Wednesday, August 23, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 419: The 2023-2024 Equity Theatre Season in Connecticut, Part One: The Bushnell, The Shubert, Music Theatre of Connecticut, Goodspeed Musicals, Palace Theater


By James V. Ruocco

It's everything you wanted it to be and so much more.

Musicals.
Plays.
Classics.
New Works.

It's the best Equity theatre in the state - Connecticut, that is - and it's full of exciting choices well worth booking and getting excited about.

So, pick up the phone.
Get out your charge card.
Grab yourself a ticket.
Make plans for dinner and drinks before or after the show.
Explore.
Indulge.
Have fun.

The 2023-2024 season is about to begin.
The choices are as follows:

The Bushnell, 166 Capitol Avenue, Hartford, CT
(860) 987-6000
bushnell.org

"Mrs. Doubtfire" (October 3-8, 2023)

"Moulin Rouge! The Musical" (November 21-December 3, 2023)

"Frozen" (February 8-18, 2024)

"The Cher Show" (March 5-10, 2024)

"Wicked" (April 24-May 12, 2024)

"Beetlejuice" (May 28-June 2, 2024)

"Funny Girl" (June 18-23, 2024)

The Shubert, 247 College Street, New Haven, CT
(203) 562-5666
shubert.com

"Come From Away" (November 8-11, 2023)

"Chicago" (December 7-10, 2023)

"Company" (January 31-February 4, 2024)

"Annie" (February 29-March 3, 2024)

"Hadestown" (April 30-May 5, 2024)

"Stomp" (May 31-June 1, 2024)

Music Theatre of Connecticut, 509 Westport Avenue, Norwalk, CT
(203) 454-3883
musictheatreofct.com

"Jersey Boys" (September 15-October 1, 2023)

"Clybourne Park" (November 3-19, 2023)

"The Legend of Georgia McBride" (February 16-March 3, 2024)

"Ghost" (April 12-28, 2024)

Goodspeed Musicals, 6 Main Street, East Haddam, CT
(860) 873-8668
goodspeed.org

"The 12" (September 18-October 29, 2023) 


"Dreamgirls" (November 10-December 30, 2023)

Palace Theater, 100 E. Main Street, Waterbury, CT
(203) 346-2000
palacetheaterct.org

"Pretty Woman" (October 10-12, 2023)

"To Kill a Mockingbird" (November 3-5, 2023)

"On Your Feet" (December 15-16, 2023)

"Hairspray" (January 16-18, 2024)

"Jesus Christ Superstar" (April 2-4, 2024) 

"Mean Girls" (May 18-19, 2024)

"The Kite Runner" (June 4-6, 2024)


Saturday, August 19, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 418, A Review: "Mentors" (Backyard Theater Ensemble)

By James V. Ruocco

A fascinating storyline mixed with the right amount of conversation, flair, approach, sponsorship and encounter gives Kristen Palmer's new play "Mentors" a powerful voice that stings, entices, questions and leads to an impactful, effective climax.
This is a production - a fine one at that - that is handled with care, with liberation, with volume and with a savvy interest that allows the material to breathe, to resonate, to march, to pitch and to explore with personal, smartly plotted and executed passion.
As theatre, "Mentors" also thrusts its audience into the pending action of the storytelling with characters and dialogue that not only get the pulses racing but prompt immediate curiosity about what exactly Palmer has hidden up her sleeve.
What's right? What's wrong?
Who's telling the truth? Who's lying?
What secrets are about to be uncovered?
Will there be heated drama - the kind prevalent in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" "August: Osage County," "Death and the Maiden" and "Long Day's Journey into Night?"  Or is Palmer, just toying with one's senses?
Or simply traveling down a very different narrative path?


That imagined belt and tilt gives Backyard Theater Ensemble's maverick staging of "Mentors" a compelling, potent inventiveness that is expressed and positioned with a mindset that stirs, provokes and unravels with takeaway merit, ambition and stand-alone guile and honesty.
And rightly, so.

As scripted by Palmer, "Mentors" finds expectant parents, Jenna and Brian, a hard-working, educated, independent-minded married couple face-to-face with David, their former arts department college professor whose life they discover - over dinner and drinks - has been turned upside down via an ongoing investigation of sexual misconduct at the university.
Is he guilty?
Is he a sexual predator?
As onetime students of David, what exactly do Jenna and Brian remember about their years of working side-by-side at the college with their ex-professor?
Are they too victims of his artistic impulses or sexual desires?

Like most important dramas, "Mentors" pulls you into its web of spiraling conversations, accusations and remembrances with tremendous, observed acumen that prompts immediate attention almost immediately after the play begins. It's very much in the here and now, swept up in the debate of timely storytelling devices that are navigated with organic concern and effect by Palmer while addressing everything from academia, artistic expression and environmental issues to woke, child rearing, sexual harassment, mentoring, influence and freedom of speech.
As storyteller, Palmer writes from the heart, clearly communicating the necessary information, essential to a particular scene, a particular character and a particular part of her story arc. Here, her choice of dialogue and situation is natural and free flowing, smartly advancing the plot through pivotal moments and situations that add resonance and heartbeat to her persuasive, important, involved dramatic material.
More importantly, there's an in-the-moment feel to the piece sparked by language, details and circumstances that bring out the human side of Palmer's dancing ideas, thoughts, revelations and theories.

Staging "Mentors," director Teresa Langston - "A Number," "Barbeque," "The Devils," "Uncommon Women and Others" - crafts a work of artfully arranged intelligence that arms its audience with just the right amount of information, believability and artifice to make it catch fire, thrill, dance and excite. Directorially, she digs deep and like Palmer, accentuates the play's inquisitive humanism, its engaged emotionalism and its abundant awareness with clear-cut measure, equality, intrigue and playful swottiness.
There's lots of clever clogs here but Langston takes her time with it all, thus allowing the play to breathe, gesticulate and smolder without any form of rushness, calculation or let's race to finish and drop an atomic bomb and shock the hell out of everyone. 
You'll find none of that here.
Here, as in "A Number" and "Barbeque," Langston, creative auteur that she is, allows "Mentors" to progress with united strains of directorial melody that is confident, assured and unleashed with steady, delicate, natural fluidity. Blocking is minimal as well it should be given the play's conversational ingredients, properties, chemicals, compounds, dueling and theorizing.
To have actor's continually moving about Evan Ev Seide's lived-in, smartly designed atmospheric set (a small, framed poster of Jonathan Larson's "Rent" musical immediately caught my eye) would derail the intimacy of the piece, its central playing ground and its rich concentration of wordplay. So, in staging it, Langston suffuses "Mentors" with minimal action and movement which works most advantageously throughout the play's one-hour-and-twenty-five-minute allotted running time (including a 15-minute interval) and validates the accuracy, emotion and certainty of Palmer's character study and its definitive proprietorship.

"Mentors" stars Tina Parziale as Jenna, Tony Palmieri as Brian and Rick Malone as David.
The character of Jenna, as portrayed by Parziale, is drawn with powerful, fiery, soft and delicate strokes that set the role ablaze with fruition and recognition that blossoms into a brilliant performance of edge, pathos, exchange and vulnerability. Palmieri's Brian hits all the right notes with well defined, unleashed sweeps and crescendos that thrust his character into the spotlight with influence, spark and drama. There's also a delightful bit of well-orchestrated humor that comes halfway through Act II when he and Parziale find themselves sharing a pint of tasty, nearly melted ice cream (the after-dinner dessert was accidentally left in the car by David) in a comforting, husband-and-wife moment warmly intertwined under Langston's sweet-and-sentimental direction.
As David, Malone crafts an inspirational, heavy-handed performance of high-level mystery and wit, combined with the necessary heat and involvement of an educator whose taste for fun and games in and out of the classroom often knows no boundaries.


Photos of "Mentors" courtesy of Robert MacPhearson

"Mentors" is being staged by Backyard Theater Ensemble (The Arts at Angeloria's, 223 Meriden-Waterbury Turnpike, Southington, CT), now through August 26, 2023.
For tickets or more information, call (203) 699-6476.
website: backyardtheater.org.  


Sunday, August 13, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 417, A Review: "August: Osage County" (Hole in the Wall Theater)

By James V. Ruocco

Much like Edward Albee ("Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" "Tiny Alice," "A Delicate Balance"), the works of playwright Tracy Letts use words and outbursts as weapons - cruel, vicious, humiliating, humorous, slashing - that are played out with such numbing conviction, the effect for both actor and audience is one of excitement, insanity, boldness and complete gratification.
True to form, every character, every word of spoken dialogue, every pause, every expression and every truth create an effortless, intoxicating feel, hypnotically sustained by well-positioned uncomfortability, extremism, chaos and blatant annihilation.

Nowhere is this more evident than in "August: Osage County," the recipient of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the 2008 Tony Award winner for Best Play. As written by Letts, this anguished, thirsty meltdown of one very large Oklahoma family, bristles with excited Freudian intent and purpose, offset by mind games, blood sports, revelations and whiplash that leaves welts, bruises, sweats, jitters and sleepless nights for pretty much everyone involved.

At Hole in the Wall Theater, the playwright's high-wire drama is articulated with heightened awareness, intimacy, blaze and stealthily built accompaniment and entrapment.
It flies.
It pops.
It attacks.
It bites.
It digs deep.

It is also yet another reminder of the quality work that is produced at Hole in the Wall - "She Kills Monsters," "Barbeque," "A Number," "Love Labour's Lost," "Day of Absence," "Wife/Worker/Whore" - and one that benefits from punchline direction, casting and storytelling.

As conceived by Letts, "August: Osage County" frames the demolition, darkness and craziness that immediately erupts once Beverly Weston, the heavy-drinking, poetic-quoting patriarch of the family goes missing. Where he is and what actually happened to him (there are all kinds of suspicions including suicide) is finally revealed at the end of Act I, thus, paving the way for a showdown, interrogation and confessional of sorts involving a dozen or so assorted characters including Violet Weston, his foul-mouthed, pill-popping wife who is dying of cancer and Barbara Weston Fordham, their troubled, outspoken daughter whose estranged husband Bill, a college professor has left her a one of his students, a much younger woman named Cindy.

Letts, as playwright, fuels the action of his story with truths, angst, collapse, lamentation, agony, absurdity, ritual and abuse exploring family dysfunction in emotionally charged ways reminiscent of Albee, Eugene O'Neill and Arthur Miller.

"We're all just people, some of us accidentally connected by genetics, a random selection of cells. Nothing more."

"Thank God we can't tell the future. We'd never get out of bed."

"The window shades have all been removed. Nighttime is now free to encroach."

"You know, this country was always pretty much a whorehouse, but at least it used to have some promise. Now it's just a shithole."

"Surely, you must have known when you started porking Pippi Longstocking you were due for a little self-righteousness."

There's a wry, signaling agenda here that amazes, taunts and numbs, layered with edge, release and contrast, all of which builds and resonates with brashness, realism, fact and naturalism. Some of it catches you by surprise. Some of hit kicks you in the ass. Some of it creeps up on you out of nowhere. Some of it causes your jaw to drop in amazement.
Then again, that's the point.
The fact that you never quite know what Letts has up his sleeve gives "August: Osage County" its mighty allure, its gravity, its mouthpiece and its strong sense of entitlement.

Staging "August: Osage County," director Warren Dutkiewicz portrays the skewed and bruising portrait of one family's repeated rounds of madness and exaltation with crisp, carefully etched crescendos, truths and climaxes that reflect the playwright's blatantly honest, revelatory dramatization. As actor himself, Dutkiewicz comes to the production with a whiz bag of ideas, thoughts, theories and staples that bring lift and melodrama to the piece, its story board progression, its conversations, its heated expressions, its characters and its clever, accountable verbiage.
Directorially, he's always prepared whether there's two people on stage, five people, six people or seven or ten. At the same time, everything that happens (card games, the placement of a table setting, a fight in the dining room, a drug-induced moment of confusion, etc.) is watchful, balanced, precise or very much in the moment.
It's a directorial choice of decisions and compliance measured by deft blocking maneuvers, rhythms, beats and stances that mirror the swerves, irony, assaults, outrage and abrupt twists envisioned by Letts, all of which are unleashed in the manner he envisioned, intended and administered to keep "August: Osage County" harrowing, hilarious, engaged and liberating. There's also a ripping expanse of periodic surprise (no spoilers here) that Dutkiewicz handles with eleventh hour skill, showmanship and "Oh my God, I never saw that coming."

"August: Osage County" stars Ingrid M. Smith as Violet Weston, Sarah Etkin as Barbara Fordham, Lindsey Campbell as Ivy Weston, Krysten Drachenberg as Johnna Monevata, Miriam Neiman as Mattie Fae Aikem, Dennis Hull as Charlie Aiken, Khara Hoyer as Karen Weston, Julia Stone as Jean Fordham, Larry Niland as Bill Fordham, Bill Mullen as Beverly Weston, William Moro as Little Charlie Aiken, Shawn Murray as Steve Heidebrecht and Wayne Crow as Sheriff Gibeau.

In the role of Violet Weston, the dying, pill-popping, acid-tonged wife of the missing patriarch ("Nobody slips anything by me," she yells), Ingrid Smith spirals into madness, addiction, anger and pretty much anything else she is asked to do with a garlanded festoon of vivid, natural and raw emotions that culminate in a "performance of the year" status of the highest order.
She doesn't just play Violet Weston. She Is Violent Weston.
Crafting a characterization as rich, as hypnotic and as shocking as Deanna Dunagan who created the part for the original 2008 Broadway production, Smith takes hold of the playscript, eats it for dinner and spits it out with such thrilling acumen, it's impossible to take your eyes off her for a single second whenever she's on stage. 
Mixing drug-induced stupefaction with high-tailed viciousness and disapproval, she is potently explosive, chilling, caustic and bare-your-soul, raw. The final image - a woman broken at odds with the rise of tomorrow - brings Act III to a close with a lingering realness that lasts long after the play has ended.

Starring in her third show at Hole in the Wall, Sarah Etkin - "She Kills Monsters," "Wife/Worker/Whore" - offers yet another five-star performance of despairing strength, guilt and crisis illuminated by real identity, purpose, rage, accent and ethic that is unleased with the knockout involvement and confidence of an actress always at the top of her game. She's amazing to watch, not only because of her extraordinary range of an actress, but because she knows how to play a scene, play a character, deliver a line and interact with the other performers with an inbred spontaneity and flourish completely in sync with the conceit of the playwright, the vision of the director and finally, her role in the ongoing drama.
Here, she steps into the role of Barbara Fordham, the oldest daughter of the Weston family whose marriage has fallen completely apart with the right mindsight, stamina, curiosity and rage Letts envisioned for the character. It's an intuitive, driven performance of reactions, beliefs, values and loss of control that Etkin communicates with befitting control, demand and embraced abandonment.

Krysten Drachenberg, as Johnna Monevata brings a natural charm, stability and presence to her role of the newly hired Native American housekeeper chosen by the missing Beverly Weston (a perfectly cast Bill Mullen) to care for his ailing wife Violet. Miriam Neiman and Dennis Hull, in the roles of Mattie Fae and Charlie Aiken, deliver dialogue and characterizations with perfectly timed resonance, heat and humor. Lindsay Campbell, as Ivy Weston, the middle daughter of the family who's secretly having an affair with her cousin Little Charlie Aiken (humorously portrayed by William Moro), plays her part with wallflower liveliness, contentment and subjected oppression.

Additional pleasure lies in the fine, nuanced performances of the supporting cast - Hoyer, Murray, Niland, Crow and Stone - all of whom fit especially well into the framework of the story, its evolution and surprise twists of fate.

A knock-out drama with a potent set up, a faultless acting ensemble and directorial choices full of buccaneering vigor, spiraling doom and blatant laceration, "August: Osage County" is brilliant, thrillingly effective theatre that plunges its audience into the mayhem and doom of an American family in the midst of collapse, rebirth and complete loss of control.
It amazes. It entices. It manipulates. It depresses. It shocks. It surprises. It resonates. It exposes. It satisfies.
The sound and the fury of Tracy Letts award-winning drama flows through the immersive environs of Hole in the Wall Theater with a rip, a roar, and an excitement helmed by director Warren Dutkeiwicz, an impressive storyteller and auteur whose grasp of the fiendishly clever material, dialogue, characters and story evolution would lead many to call this production "a work of art."
Clocking in at three hours and twenty minutes including two, ten-minute intervals, "August: Osage County" is exactly that - and so much more.


Photos of "August: Osage County" courtesy of Regina Cleaves

"August: Osage County" is being staged at Hole in the Wall Theater (116 Main Street, New Britain, CT), now through August 25, 2023.
For tickets or more information, call (860) 229-3049.
website: hitw.org 

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 416, A Review: "The Musicals of Musicals" (Legacy Theatre)


 By James V. Ruocco

parody: a form of humor that imitates or exaggerates someone or something for pure comic effect or ridicule.

spoof: a humorous imitation of something, typically, a play, a film or a particular genre where everything is exaggerated for great comic effect.

In Legacy Theatre's "The Musicals of Musicals," the celebrated works of Rodgers & Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim, Jerry Herman, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Kander & Ebb are skewered and bandied about with top flight wicked abandon as the show's creators Eric Rockwell and Joanne Bogart concoct an over-the-top parody of sorts that amusingly rips apart the plots, characters, themes and songs of popular Broadway fare with apt melodrama and homage tossed in for an outrageous party that never once dies down for a millisecond.
It's killer funny.
It's ridiculously realized.
It's knockout wackadoodle.
It's bright and brash.
It's creative and inspired.
It's quick-paced and dizzying.
It is also riddled with theatrical references and in-house jokes so amusingly fine-tuned and spoon fed, you make need to bring a pad and pencil to write everything down or grab yourself a ticket for a return visit.

Whatever the case, The Musicals of Musicals" is guaranteed fun that hits every giggly note with a drive forward delight that's absolutely irresistible.

The set up is simple enough.
Divided into five acts, each of which is dotted and inked with a short musical tale that purposely parodies the works of a specific Broadway composer, lyricist of team, "The Musical of Musicals" goes hog wild with a goofball conceit tied together by a running melodramatic gag that finds the four central characters of each story crying "I can't pay my rent!" (i.e., "Rent" by Jonathan Larson)

"Corn!" an homage to the musicals penned by Rodgers & Hammerstein pokes fun at "Oklahoma!" "The Sound of Music," "Cinderella," "South Pacific," "The King and I" and "Flower Drum Song."
"A Little Complex" thrusts the musicals of Stephen Sondheim center stage with barbed attacks aimed specifically at "Sweeney Todd," "Sunday in the Park with George," "A Little Night Music," "Company," "Assassins," "Pacific Overtures," "Into the Woods" "Anyone Can Whistle" and "Merrily We Roll Along."
"Dear Abby" roasts Jerry Herman and "Hello Dolly!" "Mame," "Dear World" and La Cage aux Folles."
"Aspects of Juanita" playfully attacks the celebrated musicals of Andrew Lloyd Webber including "Evita," "The Phantom of the Opera," "Aspects of Love," "Starlight Express," "Cats," "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," "Sunset Boulevard," "Tell Me on a Sunday" and "Jesus Christ Superstar."
"Speakeasy" finds Kander & Ebb in the hot seat with jokes aplenty about "Cabaret," "Chicago," "Liza with a Z" and Kiss of the Spider Woman."

Fueled with designated wit, camp, disses, mash ups, roars, blasts and jolly good comeuppances, "The Musicals of Musicals," as shaped by Rockwell and Bogart, thrusts Legacy Theatre's bountiful production into the spotlight where it gathers up steam, rips each composer/lyricist to shreds, places characters from various musicals in the wrong story and finally, creates outrageous opportunities for the actors to run around in circles elicited by comic and musical situations that produce great laughter at every turn. 

Staging "The Musicals of Musicals," director Colin Sheehan - a Broadway aficionado who first fell in love with musical theatre at the tender age of seven - crafts a solid, focused, thrill-and-spill parody that nearly blows the roof off Legacy Theatre. Here, the knowing nonsense of the material, mixed with flavorful song and dialogue that ignites the musical's melodramatic spin, allows Sheehan to run wild - and run wild he does - amping up the onstage action to 100 mph and finding laughs in all the right places while putting his own personal spin on the story itself, its homage to Broadway musical theatre, the characters themselves and the production's dizzying plotting and parody.
As theatre auteur and storyteller, Sheehan gets it right at every turn. 
Directorially, he knows what works. He knows how to build and pace a scene. He knows how to get a laugh. He knows when to pause, when to take a breath, when it hit hard, when to pull back, when to overplay and when to surprise.
He also creates the perfect stage picture, giving "The Musicals of Musicals" an over-the-top heartbeat that carries it from one segment to the next, eliciting laughs in all the right places while juxtaposing the ideas, themes and sarcasm of the play's originators with side-by-side frivolity, strong comedic timing and blasts of musical staging inspiration that complements his innate versatility and tremendous directorial showmanship.

Musical director Bill Speed, seated at an onstage, off-to-the-side piano for the entire production (there is no intermission) runs the show with a crisp, playful, campy-like precision that complements the musical's bounce, twists, turns, puns, nuttiness and in-your-face parody. It's a feat that keeps "The Musicals of Musicals" on its toes (no pun intended), harnessing the poke-fun musicality of the piece, its rapid-fire momentum, its ripe vocals, its machine-gun-fast lyrical spins and mash ups and its hilarious melodic assaults of original songs that take their cue from "Sweeney Todd" ("The Ballad of Jitter," "Birds"), "Carousel" ("Clam Dip," "I Don't Love You," "Sowillyquey"), "Oklahoma!" ("Oh, What Beautiful Corn," "Daylight Savings Time"), "The Phantom of the Opera" ("Chandelier Scena," "Sing a Song"), "Cabaret" ("Easy Mark," "Hola, Aloha, Hello") and "Mame" ("Did I Put Out Enough?" "Take My Advice and Live").


"The Musical of Musicals" stars Randall Delone Adkison, Keely Baisden, Karl Gasteyer and Christine Voytko.
There are star turns. There are showstoppers. There are laughs. There are surprises. There are moments destined to live long in memory.
Song by song and segment by segment, this talented quartet are in full and fine voice that reflect and complement the conceit and parody of the material, the musical story arcs, the over-the-top theatricality of the show's creators and the delightfully wicked mashups that leave you breathless and begging for more.
What's wonderful about this particular group of performers - all stars in their own right - is the depth and versatility they bring to every song they perform, their amazing range and control, their individual harmonizing, their continuity, their bouts of humor and how they wrap their voice around crazy lyrics they want you to appreciate and understand. It's a bull's-eye win from start to finish.

A musical entertainment that combines clever staging with hilarious parodies of Broadway musicals with a lush, inviting old vaudeville palace sound, "The Musicals of Musicals" is a delightfully inventive kitsch and carry theatrical gumdrop amped up to giddy perfection by director Collin Sheehan and his fantabulous cast of four.
It pops. It swaggers. It soars. It shifts. It tilts. It sings. It surprises. It stings.
Given its title and the genre it spoofs so insanely, its homage to all things musical is Broadway cheese and ham like no other, spliced and diced with healthy dozes of nonsense and fluff guaranteed to keep you howling for weeks.
It's a comedic jewel in Legacy Theatre's ongoing 2023 season and one that initiates a front row seat for any theatergoer who gets his or her kick from hijinks and hokum, great throwaway gags and dozens and dozens of songs that give the all clear to breezy and pacy spoofs of everything from "Evita" and "The Phantom of the Opera" to "Oklahoma!" "Sweeney Todd," "Cats," "South Pacific" and "The King and I," etc., etc., etc.

"The Musicals of Musicals" was staged at Legacy Theatre (128 Thimble Islands Road, Banford, CT) from July 13-30, 2023.
For more information or tickets to upcoming shows, call (203) 315-1901.
website: legacytheatrect.org


Sunday, August 6, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 415, A Review: "Bandstand (Playhouse on Park)

 By James V. Ruocco  

"War does not determine who is right - only who is left."
(Bertrand Russell)

"The world must know what happened, and never forget."
(Dwight D. Eisenhower)

"Never in the field of humor conflict was so much owed by so many to so few."
(Winston Churchill)

A serious musical about the damage war does to its surviving soldiers and veterans, "Bandstand" - the thrilling, hypnotic summer presentation at Playhouse on Park - unspools with an understandable darkness and pain so vivid and so alluring, it thrusts you into the center of the action and keeps there you - riveted, excited and anxious - haunted by the narrative, the characters, the music, the vintage dances and the forgotten traumas of a survivor's guilt, depression, lingering sadness and the bad, traumatic after effects of the war itself.

Intercut with artillery fire, remembrance and powerful, immersive storytelling techniques, "Bandstand" is a profound, catchy and raw theatrical piece, offset by a daring, matchless immediacy and alertness that grabs you by the throat and never once releases its grip.
It excites and stirs.
It shocks and frightens.
It numbs the senses.
Its sustained arc of intensity is nurtured with swept away thrill and fascination.
It echoes with duty-bound privilege.
It is well crafted, exceptionally directed and powerfully performed.

Set in 1945, "Bandstand" tells the story of Donny Novitski, a handsome musician and soldier who returns home from the war tormented by visions and memories of his best friend Michael, whose death on the battlefield was actually caused by Donny himself, a fact that he keeps from Julia, Michael's widow - at first, anyway.
This being a musical, book writers Robert Taylor and Richard Oberacker (they also wrote the music and lyrics) have devised a quick-and-easy, level-headed plot that finds Donny and his fellow army veterans forming a big band (Julia eventually is introduced as the lead singer) destined for greatness if they become the first prize winners of an upcoming national 1940s swing band contest. In between, the horrors of war and its effect on pretty much everyone in the band, toughen up the story, its exploding realism, its bite, its restorative power, its hurt and its frank, often misty-eyed vocabulary.

Staging "Bandstand" at Playhouse on Park, director Sean Harris carries out the play's musical story with golden age spirit and rootedness, PSTD believability, communicative thrust and balance, observed honor and compliance and fused, immersive seriousness. At the same time, he celebrates the joys and charm of big-band swing, the blossoming romance between Donny and Julia, the band's final audition in New York City and the conflicts that arise once everyone realizes that the contest itself is more exploitative than legit.
Directorially, Harris's reenactment of "Bandstand" is swaggering and sharp, richly theatrical, anchored and steady and juiced up with ideas, traditions and movements that portray a very different lifestyle that existed 78 years ago. To his credit, there is no modernization, updates, lingo or contemporary isms in his interpretation. He also plays the action to the fullest in an immersive, three-quarter staging using James Rotondo's atmospheric turntable set to the max suggesting and implementing multiple locations that keep the storytelling fast, fluid, cemented and lucid.


Musically, the "Bandstand" score, created by Robert Taylor and Richard Oberacker fuels the two-act production with a 1940s zing and snap, a breezy wallop, a liberating concentration and a novelty like appeal and dizzying momentum. All of the musical numbers fit seamlessly into the framework of the story and smartly fulfill their intended purpose.
In order of introduction, they are: 
"Just Like It Was Before," "Donny Novitski," "I Know a Guy," "Ain't We Proud," "Proud Riff," "Who I Was," "Counterpoint/Pie Jesu," "Just Like It Was Before (reprise)," "First Steps First," "Breathe," "You Deserve It," "Dwight Anson & Jean Ann," "Love Will Come and Find Me Again," "Right This Way," "Nobody," "The Boys Are Back," "I Got a Theory," "Everything Happens," "Welcome Home," "A Band in New York City," "This is Life," "This is Life (reprise)," His Theory," "Welcome Home (Finale)" and "Epilogue." 
As musical director, Melanie Guerin brings a tremendous sense of vintage appeal and big band swell to the proceedings, capturing the signature sound of the period, its orchestral vibrancy, its jazz swing rhythms and references, its swaying and snapping and its shouldering knock, sweep, nudge and elbow. The production also benefits from the on-stage presence of cast members who not only sing, dance and act but play their own musical instruments. It's a conceit that creates an immersive supper club atmosphere of high standards and one that lifts the spirits, drives the message home and heightens the play's ongoing musical drama.

"Bandstand's" heart, soul and drive wouldn't be complete without the booming, boogie-woogie, nostalgic shimmer of Darlene Zoller and Robert Mintz's choreography, which, as recreated here, unfolds with a period vibrancy, glisten and gleam that is snazzy, individual, fronted and engaged with a vintage scrapbook fluidity that is indicative of the musical's 1940s setting, its wartime reminiscing, its traditions, its ideals and its dance aesthetics.
As the cast swoops, slides and soars to the rising sound of the band's catchy, rhythmic interplay, Zoller and Mintz turn up the heat with frenzied, jigsaw choreography and formations that confidently secure the sweep, the wonderment, the cluster and the focus of a bygone era and all its resplendent trappings.


Benjamin Nurthen, as Donnie, carries the show with a fiercely defined angst, charm and vulnerability that suits his troubled, tormented portrait of a World War II veteran struggling to move past the guilt and anguish of a survivor responsible for the death of his best friend Michael Trojan in combat. Looking as if she time traveled back to the big band era, Katie Luke generates the right spark and sizzle with her winsome, affecting portrayal of Julia Trojan, Michael's widow.
As June, Julia's mother, Mindy Cassle delivers a winning combination of wartime pathos, humor and sugar. She's such fun to watch, it's a shame that Taylor and Oberacker didn't give her more to do in the ongoing "Bandstand" story. Chris Haley cuts a fine figure as Wayne Wright, a clean-cut trombone player whose marriage has fallen on the rocks. It's a performance fraught with real emotion reminiscent of William Wyler's "The Best Years of Our Lives."

Photos of "Bandstand" courtesy of Meredith Longo

"Bandstand" is being staged at Playhouse on Park (244 Park Road, West Hartford, CT), now through August 20, 2023.
For tickets or more information, call (860) 523-5900. 
website: playhouseonpark.org


Thursday, August 3, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 414, A Review: "Summer Stock" (Goodspeed Musicals)

By James V. Ruocco  

"Forget your troubles, c'mon get happy
You better chase all your cares away
Shout 'hallelujah,' c'mon get happy
Get ready for the judgement day.

The sun is shinin,' c'mon get happy
The Lord is waitin' to take your hand
Shout 'hallelujah,' c'mon get happy
We're going to the promised land. " 

A throwback to the golden age of Broadway and movie musicals, "Summer Stock" is a timeless, inspiring song-and-dance tale of good deeds, fairy tale showbiz, classic romance and backstage intrigue played out to such dazzling effect, you want to freeze frame it, take it home with you and watch it over and over again for pure fun and a let's-put-a-smile-on-your-face endorsement.
This is Goodspeed Musicals at its best - old-fashioned musical entertainment designed to deliver by the bucket's load, stir the senses, rhythmically intoxicate you and dance up a continual storm of good cheer that's guaranteed to leave you breathless.

Animated.
Airborne.
Magical.
Sweet-natured.
Fresh-faced.
Dance happy.

It's all here, wrapped up in shiny gold ribbons and signature colors that complement and complete the picture with a technicolor flourish, a big bang and an internal logic that flows with appropriate style, stamina, full command and intent.


Adapted to the stage by Cheri Steinkellner, "Summer Stock" replays that popular let's- put-on-a-show conceit where everything rests of the big opening night, the box-office intake, the big kiss between the leading man and the leading lady and how a complete unknown saves the day right before the final fadeout.
Here, struggling Connecticut farmer Jane Falbury decides to let her actress sister Abigail and her actor friends from New York use the family barn as a rehearsal space for their brand-new Broadway bound musical in exchange for doing the daily farm chores to raise enough money to keep the business from going completely under.
One slight problem.
During rehearsals, Jane finds herself falling for the show's handsome director, Joe Ross, who, happens to be engaged to the show's leading lady - her sister Abigail.

Staging "Summer Stock," director Donna Feore ("Chicago," "Billy Elliot," "A Chorus Line"), who doubles as choreographer, creates a loveable, intoxicating show that reels you in, grabs hold of you until the final curtain and lets you fall in love with every little detail, surprise, plot twist, joke, visual gag, one-liner and tilt of her jolly agenda while she articulates every element of this musical story with thrust, warmth, spin and splendid articulation.
Directorially, she pulls it off spectacularly.
No wrong moves here as "Summer Stock" catches fire with a spark, a gusto, a shine and a 1950s mentality infused with plenty of imagination, originality, style and flair.  More importantly, the production never loses sight of its origins, its functional plotting and its love of musicals of yesteryear despite well-intentioned doses of kitsch, takeaway humor, giddy backchat and story arcs right out of the MGM library of backlot moviemaking. 
Feore, free spirit that she is, fuels the musical with a sharpened wit and sentiment that works especially well as does her decision to let "Summer Stock" remain rooted in the period from whence it came in terms of staging, development, expression and interaction. 

Moving from screen to stage," "Summer Stock" retains only four songs from the 1950 MGM musical. The addition of several new songs to the original version of the score turns the two-act musical into more of a showstopping event and adds clarity, luster and vintage spin to its already proven material, its let's launch into another song and dance routine blueprint and its firm grasp on characterization, story evolution and its happily ever after conclusion.
At Goodspeed, there are 28 important, recognizable, smartly placed musical numbers. They are:  
"Get Happy," "Happy Days Are Here Again/I Want to Be Happy," "Accentuate the Positive," "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," "Always," "Always (reprise)," "It's Only a Paper Moon," "The Best Things in Life Are Free," "Dig for Your Dinner," "Me and My Shadow," "Howdy Neighbor, Happy Harvest," "Red Hot Mama," " 'Til We Meet Again," "You Wonderful You," "June Night," "Some of These Days," "Joe's Dance," "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows (reprise)," "It All Depends on You," "Always (reprise)," "Everybody Step," "Lucky Day," "How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm," "Hinky-Dinky Parlez Vouz," "It Had to Be You," "Get Happy (reprise)" and "You Wonderful You (Finale)."

Musical director Adam Souza ("42nd Street," "Cabaret," "Next to Normal," "A Grand Night for Singing," "Because of Winn Dixie," "Rags") grabs hold of the "Summer Stock" score and allows it to breathe, gesticulate, excite, envelop and rhapsodize with the golden age sentimentality of MGM movie musicals and the timeless, larger-than-life spirit of old Broadway. Here, every song matters. Every song is important. Every song travels down memory lane. Every song is tuned to the max with sweet, centered, warm-heartedness. Every song fulfills its intended purpose.
All of this is complemented by the strong, flavorful sound of Souza's orchestral team, all of whom share his tremendous sense of theatricality, musical interlude, impassioned communication and delight of the actual musical itself.  They are: David Uhl (bass), Sal Ranniello (percussion), Liz Baker Smith (reed 1), Andrew Studenski (reed II), Travis Higgins III (trumpet) and Matthew Russo (trombone). As with other Goodspeed musicals, Souza doubles as conductor and keyboardist.
As "Summer Stock" zings and pops, pretty music every song unfolds with a contagious orchestral musical glow, matched by the splendid musicality of the entire cast who address the catchy, homespun music and lyrics with perfect harmony, rhythm, phrasing and nostalgic commitment. These elements heighten the on-stage mode of the production, its progression from Act I to Act II, its send offs, its pastiche and its electrifying, barn-raising influence and thwack.

As with any big stage musical, choreography is key to a production's success, its fluidity of form, its artistic expression and its accompanying dance routines. Here, Feore, as choreographer, gives "Summer Stock" a highly personal touch of invigoration and speedy excitement that is tipped and generated with wonderfully elongated inspiration, stamina and determination. This is star quality choreography that peaks, shines and tilts with clever build ups, catchy dance steps and bold, concentrated rhythms, moves and beats that joyfully celebrate 1950's musicals in all their technicolor glory.  
As storyteller and dance interpreter, she brings great dimension and scope to the piece using techniques, styles, descriptions and an enriched canvas of thoughts and ideas that make their mark most engagingly. Everything that happens on the Goodspeed Musicals stage has been beautifully blocked, rehearsed and staged with such thrust and individuality, no two dance numbers are alike. In fact, once "Summer Stock" catches fire, there's no stopping it. 
Creating a freshly minted fusion of moods, tableaus, lifts, twirls and swirls, Feore pays homage to the actual vintage look and mindset of the musical, its dance-friendly art form and its free-flowing feel of excitement and exhilaration.
Hands pop. Arms move heavenward. Dancers smile and glisten as they passionately ignite into joyful visions of sweetness, passion, frenzy and syncopation. Everyone is lost in the moment illustrating the traditions, the conscience and the power of musical theatre, giving and getting the most out of Feore's phenomenal, ovation-worthy choreography.
Trained, drilled and confident, they each get a chance to shine - and shine they do - all making strong impressions that will live long in memory.

Making his Goodspeed Musicals debut, Corbin Bleu, as Joe Ross, a character originated by Gene Kelly in the 1950 film version, creates a "Wow!" song-and-dance-man factor chock full of charm, personality, self-confidence and full-beam, champagne delightness that astounds, cajoles and sparkles with leading man gait and luxury like no other.
No matter what he does, he's a proverbial triple-threat (i.e., a player who excels at acting, singing and dancing) who makes everything that happens on stage feel fresh, spontaneous, real, raw and very much in the moment. It's in his eyes. It's in his moves. It's in his expressions.
Exhibiting a sweet, contagious rapport that extends far beyond the footlights, it's the performance of the year and one that Bleu exudes with a Gene Kelly/Fred Astaire aura of showbiz savvy, knockabout whimsy, graceful athleticism and sterling encapsulation. "Joe's Dance," a solo dance number in Act II performed by Bleu only furthers that notion.

In the role of Jane Falbury, a role made famous by Judy Garland in the original "Summer Stock" MGM musical, Danielle Wade lights up the Goodspeed Musicals stage with a breezy, intuitive musical comedy performance of real warmth and spirit that is a constant joy to watch. Veanne Cox, cast in the role of the wickedly devious Connecticut farming magnate Margaret Wingate, is jaw-dropping brilliant, using humor, music, dance and melodrama in divinely daft and glorious ways that prompt applause and laughter whenever she's in the limelight. It's a scene-stealing performance so seamlessly entrenched in glee and fiery abandon, Cox, would be the ideal choice to play narcissistic Broadway diva Dee Dee Allen in the 2024 summer presentation of "The Prom" at Playhouse in Park in West Hartford. I'll personally deliver the contract.

Other memorable performances are delivered by Arianna Rosario (Gloria Falbury), Stephen Lee Anderson (Henry "Pop" Falbury), Gilbert L. Bailey II (Phil Filmore), Will Roland (Orville Wingate) and J. Anthony Crane (Montgomery Leach).

A musical escape brimming with delightful songs, engaging performances and full-beam dance numbers, "Summer Stock" is not only a bubbly tonic for theatergoers of all ages, but one that kicks nostalgia into high gear with uncomplicated bliss, fizz and vintage sparkle.
It sings. It dances. It pops. It dazzles.
Like "42nd Street" which played Goodspeed Musicals last season, it overflows with Kelly/Astaire lightness, punch and precision, sunny vibes and well-played exactitude.
The energy displayed here is fast and furious with first-night exhilaration and thrill paired especially well with Corbin Bleu's charming star turn, Danielle Wade's joyous "Get Happy" abandon and Veanne Cox's well-prepped, icy cool villain.
This is musical theatre of the highest order - infectious, irresistible, glorious. Its leave-your-troubles-at-the-door/Let's-put-on-a-show mentality accelerates with sparkle and cherry pie goodness.
And boy, do we need it now!

Photos of "Summer Stock" courtesy of Diane Sobolewski

"Summer Stock" is being staged at Goodspeed Musicals (6 Main Street, East Haddam, CT), now through April 27, 2023.
For tickets or more information, call (860) 873-8668.
website: goodspeed.org


Wednesday, August 2, 2023

From the Desk of Jim R, Take 2, Column 413, A Review: "Seven Cousins for a Horse" (Thrown Stone)



By James V. Ruocco  

Born in Colebrook, Connecticut on April 24, 1788, Ammi Phillips - the subject of Tammy Ryan's world premiere play "Seven Cousins for a Horse" at Thrown Stone - was an American itinerant portrait painter (active from the mid 1810s to the early 1860s in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York) best known for his paintings of children, the most famous being "Girl in Red Dress with Cat and Dog," which sold for one million dollars (a first for folk art) and is currently on display at New York's American Folk Art Museum. It is one of four children's portraits featuring children dressed in vibrant red clothing with a dog on the floor that Phillips produced while living in Duchess County, New York in the mid-1830s. 

"Ammi Phillips painted for six decades," explains Ryan. "About 900 paintings have been catalogued, though they think he may have painted over 2000. 
"He was born when the Constitution was written, and he died just a few months after the Civil War ended. He saw enormous changes in the country and kept working through all of it.
"I knew I wanted to somehow capture something about what is was like to live through those changes, but frankly, I was overwhelmed."


Inspired by subsequent talks with art curators and scattered biographical details about Phillips himself, Ryan found the ideal subject matter and conceit for "Seven Cousins for a Horse."
In 1848, Nisus Kinney, a cousin of Phillips invited the artist to his home in Colebrook to paint realistic portraits of seven cousins in exchange for a very fine horse. That meeting and the days that followed are reimagined by Ryan in her thoughtful, engaging play involving the select Kinney populace including Hattie Kinney, the outspoken independent minded cousin engaged to marry Lucius Culver. 
Each of the sessions finds one of the Kinney's seated before Phillips or alongside other family members engaging in backstory chatter and conversation, ranging from very personal stories about everyday 19th century life and spinsterhood to heated debates about the abolition of slavery and women's suffrage including the right to vote.

As playwright, Ryan is well-qualified to give an insider's view into the world of both the Kinney's and Phillips himself. They play is full of acute, personal and juicy ideas, observations, sentences and stand-alone quotes. It also never loses sight of the well-drawn characters, their ticks, their idiosyncrasies, their prejudices, their complaints and their beliefs in a better tomorrow.

Staging "Seven Cousins for a Horse," director Jonathan Winn uses Richard Harrison's visually pleasing, atmospheric period set as the play's main stomping ground (furniture and props are moved accordingly to show shifts in time and location), a place where time passes agreeably, enhanced by subtle movement, cynical overtones, arch references, historical fact and detailed maintenance that moves the action along without any form of hesitation.
Winn also is quite adept at keeping the narrative set in the time frame of the playwright's creation. The staging, the blocking, the interactions, the expressions, the couplings and the actual story evolution adapts a natural, but stylized patterning and positioning from another century that Winn and company pull off swimmingly. Scenes fulfill their intended purpose. Overlong speeches and monologues are not hurried or lost in translation. Characters are defined immediately following their introduction. Heated arguments and debates are enabled with full dramatic intention. The play's quieter moments are engaging, whimsical and enjoyably immersive. Incidental music composed by Aidan Meachem, who also appears in the production, adds warmth and shimmer to the proceedings.

"Seven Cousins for a Horse" stars Jason Peck as Nisus Kinney, Emmanuelle Nadeau as Sarah Kinney, Aidan Meachem as Lucius Culver, Emma Factor as Jane Kinney, Will Jeffries as Ammi Phillips, Bridget Ann White as Sally Kinney and Shannon Helene Barnes as Hattie Kinney. 
The handsome cast, all well-chosen by Winn for the respective roles, bring plenty of emotion, angst, twist and atmospheric sting to Ryan's 19th century drama, which, in turn, heightens the play's footing, attitude, excitement, outrage, shock, irony and trickling revelation. Working together as a very confident, primed and able ensemble, they deep dive into play with a committed trust and swim that complements the story, its history, its presence, its moodiness and its evolution. They also bring an authentic, relaxed and natural life to the piece that honors the great and good of live theatre, its world premiere status, its thrills and spills and its immersive grasp and connection between actor and audience. 

Technically, "Seven Cousins for a Horse" boasts a fine, astute design team whose impassioned, inspired and creative work heightens the visual appeal of the entire production. They are Richard Harrison (scenic design), Jason Peck (sound design), Jiahao (Neil) Qiu (lighting design), Aidan Meachem (score) and Brenda Phelps (costume design).

A remarkable new work that captivates, stirs and numbs the senses, "Seven Cousins for a Horse" cracks open a forgotten era and fills it with command, humor, debate and lived-in naturalism that ignites playwright Tammy Ryan's dialogue, the lives and fate of her characters, the detailed movement of the story and the play's flawed, but affecting conclusion.
The seven-member cast takes the audience through the play's dramatic moments, orchestrated with pride and deftness by director Jonathan Winn who gives his absolute all to the production, its newness and its definitive message about a group of people living in a time of great change.

"Seven Cousins for a Horse" was staged at Thrown Stone (440 Main Street, Ridgefield, CT) from July 14-23, 2023.
For general information, call (203) 442-1714.
website: thrownstone.org