed by N. Thomas Pedersen, finished the interlude meant to cover the change. One set change puzzled me as I did not understanding the purpose of a generator prop piece rolled onto stage, introduced, then rolled off.

    Costumes by Eleanor Dicks were lovely, setting the period of 1927 believably. Character traits came through clearly because of the subtle choices made. I loved the period hats, Tony’s neckerchief and Cleo’s cowgirl boots. Details make the difference and many of the detailed choices in this production are right on.

    Running Time: About three hours, including two intermissions.

    bb-ax-Happy-Fella

    The Most Happy Fella plays tonight at 7:30 PM and tomorrow at 2 PM at the Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, purchase them at the box office or online.

    LINKS:
    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 3: Drew Stairs.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 4: Harrison Smith (Coming).

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre.

  • Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch

    In Part 2 of a series of interviews with the cast of The Most Happy Fella, meet Emma Nadine Onasch, who plays Rosabella in their upcoming production, which plays this weekend October 23-25, 2015.

    Emma Nadine Onasch.
    Emma Nadine Onasch.

    Joel: Introduce yourself to our readers and tell them where they may have seen you perform on the stage or in other local venues.

    Emma: My name is Emma Onasch. I’m a senior Musical Theatre Major from Portland, Oregon. I’ve honestly been off the radar in DC for a while. I spent my last semester abroad at the London Dramatic Academy, and during the summer I was home working on Doubt by John Patrick Shanley as Sister James. The last projects in DC you may have seen me in were Carousel last fall and The Frank Loesser Review at The Kennedy Center on the Millennium Stage.

    Why did you want to be in The Most Happy Fella at CUA? What did you sing at your audition?

    I am obsessed with the score. It’s so so beautiful, and I’ve been intrigued by the story since I was introduced to it in 2013. The plot line is a doozy, but I saw it as a wonderfully challenging opportunity, no matter which role I filled. I sang “ from The Music Man for my audition!

    Who do you play in The Most Happy Fella and how do you relate to him or her? What do you admire about your character and what do you not admire?

    I play “Rosabella” (whose real name is Amy…spoiler alert!) She’s  not your typical ingénue. Though her best friend Cleo lovingly refers to her as a “dream girl,” she isn’t flighty. She’s strong willed and forward about what she wants. And that gets her into some trouble. But I love her for that. She really reflects the first wave of feminism that this play’s context sits in, and she’s true to her self weather she’s mad or overwhelmingly in love. She wears her heart on her sleeve and allows herself to be vulnerable when it counts, and in that vein I have really found a connection between the two of us. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve shared tears with Amy because of what she’s gone through. She faces a lot of challenges, but she also never lets them get the best of her, and I think that’s one of her best qualities. She’s grounded and cautious but never jaded, and she’s always hopeful.

    Which character that you are not playing is most like you and how and why?

    I find a lot of common ground with Herman. Not so much in the whole “Standing on the Corner” vein, but rather in his genuine love of people. I’m also pretty non-confrontational, so I think I would also be pretty shocked if I made a fist. Haha. We also both love our hometowns, and though Dallas and Portland are two completely different animals, the sentiment still rings true.

    How would you describe the score that Frank Loesser has written for this show?

    This score is delicious! It has so many beautiful, complex textures. I think it has a little bit of something for everyone. I, for one, have never been musically bored.

    What is your favorite song that you are not performing and why?

    Mamma, Mamma is one of my favorites. It’s such a genuine moment of joy. Even though the lyrics are  specific to Tony, the song still encapsulates that beautiful next step in any relationship. That moment where you step back and say: “Wow, I’ve found my person. A companion and friend I can really build a future with. This is really beautiful.”

    What have been the challenges you have encountered while preparing for your role and how were those challenges overcome?

    When you really look at this production, it almost seems like Amy/Rosabella are two different people. Amy’s this fiery waitress we meet at the top of the show, stuck in a rut in a city she wants to escape. Meanwhile, Rosabella lives  in the throws of a passionate, invigorating love in a fantastic new setting. The easy choice with this character is to go with that firey image or that demure image and to carry it though the production. My challenge has been marrying the two. Finding the moments when she softens, and allows herself to be the “Rosabella,” Napa has been expecting, and alternatively, allowing Amy to show Tony that she isn’t the delicate flower he’s built her up to be in his mind.

    I’ve found the key to unlocking that nuance in my performance has been a lot of play and a lot of spectacular failure when leaning on one end of the spectrum or the other. But the beautiful thing about those failures is that they’ve revealed new things about my character to me, and they have introduced me to a happy medium between the two as a result. I find that sometimes, in the moments when you feel you are farthest away from your character, you are simultaneously closer to finding her than ever

    How would you describe Pauline Grossman’s choreography and which song’s choreography is your favorite, and which was the hardest to learn?

    Pauline is a master of style, and she is so intelligent in her dance phrasing. She has this innate ability to turn pedestrian moments in the show into commentary on how the characters are feeling, and that’s the reason I absolutely love the “Ooo My Feet” sequence at the top Act 1. The waiters and the waitresses are not over dancing to explain their frame of mind, but their bodies really give you an idea of what’s going on, and you can feel their pain by the end of the number. It’s hypnotizing to watch. I personally don’t dance much in this show, but I find the Hoedown incredibly fun to participate in.

    What are your solos in the show and what do we learn about your character when you sing them?

    Rosabella has quite a few beautiful songs, but those I was not as familiar with ended up revealing the most about her. For instance, in  “Aren’t You Glad” the audience really sees Amy put her guard down. We see what she’s like when she’s painfully vulnerable. And conversely, in  “No Home, No Job” we see her insecurities and her most personal, painful fears being realized in front of a group of people she hardly knows. Finally, I think “Please Let Me Tell You That I Love You” encapsulates Amy as a fully realized character. We see this woman who has gone though an ordeal, has gathered her strength, and is doing her best with the cards she is dealt. It isn’t pretty, but it doesn’t stop her from saying what’s on her mind. It’s a beautiful, painful moment all at once.

    What does The Most Happy Fella have to say today’s theatergoer and what themes from the show are still relevant today?

    The Most Happy Fella is a beautiful testament to what love ultimately should be. I think we’re running head first into an age where social media imposes image and social status as the end all be all. In that world, this story is earth shattering. A woman meets a man who isn’t who he claims to be. Though she’s angry and embarrassed, she makes the decision to forgive him, and she attempts to understand him instead.  In doing so she falls in love. She allows image to melt away. Social status is gone. And Tony in turn sees her as more than a pretty face at a diner he encountered weeks ago. All that’s left is two humans who see each other with their hearts. Two people with a deep, mutual love and respect that will last because they did not allow the outside world to dictate how their love story should take shape.

    What have you learned about yourself – the actor and singer- during this whole process?

    I have learned to make big, messy choices and to be unapologetic, much like the character I have grown to love so fondly.

    Why do you think The Most Happy Fella is a ‘hidden treasure’ of musical theater history and why should more theater companies mount productions of it.

    Some people might consider MHF’s length a burden, but I think it gives the audience the rare opportunity to experience the character’s arch as they work though it. By spending this extended amount of time with the characters in the theatre, the audience really comes to understand them intimately. The score reveals their inner most thoughts, while the plot pushes them into action. So rarely do we get this opportunity, and it is truly a gem because it expresses’ the production’s themes more subtly . There are no songs that scream ‘this is what the play is about!’ Rather, you gather those ideas over time, from the experiences the characters are working through with immense detail.

    What advice would you give another actor who is preparing to play your role in another production of The Most Happy Fella?

    Read the script over and over and over again. It’s a big sing, and a lot to emotionally work though. Rosabella is a character who demands your respect, and if you don’t give it to her she’ll kick your butt when you least expect it. Also, become best friends with your Cleo. You’ll have an insatiable amount of fun inside as well as outside of rehearsal.

    What do you want audiences to take with them after seeing The Most Happy Fella and your performance?

    I think if theatregoers today take anything away from this production, its that we need to see one another as Tony and Rosabella do at the musical’s conclusion. We need to look upon each other without judgment or expectation. Instead of jumping to conclusions based on appearance, we should take the time to know ourselves, and to one another for what’s beneath the surface. Then, we can really begin to love and respect one another, truly and deeply.

    bb-ax-Happy-FellaThe Most Happy Fella plays from October 23-25, 2015 at the Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, purchase them at the box office or online.

    LINKS:
    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 2: Emma Nadine Onasch.

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre.

  • Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury

    Meet the Cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Catholic University of America: Part 1: Mackenzie Newbury

    In Part 1 of a series of interviews with the cast of The Most Happy Fella, meet Mackenzie Newbury who plays Cleo in their upcoming production which plays this weekend October 23-25, 2015.

    Mackenzie Newbury.

    Joel: Introduce yourself to our readers and tell them where they may have seen you perform on the stage or in other local venues.

    Hi! I’m Mackenzie Newbury and I’m a senior at CUA. I was in the mainstage productions the past two years, Carousel and Sweet Charity and was most recently seen as Dream Clarice in Studio Theatre’s production of Silence! The Musical.

    Why did you want to be in The Most Happy Fella  at CUA? What did you sing at your audition? 

    I wasn’t very familiar with the show originally, but I knew a few songs. I love old musicals and enjoyed portions of the score that I had heard but it wasn’t until I read the script that I knew I wanted to be a part of this production. Honestly, my favorite part of it is that it is a beautiful musical in that classic old Broadway style but it centers around such strong women. That’s what really sets it apart for me. Though the traditional ingenues have their moments, the three women of this show, Cleo, Marie and Rosabella, all make their own choices and are not even slightly subservient to the men in their lives. They call the shots, they make the first moves and yet they enter into these romantic relationships that complete them and support them as strong individuals.

    I sang “I Cain’t Say No” from Oklahoma! for my audition.

    Who do you play in The Most Happy Fella and how do you relate to him or her? What do you admire about your character and what do you not admire?

    I play Cleo who I relate to in a lot of ways. As I said before, she’s a strong woman. She is a presence. She is loud, says what she feels and goes after the things she wants. I have a lot of respect for that and it’s how I try to live my own life. At the same time she is compassionate and loyal, especially to Rosabella, and even finds a softer, sentimental, more romantic side that she embraces after her initial hesitation wears off. She eventually learns to stop being so cynical and get a little romantic. She is feisty too, and not always in the best way. She struggles to see the good in people and gets in fights, so I’d definitely say that she should work on that. Maybe Herman can help!

    Which character that you are not playing is most like you and how and why?

    I’m honestly Cleo through and through but if I had to pick another I’d say Rosabella. She is determined to get the things that she wants and stands up for herself. She’s independent and self-sufficient and will do what she needs to in order to make her dreams a reality. Plus, I think “wanting to be wanted, needing to be needed” resonates with everyone and that song, “Somebody Somewhere” is some of the most honest writing in musical theatre.

    How would you describe the score that Frank Loesser has written for this show?

    I’m sorry- my castmates and some of the Production Team may disagree but to me this is an opera! Or at the very least, incredibly operatic. We are all earning our Bachelors of Music here and have a lot of exposure to difficult music, but this was quite the challenge for a lot of us.

    What is your favorite song that you are not performing and why?

    “Please Let Me Tell You.” I can’t say too much about it without giving away a major plot point, but it is gorgeous. There are grand moments from the orchestra interspersed with almost recitative-type passaged sung by Rosabella and it is so expressive.

    What have been the challenges you have encountered while preparing for your role and how were those challenges overcome?

    Being bigger. One way that I differ from Cleo is that I’m a little more physically reserved but she throws her heart and soul and sass into everything she does so I had issues loosening up in the beginning, physically. I got used to it through time and rehearsal and several reminders from Pauline while we were working through the beginning of “Big D.” I’ve always kind of been “the dancer” in life, so working through the songs and the movement to find the character just kind of makes sense to me and helps me to make bolder physical choices.

    How would you describe Pauline Grossman’s choreography and which song’s choreography is your favorite, and which was the hardest to learn?

    Pauline’s choreography is grounded, I would say. She focuses more on beatwork than any choreographer I have ever worked with and it ensures that all the movement is genuine and motivated. We build from a strong sense of community, with a core group of dancers and join in when the natural impulse is to join in from the infectious energy of the ensemble. I’m biased, but my favorite number is “Big D.” The energy level is so high and it is so much fun. It’s also stylistically very different from the rest of the show and the moment when my character is really embraced by this community.

    What is your solo in the show and what do we learn about your character when you sing it?

    My only solo in the show is “Ooh My Feet.” I also sing a few duets with Rosabella, a duet with Marie, and a beautiful trio with Marie and Tony in addition to a few duets with Herman including “Big D.” While “Ooh My Feet” sets the scene for the show, clueing the audience in on the fact that these women are waitresses living a rather dull, hard life that has made them numb, I’d say that it’s some of the other pieces that tell more about Cleo.

    “Big D” explains about where she came from. “I Don’t Like This Dame” shows that she often speaks before she thinks and that she isn’t used to keeping her opinion to herself. The duets with Rosabella show her loyalty to her friendship and her sassy side, a lot of the times. She always has a quick response. However, I think it’s “I Like Everybody Reprise” which for me is the turning point for her and reveals the most — it reveals that softer side. It’s her “oh no, I’m in love” moment and she spirals through a few more emotions before that realization really hits. It’s where you see her guard break down and she starts to think about what she really wants.

    What does The Most Happy Fella have to say today’s theatergoer and what themes from the show are still relevant today?

    There is an interview on Broadway.com with Laura Benanti who played Rosabella in the recent “Encores” production where she says, “It is not necessarily happy like a kickline, but the way grown-ups are happy, like ‘I’ve suffered some stuff, and I’ve gotten through it, and I’m wiser and now I’m grateful’” and that’s what I always refer to when people ask me about this show. It is so elegant and beautiful but there is a real maturity to this piece. It is about very realistic characters dealing with very realistic emotions and problems that are incredibly timeless.

    What have you learned about yourself – the actor and singer- during this whole process?

    I’ve learned to trust my technique. This whole production has been a kind of “vocal bootcamp” and I’ve become very aware of checking in to make sure that I’m doing everything technically correct. Because it’s such a massive undertaking, I’ve been forced to take better care of myself as well- more sleep, more steam, less nights out. As an actor working with the scenes that bounce between recitative, dialogue and fully sung phrases has been an amazing exercise that has really helped me to improve my ability in acting while singing.

    Why do you think The Most Happy Fella is a ‘hidden treasure’ of musical theater history and why should more theater companies mount productions of it.

    It walks the line between musical theatre and opera more-so than any other production that I can think of. That alone earns it a spot in the history books!

    What advice would you give another actor who is preparing to play your role in another production of The Most Happy Fella?

    Create your own character. There are so many different ways that these characters can be played and even Cleo. She is a bit larger than life and incredibly sassy and brassy, but I also attempted to find a bit of the “Southern Belle” side of her as well. I keep joking that my take is a combination of “Ado Annie” of Oklahoma and “Lois” in Kiss Me Kate. Make your own interpretation!

    What do you want audiences to take with them after seeing The Most Happy Fella and your performance?

    I just honestly want their heart to be “so full” of this show.

    bb-ax-Happy-FellaThe Most Happy Fella plays from October 23-25, 2015 at the Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, NE, in Washington, DC. For tickets, purchase them at the box office or online.

    LINK:
    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre.

  • ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays This Friday through Sunday 10/23-25 at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre

    Print

    The Most Happy Fella’ Depicts May-December Romance 

    The Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre

    Friday, October 23 at 7:30 PM; Saturday, October 24th at 7:30 PM; and Sunday. October 25th at 2 PM.

    CUA Music faculty member Gustavo Ahualli and Senior Emma Onash star in 'The Most Happy Fella' at The Hartke on Friday, October 23 at 7:30 PM;Saturday, October 24th at 7:30 PM; and Sunday. October 25th at 2 PM.
    CUA Music faculty member Gustavo Ahualli and Senior Emma Onash star in ‘The Most Happy Fella.’ 

    With book and lyrics by Frank Loesser, The Most Happy Fella is known for a lush score, powerful vocals, and extensive dance sequences in songs like “Standing on the Corner,” “Somebody Somewhere,” and “Big D.” Audiences will be swept away by a tale of comedy and romance this month as the Musical Theatre Division of the Benjamin T. Rome School of Music presents its fall production, The Most Happy Fella.

    The Most Happy Fella will be presented Friday and Saturday, Oct. 23 and 24, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 25, at 2 p.m., at Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, in Washington, DC. The performance is a part of the year-long 50th Anniversary Celebration for the music school.

    Set in Napa Valley in 1927, The Most Happy Fella tells the story of a May-December romance between Tony, an aging Italian vintner, and Rosabella, a young and beautiful waitress from San Francisco.

    The show opened at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway in 1956 and had an original run of 676 performances. The production has been said to be a combination of Broadway and opera, but Loesser described it as “a musical comedy — with a lotta music.”

    “I like to equate it to Stephen Sondheim’s quote when asked about Sweeney Todd,” said N. Thomas Pedersen, head of the Musical Theater Division and conductor. “Sondheim said, ‘When it plays in an opera house, it’s an opera; and when it plays in a theater, it’s a musical.’”

    Though Loesser called The Most Happy Fella “a very simple love story,” director Matt Basset believes the musical actually depicts “the complexity and depth of feeling present in any melodrama, opera or otherwise.”

    “The joy in exploring this piece for me has been in celebrating the large, pure emotions in the group scenes — we tell our actors often that these are people who, in large groups, feel everything big — and the complexity in the more intimate scenes — solos and duets express a character’s arguments and desires like soloists,” Basset said. “Far from ‘simple,’ I would call it ‘elegant.’”

    The choreographer for the production is CUA Dance Coordinator Pauline Grossman and costumes are by Eleanor Dicks. The musical’s cast of actors will be accompanied by the 35-piece CUA Symphony Orchestra.

    The main character, Tony, will be played by baritone Gustavo Ahualli, a member of the CUA voice faculty. Originally from Argentina, Ahualli has performed leading roles in standard operatic repertoire and contemporary works all over the world. He has been praised for his “full, rich, and powerful” baritone.

    “This is an excellent opportunity for our students,” Pedersen said. “Musical theatre students get to work with a world-class baritone and they get to learn from him while he learns from them.

    “I know audiences will love hearing this score in our intimate 600-seat Hartke Theatre with Don Walker’s original orchestrations played by members of the CUA Symphony Orchestra,” Pedersen added.

    WebArt_200x200Tickets are $40 for premium seating; $25 for general admission; $15 for seniors and CUA alumni, faculty, and staff; and $5 for students and children under 8. Purchase tickets at the box office or online.

  • ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays October 23-25th at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre

    ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Plays October 23-25th at Catholic University’s Hartke Theatre

    Print

    The Most Happy Fella’ Depicts May-December Romance 

    The Catholic University of America’s Hartke Theatre

    Friday, October 23 at 7:30 PM; Saturday, October 24th at 7:30 PM; and Sunday. October 25th at 2 PM.

    CUA Music faculty member Gustavo Ahualli and Senior Emma Onash star in 'The Most Happy Fella' at The Hartke on Friday, October 23 at 7:30 PM;Saturday, October 24th at 7:30 PM; and Sunday. October 25th at 2 PM.
    CUA Music faculty member Gustavo Ahualli and Senior Emma Onash star in ‘The Most Happy Fella.’ 

    With book and lyrics by Frank Loesser, The Most Happy Fella is known for a lush score, powerful vocals, and extensive dance sequences in songs like “Standing on the Corner,” “Somebody Somewhere,” and “Big D.” Audiences will be swept away by a tale of comedy and romance this month as the Musical Theatre Division of the Benjamin T. Rome School of Music presents its fall production, The Most Happy Fella.

    The Most Happy Fella will be presented Friday and Saturday, Oct. 23 and 24, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 25, at 2 p.m., at Hartke Theatre – 3801 Harewood Road, in Washington, DC. The performance is a part of the year-long 50th Anniversary Celebration for the music school.

    Set in Napa Valley in 1927, The Most Happy Fella tells the story of a May-December romance between Tony, an aging Italian vintner, and Rosabella, a young and beautiful waitress from San Francisco.

    The show opened at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway in 1956 and had an original run of 676 performances. The production has been said to be a combination of Broadway and opera, but Loesser described it as “a musical comedy — with a lotta music.”

    “I like to equate it to Stephen Sondheim’s quote when asked about Sweeney Todd,” said N. Thomas Pedersen, head of the Musical Theater Division and conductor. “Sondheim said, ‘When it plays in an opera house, it’s an opera; and when it plays in a theater, it’s a musical.’”

    Though Loesser called The Most Happy Fella “a very simple love story,” director Matt Basset believes the musical actually depicts “the complexity and depth of feeling present in any melodrama, opera or otherwise.”

    “The joy in exploring this piece for me has been in celebrating the large, pure emotions in the group scenes — we tell our actors often that these are people who, in large groups, feel everything big — and the complexity in the more intimate scenes — solos and duets express a character’s arguments and desires like soloists,” Basset said. “Far from ‘simple,’ I would call it ‘elegant.’”

    The choreographer for the production is CUA Dance Coordinator Pauline Grossman and costumes are by Eleanor Dicks. The musical’s cast of actors will be accompanied by the 35-piece CUA Symphony Orchestra.

    The main character, Tony, will be played by baritone Gustavo Ahualli, a member of the CUA voice faculty. Originally from Argentina, Ahualli has performed leading roles in standard operatic repertoire and contemporary works all over the world. He has been praised for his “full, rich, and powerful” baritone.

    “This is an excellent opportunity for our students,” Pedersen said. “Musical theatre students get to work with a world-class baritone and they get to learn from him while he learns from them.

    “I know audiences will love hearing this score in our intimate 600-seat Hartke Theatre with Don Walker’s original orchestrations played by members of the CUA Symphony Orchestra,” Pedersen added.

    WebArt_200x200Tickets are $40 for premium seating; $25 for general admission; $15 for seniors and CUA alumni, faculty, and staff; and $5 for students and children under 8. Purchase tickets at the box office or online.

  • Meet the Cast of ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ at Kensington Arts Theatre: Part 4: Teresa Danskey

    Meet the Cast of ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ at Kensington Arts Theatre: Part 4: Teresa Danskey

    In Part 4 of a series of interviews with the cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at Kensington Arts Theatre, meet Teresa Danskey.

    Teresa Danskey.
    Teresa Danskey.

    Joel: Please introduce yourself and tell our readers where they may have seen you in the past year on local stages?

    Teresa: My name is Teresa Danskey and I play Rona Lisa Peretti in KAT’s production of Spelling Bee. I was last seen on stage with The Arlington Players’ (TAP) productions of The Wedding Singer (Holly), and The Most Happy Fella (Cleo).

    Why did you want to be part of Kensington Arts Theatre’s Spelling Bee?

    I had a blast watching KAT’s production of The Addam’s Family and knew I wanted to get involved with the organization right away. I wanted to have some plain old fun with the next show I chose, so Spelling Bee with KAT just made sense!

    Have you appeared in or seen other productions of Spelling Bee before and who did you play and how is this production different and unique?

    No.

    What did you perform at your audition and where were you when you got the call that you had the role?

    I performed “It Won’t be Long Now” from In the Heights. My husband and I are renovating our house ourselves, so I was in the middle of demolishing my kitchen when Bobby called. Breathing mask, goggles, and all!

    Who do you play in the show and how do you relate to your character?

    I play Rona Lisa Peretti: Top Realtor and past Spelling Bee champion of Putnam County.  While Rona loves replaying her triumphant past, she hopes for grander experiences in life. Although I do not relate to this currently (I am the same age as Rona’s character), I did have similar sentiments before moving to DC.

    How did you prepare for your role, and what were the biggest challenges you faced and how did you resolve them?

    Bobby, Sam, and I discussed Rona’s past and how she interacts with the future in depth. I played with a lot of jokes off stage and during rehearsals to see which ones worked and which fell flat. Matt (Mr. Panch) and I wrote some jokes together and I frequently sought out his advice on improve tips.

    What is your favorite scene and  song in the show that you are not in and do not sing  and what is your favorite scene that you are in and favorite song that you do sing and why?

    Favorite scene/song not in: While I am on stage for Logainne’s lament “Woe Is Me,” I do not sing it. The next time I audition for this show I am auditioning for this part. Sarah does a fantastic job convincing us that she has the best role in the show!

    Which character in the show is most like you, and why?

    When I was a young child, my brothers and I were like Leaf. We had daily contests to see who could act the most bizarre. Many of these moments are on tape and I can do nothing but smile with pride when I watch them. We were all very strange children!

    What do you admire most about your fellow castmates’ performances?

    This cast is full of powerful singers. I love coming to rehearsal and listening to the voices.

    Why should audience goers bring their families to see Spelling Bee?

    There’s humor for children, teens, and definitely adults. It’s a shorter show, so you can go out for an evening and not be committing to an all night event! Just to plain ol’ fun!

    SpellBee-KAT-728x90

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee plays through March 1, 2015 at Kensington Arts Theatre performing at Kensington Town Center – 3710 Mitchell Street, in Kensington, MD. For tickets, purchase them online.

    LINKS
    Meet the Cast of ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ at Kensington Arts Theatre: Part 1: Dylan Echter.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ at Kensington Arts Theatre: Part 2: Matt Baughman.

    Meet the Cast of ‘The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’ at Kensington Arts Theatre: Part 3: Emma Lord.

  • The 15th Annual 2014 WATCH AWARDS Nominations Announced

    The 15th Annual 2014 WATCH AWARDS Nominations Announced

    THE WATCH AWARDS

    Nominations Announced

    January 18, 2015 – 7:30 pm

    at The Birchmere, Alexandria, VA

    Award Ceremony

    Sunday, March 8, 2015 – 7:00 pm

    at The Birchmere, Alexandria, VA

    Award Ceremony Tickets $17.50 at the Birchmere Box Office or through Ticketmaster (plus service charge)

    111 productions (34 musicals, 77 plays) were adjudicated in 2014. Thirty-one community theater companies participated in WATCH adjudication.

    watchlogoIn each of the thirty-eight categories, five nominees were selected based on the average scores of eight judges.  In some categories, due to score ties, more than five nominees are announced.  Nominations are provided in alphabetical order by nominee.  The nominations are provided by category and then by theater at the end of the document.

    Nominations for outstanding technical achievements.

    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Set Design in a Play (6)

    • John Coscia – Of Mice and Men – Providence Players of Fairfax
    • John Coscia – Rumors – Providence Players of Fairfax
    • John Downing & Bill Glikbarg – Boeing Boeing – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Andrew S. Greenleaf – Other Desert Cities – Silver Spring Stage
    • Jeff Merritt & John Merritt – Death by Chocolate – Port Tobacco Players
    • Dan Remmers – Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical (7)

    • Bill Bagaria, Joanne D. Wilson, Marty Hayes – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions
    • Lawrence Gresko – Xanadu – Reston Community Players
    • Jim Korte & Bill Rippey – My Fair Lady – Damascus Theatre Company
    • Ryan Mudd – Annie – Port Tobacco Players
    • Ryan Mudd – Godspell – Port Tobacco Players
    • Greg Steele – Les Miserables – Reston Community Players
    • Bill Wisniewski – The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play (5)

    • John Coscia – Rumors – Providence Players of Fairfax
    • John Downing & Bill Glikbarg – Boeing Boeing – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Andrew S. Greenleaf – Other Desert Cities – Silver Spring Stage
    • Jeff Merritt & John Merritt – Death by Chocolate – Port Tobacco Players
    • Dan Remmers – Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play (6)

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Musical (5)

    • Angie Anderson –  The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players
    • Nancy Eynon Lark & Maria Littlefield – My Fair Lady – Damascus Theatre Company
    • Terri Fortney Beinert et al – Godspell – Port Tobacco Players
    • Malca Giblin, Craig Pettinati, John Nunemaker – The Addams Family – Kensington Arts Theatre
    • Jane B. Wingard & Gail Bagaria – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding Set Decoration and Set Dressing in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Properties in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Musical (6)

    Outstanding Lighting Design in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical (6)

    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play (5)

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play (6)

    Outstanding Special Effects (5)

    Nominations for outstanding performances by an actor or actress.

    Outstanding cameo in a musical (5)

    • Quinn McCord as “Cicco/Postman” – The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players
    • Tim Sayles as “Rudolph” – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions
    • Benjamin Simpson as “Mookie” – The Wedding Singer – Port Tobacco Players
    • Chad Wheeler as “Teen Angel” – Grease – Rockville Musical Theatre
    • Amy Winger as “Cha-Cha DeGregorio” – Grease Rockville Musical Theatre

    Outstanding cameo in a play (5)

    Outstanding featured actress in a musical (5)

    • Theresa Danskey as “Cleo” – The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players
    • Shaina Freeman as “Betty Rizzo” – Grease Rockville Musical Theatre
    • Ashlie-Amber Harris as “The Lady of the Lake” – Monty Python’s Spamalot – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Camryn Shegogue as “Wednesday Addams” – The Addams Family – Kensington Arts Theatre
    • Pam Shilling as “Irene Molloy” – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions

    Outstanding featured actor in a musical (6)

    Outstanding featured actress in a play (5)

    • Maya Brettell as “Christina” – Black Hole – Port City Playhouse
    • Terresita Edwards as “Madame Arcati” – Blithe Spirit – Prince William Little Theatre
    • Elizabeth Keith as “Claire” – Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Rebecca Lenehan as “Bev” – Clybourne Park – Arlington Players
    • Marianne Meyers as “Jean” – Good People – Silver Spring Stage

    Outstanding featured actor in a play (6)

    • Derek Bradley as “Karl” – Clybourne Park – Arlington Players
    • Derek Bradley as “Steve” – Clybourne Park – Arlington Players
    • William Cassidy as “Max Tarasov” – Superior Donuts – Silver Spring Stage
    • Bill Hurlbut as “Big Daddy” – Cat on a Hot Tin Roof – Rockville Little Theatre
    • Bill Hurlbut as “Lyman Wyeth” – Other Desert Cities – Silver Spring Stage
    • Don Myers as “Lenny Ganz” – Rumors – Providence Players of Fairfax

    Outstanding lead actress in a musical (5)

    • Annabelle Lowe as “Marian Paroo” – The Music Man – Port Tobacco Players
    • Nori Morton as “Dolly Levi” – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions
    • Caelyn Sommerville as “Eve/Mama Noah” – Children of Eden – 2nd Star Productions
    • Leslie Walbert as “Sandy Dumbrowski” – Grease Rockville Musical Theatre
    • Heather Whitney as “Rosabella” – The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players

    Outstanding lead actor in a musical (5)

    Outstanding lead actress in a play (5)

    • Anna Fagan as “Catherine” – Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Roxanne Fournier Stone as “Margaret” – Good People – Silver Spring Stage
    • Lolita-Marie as “Angel Allen” – Blues for an Alabama Sky – Port City Playhouse
    • Nicky McConnell as “Jane” – Black Hole – Port City Playhouse
    • Alyssa Sanders as “Veronica” – God of Carnage – Silver Spring Stage

    Outstanding lead actor in a play (5)

    • Terry Averill as “Arthur Przybyszewki” – Superior Donuts – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    • Patrick M. Doneghy as “Robert” – Boeing Boeing – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Kyle Keene as “Lennie” – Of Mice and Men – Providence Players of Fairfax
    • Darius McCall as “Franco Wicks” – Superior Donuts – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    • Nick Torres as “Arthur Przybyszwki” – Superior Donuts – Silver Spring Stage

    Nominations for outstanding achievement in overall production.

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography (5)

    Outstanding Choreography (5)

    Outstanding Music Direction (5)

    Outstanding Direction of a Musical (5)

    Outstanding Direction of a Play (5)

    • John Coscia – Of Mice and Men – Providence Players of Fairfax
    • Susan Devine – Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria
    • Edd Miller – Coyote on a Fence – Colonial Players of Annapolis
    • Bridget Muehlberger – Other Desert Cities – Silver Spring Stage
    • Liz Mykietyn – Rumors – Providence Players of Fairfax

    Outstanding Musical (5)

    • The Addams Family – Kensington Arts Theatre. Produced by Malca Giblin, Stage managed by John Nunemaker
    • Children of Eden – 2nd Star Productions. Produced by Jane B. Wingard, Stage managed by Joanne D. Wilson
    • Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions. Produced by Jane B. Wingard, Stage managed by Joanne D. Wilson
    • Monty Python’s Spamalot – Little Theatre of Alexandria. Produced by Rachel Alberts, Bobbie Herbst and Russell Wyland, Stage managed by Christine Farrell and Joan A.S. Lada
    • The Most Happy Fella – Arlington Players. Produced by Janet Bordeaux, Stage managed by Terri Carnahan

    Outstanding Play (5)

    • A Few Good Men – Colonial Players of Annapolis. Produced by Beth Terranova, Stage managed by Ernie Morton
    • Of Mice and Men – Providence Players of Fairfax. Produced by Jimmy Gertzog, Stage managed by Mike Mattheisen
    • Other Desert Cities – Silver Spring Stage. Produced by Seth Ghitelman, Stage managed by Alika Codispoti
    • Proof – Little Theatre of Alexandria. Produced by Lynn O’Connell and Kevin O’Dowd, Stage managed by Mary Beth Smith-Toomey and Kira Hogan.
    • Rumors – Providence Players of Fairfax. Produced by Chip Gertzog, Stage managed by April Bridgeman

    Congratulations to all of the nominees!

    Nominations sorted by theatre and show.

    2nd STAR PRODUCTIONS (21)

    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Casey Kaleba  – A Soldier’s Play
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Linda Swann  – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Vincent Musgrave  – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Caelyn Sommerville as “Eve/Mama Noah” – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Garrett R. Hyde  – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Musical  –  Children of Eden
    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard  – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard  – Children of Eden
    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Tim Sayles as “Rudolph” – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Jane B. Wingard – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Nathan Bowen as “Cornelius Hackl” – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Pam Shilling as “Irene Molloy” – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – No Listing – Hello, Dolly! – 2nd Star Productions – 2014
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Nori Morton as “Dolly Levi” – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Music Direction – Joe Biddle – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Musical – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Joanne D. Wilson – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Bill Bagaria, Joanne D. Wilson, Marty Hayes – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard & Gail Bagaria – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Jane B. Wingard – Hello, Dolly!
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Garrett R. Hyde – Hello, Dolly!

     ARLINGTON PLAYERS (17)

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Derek Bradley as “Karl” – Clybourne Park
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Derek Bradley as “Steve” – Clybourne Park
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Rebecca Lenehan as “Bev” – Clybourne Park
    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Quinn McCord as “Ciccio/Postman” – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Teresa Danskey as “Cleo” – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Jimmy Payne as “Tony” – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Heather Whitney as “Rosabella” – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – B. Keith Ryder  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Music Direction  – David Rohde  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Musical  –  The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Angie Anderson  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Bill Wisniewski  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Angie Anderson  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Bill Wisniewski  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Mary Speed  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Stan Harris  – The Most Happy Fella
    Outstanding Choreography  – John K. Monnett  – The Wedding Singer

    COLONIAL PLAYERS (16)

    Outstanding Play  –  A Few Good Men
    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Beverly Hill van Joolen  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Ron Giddings as “Bat Boy” – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Frank Florentine  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Eddie Hall  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Wes Bedsworth  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Special Effects  – Terry Averill et al  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Andrew Pecoraro  – Bat Boy: The Musical
    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Edd Miller  – Coyote on a Fence
    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Frank Florentine  – Coyote on a Fence
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Carl Andreasen & Theresa Riffle  – Coyote on a Fence
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Mary MacLeod as “Lady Boyle” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Ben Carr as “Kiril Ivakina” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Terry Averill as “Arthur Przybyszewki” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Darius McCall as “Franco Wicks” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Ben Cornwell  – Superior Donuts

    DAMASCUS THEATRE COMPANY (6)

    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Nancy Eynon Lark & Maria Littlefield  – My Fair Lady
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Jim Korte & Bill Rippey  – My Fair Lady
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Nancy Eynon Lark & Maria Littlefield  – My Fair Lady
    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Bill Brown  – My Fair Lady
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Maria Littlefield  – My Fair Lady
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Vitol Wiacek  – My Fair Lady

     DOMINION STAGE (1)

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Larissa Norris – Bug

     FAUQUIER COMMUNITY THEATRE (1)

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Vicki Wade – Black Coffee

    GREENBELT ARTS CENTER (1)

    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Heather Brooks – Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean

    HARD BARGAIN PLAYERS (1)

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Priscilla Grow – Rebel Yells

    KENSINGTON ARTS THEATRE (18)

    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – David Merrill as “Jean Valjean” – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Eleanor B. Dicks  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Music Direction  – Stuart Y. Weich  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Choreography  – Nick Carter  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Eleanor B. Dicks  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Craig Pettinati  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Chuck Dluhy as “Uncle Fester” – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Camryn Shegogue as “Wednesday Addams” – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Stephen D. Welsh  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – Bobby Libby as “Gomez Addams” – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Xena Petkanas  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Scott Beadle  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Music Direction  – Stuart Y. Weich  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Musical  –  The Addams Family
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Malca Giblin, Craig Pettinati, John Nunemaker  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Musical – Matt Karner  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – Dan Caughran  – The Addams Family
    Outstanding Special Effects  – John Nunemaker  – The Addams Family

    LAUREL MILL PLAYHOUSE (2)

    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Zach Pajak as “Charles D. Schmendimann” – Picasso at the Lapine Agile
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Jed Duvall as “A Visitor” – Picasso at the Lapine Agile

     LITTLE THEATRE OF ALEXANDRIA (35)

    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Ashley Amidon  – A Streetcar Named Desire
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Larissa Norris  – A Streetcar Named Desire
    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Liz & Nancy Owens  – A Streetcar Named Desire
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Jean Schlichting & Kit Sibley  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Susan Boyd  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Patrick M. Doneghy as “Robert” – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Emma Baskir  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Carol Coyle & Susie Poole  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Downing & Bill Glikbarg  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Carol Coyle & Susie Poole  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Downing & Bill Glikbarg  – Boeing Boeing
    Outstanding Choreography  – Grace Machanic  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Grant Kevin Lane  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Direction of a Musical – Wade Corder  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Matt Liptak as “Mayor/Patsy/Guard 2” – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Ashlie-Amber Harris as “The Lady of the Lake” – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Robin Havens Parker & Dominique Thompson  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Musical – James Hotsko, Jr. as “King Arthur” – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Franklin C. Coleman  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Music Direction  – Paul Nasto  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Musical  –  Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Helen Bard-Sobola & Rebecca Sheehy  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Musical – David Correia & Janice Rivera  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Special Effects  – Arthur Snow  – Monty Python’s Spamalot
    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Susan Devine  – Proof
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Elizabeth Keith as “Claire” – Proof
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Anna Fagan as “Catherine” – Proof
    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Franklin C. Coleman  – Proof
    Outstanding Play  –  Proof
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Dan Remmers  – Proof
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – Dan Remmers  – Proof
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Kevin O’Dowd  – Proof
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – David Correia  – Proof
    Outstanding Choreography  – Ivan Davilla ACCENTS  – Ragtime
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Susan Boyd  – The Rocky Horror Show

     PORT CITY PLAYHOUSE (4)

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Maya Brettell as “Christina” – Black Hole
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Nicky McConnell as “Jane” – Black Hole
    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Abby Giuseppe & Bobbie Herbst  – Black Hole
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Lolita-Marie as “Angel Allen” – Blues for an Alabama Sky

     PORT TOBACCO PLAYERS (18)

    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Ryan Mudd  – Annie
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Melody Sciarratta  – Cyrano
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Kaitelyn Bauer  – Cyrano
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Kaitelyn Bauer  – Cyrano
    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Casey Kaleba  – Cyrano
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Sheila Hyman  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Ted DeMarco-Logue  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Sheila Hyman  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Kim Moore Bessler  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Jeff Merritt & John Merritt  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – Jeff Merritt & John Merritt  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – John Merritt & Christine Schubert  – Death by Chocolate
    Outstanding Properties in a Musical – Terri Fortney Beinert  – Godspell
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Ryan Mudd  – Godspell
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Musical – Terri Fortney Beinert et al  – Godspell
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Pat Brennan & Cathy Compton  – The Music Man
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Annabelle Lowe as “Marian Paroo” – The Music Man
    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Benjamin Simpson as “Mookie” – The Wedding Singer

     PRINCE GEORGE’S LITTLE THEATRE (2)

    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Roy Peterson  – The Fox on the Fairway
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Frank Pasqualino  – The Fox on the Fairway

     PRINCE WILLIAM LITTLE THEATRE (2)

    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Terresita Edwards as “Madame Arcati” – Blithe Spirit
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Larry Keeling as “Jitter et al” – Musical of Musicals (The Musical!)

     PROVIDENCE PLAYERS (19)

    Outstanding Direction of a Play – John Coscia  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Kyle Keene as “Lennie” – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Light Design in a Play – Chip Gertzog  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Play  –  Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Properties in a Play – Julie Janson & Andra Whitt  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Lisa Church & John Coscia  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Coscia  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Lisa Church  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Sound Design in a Play – Chip Gertzog  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Special Effects  – Julie Janson, Beth Harrison, Andra Whitt  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – Mike Donahue  – Of Mice and Men
    Outstanding Cameo in a Play – Eric Jones as “Officer Welch” – Rumors
    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Liz Mykietyn  – Rumors
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Don Myers as “Lenny Ganz” – Rumors
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Beth Harrison & Robbie Snow  – Rumors
    Outstanding Play  – Rumors
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – John Coscia  – Rumors
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – John Coscia  – Rumors
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Craig Geoffrion  – Rumors

    RESTON COMMUNITY PLAYERS (7)

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Ethan Van Slyke as “Gavroche” – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Mary Price  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Light Design in a Musical – Ken & Patti Crowley  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Greg Steele  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Greg Steele et al  – Les Miserables
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Musical – Lawrence Gresko  – Xanadu
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Terry Barr as “Snoopy” – You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown

     ROCKVILLE LITTLE THEATRE (2)

    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Bill Hurlbut as “Big Daddy” – Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
    Outstanding Properties in a Play – David Levin & Andie Allison  – Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

     ROCKVILLE MUSICAL THEATRE (8)

    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Chad Wheeler as “Teen Angel” – Grease
    Outstanding Cameo in a Musical – Amy Winter as “Cha-Cha DiGregorio” – Grease
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical – Shaina Freeman as “Betty Rizzo” – Grease
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Musical – Leslie Walbert as “Sandy Dumbrowski” – Grease
    Outstanding Set Design in a Musical – Mark Hamberger  – Grease
    Outstanding Choreography  – Valerie Mikles  – The Music Man
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Musical – Eleanor B. Dicks  – The Music Man
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Musical – Renee Silverstone  – The Music Man

    SILVER SPRING STAGE (17)

    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Alyssa Sanders as “Veronica” – God of Carnage
    Outstanding Special Effects  – Star Johnson  – God of Carnage
    Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play – Marianne Meyers as “Jean” – Good People
    Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play – Roxanne Fournier Stone as “Margaret” – Good People
    Outstanding Direction of a Play – Bridget Muehlberger  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – Bill Hurlbut as “Lyman Wyeth” – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Play  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Set Construction in a Play – Andrew S. Greenleaf  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Set Decoration in a Play – Andrew S. Greenleaf, Sonya Okin, Amy M. Sullivan  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Set Design in a Play – Andrew S. Greenleaf  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Set Painting in a Play – Andrew S. Greenleaf  – Other Desert Cities
    Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play – William Cassidy as “Max Tarasov” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play – Nick Torres as “Arthur Przybyszewki” – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Stage Combat Choreography – William T. Fleming  – Superior Donuts
    Outstanding Costume Design in a Play – Laurel Victoria Gray  – The Arabian Nights
    Outstanding Hair Design in a Play – Maureen Roult  – The Arabian Nights
    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Play – Maureen Roult  – The Arabian Nights

    THE ALLIANCE THEATRE (1)

    Outstanding Makeup Design in a Musical – Shavon Harding & Tracy Mullen Cosker  – Shrek The Musical

    LINK

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    These are the Best of 2014 Honorees for Community Theatre selected by the staff of DCMetroTheaterArts.

     

     

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Ensembles in DC Area Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Ensembles in DC Area Theatres

    The staff of DCMetroTheaterArts is honored to announce that their 2014 Best Ensemble honors go to:

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    A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Castaways Repertory Theatre

    A Soldier’s Play at 2nd Star Productions

    Amadeus at CENTERSTAGE

    Annie at Port Tobacco Players

    Bat Boy: The Musical at The Colonial Players

    Bat Boy: The Musical at 1st Stage

    Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theatre

    Brighton Beach Memoirs at Prince George’s Little Theatre

    Carousel at The Catholic University of America

    Catch Me If You Can at McLean High School

    Charles Dickens’ Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Children of Eden at 2nd Star Productions

    Collidescope: Adventures in Pre-and Post-Racial America at The University of Maryland 

    Colossal at Olney Theatre Cent

    Crazy for You at at Blake High School

    Disney’s The Little Mermaid at Olney Theatre Center

     Earth and Sky at Silver Spring Stage

    Evita at The Theatre Lab School of the Dramatic Arts

    Fiddler on the Roof at Arena Stage

    For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    Ghost-The Musical at Drama Learning Center

    Good People at Silver Spring Stage

    Godspell at Pasadena Theatre Company

    Godspell at The Catholic University of America

    Guys and Dolls at McLean Community Players

    HAIR at The Keegan Theatre

     Hairspray at Magruder Hugh School

    Hairspray at Thomas S. Wootton High School 

    Into the Woods at NextStop Theatre Company

    Into the Woods at Wildwood Summer Theatre

    It’s a Wonderful Life at Arts Collective @ HCC

    Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris at Creative Cauldron

    Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    Into the Woods at Wildwood Simmer Theatre

    It’s a Wonderful Life at Arts Collective @ HCC

    Judgment at Nuremberg at The American Century Theater

    Julius Caesar at Folger Theatre

    Kwaidan at Spooky Action Theater

    Les Misérables at Glyndon Area Players

    Les Misérables at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    Les Misérables at Reston Community Players

    Les Misérables at Kensington Arts Theatre

    Lucky Stiff at Being Revived and The Fredericktowne Players

    Mary Poppins at Shenandoah Summer Music Theatre

    Memphis at Toby’s Dinner Theatre

    Monty Python’s Spamalot at Annapolis Summer Garden Theatre

    Monty Python’s Spamalot at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Monty Python’s Spamalot at West Potomac High School

    My Fair Lady at Damascus Theatre Company

    Not Enough Lifetimes at The Welders

    One Man, Two Guvnors at 1st Stage

    Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Shrek The Musical at The Alliance Theatre 

    Side Show at The Kennedy Center

    Songs For A New World at Young Artists of America With Jason Robert Brown

    Spamalot at Act Two @ Levine’s Pre-Professional Program

    Spamalot at Riverside Center Dinner Theater.

    Spamalot at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Spamalot at Zemfira Stage

     Spring Awakening at Montgomery College

    Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    The Addams Family at Kensington Arts Theatre

    The Cradle Will Rock at The George Wahington University

    The Last Days of Judas Iscariot at Forum Theatre

    The Me Nobody Knows at University of Maryland

    The Most Happy Fella at The Arlington Players

    The Piano Lesson at Olney Theatre Center

    The Pirates of Penzance at Victorian Lyric Opera House

    The Producers at Sandy Spring Theater Group

    The Producers at South County High School

    The Rocky Horror Show at Little Theatre of Alexandria

    The Rocky Horror Show at Spotlighters

    The Taming of the Shrew at Pallas Theatre Collective

    The Tempest at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    The Threepenny Opera at Signature Theatre

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at Drama Learning Center

    The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at Magruder High School

    The Understudy at Everyman Theatre

    The Wedding Singer at The Arlington Players

    Titus Andronicus at Faction of Fools

    Twelve Angry Men at 2nd Star Productions

    Twelfth Night at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Twelfth Night at Synetic Theater

    Two Trains Running at Round House Theatre

    Urinetown: The Musical at Act Two @ Levine’s Pre-Professional Program

    Urinetown the Musical at Dominion Stage

    Urinetown the Musical at Heritage Players

    Violet at The Theatre Lab School of the Dramatic Arts

    Visible Language at WSC Avant Bard

    We Are Samurai at Venus Theatre Company

    West Side Story at Our Lady of Good Counsel High School

    The Wild Party at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    The Wiz at Creative and Performing Arts Center

     Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown at American University

    Yellow Face at Theater J

    LINKS

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Special Awards.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Play in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Play in Community Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Director/Musical Director in a Musical in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Director/Musical Director in a Musical in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: University Productions and Performances.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: High School and Training Programs.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Design of 2014 in DC Metro Area Theatres.

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Design of 2014 in DC Metro Area Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Design of 2014 in DC Metro Area Theatres

    The staff of DCMetroTheaterArts is pleased to honor the following designers for their work in 2014:

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    CHOREOGRAPHY

    Michael J. Bobbitt for Carrie the Musical at The Studio Theatre

    Debbie Clark, Nancy Newell, and Anna Bartels-Newton for Hairspray at Thomas S. Wootton High School 

    Philip Lee Clark for Little Shop of Horrors at West Potomac High School

    Ben Cunis for Inherit the Wind at American University

    Christopher D’Amboise and Ben Cunis for Colossal at Olney Theatre Center

    Erich DiCenzo for 9 to 5: The Musical at Fairfax High School

    Rachel Leigh Dolan for Hair at The Keegan Theatre

    Parker Esse for Fiddler on the Roof at Arena Stage

    Kristina Friedgen for West Side Story at Our Lady of Good Counsel High School

    Matthew Gardiner for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Billy Griffis for Twelfth Night at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Pauline Grossman for Godspell at The Catholic University of America

    Jenny Male for Spring Awakening at Montgomery College

    Mark Minnick for  Mary Poppins at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Mark Minnick for Monty Python’s Spamalot at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Christopher Noffke for Gypsy at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Rachael Schindler for Spamalot at Act Two @ Levine’s Pre-Professional Program

    Stefan Sittig for Urinetown: The Musical at The George Washington University

    Bobby Smith for Avenue Q at Olney Theatre Center

    Ricky Stakem for Hairspray at Magruder Hugh School

    Susan Stroman for Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    Christen Svingos for Memphis at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Irina Tsikurishvili for Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theater

    Irina Tsikurishvili for Twelfth Night at Synetic Theater

    Tara Jeanne Vallee for Disney’s The Little Memaid at Olney Theatre Center

    Anthony Van Laast for Side Show at The Kennedy Center 

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    COSTUME DESIGN

    Reema F. Al-Bawardy for Urinetown: The Musical at The George Washington University

    Flo Arnold for Hairspray at Thomas S. Wootton High School  

    David Burdick for Amadeus at CENTERSTAGE

    Eleanor Dicks for Carousel at The Catholic University of America

    Candice Donnelly for Private Lives at  Shakespeare Theatre Company

    Todd Douglas for The Rocky Horror Show at Spotlighters

    Laurel Dunayer for The Mystery of Edwin Drood at George Mason University

    Kathy Dunlap for Into the Woods at NextStop Theatre Company

    Wendy Eck for Brother Hal at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Wendy Eck and Dianne Dumais for Twelfth Night at Lumina Studio Theatre

    CS Ferguson for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Rockville Little Theatre

    Kathleen Geldard for The Understudy at Everyman Theatre

    Mariah Hale for Richard III at Folger Theatre

    Heidi Leigh Hanson for Fetch Clay, Make Man at Round House Theatre

    Tim Hatley for Monty Python’s Spamalot at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Frank Labovitz for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Gaye Law for Gypsy at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Gaye Law for Spamalot at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Pei Lee for Disney’s The Little Memaid at Olney Theatre Center

    William Ivey Long for Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    Ken MacDonald for The Shoplifters at Arena Stage

    Shannon Maddox for  It’s A Wonderful Life at Arts Collective@HCC

    Shannon Maddox for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Kristina Martin for Sylvia at NextStop Theatre Company

    Lawrence B. Munsey and Janine Sunday for Shrek at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Barbara Tucker Parker for Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown at American University

    Robert Perdziola for The Importance of Being Earnest at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    Kendra Rai for Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theater

    Kendra Rai for Twelfth Night at Synetic Theater

    Reggie Ray for The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin at Howard University 

    Reggie Ray for Two Trains Running at Round House Theatre

    Deb Sivigny for Yellow Face at Theater J

    Chelsey Schuller for Hair at The Keegan Theatre

    Robbie Snow for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Robbie Snow and Courtney Fonnesbeck for Rumors at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Beth Starnes, Carrie Dare, and Linda Swann for Children of Eden at 2nd Star Productions

    Linda Swann for Hello, Dolly! at 2nd Star Productions

    Paul Tazewell for Side Show at The Kennedy Center 

    Rameja Thompson for The Wiz at Creative and Performing Arts Center

    Ann Hould-Ward for Henry IV Part I and Henry IV Parts II at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    Peter Zakutansky for Les Misérables at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    Peter Zakutansky for Seussical at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    ______

    HAIR/WIG DESIGN

    Paul Huntler (Wig Design) for Henry IV Part I and Henry IV Parts II at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    Samantha Hunter (Wig Design) for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Anne Nesmith (Wig Design) for Mother Courage and Her Children at Arena Stage.

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    LIGHTING DESIGN

    Jason Arnold for Inherit the Wind at American University

    Laurie Bautista and Simonne Vincent for West Side Story at Our Lady of Good Counsel High School

    Ken Billington for Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    Colin K. Bills for Colossal at Olney Theatre Center

    Colin K. Bills for Moth at The Studio Theatre

    Aaron Black for Next to Normal at CENTERSTAGE

    Harold F. Burgess III for By The Way, Meet Vera Stark at Everyman Theatre

    Anthony Cantrel for Spamalot at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Jane Chan for Take Me Out at 1st Stage

    Andrew Cissna for Sex With Strangers at Signature Theatre

    Andrew Cissna for Yentl at Theater J

    Dan Covey for Yellow Face at Theater J

    Franklin C. Coleman for Into the Woods at NextStop Theatre Company

    Franklin C. Coleman for Proof at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Brittany Diliberto for Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theater

    Julie H. Duro for Disney’s The Little Memaid at Olney Theatre Center

    Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer for Side Show at The Kennedy Center 

    Coleen M. Foley for Monty Python’s Spamalot at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Chip Gertzog for Rumors at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Jimmy Gertzog and Jason Hamrick for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Andrew Griffin for Avenue Q at Olney Theatre Center

    Carl F. Gudenius for Urinetown: The Musical at The George Washington University

    Jay A. Herzog for The Understudy at Everyman Theatre

    David A. Hopkins for Mary Poppins at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    David A. Hopkins for Memphis at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Jim Hunter for Richard III at Folger Theatre

    Jim Hunter for Julius Caesar at Folger Theatre

    Lynn Joslin for It’s A Wonderful Life at Arts Collective @HCC

    Lynn Joslin for Les Misérables at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    Lynn Joslin for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Lynn Joslin for Shrek at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Marianne Meadows for Elling at The Washington Stage Guild 

    Nancy Owen for Charles Dickens’ Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Jennifer Schriever for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Scott Selman for Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street at Act Two @ Levine

    Scott Selman for Parade at Act Two@Levine’s Pre-Professional Program

    Klyph Stanford for The Admission at Theater J

    Eve Vawter for Brother Hal at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Eve Vawter for Twelfth Night at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Allan Sean Weeks for Hair at The Keegan Theatre

    Robert Wierzel for As You Like It at Shakespeare Theatre Company

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    PROJECTION DESIGN

    Brandon Babbit for Catch Me If You Can at Walt Whitman High School

    Benjamin Burke for Spamalot at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Kate Freer for The Shoplifters at Arena Stage

    Robbie Hayes for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Riki K. for It’s A Wonderful Life at Arts Collective@HCC

    Riki K. for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    JJ Kaczynski for Avenue Q at Olney Theatre Center

    Caite Hevner Kemp for Fetch Clay, Make Man at Round House Theatre

    Patrick Lord for Judgement at Nuremberg at The American Century Theater

    Jared Mezzocchi for The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism With a Key to the Scriptures at Theater J

    Klyph Stanford for The Admission at Theater J

    Erik Trester for Tribes at The Studio Theatre

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    SCENIC DESIGN

    Brian Barker for Spamalot at Riverside Center Dinner Theater

    Colin K. Bills for Moth at The Studio Theatre

    Beowulf Boritt for Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    J. Branson for Hairspray at Thomas S. Wootton High School  

    Marielle Burt for Catch Me If You Can at McLean High School

    Tony Cisek for Julius Caesar at Folger Theatre

    Tony Cisek for Richard III at Folger Theatre

    Tony Cisek for Two Trains Running at Round House Theatre

    Dan Conway for Elmer Gantry at Signature Theatre

    Daniel Conway for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    John Coscia for Rumors at Providence Players of Fairfax

    John Coscia for The House of Blue Leaves at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Andrea D’Amato, Brian Sentman, and Diedre Nicholson Lamb for Charles Dickens’ Christmas Carol at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    John Downing and Bill Glickbarg for Murder on the Nile at Aldersgate Church Community Theatre

    Daniel Ettinger for By The Way, Meet Vera Stark at Everyman Theatre

    Daniel Ettinger for The Understudy at Everyman Theatre

    James Fouchard for Disney’s The Little Memaid at Olney Theatre Center

    Ryan Haase and Alexander Fox for Vanishing Point, A New Musical at Stillpointe Theatre Initiative

    Ryan Haase, Nolan Cartwright, Jeanine Vreat, Danielle Robinette, and Mitchel Brower for Caroline, or Change at Stillpointe Theater Initiative

    Jeff Harrison for It’s A Wonderful Life at Arts Collective@HCC

    Jeff Harrison for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Robbie Hayes for Yentl at Theater J

    Simon Higlett for The Importance of Being Earnest at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    David A. Hopkins for Shrek at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Natalie Jurkowski and Ella Moore for Monty Python’s Spamalot at West Potomac High School

    Natalie Jurkowski and Ella Moore for Little Shop of Horrors at West Potomac High School

    Misha Kachman for Colossal at Olney Theatre Center

    Kristofer Kauff for Superior Donuts at The Colonial Players

    Matthew Keenan for Hair at The Keegan Theatre

    Kirk Kristlibas for Absurdities: An Evening of Ionesco at The George Washington University

    Kirk Kristlibas for Elling at The Washington Stage Guild 

    Kirk Kristlibas for Urinetown: The Musical at The George Washington University

    James Kronzer for The Nutcracker at Round House Theatre

    Kevin Kuchar for Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street at Act Two @ Levine

    Patrick Lord for Judgement at Nuremberg at The American Century Theater

    Timothy R. Mackabee for Amadeus at CENTERSTAGE

    Timothy R. Mackabee for Deathtrap at Everyman Theatre

    Ken MacDonald for The Shoplifters at Arena Stage

    JD Madsen for One Man, Two Guvnors at 1st Stage.

    JD Madsen for Sex With Strangers at Signature Theatre

    Elizabeth Jenkins McFadden for Les Misérables at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    Elizabeth Jenkins McFadden for Seussical at Montgomery College Summer Dinner Theatre

    Derek McLane with James Kronzer for Diner at Signature Theatre

    Allen Moyer for Blithe Spirit at Shakespeare Theatre Company

    Brian O’Connor for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe at Providence Players of Fairfax

    Daniel Pinha for Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theater

    Jim Porter for Brother Hal at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Jim Porter for Twelfth Night at Lumina Studio Theatre

    Ken Roos and Cathy Sledz for Into the Woods at Woodrow Wilson High School’s Theatre Arts

    Meghan Raham for Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown at American University

    David Rockwell for Side Show at The Kennedy Center 

    Steven Royal for Etiology at The Catholic University of America

    Steven Royal for Into the Woods at NextStop Theatre Company

    Klyph Stanford for Oedipus the King at The Catholic University

    Luciana Stecconi for Yellow Face at Theater J

    Mary-Anne Sullivan for Blithe Spirit at Prince William Little Theatre

    Ruthmarie Tenorio for Take Me Out at 1st Stage

    April Joy Tritchler for The Me Nobody Knows at University of Maryland

    Samina Vieth for Inherit the Wind at American University

    Caleb Wertenbaker for Next to Normal at CENTERSTAGE

    Jane B. Wingard for Children of Eden at 2nd Star Productions

    Jane B. Wingard for Hello, Dolly! at 2nd Star Productions

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    SOUND DESIGN 

    Patrick Calhoun for The Me Nobody Knows at University of Maryland

    David Correia for Proof at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Drew Dedrick for Memphis at Toby’s Dinner Theatre of Columbia

    Gracie Denton for Monty Python’s Spamalot at West Potomac High School

    Lane Elms for Sunday in the Park with George at Signature Theatre

    Frank DiSalvo Jr. for Elling at The Washington Stage Guild 

    James Bigbee Garver for Moth at The Studio Theatre

    Kai Harada for Little Dancer at The Kennedy Center

    Kevin Hill for  It’s A Wonderful Life at Arts Collective@HCC

    Daniel Kluger for The Wolfe Twins at The Studio Theatre

    Eric Kritzler for Into the Woods at NextStop Theatre Company

    Neil McFadden for One Man, Two Guvnors at 1st Stage

    Neil McFadden for The Understudy at Everyman Theatre

    Kenny Neal, Helen Tuliene West, and Erin Sullivan for Inherit the Wind at American University

    Matthew M. Nielson for The Nutcracker at Round House Theatre

    Matthew M. Neilson and Christopher Baine for The Wonderful World of Dissocia at Theater Alliance

    Jeff Schabdach for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Scott Selman for Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street at Act Two @ Levine

    Eric Shimelonis for Julius Caesar at Folger Theatre

    Eric Shimelonis for Ordinary Days at Round House Theatre

    Eric Shimelonis for The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism With a Key to the Scriptures at Theater J

    Thomas Sowers for Beauty and the Beast at Synetic Theater

    David Van Tieghem for The Shoplifters at Arena Stage

    LINKS

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Special Awards.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Play in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Play in Community Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Director/Musical Director in a Musical in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Director/Musical Director in a Musical in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: University Productions and Performances.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: High School and Training Programs.

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Directors/Musical Directors in a Musical in Community Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Directors/Musical Directors in a Musical in Community Theatres

    Hans Bachmann for La Cage aux Folles at McLean Community Players 

    Musical Director: John Edward Niles

    ______

    Homero Bayarena for Les Misérables at Glyndon Area Players

    Musical Director: Matt Hartman

    ______

    Rich Bird for You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown at Reston Community Players

    Musical Director: Mark V. Deal

    ______

    Zina Bleck for Spamalot at Zemfira Stage

    Musical Director: Annette Fakoury

    _____

    Stephanie Bonte-Lebair for My Fair Lady at Damascus Theatre Company

    Musical Director: Ruth Bright

    _____

    Felicity Ann Brown for The Pirates of Penzance at Victorian Lyric Opera House

    Musical Director Joseph Sorge

    ______

    Wade Corder for Monty Python’s Spamalot at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Musical Director: Paul Nasto

    ______

    Stephen Michael Deininger for Urinetown the Musical at The Heritage Players

    Musical Director: Andrew Worthington

    ______

    Chuck Dick for Godspell at Pasadena Theatre Company

    Musical Director: Kim Murray

    ______

    Patrick M. Doneghy for Urinetown the Musical at Dominion Stage

    Musical Direction: Kevin Diana

    ______

    Gloria DuGan for The Most Happy Fella at The Arlington Players

    Musical Director: David Rohde

    ______

    Devin Goodman for Into the Woods at Wildwood Summer Theatre

    Musical Director: Itai Yasur

    ______

    David Gregory for Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    Musical Director: Mayumi B. Griffie

    ______

    Michael V. Hartsfield for The Wild Party at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    Musical Director by Alice Laurissa

    ______

    Rachelle Horn for Guys and Dolls at McLean Community Players

    Musical Director Keith Tittermary

    ______

    Catherine Huntress-Reeve for The Yeomen of the Guard, or the Merryman and His Maid at Victorian Lyric Opera Company

    Musical Director: Joseph Sorge

    ______

    Kristofer Kauff for The Producers at Sandy Spring Theater Group

    Musical Director: Theresa Riffle

    _______

    Kristofer Kauff  for The Rocky Horror Show at Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Musical Director: Christopher A. Tomasino

    ______

    Jeffery Lesniak for Monty Python’s Spamalot at Annapolis Summer Garden Theatre

    Musical Director: Steve Przybylski

    ______

    TJ Lukacsina for White Christmas at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    Musical Director: William Georg

    ______

    John K. Monnett for The Wedding Singer at The Arlington Players

    Musical Directors: Walter McCoy and Steve Przybylski 

    ______

    Susy Moorstein for The Musical Of Musicals (The Musical!) at Prince William Little Theatre

    Musical Director:  Matthew Scarborough

    ______

    Darnell Morris for Les Misérables at Kensington Arts Theatre

    Musical Director: Stuart Y. Weich

    ______

    Vince Musgrave for Children of Eden at 2nd Star Productions

    Musical Director: Joe Biddle

    ______

    Stephen Napp for The Wizard of Oz at Charm City Players

    Musical Direction: Kathryn Weaver.

    ______

    David Norman for Lucky Stiff at Being Revived and The Fredericktowne Players

    Musical Director: Jonas Dawson

    ______

    Scott Olson for Shrek The Musical at The Alliance Theatre 

    Musical Director: Laurelyn Morrison

    ______

    Craig Pettinati for The Addams Family at Kensington Arts Theatre

    Musical Director: Stuart Y. Weich

    ______

    Andrew JM Regiec for Les Misérables at Reston Community Players

    Musical Director: Mark V. Deal 

    _____

    Lee Michele Rosenthal for The Great American Trailer Park Musical at Rockville Musical Theatre

    Musical Director: Debbie Jacobson

    ______

    Leslie Ann Ross for Young Frankenstein at The Alliance Theatre

    Musical Director Laurelyn Morrison

    ______

    Tessa Silvestro for Annie at Port Tobacco Players

    Musical Director: William Derr

    ______

    Beverly Hill van Joolen for Bat Boy: The Musical at The Colonial Players

    Musical Director: David Merrill 

    ______

    Leslie Ann Ross for Young Frankenstein at The Alliance Theatre

    Musical Director Laurelyn Morrison

    ______

    LINKS

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Special Awards.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Plays in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Professional Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts: Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Musical in Community Theatres.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Performances in a Play in Professional Theatres.

  • DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Community Theatres

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Community Theatres

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    The staff of DCMetroTheaterArts is honored to announce that their 2014 Best Musicals at Community Theatres go to:

    The Addams Family at Kensington Arts Theatre

    Annie at Port Tobacco Players

    Bat Boy: The Musical at The Colonial Players

    Children of Eden at 2nd Star Productions

    Godspell at Pasadena Theatre Company

    The Great American Trailer Park Musical at Rockville Musical Theatre

    Guys and Dolls at McLean Community Players

    Into the Woods at Wildwood Simmer Theatre

    La Cage aux Folles at McLean Community Players 

    Les Misérables at Glyndon Area Players

    Les Misérables at Reston Community Players

    Les Misérables at Kensington Arts Theatre

    Lucky Stiff at Being Revived and The Fredericktowne Players

    Monty Python’s Spamalot at Annapolis Summer Garden Theatre

    Monty Python’s Spamalot at The Little Theatre of Alexandria

    The Most Happy Fella at The Arlington Players

    The Musical Of Musicals (The Musical!) at Prince William Little Theatre

    My Fair Lady at Damascus Theatre Company

    The Pirates of Penzance at Victorian Lyric Opera House

    The Producers at Sandy Spring Theater Group

    Ragtime at Arts Collective@HCC

    The Rocky Horror Show at Little Theatre of Alexandria

    Shrek The Musical at The Alliance Theatre 

    Spamalot at Zemfira Stage

    Urinetown the Musical at Dominion Stage

    Urinetown the Musical at Heritage Players

    The Wedding Singer at The Arlington Players

    White Christmas at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    The Wild Party at Laurel Mill Playhouse

    The Wizard of Oz at Charm City Players

    The Yeomen of the Guard, or the Merryman and His Maid at Victorian Lyric Opera Company

    Young Frankenstein at The Alliance Theatre

    You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown at Reston Community Players

    LINKS

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Special Awards.

    DCMetroTheaterArts’ Best of 2014: Best Musicals in Professional Theatres.

  • ‘Pippin’ is Playing at The National Theatre: A Chat with John Rubinstein on Coming into the Broadway Production, Playing Charles, and Playing Pippin in the Original Broadway Production

    ‘Pippin’ is Playing at The National Theatre: A Chat with John Rubinstein on Coming into the Broadway Production, Playing Charles, and Playing Pippin in the Original Broadway Production

    John Rubenstein.
    John Rubinstein

    [Editor’s Note: Press Night for The National Tour of Pippin is tonight at The National Theatre in DC, and John Rubenstein is here to play King Charlemagne direct from The Tony Award-winning Broadway production. Teresa McCormick Ertel interviewed John right after he began performances on Broadway (June 19, 2014 – August 24, 2014).. Here’s her interview:

    Actor, director, teacher, and composer John Rubinstein has taken on the role of King Charlemagne in the critically acclaimed Tony Award-winning revival of Pippin until the end of July. He’s Broadway’s original Pippin and here he shares his thoughts on his experience with the musical and how it feels to be king.

    Teresa: How was opening night and what were you feeling and what was going through your mind before you took to the stage?

    John: Well, the thought that I was having as the music was starting off was, “Why did I ever talk myself into doing this?”

    Were you terrified?

    I was. I remember having the same thought 32 years ago, almost to the day, when I first did Pippin at The Opera House at The Kennedy Center in DC where Pippin first opened for an out of town try out. I remember standing backstage, looking at this giant set that we had that Tony Walton designed, thinking, “Why did I ever let myself get into this?” That panic, that is the actor’s nightmare, that I’ll walk out onstage and not have a clue what I’m doing.

    So, how did it go?

    In DC it went well, and the other night went quite well, too.

    At what point in the show did you realize, “OK, I can relax, this going to be alright, and I’m ready?”

    I didn’t (laughs). I still haven’t quite gotten there. I’ve done the show five times now. The fourth and fifth times I had a few moments where I breathed and said to myself, “Everything’s going to be ok.” But, onstage, especially in the big group numbers, I still have this feeling of, “Oh my God, I feel like I’m standing in the wrong place bumping into people and somebody’s gonna die.”

    I can imagine that it’s a little different this time around with the added “cirque” elements. How do you feel about the acrobatics and the effects?

    Well, it’s a completely different take on the show. The story is still there, of course. You know I always related the old production to Shakespeare’s Macbeth. The image that Shakespeare chose of those three weird sisters, whom we call the witches. They do magic and you know, [to quote them]“Double, double toil and trouble.” They tell things to Macbeth that startle, surprise, scare and inspire him. And he moves through the story of that play, very much motivated by those three weird sisters. He tells his wife about them and she buys into it, and finally they lead him to destruction. So what are they? Are they three strange gypsies, fortune tellers that actually live there in Scotland and know what’s going to happen? Or are they the interior dark workings and forces of his own mind?

    I see the parallel and similar idea behind the players, who are they, do they exist or are they part of Pippin’s mind. That’s part of why my family adores this show, because of the open interpretation. My daughters’ art school did an eerie and wonderful production of it this year, with a steampunk element costume design and minimalist set that was more like the original  -without the circus performance elements. The new slant offered by the revival is brilliant and absolutely beautiful to watch. Do you feel the story remains intact?

    Yes, it’s basically the same, but the main difference is the ending. Stephen Schwartz and Roger Hirson changed the ending of the play several years ago. The original ending had Pippin defeating the players. They were beaten at the end. The dragged away the scenery and chased away the orchestra. So Pippin and Catherine and the little boy are left, like Dustin Hoffman and Katherine Ross [in the film The Graduate] at the end of the day. They are thinking of the future saying, “Now what?”

    They didn’t bring the ending around full circle as they do in the revival?

    No. In Washington {the ’72 opening) they had a little uplift at the end, which was a favorite for me. After the orchestra and players were gone, Jill Clayburgh, who played Catherine, would turn to me and say something like, “Well Pippin, how do you feel now?” I would think for a long minute and I would say, “…Trapped.” And the audience would howl with laughter. I guess because at that moment they were expecting Pippin to say, “I realize that I love you and that love is more important than anything else, blah blah blah,” And I didn’t. Everyone would laugh because they could relate to that feeling of being trapped in our lives and [feeling as though] perhaps we didn’t achieve what we wanted to achieve, and feel trapped in the limited world that we ended up in. Maybe my wife doesn’t seem to like me all that much anymore, and when I was a little boy, I wanted to be a fireman or a marine or a rock star.

    c1c1c4d4c978664714ecfbd65fb096d4Then I would wait for that laughter to dissipate, and then I would say, “But… happy.” And the audience would go “YES!” Because although maybe the accomplishments weren’t just as we hoped, and maybe I’m not the amazing person I thought I might be, but I love my wife, I love my kids, I’m happy in my little house, the guys at work are nice…I’m happy.

    After that, I said, softly, and with simultaneous hope and discovery, “… which isn’t too bad for the end of a musical comedy.” Then, I slowly, tentatively, and tenderly raised their hands in mine — tiptoeing into our brave new world together — and sang, high and very soft, almost whispered, “Ta-daahh!”

    The audience was enthralled, they loved it, and we got rave reviews in Washington, DC.

    When we moved it to New York, [Director] Bob Fosse, a couple of nights before we open, comes up to me and says, “John, cut ‘But happy.’” I said, “Oh my God, really? Those key little words are what save the evening. That’s what makes Pippin

    The hero?

    Yeah, He’s defeated the powers of darkness and he’s smart enough to realize that he hasn’t accomplished what he wants, he’s trapped in it, and he’s happy about it. And that is really what the journey is. Fosse said, Nah, nah, that’s sentimental bullshit, don’t say it (laughs).

    So for the 5 years that we played on Broadway, we didn’t say, “But happy.” And for the national tour, no “But happy.” It was just “Trapped…which isn’t too bad for the end of a musical comedy.” And I felt the audience reaction was more flat. Our reviews were more negative in New York. They loved Fosse’s choreography, they loved [Lead Player] Ben Vereen, they loved the sets and the costumes, but not necessarily the show.

    How do you feel about the ending used now in the revival?

    I’m in the show and part of that new ending now and I love playing it with all my heart. I feel so fortunate and proud to be in this production. I’m looking forward to the national tour. I’m going to take it all across the country and I love it. As a dramaturge, as a director, as a critic, I would say, no, we don’t need Pippin and Catherine to walk away blithely, and little Theo, the little boy, to stay behind and get swept up by those same players. It’s more a of a negativist point of view.

    You have the benefit of knowledge of the variety of endings, and what it was originally, but you agree that this one works as well.

    Oh, yes! I get it and it’s not and it’s not at all illegitimate, it’s just that I’m an old man and I grew up as Pippin with his journey as a foolish adolescent, full of himself, and he ends it with a little bit more humility, a little bit more sense of what’s actually true in life and what actually has value. In the current ending the message is more that life is a cycle, you reach the heights, you fall to the depths, and the next guy is waiting right behind you. It works and the audience is enthralled, they love it! They scream, they shout, they stand up at the end, they laugh, they love it.

    Yes, we loved it, as well, and the audience gets to come full circle with that haunting music from the opening scene. It’s an eerie and ironic ending. I also get your point that the original ending takes on a journey of Pippin with a different resolution. Both are just brilliant.

    Diane Paulus, the director and I had a long talk and she is an artist of great integrity. She absolutely believes in what she has created with the writer, and I buy it, I absolutely accept it and was convinced by what she said. Two different ideas and endings, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

    Kyle Dean Massey (Pippin), John Rubinstein (Chales) & Ciara Renee (Leading Player). Photo by Bruce Glikas.
    Kyle Dean Massey (Pippin), John Rubinstein (Charles) & Ciara Renee (Leading Player). Photo by Bruce Glikas.

    So now that you are Charles, is there anything that you recall from Fosse’s direction of Eric Berry (originator of the role) that you are using or have called upon for your portrayal?

    Yes, I have to say, I did the show with him for two and a half years and just by osmosis I took it in. To me Eric Berry is Charlemagne, you know, so when I am up there saying his lines, I’m not imitating him because I am a completely different entity than he was, but I definitely feel his dignity, his pride, his coldness and cruelty that he put into it. I’m channeling that somewhere, although this version of the play is also very different for Charlemagne. He’s a different guy, he’s a circus performer, a knife thrower. But I can feel, coursing through my veins, Eric Berry’s performance in there somewhere.

    Do you portray Charlemagne as a bit of the likeable father figure or more as one of the players that is tasked with leading Pippin to his doom?

    Well, both. It’s this weird little play that can be interpreted on all these different levels. On one level, I am the veteran, the oldest of the circus performers. I’ve been with the troupe forever. We do Pippin and maybe we even do twenty other different plays and we travel around and we try to get an audience member to do this magic scene. In the old days, it was thought of as a fatal scene, but now it’s not thought of in quite the same way. You do this act of daring, sort of like reality TV or like Jerry Springer, the kind of thing where you get people to watch something that is very much staged, as all those reality TV shows are. During the commercials they coach them, like “Come on now you’ve got to get up and you’ve got to go punch that girl and then we’ll have our people come pull you off of her, but you’ve got to do something.”

    What a fantastic analogy of Pippin to reality TV. I’ve never thought about it that way, but that’s a brilliant analogy.

    So Pippin is sort of the ancient version of doing that. Setting up in a town, doing amazing acrobatic tricks, magic, and illusions, and trying to lure one of the townspeople into a reality situation where they’re going to defy death and do an amazing climax number. And if we don’t get that done, than we don’t get paid. So it’s terribly important to me, as this old knife throwing actor, to pick up this kid and do what we’re supposed to do. 

    How is the knife throwing going? Did you have a lot of training and preparation for that?

    I worked very hard at that and it wasn’t easy at all. Every night that is one of the things that I’m most nervous about. If it goes flying from the stage then I look like an idiot. But then, I am an old guy. I [as Charlemagne] could be the old drunken actor and when I was thirty something I could fly them like an ace, but now I’m sixty something and I’m losing it. I’d feel ashamed that I can’t throw my knives well anymore. So far, though, I’ve done them great, so I’m OK (laughs).

    So, you are going to be touring for at least a year with Pippin after your Broadway stint ends at the end of July?

    Yes, after July 27th we will rehearse for the tour, here in New York, and then we open in Denver in September.

    We won’t miss that and will make a point to see you on tour. I have to say, I think it’s just a genius casting decision to have the original Pippin come full circle and play the king. Who came up with that?

    I think it may have been my wonderful agent in New York, Michael Rodriguez.

    How do you like to spend your downtime in New York City, when you are on Broadway?

    Well, I haven’t had any downtime yet (laughs). I’ve done a lot of Broadway shows. At times when I’ve worked here, my kids were going to school here. This is my favorite schedule, 8 shows a week, you know, and especially in New York City. There is just nothing like that feeling. If you grew up in this town like I did, as an actor, wanting to do this and being allowed to be in a Broadway show, it’s wonderful. Right now, it’s my day off, I’m sitting in a beautiful little park, all of these people are out here having their lunch, and I get to do a Broadway show tomorrow night!

    What’s your advice for young actors and students now, who have that goal… that dream to be on Broadway?

    I teach at USC. I’ve taught there for six years and I teach musical theater and I direct the big spring musicals. I’m obviously taking a sabbatical to do this show. I try to instill in all my students a respect and love of not only the process and the virtue of performing, but of the history. Know the history, know the old musicals. Listen to all the musicals from the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. Don’t just listen to Spring Awakening and Hairspray, go back and listen to Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Rodgers and Hart. Listen to all the shows and get to know them. Learn the stories and listen to the original Broadway recordings of them. Learn all of that stuff, learn it and know it and feel it.

    Even if you are in a small town, go to the community theater, see whatever they are putting on. Look at the road shows that come through, like I’m going to be coming through all these towns, with the tour. If you get to New York, drag your parents to the theater. So that by the time you are in college and getting out of college, you are not just some person who can sing or who can dance, you are someone who actually knows the material and knows the world they want to become a part of. The time that is spent texting friends and writing on Facebook, is time that could be spent listening to Mary Martin sing South Pacific.

    What shows have you chosen to direct for the spring musicals at University of Southern California?

    Well, I’ve done six now. I did Brigadoon, Into the Woods, On the Town, City of Angels, The Most Happy Fella

    I don’t know that one.

    Oh, that’s Loesser, his masterpiece. Well, Guys and Dolls, I guess is his masterpiece, but The Most Happy Fella is almost like an opera with a fantastic, beautiful score, one of the most beautiful scores ever written for Broadway. The last musical we did was Grand Hotel. Fantastic show.

    As a director, is there something you think is due for a revival? You mentioned all these wonderful musicals of history and have such a vast knowledge, so what do you think might be due to come back around? What should come back to Broadway?

    Oh my God. Wow, I have to think about that. Well, just a couple of years ago, they did do A Little Night Music. I love A Little Night Music. I would like to do Ragtime. To me, it’s the show that should be the perennial New York show. Not Phantom of the Opera, not Cats, and not Les Mis, and not The Lion King. I respect all of those shows, but the show that should never close and should attract tourists from all over the world to come to New York City is Ragtime. I think they revived it and it didn’t go so well. But, it’s a show that’s about the history of the United States, the history of New York City, it’s about the ethnic hodge-podge that our country is and all the difficulties that arise from that. It has glorious music and lyrics, great roles for actors. Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens wrote music that is just killer.  I think that’s one of the best shows that’s been written in the last 30 years. I would love to get my hands on that show.

    Have you ever directed Pippin or have you considered Pippin?

    No, no, I don’t want to do Pippin.

    You don’t want to direct it?

    No, not yet. I may want to sometime. They keep asking me.

    John Rubenstein (Pippin) and Jill Clayburgh (Catherine) in the Original Broadway Production of 'Pippin.'
    John Rubinstein (Pippin) and Jill Clayburgh (Catherine) in the Original 1972 Broadway Production of ‘Pippin.’

    I’m sure, of course!

    Having being in it, and working with Fosse, I wouldn’t want to imitate him and I wouldn’t want to try to reproduce what he did and I also don’t have any brilliant, brand new idea. I love what he did and what we did. I love what I’m doing now, and that’s enough for now.

    Pippin is playing through January 4, 2015 at The National Theatre-1321 Pennsylvania Ave NW, in Washington, DC. For tickets call (800) 514-3849 (ETIX), by visiting the Box Office, or purchase them online.


  • Broadway Royalty Returns to Broadway: A Chat with John Rubinstein on Joining the Cast of ‘Pippin’

    Broadway Royalty Returns to Broadway: A Chat with John Rubinstein on Joining the Cast of ‘Pippin’

    John Rubenstein.
    John Rubinstein

    Actor, director, teacher, and composer John Rubinstein has taken on the role of King Charlemagne in the critically acclaimed Tony Award-winning revival of Pippin until the end of July. He’s Broadway’s original Pippin and here he shares his thoughts on his experience with the musical and how it feels to be king.

    Teresa: How was opening night and what were you feeling and what was going through your mind before you took to the stage?

    John: Well, the thought that I was having as the music was starting off was, “Why did I ever talk myself into doing this?”

    Were you terrified?

    I was. I remember having the same thought 32 years ago, almost to the day, when I first did Pippin at The Opera House at The Kennedy Center in DC where Pippin first opened for an out of town try out. I remember standing backstage, looking at this giant set that we had that Tony Walton designed, thinking, “Why did I ever let myself get into this?” That panic, that is the actor’s nightmare, that I’ll walk out onstage and not have a clue what I’m doing.

    So, how did it go?

    In DC it went well, and the other night went quite well, too.

    At what point in the show did you realize, “OK, I can relax, this going to be alright, and I’m ready?”

    I didn’t (laughs). I still haven’t quite gotten there. I’ve done the show five times now. The fourth and fifth times I had a few moments where I breathed and said to myself, “Everything’s going to be ok.” But, onstage, especially in the big group numbers, I still have this feeling of, “Oh my God, I feel like I’m standing in the wrong place bumping into people and somebody’s gonna die.”

    I can imagine that it’s a little different this time around with the added “cirque” elements. How do you feel about the acrobatics and the effects?

    Well, it’s a completely different take on the show. The story is still there, of course. You know I always related the old production to Shakespeare’s Macbeth. The image that Shakespeare chose of those three weird sisters, whom we call the witches. They do magic and you know, [to quote them]“Double, double toil and trouble.” They tell things to Macbeth that startle, surprise, scare and inspire him. And he moves through the story of that play, very much motivated by those three weird sisters. He tells his wife about them and she buys into it, and finally they lead him to destruction. So what are they? Are they three strange gypsies, fortune tellers that actually live there in Scotland and know what’s going to happen? Or are they the interior dark workings and forces of his own mind?

    I see the parallel and similar idea behind the players, who are they, do they exist or are they part of Pippin’s mind. That’s part of why my family adores this show, because of the open interpretation. My daughters’ art school did an eerie and wonderful production of it this year, with a steampunk element costume design and minimalist set that was more like the original  -without the circus performance elements. The new slant offered by the revival is brilliant and absolutely beautiful to watch. Do you feel the story remains intact?

    Yes, it’s basically the same, but the main difference is the ending. Stephen Schwartz and Roger Hirson changed the ending of the play several years ago. The original ending had Pippin defeating the players. They were beaten at the end. The dragged away the scenery and chased away the orchestra. So Pippin and Catherine and the little boy are left, like Dustin Hoffman and Katherine Ross [in the film The Graduate] at the end of the day. They are thinking of the future saying, “Now what?”

    They didn’t bring the ending around full circle as they do in the revival?

    No. In Washington {the ’72 opening) they had a little uplift at the end, which was a favorite for me. After the orchestra and players were gone, Jill Clayburgh, who played Catherine, would turn to me and say something like, “Well Pippin, how do you feel now?” I would think for a long minute and I would say, “…Trapped.” And the audience would howl with laughter. I guess because at that moment they were expecting Pippin to say, “I realize that I love you and that love is more important than anything else, blah blah blah,” And I didn’t. Everyone would laugh because they could relate to that feeling of being trapped in our lives and [feeling as though] perhaps we didn’t achieve what we wanted to achieve, and feel trapped in the limited world that we ended up in. Maybe my wife doesn’t seem to like me all that much anymore, and when I was a little boy, I wanted to be a fireman or a marine or a rock star.

    c1c1c4d4c978664714ecfbd65fb096d4Then I would wait for that laughter to dissipate, and then I would say, “But… happy.” And the audience would go “YES!” Because although maybe the accomplishments weren’t just as we hoped, and maybe I’m not the amazing person I thought I might be, but I love my wife, I love my kids, I’m happy in my little house, the guys at work are nice…I’m happy.

    After that, I said, softly, and with simultaneous hope and discovery, “… which isn’t too bad for the end of a musical comedy.” Then, I slowly, tentatively, and tenderly raised their hands in mine — tiptoeing into our brave new world together — and sang, high and very soft, almost whispered, “Ta-daahh!”

    The audience was enthralled, they loved it, and we got rave reviews in Washington, DC.

    When we moved it to New York, [Director] Bob Fosse, a couple of nights before we open, comes up to me and says, “John, cut ‘But happy.’” I said, “Oh my God, really? Those key little words are what save the evening. That’s what makes Pippin

    The hero?

    Yeah, He’s defeated the powers of darkness and he’s smart enough to realize that he hasn’t accomplished what he wants, he’s trapped in it, and he’s happy about it. And that is really what the journey is. Fosse said, Nah, nah, that’s sentimental bullshit, don’t say it (laughs).

    So for the 5 years that we played on Broadway, we didn’t say, “But happy.” And for the national tour, no “But happy.” It was just “Trapped…which isn’t too bad for the end of a musical comedy.” And I felt the audience reaction was more flat. Our reviews were more negative in New York. They loved Fosse’s choreography, they loved [Lead Player] Ben Vereen, they loved the sets and the costumes, but not necessarily the show.

    How do you feel about the ending used now in the revival?

    I’m in the show and part of that new ending now and I love playing it with all my heart. I feel so fortunate and proud to be in this production. I’m looking forward to the national tour. I’m going to take it all across the country and I love it. As a dramaturge, as a director, as a critic, I would say, no, we don’t need Pippin and Catherine to walk away blithely, and little Theo, the little boy, to stay behind and get swept up by those same players. It’s more a of a negativist point of view.

    You have the benefit of knowledge of the variety of endings, and what it was originally, but you agree that this one works as well.

    Oh, yes! I get it and it’s not and it’s not at all illegitimate, it’s just that I’m an old man and I grew up as Pippin with his journey as a foolish adolescent, full of himself, and he ends it with a little bit more humility, a little bit more sense of what’s actually true in life and what actually has value. In the current ending the message is more that life is a cycle, you reach the heights, you fall to the depths, and the next guy is waiting right behind you. It works and the audience is enthralled, they love it! They scream, they shout, they stand up at the end, they laugh, they love it.

    Yes, we loved it, as well, and the audience gets to come full circle with that haunting music from the opening scene. It’s an eerie and ironic ending. I also get your point that the original ending takes on a journey of Pippin with a different resolution. Both are just brilliant.

    Diane Paulus, the director and I had a long talk and she is an artist of great integrity. She absolutely believes in what she has created with the writer, and I buy it, I absolutely accept it and was convinced by what she said. Two different ideas and endings, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

    Kyle Dean Massey (Pippin), John Rubinstein (Chales) & Ciara Renee (Leading Player). Photo by Bruce Glikas.
    Kyle Dean Massey (Pippin), John Rubinstein (Charles) & Ciara Renee (Leading Player). Photo by Bruce Glikas.

    So now that you are Charles, is there anything that you recall from Fosse’s direction of Eric Berry (originator of the role) that you are using or have called upon for your portrayal?

    Yes, I have to say, I did the show with him for two and a half years and just by osmosis I took it in. To me Eric Berry is Charlemagne, you know, so when I am up there saying his lines, I’m not imitating him because I am a completely different entity than he was, but I definitely feel his dignity, his pride, his coldness and cruelty that he put into it. I’m channeling that somewhere, although this version of the play is also very different for Charlemagne. He’s a different guy, he’s a circus performer, a knife thrower. But I can feel, coursing through my veins, Eric Berry’s performance in there somewhere.

    Do you portray Charlemagne as a bit of the likeable father figure or more as one of the players that is tasked with leading Pippin to his doom?

    Well, both. It’s this weird little play that can be interpreted on all these different levels. On one level, I am the veteran, the oldest of the circus performers. I’ve been with the troupe forever. We do Pippin and maybe we even do twenty other different plays and we travel around and we try to get an audience member to do this magic scene. In the old days, it was thought of as a fatal scene, but now it’s not thought of in quite the same way. You do this act of daring, sort of like reality TV or like Jerry Springer, the kind of thing where you get people to watch something that is very much staged, as all those reality TV shows are. During the commercials they coach them, like “Come on now you’ve got to get up and you’ve got to go punch that girl and then we’ll have our people come pull you off of her, but you’ve got to do something.”

    What a fantastic analogy of Pippin to reality TV. I’ve never thought about it that way, but that’s a brilliant analogy.

    So Pippin is sort of the ancient version of doing that. Setting up in a town, doing amazing acrobatic tricks, magic, and illusions, and trying to lure one of the townspeople into a reality situation where they’re going to defy death and do an amazing climax number. And if we don’t get that done, than we don’t get paid. So it’s terribly important to me, as this old knife throwing actor, to pick up this kid and do what we’re supposed to do. 

    How is the knife throwing going? Did you have a lot of training and preparation for that?

    I worked very hard at that and it wasn’t easy at all. Every night that is one of the things that I’m most nervous about. If it goes flying from the stage then I look like an idiot. But then, I am an old guy. I [as Charlemagne] could be the old drunken actor and when I was thirty something I could fly them like an ace, but now I’m sixty something and I’m losing it. I’d feel ashamed that I can’t throw my knives well anymore. So far, though, I’ve done them great, so I’m OK (laughs).

    So, you are going to be touring for at least a year with Pippin after your Broadway stint ends at the end of July?

    Yes, after July 27th we will rehearse for the tour, here in New York, and then we open in Denver in September.

    We won’t miss that and will make a point to see you on tour. I have to say, I think it’s just a genius casting decision to have the original Pippin come full circle and play the king. Who came up with that?

    I think it may have been my wonderful agent in New York, Michael Rodriguez.

    How do you like to spend your downtime in New York City, when you are on Broadway?

    Well, I haven’t had any downtime yet (laughs). I’ve done a lot of Broadway shows. At times when I’ve worked here, my kids were going to school here. This is my favorite schedule, 8 shows a week, you know, and especially in New York City. There is just nothing like that feeling. If you grew up in this town like I did, as an actor, wanting to do this and being allowed to be in a Broadway show, it’s wonderful. Right now, it’s my day off, I’m sitting in a beautiful little park, all of these people are out here having their lunch, and I get to do a Broadway show tomorrow night!

    What’s your advice for young actors and students now, who have that goal… that dream to be on Broadway?

    I teach at USC. I’ve taught there for six years and I teach musical theater and I direct the big spring musicals. I’m obviously taking a sabbatical to do this show. I try to instill in all my students a respect and love of not only the process and the virtue of performing, but of the history. Know the history, know the old musicals. Listen to all the musicals from the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. Don’t just listen to Spring Awakening and Hairspray, go back and listen to Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Rodgers and Hart. Listen to all the shows and get to know them. Learn the stories and listen to the original Broadway recordings of them. Learn all of that stuff, learn it and know it and feel it.

    Even if you are in a small town, go to the community theater, see whatever they are putting on. Look at the road shows that come through, like I’m going to be coming through all these towns, with the tour. If you get to New York, drag your parents to the theater. So that by the time you are in college and getting out of college, you are not just some person who can sing or who can dance, you are someone who actually knows the material and knows the world they want to become a part of. The time that is spent texting friends and writing on Facebook, is time that could be spent listening to Mary Martin sing South Pacific.

    What shows have you chosen to direct for the spring musicals at University of Southern California?

    Well, I’ve done six now. I did Brigadoon, Into the Woods, On the Town, City of Angels, The Most Happy Fella

    I don’t know that one.

    Oh, that’s Loesser, his masterpiece. Well, Guys and Dolls, I guess is his masterpiece, but The Most Happy Fella is almost like an opera with a fantastic, beautiful score, one of the most beautiful scores ever written for Broadway. The last musical we did was Grand Hotel. Fantastic show.

    As a director, is there something you think is due for a revival? You mentioned all these wonderful musicals of history and have such a vast knowledge, so what do you think might be due to come back around? What should come back to Broadway?

    Oh my God. Wow, I have to think about that. Well, just a couple of years ago, they did do A Little Night Music. I love A Little Night Music. I would like to do Ragtime. To me, it’s the show that should be the perennial New York show. Not Phantom of the Opera, not Cats, and not Les Mis, and not The Lion King. I respect all of those shows, but the show that should never close and should attract tourists from all over the world to come to New York City is Ragtime. I think they revived it and it didn’t go so well. But, it’s a show that’s about the history of the United States, the history of New York City, it’s about the ethnic hodge-podge that our country is and all the difficulties that arise from that. It has glorious music and lyrics, great roles for actors. Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens wrote music that is just killer.  I think that’s one of the best shows that’s been written in the last 30 years. I would love to get my hands on that show.

    Have you ever directed Pippin or have you considered Pippin?

    No, no, I don’t want to do Pippin.

    You don’t want to direct it?

    No, not yet. I may want to sometime. They keep asking me.

    John Rubenstein (Pippin) and Jill Clayburgh (Catherine) in the Original Broadway Production of 'Pippin.'
    John Rubinstein (Pippin) and Jill Clayburgh (Catherine) in the Original 1972 Broadway Production of ‘Pippin.’

    I’m sure, of course!

    Having being in it, and working with Fosse, I wouldn’t want to imitate him and I wouldn’t want to try to reproduce what he did and I also don’t have any brilliant, brand new idea. I love what he did and what we did. I love what I’m doing now, and that’s enough for now.

    Pippin is playing at The Music Box Theatre-239 West 45th Street, in New York City. For tickets, call Telecharge at (212) 239-6200 or (800) 432-7250, or purchase them online.


  • 5 Top Scene Stealers of the Week-Week Ending 6/13/14

    Here are our 6  (We have a tie) Top Scene Stealers for the week ending June 13, 2014.

    Congrats to all our honorees! 

    A Special Scene Stealer of The Week:

    Frank Britton (center) as Pontius Pilate. Photo by Melissa Blackall Photography.
    Frank Britton (center) as Pontius Pilate. Photo by Melissa Blackall Photography.

    Frank Britton Returns as Pontius Pilate in The Last Days of Judas Iscariut. 

    The joy that filled Forum Theatre’s production of The Last Days of Judas Iscarot when Frank Britton appeared on the stage Wednesday night (after enduring  a brutal attack only weeks earlier) was felt all over the DC Metro area by friends, admirers, and theatregoers alike. It was a moment that will never be forgotten. The word ‘resurrection’ had a deeper meaning that night. Bravo to this gentle, kind, and courageous man. It’s so nice Frank to see you back where you belong!

    Frank Britton’s memorable time on the stand as the militant and righteous Pontius Pilate is a second act highlight as the trial nears its end. Britton has the rare ability of elevating any character that he performs and making his mark without ever stealing focus from the other ensemble members.” Sydney Chanele-Dawkins, in her review

    ______

    The cast of BASTIANELLO around the wine barrels arguing: Keith Phares, Catherine Martin, Tom Corbeil, Erin Sanzero and Alex Mansoori.
    The cast of BASTIANELLO around the wine barrels arguing: Keith Phares, Catherine Martin, Tom Corbeil, Erin Sanzero and Alex Mansoori.

    (1) Catherine Martin Retrieving Wine in the Cellar in Bastianello & Lucrezia at Urban Arias. 

    After the wedding of Luciano (Bass-baritone Tom Corbeil) and Amadora (Mezzo-soprano Catherine Martin), Amadora is asked to go down to the cellar and retrieve some wine. The aria that follows is one that both tickles the funny bone and tugs at the heartstrings. Amadora begins, alone, center stage behind a barrel of wine, exclaiming that this is the “Happiest moment of my life.” The smile fades to comic despair, as she looks forward and sees the monotonous world she has now committed herself to, where one day she’ll “just wake up dead.” Martin delivers angelic vocals, perfect facial expressions, spot-on comic timing, and yet just enough real sadness to be relatable. Soon joined by Luciano’s mother and father, (Soprano Erin Sanzero and Baritone Keith Phares, respectively) this is one of the most funny and touching moments in the show, and heavenly sung by this group of exceptional singers.” Brennan Jones.

    _____

    Jennifer Osborn (Dottie Smith) and Matthew Marcus (Chris Smith). Photo courtesy of SeeNoSun OnStage.
    Jennifer Osborn and Sun King Davis. Photo courtesy of SeeNoSun OnStage.

    (2) Jennifer Osborn Having Dinner With Sun King Davis in Killer Joe at SeeNoSunOnStage.

    Jennifer Osborn in Killer Joe in the role of Dottie is a standout: nuanced and centered, gritty and guileless. With effortlessness and simplicity, she captures the center of attention every moment she’s on stage. And in the scene when she first meets Joe Cooper (Sun King Davis)—the contract killer to whom her father and brother have promised her—she is riveting. She has made a trailer park dinner of tuna casserole and salad. They sit at a kitchen table making small talk. And as Dottie scarfs down her own cooking—which Joe barely touches, having arrived to sate another appetite—Osborn’s nervous hospitality conveys a mix of fear and attraction that not only steals the scene but anchors the whole cockamamie plot. Alone among the miscreant misfits in Letts’ cast of characters, Dottie is a locus of innocence—and Osborn keeps her in focus throughout the fracas till her stunning comeuppance at the end.  John Stoltenberg.

    ______

    Christen N. Cromwell and Tyrone Requer. Photo by Tom Lauer.
    Christen N. Cromwell and Tyrone Requer. Photo by Tom Lauer.

    (3) Tyron Requer as Robert Earl Hayes Reading His Letter send to The Judge in The Exonerated  at Vagabond Players. 

    Robert (Tyrone Requer) delivers a similar presence in his stories; calm and collected until he isn’t anymore. Requer’s letter to the judge over an incident of officer harassment is loaded with fury and frustration and delivered with equal parts of rage and flippancy.” Amanda Gunther.

    (Note: Robert Earl Hayes was convicted for the rape and murder of a white woman in Florida . A lawyer late proved that the murder was committed by a white man whose hair was clutched in the murder victim’s hand.)

    ______

    Diane Schurr. Photo courtesy of Diane's website.
    Diane Schurr. Photo courtesy of Diane’s website.

    (4) Diane Schuur singing, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” at Bethesda Blues and Jazz Supper Club.

    “Cole Porter’s “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” was unlike any rendition I have ever heard of this still remarkably potent song. Schuur’s delivery was very pointed and direct but, alternately, full of subtext and poignancy. As I told Ms. Schuur, not since Sarah Vaughan turned her voice into a veritable fog when drawing out the words: “a foggy, foggy day in London Town” (from the song “A Foggy Day in London Town”) had I ever felt words transformed beyond their outer verbal meaning into an actual living breathing entity; in Schuur’s acrid, fully-realized and drawn-out singing of the last repeating of the words “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” she had convinced me that someone was “under her skin.” Schuur evoked such a rare moment of intensity and absorption in the lines that I felt an artistic epiphany of sorts and a moment of artistry that cannot be duplicated.” David Frisic.

    ________

    Photo by Chris Maddaloni — with Jamie Smithson, Jenna Berk and Nick Kowalczyk. Photo by
    Photo by Chris Maddaloni — with Jamie Smithson, Jenna Berk and Nick Kowalczyk. Photo by Chris Maddaloni.

    (5) Jamie Smithson as Robert Nervously Explaining the Contents of a Bag in Boeing Boeing at No Rules Theatre Company

    “Jamie Smithson was truly, a comic tour-de-force who vaulted Boeing Boeing to comedy mastery. In a particularly brilliant scene in Act II, Robert must convince Gloria that Gretchen’s tell-tale Lufthansa flight bag is actually his. As the contents of the bag are revealed to include Tampax and a lacy bra, Robert is forced to spin a web of ever more complicated lies, and the audience was rolling in the aisles.” Michael Poandl.

    ______

    Emily Townley. Photo by Stan Barouh.
    Emily Townley. Photo by Stan Barouh.

    (5) Emily Townley Delivering Her “The Campaign is Like a First Date” speech in The Totalitarians at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

     “It is alarming how well Townley can energize the audience with the stupid things her character says. The laughter doesn’t stop when Townley delivers the “campaign is like a first date” speech; her ability to make this character a reality hits the audience with such relativity that it’s impossible not to laugh. Townley is an absolute hoot; a knockout when it comes to comic timing and delivery; as shiny in this role as the rhinestones all over her outfits.” Amanda Gunther.

    ______

    LINKS

    5 Top Scene Stealers of the Week-Week Ending 6/02/14.

    5 Top Scene Stealers of the Week-Week Ending 5/29/14.

    5 Top Scene Stealers of the Week-Week Ending 5/22/14.

    Meet the Cast of No Rules Theatre Company’s ‘Boeing Boeing’: Part 1: Helen Hedman.

    Meet the Cast of No Rules Theatre Company’s ‘Boeing Boeing’: Part 2: Nick Kowalczyk.

    Meet the Cast of No Rules Theatre Company’s ‘Boeing Boeing’: Part 3: Jamie Smithson.

    Meet the Cast of No Rules Theatre Company’s ‘Boeing Boeing’:Part 4: Sherry Berg.

    Robert O’Hara on Directing ‘The Totalitarians’ at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.

     

  • ‘Bastianello & Lucrezia’ at Urban Arias

    FIVE STARS 82x15
    Beautifully sung, hilariously acted, perfectly directed, brilliantly composed (John Musto for Bastianello and William Bolcom for Lucrezio), cleverly written (both by Mark Campbell)- these are just some of the ways to describe Urban Arias’ production of Bastianello & Lucrezia. Stage Directed by Alan Paul (This year’s Helen Hayes Award winner for directing Shakespeare Theatre Company’s A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum), and Musically Directed by Robert Wood, the two form a perfect team and present a most enjoyable evening of comic, modern opera. And what a treat to hear two pianos playing at the same time by two incredible musicians: R. Timothy McReynolds and David Hanlon. It was glorious!

    Erin Sanzero and Keith Phares in 'Bastianello.' Photo by Teresa Castracane Photography.
    Erin Sanzero and Keith Phares in ‘Bastianello.’ Photo by Teresa Castracane Photography.

    Before I go on, I will openly admit that I had never reviewed an opera before. When I arrived at the Artisphere I was excited,  but most of all, a little nervous being an Opera newbie. After enjoying and laughing myself silly, I’ll certainly be back to see more of Urban Arias, and I’ve grown very curious about the opera world as a whole.

    Urban Arias has indeed made opera accessible.

    A black box theatre hosts the performances of Lucrezia & Bastianello. The seats are arranged in a full thrust, and Director Alan Paul does a tremendous job of ensuring that no audience member loses out on any of the countless hilarious moments in either of the 40-minute pieces. The sets, designed by Andrew Cohen, are strikingly simple and effective. The only piece that remains for both shows is a balcony, upstage.

    The costumes by Sydney Gallas are distinctive, detailed, colorful, and perfectly ridiculous. The wigs, especially, add to the comedy of the operas. The props by Timothy Jones are superb. One piece (worth the price of admission in-and-of itself), is the “Confession On Wheels,” a hilarious scene from Lucrezia. I don’t want to give it away, but I must confess that the audience and I were roaring with laughter.

    Bastianello, set in rural Italy in 1700, is a modern retelling of an Italian folktale. After the wedding of Luciano (Bass-baritone Tom Corbeil) and Amadora (Mezzo-soprano Catherine Martin), Amadora is asked to go down to the cellar and retrieve some wine. The aria that follows is one that both tickles the funny bone and tugs at the heartstrings. Amadora begins, alone, center stage behind a barrel of wine, exclaiming that this is the “Happiest moment of my life.” The smile fades to comic despair, as she looks forward and sees the monotonous world she has now committed herself to, where one day she’ll “just wake up dead.” Martin delivers angelic vocals, perfect facial expressions, spot-on comic timing, and yet just enough real sadness to be relatable. Soon joined by Luciano’s mother and father, (Soprano Erin Sanzero and Baritone Keith Phares, respectively) this is one of the most funny and touching moments in the show, and heavenly sung by this group of exceptional singers.

    During this lament, though, Amadora, and the rest of the family have let all the wine run out. Luciano swears that he will not return until he has found six others more foolish than his family- as “nothing is worse than wasted wine.” He does find the fools, but not in the manner you might expect.

    Lucrezia is set sometime around 1900 in Argentina. When Lorenzo (Tenor Alex Mansoori) falls head-over-heels for Lucrezia (Catherine Martin), his friend Chucho (Tom Corbeil) comes up with a plan to get the two in bed together. Is the plan devious? “Of course it’s devious!” says Chucho. The plan involves Lorenzo tricking Lucrezia’s mother (Erin Sanzero) and her husband (Keith Phares) through several elaborate ruses, including impersonating a German doctor, a priest, and a mariachi player.  And for the frustrated Lucrecia, who proclaims “I like sex!,” she learns quickly that a priest can also fill other needs besides spiritual ones.

    Catherine Martin and Alex Mansoori in 'Lucrezia.' Photo by Teresa Castracane Photography.
    Catherine Martin and Alex Mansoori in ‘Lucrezia.’ Photo by Teresa Castracane Photography.

    In Lucrezia, Mansoori shows us a tremendous range – serving as a narrator in Bastianello, Mansoori comes back as a character actor in Lucrezia that seems to delight in his role, and certainly has tremendous fun on stage. Rarely does a moment pass where Mansoori graces the stage in Lucrezia where the audience isn’t, at the very least, giggling at his antics.

    Who knew opera could be so much fun? What great singers and comedians! Don’t miss Bastianello and LucreziaIt’s an experience I will never forget!

    Running Time: 90 minutes, with one 15 minute intermission.

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    Bastianello and Lucrezia plays tonight June 7th, Friday, June 13th, Saturday, June 14th at 8 PM and Sunday, June 15th at 2 pm at Urban Arias performing at The Artisphere – 1101 Wilson Boulevard, in Arlington, VA. For tickets, purchase them online.

    LINKS

    Alan Paul on Directing ‘Bastianello’ and ‘Lucrezia at Urban Arias.

    Urban Arias website.

    Review of ‘She, After’ at UrbanArias at Artisphere by Justin Schneider.

    Composer Daniel Felsenfeld, Director Beth Greenberg, and Principle Artist Emily Pulley on UrbanArias’ ‘She, After.’

    Review of ‘Paul’s Case’ at UrbanArias by Terry Byrne.

    UrbanArias Presents ‘Blind Dates’ including ‘Craigslistlieder’ at IOTA on August 5th at 7 PM by Robert Wood.

  • Alan Paul on Directing ‘Bastianello’ and ‘Lucrezia’ at Urban Arias

    Performances begin tomorrow night, June 6th at 8 PM for two short comic operas –Bastianello and Luxrezia– at Urban Arias at Artisphere. Director Alan Paul gives us a short preview of what we will see and hear in the intimate Black Box Theatre.

    Director Alan Paul.
    Director Alan Paul.

    Joel: What is Urban Arias?

    Alan: Urban Arias is a company that is dedicated to contemporary opera and contemporary opera composers. It’s run by a great guy named Robert Wood, who is a wonderful conductor. I have had the opportunity to work on a lot of pieces and it has brought together some amazing musicians and you get to hear opera in an  intimate setting. It’s such a different and wonderful and different experience than going to a large opera house. You are in the Black Box in Artisphere and you are right there in the story.

    I was in rehearsal the other day and I told them, “You are always in closeup! So all the grand gestures you would have to do there [in a large opera house]  you don’t have to do here, because as you sing, the audience will be right here with you.”

    Robert Wood.
    Robert Wood.

    These are short operas?

    Yes. They are about 45 minutes long and have the same Librettist Mark Campbell and different composers. Bastianello‘s composer is John Musto, and Lucrezia‘s composer is William Bolcom. They have a lot of humor involved in them. And what’s most exciting is that there are two pianos. I’ve never worked with two pianos before. I always wanted to do a show with with two piano ever since I heard the cast recording of the revival of The Most Happy Fella. 

    I saw it in NYC a couple of times and loved it.

    It was an amazing experience, wasn’t it? At the rehearsal last week both pianists, who have known each, had never played the score together. They were so fantastic. I asked them, “Have you been rehearsing this together?” And they hadn’t. It was so beautiful and it sounded like they had rehearsed together for weeks.

    This is so different for you. You work at Shakespeare Theatre Company, and you just won a Helen Hayes Award for your direction of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. 

    I did and it was a big, big thrill! I didn’t think that I was going to win! My mother was crying and I am up there talking to people and I was so excited. It was a fun night. It was amazing how many people posted something on facebook a few minutes later after I won, and everybody knew about it, and my friends following it closely in NY.

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    I hear you are directing another musical at Shakespeare Theatre Company.

    I am directing Man of La ManchaWhat people don’t know is that I have directed opera several times. I am directing a new short opera called Penny at American Opera Initiative at The Washington National Opera on January 23-24, 2015. It’s an hour-long opera by Composer Douglas Pew and Librettist Dara Weinberg.

    What is so stimulating about directing opera?

    Chrissellene G. Petropoulos.
    Chrissellene G. Petropoulos.

    When I was growing in Potomac, MD and all through College – like a lot of other people – I wanted to be a performer, and I wanted to be a singer. There was a voice teacher named Chrissellene G. Petropoulos, who had a great career in opera, and she instilled in me a love for Classical music.  I started taking lessons from her when I was 9 years old., and she is still my mentor to this day. When I was going to college I was deciding if I should be a voice major in a conservatory or a theater major, I went to Northwestern because I could be in the Music Theatre Program but they would also give me a classical voice teacher who would allow me to study opera. But I ended up not being a performer.

    Music has always been a passion of mine, and I have a past as a Music Director and accompanist. It helped to pay a lot of bills in college by being an accompanist for a voice teacher in the School of Music at Northwestern. And then when I graduated from college and I was living in Chicago it was so much easier to get jobs as a music director than it was as a director, because I could join an existing show as a Musical Director, so music and classical music has been part of my fiber for a long time.

    So why should local theatre and music and opera lovers come to the Artisphere to see Urban Arias?

    B&L Digital Asset-page-798 (2)Because it will be a very fun night and you will hear great singing and both pieces are so different. The first piece is romantic and pastoral about a guy growing up, and the second piece is in Argentina about 1900 and it’s sexual and lusty and flirtatious and sensual, so you get two different flavors.

    What I really want to impress is that they are all singing actors because they are extremely expressive and they all have a real ability to express a lot of complicated emotions on the stage. It’s been like working with actors who sing. And they can really sing! You’ll be glad you came.

    NOTES:
    Bastianello is a modern take on an Italian folk tale; a frustrated groom leaves his new bride after she spills a cask of wine at the wedding, vowing not to return until he’s found six greater fools than she is. Lucrezia is an updated riff on a play by Machiavelli, in which a plan to provide an elderly husband with an heir leaves his wife and her new lover equally satisfied.

    Bastianello and Lucrezia plays on Friday, June 6th, Saturday, June 7th, Friday, June 13th, Saturday, June 14th at 8 PM and Sunday, June 15th at 2 pm at Urban Arias performing at The Artisphere – 1101 Wilson Boulevard, in Arlington, VA. For tickets, purchase them online.

    LINKS

    Review of ‘She, After’ at UrbanArias at Artisphere by Justin Schneider.

    Composer Daniel Felsenfeld, Director Beth Greenberg, and Principle Artist Emily Pulley on UrbanArias’ ‘She, After.’

    Review of ‘Paul’s Case’ at UrbanArias by Terry Byrne.

    UrbanArias Presents ‘Blind Dates’ including ‘Craigslistlieder’ at IOTA on August 5th at 7 PM by Robert Wood.

  • ‘The Most Happy Fella’ at The Arlington Players

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    Who doesn’t like a good, touching love story? If you are also fond of musicals-especially the grand old fashioned Broadway productions of the 1950s-seeing The Most Happy Fella at The Arlington Players is simply a must!

    The cast of  'The Most Happy Fella.' Photo by Peter Hill.
    The cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella.’ Photo by Peter Hill.

    “Wanting to be wanted, needing to be needed, that’s what it is…” and that’s what Heather Whitney (Rosabella) dreams about as she sings about her yearning for love and happiness, and later with her co-star and admirer and husband-to-be Jimmy Payne (Tony), she sings beautiful duets including “My Heart is Full of You.” Frank Loesser’s most challenging musical, is by no means a ‘boy meets girl and they live happily ever after’ cliché. Expect the unexpected. There’s a large age difference, hurtful disappointments, jealousy, and more. Does the fellow end up happy? Does the audience end up happy? Judging by the standing ovation bestowed on the performers after the finale – most definitely!

    Entering the auditorium, seeing the orchestra pit with the conductor ready to begin , and a spacious stage by Scenic Designer Bill Wisniewski, which hat has been turned into a San Francisco Chinese restaurant, I was so excited with anticipation. Within minutes after watching and hearing the first performer – beautiful, talented, and funny Teresa Danskey (Cleo)-I was transported into the world of 1950’s Broadway-esque magic, with a score that marvelously fused American and Italian cultures and musical styles together. What followed was a display of amazing singing, acting and dancing, and a great visual and musical feast in 3 acts, 11 scenes, and 27 musical numbers. Not that I was counting, because I was too busy with my eyes and ears ‘glued’ to the stage, lost in time.

    By the end of the first act, I was familiar with all characters and performers, enchanted with the songs, dance, and superb performance of David Rohde’s talented musicians. I was so moved by the story of two lonely people; Tony, an Italian middle aged wine farmer and a much younger Rosabella, who dreamed of marrying Tony, despite his sister’s objection.

    Jimmy Payne is perfectly cast as a the romantic farmer with a good heart and a strong disposition, and his unique ability to attract a younger woman.  Apart from the impressive stature and his handsome face, Payne has a special twinkle in his eyes that adds to the attraction. Combine this with a powerful singing voice and an ability to generate laughs with a thick Italian accent and you have a compelling stage presence. Heather Whitney, also a talented singer, is equally convincing as the younger, modest woman craving love and stability and she performs memorable (among others) renditions of “Somebody, Somewhere” and “Warm All Over.” And Payne is superb on “Rosabella,” and “Mamma, Mamma.” Christopher Overly in the role of Joe sings a wonderful rendition of “Don’t Cry.”

    Like every classic story, this one also has a villain, Tony’s sister Marie (Linda Wells), is the only character dressed in black, for a reason. On the surface Ms. Wells is a perfect embodiment of an Italian Mamma, full-bodied and warm, just like Marie, yet she easily transforms into a possessive, scheming, and vicious woman that she portrays.

    Most of the laughs in the show are generated by three groups of characters; a trio of cooks, Pasquale (Tom Mirenda), Ciccio (Quinn McCord) and Giuseppe (Jerrod Laber); the pairing of vivacious and flirty Cleo (Teresa Danskey) and good-hearted, always smiling Herman (Joseph Wilson), and a foursome of farm boys; Herman, Jake (Jerrod Laber), Clem (William Shingler), and Al (Derek Marsh), whose comedic talents go hand-in-hand with their singing and dancing skills. Look out for the farm boys singing the bouncy “Standing on the Corner,” the cooks’ song “Abbondanza”and “I Like Everybody,” and “Big D” by Cleo and Herman. The Ensemble lends their singing and dancing skills to many scenes, enriching the action and adding to the feel of the 1950s with their colorful costumes and characteristic hairstyles.

    Staging The Most Happy Fella is a dream come true for its Director, Gloria DuGan, and Musical Director David Rohde. Both have always wanted to do the show, despite its scope and challenges. The musical score is very extensive and thus demanding on both the singers and musicians.

    There are 26 performers in the show, including 13 members in the ensemble, several set changes, and a live orchestra. It took seven weeks and 1,100 hours of volunteer time to prepare the beautiful backdrops supporting the scenes; a colorful backdrop of Napa Town depicting shop fronts and a back drop depicting the rolling hillsides of Napa Valley. All in all it took 5,300 hours of volunteer time to put the production together. And what a success!

    The cast of 'The Most Happy Fella.' Photo by Peter Hill.
    The cast of ‘The Most Happy Fella.’ Photo by Peter Hill.

    Congrats to Producer Janet Bordeaux, Choreographer Jeannie Torres, Scenic Designer Bill Wisniewski, Lighting Designer B. Keith Ryder, Sound Designer Stan Harris, Costume Designers Laura Fontaine and Holly McDade and Hair and Makeup Designer Kendel Taylor for their brilliant work on this production.

    If Frank Loesser was in the audience last night, he would have been thrilled with The Arlington Players’ gorgeous production of The Most Happy Fella. Abbondanza!

    Running Time: Approximately two hours and 30 minutes, with one intermission.

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    Here’s the third video of Claire O’Brien’s ‘Behind the Scenes’ videos for The Arlington Players’ production of The Most Happy Fella, which opens this weekend.

    In this video meet the cast.

    Meet Director Gloria DuGan

    Meet Musical Director David Rohde.

    The Arlington Players’ production of The Most Happy Fella plays through April 19, 2014 at the Thomas Jefferson Community Center – 3501 Second Street, in Arlington, VA. Purchase tickets online.

    LINK
    ‘The Most Happy Fella’: Let’s Take It Outside: The Expansive Musical World of ‘The Most Happy Fella’ Which Opens at The Arlington Players on Friday, 4/4

  • Filichia on Friday: ‘March Leftovers and April’s Brainteaser’ by Peter Filichia

    Here is a new article from Peter Filichia’s column on Kritzerland called ‘Filichia on Friday.’ It’s an honor to bring Peter’s column every week to our readers on DCMetroTheaterArts.

    This week:
    March Leftovers and April’s Brainteaser

    Peter Filicia. Photo by: Jim Baldassare.
    Peter Filicia. Photo by: Jim Baldassare.

    Peter Filichia is the New York-based theater critic emeritus for The Newark (N.J.) Star Ledger newspaper and News 12 television station. He is also the author of Let’s Put on a Musical (Back Stage Books, 2007), now in its third printing; Broadway Musicals: The Biggest Hits /The Biggest Flops of the Season (Applause Books, 2010); and Broadway Musical MVPs 1960-2010: The Most Valuable Players of the Last 50 Seasons (Applause Books, 2011), chosen one of Publishers Weekly’s Top 10 Performing Arts titles of 2011. His new book, Strippers, Showgirls, and Sharks: A Very Opinionated History of the Broadway Musicals That Did Not Win the Tony Award, will be published in May, 2013 by St. Martin’s Press.

    Peter has been a columnist for Playbill, Theater.com, Theatermania and Theater Week. He blogs weekly at MasterworksBroadway.com; and writes Filichia Featuresfor Musical Theatre International’s Web site The Marquee, and Filichia on Friday for Kritzerland Records’ Web site.

    Before joining the Theatre World Awards in 1996 as host and head of the selection committee, Peter served four terms as president of the Drama Desk. He has served on an assessment panel for the National Endowment for the Arts, and is currently critic-in-residence for the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music and the musical theater judge for the ASCAP Awards program.