Showing posts with label Off-Broadway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Off-Broadway. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2011

CASTING: The Submission & Wild Animals You Should Know

NOTE: This article has been updated from its original posting.  An error was found and reported by a reader - THANK YOU!  It has been corrected and is in RED below.

If you follow this blog somewhat regularly, you know that one of my goals over the last year has been to expand my theater-going horizons beyond Broadway musicals and high profile plays.  More regular attendance at off-Broadway and regional theatres is on my agenda.  So far so good... Death Takes a Holiday and Lysistrata Jones have proven that the quality and star power of Broadway can and does exist beyond Times Square.


This season, I got a subscription to MCC Theater mainly because I really wanted to see Carrie, the fateful Broadway musical flop of legend.  Given that it is to star one of my favorite actresses, Marin Mazzie, it was a no-brainer.  And it was actually only a few more dollars to subscribe to the whole season than to try and buy whatever was left over ticket-wise for Carrie.  Both plays, The Submission and Wild Animals You Should Know, had me with their plot synopses on the company website.  The former, about making art and identity and race sounded right up my alley.  The former sounded intriguing, creepy and definitely interesting.  The casting for both (Wild Animals was just announced yesterday) really has me even more excited about both world premiere plays.  Talk about top-notch actors and directors!


The Submission's Logo Photo
From MCC Theater
The Submission, currently in previews toward a September 27th opening, plays through October 22.  The cast is just four, but really represents the current generation of actors who embrace theatre just as they do television and film work.  I think we are all the better for it, too.  The immediate draw for me was Glee and Spring Awakening star Jonathan Groff, a young actor whose career I have followed since seeing Spring Awakening off-Broadway (go figure).  I have yet to see him in anything where I didn't enjoy his work.  I think he has an honesty and vulnerability that appeals to me.  Eddie Kaye Thomas, whose work in the funny, if not terribly brilliant film series American Pie is all I have seen.  But his work on stage has been well-received, including Broadway's Four Baboons Adoring the Sun and The Diary of Anne Frank, as well as off-Broadway's Dog Sees God

A scene from The Submission.  (L to R) Eddie Kaye Thomas,
Jonathan Groff, Rutina Wesley, Will Rogers
Photo by Joan Marcus

And I have never seen a single second of HBO's True Blood, but mention Rutina Wesley to anyone who has seen it, and their eyes light up.  So, I am curious to see how good she will be, not that I really doubt it.  The final actor in this four-hander, Will Rogers, is making quite a name for himself quickly, having co-starred in this summer's Unnatural Acts, the critically acclaimed, oft-extended play about the underground gay scene in 1920's Harvard.  Doesn't sound like it can lose, cast-wise, and a world premiere play by a young writer, Jeff Talbott, who was awarded by no less than the late Arthur Laurents, can't be all that bad, either, right?  And Walter Bobbie of Chicago fame is directing.  I think you can probably understand why I am looking forward to seeing this show in early October.

With the announcement yesterday of the final casting of Wild Animals You Should Know, another world premiere by a newer playwright, Thomas Higgins, I am really looking forward to seeing this play in late fall.  Daniel Stewart Sherman is a respected regional actor, while John Behlman is a veteran of The 39 Steps, and these are just the supporting roles! 

Patrick Breen and Alice Ripley

The drama surrounding two young men on a scout camping trip (press materials use words and phrases like "cat-and-mouse," "intrigue and deception," and "innocently erotic game."  The final sentence of the play description really makes this sound mysterious and even dangerous: "But Matthew has secretly decided just how far he's willing to go for his final act of scouting and everyone might do well to heed the scouts' motto: Be Prepared."

Gideon Glick and Jay Armstrong Johnson

Patrick Breen of Next Fall and The Normal Heart on Broadway, is a co-founder of MCC.  He plays the father of one of the boys.  The young men are being played by up and comers Gideon Glick and Jay Armstrong Johnson.  I have enjoyed the work of both actors: Glick in Spring Awakening and in Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark (Version 1.0), and Johnson in the National Tour of A Chorus Line and his very first performance as Claude in Hair (It was the fourth preview and he was going on almost unrehearsed for Gavin Creel.  He was TERRIFIC!) And as the mother, Alice Ripley!  I cannot wait to see her act in a straight role; I'm sure she will be intense and fierce.

Glick, far left, with the original Geek Chorus from
Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark

The First National Tour of A Chorus Line
Jay Armstring Johnson is third from right.
Photo by Paul Kolnik

Wild Animals You Should Know begins previews November 3rd, opens November 20th, with a scheduled closing of December 11.

To find out more about these plays, click HERE.


Rate this blog below, leaving any comments here, or by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
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Friday, July 22, 2011

REVIEW: Death Takes a Holiday

Review of the matinee preview performance on Saturday, July 16 at the Laura Pels Theatre off-Broadway in New York City.  Starring Linda Balgord, Matt Cavenaugh, Mara Davi, Simon Jones, Rebecca Luker, Julian Ovenden, Jill Paice, Michael Siberry, Alexandra Socha, Don Stephenson, and Max Von Essen.  Book by Peter Stone and Thomas Meehan.  Music and lyrics by Maury Yeston.  Musical staging by Peter Pucci.  Direction by Doug Hughes.  2 hours, 15 minutes, including intermission.

Grade: A+

Like a refreshing, cool glass of freshly squeezed lemonade, Death Takes a Holiday goes down pretty smoothly: sweet and tart at the same time, with little bits to chew on before the whole drink is gone.  The musical, based on a play by Alberto Cassella (American translation by Walter Ferris), may, at first blush, seem hardly a candidate for a joyful summer's night of theatre.  It is, after all, about Death taking human form to see why the rest of us fear and loathe him.  His "holiday" from the job is here chronicled as he joins a family at their Italian villa, post World War I.  These are a wealthy, international bunch, in a war-weary world coming to terms with the Great War's outcomes.  Given the state of the world today, it isn't much of a stretch to see how the show might apply to its audience.  Yes, the musical makes us pause (ever so slightly) to contemplate our own mortality - maybe just enough to re-check our "bucket lists" to make very sure that "falling in love" is on it.  Our two hours together will be spent with an eye to the future, with families to appreciate and lives to live.

That the late Peter Stone and the very much alive Thomas Meehan have concocted perhaps one of musical theatre's tightest, fat-free books in decades is reason enough to run to the Laura Pels Theatre and snatch up whatever tickets remain.  But these masters of the art form (collectively they are responsible for 1776, Annie, The Producers and Titanic, among others) have created an even better reason to rush the box office:  their book resonates with an unabashed joy for life, a sense of humor that runs from the charmingly silly to the thoughtfully witty, and all with a sharp poignancy that leaves you feeling a high so rare in the theatre these days.  It is not just a laugh fest, nor is it trying to be "important."  It is a simply remarkable, thought-provoking, and wonderfully entertaining show.

Add yet another American musical master to the mix and the potential for brilliance is that much greater.  When it comes to smart, sharp lyrics that are simultaneously brain food and easily digestible words of wisdom, there really is no one better suited to this romantic chamber musical than the great (and woefully underappreciated) Maury Yeston.  Fans of his work, myself included, marvel at his sense of the grander ideas as well as the smaller notions that represent human nature.  We appreciate that his lyrics can take a very specific situation and make it universal, and our ears perk up at his lush, soaring melodies, just as we tingle and smile at his catchier tunes.  Here is a man who has given the world his own Phantom, Nine, Grand Hotel and Titanic.  If the latter on that list proved that anything could be turned into a musical, Death Takes a Holiday proves the same profound, innately sad topic can sing on a smaller, more humorous scale and still pack an emotional punch, without leaving us a depressed mess at the curtain call.

"In the Middle of Your Life"/
"Nothing's Happened"

I will say now, and I suspect other reviews will bear me out on this: this show is not for everyone.  It thrives on a very carefully calculated and heady mix of modern musical know-how and an old school - and I don't mean the 60's or 70's - style of theatre.  Director Doug Hughes and choreographer Peter Pucci set the tone immediately as the gauzy grand drape rises and the principal cast assembles on a foggy stage to create a small omnibus made simply of chairs and pantomimed steering; the cast moves from side to side as the car takes each turn, and they occasionally bounce in their seats as the bumpy road dictates.  Their songs, "In the Middle of Your Life" and "Nothing Happened," pointedly and joyfully take us from the thrill of unexpected love to the instant guilt associated with an accident, only to feel the rush of relief as, miracle of miracles, no one is hurt, not even a young, lovely woman who is thrown from the car.  Unable to explain this happy turn of events, they reassure each other and convince themselves that, indeed, nothing happened.  In this scene, one also becomes instantly aware that despite the modern staging, the acting and the very characters are painted with an oddly broad stroke.  Every gesture is large, every emotion even larger.  The actors seem to speak with an affectation rather than a genuine tone, and the humor and pathos seem equally big and obvious.  In short, our eyes are watching a very 21st century staging, but our ears are picking up a very early 20th century sensibility.  There are, throughout the entire show, moments like this.  Simple ideas are simply presented and blown out of proportion as musicals will do. 

Don't be fooled, either.  The brilliance is in the details, the undercurrents and the universal themes.  These moments are also not hard to find - remember I said this show goes down smoothly.  But it is the sometimes jarring juxtaposition of the two styles that makes this a show not necessarily for everyone.  It requires an audience to enjoy a modern staging like the opening scene.  And it requires an audience to accept broadly drawn types - wealthy but distraught parents still mourning the loss of their son to the war, a flighty, ethereal sister/daughter in love with being in love, an older generation of people who have had an unrequited love for each other for decades, the young upstart guy worried that he won't fit in, the pair of moderns, one dancing life away, the other desperate to grow up, and the dashing young war hero who revels in his heroism even as he questions his own mortality.  To top it all off, it requires an audience to listen.  To fully appreciate this gem, one must listen closely to not only the broad strokes and broader jokes, but to the details revealed in witty, sophisticated conversations and the occasional solo number.  That is asking a lot of an audience, but, trust me here, the rewards for your full attention pay off and handsomely.  Both Mr. Hughes and Mr. Pucci are to be commended for finding this difficult balance and staging it so crisply and deeply throughout the entire course of the show.

"Shimmy Like They Do in Paree"

Yeston's score is full of wonderful ballads, like the touching "Losing Roberto," where a mother is unwittingly telling Death himself why the loss of her son is so completely devastating, or the soaring act one closer, "Alone Here with You," where a young woman is professing her love to Death.  There are the clever and jaunty numbers that open each act, "Nothing's Happened" and "Something's Happened."  And the dance-y "Shimmy Like They Do in Paree," where a Modern shows Death the joy that being happy brings to life.  And there is the song "Finally to Know" where all three young ladies of the cast sing of what it is to finally understand and appreciate love.  It is the best number of the show (which is no small feat, strong as this score is), and is instantly on my list of the best musical theatre songs of all time.  I wanted so badly to stand up at the end of this number to show my appreciation: the performance and the content were blissfully superior to pretty much everything I've seen in recent years.


The world created onstage for Death Takes a Holiday is much like the show itself, simple and straightforward, yet magical and complex.  And all of it with a witty sophistication that is also subtle and elegant.  Derek McLane's setting is a large open space, with marbled floors, tall Roman columns and archways made entirely of flowered vines and twinkling lights.  In the distance, at times, one can see a distant shore and the Mediterranean.  Kenneth Posner's lighting design matches the set and the show perfectly, alternating real life lighting (and considerable shadows when appropriate) with more romantic, fantasy-like lighting.  And Catherine Zuber's exquisite costumes reveal, even at a quick glance, much about the characters.  I mused that if this were a silent film, with only the visual aesthetic provided by these designers and some underscoring (amazing and beautiful orchestrations by recent Tony winner Larry Hochman), one could still follow the story with ease.

All of this first-rate work would be for naught without this superbly cast ensemble.  Even the smaller servant roles (Jay Jaski, Patricia Noonan, Joy Hermalyn) are expertly played, especially and noticeably during the company numbers.  As the majordomo and confidante to the man of the house, Don Stephenson manages to milk every laugh he can from his funny, if obvious role.  (Remember, I said these roles were, on the surface, types.)


TOP: The Servants
BOTTOM: Matt Cavenaugh

In a small but pivotal role as war hero and friend to the deceased Roberto, Matt Cavenaugh provides the swagger and machismo to go along with his matinee idol looks.  His very telling ballad - "Roberto's Eyes" - soars to the rafters as he belts and emotes in a way I've never seen him do before, and the effect is spell-binding.  He also plays older brother to the younger "Modern," Daisy, played with a refreshingly coy and playful air by Alexandra Socha, who once again proves that her star is on the rise.  When she is onstage, one can't help but be captivated by her take on this brash, flirtatious woman-child.  Her charms work more on us than they do her intended catch, Corrado, played by Max Von Essen.  For years I have heard what a great actor this guy is, and I have always managed to miss him.  It was well worth the wait, and all of the hearsay is true.  This guy has "it."  He manages to take the role of the often clueless and jilted lover and play all of his angst and anger without being annoying.  He is a commanding presence, another actor you find yourself drawn to whenever he is onstage.  His duet with Miss Socha, "What Do You Do," is all the more charming because these two are singing it.  The younger set in the cast is rounded out by the terrifically energetic Mara Davi, the American gal with her finger on the pulse of pop culture, and tempered by the wisdom that comes from heartbreak at an early age - her character is the widow of Roberto.  It is this wisdom that provides the first inkling that there are darker forces at play in this otherwise silly romp.

Alexandra Socha, Max Von Essen, Mara Davi and Julian Ovenden

The oldest generation is sweetly represented by two wonderful actors, Simon Jones and Linda Balgord.  Both play the eldest inhabitants of the villa with a smarts that only aged wisdom can bring, and with a wonderfully youthful take on love during the twilight years.  Their duet, "December Time," is simply charming.  The parents of Roberto and their younger daughter Grazia, are played by Michael Siberry and Rebecca Luker, and both are given meaty roles to work with.  He plays the comedy and the tragedy of the situation he is in (he knows Death is here and isn't allowed to tell a soul or someone will die) with a grace and dignity that makes this implausible turn of events completely believable without being too giddy or too maudlin.  Ms. Luker plays the worried mother with enough nuance that she steers far from being a soap opera-ish matriarch, and when she finally gets to unleash her glorious voice and considerable acting talents in "Losing Roberto," we all feel her grief as if it were our own personal tragedy.



TOP: Julian Ovenden and Linda Balgourd
CENTER: Julian Ovenden and Simon Jones
BOTTOM: Rebecca Luker and Michael Siberry

I have waited, literally for years, to find out why the rest of the theatre world is so smitten with Jill Paice.  I've seen her several times and have appreciated her work, but never really understood the overall appeal.  With her performance here, I can finally see what all the fuss is about.  As the young lady in love with love (and the object of Death's affection), Ms. Paice expertly navigates the treacherous waters of this role which requires her to fanciful, stubborn, drunk with love, and in the depths of despair as she faces an impossible life-changing choice.  Her role is written with some of the broadest strokes, and it is to her credit that she never once goes for the easy, overblown way of conveying these huge emotions.  A lesser actress would overplay, where Paice chooses carefully when to wear her heart on her sleeves, when to play it close to the vest, and most interestingly, when to be more subtle.  And what a voice!  Her solo  numbers, including "How Will I Know," are skillfully and beautifully rendered.  But it is her work with her co-star that is at the heart of this show, and their chemistry and marvelously blended voices make each of their scenes and duets incredibly pleasing to the heart and ear.

Julian Ovenden and Jill Paice

"Death" - Julian Ovenden

Much has been written lately about the show's star, Julian Ovenden, a Brit, whose American star is born with this amazing once-in-a-lifetime performance.  He is nothing short of spectacular in every sense that he could be.  He is as dynamic as he is handsome, charming as he is enigmatic, and mesmerizing, even when you know you shouldn't be this drawn to the character.  The man has it all: perfect comic timing, a beguiling romanticism, a sexy allure, a childlike sense of wonder, and joie de'vivre that is utterly captivating.  Thankfully, the character he plays must also have these qualities!  And his voice!  Oh, his voice.  What an instrument.  His solo in act one, "Alive," is a joyful tour-de-force, and each of his ballad duets with Ms. Paice is just stunning. 

But it is his act two solo, "I Thought I Could Live," that is the real culmination of his role, when he, Death, begins to understand why humans fear him, and why they don't want to give up on life.  It is a stunning turning point for both character and plot, and it is so wonderfully rendered.  Ultimately, it is the point at which everything spirals into the show's conclusion.  And one can safely say that Ms. Paice and Mr. Ovenden's performances are what make the ending a nail-biter right up until the end.  Even if you go in knowing, the final moments of this musical will have you on the edge of your seat and holding your breath.

I suspect that once this show's New York life is over (and I hope it will be some time before that happens) this show will find itself as a staple in regional and local theatres.  It is one set, with a small cast of actors that range in age from 20's to 70's.  And it seems so simple.  And that is what I fear most about this show's future.  Without a director that understands the demands and styles of the book or a cast that is fully on board with playing a variety of styles within one performance, the show may come off either as a silly trifle or an oddity.  And that would be a true shame.  Death Takes a Holiday, the musical, isn't for everyone, probably, but for this theatergoer, it is that rare perfection of art and entertainment as one intertwined piece.

(Photos by Joan Marcus)

Rate this blog below, leaving your comments here, or by emailing me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or by Tweeting me!
Jeff
2.328

Thursday, July 21, 2011

LOGOS: Death Takes a Holiday

An all-star cast and legendary creative team have joined forces with Roundabout Theatre Company to create a new off-Broadway musical, Death Takes a Holiday, based on the original play by Alberto Casella.  The folks over at Roundabout may have a somewhat uneven track record of hits and misses as far as their shows go, but their show logos and advertising are always first rate; Holiday is no exception. 
Let's first take a look at the title and "catchphrase."  First, the color, a muted yellow is the perfect choice pratically and artistically.  Practically speaking, the yellow catches the eye and works wonderfully with the grey-blue background of the rest of the image.  Artistically, the yellow, being muted instead of bright and vivid, has a calming effect, yet still speaks to a certain vitality, meaningful in conjunction with the title and central character, "Death."  Then there is the lettering itself, slightly arched, instead of boldly straight as an arrow, which again speaks to a vitality tempered with a calm relaxation.  Notice, too, that the word that probably carries the most weight, "death," is actually secondary in size and letter style to "holiday."  Clearly, the authors and the show itself hope to draw us in with the "holiday" (vacation) aspect of the piece rather than the potentially frightening aspect of "death."  All three typefaces used here have a definite "long ago" feel to them, and in conjunction with the central image of the logo, tells us that we are going to be transported to another time.  The color and typefaces also have a regal, upper-class connotation, thus letting us know that we will be on holiday, during a time ago, with the upper echelon of society.


The catchphrase, a play on the typical "a new musical" or "a musical," speaks volumes about the play both literally and figuratively.  But calling the show "a breathtaking new musical," two thoughts come to mind: literally, the show, like the romance depicted in the image below, will take your breath away.  True love that sweeps you off your feet does just that.  What else leaves you breathless?  Why, death, of course!  The double-meaning here speaks to the wit and sophistication of the material at hand.  It tells us at once that we are in for a love story of epic proportions and a sense of humor that requires you bring your heart and mind with you.  It, like the word "death" in the titling, are subtle reminders that while the fun of romance and holidays are at the forefront of the show, death also lurks and importantly so in this piece.  What a brilliant use of four words!


Just as the title and catchphrase reveal the content and tone of this new musical, so, too, does the imagery used in the logo.  Against a dark grey-blue sky, with a cloud covered and/or unseen moon, and over a calm body of water (not quite a "dead calm"), a faceless couple dances.  They are so into each other, so enraptured by the partnership, that they are facing each other and see only each other.  Both figures hold tightly to each other as they are perhaps doing a tango or other dance of passion.  With hairstyles that reflect the late 19-teens/early 20's, with dapper, elegant clothing to match, we know the time of the show.  The clothing, also period, yet somehow classic and never out of style reflects a certain timelessness.  And nothing is more timeless than either love or death.  His black tuxedo and her floor length, satin finished gown match each other perfectly, with her gown floating around her ankles.  The duo, floating above the water, is hovering above the ground, just as the feeling of intense love makes us feel.  Or are they dancing off to another plane of existence?  Is this a dance of love?  Or is it the dance of death?  The two are inextricably intertwined.  And so are the two in the play, and now in the musical version.

Is the musical going to live up to its beautiful, thought-provoking logo?  We'll find out tomorrow.

Grade: A+



Rate this blog below and please leave your comments here, or email them to me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.327

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Ask Jeff: Puzzles Answered and More

Thank you, all of you, who take the time to write in your thoughts and questions.  And I'll answer one that I get all of the time: Do I actually read your comments and emails?  Well, except for those of you who asked just that question, which I am now answering, yes.  I read every single email and comment you send or leave.  And I answer all of them.  I don't publish all of them for a variety of reasons - relevance, readability and length among them.  The most common reason, though, is that many of you wish to keep your thoughts between us.  I hope that settles things for those of you who ask.

Now, a couple of  recent letters that are very timely!  (After that, a request I have of all of you!)

Dear Jeff,

Why don't you cover more touring company shows and off-Broadway shows?

Tim, an off-Broadway Fan

Tim,

Thanks for writing.  Funny that you should mention that.  In recent weeks, I have posted reviews of the National Tours of next to normal and Hair.  And so far this season, I've reviewed Lysistrata Jones, and just this week, I'll have discussed the logos of RENT and Death Takes a Holiday, and reviews of both will be posted when they open.  In fact, Death will have its review posted on Friday. 


True, these entries are far out-blogged about by Broadway shows.  There are a few reasons for this.  First, my access to National Tours is somewhat limited by my location.  Second, Broadway content is by far the most read and asked for, so I concentrate on that the most.  Then there is a question of time and money.  I can barely get to the new musicals and new revivals on Broadway, let alone the dozens of off-Broadway openings.  Still, given the advent last season of Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson and The Scottsboro Boys, I am trying to pay more attention to off-Broadway.  And I can tell you now that later this season, I'll be covering Carrie.

Jeff

Dear JK:

Come on, man!  You put up these puzzles and you promise the answers and then nothing!  How about that last logic puzzle?

JK, too (though my name isn't Jeff!) Albany, NY

Sorry, JK!

I actually forgot to post the answers to Logic Puzzle #2 last Sunday.  And I'll post the answers to Monday's Broadway Vocabulary Quiz below that.  So, if you don't want to know, stop reading NOW!

Here's the answer to Logic Puzzle #2:

Female-Male-Performance-Show-Ticket Outlet
  1. Millie - Frank - Tuesday - Spider-Man - Lottery
  2. Nanette - Edwin - Saturday - Ghetto Klown - Box Office
  3. Ophelia - Charlie - Friday - Hair - Online
  4. Paula - Don - Wednesday - Billy Elliot - TKTS
  5. Rose - Bobby - Thursday - Master Class - Concierge

And here are the answers to the Broadway Vocabulary Quiz:
  1. Bindus, i, A
  2. calumnies, c, J
  3. coriander, j, F
  4. diadem, h, D
  5. lavabo, e, C
  6. metronome, b, B
  7. passeggiata, f, I
  8. seraglio, a, E
  9. ululating, d, H
  10. vindaloo, g, G
OK, readers!  Now here's where I ask for your help!  For future blogs, I am looking for:
  1. Someone to review National Touring companies, Broadway and off-Broadway shows that I don't get to.
  2. New words for the next Broadway Vocabulary Quiz.
  3. Clever sayings and turns of phrase from your favorite Broadway musicals.

If you have any or all of these, please email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com.

Jeff
2.326

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

LOGOS: RENT

If it ain't broke, don't fix it.  That little axiom is true in most aspects of life, I've come to find out.  People, in general, are resistant to change, especially when it comes to things they have a personal/emotional connection to.  So it is probably a good thing that - for the most part - the powers that be at RENT have chosen to stay with the tried and true for the show logo.  It is, arguably, as iconic as the logos for Cats, Phantom and Les Miserables.  In fact, if you look at all of the 10 longest-running shows in Broadway history, all 10 have logos that are easily recognizable beyond the theatre community.

I have to admit, that for all of the press and posturing that has gone on with respect to this off-Broadway return and its "re-envisioned" direction and presentation, I am a bit surprised that virtually nothing has been done to separate this version from the original in terms of advertising.  It might be a wise choice given the intensely loyal RENT-heads and the relatively short time since the original production closed.  The clean original logo, as well as ads with "No Day But Today" playing in the background, might draw them in, and it will likely draw in those folks who missed it the first time around.  It is hard to imagine, isn't it, that anyone has missed this classic.  But consider that anyone born in 1996, when the show premiered, would now be only 14 or 15 years old... just old enough to be a part of the show's target audience (at least the youngest end of that scale).  This way, a new generation can feel like it is experiencing what their older brothers and sisters, and even parents did, "way back in the '90's."

As a logo, it works on many levels.  The simple stencil letters hastily taped up with shards of uneven tape tell us a lot (as does the "spray painted" negative version).  First, it tells us we aren't dealing with "rent" as it applies to swanky apartments in the upper East Side.  No, that lettering would be ornate and metallic looking.  The haste of the tape job and uneven spacing of the letters also implies that perhaps this is going to be graffiti sprayed onto a wall or other structure in the low-rent district.  The addition of a poorly inked old typewriter style of lettering for the rest of the show information also calls to mind the handbills put together on the cheap to advertise cheap places to live, local concerts and events, and definitely protest events.  All of those, of course, figure prominently in the story of RENT.

Then, too, as my buddy Mike pointed out, the word "rent" doesn't just mean "money paid to a landlord," but it also means "torn to pieces."  The logo certainly gives off that vibe, and the show supports that, too.  Let's face it.  In many ways, these characters are torn apart, ripped into pieces, fixed up and torn again.

Keeping it familiar and simple also keeps down costs while still looking subversively stylish to RENT-heads old and new, who will soon be restocking their show memorabilia collections with all that this new version has to offer.  And I have to admit that I really like the new spin on the old logo.  Notice that you get the negative version of the main logo against a background of that cool typewriter type style that lists all of the songs in the show, right down to the phone messages.  This is an instant memory-maker, with everyone's favorite songs listed - perfect for fans of "Light My Candle" who are maybe not wanting to buy one more thing that says, "No Day But Today" or "La Vie Boheme."  But if you love those songs or the whole score, everyone is invited to enjoy the t-shirt it is printed on.  It is also a plain reminder that all of the show songs are here and this is not a stage version of the film.  Most fans of the show will find that important, though this admitted RENT-head is in the minority.  I loved the film version, too.

How all of this will impact the enjoyment of this new version remains to be seen.  (If it impacts anything at all.)  But it certainly leads you to believe you are seeing the "authentic RENT."  What happens when you get into New World Stages, and the new RENT is not as much like the old as you'd expect?  (I'll tell you in my review next month...)

Grade: A


Rate this blog below, and leave your comments here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.325

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Looking Forward to Summer

Save for the occasional late August Broadway opening, summer is usually a dry spell in professional theatre.  This year, however, the period between June and August, is somewhat exciting.  Especially exciting is the potentially strong summer of openings off-Broadway.  Here are the shows I am looking forward to:


Lysistrata Jones at The Gym at Judson (off-Broadway)

Actually, I saw this hilarious musical already, and it closes tomorrow.  But I include it here to mark the start of the season, and because of its rumored Broadway transfer this fall.  Although I have my doubts about how it would play in a larger house (the Helen Hayes and the ideal Circle-in-the-Square are taken, and it seems they aren't looking at the Golden) I think this funny, smart show could tap into the same audience that embraced Xanadu.  of course, with a book by Douglas Carter Beane and direction/choreography by Dan Knechtges, it isn't much of a stretch. Still, given the basketball court setting, and having seen it on an actual basketball court, I can't help but wonder how it would translate to a traditional stage setting.  Good luck to all involved in whatever the future brings.


Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark at the Foxwoods Theatre

At long last, I will be seeing the final, official version of this property!  Having seen it in its infancy (preview five) and its adolescence (the first show after its last announced opening that did not happen) I can't wait to see its all grown-up, finished version.  I am particularly looking forward to seeing how much of Julie Taymor's vision remains.  The one thing I feel confident about is the principal cast, having thoroughly enjoyed and respected the work done by Reeve Carney, Jennifer Damiano, Patrick Page, T.V. Carpio and Matthew James Thomas, the Peter Parker/Spider-Man alternate.  We'll see about the score...


Death Takes a Holiday at the Laura Pels Theatre (off-Broadway)

What do you get when you cross a classic play (and several film versions of the same story), a musical theatre dream team, and a cast full of acclaimed theatre stars?  Women on the Verge Death Takes a Holiday the musical, that's what.  Peter Stone, Thomas Meehan, Maury Yeston (a who's who of musical writing) and Alexandra Socha, Jill Paice, Max von Essen are but 6 reasons to look forward to this show.  That, and a compelling story.


RENT at New World Stages, Stage 1 (off-Broadway)

I'm the first one to wonder if it has been too soon to bring this show back.  And having seen the unparalleled original cast, I doubt anything will come close the phenomenon of the 90's.  Still, with the promise of a new staging by Michael Greif, a smaller up close theatre, and a cast full of young actors on the cusp of career explosions, including one of my all-time favorite young actors, Adam Chanler-Berat as Mark, I am definitely interested.  Will this version spawn a new crop of Idinas, Daphnes, Tayes, Adams and Anthonys?  Will this Tony-winning Best Musical join the other Tony-winning Best Musical, Avenue Q, as a long-running off-Broadway hit?  Will the RENTheads embrace or shun this version?  Time will tell...


Follies at the Marquis Theatre

I've never seen a production of Follies, a hard thing for this Sondheim fan to admit.  Harder still is the admission that I don't really care for the score.  I'm told that I really need to see the show in order to appreciate both the score and the phenomenon that is Follies.  OK, Bernadette Peters and Jan Maxwell really up the ante, too.  And we all know about my need to see every new musical each season.  looks like I'll finally see what all the fuss is about.



What shows are you looking forward to this summer?  Let me know...
Leave your comment here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me.
Jeff
2.299

Monday, June 6, 2011

REVIEW: Lysistrata Jones

Review of the June 4 evening preview performance at The Gym at Judson off-Broadway in New York City. 2 hours, including one intermission. Starring Patti Murin, Josh Segarra, Liz Mikel, Alexander Aguilar, Katie Boren, Lindsay Nicole Chambers, Max Kumangai, Kat Nejat, LaQuet Sharnell, Jason Tam, Teddy Toye and Alex Wyse.  Book by Douglas Carter Beane.  Music and lyrics by Lewis Flinn. Direction and choreography by Dan Knechtges.

Grade: A-


Fans of Tony nominee Douglas Carter Beane (myself included) will not be disappointed with his current work, Lysistrata Jones, which opened last night at the Gym at Judson, presented by Transport Group Theatre Company.  That it opened at this particular locale is crucial to the production as it now stands, even assuming all involved are hoping for a further life for the piece.  As the show takes place during college basketball season, it is more than appropriate that the show takes place in an actual gym, and the set is entirely on a modified basketball court.  Based upon the millennia-old Lysistrata by Aristophanes, this version of the comedy/sex-farce concerns the woeful Athens University Spartans (two different city-states, I know) who haven't won at hoops in 30 years, and a new girl on campus, Lysistrata Jones, who wants only that the team, that the school, become passionate about anything.  The resourceful, if not studious, babe forms a cheerleading squad to light some fire under the pitiful team, and when that does not work, concocts a plan that has worked from 411BC through I Love Lucy, through many an 80's teen flick, and right up until today: all sexual favors will be withheld until the team wins a game.  As the act one song says, "No More Giving It Up!" (the piece was formerly known as Giving It Up).  All of this may sound silly to the point of stupid, perhaps a tad sexist, and pretty cheesy.  I assure you it is not; after all, the play it is based upon is still performed after nearly two and a half centuries.  Beane doesn't go that far adrift from the original, and I think it says something about humanity that all these years later, it has relevancy.


Basketball is the game: GO SPARTANS!

OK, so not putting out to win a basketball game may not have the gravitas that Aristophanes' original no-nooky-until-the-war-is-over plan, but the idea that men and women are in a constant battle for control and that both sides use the most basic, animalistic aspect of being human, sexuality, as a weapon is as potent as ever.  Ask Arnold and Maria, the IMF chairman, John Edwards, etc.  Sex is a weapon folks, so why not celebrate that in song and dance?  Let me say it plainly here: Lysistrata Jones is as smart as it is silly, as witty as it is bawdy, and has some surprisingly emotional heft to it.  But most of all, it is fun, sexy and really doesn't try for much more than that, which is more than just fine.  Also just fine with this theatre-goer is its lack of cruel snarkiness, the hallmark of too many recent and current musical comedies.  Don't check your brain at the door (you can leave it on idle) because the laughs are just as often with literary allusion as they are about the various loins of human beings.  Sure, many of the jokes are razor-sharp, but they are never mean; the laughs are genuine, not ever tinged with an "aww" of shock value.  And once you give in to surprising sincerity amidst all of the giddiness, and you will, the show becomes just that much more enjoyable.

Lewis Flinn's modern, hip-hop infused score is always up to the intelligence of the book, and adds delightful punctuation to ideas at hand.  And when both the book and the score come together in an emotional moment, the show really soars, adding a heft and importance to the piece that grounds it, makes it a fuller experience, and shows us that the authors are going for much more than an extended comedy sketch.  Think High School Musical goes to college mixed with Xanadu with a healthy dash of Plato and you get the whole recipe of Lysistrata Jones.  Here as there, there is a comfort in types - the bookish girl of questionable sexuality who no one pays attention to; the loner college guy who speaks to no one and puts them off further with his scowl and menacing army jacket; the dumb, lazy frat boy jock; the Latina couple whose accent and use of Spanish are equal with the intensity of the given situation; the white boy who wants to be a bling carrying yo boy thug rapper, and of course, the always underestimated cheerleader type.  Yes, they are comfortable because we can recognize them even in a world we might not know, and it takes away any fear one might have of not knowing the original ancient play.  And there in, too, is the fun.  It is always fun to knock those stereotypes because we know they aren't always true, but are true enough that they have become stereotypes.  But even more fun than that is discovering all the fun that can be had when we find out there is WAY more to these types than is on the surface.  If that isn't timeless and universal, I don't know what is.


Let's talk types: bookish library assistant, wannabe
cheerleader, social outcast, urban thug hopeful
and basketball team captain

The design team really nails the wit and wisdom of the piece, offering as many visual jokes and puns as the script does.  Allen Moyer's set design takes full advantage of the gym space, and supplements it with some ingeniously creative uses for two gym locker banks, while the costumes (designed by David Woolard and Thomas Charles LeGalley) are a laugh riot all by themselves, and range from Greek Goddess motifs, to cheerleading warm ups, to full on basketball uniforms.  And, especially given the gym setting, Michael Gottlieb's lighting design is amazing for its intricacy and some really cool fixtures that hang above the gym floor.  Only Tony Meola's sound design suffers a bit, not because of an echo as one might expect, but because the low roof, loud band and high volume body mics conspire against one another on a few occasions, making the lyrics and dialogue muffled and even a tad unintelligible.  Thankfully, this isn't often, and I can't even begin to suggest how to fix it without giving up the amazing space they are using.


Girl Power!
um... Boy Power...

Directed and choreographed by Dan Knechtges, the show is energetic and exciting to watch from start to finish.  Act one suffers just a bit from trying to cram too much of the "this is the kind of show we are doing" into it, and from not getting to any kind of genuine emotion until the very last song of the first half, a power ballad that is excellently staged and delivered called "Where Am I Now."  In the midst of setting up the plot and subplots and introducing all of the characters, a hint that there would be some true moments prior to the act closer might have elevated the "great" first act to the "Excellent" first act.  And while much of this is a function of the book and the inspiration of the original Aristophanes, I can't help but wonder if Mr. Knechtges might have chosen a couple of times to slow things down to allow us to catch our breath.  Still, in the spectrum of things, this is a small quibble.  Especially when one considers the near perfection of act two, which is equal parts zany sex romp, emotional release, and really cool staging.  Act two, simply put, is pure fun and pay off.  Not that there was any doubt how it would end before it even started, it is really a pleasure to say that all of the last minute plot twists and long-term set ups pay off in a very pleasing, often surprising way.  The getting to the end is the fun, not the end itself.  Act two also features one of the most exciting extended stagings I've seen in a very long time, since the Prologue to West Side Story maybe (the second act Mormon pageant in The Book of Mormon comes close, too).  It is called the "Right Now Operetta" and is one of those big numbers which rehash the wants and needs of each plot, subplot and character, while showing us how they all fit together at the greatest moment of climax in the story.  Knechtges' choreography reminds one of Fosse, Robbins and Stroman all at once, and yet all with an original dance language of its own.  It is his best choreography to date by far.


Basketball, Broadway-style
The girls find inspiration on the Internet

A show like this really requires an entire cast of actors who all truly, to the fiber of their being, understand the tone, the message and the exact way this specific kind of comedy needs to be delivered.  And each of the dozen cast members is fully present on that "same page."  A true ensemble piece, the show would suffer without any of these people.  Katie Boren and Max Kumangai are a riot as they both embody racial stereotypes as much as they eschew them, landing every inevitable racially tinged joke in such a way that makes them delightfully less inevitable feeling and never offensive.  Teddy Toye and Alex Wyse both delight with their downright adorableness - Toye with his cute smile and Shirley Temple curls, Wyse with his diminutive stature and loud mouth "yo boy - thug" persona.  What really sells them both, though, is the breadth of their talents as dancers.  As the sexy, fiery Latino couple, Alexander Aquilar and Kat Nejat bring all the silly passion of a telenovela to life, basking in the humor of their heritage while honoring the strength of it.  And like the rest of the company, they are superb dancers - her extension is incredible. LaQuet Sharnell brings her own brand of sass to her role, which at one point requires her to go, um, undercover, as a hooker, while putting one over on her lover (Mr. Wyse, who plays the shock and awe in this scene to perfection).  Not since Lola seduced Young Joe Hardy in Damn Yankees, has there been such a hot use of two bodies and a piece of furniture as there is in that scene and number, "Don't Judge a Book."

Patti Murin and Jason Tam

As social outcast and leftist blogger Xander, Jason Tam (so incredible in the revival of A Chorus Line) shows off his dancing and comedic skills, as his character undergoes a transformation on par with Pygmalion.  His number, "Hold On," stands out musically - he delivers it with gusto - but also visually, as he creates what amounts to an entire dance made up of Grecian urn poses.  Picture, if you will, gods and goddesses in poses on pottery that get there via a hilarious combination of Pilates, yoga and ballet moves.  It is complicated, made to look easy, and is always fun.  One of the nicest surprises of the night is Lindsay Nicole Chambers as Robin, the militantly abrasive library assistant who expresses herself through putting down everyone else through slam poetry of all things.  Like Mr. Tam, Ms. Chambers is afforded a rich character that undergoes a massive and funny transformation, and she takes full advantage.  She is just one of those actors you find yourself drawn to, and watch even when she isn't the focus.  Remember her name.

Liz Mikel

The voluptuous and wonderfully funny Liz Mikel uses everything she has - booty, booby, and sassy hair extensions included - as Hetaira, who narrates this complex tale and even takes part as the madam of the Eros Motor Lodge and brothel.  She has powerful pipes, blistering comic timing and an ease about her that allows you to relax within 15 seconds of the show starting.


Josh Segarra and Patti Murin
Mick and Lysistrata Jones

The central characters of Mick and Lysistrata are played with exuberance and a tantalizingly sexy eroticism by Josh Segarra and Patti Murin, respectively.  Being that this is a sex farce/romp/comedy it is only fitting that both exude an almost palpable sexuality, not just with each other, but with every character they come into contact with.  And given that the plot revolves around the withholding of sexual favors, it makes the whole show that much more adult fun.  She is as scantily clad as a cheerleader can be throughout, and he is shirtless and down to undies more than once, and given the variety of situations they are in, they cover most of the permutations of orientation there are, and you never really feel like it is gratuitous or even uncomfortable.  That, I think pays tribute to some very well thought out direction, a smarter than it seems book and two actors who are so comfortable in their own skin that they make us all feel comfortable.  The result is that it makes the whole show kind of naughty but never off-putting.  It also tells you that these two are wonderfully talented.  That they both sing like birds, act with an ease and an edge, and can dance like Astaire is a given.  That they can both create such wide ranging characters with all of their quirks and oddities is what is a marvel to watch.  You believe that she is worldly wise beyond her years, even if it is with the aid of wifi, laptops and an iPhone with sketchy connectivity.  You believe he is an athlete interested only in the booty he can get for simply showing up, but never trying to win a game, just as much as you can believe that he has memorized poems by some of the best in the English language and can write papers on the "411" of plays written in "411BC" and their relevancy to the 21st Century.  They are, to be sure, stars on the rise - watch for them.

With Xanadu and now Lysistrata under his belt, I think Mr. Beane should consider creating a Grecian trilogy of fun, sexy musicals.  I'd love to see what he can do with a boy as the central character in ancient/modern times... how about Eddie R.: The Oedipus Rex Musical?  Or if you like the symmetry of strong female leads, Medea could be a real hoot.  Until then, it will be fun to see where Lysistrata Jones, perhaps slightly expanded, might end up.  More urgently, though, snap up whatever tickets are left for this production before it closes June 19.  It could be the only time theatre geeks will ever feel fully comfortable in a gym!

(Photos by Carol Rosegg)

Comments? Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.280