Though the winds and snow are blowing, theater in Cleveland continues on. Here’s a list of some of the offerings through the spring season. SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL THEATRES!
ACTOR’S SUMMIT
330-374-7568 or go to www.actorssummit.org
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 PM and Sundays @ 2 PM
EINSTEIN (January 15-February 1)—Brian Zoldessy, as Albert Einstein, invites the audience into his home to set the record straight. Remember, it’s all relative.
THE BOOK CLUB PLAY (February 26-March 15)—A famous filmmaker chooses Ana’s book club to be part of his next documentary with comic results.
BAD JEWS (April 16-May 3)—She is the family’s “Superjew,” he is an assimilated atheist. This comedy asks, “who gets the sacred family heirloom?”
ALWAYS . . . PATSY CLINE (May 28-June 21)—A musical tribute to Patsy’s spirit and a celebration of her music. Yes, “Crazy,” “Sweet Dreams,” “Walkin’ After Midnight” and 17 more.
BECK CENTER
216-521-2540 or http://www.beckcenter.org
8 p.m. evenings, 3 p.m. matinees
MARY POPPINS (December 5-January 4, 2015)—The supercalifragilisticexpialidocious musical in its local premiere.
DOGFIGHT (February 6-March 15)—In collaboration with Baldwin Wallace University’s Music Theatre Program, this musical, based on the film of the same name, centers on three young Marines, who, in 1963, before the night of their deployment, learn the power of compassion. (Studio Theatre)
LEND ME A TENOR (March 27-April 26)—Ken Ludwig’s farce, with mistaken identities, misunderstandings, and lots of slammed doors, follows Tito Morelli, the fiery-tempered Italian superstar, who arrives in Cleveland to star in a local opera, and then disappears.
THE YOUNG MAN FROM ATLANTA (May 29-June 28)—Horton Foote’s Pulitzer Prize winning drama tells the story of a Texas couple’s attempt to make sense of the death of their son.
BLANK CANVAS
440-941-0458 or www.blankcanvastheatre.com
TBA
CLEVELAND PLAY HOUSE
216-241-6000 or go to www.clevelandplayhouse.com
7:30 Wednesday-Saturday, 2:30 Saturday and Sunday
FIVE GUYS NAMED MOE (January 23-February 15)—Main Stage--His woman left him, he’s broke, and it’s almost five o’clock in the morning. But don’t worry about our hero. All he needs is the right music—and the right guys—to get him through. Enter five guys named Moe, stepping out through his radio to cajole, comfort and jazz him with dozens of whimsical hit songs from the extraordinary Louis Jordan.
THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (February 25-March 7)—The Helen—CPH and CWRU/MFA program perform Phillip Barry’s romantic comedy focusing on the mixed-up lives of the rich and famous who seemingly “have it all.”
THE PIANIST OF WILLESDEN LANE (February 27-March 22)—Main Stage--Jura’s daughter, renowned pianist Mona Golabek, brings her mother’s true tale of survival and triumph to the stage. Featuring live performances of classics by Chopin, Beethoven, and Debussy. Content and themes include war and the Holocaust.
VANYA AND SONIA AND MASHA AND SPIKE (April 3-April 26)—Main Stage—Siblings Vonya and Sonia are contentedly discontent to pass into their twilight years sipping coffee and watching for blue herons. However, when their fading B-movie-star sister descends upon their quiet country home with sexy boy toy Spike, chaos ensues. (To read my review of the New York production go to: http://www.royberko.info, click on Broadway, scroll down to “Absurd Vonya and Sonya and Masha and Spike delights.”
FAIRFIELD (May 1-May 24)—Outcalt Theatre—Clevelander Eric Coble’s play examines how we each determine what’s appropriate and inappropriate, and whether “We Shall Overcome.” (Content Advisory: Play contains strong language, including profanity and derogatory terms, mild violence, innuendo, and frank conversations on race.)
CLEVELAND PUBLIC THEATRE
216-631-2727 or go on line to www.cptonline.org
FIRE ON THE WATER: PART FOUR OF THE ELEMENTS CYCLE (January 29-February 14)—7:30, Gordon Square Theatre--This concluding work will focus on how the environment can shape identity and will celebrate the remarkable recovery of Cleveland’s waterways.
STANDING ON CEREMONY: THE GAY MARRIAGE PLAYS (March 5-21)-- 7:30, Gordon Square Theatre--Back by popular demand, this powerful series of short plays promote marriage equality and the power of love to overcome.
IN A WORD (April 16-May 2)—7:00, James Levin Theatre--Two years have passed since Fiona’s eight-year-old son mysteriously vanished. As she delves back into her memories of that fateful day to find the missing piece.
DONTRELL, WHO KISSED THE SEA (May 21-June 6)—7:00, James Levin Theatre—It’s a month before his first day in college and Dontrell Jones III wakes up from a dream that will change his life. The young man’s unconventional journey begins with swimming lessons, and ends in a boat drifting into the sea to meet his grandfather’s spirit.
JOHANNA: FACING FORWARD (May 28-June 13)—7:30 Gordon Square Theatre--Based on the true story of Johanna Orozco, a Cleveland teen who survived a gunshot wound to the face by her boyfriend in 2007 and whose story sparked a nation-wide movement against teen domestic violence
convergence continuum
convergence-continiuum.org or 216-687-0074
Thursday-Saturday @ 8
ISAAC’S EYES (March 20-April 11)—A quirky look at what drove Isaac Newton, a brilliant but troubled farm boy, to become one of the modern world’s greatest thinkers.
WOLVES (May 8-30)—A female narrator tells an urban fable that takes place during a long and terrible night at the apartment of Ben, his roommate and one time boyfriend, Jack.
DOBAMA
216-932-3396 or www.dobama.org
check the theatre’s blog for performance times
A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION (December 5-January 5, 2015)—A musical that weaves together characters, story lines and pieces of music about hope, joy, and the beauty of the human spirit.
SLOWGIRL (January 23-February 15)--A teenager is sent to her reclusive uncle’s retreat in the Costa Rican jungle to avoid the aftermath of a tragic accident. In the days that follow, they are forced to face the choices they’ve made and what they both are truly running from.
BECKY SHAW (March 6-March 29)-- When a couple of newlyweds set up their abrasive and confident friend with a sexy and strange new co-worker, it’s the blind date from hell.
SUPERIOR DONUTS (April 24-May 24)-- When his donut shop in the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago is vandalized, an uninspired, ex-hippie, seems both hapless and indifferent. But when an African-American college student enters the doors of Superior Donuts, both men are changed forever.
ENSEMBLE THEATRE
216-321-2930 or http://www.ensemble-theatre.com
Friday and Saturdays @ 8, Sundays @ 2
THURGOOD (January 31-February 22)--Brings to life a civil rights giant who attended Fredrick Douglas High School in Baltimore, as well as Lincoln University where his class mates were the likes of poet Langston Hughes and Musician Cab Calloway.
BENGAL TIGER AT THE BAGHDAD ZOO (April 24-May 17)—Cleveland Heights native Rajiv Joseph’s play about the lives of two American Marines and an Iraqi translator whose lives are forever changed by an encounter with a quick-witted tiger who haunts the streets of war-torn Baghdad. Starred Robin Williams on Broadway.
GREAT LAKES THEATER
http://www.greatlakestheater.org or 216-241-6000
Wednesday-Saturday @ 7:30, Saturdays @ 1:30, Sunday @ 3.
DIAL M FOR MURDER (February 27-March 22)—An ex-tennis professional married his wife for her money. Now he plans to kill her for the same reason, convinced that she is having an affair. When his precise murder plot goes awry, can he improvise an equally deadly plan B?
THE TEMPEST (April 10-26)—Along a magically tempestuous journey, passions are unleashed, villainy is thwarted and a family is reunited in Shakespeare’s comic and cathartic tale of romance and renewal.
LAKELAND COMMUNITY THEATRE
440-525-7134 or http://lakelandcc.edu/academic/arts/theatre/index.asp
VIOLET (January 30, 31, February 6, 7, 13, 14 @ 7:30, February 1, 8, 15 @ 2)--Tony nominated musical tells the story of a young disfigured woman who embarks on a journey, by bus, from her farm in North Carolina to Tulsa, Oklahoma in order to be healed.
none-too-fragile
www.nonetoofragile.com or 330-671-4563
evenings at 7:30, matinees at 2:00
THE LONESOME WEST (February 5-21)--Marin McDonagh’s contemporary Irish play about the murderous goings-on in the Western Ireland town of Leenane.
GOD OF CARNAGE (April 24-May 9)-- Two sets of parents, one of whose child has hurt the other at a public park, meet to discuss the matter in a civilized manner. As the evening goes on, the parents become increasingly childish, resulting in the evening evolving into chaos.
PLAYHOUSESQUARE
216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org.
See the website for specific dates and times
STOMP (January 16-18)—Connor Palace--The eight-member troupe uses everything but conventional percussion instruments--matchboxes, wooden poles, brooms, garbage cans, Zippo lighters, hubcaps--to fill the stage with magnificent rhythms.
PIPPIN (February 3-15)—Connor Palace--Full of extraordinary acrobatics, wondrous magical feats and soaring songs from the composer of Wicked, PIPPIN is noted for such Broadway standards as “Corner of the Sky,” “Magic To Do,” “Glory,” “No Time at All,” “Morning Glow,” and “Love Song.” (For Roy Berko’s review of the Broadway show go to http://www.royberko.info, go the Broadway link and scroll to PIPPIN.)
DEFENDING THE CAVEMAN (February 4-15)—Outcalt Theatre-The longest running solo play in Broadway history, the insightful play about the ways men and women relate, or don’t relate.
HAL HOLBROOK IN MARK TWAIN TONIGHT (February 21)--Fifty years ago, a young actor took the stage in a tiny off-Broadway theater and introduced the world to a man they would never forget. The actor was Hal Holbrook and the man was Mark Twain.
DIRTY DANCING (March 3-22)—Connor Palace--Tells the story of Baby and Johnny, two independent young spirits from different worlds, who come together in what will be the most challenging and triumphant summer of their lives. Featuring such songs as “Hungry Eyes,” “Hey Baby,” “Do You Love Me?” and the heart stopping “(I’ve Had) The Time Of My Life.”
POTTED POTTER (March 26-29)—Ohio Theatre--Whether you camped outside a bookstore for three days awaiting the release of the “Deathly Hallows” or you don't know the difference between a “horcrux” and a “Hufflepuff,” the comedy, magic and mayhem makes for perfect entertainment for the entire family.
KINKY BOOTS (April 7-19)—Connor Palace—Based on a true story, the musical follows a struggling shoe factory owner who works to turn his business around with help from Lola, a fabulous entertainer in need of some sturdy stilettos. Together, this unlikely pair find that they have more in common than they ever dreamed possible… proving that when you change your mind about someone, you can change your whole world. (For Roy Berko’s review of the Broadway show go to http://www.royberko.info, go the Broadway link and scroll to KINKY BOOTS.)
AMERICA’S GOT DOWNTON (April 18)—Ohio Theatre—Direct from London’s West End, Luke Kempner creates more than thirty characters in this parody that blends celebrity visitors with well-known characters from Downton Abbey. Cultures clash and eras hilariously collide to help the cast save the estate from financial ruin – again!
DISNEY’S BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (April 24-26)—Connor Palace--The classic musical love story filled with unforgettable characters, lavish sets and costumes, and dazzling production numbers including “Be Our Guest” and the beloved title song.
RAIN-A TRIBUTE TO THE BEATLES (May 3)—State Theatre--A live multi-media spectacular that takes you on a musical journey through the life and times of the world’s most celebrated band. It includes such songs as “I Want To Hold Your Hand,” “Hard Day’s Night,” “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” “Let It Be,” “Come Together” and “Hey Jude.”
I LOVE LUCY: LIVE ON STAGE (May 15-17)—Connor Palace--It’s 1952 and you are a member of the Desilu Playhouse studio audience awaiting the filming of two oh-so-familiar I LOVE LUCY® episodes and the sidesplitting antics of America’s favorite foursome – Lucy, Ricky, Fred and Ethel – are presented live on stage.
THE MUSICAL THEATER PROJECT
http://www.MusicalTheaterProject.org or 216-529-9411 for tickets and information
(productions staged in review format with narration)
OVER THE RAINBOW (The Songs of Harold Arlen)--January 18 @3 PM—Main Stage Theatre Tri-C Metro—A national survey found that Arlen’s “Over the Rainbow” was the most beloved song of the 20th century!
FINE ROMANCE (The Love Song Cabaret)—February 15—Vosh Lakewood (area’s newest entertainment venue, 1414 Riverside Drive, Lakewood) @ 7 PM—Puts a spotlight on the many faces of love.
SWING’S THE THING!—Saturday, March 21 @ 8 PM—Ohio Theatre, and Saturday, April 11, 7 PM—Lorain County Community College—A salute to the electrifying Swing Era, a golden age for musical theatre history.
BEHIND THE MUSICAL: HELLO, DOLLY—Sunday April 26 @ 3 PM—Chagrin Falls High School Performing Arts Center—From Carol Channing to Pearl Bailey to Barbra Streisand, the musical is 50 years old and still “going strong.”
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Saturday, December 20, 2014
TIMES THEATER TRIBUTES--2014
Greater Cleveland is blessed with a vital theatre scene. It is the purpose of the TIMES THEATRE TRIBUTES to recognize theatrical experiences that, in the subjective view of this reviewer, were excellent and deserve recognition.
Only shows performed in 2014 which I reviewed were considered. With the exception of Outstanding National Touring Production, selections were limited to local presentations though actors, directors and technicians who were imported by local theatres for their productions were considered. No community theatre recognitions are included. Actors are separated by gender, but not equity or lack of union affiliation, or leading or supporting roles. Names are listed in alphabetical order, not in rank order.
2014 OUTSTANDING NON-MUSICAL PRODUCTIONS
‘night MOTHER, Beck Center
BELLEVILLE, Dobama
EXACT CHANGE, none too fragile
GIDION’S KNOT, none too fragile
INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
KIN, Dobama
SEMINAR, Beck Center
STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
THE ALIENS, Dobama
THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING MUSICAL THEATRE PRODUCTIONS
CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
LES MISÉRABLES, GREAT LAKES THEATER
THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
2014 OUTSTANDING DIRECTOR OF A NON-MUSICAL
Corey Atkins, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Donald Carrier, SEMINAR, Beck Center
Jeremy Paul, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
Laura Kepley, THE LITLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Nathan Motta, THE ALIENS, Dobama
Scott Plate, ‘night MOTHER, Beck Center
Sean Daniels, INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
Sean Deery, GIDION’S KNOT, none too fragile
Sean Deery, TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
Shannon Sindelar, KIN, Dobama
Nathan Motta, A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING DIRECTOR OF A MUSICAL
Jaime Castañeda, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Martin Friedman, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Victoria Bussert, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Victoria Bussert, LES MISÉRABLES, GREAT LAKES THEATER
2014 OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY IN A THEATRE PRODUCTION
Gregory Daniels, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Martin Céspedes, AS YOU LIKE IT, Great Lakes Theater
Martin Céspedes, FOREVER PLAID, Beck Center
Martin Céspedes, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Martin Céspedes, THE FROGS, Cain Park
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A MALE IN A NON-MUSICAL
Alexander V. Thompson, THE ALIENS, Dobama
Brian Kenneth Armour, TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
Daniel McElhaney, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, Blank Canvas
Daniel McElhaney, THE PILLOWMAN, convergence continuum
Grey Cross, LOBSTER ALICE, convergence-continuum
Matt O’Shea, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Perren Hedderson, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, Blank Canvas
Scott Plate, SEMINAR, Beck Center
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A FEMALE IN A NON-MUSICAL
Chris Howey, EXACT CHANGE, Cleveland Public Theatre & none too fragile
Chris Seibert, AMERICAN FALLS, Cleveland Public Theatre
Derdriu Ring, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
Dorothy Silver, night MOTHER, Beck Center
Elena Kepner, KIN, Dobama
Ireland Derry, RIDE, none too fragile
Jen Kilka, Gidion’s Knot, none too fragile
Jessica Wortham, INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
Laura Perotta, night MOTHER, Beck Center
Llewie Nunez, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
LucyBredeson-Smith, TERMINUS, convergence continuum
Maggie Lacey, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Sally Groth, PHOTOGRAPH 51, Actors’ Summit
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A MALE IN A MUSICAL
Dan Folino, THE FROGS, Cain Park
Elijah Rock, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Greg Violand, MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Matthew Ryan Thompson, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Stephen Mitchell Brown, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A FEMALE IN A MUSICAL
Caitlin Houlahan, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Cyndii Johnson, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Daphne Gaines, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Jodi Dominick, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Kayce Cummings (Green), MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Lindsey Sandham Leonard, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Rebecca Pitcher, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
2014 OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN OF A NON-MUSICAL
Aaron Benson, ANCESTRA, CLEVELAND PUBLIC THEATRE
Laura Carlson Tarantowski, OCCUPANT, Cesear’s Forum
Lex Liang, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Marcus Dana, KIN, Dobama
Russell Metheny, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
2014 OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN OF A MUSICAL
Ben Needham, , A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Jeff Herrmann, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Jeff Herrmann, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Jordan Janota, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Ron Newell, THE FROGS, Cain Park
Todd Krispinski, TITUS A GRAND AND GORY ROCK MUSICAL, Cleveland Public Theatre
Trad Burns, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
2014 OUTSTANDING MUSICAL DIRECTION
Bryan Bird, FOREVER PLAID, Beck Center
Joel Mercier, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Jordan Cooper, LIGHT IN THE PIAZZA, Lakeland
Larry Goodpaster, “[title of the show],” Beck Center
Larry Goodpaster, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Nancy Maier, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Nathan Motta, THE FROGS, Cain Park
2014 OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Amanda Were, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
James C. Swonger, A CHRISTMAS STORY, Cleveland Play House
Clyde Simon (with music by Jeremy Allen), TERMINUS, convergence-continuum
Mikhail Fiksel, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Richard Ingraham, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
Tom Limsenmeier, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Esther M. Haberlen, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Lex Liang, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
S. Q. Campbell, MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Tesia Dugan Benson , A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Ben Gatose, TITUS A GRAND AND GORY ROCK MUSICAL, Cleveland Public Theatre
Jeff Nellis, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Marcus Dana, A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Marcus Dana, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Mary Jo Dondlinger, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Rick Martin, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
Russ Borski, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Trad A Burns, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Trad A Burns, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN, Beck Center
Zachary Svoboda, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
2014 OUTSTANDING NATIONAL TOURING PRODUCTION
PORGY AND BESS
SPECIAL RECOGNITION
Daryl Waters for his musical arrangements for A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Eric Coble, for THE VELOCITY OF AUTUMN, his first on-Broadway production
Holly Holsinger, Chris Seibert, Renee Schilling and Sally Groth, for their development of ANCESTRA for Cleveland Public Theatre
Martin Céspedes’s choreography for the Cleveland Foundation’s Centennial gala
Mike Tutaj, videos, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
The Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre program for producing an outstanding number of Broadway theatre cast members
Victoria Bussert and the Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program student company fir their quality production of THE MURDER BALLAD
If any names are spelled incorrectly, or there are errors in identifications, please let me know so I can change the permanent record on www.royberko.info.
If you would like to read any of my reviews for the year, please go to www.royberko.info, enter the blog and click on “2014 Reviews” or click on the name of the producing theatre and scroll through their performances. Reviews from previous years may also be accessed.
Only shows performed in 2014 which I reviewed were considered. With the exception of Outstanding National Touring Production, selections were limited to local presentations though actors, directors and technicians who were imported by local theatres for their productions were considered. No community theatre recognitions are included. Actors are separated by gender, but not equity or lack of union affiliation, or leading or supporting roles. Names are listed in alphabetical order, not in rank order.
2014 OUTSTANDING NON-MUSICAL PRODUCTIONS
‘night MOTHER, Beck Center
BELLEVILLE, Dobama
EXACT CHANGE, none too fragile
GIDION’S KNOT, none too fragile
INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
KIN, Dobama
SEMINAR, Beck Center
STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
THE ALIENS, Dobama
THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING MUSICAL THEATRE PRODUCTIONS
CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
LES MISÉRABLES, GREAT LAKES THEATER
THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
2014 OUTSTANDING DIRECTOR OF A NON-MUSICAL
Corey Atkins, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Donald Carrier, SEMINAR, Beck Center
Jeremy Paul, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
Laura Kepley, THE LITLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Nathan Motta, THE ALIENS, Dobama
Scott Plate, ‘night MOTHER, Beck Center
Sean Daniels, INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
Sean Deery, GIDION’S KNOT, none too fragile
Sean Deery, TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
Shannon Sindelar, KIN, Dobama
Nathan Motta, A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING DIRECTOR OF A MUSICAL
Jaime Castañeda, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Martin Friedman, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Victoria Bussert, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Victoria Bussert, LES MISÉRABLES, GREAT LAKES THEATER
2014 OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY IN A THEATRE PRODUCTION
Gregory Daniels, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Martin Céspedes, AS YOU LIKE IT, Great Lakes Theater
Martin Céspedes, FOREVER PLAID, Beck Center
Martin Céspedes, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Martin Céspedes, THE FROGS, Cain Park
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A MALE IN A NON-MUSICAL
Alexander V. Thompson, THE ALIENS, Dobama
Brian Kenneth Armour, TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, none too fragile
Daniel McElhaney, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, Blank Canvas
Daniel McElhaney, THE PILLOWMAN, convergence continuum
Grey Cross, LOBSTER ALICE, convergence-continuum
Matt O’Shea, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Perren Hedderson, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, Blank Canvas
Scott Plate, SEMINAR, Beck Center
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A FEMALE IN A NON-MUSICAL
Chris Howey, EXACT CHANGE, Cleveland Public Theatre & none too fragile
Chris Seibert, AMERICAN FALLS, Cleveland Public Theatre
Derdriu Ring, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
Dorothy Silver, night MOTHER, Beck Center
Elena Kepner, KIN, Dobama
Ireland Derry, RIDE, none too fragile
Jen Kilka, Gidion’s Knot, none too fragile
Jessica Wortham, INFORMED CONSENT, Cleveland Play House
Laura Perotta, night MOTHER, Beck Center
Llewie Nunez, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
LucyBredeson-Smith, TERMINUS, convergence continuum
Maggie Lacey, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Sally Groth, PHOTOGRAPH 51, Actors’ Summit
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A MALE IN A MUSICAL
Dan Folino, THE FROGS, Cain Park
Elijah Rock, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Greg Violand, MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Matthew Ryan Thompson, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Stephen Mitchell Brown, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
2014 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES BY A FEMALE IN A MUSICAL
Caitlin Houlahan, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Cyndii Johnson, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Daphne Gaines, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Jodi Dominick, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Kayce Cummings (Green), MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Lindsey Sandham Leonard, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Rebecca Pitcher, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
2014 OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN OF A NON-MUSICAL
Aaron Benson, ANCESTRA, CLEVELAND PUBLIC THEATRE
Laura Carlson Tarantowski, OCCUPANT, Cesear’s Forum
Lex Liang, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
Marcus Dana, KIN, Dobama
Russell Metheny, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
2014 OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN OF A MUSICAL
Ben Needham, , A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Jeff Herrmann, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Jeff Herrmann, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Jordan Janota, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Ron Newell, THE FROGS, Cain Park
Todd Krispinski, TITUS A GRAND AND GORY ROCK MUSICAL, Cleveland Public Theatre
Trad Burns, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
2014 OUTSTANDING MUSICAL DIRECTION
Bryan Bird, FOREVER PLAID, Beck Center
Joel Mercier, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Jordan Cooper, LIGHT IN THE PIAZZA, Lakeland
Larry Goodpaster, “[title of the show],” Beck Center
Larry Goodpaster, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
Nancy Maier, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Nathan Motta, THE FROGS, Cain Park
2014 OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Amanda Were, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
James C. Swonger, A CHRISTMAS STORY, Cleveland Play House
Clyde Simon (with music by Jeremy Allen), TERMINUS, convergence-continuum
Mikhail Fiksel, HOW WE GOT ON, Cleveland Play House
Richard Ingraham, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
Tom Limsenmeier, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Esther M. Haberlen, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Lex Liang, THE LITTLE FOXES, Cleveland Play House
S. Q. Campbell, MY FAIR LADY, Porthouse
Tesia Dugan Benson , A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
2014 OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN IN A NON-MUSICAL OR MUSICAL
Ben Gatose, TITUS A GRAND AND GORY ROCK MUSICAL, Cleveland Public Theatre
Jeff Nellis, BREATH AND IMAGINATION, Cleveland Play House
Marcus Dana, A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Marcus Dana, BELLEVILLE, Dobama
Mary Jo Dondlinger, LES MISÉRABLES, Great Lakes Theater
Rick Martin, DEATHTRAP, Great Lakes Theater
Russ Borski, CARRIE, Beck Center/Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program
Trad A Burns, THE LIGHT IN THE PLAZA, Lakeland
Trad A Burns, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN, Beck Center
Zachary Svoboda, STRANDED ON EARTH, Theater Ninjas
2014 OUTSTANDING NATIONAL TOURING PRODUCTION
PORGY AND BESS
SPECIAL RECOGNITION
Daryl Waters for his musical arrangements for A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS: AN AMERICAN MUSICAL CELEBRATION, Dobama
Eric Coble, for THE VELOCITY OF AUTUMN, his first on-Broadway production
Holly Holsinger, Chris Seibert, Renee Schilling and Sally Groth, for their development of ANCESTRA for Cleveland Public Theatre
Martin Céspedes’s choreography for the Cleveland Foundation’s Centennial gala
Mike Tutaj, videos, MARY POPPINS, Beck Center
The Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre program for producing an outstanding number of Broadway theatre cast members
Victoria Bussert and the Baldwin Wallace University Musical Theatre Program student company fir their quality production of THE MURDER BALLAD
If any names are spelled incorrectly, or there are errors in identifications, please let me know so I can change the permanent record on www.royberko.info.
If you would like to read any of my reviews for the year, please go to www.royberko.info, enter the blog and click on “2014 Reviews” or click on the name of the producing theatre and scroll through their performances. Reviews from previous years may also be accessed.
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
Funky, fun, “High Fidelity a musical” at Blank Canvas
Pat Ciamacco, artistic director at Blank Canvas, has a “thing” for off-beat musicals. Sure, he produced “Hair” and “Godspell,” but it’s more likely that what you’ll see mounted on his stage are “Beach Blanket Party,” “Debbie Does Dallas,” and “Texas Chainsaw Musical.” I’m surprised he’s missed out on “Bullshot Crummond,” “Dance of the Vampires,” “Expresso Bongo,” “Hands on a Hard Body, and, of course, “The Rocky Horror Show.”
Pat’s latest offering is David Lindsay-Abaire, Amanda Green and Tom Kitt’s “High Fidelity, a musical,” which is based on Nick Hornby’s similarly named novel.
The story centers on Rob Gordon, a 30-year old slacker, who owns a record shop. ("I'm sitting on a business that has zero growth potential, and I wouldn't change a thing.") He is obsessed with developing top five lists for everything. You name the category, and Rob, rather than concentrating on what is really happening in his life, has developed a top five.
He’s kind of a Peter Pan who refuses to grow up, geared to live with and obsess about disappointment. “Never grow up, never grow up, never grow up,” that is, until his girlfriend, Laura, leaves him (not even qualifying for his “Worst Top Five Breakup” list). When Laura’s father dies, Rob suddenly has an epiphany, “He needs to let loose of his top five lists, yes, even his “Top Five ‘mother load’ of 45-rpm records” list, and the records, themselves, and his self-centered view of the world.
The musical had a short and mixed-reviews run in Boston, then a fourteen performance run on Broadway. With a review from a New York leading newspaper calling the epic-not “an all-time most forgettable musical,” there wasn’t much of a future for this script.
Short runs and bad reviews don’t dissuade Ciamacco. He knows his niche audience and his own off-the-wall sense of humor. His people go for loud, brash and kooky, not sweet, home style and family friendly. Yeah, blood zones, not comfort zones. So this off-the wall script is a perfect choice for him and them.
The score includes ballads, rock, country western, and heavy metal. There are references to mega-stars like the Beastie Boys, Indigo Girls, Talking Heads, and Aretha Franklin. All of the songs are original, however, so no old standards are sung. This is not a jukebox musical.
The music is loud, everyone is miked, even the orchestra, which shakes the walls and chairs in the postage-stamp sized theatre, where the furthest seat is ten feet from the stage.
My head is still ringing, and I removed my hearing-aids half way through. I still have an echo in my head twenty-four hours later. I guess it’s a generational thing, but I have a strong desire to hear the words the singers are singing, not the semblance of words. I think since the words were written, I should understand them. As I said, it’s a generational thing.
Songs include “The Last Real Record Store,” “Desert Island Top 5-Break-Ups,” “Ian’s Here,” “Ready to Settle,” “Cryin’ in The Rain,” and “Turn the World Off.”
Favorites songs include the clever “Nine Percent Chance,” the statistical probability that Laura will take Rob back, which had a boy-group sound complete with repetitive gestures and choreography.
Another delight was “It’s No Problem,” first sung by the utterly charming Charlie Brown-like Pat Miller as the nerdy Dick, who doesn’t know whether he has had sex or not. But by the end of the show, he has a girl friend, Anna (the equally nerdy Monica Zach) who joins Miller in the song’s reprise.
And then there is “Laura, Laura,” a nice ballad, performed beautifully by our hero, the tall, skinny, handsome, Shane Patrick O’Neill, he of great voice and acting talent.
I heard and understood the lyrics to those three “quiet” songs.
The cast is talented, sings well, and has a ball portraying their odd ball parts. They even did justice to the farce nature of the piece, a hard task.
Leslie Andrews is girlfriend Laura, Kate Leigh Michalski is Rob’s nagging female friend, director Pat Ciamacco displays a big set of singing pipes as the negative Barry, Kevin Myers is a hoot as T.M.P.M.I.T.W. (yes, that’s what the guys call him!). Stephen Berg does a bad (yes, bad, “bad,” not bad “good”) take-off on Bruce Springsteen, to the delight of the audience.
The overly energetic and overly miked orchestra, under the direction of Lawrence Wallace, played the begeebers out of the music.
CAPSULE JUDGMENT: “High Fidelity, a musical,” now on stage at Blank Canvas, is fun. It’s filled with delightful ridiculousness, is well-staged and performed, and is definitely LOUD. If you are in the mood for a night of off- beat “cool,” and “different” and want to avoid Santa Claus, reindeer, an umbrella carrying flying nanny, and “bah-humbug,” this should be your holiday theatre treat.
Blank Canvas runs “High Fidelity, a musical” through December 20 in its west side theatre, 1305 West 78th Street, Suite 211, Cleveland. For tickets and directions go to www.blankcanvasthetre.com
Monday, December 08, 2014
MARY POPPINS continues the happy holiday tradition at Beck
Like retail stores, local theatres realize that they need a big December holiday season to make enough profits to sustain themselves for rest of the year.
Looking on the holiday boards, there’s Great Lakes with their umpteenth production of “A Christmas Carol,” Cleveland Play House’s “A Christmas Story,” and Cleveland Public Theatre’s “Santaland Diaries.” PlayhouseSquare joined the jolly days with a production of “White Christmas.” Even Dobama, the “serious theatre” added “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration” to its line up, with seemingly good pre-sales.
Beck has used ”Annie” and “Beauty And The Beast” as its holiday cash cows in previous years. This time, it decided to start a new tradition with “Mary Poppins.”
Beck is up against several obstacles with their selection. Because of the theatre space not having a fly gallery, Mary, as she does in the movie version, can’t fly. (Leave it to some cute little lass, who, when the nanny with the umbrella in the movie went skyward, and our Mary was instead gliding, anchored to a moving stepladder, jumped out of her seat and wailed, “Why isn’t she flying?”)
Poppins is also a “lesson” play. It doesn’t have a prince and princess or a little orphan girl who gets saved. It also doesn’t have a cute dog, or a monster who turns in to a handsome prince. It’s long on story and is short on cutesy stuff, slapstick, and unbridled action.
Fortunately, the theatre employs Martin Céspedes, the most awarded choreographer in the area. Leave it to Céspedes to create some show stopping dances that tended to hold the attention of the kids and adults alike.
But, as good as the production is, under Scott Plate’s inventive staging, this just isn’t a kid pleasing show, especially kids who have seen the movie so many times that they can repeat the lines and expect Mary to fly and for Burt and his chimney sweeps to dance on the roof tops.
As the story goes, Jane and Michael Banks, the children of the up-tight banker George Banks, are the scourge of nannies. The parade of child keepers, go in and out of employment, as if the house had a revolving door. No ad was run, no one knew the last nanny left, but based on a ripped-up note thrown into the air (magically taken sky-bound by creative electronic video), “The Perfect Nanny,” Poppins, shows up.
Using a child rearing philosophy of “A Spoon Full of Sugar,” the nanny tames the wild beasts and inserts a joyful ”Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” attitude. When Poppins leaves to test her long term effect, Mrs. Banks finds Mr. Banks’ old nanny, the fearsome Miss Andrew to take her place. The results, of course, are disastrous. Poppins returns, to “Cherry Tree Lane” and the family settles down in happy bliss, appreciating the value of family and the need for love rather than fear. Mary Poppins leaves to the strains of “A Shooting Star.”
Along the way, such tunes as “Chim Chim Cher-ee,” “Jolly Holiday,” “A Man Has Dreams,” “Feed the Birds,” “Playing the Game,” and “Let’s Go Fly a Kite,” are sung, and Céspedes pulls off his choreographic magic with rousing numbers such as “Step in Time.”
Scott Plate does a “Practically Perfect” job of directing.
The cast is universally strong. As Jane and Michael, Anna Barrett and Joseph Daso have been well-versed in the ways of theatre and the to be natural and not act their roles. Accent perfect, the duo are totally believable. Good job!
Matthew Ryan Thompson succeeds in the battle to create his own Bert and not imitate Dick VanDyke. He sings well, dances with gusto and has a nice touch with humor. Rebecca Pitcher as “The Perfect Nanny,” also avoids the film’s stereotype set by Julie Andrews. She reverts to the character as written in the P. L. Travers’ book series, stern but loving, rather than syrupy sweet.
Katherine DeBoer is properly motherly and displays a well-trained singing voice. Curt Arnold is excellent as the rigid George Banks. Lissy Gulick is adorable as Mrs. Brill, the put-upon house keeper. Aimee Collier plays the nasty Miss Andrew with a negative relish and a big voice! Peggy Gibbons delivers a lovely rendition of “Feed the Birds.”
The dancing corps is excellent, pulling off the choreography with ease and effectiveness. The orchestra, under the direction of Larry Goodpaster, plays well and supports rather than drowning out the singers. Sound designer Carlton Guc did the masterful job of getting the Beck sound system to operate without a single sound squeal!
Jeff Herrmann, cursed with a small playing area and no back or side stage space, must be a master of jigsaw puzzles, as set pieces whiz on and off stage with comparative ease. Using many, many white umbrellas hanging from the batons, as a background for Mike Tutaj’s masterfully designed videos, was a stroke of genius.
CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: “Mary Poppins, based on the stories of P. L. Travers and the Walt Disney Film, is generally delightful, though not as charismatic as required for the attention of young children. It will delight most theatre-goers as Mary Poppins flylessly cavorts into their hearts and feeds them “A Spoon Full of Sugar.”
“Mary Poppins” is scheduled to run at Beck Center for the Arts through January 4, 2015. For tickets and information call 216-521-2540 or go online to http://www.beckcenter.org
Looking on the holiday boards, there’s Great Lakes with their umpteenth production of “A Christmas Carol,” Cleveland Play House’s “A Christmas Story,” and Cleveland Public Theatre’s “Santaland Diaries.” PlayhouseSquare joined the jolly days with a production of “White Christmas.” Even Dobama, the “serious theatre” added “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration” to its line up, with seemingly good pre-sales.
Beck has used ”Annie” and “Beauty And The Beast” as its holiday cash cows in previous years. This time, it decided to start a new tradition with “Mary Poppins.”
Beck is up against several obstacles with their selection. Because of the theatre space not having a fly gallery, Mary, as she does in the movie version, can’t fly. (Leave it to some cute little lass, who, when the nanny with the umbrella in the movie went skyward, and our Mary was instead gliding, anchored to a moving stepladder, jumped out of her seat and wailed, “Why isn’t she flying?”)
Poppins is also a “lesson” play. It doesn’t have a prince and princess or a little orphan girl who gets saved. It also doesn’t have a cute dog, or a monster who turns in to a handsome prince. It’s long on story and is short on cutesy stuff, slapstick, and unbridled action.
Fortunately, the theatre employs Martin Céspedes, the most awarded choreographer in the area. Leave it to Céspedes to create some show stopping dances that tended to hold the attention of the kids and adults alike.
But, as good as the production is, under Scott Plate’s inventive staging, this just isn’t a kid pleasing show, especially kids who have seen the movie so many times that they can repeat the lines and expect Mary to fly and for Burt and his chimney sweeps to dance on the roof tops.
As the story goes, Jane and Michael Banks, the children of the up-tight banker George Banks, are the scourge of nannies. The parade of child keepers, go in and out of employment, as if the house had a revolving door. No ad was run, no one knew the last nanny left, but based on a ripped-up note thrown into the air (magically taken sky-bound by creative electronic video), “The Perfect Nanny,” Poppins, shows up.
Using a child rearing philosophy of “A Spoon Full of Sugar,” the nanny tames the wild beasts and inserts a joyful ”Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” attitude. When Poppins leaves to test her long term effect, Mrs. Banks finds Mr. Banks’ old nanny, the fearsome Miss Andrew to take her place. The results, of course, are disastrous. Poppins returns, to “Cherry Tree Lane” and the family settles down in happy bliss, appreciating the value of family and the need for love rather than fear. Mary Poppins leaves to the strains of “A Shooting Star.”
Along the way, such tunes as “Chim Chim Cher-ee,” “Jolly Holiday,” “A Man Has Dreams,” “Feed the Birds,” “Playing the Game,” and “Let’s Go Fly a Kite,” are sung, and Céspedes pulls off his choreographic magic with rousing numbers such as “Step in Time.”
Scott Plate does a “Practically Perfect” job of directing.
The cast is universally strong. As Jane and Michael, Anna Barrett and Joseph Daso have been well-versed in the ways of theatre and the to be natural and not act their roles. Accent perfect, the duo are totally believable. Good job!
Matthew Ryan Thompson succeeds in the battle to create his own Bert and not imitate Dick VanDyke. He sings well, dances with gusto and has a nice touch with humor. Rebecca Pitcher as “The Perfect Nanny,” also avoids the film’s stereotype set by Julie Andrews. She reverts to the character as written in the P. L. Travers’ book series, stern but loving, rather than syrupy sweet.
Katherine DeBoer is properly motherly and displays a well-trained singing voice. Curt Arnold is excellent as the rigid George Banks. Lissy Gulick is adorable as Mrs. Brill, the put-upon house keeper. Aimee Collier plays the nasty Miss Andrew with a negative relish and a big voice! Peggy Gibbons delivers a lovely rendition of “Feed the Birds.”
The dancing corps is excellent, pulling off the choreography with ease and effectiveness. The orchestra, under the direction of Larry Goodpaster, plays well and supports rather than drowning out the singers. Sound designer Carlton Guc did the masterful job of getting the Beck sound system to operate without a single sound squeal!
Jeff Herrmann, cursed with a small playing area and no back or side stage space, must be a master of jigsaw puzzles, as set pieces whiz on and off stage with comparative ease. Using many, many white umbrellas hanging from the batons, as a background for Mike Tutaj’s masterfully designed videos, was a stroke of genius.
CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: “Mary Poppins, based on the stories of P. L. Travers and the Walt Disney Film, is generally delightful, though not as charismatic as required for the attention of young children. It will delight most theatre-goers as Mary Poppins flylessly cavorts into their hearts and feeds them “A Spoon Full of Sugar.”
“Mary Poppins” is scheduled to run at Beck Center for the Arts through January 4, 2015. For tickets and information call 216-521-2540 or go online to http://www.beckcenter.org
CPT’s “American Falls” is an existentialist tale of yearning and destruction
The existentialists ask, “What does it mean to exist? What is our purpose in being?” “American Falls,” Miki Johnson’s drama which showcases eight people living in a small town—six alive, two dead—is an existentialist exercise.
The Cleveland Public Theatre production probes “the inner life of everyday people desperately seeking meaning and love on the razor’s edge of transcendence and despair.”
Much in the vein of Thornton Wilder’s classic, “Our Town,” “American Falls” takes place in a small town, populated by people who examine life from birth through death and thereafter. Neither give answers, but much in the pattern of Talmudic scholars, asks questions.
Wilder’s heroine, Emily Webb asks, “Does anyone ever realize life while they live it…every, every minute?” Wilder goes on to observe: “That's what it was to be alive. To move about in a cloud of ignorance; to go up and down trampling on the feelings of those about you. To spend and waste time as though you had a million years. To be always at the mercy of one self-centered passion, or another.”
Lisa, one of the dead characters states, “I mean, we do these things. We spill coffee down our sleeve, we read the labels on soup cans, we honk our horns and floss our teeth and cry and sing and swallow and turn on light switches and turn them off again and get places on time and get places late and watch TV and we get upset when a storm takes out the electricity and we blink and open drawers and sometimes forget to close them again and write ourselves reminders. All these things. And it’s nothing. It’s all nothing. And it’s everything . . .It’s so lovely, so kind that this is how it ends.
The play starts with the line, “Let me tell you a story.” And, what a story it is. A story of intrigue, yet, ordinariness. A tale of horror, yet one of longing. The events appear to be a natural outlet for probing about life by Miki Johnson, born and nurtured in the small town of Green, Ohio (near Akron).
In one suspended period of time, we hear the tales of Lisa, a new suicide, who relates her life of abuse, while we view her former husband, Samuel, transform himself from ranting male to psychotic female…denuding himself of all bodily hair, putting on a wig, as he explains to an uncomprehending young boy why he is not really the child’s biological father, because his mother had an affair . As this part of the tale unravels, the boy’s real father is interacting with two friends in a bar, and a Native American shoe salesman tells about his magical shoes, “Not bullshit magic, real magic.” Samuel’s dead mother relates her tale of depression, alcoholism, mothering 11 children, and the mistakes of her life.
The stories continue, some funny, some sad, but all filled with some sort of heartache and pain, and how life carries on with losses and gains.
Johnson uses numerous pop references in her tale-telling. She refers to Budweiser beer, National Public Radio, Terry Gross interviews, Frank Capra movies, and “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit” in her metaphoric descriptions of the story of life.
The characters are bound by geography, but, most by being humans and probing for the whys of their existence.
The performances, most of which are presented in monologue form directly to the audience, are compelling. Each member of the cast, Darius Stubbs, Faye Hargate, Adam Seeholzer, Chris Seibert, PJ MCready, Ryan Edlinger, Dionne D. Atchison, and Anthony Sevier is convincing in being, not acting, his/her character.
Capsule judgement: “American Falls” is not an easy sit. If takes concentration. As Raymond Bobgan, the director, states in his program notes, “This journey requires curiosity, attention and a yearning for something wonderful to happen.” Each will take his/her own journey in this complex piece.
“American Falls” continues at Cleveland Public Theatre through December 20, 2014. For tickets go to: 216-631-2727 or go to www.cptonline.org
The Cleveland Public Theatre production probes “the inner life of everyday people desperately seeking meaning and love on the razor’s edge of transcendence and despair.”
Much in the vein of Thornton Wilder’s classic, “Our Town,” “American Falls” takes place in a small town, populated by people who examine life from birth through death and thereafter. Neither give answers, but much in the pattern of Talmudic scholars, asks questions.
Wilder’s heroine, Emily Webb asks, “Does anyone ever realize life while they live it…every, every minute?” Wilder goes on to observe: “That's what it was to be alive. To move about in a cloud of ignorance; to go up and down trampling on the feelings of those about you. To spend and waste time as though you had a million years. To be always at the mercy of one self-centered passion, or another.”
Lisa, one of the dead characters states, “I mean, we do these things. We spill coffee down our sleeve, we read the labels on soup cans, we honk our horns and floss our teeth and cry and sing and swallow and turn on light switches and turn them off again and get places on time and get places late and watch TV and we get upset when a storm takes out the electricity and we blink and open drawers and sometimes forget to close them again and write ourselves reminders. All these things. And it’s nothing. It’s all nothing. And it’s everything . . .It’s so lovely, so kind that this is how it ends.
The play starts with the line, “Let me tell you a story.” And, what a story it is. A story of intrigue, yet, ordinariness. A tale of horror, yet one of longing. The events appear to be a natural outlet for probing about life by Miki Johnson, born and nurtured in the small town of Green, Ohio (near Akron).
In one suspended period of time, we hear the tales of Lisa, a new suicide, who relates her life of abuse, while we view her former husband, Samuel, transform himself from ranting male to psychotic female…denuding himself of all bodily hair, putting on a wig, as he explains to an uncomprehending young boy why he is not really the child’s biological father, because his mother had an affair . As this part of the tale unravels, the boy’s real father is interacting with two friends in a bar, and a Native American shoe salesman tells about his magical shoes, “Not bullshit magic, real magic.” Samuel’s dead mother relates her tale of depression, alcoholism, mothering 11 children, and the mistakes of her life.
The stories continue, some funny, some sad, but all filled with some sort of heartache and pain, and how life carries on with losses and gains.
Johnson uses numerous pop references in her tale-telling. She refers to Budweiser beer, National Public Radio, Terry Gross interviews, Frank Capra movies, and “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit” in her metaphoric descriptions of the story of life.
The characters are bound by geography, but, most by being humans and probing for the whys of their existence.
The performances, most of which are presented in monologue form directly to the audience, are compelling. Each member of the cast, Darius Stubbs, Faye Hargate, Adam Seeholzer, Chris Seibert, PJ MCready, Ryan Edlinger, Dionne D. Atchison, and Anthony Sevier is convincing in being, not acting, his/her character.
Capsule judgement: “American Falls” is not an easy sit. If takes concentration. As Raymond Bobgan, the director, states in his program notes, “This journey requires curiosity, attention and a yearning for something wonderful to happen.” Each will take his/her own journey in this complex piece.
“American Falls” continues at Cleveland Public Theatre through December 20, 2014. For tickets go to: 216-631-2727 or go to www.cptonline.org
Sunday, December 07, 2014
“A Civil War Christmas,” a massive and impressive undertaking at Dobama
Pulitzer Prize winner Paula Vogel is noted for crafting play scripts which impact directly on the lives of people. A review of her works illustrates that she writes about issues that need to be expressed (AIDS, sexual abuse, prostitution, degradation of the individual), she favors writing about emotional circumstances which she expresses in narrative structures, and her works contain theatrical requirements that make for better viewing, than reading.
Her “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration,” which was written over a ten-year period, reflects her focus on direct impact of situations and experiences on the lives of people.
The epic drama, which is set on Christmas Eve, 1864, in Washington, D.C., centers on the lives of about a dozen characters, some real (e.g., Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, John Wilkes Booth and Clara Barton), some compositions which allude to real people, and purely fiction beings. There is a multi-religious message, as well as historical tales. It highlights community and family values (e.g., deep dedication of Southerners regarding their cause, even when faced with certain defeat; the confusion on the part of the slaves of what it meant to be free; the conflict between religious convictions and national pride.)
The musical interludes contain slave songs, spirituals, code songs (melodies of the Underground railroad intended to give directions to Blacks who were attempting to flee to the North, on whether it was safe to travel by land or waterways), as well as traditional Americana tunes, carols, and even a Hebrew prayer.
Abraham Lincoln, in the midst of seeing victory within reach of the union, frets over the gloves he bought for his wife, which were left at the family’s summer home; John Wilkes Booth schemes to capture the president; a Quaker questions whether he could kill someone if forced to do so; bi-polar Mary Lincoln fusses and fumes over obtaining a holiday tree, her need for a new dress, mourning the death of her son, and balancing her over-extended budget; a black Union solder wants revenge against the Rebels for kidnapping his wife; a young black girl wanders the frigid streets of D.C. in search of her mother and a place to stay.
The story of nation, family, reconciliation and communal hope, spotlights familiar themes, often in a code that only a keen viewer will grasp. The mother and child, like the Jesus story, are refused entrance to their home (the nation’s capital), the child is swaddled in straw (in this case, in a shipping container), and is found by a group of do-gooders (much like the Wise Men). A delirious wounded Jewish young man hears the songs of the “Kaddish” (the prayer for the dead) sung as he confuses a hallucination of poet Walt Whitman, who was noted for visiting the wounded Union soldiers, as a vision who is looking out for him. “Marching Through Georgia,” the fevered Confederate battle cry blasts forth in pride, even though the South has lost what they called “the war of Northern aggression,” a war that is still being fought today in the minds of some. The Black experience on both sides of the conflict center on what has changed, what will change and what will stay the same. The race card issue is very much in the present day news.
This is not a historical play as many of the “facts” are not “facts,’ per se, but Vogel will not allow the audience to ignore that that war, and the trauma it left behind is still present.
Dobama has taken on a major task in producing “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration.” Not only does the production require 15 skilled actors who portray 60 characters, each character requires a number of unique costumes. In order to visually transport the audience from each of the 64 scenes to the other, a massive turntable had to be constructed. Props are numerous. Special lighting effects were present. This is the most expensive and probably the most complex show that Dobama has ever produced.
Director Nathan Motta has succeeded in master-planning the epic tale. Nothing short of using an Excel spreadsheet could have solved how to keep track of all the characters and where they should be on and off stage at all times, as well as the numerous props and multitude of lighting changes.
The technical aspects of the show were as complex as the staging. Ben Needham’s set designs, Marcus Dana’s lighting, Richard Ingraham’s sound design, Mark Jenks’ puppets, Jeremy Dobbins’ projection designs, and Tesia Dugan Benson’s costumes all added to the epic feel and images of the production.
Daryl Waters’ musical arrangements were well honed. Especially effective were the singing of the spirituals and the counterpoint of “Kaddish”/”Silent Night,” and the musical sounds of Jordan Cooper and the orchestra.
The cast was universally outstanding. Curtain calls to Vincent Briley (Willy Mack), precocious Caris Collins (Jessa), Andrew Gombas (Moses Levy/Chester Saunders), Natalie Green (RAZ), Sally Groth (Clara Barton), Katrice Headd (Hannah), Bob Keefe (Ulysses S. Grant), Nathan Lilly (Bronson), Lashawn Little (Jim Wormley), Brian Mueller (John Surrat), ), Matt O’Shea (Johns Wilkes Booth), Sally Field’s look and-sound-a-like Juliette Regnier (Mary Todd Lincoln), Nicole Sumlin (Elizabeth Keckley), Tim Tavcar (Robert E. Lee), and Matthew Wright (Lincoln).
CAPSULE JUDGMENT: Audiences looking for an alternative to the usual escapist holiday treats have an opportunity to attend “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration, ” and broaden their knowledge of a series of historical and fictional events, which should challenge their thinking, while helping place some of the current legal and ethical issues in a broad perspective. The production is stronger than the content, but it is a show well worth seeing.
“A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration” runs through January 4, 2015, at Dobama Theatre. Call 216-932-3396 or http://www.dobama.org for tickets.
Her “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration,” which was written over a ten-year period, reflects her focus on direct impact of situations and experiences on the lives of people.
The epic drama, which is set on Christmas Eve, 1864, in Washington, D.C., centers on the lives of about a dozen characters, some real (e.g., Abraham Lincoln, Mary Todd Lincoln, John Wilkes Booth and Clara Barton), some compositions which allude to real people, and purely fiction beings. There is a multi-religious message, as well as historical tales. It highlights community and family values (e.g., deep dedication of Southerners regarding their cause, even when faced with certain defeat; the confusion on the part of the slaves of what it meant to be free; the conflict between religious convictions and national pride.)
The musical interludes contain slave songs, spirituals, code songs (melodies of the Underground railroad intended to give directions to Blacks who were attempting to flee to the North, on whether it was safe to travel by land or waterways), as well as traditional Americana tunes, carols, and even a Hebrew prayer.
Abraham Lincoln, in the midst of seeing victory within reach of the union, frets over the gloves he bought for his wife, which were left at the family’s summer home; John Wilkes Booth schemes to capture the president; a Quaker questions whether he could kill someone if forced to do so; bi-polar Mary Lincoln fusses and fumes over obtaining a holiday tree, her need for a new dress, mourning the death of her son, and balancing her over-extended budget; a black Union solder wants revenge against the Rebels for kidnapping his wife; a young black girl wanders the frigid streets of D.C. in search of her mother and a place to stay.
The story of nation, family, reconciliation and communal hope, spotlights familiar themes, often in a code that only a keen viewer will grasp. The mother and child, like the Jesus story, are refused entrance to their home (the nation’s capital), the child is swaddled in straw (in this case, in a shipping container), and is found by a group of do-gooders (much like the Wise Men). A delirious wounded Jewish young man hears the songs of the “Kaddish” (the prayer for the dead) sung as he confuses a hallucination of poet Walt Whitman, who was noted for visiting the wounded Union soldiers, as a vision who is looking out for him. “Marching Through Georgia,” the fevered Confederate battle cry blasts forth in pride, even though the South has lost what they called “the war of Northern aggression,” a war that is still being fought today in the minds of some. The Black experience on both sides of the conflict center on what has changed, what will change and what will stay the same. The race card issue is very much in the present day news.
This is not a historical play as many of the “facts” are not “facts,’ per se, but Vogel will not allow the audience to ignore that that war, and the trauma it left behind is still present.
Dobama has taken on a major task in producing “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration.” Not only does the production require 15 skilled actors who portray 60 characters, each character requires a number of unique costumes. In order to visually transport the audience from each of the 64 scenes to the other, a massive turntable had to be constructed. Props are numerous. Special lighting effects were present. This is the most expensive and probably the most complex show that Dobama has ever produced.
Director Nathan Motta has succeeded in master-planning the epic tale. Nothing short of using an Excel spreadsheet could have solved how to keep track of all the characters and where they should be on and off stage at all times, as well as the numerous props and multitude of lighting changes.
The technical aspects of the show were as complex as the staging. Ben Needham’s set designs, Marcus Dana’s lighting, Richard Ingraham’s sound design, Mark Jenks’ puppets, Jeremy Dobbins’ projection designs, and Tesia Dugan Benson’s costumes all added to the epic feel and images of the production.
Daryl Waters’ musical arrangements were well honed. Especially effective were the singing of the spirituals and the counterpoint of “Kaddish”/”Silent Night,” and the musical sounds of Jordan Cooper and the orchestra.
The cast was universally outstanding. Curtain calls to Vincent Briley (Willy Mack), precocious Caris Collins (Jessa), Andrew Gombas (Moses Levy/Chester Saunders), Natalie Green (RAZ), Sally Groth (Clara Barton), Katrice Headd (Hannah), Bob Keefe (Ulysses S. Grant), Nathan Lilly (Bronson), Lashawn Little (Jim Wormley), Brian Mueller (John Surrat), ), Matt O’Shea (Johns Wilkes Booth), Sally Field’s look and-sound-a-like Juliette Regnier (Mary Todd Lincoln), Nicole Sumlin (Elizabeth Keckley), Tim Tavcar (Robert E. Lee), and Matthew Wright (Lincoln).
CAPSULE JUDGMENT: Audiences looking for an alternative to the usual escapist holiday treats have an opportunity to attend “A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration, ” and broaden their knowledge of a series of historical and fictional events, which should challenge their thinking, while helping place some of the current legal and ethical issues in a broad perspective. The production is stronger than the content, but it is a show well worth seeing.
“A Civil War Christmas: An American Musical Celebration” runs through January 4, 2015, at Dobama Theatre. Call 216-932-3396 or http://www.dobama.org for tickets.
Friday, December 05, 2014
New cast brings added cheer to ‘A Christmas Story” at Cleveland Play House
Little did I realize as I stood many years ago, as an extra, in front of Higbee’s Department Store in downtown Cleveland at 3 AM, that I was participating in the filming of what would become one of the most popular winter holiday movies of all times.
The filming was done in
the middle of the night because in daytime, the Erieview Tower and Federal
Building were visible from Public Square, as was the shell of the BP Tower,
that was under construction.
I also didn’t know, as I
stood on the stoop of a house, a couple of doors down from 3159 West 11th
Street, in the heart of Tremont, that the single sentence I spoke on camera,
would wind up on the cutting room floor, eliminating my actual role in “A
Christmas Story.” Ah, show business, cruel show business!
Many Clevelanders think
of “A Christmas Story” as “our” movie, a movie set and made in Cleveland. They are only partially right. Our fair city was selected as the place
to film the low budget flick because Cleveland, in the winter, has lots of
snow. Right? Wrong! A freak of nature caused 1982 to be mild. Little snow. The movie mavens had to flood the scenes with fake
snow. Finally, frustration set in
and the powers that be moved the filming to Canada.
Before the flight across
the lake took place, the now dubbed “The Official Christmas Story House” was
used for external shots, including the footage of the stocking lamp in the
front window. Interior scenes were
shot on a sound stage. The actual
house, after falling into disrepair, was bought, turned into a museum which
displays rooms rebuilt to duplicate the images on the sound stage decorated
with props from the film, as well as hundreds
of rare, behind-the-scenes photos, which are now on display.
(Nope, though I was posed
for some pictures, and interviewed Peter Billingsley (the film’s Ralphie) and
Scott Schwartz (Flick) for Continental Cable, I’m not on display their
either).
The house gets about
50,000 visitors a year. Across the
street there is a gift store that sells such goodies as Lifebuoy soap, pink bunny suits and leg lamps.
The interior of the
beautiful Higbee’s Department Store, now the home of the Horseshoe Casino, was
actually used for “the visit to Santa” scene. Santa’s house and slide, where Ralphie and his friends went
to sit on the lap of he great-giver-of-gifts, which was built for the movie,
was left in the store after the film crew departed. The slide was used from that time until the store closed in
2002.
The film, “A Christmas
Story,” was released in 1983. It
takes place on Cleveland Street in Hohman, Indiana, in the 1940s. It centers on Ralphie, a 9 year-old boy whose goal in life
is to have Santa bring him “an Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action Two-Hundred-Shot Range
Model Air Rifle with a compass in the stock and this thing
which tells time.”
Ralphie and his best friends, Flick and
Schwartz, try to negotiate life as tweens. A life filled with sophomoric
wishes, eluding Scut Farkas, the neighborhood bully, putting up with Randy,
Ralphie’s younger brother, escaping the grasps of Esther Jane, who has a crush
on our hero, and the need to convince every one in his life, that he won’t
shoot out his eye with the sought after bb gun.
The tale is narrated through
remembrances relayed by Ralph, the adult Ralphie. (In the film Ralph’s voice was supplied by Jean Shepherd, the
films co-author.)
The play, written by Philip Grecian, is
based on Shepherd, Leigh Brown and Bob Clark’s film script and Shepherd’s book,
“In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash.”
The stage version is filled with the
memorable lines of the film, including, “Be sure to drink your Ovaltine,”
“Daddy’s gonna kill Ralphie!,” “Only I didn’t say ‘Fudge.’ I said the WORD, the big one, the
queen-mother of dirty words, the ‘F-dash-dash-dash’ word!,” “Some men are
Baptists, others Catholics, my father was an Oldsmobile man!,” “Scut Farkus
staring out at us with his yellow eyes.
He had yellow eyes! SO HELP
ME GOD, YELLOW EYES,” “Aha, aha, it’s a clinkerrrr!!! That blasted, stupid
furnace. Dadgummit!.” And, the
never to be forgotten epithet by Flick before he succumbed to the , “I
TRIPLE-dog-dare you!”
Yes, “Stick my tongue to
that stupid pole, that’s stupid.”
Again this year, the Play
House production is directed by John McCluggage. Last time around the production was sluggish and lacked some
of the requisite charm. McCluggage
replaced much of the cast, has refined some of the technical aspects, and added
zing that previously was missing.
Jeff Talbott revived his
role as Ralph, the on-stage narrator, with great ease, charm and empathy.
Skipper Rankin grew enough
to move from being Randy in last year’s production, to portray Ralphie. Though his voice got a little into the
high range, making it difficult to hear some words, Skipper was real,
believable and delightful.
Ethan Montoya was amusing
as the put upon Flick, though he needs to work on projection. Yumi Ndhlovu was properly full of
herself as Helen, and Giovanna A. Layne was on point as the crush-struck Esther
Jane. Jake Spencer nearly stole
the show as probably the best, “I have to go wee-wee” Randy, in the long
history of local staging.
Newcomers, Christopher
Gerson, was wonderful as The Old Man, and Madeleine Maby was perfect as the
gentle, put upon, June Cleaverish-mom.
Laura Perrotta was nicely fierce as Miss Shields, the teacher who turns
in the Wicked Witch of the West!
Robert Mark Morgan’s set
design worked well, but the Higbee’s Santa house and slide are still flimsy and
underwhelming. James C. Swonger’s
sound design was outstanding. The audio
special effects, especially the “clinkers” and “Bumpuses’s dogs”
were terrific.
CAPSULE JUDGMENT: This year’s “THE CHRISTMAS STORY,” now a seemingly permanent
installment as CPH’s holiday show, was a step above some of the recent stagings
of the epic. Many of the opening
night audience seemed to be long time devotees, as many of the laugh lines were
preceded by pre-giggles and oral
forecasting of the now famous lines. It was almost like a midnight viewing of “The Rocky Horror
Show.” Yes, a good time was had by all.
No “bah Humbug” here!
“A Christmas Story,” runs
through December 21, 2014 in the Allen Theatre at PlayhouseSquare. For
tickets call 216-241-6000 or go to http://www.clevelandplayhouse.com.
Thursday, December 04, 2014
It’s that time of year—“Irving Berlin’s White Christmas” @ State Theatre
The stage musical, with libretto by David Ives and Paul Blake, and music and lyrics by Irvin Berlin, is loosely based on the 1954 film, “White Christmas, which was based on the 1942 film, “Holiday Inn.”
It’s 1944. America and its Allies are involved in the second world war. Bob Wallace and Phil Davis are doing a USO-type show for the troops of the 151st Division. Not only is there a war hanging over the heads of the troops, but their beloved commanding officer, Major General Thomas F. Waverly, is about to be relieved of his duties. At the end of the show-within a show, a musical tribute is given in honor of Waverly.
As the rest of the story unfolds, Wallace and Davis, following the war, become celebrities doing night club, radio and TV gigs, including appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show. Years later, the duo finds that General Waverly’s ski lodge in Vermont is about to be foreclosed upon, and along with two cuties and a host of entertainers, they put on a fund-raising tribute for the General, and, of course, save the lodge and find love.
As has to happen in any escapist musical, boy-girl meet and argue and make up (in this plot two boys and two girls), a crisis or two has to emerge and be solved, and all ends well, since, as one of the show’s songs says, “I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm.”
All of the required audience pleasers are present. There’s a cute little talented girl, a lovable local yokel, adorable dancing girls, handsome dancing boys, and a big-mouthed sarcastic aging female.
In the course of the action, the cast and audience is humming and singing such classics as, “White Christmas,” “Let Yourself Go,” “Sisters,” “Count Your Blessings, Instead of Sheep, and “Blue Skies.” There is even an audience sing along.
The songs are shoe-horned in, sometimes with no real reason other than that Irving Berlin wrote them. This is no book musical in the ilk of “Fiddler on the Roof” or “West Side Story.” It’s no thinking person’s script, such as “Next to Normal.” That matters little. That’s not the purpose of this type of show. It’s pure entertainment for entertainment’s sake. It’s “42nd Street” and “Singing in the Rain.” It’s meant to be fantasy, feel good stuff.
“Irving Berlin’s White Christmas” has been hailed as “a holiday day card come to life,” and, that it is. Snow falls on the stage and the audience, Christmas trees shine brightly, and there are big dancing and singing production numbers. The whole experience is all decked out in the holiday mood. As one of the songs says, “Let Me Sing and I’m Happy.”
The touring production does not have great production qualities. Most of the sets are painted drops, no electronic special effects, just good old fashioned, old time techniques. Curtains close between each scene to allow time to set up for the next scene. It, like the script, is a flashback to the past.
The production, under the direction of Randy Skinner, who is also the choreographer, is filled with creative dancing and gimmicks. Those who left at intermission missed the exciting show stopper, “I Love a Piano,” which opened Act II and concluded to extended applause.
The cast is uneven. The male leads need to sparkle. Think Donald O’Connor, Gene Kelly, Tommy Tune, Danny Kaye. Jeremy Benton comes close as Phil. He has a nice connection with his female “love,” the pert and talented Kaitlyn Davison. He sings well and dances even better. On the other hand, James Clow lacks the charisma and stage magnetism for creating a believable Bob. He displays little emotional connection to his lady love, the big voiced, stand-offish Trista Moldovan (Betty).
Pamela Myers delights as the Ethel Merman-ish Martha, the Inn’s take-charge lady. Conrad John Schuck was correctly military-stuffy as General Waverly.
Though his talents are basically wasted, Clevelanders should be thrilled to see Elyrian Cliff Bemis on the State’s stage, a stage which he helped save. He was cast a member of “Jacques Brel,” which played, in an extended run, in the lobby of the State Theatre while money was raised to stop the destruction of what is now the PlayhouseSquare theatre complex.
BTW...”Jacques Brel’s” director, Joe Garry, and Bemis’s fellow cast member, David O. Frazier, were in the “White Christmas” audience to see their old buddy portray Mr. Snoring Man and Ezekiel Foster, the local yokel. Bemis, a Baldwin Wallace graduate, who is often seen in TV commercials (think "Hi, Cliff here for IHOP") has established a music theatre scholarship at his alma mater.
The dance corps was excellent, as were the group choral sounds. The large local orchestra, which had a nice upbeat tone, sometimes overpowered the singers.
CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: “Irving Berlin’s White Christmas” is theatrical fluff that makes for a nice marzipan treat for the holidays. Don’t go expecting a great American musical. It’s intended to entertain, not teach a lesson or give advice on how to solve the world’s problems. If you ”Let Yourself Go,” the show should add to your “Happy Holiday.”
“Irving Berlin’s White Christmas,” is scheduled to run through December 14 , 2014. For tickets call 216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org
Monday, December 01, 2014
Farcical “Hounds of the Baskervilles” at Actors’ Summit
There’s a moor, a diabolical hound, a maiden, a man who dies
of a heart attack (well, maybe), a butler who carries around a tray of plastic
food and wears an obvious fake beard, an attempt to perform CPR on an obvious
stuffed dummy, men in a sauna wearing towels over their suits, men dressed as
women, and lots of doors slamming.
Then there’s Sir Henry, the last of the Baskervilles (well,
maybe). Sherlock Holmes and his
faithful companion, Dr. Watson, are brought in to protect Sir Henry, but bumble
so badly at the start of the production, the play has to be started over. Then there’s a series of tweets about
the play, while it is going on, requiring the cast to redo the entire show to
prove its not as outlandish as the tweet indicated.
Yes, Actors’ Summit is staging a British farce entitled
“Hound of the Baskervilles.”
The mystery novel “The Hound of the Baskervilles” by Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle was the third of his novels about the detective Sherlock
Holmes. It, like the play
adaptation by Steven Canny and Frank Nicholson, takes place on Dartmoor in
Devon, located in England’s West Country.
Like the play, the book tells of an attempted murder of the last in the
line of Baskervilles, wealthy landowners.
Any resemblance between the serious tone of the book and the
ridiculous staged version ends there.
Canny and Nicholson pull out all the stops to create a typical
British farce, much in the vein of “The 39 Steps” and “Noises Off.” They have three men playing fifteen
parts, which results in lots of quick costume changes, males playing females,
bad wigs and beards, maniacal changing of sets, ridiculous double entendres,
the stretching of reality to its limits, and general exhausting chaos on both
the parts of the actors and the audience.
British theatrical farces, commonly referred to as “foolish
shows,” “mockeries,” or “ridiculous shams” can be very, very funny. The difficulty is that to make them
hilarious requires meticulous staging. British and Canadian actors and directors have been
trained to be sensitive to making over-exaggeration look natural and the real,
a requirement for effective farce. Double takes, side glances, asides to the
audience are all part of the farce lexicon. Think Monte Python.
Much of British humor is tongue-in-cheek. This has also built a pattern for the
presentation, as does the ability to play with the sound of British punctuation
and the pitches of the voice.
These techniques do not come naturally to Americans. Few U.S. playwrights use that type of
humor. Most, like Neil Simon, put
their characters in real humorous situations, not preposterous ones. Mel Brooks uses exaggeration, but not
of the British variety. American
jokes tend to be self-deprecating or sexually laden. Neither of these lend themselves to farce presentation. It accounts to why Americans often
“don’t get” British humor.
Accepting the difficulty of staging and acting in farce, the
Actor’s Summit production of ‘Hound of the Baskervilles” is quite nice,
especially considering I saw an early-in-the-run staging. Farce tends to improve as the
production goes on, as the timing becomes more crisp, adding to the folly.
Stuart Hoffman, who not only played Holmes, but four other
males and two females, was properly staid as the great detective and humorous
as Cecile Stapleton and Mrs. Barrymore.
Frank Jackman was on target as Watson and a local yokel.
Jim Fippin nicely carried much of the load with his six
characterizations.
British accents, when used, were well done, the costume
changes fun to watch, many of the shticks worked. The numerous movements of set pieces slowed down the
production and got monotonous. Some
other way of making the shifts would have helped so that there were not long
pauses.
Capsule judgement: You have to go to Actors’ Summit to see “The Hounds
of the Baskervilles” in the right state of mind. Understand that this is not a “real” Sherlock Holmes mystery
tale. Be prepared to laugh, accept
the outlandish, and groan at the ridiculousness.
For tickets to “Hound of the Baskervilles”
which runs through December 21, 2014, call 330-374-7568 or
go to www.actorssummit.org
Sunday, November 30, 2014
“The Nutcracker”—orchestra and chorus superb, short version and dancing proficient
From 1981 until about 2000, Cleveland audiences were enchanted with Dennis Nahat, the then artistic-director of Cleveland Ballet, later the Cleveland San Jose Ballet’ s version of “The Nutcracker.” Often starring the wunderkinds of the company, Karen Gabay and Raymond Rodriguez, the production was filled creativity, gorgeous costumes and scenery, enveloping story telling, and general wonder.
Since the departure of the company to San Jose, California, the holiday season offering of the epic “The Nutcracker,” adapted from the E.T.A. Hofmann tale, “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King,” with magnificent score by Tchaikovsky, which has become one of the most famous compositions in the western lexicon of music, has been filled by touring productions. Companies such as the Pennsylvania Ballet and Winnipeg Ballet have performed. Though competent, they did not compare with the Nahat version, nor meet the dance levels of his performers.
The newest guests are the Joffrey Ballet. The company has performed during the summer at Blossom with mixed results. Sometimes their performances have been breath taking, at other times pedestrian.
Joffrey’s production, staged for seven performances, is drawing large crowds. Little girls, dressed in their holiday finest, are seen joyously prancing through the lobby, with visions of Nutcrackers, princes and sugarplums in their heads and smiles on their faces.
The Joffrey production was conceived and directed by Robert Joffrey, with choreography for “Waltz of the Snowflakes” and “Waltz of the Flowers” by Gerald Arpino.
The Joffrey version, as is traditional, is set in Germany on Christmas Eve. (The Winnipeg production was set in Canada, and started out with a hockey match, proceeding the march of guests coming to the family celebration.
Two children if the house, Clara and Fritz Stahlbaum, and their cousins and guests, enjoy the lovely party. Clara and Fritz’s godfather, the toymaker, Herr Drosselmeyer, gives the children gifts. Clara receives a large nutcracker doll, which unfortunately is broken by Fritz and mended by Drosselmeyer. When the children are sent to sleep, Clara dreams of her nutcracker and his adventures fighting The Mouse King and going on a journey to an enchanted forest where the Sugar Plum Fairy, and the presents, who have been brought to life, perform traditional dances of various countries.
This presentation is an adapted version, cutting out about eight minutes of the traditional staging, cuts which took away some of the visual wonder from the “Waltz of the Snowflakes,” have Drosselmeyer, rather than the nutcracker prince accompany Clara on her journey, and doesn’t have her return to her home to realize she has been dreaming, but, instead, she floats away in a hot air balloon, thus leaving the tale incomplete. It changed the fairy tale love by almost eliminating the story of Clara and her prince, and instead had her spending time with Drosselmeyer.
Traditionalists will not be enchanted by these changes, though the shorter sit time is wonderful for children, as was the decision to start the evening performances at 7 o’clock so that parents didn’t have to carry sleeping young children out of the State Theatre.
On opening night the dancing was generally fine. It was not world class, but acceptable. Some of the staging confounded. Why, in the second act, was Drosselmeyer allowed to distract attention from the dancers, upstaging them, by repeatedly waving his arms, wandering among them, rearranging his cloak while sitting, and talking to Clara, was confounding.
The large number of local children who were incorporated as “supernumeraries,” was exciting, especially since they were excellent, thanks to Gladisa Guadalupe, their rehearsal director.
The sets, costumes, and special effects were beautiful.
The highlights of the evening were the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Orchestra’s Children’s Chorus.
Under the baton of Tito Muñoz, the orchestra created a sound that virtually engulfed the audience with a clarity and style that made the music live. Even though they were in the pit, which often muffles the sound, the tones were full and articulate. The chorus, under the direction of Ann Usher, perched in the mezzanine level boxes on both sides of the theatre, created pitch perfect sounds that added illusions of delight and beauty.
The combined sound of the orchestra and chorus was acknowledged when on opening the audience, who gave the dancers a polite round of applause, leapt from their seats as Muñoz came onto the stage, gestured toward the orchestra, and the lights came up on the choir. Bravo!
Capsule judgement: It has been an interesting experience to see a variety of companies come into the area in and attempt to fill the void of not having a local company to satisfy the “The Nutcracker” tradition. None of these groups has yet reached the level of the rendition by Dennis Nahat and Cleveland Ballet. The recent presentation, which combined the Cleveland Orchestra and Chorus with the Joffrey Ballet, was entertaining, with the music and singing superb, and the dancing quite proficient, but not compelling.
The performances conclude with performances at 2 and 7 on November 30, 2014. For tickets call 216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org
Since the departure of the company to San Jose, California, the holiday season offering of the epic “The Nutcracker,” adapted from the E.T.A. Hofmann tale, “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King,” with magnificent score by Tchaikovsky, which has become one of the most famous compositions in the western lexicon of music, has been filled by touring productions. Companies such as the Pennsylvania Ballet and Winnipeg Ballet have performed. Though competent, they did not compare with the Nahat version, nor meet the dance levels of his performers.
The newest guests are the Joffrey Ballet. The company has performed during the summer at Blossom with mixed results. Sometimes their performances have been breath taking, at other times pedestrian.
Joffrey’s production, staged for seven performances, is drawing large crowds. Little girls, dressed in their holiday finest, are seen joyously prancing through the lobby, with visions of Nutcrackers, princes and sugarplums in their heads and smiles on their faces.
The Joffrey production was conceived and directed by Robert Joffrey, with choreography for “Waltz of the Snowflakes” and “Waltz of the Flowers” by Gerald Arpino.
The Joffrey version, as is traditional, is set in Germany on Christmas Eve. (The Winnipeg production was set in Canada, and started out with a hockey match, proceeding the march of guests coming to the family celebration.
Two children if the house, Clara and Fritz Stahlbaum, and their cousins and guests, enjoy the lovely party. Clara and Fritz’s godfather, the toymaker, Herr Drosselmeyer, gives the children gifts. Clara receives a large nutcracker doll, which unfortunately is broken by Fritz and mended by Drosselmeyer. When the children are sent to sleep, Clara dreams of her nutcracker and his adventures fighting The Mouse King and going on a journey to an enchanted forest where the Sugar Plum Fairy, and the presents, who have been brought to life, perform traditional dances of various countries.
This presentation is an adapted version, cutting out about eight minutes of the traditional staging, cuts which took away some of the visual wonder from the “Waltz of the Snowflakes,” have Drosselmeyer, rather than the nutcracker prince accompany Clara on her journey, and doesn’t have her return to her home to realize she has been dreaming, but, instead, she floats away in a hot air balloon, thus leaving the tale incomplete. It changed the fairy tale love by almost eliminating the story of Clara and her prince, and instead had her spending time with Drosselmeyer.
Traditionalists will not be enchanted by these changes, though the shorter sit time is wonderful for children, as was the decision to start the evening performances at 7 o’clock so that parents didn’t have to carry sleeping young children out of the State Theatre.
On opening night the dancing was generally fine. It was not world class, but acceptable. Some of the staging confounded. Why, in the second act, was Drosselmeyer allowed to distract attention from the dancers, upstaging them, by repeatedly waving his arms, wandering among them, rearranging his cloak while sitting, and talking to Clara, was confounding.
The large number of local children who were incorporated as “supernumeraries,” was exciting, especially since they were excellent, thanks to Gladisa Guadalupe, their rehearsal director.
The sets, costumes, and special effects were beautiful.
The highlights of the evening were the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Orchestra’s Children’s Chorus.
Under the baton of Tito Muñoz, the orchestra created a sound that virtually engulfed the audience with a clarity and style that made the music live. Even though they were in the pit, which often muffles the sound, the tones were full and articulate. The chorus, under the direction of Ann Usher, perched in the mezzanine level boxes on both sides of the theatre, created pitch perfect sounds that added illusions of delight and beauty.
The combined sound of the orchestra and chorus was acknowledged when on opening the audience, who gave the dancers a polite round of applause, leapt from their seats as Muñoz came onto the stage, gestured toward the orchestra, and the lights came up on the choir. Bravo!
Capsule judgement: It has been an interesting experience to see a variety of companies come into the area in and attempt to fill the void of not having a local company to satisfy the “The Nutcracker” tradition. None of these groups has yet reached the level of the rendition by Dennis Nahat and Cleveland Ballet. The recent presentation, which combined the Cleveland Orchestra and Chorus with the Joffrey Ballet, was entertaining, with the music and singing superb, and the dancing quite proficient, but not compelling.
The performances conclude with performances at 2 and 7 on November 30, 2014. For tickets call 216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
TOPDOG/UNDERDOG affords a conflicted look at the African American male@ none too fragile
Suzan-Lori Parks won a Pulitzer Prize for her script “Topdog/Underdog,” now in production at none-too-fragile theatre. She also won the MacArthur “Genius Grant” Award for the play. The script is an existential trip asking, “What is it like to be a black male in modern America?”
Being a student of James Baldwin, African American powerhouse writer, when she was a student at Mount Holyoke College, afforded Parks a model for delving into the Black experience, especially the male experience.
“Topdog/Underdog” showcases how two brothers, Lincoln and Booth, deal with women, poverty, racism, and their troubled upbringing. They came from a home where the mother abandoned the family, the father named them Lincoln and Booth as a joke, and also split from the boys when they were teens, and the duo has struggled to find a constructive place in society.
The setting is a depressing, small apartment in an unnamed urban area. The brothers have a relationship based on a thin line of being brothers, but brothers of a very different ilk. Lincoln graduated from high school and has been employed with odd jobs. His latest is being a stand-in for Abraham Lincoln at an arcade, where the patrons pay to assassinate honest Abe, much like John Wilkes Booth did near the end of the Civil War as he watched a production of “Our American Cousin” in Washington D.C.’s Ford’s Theatre. In the role he is painted with white makeup and given a lower wage than his white predecessor. With little compassion, he is fired and replaced by a wax figure.
Lincoln walks through life in a coma. He was married, but his wife left because his life centered on making money by conning tourists while performing a three-card Monte game. When his partner was killed, he left the “business.” He sleeps on a recliner in his brother’s apartment, which, he pays for with his arcade job. He spends most of his time drinking, lying in the chair, and hanging out. After his firing, he turns back to a life of shilling, with eventually bitter results.
Booth, a high school dropout with no prospects for any type of income, spends his time trying to emulate his brother’s success as a card dealer, telling fantasy success tall tales about his carnal life with Grace his “fiancé,” stealing , and fantasizing about sex.
As the prospects for their futures become more and more tenuous, a psychological battle between Lincoln (topdog) and Booth (underdog) escalates. Eventually, Booth shoots Grace and, as their names indicate, a confrontation between the brothers brings to a climax the tale of Lincoln and Booth.
The none-too-fragile production, under the direction of Sean Derry, though overly long, grabs and holds the audience’s attention. The quality of the acting is excellent. Both Brian Kenneth Armour as Booth and Robert Grant III as Lincoln are totally natural and don’t act the parts, but become the characters. Short, chunky Armour reeks of a frustrated boy-child with no realistic future, so he must invent a reason for respect and purposefulness. Tall, handsome, Grant wants desperately to escape from his frustrating trap of a life, but doesn’t have the skills or tools to see daylight.
Capsule judgement: “Topdog/Underdog” is one of those well directed, acted and written plays that should be seen by anyone interested in the plight of the Black man in America. On the other hand, with nearly one in three 20-29 year-old African American males under some form of criminal justice supervision, whether imprisoned, in jail, or on parole or probation, it is frustrating to realize that the situation may be hopeless and there appears to be no way to solve the problems. Sad, so sad.
For tickets call 330-671-4563 or go to http://www.nonetoofragile.com
Being a student of James Baldwin, African American powerhouse writer, when she was a student at Mount Holyoke College, afforded Parks a model for delving into the Black experience, especially the male experience.
“Topdog/Underdog” showcases how two brothers, Lincoln and Booth, deal with women, poverty, racism, and their troubled upbringing. They came from a home where the mother abandoned the family, the father named them Lincoln and Booth as a joke, and also split from the boys when they were teens, and the duo has struggled to find a constructive place in society.
The setting is a depressing, small apartment in an unnamed urban area. The brothers have a relationship based on a thin line of being brothers, but brothers of a very different ilk. Lincoln graduated from high school and has been employed with odd jobs. His latest is being a stand-in for Abraham Lincoln at an arcade, where the patrons pay to assassinate honest Abe, much like John Wilkes Booth did near the end of the Civil War as he watched a production of “Our American Cousin” in Washington D.C.’s Ford’s Theatre. In the role he is painted with white makeup and given a lower wage than his white predecessor. With little compassion, he is fired and replaced by a wax figure.
Lincoln walks through life in a coma. He was married, but his wife left because his life centered on making money by conning tourists while performing a three-card Monte game. When his partner was killed, he left the “business.” He sleeps on a recliner in his brother’s apartment, which, he pays for with his arcade job. He spends most of his time drinking, lying in the chair, and hanging out. After his firing, he turns back to a life of shilling, with eventually bitter results.
Booth, a high school dropout with no prospects for any type of income, spends his time trying to emulate his brother’s success as a card dealer, telling fantasy success tall tales about his carnal life with Grace his “fiancé,” stealing , and fantasizing about sex.
As the prospects for their futures become more and more tenuous, a psychological battle between Lincoln (topdog) and Booth (underdog) escalates. Eventually, Booth shoots Grace and, as their names indicate, a confrontation between the brothers brings to a climax the tale of Lincoln and Booth.
The none-too-fragile production, under the direction of Sean Derry, though overly long, grabs and holds the audience’s attention. The quality of the acting is excellent. Both Brian Kenneth Armour as Booth and Robert Grant III as Lincoln are totally natural and don’t act the parts, but become the characters. Short, chunky Armour reeks of a frustrated boy-child with no realistic future, so he must invent a reason for respect and purposefulness. Tall, handsome, Grant wants desperately to escape from his frustrating trap of a life, but doesn’t have the skills or tools to see daylight.
Capsule judgement: “Topdog/Underdog” is one of those well directed, acted and written plays that should be seen by anyone interested in the plight of the Black man in America. On the other hand, with nearly one in three 20-29 year-old African American males under some form of criminal justice supervision, whether imprisoned, in jail, or on parole or probation, it is frustrating to realize that the situation may be hopeless and there appears to be no way to solve the problems. Sad, so sad.
For tickets call 330-671-4563 or go to http://www.nonetoofragile.com
Sunday, November 23, 2014
“The story is told in verse, densely packed with rhyme, which has to be spoken so that it sounds like natural language.“ “Much of the play concerns a battle between angels and demons.” “There is little action in the play, just a series of monologues.” The descriptions are vivid, “fingernails pierce an eyeball and drain it of fluid, a knife slices into a woman while she’s having sex. A body implodes beneath the tires of a truck.” “The play is filled with vivid, vulgar verse.”
Most theatre’s artistic directors, reading those descriptions, wouldn’t even conceive of producing such a script. But fear not local theater-goers looking for the unusual in the theatre, know that Clyde Simon, the chief guru of congruence-continuum, is turned on by such imagery. He knows that his niche audience will flock through the doors of his postage stamp-sized theatre to see how he stages such visuals as a police chase of a stolen truck, the sex and beating scenes, and an attempted abortion with a pointed broom handle.
Irish writer Mark O’Rowe, who is noted for writing about thugs and lowlifes who have fits of savagery, has penned “Terminus,” a vivid play in which all of the action takes place in the theatre-goer’s imagination, rather than on stage. In other words, he has written a movie script for the listener’s mind.
He does this by using vivid language to create the imagery. Rather than dialogue, which places the actions on stage between people, he has his three actors speak monologues directly to the audience, forcing the listener to take the words and experience them.
Why the monologues? O’Rowe says, ““The monologue is somewhere in the middle of theater, stand-up, and the novel. You can’t look away, because everything that’s said is already inside your head.’’
Why this story and format? The author states, ““The truest thing I can say is I’m indulging my inner 16-year-old, who loves films about blowing [stuff] up,’’
The storyline centers on three people, “A,” “B” and “C.” “A” is a former teacher who is now working on a suicide hotline. She is a mother who is estranged from her daughter. “B” is a young pregnant girl, who is in the clutches of a powerful lesbian pimp. “C” is a murderous, socially incompetent male psychopath, who has seemingly made a deal with the devil.
The trio’s lives intersect in a series of violent confrontations.
While on the hotline, “A” receives a call from a former student who is threatening to abort her 9-month fetus. When she turns into a sleuth in order to track the young lady down, she ends up dipping her toe into the gritty Dublin underworld of lesbian gangs, abortions in backroom bars, physical beatings, and death.
Lucy Bredeson was born to play “A.” She gives a vivid, performance. Her eyes flashing, she tells her part of the tale in a direct, flat tone that is chilling!
Rachel Lee Kolis portrays “B,” telling her part of the tale consisting of searched after affection, and a near-death encounter with an otherworldly creature, with attention-demanding clarity.
Dana Hart, portrays “C,” an oddball with no conscience, who has supposedly sold his soul to the devil. He is often compelling in his tall telling. Unfortunately, on opening night, some of the power of his last scene was diminished by some line stumbles.
Jim Smith’s set design, a series of three-step platforms on different parts of the stage, a modified crane, and graffiti covered walls, works well, as does Jeremy Allen’s music choices, which underlie many of the scenes.
Dialect coach, Chuck Richie, has masterfully perfected each of the actor’s Irish lilts.
Capsule Judgement: Though compelling, “Terminus” is definitely not a play for everyone. The language is rough, the vivid descriptions often unnerving, and the closeness of the actors to the audience can be off-putting. On the other hand, the performances, the experience of listening to the impressive poetic writing, and the opportunity to experience intense emotional involvement, may stir the right audience to attend.
“Terminus” runs through December 20, 2014 at 8 pm on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at convergence-continuum’s artistic home, The Liminis, at 2438 Scranton Rd. in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood. For information and reservations call 216-687-0074 or go to convergence-continuum.org
Most theatre’s artistic directors, reading those descriptions, wouldn’t even conceive of producing such a script. But fear not local theater-goers looking for the unusual in the theatre, know that Clyde Simon, the chief guru of congruence-continuum, is turned on by such imagery. He knows that his niche audience will flock through the doors of his postage stamp-sized theatre to see how he stages such visuals as a police chase of a stolen truck, the sex and beating scenes, and an attempted abortion with a pointed broom handle.
Irish writer Mark O’Rowe, who is noted for writing about thugs and lowlifes who have fits of savagery, has penned “Terminus,” a vivid play in which all of the action takes place in the theatre-goer’s imagination, rather than on stage. In other words, he has written a movie script for the listener’s mind.
He does this by using vivid language to create the imagery. Rather than dialogue, which places the actions on stage between people, he has his three actors speak monologues directly to the audience, forcing the listener to take the words and experience them.
Why the monologues? O’Rowe says, ““The monologue is somewhere in the middle of theater, stand-up, and the novel. You can’t look away, because everything that’s said is already inside your head.’’
Why this story and format? The author states, ““The truest thing I can say is I’m indulging my inner 16-year-old, who loves films about blowing [stuff] up,’’
The storyline centers on three people, “A,” “B” and “C.” “A” is a former teacher who is now working on a suicide hotline. She is a mother who is estranged from her daughter. “B” is a young pregnant girl, who is in the clutches of a powerful lesbian pimp. “C” is a murderous, socially incompetent male psychopath, who has seemingly made a deal with the devil.
The trio’s lives intersect in a series of violent confrontations.
While on the hotline, “A” receives a call from a former student who is threatening to abort her 9-month fetus. When she turns into a sleuth in order to track the young lady down, she ends up dipping her toe into the gritty Dublin underworld of lesbian gangs, abortions in backroom bars, physical beatings, and death.
Lucy Bredeson was born to play “A.” She gives a vivid, performance. Her eyes flashing, she tells her part of the tale in a direct, flat tone that is chilling!
Rachel Lee Kolis portrays “B,” telling her part of the tale consisting of searched after affection, and a near-death encounter with an otherworldly creature, with attention-demanding clarity.
Dana Hart, portrays “C,” an oddball with no conscience, who has supposedly sold his soul to the devil. He is often compelling in his tall telling. Unfortunately, on opening night, some of the power of his last scene was diminished by some line stumbles.
Jim Smith’s set design, a series of three-step platforms on different parts of the stage, a modified crane, and graffiti covered walls, works well, as does Jeremy Allen’s music choices, which underlie many of the scenes.
Dialect coach, Chuck Richie, has masterfully perfected each of the actor’s Irish lilts.
Capsule Judgement: Though compelling, “Terminus” is definitely not a play for everyone. The language is rough, the vivid descriptions often unnerving, and the closeness of the actors to the audience can be off-putting. On the other hand, the performances, the experience of listening to the impressive poetic writing, and the opportunity to experience intense emotional involvement, may stir the right audience to attend.
“Terminus” runs through December 20, 2014 at 8 pm on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at convergence-continuum’s artistic home, The Liminis, at 2438 Scranton Rd. in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood. For information and reservations call 216-687-0074 or go to convergence-continuum.org