Monday, May 29, 2023

THE LIGHT @ ENSEMBLE


 

Ensemble’s Cleveland premiere of THE LIGHT is theater at its finest!

 
Roy Berko
(American Theatre Critics Association, Cleveland Critics Circle)
 
Loy A. Webb’s THE LIGHT, which is now having its Cleveland area premiere at Ensemble Theater, introduces Rashad, a firefighter, and Genesis, a charter school principal, on what should be one of the happiest days of their lives.
 
Unfortunately, their joy quickly unravels when ground-shifting accusations from the past resurface asking, “Can their relationship survive the growing divide between them over who – and what – to believe? 
 
THE LIGHT is a reckoning that unfolds in real time and peels away the layers of truth, doubt, pain.  It implores, “is love enough?”

The play begins with a much-anticipated marriage proposal. But after an enthusiastic “Yes! Yes! reply to the proposal,” it swerves into darker terrain. It recalls a moment when a woman said, “no” and it wasn’t heard, or was ignored.

Language is important.  This play is a rom-com, a drama, as well as a tragedy. Do we have a word for that? Do we want one?

This is a tear-struck thesis play, proposing that, as Genesis says, “black women are at the bottom of virtually everything in society,” their labor undervalued, their hurt unrecognized. They deserve to be heard and seen and believed, not because they are someone’s wife or mother or daughter, but because they are human beings.”

The play is focused and creatively directed by Jeannine Gaskin, with intimacy direction by Julia Fisher.  The runway set, with the audience on each side of the stage, was attractively designed by Ian Hinz, who also did the light design.  (Sidenote:  holding the final light cue for a brief few more seconds would have added to the suspenseful ending.)

The two-person cast is superb.  Both Nicole Sumlin (Genesis) and Ananias J Dixon (Rashad)  give flawless, emotionally vulnerable performances.  Neither acts their characters, they live their personas.  Tempers are held in check and then explode.  Tears are held back and then flow.  Each is stoic and then totally vulnerable.  Bravo!  Bravo!  Bravo!  

CAPSULE JUDGMENT:  Every once in a while a theater-goer is blessed with an emotional and logical experience that lives for a long time in their being.  Such is THE LIGHT, Loy A. Webb’s searing must-see play that is having its Cleveland area premiere at Ensemble Theater.
 
THE LIGHT runs through June 11, 2023 at Ensemble Theatre, housed in the main academic building’s Performing Arts Center, at Notre Dame College.  There is free parking in the easily accessed lot at 4545 College Road (off Green Road), South Euclid.
 
For tickets call 216-321-2930 or go to www.ensembletheatrecle.org

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Superlative touring DEAR EVAN HANSEN is an absolutely must see!

 


Rogers and Hammerstein’s “OKLAHOMA” ushered in the era of book-centric American musicals that have been designated as “musical comedies.”  The beginning, middle and ending structured stories normally contain singing, dancing, show stoppers, comedy, a few conflicts, and a satisfying ending, in a two-act format.

 
In the near recent-present, ushered in by “RENT” shows like “COME FROM AWAY,” “THE COLOR PURPLE” and “SPRING AWAKENING” have brought the genre to a new probing of sociological and psychological issues including schizophrenia, incest, rape, homosexuality and social responsibility, thus ushering in the format of the “musical drama.”  These scripts center on dramatic storytelling and less glitz, spectacle and contrived story lines.  They often contain some humor, but the emphasis is on realism and societal investigation.
 
DEAR EVAN HANSEN,” now on stage at the Connor Palace, has to be ranked, along with “HAMILTON” and “NEXT TO NORMAL” in the top three of musicals of that genre.  It shines its spotlight on social anxiety, suicide, family angst, and teenage drug addiction as major plot issues.

The musical is loosely based on an incident that took place during the musical’s composer and lyricist Benj Pasek’s high school days, when a teenager invented an important role for himself, leading to credit that he did not earn and, therefore, did not deserve.

The show’s musical sound is that of pop-contemporary musical theatre, borrowing format elements from modern compositions.  It is art songs and narrative storytelling.  
 
This is not the style of Rogers and Hammerstein or Lerner and Loewe, but that of new voices, such writers as Jason Robert Brown (“PARADE” and “LAST FIVE YEARS”), Jonathan Larson (“RENT”), Lin-Manuel Miranda (“IN THE HEIGHTS” and “HAMILTON”), and Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey (“NEXT TO NORMAL”).  Their music uses pop and rock to tell provocative, boundary-pushing stories.

The story of “DEAR EVAN HANSEN” centers on a teenager with social anxiety.  Upon the advice of his therapist, in order to expose himself to the positive parts of life, Evan writes letters to himself detailing what was “good” about each day.  

Besides Evan and his mother, Heidi, Jared, Evan’s only “friend,” and their attention-starved school-mate, Alana, the story-circle also includes Connor and Zoe Murphy and their parents, Larry and Cynthia. 

Conner is a troubled teenage drug-user, with anger management issues.   Zoe is the girl that Evan crushes on from afar.  In spite of their wealth, the Murphy family is in major crisis and appears to be falling apart due to parental conflicts and Conner’s drug and conduct issues. 
At school, one day, Connor makes fun of Evan’s awkwardness and knocks Evan to the ground.  Zoe apologizes for Connor’s actions. 
 
That same day Connor encounters Evan again, and unexpectedly offers to sign the cast on the boy’s broken arm.  Connor accidentally finds one of Evan's self-encouragement letters in the computer lab’s printer, reads it, becomes furious at the mention of Zoe, and storms out, taking the letter with him. 

Several days later Evan is called to the principal's office and told that Connor has committed suicide.  Evan’s letter was found in Connor’s pocket, but it is assumed to be Connor’s suicide note addressed to “his friend Evan,” since it started, “Dear Evan Hansen” and was signed “Me.” 

Evan is invited to the Murphy house to explain his supposed friendship with Connor.  Though he intends to "nod and confirm" to avoid making things worse, Evan, in a fit of panic, lies, pretending he and Connor had been best friends, emailing each other from a secret account. 

Thus, the story spins into a tale of humorous, but mainly angst-laden misinterpretations, a growing closeness of Evan and Zoe, an on-line fund raiser to honor Connor, growing conflict between Evan and his mother, and Evan admitting his lack of friendship with Connor.  
The emotional tale ends as Evan admits to finally being at peace with who he is.

DEAR EVAN HANSEN,” which opened on Broadway in December 2016 to universal rave reviews, was nominated for nine Tony awards, and won six statues, including those for Best Musical and Best Score.

On March 12, 2020, the show suspended production due to the COVID pandemic.

Performances resumed on December 11, 2021. The show closed its Broadway run on September 18, 2022 after 1,678 regular performances.  The script will soon be released for local professional and then collegiate and community theatre performances.

Before that happens, and we are inundated with amateur productions of this fine script, the touring company, like the one now in CLE, will finish their professional runs.

The touring production is mesmerizing.  The quality of this tour, is everything that the Broadway version was.  The technical aspects and the quality of the performances are of the highest level!


From the opening number, “Anybody Have a Map?,” to Connor’s I want/am song, “Waving Through a Window,” to the emotion-draining “Requiem” and finally to the first act ending, the gut-wrenching “You Will Be Found,” which found many in the audience vocally sobbing, the show is an emotional roller-coaster.
 
The second act, though well done, is somewhat anti-climactic.  Part of the issue is that it lacks the humor and drama of the opening stanza.  Secondly, the pacing is slower, and finally, though the song “Finale” is affirming, much of the play’s final spoken speech, given by Coleen Sexton, as Evan’s mother, was lost in a low volume mumble.
 
Tiny, sensitive Anthony Norman, is spell-binding in his development of the socially inept Evan.  He visually has the weight of the world on his slender shoulders and pounding in his troubled head.  He gives his own spin to the role, totally immersing himself into the psyche of the ego-weak Evan.  He didn’t portray Evan, he was Evan!  He didn’t just sing songs, he presented meanings to the words of the score.  Bravo!
 
(Side notes:  Having seen Tony winner Ben Platt on Broadway as Evan, local audiences can be assured that Norman’s is his near-equal.)
 
The rest of the cast is equally strong.  August Emerson is angst-right as the conflicted, moody Connor. 
 
Pierce Wheeler is delightful as Jared Kleinman, the sex-obsessed, computer nerd, and Evan’s only friend.  
 
Micaela Lamas was properly self-centered as Alana.
 
As the adults, John Hemphill (Larry), Lili Thomas (Cynthia) and Coleen Sexton (Heidi) all nicely textured their roles.  
 
For the younger generation, the extensive use of newsfeed, and computer and I-phone communication, will illuminate “life-as-it-is.” Others might find the constant bombardment of visual stimulation to be over-load.  The changes aren’t a-comin’, they are here!  The growing use of computer-generated sets and special effects, like the contemporary musical sounds, is part of what makes for the modern musical drama.

CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: “DEAR EVAN HANSEN” is a mesmerizing evening of contemporary musical theater.  Complete with pop-contemporary music sounds, staged with narrative storytelling tunes, and a relevant story line, it is one of the finest examples of the new wave of musical dramas.  Don’t go expecting show-stoppers and an escapist plot.  This is life as it is being lived, with all its angst and issues.  The touring production, with choreography by Danny Mefford and direction by Michael Greif, is standing ovation worthy and is an absolutely must see!!  
 
DEAR EVAN HANSEN” runs only May 21, 2023 through as part of the Huntington Featured Performance Series.  To purchase tickets, visit playhousesquare.org, call 216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org
 

Saturday, May 13, 2023

CLEVELAND THEATER CALENDAR—June-August, 2023





 
 
Though it seems like it will never be here, there will be summer and the 216/440/330 theater scene will heat up.  Here’s a list of some of the offerings that are being staged.  SUPPORT LOCAL LIVE THEATER!
 
BECK CENTER 
216-521-2540 or http://www.beckcenter.org
8 p.m. evenings, 3 p.m. matinees
 
DOUBT:  A PARABLE--May 26-June 25 (Studio Theatre)
                  This Pulitzer Prize-winner for Drama draws one into an issue of suspicion in the query of a Catholic school in the Bronx in the 1960s. Principal Sister Aloysius’s suspicions about the relationship between a priest, Father Flynn, and a young male student will raise questions long after this play is over!
 
ONCE ON THIS ISLAND—July 7-August 6 (Senney Theater)
            Tony Award-nominated musical in which a wise peasant girl on this tropical island uses the power of love and the beauty of acceptance to bring together very different people.          
 
BLANK CANVAS

440-941-0458 or www.blankcanvastheatre.com
 
LIES ABOUT LOVE—June 9 & 10
                  A unique intwining of poetry, music, images and dance on themes of love, loss, motherhood and the human struggle.
 
LEAP OF FAITH—June 30-July 15
                  Based on the film of the same name, this musical follows an electrifying “Reverand” and con artist who finds himself in a small Kansas town.  He meets the sheriff and her son and love forces an ultimate cynic to take a leap of faith.
 
COMMA—July 28-30
                  Cleveland native Jeff Glover’s play about good and bad decisions, beautiful and horrible miracles, and real or imagined love.
 
PETER AND THE STAR CATCHER—August 18-September 2
                   Based on the Disney-Hyperion novel, the play features a dozen actors portraying more than 100 characters in discovering the Neverland we never knew.
 
CAIN PARK
216-371-3000 or http://www.cainpark.com
Thursday-Saturday 7 pm, Sunday 2 pm
 
RENT—June 8-25
                  The rock musical follows a year in the life of a group of young artists struggling to create and survive in New York’s Lower East Side under the shadow of poverty, social unrest, and the AIDS epidemic.  With universal themes of falling in love, finding one’s voice, and living for today, it teaches us to measure our lives in love.
 
FUN HOME—August 10-27
                  Area premiere of Alison Bechdel’s groundbreaking graphic novel memoir of the same name, the musical explores the haunting pull of memory and its power to shape one’s identity.
 
CLEVELAND PLAY HOUSE  
216-241-6000 or go clevelandplayhouse.com
7:30 Wednesday-Saturday, 2:30 Saturday and Sunday
 
WATCHING BUTTERFLIES—JUNE 17-24
                  Five children find themselves in a room. Why are they there? How did they get there? Can anyone get out? Who is a helper? Who is not? The children must rely upon their collective skills, talents, and experiences to find a way to health, safety, and understanding.  Inspired by and created in partnership with families in Cleveland.
 
ERMA BOMBECK:  AT WIT’S END—JULY 29-AUGUST 20 (Outcalt Theatre)
Chronicles Ohioan, Erma Bombeck’s fascinating story, beginning in 1964 with the launch of her groundbreaking newspaper column through her emergence as America’s favorite mother.  Filled with Bombeck’s own wit and wisdom.
 
CLEVELAND SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL
Free admission, except where noted.  
 
For the past 25 years Cleveland Shakespeare Festival has delivered FREE and ACCESSIBLE theatrical productions directly to all of Northeast Ohio! 
 
For plays, times and places go to http://www.cleveshakes.com
 
convergence continuum
convergence-continuum.org or 216-687-0074
Thursday-Saturday @ 8
 
WALKING TO BUCHENWALD--June 2-24
                  Using his personal experience as a jumping off point, playwright Tom Jacobson takes the audience on an ominously comic trip in which learn that the world no longer admires the U.S.
 
EXIT, PURSUED BY A BEAR—August 11-September 2
                  A dark revengeful comedy in which two people are freed from their past. 
                  
OHIO SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL
Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens (outdoor performances)
Thursday-Sundays (6:00 gates open for picnicking, 7:30 Greenshow performance, 8 show begins)
714 N. Portage Path, Akron
ohioshakespearefestival.com or 1-888-718-4253 opt.1
 
LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST--June 29-July 16
                  Whimsical rom-com-meets-buddy-play.  Silly disguises, mistaken identities, a play-within-a-play, and all the favorite Shakespeare devises come together for a whimsical night under the stars.
 
TWELFTH NIGHT—July 27-August 13
Lady Viola is shipwrecked on the beaches of Ilyria. To protect herself in an unknown land, she pretends to be a boy and takes on a page’s role to Count Orsino.  Problem is: she falls madly in love with him. Add in some drunken uncles, fools, fops, and pirates, and you’ve got one of Shakespeare’s most perfect comedies.
                                                                                                                                                                                
PLAYHOUSE SQUARE
216-241-6000 or go to www.playhousesquare.org.
 
BROADWAY BUZZ
 
Get the inside scoop on every KeyBank Broadway show from host Joe Garry one hour before each performance. Broadway Buzz Pre-Show Talks are held in the Upper Allen, accessible through the Allen Theatre lobby. Admission is free.
 
MOULIN ROUGE! THE MUSICAL--June 7-July 2, 2023
Enter a world of splendor and romance, of eye-popping excess, of glitz, grandeur, and glory! Baz Luhrmann's revolutionary film comes to life onstage, remixed in a new jukebox musical mash-up extravaganza. A celebration of Truth, Beauty, Freedom, and — above all — Love.
 
LATE NIGHT CATECHISM—JUNE 11
                  The irrepressible Sister teaches a class to a roomful of "students." Throughout the course of the class the benevolent instructor rewards the "students" for correct answers with glow-in-the-dark rosaries and other nifty prizes. Naughty students may well find themselves on stage sitting in a corner reflecting their actions.  Be on the watch for flailing yardsticks.
 
COME FROM AWAY—July 25-28
                  On 9/11, the world stopped. On 9/12, their stories moved us all. The true story, set to music, of 7,000 stranded passengers and the small town in Newfoundland that welcomed them. Cultures clashed and nerves ran high, but uneasiness turned into trust, music soared into the night, and gratitude grew into enduring friendships. 
 
SIX THE MUSICAL—August 8-September 10
From Tudor Queens to Pop Princesses, the SIX wives of Henry VIII take the mic to remix five hundred years of historical heartbreak into an exuberant celebration of 21st-century girl power!
 
PORTHOUSE
Blossom Music Center
http://www.porthousetheatre.com or 330-929-4416 or 330-672-3884
 
A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM—JUNE 9-24
                  One of the funniest musicals ever written, takes comedy back to its roots, combining 2000-year-old comedies of Roman playwright, Plautus, with the infectious energy of classic vaudeville. Comedy tonight!
 
THE MARVELOUS WONDERETTES—June 30-July 15
                  It’s 1958 at the Springfield High School prom. Betty Jean, Cindy Lou, Missy and Suzy, four girls with hopes and dreams as big as their crinoline skirts learn about life love while serenading with classic ’50s hits including “Lollipop,” “Dream Lover,” and “Stupid Cupid.” 
 
THE PROM—July 21-August 6
                  Area premiere of a new hit musical, about inspiring people to accept their differences, becoming the star each person was meant to be, and there’s no business like getting in other people’s business.

 
 





 

KEN LUDWIG’S MORIARTY not one of CPH’s shining moments

 




Ken Ludwig is the crown king of writing modern farcical plays.  
 
Ludwig and the Cleveland Play House seem to have a “thing” for each other.  He has had world premiere productions of his scripts A Comedy of Tenors (2015), The Games Afoot (2011) and Leading Ladies (2004) on CPH stages.  His KEN LUDWIG’S MORIARTY: A NEW SHERLOCK HOLMES ADVENTURE is now having its premiere on the Allen stage.
 
The public relations release from the Cleveland Play House states of the show, “Five actors play over 20 roles in this brand-new adventure that has danger—and laughter! —around every corner.”
 
The stories of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle have been very popular as adaptations for the stage, and later film, and still later television. 
 
A recent source lists over 25,000 Holmes-related productions and products. They include the original writings, "together with the translations of these tales into sixty-three languages, plus Braille and shorthand, the writings about the writings or higher criticism, writings about Sherlockians and their societies, memorials and memorabilia, games, puzzles and quizzes, phonograph records, audio and video tapes, compact discs, laser discs, ballets, films, musicals, operettas, oratorios, plays, radio and television programs, parodies and pastiches, children's books, cartoons, comics, and a multitude of other items — from advertisements to wine.”  Talk about a cottage industry!
 
Ken Ludwig’s professional theatre career started with his first Broadway play, LEND ME A TENOR in 1989 which was bannered in the New York Times as "one of the two great farces by a living writer.”  That play won three Tony Awards.
 
His second Broadway show CRAZY FOR YOU ran for over five years and won the Tony, Drama DeskOuter Critics Circle, and Laurence Olivier Awards as Best Musical. 
 
Too bad A NEW SHERLOCK HOLMES AVENTURE isn’t going to add to that reputation.  It definitely is not of the quality of his very clever and humorous adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1902 novel THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES.
 
My review of that show stated, “CPH’s production, creatively directed by Brendon Fox, leaps over all the farcical barriers to create mayhem.  Sets zoom on and off stage, costumes morph from being one thing to being another, lighting and sound effects create mystery and intrigue.  The audience is taken on a silly overly dramatic journey as the intrepid investigators escape a dizzying web of clues, silly accents, disguises, and deceit. “ 
 
The story line for the NEW SHERLOCK HOLMES ADVENTURE centers on the investigation into the Bohemian king’s stolen letters and cascades into an international mystery filled with spies, blackmail, and intrigue.  Holmes and Watson join forces with American actress, Irene Adler, to take down criminal mastermind Professor Moriarty and his network of devious henchmen.
 
The overly obvious plot, the poorly developed humor, and poor directing, all add up to a rather boring sit.
 
The cast Jeffrey M. Bendere, Talley Gale, Nick Gaswirth (Dr. Watson), Olivia Gilliatt, and Christian Pedersen (Sherlock Holmes) try hard, but the slow pace, poorly designed sets, in which the same chairs never leave the stage and are shuttled around in attempts to try and create different settings, all just get in the way. The show isn’t helped by the lack of vocal projection by several of cast members.
 
Maybe the problem is Ludwig tried to duplicate what he has done before and the gimmicks seem repeats and miss the mark. Maybe it’s the lack of creative staging.  Maybe it’s the lack of dynamic technical works.  
 
Whatever, this is not one of CPH’s shining moments!
 
Capsule judgement:   I wish I could say that the relationship of positive productions by CPH, Ludwig and Sherlock Holmes continue with their latest co-adventure.  Unfortunately, I can’t.  KEN LUDWIG’S MORIARTY: A NEW SHERLOCK HOLMES ADVENTURE is short on clever writing, adventure, humor, pace and enjoyment.  Too bad!
 
The show runs through May 21, 2023 in the Allen Theatre.  For tickets call 216-400-7000 or go to https://www.clevelandplayhouse.com/

 




Monday, May 08, 2023

Intimate Hanna Theatre a perfect venue for swingin’ AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’




The setting in which a musical production takes place, often affects the pleasure one gets from the experience.  A perfect case in point is AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ presently being staged by Great Lakes Theater in its intimate Hanna Theatre home. 

 
AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ is a musical tribute which celebrates Fats Waller and his music.  It is a series of song and dance numbers, sans any story line.  The segments are woven together by choreography and music transitions.  It requires an up-close and personal experience.  The closer the better.  This is not a production to stage at the likes of the Connor Palace or the State Theatres.
 
The show echoes the performances presented at the Cotton Club and Savoy Ballroom, the great New York black playgrounds of high society, and the Lenox Avenue dives filled with piano players banging out the new beat known as swing.  
 
It was an era of rowdy, raunchy and humorous songs that reflected Waller, his music and view of life as a journey meant for pleasure and play.
 
The evening features GLT veterans, Jessie Cope Miller and Colleen Longshaw, who are joined by Tyrick Wiltez Jones, David Robbins and Brittney Mack and William Knowles, who serves as both the musical director and Waller.
  
The show was conceived by Richard Maltby, Jr. and Murray Horwitz and is locally directed and choreographed by Gerry McIntyre.
 
Creative staging, which often finds the performers singing to, playing with, and including the audience in the actions, plus dynamic choreography, makes for fun.
 
The actors croon, jive, wail, and dance their way through the songs that made Waller a household name in the heyday of American big band jazz music, singing such hits as “The Joint is Jumpin’,” “Spreadin’ Rhythm Around,” “Honeysuckle Rose,” “’Tain’t Nobody’s Biz-Ness If I Do,” I’ve Got a Feeling I’m Falling,” “Your Feet’s Too Big,” and the show’s namesake “Ain’t Misbehavin’.”
 
The goings on include a Finale of six songs, including such classics as “I’m Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter,” “Two Sleepy People” and “It’s a Sin to Tell a Lie” that keep the audience singing, clapping and stomping all the way out of the theatre.
 
Capsule judgment:  If you love, even like jazz and want to swing back into the long-gone era or the Harlem Renaissance this is a show for you!
 
AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ runs at Great Lakes Theater’s Hanna Theatre home until May 21, 2023.  For tickets go to https://www.greatlakestheater.org/or call (216) 241-6000