There is that moment, when the house is dark and just before the curtain rises, that sends a small shiver down your spine. Let's capture that moment together!
Lights dim, the curtain goes up. Suddenly, we are transported into the imagination of a playwright and actors we do not know! The stage is set for magic and fireworks.
Mary Martin immortalized the boy who wouldn't grow up when her Peter Pan flew across television screens in a televised broadcast in 1955, 1956 and 1960 of her Broadway hit.
Emily Skinner, Lynne Halliday, and Cameron Adams in the York Theatre Company world premiere production of the new musical revue, Inventing Mary Martin, conceived, written and directed by Stephen Cole, with music supervision and arrangements by David Krane, co-direction and choreography by Bob Richard and music direction by Lawrence Goldberg. The cast also features Jason Graae with Bob Renino on bass and Perry Cavari on drums. Now in performance through May 25 at York Theatre Company’s home at Saint Peters. Photo credit: Carol Rosegg.
"Inventing Mary Martin," a world premiere conceived, written and directed by Stephen Cole, is a musical revue about the titular star's career. The York Theatre production, through May 25th also touches lightly on her life. Mary Martin went from a small Texas town to Hollywood and on to Broadway and London stages. She was the toast of the town in any number of hits.
Cameron Adams and Jason Graae in the York Theatre Company world premiere production of the new musical revue, Inventing Mary Martin, conceived, written and directed by Stephen Cole, with music supervision and arrangements by David Krane, co-direction and choreography by Bob Richard and music direction by Lawrence Goldberg. The cast also features Lynne Halliday and Emily Skinner with Bob Renino on bass and Perry Cavari on drums. Now in performance through May 25 at York Theatre Company’s home at Saint Peters. Photo credit: Carol Rosegg.
Of course, she also had her share of misses, most famously in passing on the musical which came to be named "Oklahoma."
Emily Skinner, Lynne Halliday, Cameron Adams and Jason Graae in the York Theatre Company world premiere production of the new musical revue, Inventing Mary Martin, conceived, written and directed by Stephen Cole, with music supervision and arrangements by David Krane, co-direction and choreography by Bob Richard and music direction by Lawrence Goldberg. Now in performance through May 25 at York Theatre Company’s home at Saint Peters. Photo credit: Carol Rosegg.
The talented cast recreating some of the songs along Mary Martin's path include Cameron Adams, who sings and taps to perfection, Jason Graae as host and narrator, Lynne Halliday, and Emily Skinner. The latter is tasked with singing "Swatting the fly," the big number from the show Martin, and her husband Richard Halliday, chose for her instead of Rodgers and Hammerstein's iconic show.
Emily Skinner in the York Theatre Company world premiere production of the new musical revue, Inventing Mary Martin, conceived, written and directed by Stephen Cole, with music supervision and arrangements by David Krane, co-direction and choreography by Bob Richard and music direction by Lawrence Goldberg. The cast also features Cameron Adams, Jason Graae, and Lynne Halliday with Bob Renino on bass and Perry Cavari on drums. Now in performance through May 25 at York Theatre Company’s home at Saint Peters. Photo credit: Carol Rosegg.
The musical arrangements, by David Krane, of classic tunes by the likes of Noel Coward, Cole Porter, and so forth, are delivered by an off-stage trio, led by Lawrence Goldberg on the piano, with Perry Cavari on percussion and Bob Renino on bass.
"Inventing Mary Martin" is a tuneful and well-sung remembrance of the much-awarded star that informs rather than engages.
For more information about "Inventing Mary Martin," and the York Theatre Company, please visit http://www.yorktheatre.org.
We are still catching up with the 2013 Tony winners here at T and B On The Aisle. A case in point: http://tbontheaisleatheaterdiary.blogspot.com/2014/04/matilda-is-just-right.html. Another is "Pippin," winner as the best musical revival of 2013, along with Andrea Martin for a supporting role, and the extraordinary Patina Miller for "Best Actress in a Musical." "Pippin" is still at the Music Box, but Patina Miller has moved on, replaced by Ciara Renee as the coyly named "Leading Player." It's likely that strongmen and circus acts were more revolutionary theatricalities in the 1972 original Broadway production in which Ben Vereern starred. Pippin, himself, is a silly twit overly impressed with his exceptionalism, and well-played by Kyle Dean Massey (in the current cast). He lacks the naive charm of, say, Candide, but Annie Potts is charming as his acrobatic grandmother.
Billy Porter, Daniel Stewart Sherman, and Marcus Neville (right) Photo (c) Matthew Murphy
On the other hand, "Kinky Boots" fulfills the razzmatazz its many Tony statuettes promised. Billy Porter, its rags to riches--or chorus to leading man at any rate, star is as fresh and peppy in his award winning role as Lola as if he hadn't been doing this for over year. "Kinky Boots," with music and lyrics by Cyndi Lauper 2013 Tony,) and a book by Harvey Fierstein at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, is a lively heart-warming joyful musical extravaganza.
Idina Menzel center with cast of "If/Then" from the creative team of Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt. Photo by Joan Marcus.
Here we are in 2014, however so let's put Idina Menzel at the top of the slate of Tony possibles in the bifurcated role of Liz/Beth, along with her quirky sometimes confusing show, "If/Then," from the creative team of Brian Yorkey (book and lyrics) and Tom Kitt (music.) (Note that Kitt and Yorkey and Menzel are nominees, but the show did not make the cut. That's a shame.)
LaChanze and Anthony Rapp in a scene from "If/Then."
Photo by Joan Marcus.
"If/Then," at the Richard Rodgers Theatre, is about choice, chance, fate, happenstance, and possibility. It's also thought-provoking and dynamic. Anthony Rapp, as Lucas, Liz/Beth's best friend and maybe lover, is charmingly annoying, but in a good way. LaChanze is perky and positive as the accepting and open Kate.
Tamika Lawrence, Jenn Colella, LaChanze and Idina Menzel.
Photo by Joan Marcus.
Idina Menzel is a fierce and resolute performer; certainty pours out with every line and each note. These qualities add to the interest of her role as the vacillating Liz/Beth-- two women in one. In "If/Then," each path she might take is fully played out. The choices are all laid out for her and us.
Jerry Dixon, Ann Sanders and Idina Menzel. Photo by Joan Marcus.
One of these paths has Liz marry the hunky and handsome Josh (James Snyder,) whom she meets by chance at a park and runs into on a subway. The other has Beth flirting with her boss, Steve (Jerry Dixon.)
It's a nice touch that she is a city planner, designing the pathways for so many lives in the big city. "If/Then" is an unapologetically urban, New York City centric musical drama. It's smart, well-paced, --under the very able direction of Michael Grief--, beautifully designed--with a truly novel and delightful set by Mark Wendland--, wonderfully acted by a large, tight ensemble. It is also unlike any other musical play.
If I hadn't seen it, Then I would have missed an exciting theatrical experience. Michael Grief does everything he can to clarify the dichotomies of the script. Pay close attention, but don't overthink it. Enjoy "If/Then" for the wonderful ride it is.
Except in Will Eno's new drama, "The Realistic Joneses," at the Lyceum Theatre through July 6th, where it is. "The Realistic Joneses," isthe playwright's Broadway debut, and it features a starry cast.
This very funny drama has a very funky plot. The Joneses, John (Michael C. Hall) and Pony (Marisa Tomei) have moved in down the block from Jennifer (Toni Collette) and Bob (Tracy Letts) Jones. The new neighborrs drop in on a beautiful quiet night. Over the course of several encounters around town, it is clear that John is suffering from the same uncommon genetic disease that Bob has.
Michael C. Hall and Marisa Tomei as the new neighbors, John and Pony.
Photo by Joan Marcus.
If Eno has a point, it is buried in the diurnal rhythms of his play. Yes, despite its outlandishness, life in "The Realistic Joneses" seems very normal. A thin-- more like a whisper of a-- story doesn't suggest much but an opportunity for crackling good talk and a slice of real life ordinariness.
Toni Collette, Michael C. Hall, and Tracy Letts as Jennifer,
John and Bob. Photo by Joan Marcus.
All the revelatons in "The Realistic Joneses" come with terrifically snappy dialogue, delivered with a suave ease by an expert cast. Sam Gold's direction keeps the scenes moving, and the sparkling wit flowing. Michael C. Hall's quip-cracking John is expecially wonderful-- maybe because he has all the best lines. Tracy Letts, the 2013 Tony Award recipient for Best Actor, is also especillay wry in his deliveries.The women of the quartet in "The Realistic Joneses" are natural and comfortable in the strange circumstances of the play. "The Realistic Joneses" is a most entertaining and amusing tragedy you are ever likely to see.
Is there anything sadder than watching a great talent squander her gifts?
The image of Billie Holiday near her end staggering around a small bar in Philidelphia, distrubed playwright Laine Robertson so that "writing Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill was an attempt to rid myself of the ghost."
It may have freed Ms. Robertson, but the ghost lives on at Circle in the Square where Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill plays through August 10th.
There is no joy in watching Billie Holliday (Audra McDonald) stumble around the stage.
Audra McDonald is "Lady Day." Photo by Evgenia Eliseeva
By March of 1959 when she performed at Emerson's Bar & Grill in Philadelphia, Billie Holiday had lost a good deal to her addictions. A felony conviction for possession of heroine cost her her cabaret license so she could no longer perform at clubs in New York. She spent nearly a year in a West Virginia penitentiary.
In 1948, after her release from prison, friends had arranged a Carnegie Hall appearance for her; although Lady Day was uncomfortable in white-run venues and toney spots, she sold out Carnegie Hall and gave it her best, singing 32 standards and her own repertoire, including her 1930's hit "Strange Fruit."
The pleasure in this play is watching as Audra McDonald turns herself into the embittered, nearly beaten Lady Day. Audra McDonald is nowhere to be found or seen in this performance. Her acting is a totally self-effacing feat; she disappears into the character. Abused, self-loathing and completely self-destructive, Billie Holiday still did not consider singing the blues. "I'm a jazz singer," Lady Day says. "Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill" is a one woman show with support from Shelton Becton who plays Jimmy Powers, Lady's piano player and apologist. Clayton Craddock is on drums with George Farmer playing the bass in the three piece band backing Billie Holiday.
When I was last in London a gazillion years ago, I was thrilled to have the chance to go to a Thursday matinee, as well as the usual Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday ones. One more outing in a week full of theater adventures. I always thought it was a great idea to spread out the matinees so binge goers, and out- of-towners eager to see whatever was on on the Great White Way could do more with their week in New York.
Three shows now offering you the Thursday option are "Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella,"''Mamma Mia!" and "The Phantom of the Opera." ''Matilda the Musical" (reviewed with the current cast in these pages recently) may give the idea a try this summer.
"Cinderella" now features the enormously likeable Fran Drescher as the wicked stepmother. The infectious gaiety that is "Mamma Mia," which is also playing Vegas as it happens, has recently moved to the Broadhurst Theatre on W44th Street. "The Phantom of the Opera" is celebrating more than 25 years at The Majestic.
"Phantom," "Mamma Mia!," "Rock Of Ages," and "Chicago" have long also had Monday night curtains, another great way to extend the Broadway week.
Charlotte D'Amboise as Roxie Hart with Ryan Worsing and
Michael Cusumano in a production of "Chicago." Photo by Jeremy Daniel
This show does not have a Thursday matinee, or a Monday night, so you'll have to stick to one of the more traditional days to see "Bullets Over Broadway" which, by the way, hits the bull's eye. "Bullets...," based on the Woody Allen film from 1995, and written by Mr. Allen and Douglas McGrath (who also penned "Beautiful...") starts off with a bang-- in case you're worried that you are in the wrong theater, a machine gun sprays the play's title on the inside curtain-- and doesn't let up 'til the final curtain drops. The musical's style rings in a little like "The Producers," which Susan Stroman also famously directed and choreographed. Stroman's signature dancing in unconventional locales has a tap chorus hoofing fiercely on top of the train headed for out-of-town tryouts.
In an impressive cast, Nick Cordero is a revelation as the soulful thug Cheech. Marin Mazzie gives her all as an egocentric star on the wane. This is a Tony-worthy performance.
"Bullets" does something that Broadway hasn't done since the beginning of the last century, using standards and in a way that generally is not done-- the tunes, by Cole Porter and others-- move the story along and further the plot.
The "jukebox musical" is no longer a term of endearment. So it's a good thing that the jukebox musical has found its way to the other side.
It doesn't matter that few would have a bigger jukebox than Carole King because "Beautiful-The Carole King Musical," at The Stephen Sondheim Theatre, is actually a "non-jukebox" musical. "Beautiful" is a story, almost a drama with a track, that covers Carole King's journey from hitmaker to hit singer-songwriter. It moves from 1650 Broadway ("not the Brill Building") to the "Tapestry" album and her appearance at the piano at Carnegie Hall. It is biography so it sticks to a timeline. The songs don't move the story along so much as they are the story.
Jeb Brown as Don Kirshner, Jake Epstein as Gerry Goffin,
Jessie Mueller as Carole King, Jarrod Spector as Barry Mann,
and Anika Larsen as Cynthia Weil in "Beautiful - The Carole King Musical" on Broadway at
the Stephen Sondheim Theater (c)Joan Marcus
Carole King (Jessie Mueller) had her first chart topper in 1959, when, at 17 she and her husband, lyricist Gerry Goffin (Jake Epstein), gave The Shirelle's a huge hit in "Will You Love Me Tommorrow." From there the hits just kept coming, until one day, years later, Carole King began singing and playing her own music.
Rock and roll did not die, but as Gerry Goffin predicted, it changed under the influence of folk and split off into all kinds of pop and crackle from The Monkees to metal. For many practitioners in the medium, rock and roll went deeper and became more expressive than "The Locomoton" (another King-Goffin hit.)
Jessie Mueller as Carole King in "Beautiful - The Carole King Musical"
on Broadway at the Stephen Sondheim Theater (c)Joan Marcus
"Beautiful" thoroughly integrates the music into the plot. "Beautiful" doesn't take its legends too seriously. Jessie Mueller gets Carole King's inflections and phrasing, but not just in a mimicky way. It can't be easy to personify Carole King when so mnay of us have known her so well and for so long. Jessie Mueller pulls this off as well. King has been a star for most of my life and much of hers, but she is not a glamourous presence. Mueller captures this too--, the simple girl whose genius is undisputed so that even she cannot deny it.
The Shirelles (L-R: Ashley Blanchet, Rashidra Scott, Alysha Deslorieux, and Carly Hughes) in "Beautiful - The Carole King Musical" on Broadway at the Stephen Sondheim Theater (c)Joan Marcus
The excellent work by Jeb Brown as Don Kirshner and Jake Epstein as Gerry Goffin back Mueller up. Also outstanding in a great ensemble, under Marc Bruni's fine direction, are Anika Larsen, charming as Cynthia Weil, and Jarrod Spector as Cynthia's writing partner, Barry Mann.
"Beautiful- The Carole King Musical" steps out of the jukebox genre to deliver a moving portrait of its eponymous heroine, and the times in which her art was forged.
In Terrence McNally's "Mothers and Sons," at the Golden Theatre, it is particularly difficult and the way forward is a slog.
It is more so for Katharine Gerard (Tyne Daly), the titular mother in this play, for whom the death of her son nearly twenty years ago remains a fresh wound. She shows up at Cal Porter's (Frederick Weller) door unbidden because he is her one connection to Andre. For Katharine, who is recently widowed, Andre was the only beacon of love in a bitter life.
Cal has not forgotten Andre but he has allowed himself some happiness. His sunnier present is with Will Ogden (Bobby Steggert) whose youth and disposition help them to make a home for their son Bud (Grayson Taylor). The Ogden-Porters are guppies, an affluent gay family, something that was not even thought of while Andre was alive.
Katharine did not expect this. She is a ramrod of indignation anger and vengeance. Andre's death was cataclysmic. There should be no moving on. Cal has picked up the pieces as Katharine could not.
As Katharine, Tyne Daly is at once brittle and ascerbic. Wheeler's mild-mannered Cal is the perfect foil for the hateful Katharine, whose grief is a heaviness that is only lifted in her very sweet and natural interactions with Bud.
Don't shy from "Mothers and Sons" because it is a genuinely sad and moving play. There is plenty of humor and wit to ease us along. The drama is well played by all the four principals, and well paced under Sheryl Kaller's able direction, and well worth your time.
Barrett Wilbert Weed as Veronica Sawyer, Ryan McCartan as "JD," and Jessica Keenan Wynn as Heather Chandler in a scene from "Heathers, The Musical." Photo by Chad Batka.
Can belonging to a clique save you from the worst parts of growing up?
In "Heathers, The Musical," based on the Daniel Waters (screenplay)-Michael Lehmann (direction) 1989 film, adapted by Kevin Murphy and Laurence O'Keefe under the direction of Andy Fickman, playing at New World Stages, there is a high price to pay for fitting in.
Veronica Sawyer's (Barrett Wilbert Weed) seeks protection from bullying by befriending the most terrifying bullies at Westerburg High. Veronica is smart and pretty so her need for the Heathers-- Heather Chandler (Jessica Keenan Wynn), McNamara (Elle McLemore) and Duke (Alice Lee)-- seems an unnecessary precaution.
Elle McLemore, Charissa Hogeland (dance captain) and Alice Lee as the dreaded and popular Heathers.
Photo by Brad Chatka.
Veronica double dips by also hooking up with the glamourously elusive "JD" ( short for Jason Dean--played by Ryan McCartan) whose angst is a tad more extreme than that of most seventeen year olds. When JD beats up two jocks, Ram Sweeney (Jon Eidson) and Kurt Kelly (Evan Todd), in the cafeteria, he proves that he is more than a match for any other bad of the boys at school.
Jon Eidson as Ram Sweeney and Katie Ladner as Martha Dunnstock in a scene from "Heathers, The Musical." Photo by Brad Chatka.
Is it silly? You betcha. Over the top ridiculous. Is it entertaining? Ditto. Positively non-stop. An energetic cast with fine leads in Barrett Wilbert Weed, Jessica Keenan Wynn and Ryan McCartan keeps this musical running along. The Greek chorus of Ram, Kurt and Heather Chandler adds a nice theatricality to the episodic script.
The cast of "The Most Deserving:" Daniel Pearce, Jennifer Lim, playwright Catherine Trieschmann, Veanne Cox, Ray Anthony Thomas (seated), Adam LeFevre, and director Shelly Butler. Photo by Carol Rosegg
Edie Falco is one of the stars performing plays by ten-year olds this weekend. Consider the hash that some grown playwrights put forth (some not all), and maybe these youngsters will have a fresh perspective. The (very) young playwrighters project is called "Out on a Limb" from The 52nd Street Project’s Five Angels Theater.
Where: 52nd Street Project’s Five Angels Theater, 789 Tenth Avenue, 2nd floor
When: April 4th throgh 6th, Friday – Sunday at 7:30pm, and Saturday at 3pm
Visit www.52project.org for reservatons and more information.
The Women's Project tackles an exciting new play by Catherine Trieschmann; "The Most Deserving" looks at small town culture wars from Ms. Treischmann's satirical pov. "The Most Deserving" features a superb cast including but not limited to Veanne Cox, Jennifer Lim and Adam LeFevre under the direction of Shelly Butler.
Where: City Center Stage II
When: through May 4th
Visit www.womensproject.org for more information and tickets.
On a stakeout for their mark are from left to right Stephanie Hsu, Mia Katigbak and Chris Larkin in a scene from "Fast Company." Photo by Gerry Goodstein
Grifting is a family affair in Carla Ching's "Fast Company." Well, almost a family affair, since the older siblings want to shield Blue (Stephanie Hsu) from their line of work. Blue, however, has plans of her own for a large payday.
Sometimes coming late to the party isn't so bad. While others were giddy (or jaded), you're less likely to be swept away by the fresh and the new.
You feel a little out of it, but being apart (rather than "a part of") can make for greater objectivity. Sure there are expectations... by now, you've heard a lot about the production, but with the lapsed time, you have a chance to see a bigger picture, and, of course, more clearly.
The party in question is the children's revolution known as "Roald Dahl's Matilda, The Musical," being held for a little over a year now at Broadway's Schubert Theatre. The revelers are a cast of talented youngsters and their adult counterparts in short pants who rise up under the tyranny of a demented headmistress, Miss Trunchbull (Ben Thompson, at this moment.)
Their cause is led by Matilda (the talented Gabriella Pizzolo, one of four young leads) and supported by the sweetly ineffectual Miss Honey (the affecting Jill Paice.) At home, Matilda is bullied but not beaten or even bowed by ignorant and self-absorbed parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood (the excellent Matt Harrington and superb Lesli Margherita.)
Mr. Wormwood is a schemer who gives the used car sales profession a very bad name, He dotes on his doltish son, Michael (Taylor Trensch), and calls Matilda "boy," while watching "Telly" with his son on his lap. Mrs. Wormwood dotes on her ballroom dance partner, Rudolpho (Phlip Spaeth) and nags Matilda for reading too much; "looks, not books," is her advice.
Much of the cast has rolled over since Bertie Carvel was nominated for a Best Actor Tony as the original Miss Trunchbull, but Lesli Margherita originated her part as Matilda's loopy mother; her performance is delightfully flighty. Matt Harrington, as the current Mr. Wormwood, brings the vaudeville to "Matilda" with a lot of dash and swarmy charm; he is dispicably likeable. (His predecessor, Gabriel Ebert won the 2013 Tony as Best Featured Actor in a Musical.) The beguiling Karen Aldridge has returned as Matilda's champion, the librarian, Mrs. Phelps, who is moved to shout outloud when Matilda tells her stories.
The book, based on Roald Dahl's children's story, by Dennis Kelly won the 2013 Tony for Best Book of A Musical. Tim Minchin's tunefull score and clever lyrics (he was a nominee but lost out to Cyndi Lauper's "Kinky Boots") add to the many pleasures of seeing "Matilda."
"Matilda" is an unexpected musical, with a little touch of "Naughty" and a lot of "Miracle."
The cast, under the direction of Matthew Warchus, and dance guidance of choreographer Peter Darling, deliver a rousing entertainment. The letter blocks that decorate the stage are just one of the inspired touches on the fine set design by Rob Howell (who is also responsible for the costumes.)
photo from Richard Maxwell's "Isolde"
by Simon Hallström
April 2: Dominic Chianese at The Café Carlyle
April 3- May 4: "The International" plays at the cell
April 10-26: "Isolde" (US premiere) at the Abrons Arts Center (466 Grand Street)
April 15 through 19: Lucie Arnaz at The Café Carlyle
April 23 through May 18: "Peddling" part of Brits Off Bway at 59E59
May 30 through July 5: Summerworks Festival at The Wild Project
April 2: Dominic Chianese at The Café Carlyle
He may always be "Uncle Junior" to some of us, but Dominic Chianese has long been a man of many talents. He is a singer and guitarist, who has released two albums and performed in cabaret, as well as on stages on and off-Broadway. In his Café Carlyle debut, An Evening with Dominic Chianese, he will perform songs running the gambit of American music, from country to the Great American Songbook, as well as standards in Italian and Spanish.
April 3- May 4: "The International" plays at the cell
"The International" is inspired by events in the Bosnian War of 1992-95. Tim Ruddy’s award-winning and probing three-character play looks at the same events taking place during an ethnic-incited conflict through the eyes of three different people in three different parts of the world. Origin Theatre Company’s production is directed by Christopher Randolph and stars Timothy Carter, Carey Van Driest and Ted Schneider.
www.origintheatre.org (Running time 80 minutes)
April 10-26: "Isolde" (US premiere) at the Abrons Arts Center (466 Grand Street)
Based on the legend of Tristan and Isolde, Richard Maxwell's "Isolde" is about Patrick, the owner of a successful construction company and his wife, Isolde, a successful star.
Patrick and Isolde appear to be happly married. But Isolde finds herself increasingly unable to remember her lines. To occupy herself, she decides to build her dream house and her husband is eager to help. The project is jeopardized by Massimo, an award-winning architect that Isolde hires.
Written and directed by Maxwell for his company, New York City Players, "Isolde" marks 15 years of new plays by Maxwell in New York. The production features Jim Fletcher, Brian Mendes, Tory Vazquez and Gary Wilmes.
April 15 through 19: Lucie Arnaz at The Café Carlyle
"Spring is Here" is Lucie Arnaz's new show. The talented daughter of one of show business’ most prominent couples, Lucie Arnaz has forged a distinct career of her own, starring in roles on Broadway, television and film, and has won awards including an Emmy, a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award and an Outer Critics Circle Award.
April 23 through May 18: "Peddling" part of Brits Off Bway at 59E59
Henry Melling, known as Dudley Dursley from the Harry Potter franchise, has written a fascinating new play featured in the 10th annual Brits off Bway Festival. In "Peddling." a peddler wakes up in a field, somewhere in London, surrounded by the burnt and empty remnants of the night before. With no memory of how he has come to be there, he knows he must go back to ‘the very start of it all'. His attempts to retrace events from the previous day lead him on a haunting journey where everything comes into question: his life, his world, his future.
Harry Melling’s remarkable debut play follows the day in the life of a man on the fringes of society as he battles difficult questions and attempts to come to terms with the answers.
May 30 through July 5: Summerworks Festival at The Wild Project
The 2014 fest features plays by Jenny Schwartz, Ariel Stess, Peggy Stafford. Summerworks 2014 features "41-derful", written and directed by Jenny Schwartz; "I’m Pretty Fucked Up" by Ariel Stess, directed by Kip Fagan; and "16 Words Or Less" by Peggy Stafford, directed by Portia Krieger.
Summerworks 2014 will also feature various free events, including a collaborative piece and individual readings written by Clubbed Thumb’s Early-Career Writers’ Group: Jaclyn Backhaus, Adam Blodgett, Tasha M Gordon-Solmon, Ken Greller, MJ Kaufman, Dan Regelski, and Ariel Stess. Further details on these events will be announced soon.
There is something brutalizing about those depression-era dance marathons. The contestants are equal parts hopeful and downtrodden. Paul Taylor captures the essence in his latest creation "Marathon Cadenzas," on view in the penultimate PTDC performance of the Spring 2014 season, just completed at David H. Koch Theatre at Lincoln Center.
Taylor's 140th dance in a 60 year span is as vital and entertaining as any in his repertoire."Marathon Cadenzas" is set to music by Raymond Scott with sets and costumes by Santo Loquasto and lighting by James F. Ingalls. The company are all standouts in this heartbreaking dance.
More PTDC Spring Ahead: Sotheby's auction to benefit PTDC on May 14th
On May 14th, the Taylor "Spring" extends to an auction at Sotheby's where works by Robert Rauschenberg, a friend and frequent collaborator of Paul Taylor's.The two met in 1954 after Taylor left Merce Cunningham's dance company to set off on his own Rauschenberg designed the sets and costumes for a number of Paul Taylor productions including: Jack and the Beanstalk (1954), the solo dance performance Circus Polka (1955), Three Epitaphs (1956), The Least Flycatcher, The Tower (1957), Seven New Dances (1957), Rebus (1958), Images and Reflections (1958), and Tracer (1962), for which he also
created a work of the same title that will be offered in May.
To learn more about the May 14th auction event, click here.
To keep apprised of PTDC performances, visit www.ptdc.org.
The former gathers on on April 12, May 31, June 7, August 9 & 16, October 4 & 11 and December 6 at 2:30pm for three hours of beer and Bard at four bars.
Drunk Shakespeare opens in its home at Quinn's Bar & Grill in midtown for drinking and tragedies on March 26th.
In posters and on billboards for each of their Spring seasons, PTDC flies off the page. In person, the they do a similar trick.
Francisco Graciano and Michael Apuzzo in Paul Taylor's "Gossamer Gallants,"
once more on the program on March 29th at 2pm.
Photo by Tom Caravaglia.
Paul Taylor Dance Company always seems to be in motion, just off and above the stage. Theirs is an energetic force. PTDC is always propelling through air.
The momentum is intellectual as well as physical. A Paul Taylor dance is well-thought out and intelligent.
Taylor, in fact, is a man of many parts-- an author with a nice sense of humor, a dance maker with a great sense of humor, irony, and a vision all his own.
There are 8 performances left to the PTDC Lincoln Center Spring at this writing, and we urge you to catch
at least one of our favorites: tonight at 7pm, "Mercuric Tidings" and "Sunset" are on the bill with "Fibers" and "Troillus and Cressida (reduced)." On Wednesday, March 26th, go see "A Field of Grass." Friday, March 28th at 8pm brings a chance to see the new "American Dreamer," and Saturday at 2pm, "Marathon Cadenzas" premieres again; these are numbers 139 and 140 in the Paul Taylor oeuvre. "Piazzolla Caldera" is on the final program for this season on Sunday, March 30th at 6pm.
You can purchase tickets and view the schedule here and follow PTDC on FB.
Paul Taylor's most recent book are the essays in "Facts and Fancies" published in 2013.
Is the fascination we have with politics and politicians all about power and those who wield it?
Robert Schenkkan's "All The Way," at the Neil Simon Theatre through June 29th, looks at one critical year in the life of one of the great political practitioners.
Bryan Cranston and Betsy Aidem. Photo Credit: Evgenia Eliseeva
Lyndon Baines Johnson (Bryan Cranston) was one of the great negotiators in our country's presidential history. You know the famously effective politician whose arm twisting got legislation passed, but the author posits an LBJ who may have been a better man than his reputation suggests. Lady Bird Johnson (Betsy Aidem) has a particularly poignant take on LBJ the man in one scene, making it clear that the man was the politician.
Robert Petkoff, Bryan Cranston.
Photo Credit: Evgenia Eliseeva
LBJ took office in November 1963 as "an accidental President" after the assassination of John F. Kennedy. He had just one year to establish his presidency and launch the campaign for the 1964 elections. That year hinged on LBJ's role in the struggle for civil rights. He was left to polish his predecessor's legacy, and create his own. The pressures he faced during that year are history, and as told by Schenkkan it is a compelling and dramatic story.
Bryan Cranston, Brandon J. Dirden and
Richard Poe in the back.
Photo Credit: Evgenia Eliseeva
There were the rightfully disgruntled factions in the Negro caucus. He also had to deal with the recalcitrant segments of his own party's Dixiecrats, most prominently represented by LBJ's mentor, "Uncle" Dick Russell (John McMartin), the Senator from Georgia. Hubert Humphrey (Robert Petkoff) of Michigan was the Senator most sympathetic to the cause of equality for all Americans.
Among the groups of black leaders, Martin Luther King, Jr. (Brandon J. Dirden) is the acknowledged head. He lobbied the President, often through Humphrey, for the assorted black organizations, which included Stokely Carmichael's (William Jackson Harper) radical SNCC and the much tamer NAACP lead by Roy Wilkins (Peter Jay Fernandez). LBJ not only supported civil rights, but was instrumental in passing legislation to insure that fairness and equality were the law of the land.
Rob Campbell, Susannah Schulman on the desk. On left on floor:
James Eckhouse and on right on floor: Christopher Gurr
Photo Credit: Evgenia Eliseeva
The sets in "All The Way" often depend on projections to identify the locale of a scene. Credit Christopher Acebo for the simple multi-functional scenic design and Jane Cox for the lighting.
The acting, with Bryan Cranston embodying LBJ in an astonishing performance, and Brandon J. Dirden embodying MLK down to the cadences of his speech, is universally excellent. Under Bill Rauch's well-paced directing, the nearly three hours of politics and power go by in a flash; there is not a wasted minute.
Among other standouts in the outstanding cast are William Jackson Harper, Rob Campbell as Governor George Wallace (and others), and Eric Lenox Abrams as Bob Moses (and others.) Michael McKean is a wry and formidable J. Edgar Hoover.
Michelle Fleet and Robert Kleinendorst in "A Field of Grass"
choreograhped by Paul Taylor, set to songs by
Harry Nilsson with costumes by Santo Loquasto and
lighing by Jennifer Tipton. First performed in 1993.
Photo by Paul B. Goode
It's spring-- at least it is a Paul Taylor Dance Company spring. The weather outside the David H. Koch Theatre at Lincoln Center, where the season lasts from March 11th through 30th, may still be iffy, but you can count on the warmth and good humor of PTDC to welcome you once inside.
Poster for "Airs" by Paul B. Goode.
Paul Taylor's vision is often edgy and a bit cockeyed, but it is always intelligent and interesting. For Paul Taylor, dance is social commentary or sometimes just social observation. He is often caustic, sometimes pointedly so, sometimes more genially. Paul Taylor sets the ordinary askew in his little jewels of invention.
His sharp insight into the human condition was well on display in the weekend programs we saw.
"Gossamer Gallants" took a place as a favorite when it first presented in 2011. This weekend, it had competition from a new work, that is new to me, "A Field of Grass," first performed in 1993. In the interests of transparency, it is important to reveal that this reviewer has many favorites in the PTDC repertoire-- from "Company B" to the transcendent "Aureole," and on and on. "A Field of Grass" just happens to be a proximate fave.
Photo by Tom Caravaglia.
Leading a hippie circle-- yes it is that kind of grass-- that includes the outstanding Michelle Fleet, Robert Kleinendorst goes from joy to a little bit of a bummer and back again in "A Field of Grass." The lively songs of Harry Nilsson accompany the ensemble, which on this occasion also included the splendid Aileen Roehl, Sean Mahoney, Francisco Graciano, Heather McGinley and Christina Lynch Markham.
Photo by Paul B. Goode
For "Sunset," set to Edward Elgar's Serenade for Strings and Elegy for Strings, the mood is appropriately more elegiac. The cast puts aside its bell bottoms (designed by santo Loquasto for "A Field of Grass") and trades them in for shirtwaists and crisp khakis (set and costumes designed by Alex Katz.)
Both dances are more balletic than we've come to expect from Paul Taylor, and very beautiful to watch. In "Sunset," the men's movements have a Gene Kelly quality.
Photo by Paul B. Goode
"Airs," a classic out of the PTDC repertoire first performed in 1978, is danced to Handel. It's formality is belied by the the short gowns and leotards worn by the men and their bare chests (costumes by Gene Moore.) On the same bill, "Dust," set to Francis Poulenc's Concert Champetre, is amusing and lively, but the pièce de résistance on this day's program is "Piazzolla Caldera" (1997).
"Piazzolla Caldera" breaks down the tango. There is the tango for one, a solo that seems impossibly sad in the context of this very sexy dance. A same sex tango relies heavily on horseplay and a tango a trois plays up the aggression that is also germaine to the genre.The music is by Astor Piazzolla and Jerzy Peterburshaky with costumes by Santo Loquasto.
Going forward into the searon, you can see "Gossamer Gallants" on March 22nd at 8pm with "Sunset" and on March 29th at 2pm with other works. "Piazzolla Caldera" reappears on March 21st at 8pm, and with "Dust" on March 30th at 6pm. "A Field of Grass" is on the program on March 26th at 6pm. and "Airs" repeats on the March 29th performance at 8pm.
Not so soon, in fact 2014-15 season at the Public:
"Hamilton," written by the Tony and Grammy Award-winning composer and lyricist Lin-Manuel Miranda, will have its world premiere next January as part of The Public’s 2014-15 season at Astor Place. Directed by his In The Heights collaborator Thomas Kail, this new musical features Miranda playing Alexander Hamilton, one of our country’s Founding Fathers and the first Secretary of the Treasury.
“Lin-Manuel Miranda is a marvel, but nothing could have prepared us for the astonishing achievement of Hamilton,” said Artistic Director Oskar Eustis. “Alexander Hamilton was born in the West Indies, the only Founding Father who was an immigrant, and Lin’s genius is to tell the story of the birth of the United States as an immigrant’s story. The energy, the passion, joy, tragedy, and raw intelligence of this show are stunning.”
Do we exist only as constructs in each other's minds? Explore this concept and Sartre's famous bon mots, "Hell is other people," at the Pearl Theatre's production of "No Exit." For tickets and informaiton, please go to http://www.pearltheatre.org/1314/noexit/
Jolly Abraham as Inez and Sameerah Luqmaan-Harris as Estelle in a scene from "No Exit."
Photo by Al Foote III
March 11-April 12
Paula Vogel's "And Baby Makes Seven" is an uproarious and timely comedy that has not been seen professionally in New York in 20 years. Marc Stuart Weitz directs an ensemble including Ken Barnett, Susan Bott and Constance Zaytoun. Vogel’s "And Baby Makes Seven" tells the story of Anna and Ruth, a lesbian couple, who enlist their gay friend Peter to help them create a family. But are any of them ready for parenthood?
For tickets and to find out more, visit newohiotheatre.org
March 14-April 5
The Chocolate Factory Theater is presenting the world premiere Target Margin Theater's "Uriel Acosta: I Want That Man!" from March 14-April 5. This new adaptation of one of the central plays of Yiddish history is taken from a variety of literary and historical sources and created and directed by TMT’s Artistic Director, David Herskovits. Original songs are by Rebecca Hart, with toy theater created by Kathleen Kennedy Tobin for this production.
Tickets and information are available at chocolatefactorytheater.org
April 1-12
Singer-songwriter Alexa Ray Joel, Christine Brinkley's and Billy Joel's talented daughter, makes her premiere at Cafe Carlyle.
Visit www.thecarlyle.com to find out more.
April 5
Patricia Kenny Dance Collection presents "Spring Collection" which includes their world premiere of "Unrest" choreographed by Patricia Kenny Reilly. Excerpts of "Unrest" were released on film in an open rehearsal series web forum, and this evening PKDC will share the culmination of the work-in-progress. The evening of dance is at the Queens Theatre for one night only.
For tickets, visit https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pe.c/9883433. To learn more about PKDC, go to www.patriciakennydancecollection.com.
April 17-30
Ripe Time, the Brooklyn-based company led by Rachel Dickstein, will premiere "The World is Round,"
which adapts the Gertrude Stein book, at BAM Fisher. Conceived, written and directed by Dickstein, the work is a fable (for grownups and mature children) full of original live music by Heather Christian and aerial movement choreographed by Nicki Miller. "The World is Round" is Ripe Time’s first new show since 2011 when it launched its celebrated Mrs. Dalloway adaptation Septimus and Clarissa.
Go to www.bam.org/theworldisround for tickets and informaiton.
April 17-May 11
"The Complete & Condensed Stage Directions of Eugene O'Neill, Volume 2" in sequel to the award-winning "... Volume 1" is adapted and directed by Christopher Loar, ensemble member of the New York Neo-Futurists.
Now he's a legendary playwright and a Broadway mainstay, but Eugene O'Neill was once considered an experimental, downtown playwright. His plays defied the melodramatic conventions of the day and much of his work premiered with the Provincetown Players on MacDougall Street. The New York Neo-Futurists return O'Neill to his experimental roots, and "...Volume 2" spans the years 1913 - 1915, and includes his plays Recklessness, Warnings,Fog, Abortion, and The Sniper.
Tickets and informatiokn at www.nynf.org
April 23- May 18
Part of the Brits off Broadway at 59E59, Harry Melling's debut play, "Peddling" makes its US premiere.
A peddler wakes up in a field, with no memory of how he got there or what happened the night before. In his attempt to find out what happened, everything comes into question.
Learn more at www.59e59.org
"Fast Company" plays through April 6th and "The Pig, or Vaclav Havel's Hunt for the Pig" only through March 29th.. At the latter, dinner is served at the 3 Legged Dog production, provided by the Slovakian restuarant Korzo.