If you follow the musical theatre world on Twitter or
Tumblr at all, you may have noticed an explosion of the hashtag - #BroadwayCon. This past weekend (January 22-24), the first annual convention dedicated to
fans of musical theatre was held at the New York Hilton Midtown. The show went
on despite Winter Storm Jonas. I had the chance to attend because my health insurance company issued me a shiny refund for exercising regularly (Thanks, Obama!). Here’s what I
thought.
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Khamis, Januari 28, 2016
Rabu, Julai 23, 2014
NYMF - Central Avenue Breakdown in Concert
I finally saw it! Well...heard/saw it. Kind of. Whatever. It was a concert staging.
I first caught wind of Central Avenue Breakdown following its successful
run at the 2011 New York Musial Theatre Festival (NYMF). This show – with music/lyrics by Kevin Ray, book
by Kevin Ray, Andrea Lepcio, and Dominic Taylor, and additional story by
Suellen Vance – racked up four awards for excellence and the Daegu International
Musical Festival Award. It was also
granted a revival run at the 2012 NYMF.
And, of course, I was out of country for that entire run. So when I heard that the 2014 NYMF was
holding a one-night only concert of the show, I was like, “[Insert expletive of
choice], I gotta go.”
I wasn’t disappointed.
Label:
Andrea Lepcio,
ayaesther,
Azudi Onyejekwe,
Central Avenue Breakdown,
Dominic Taylor,
Donna Vivino,
Juson Williams,
Kevin Ray,
NYMF,
Rodrick Covington,
Stacy Sargeant,
Suellen Vance
Sabtu, Julai 12, 2014
NYMF - Searching for Romeo
I just got back from this evening's performance of Searching For Romeo, and I have to say...I was utterly charmed.
Searching For Romeo is a comedic backstory musical for the Bard's Romeo and Juliet...think of what Gregory Maguire/Stephen Schwartz's Wicked does for L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. It's kind of like that. Our protagonist is high school student Roz, who has just been unceremoniously dumped by her jerky boyfriend Tony (potential West Side Story ref?). Her girlfriends try to pep her up at the start of English class, as does the Boy-Next-Door type fellow Perry. In the midst of a class reading of Romeo and Juliet, Roz finds herself transported to Verona. She has assumed the role of Romeo's jilted lover Rosaline; Jerk Boyfriend Tony is Romeo, Jerk Boyfriend's new girlfriend is Juliet, and Boy-Next-Door Perry is Paris. Roz's English teacher, her friends, and classmates fill a variety of roles including Friar Laurence, Mercutio, Tybalt, the Nurse, and Lady Avare (Paris's scheming rich mother). Despite frantically searching for Romeo at the Capulet's party, she keeps running into and finds herself strangely attracted to Juliet's recent fiance Paris. Needless to say, hijinks ensue all around the play's famous scenes as we follow Roz/Rosaline and Paris, hoping that they will get a happy ending as opposed to the star-crossed lovers' tale of woe.
Searching For Romeo is a comedic backstory musical for the Bard's Romeo and Juliet...think of what Gregory Maguire/Stephen Schwartz's Wicked does for L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. It's kind of like that. Our protagonist is high school student Roz, who has just been unceremoniously dumped by her jerky boyfriend Tony (potential West Side Story ref?). Her girlfriends try to pep her up at the start of English class, as does the Boy-Next-Door type fellow Perry. In the midst of a class reading of Romeo and Juliet, Roz finds herself transported to Verona. She has assumed the role of Romeo's jilted lover Rosaline; Jerk Boyfriend Tony is Romeo, Jerk Boyfriend's new girlfriend is Juliet, and Boy-Next-Door Perry is Paris. Roz's English teacher, her friends, and classmates fill a variety of roles including Friar Laurence, Mercutio, Tybalt, the Nurse, and Lady Avare (Paris's scheming rich mother). Despite frantically searching for Romeo at the Capulet's party, she keeps running into and finds herself strangely attracted to Juliet's recent fiance Paris. Needless to say, hijinks ensue all around the play's famous scenes as we follow Roz/Rosaline and Paris, hoping that they will get a happy ending as opposed to the star-crossed lovers' tale of woe.
Rabu, April 02, 2014
National Theatre Live @ Symphony Space: War Horse
True confession: I love Joey. The horse, that is. Well...the puppet horse.
Thanks to the National Theatre Live's encore screening at Symphony Space on Monday night, I got to see the play for the fifth time. Yes, I saw it four times in New York. No, I didn't pay full price because of TDF, LincTix (for theatre patrons ages 21 to 35), and Student Rush.
The story itself is a mix between a romance and a period piece, just with a boy and horse instead of a boy and girl. Sixteen year old Albert falls in love with Joey the horse. Albert loses Joey to the war effort. Albert joins army in order to find Joey. It's a sweet and heartwarming story, but pretty predictable.
So why go see it so many times? Why not just watch the Spielberg film? The puppets. They are the heart and soul and magic of this piece. The amazing thing about the puppets is that the puppeteers are in plain sight. Yet, no matter how hard you try to focus on the puppeteers (and believe me, I have), they bring Joey and Topthorn, Joey's army horse friend, to life in such a way that you just stop seeing them. There are several moments where the puppets' choreography takes my breath away.
The National Theatre production is slightly different from the Broadway one. The text is altered for one. Captain Nichols has a heroic and nationalistic speech before the first cavalry charge in Act I that was cut from the Broadway production, probably because it wouldn't resonate in the same way. In addition, this production has several small parts spoken in French and German. In the Broadway production, these were spoken in English with exaggerated accents. I personally think the comedy worked better in French and German, especially during the No Man's Land scene. I think the assumption is that British audiences are more likely to know some conversational German and French, whereas American audiences aren't. Things like this make me think that Brits are just naturally smarter.
The performances were quite good. Sion Young's (Albert) performance was adorable in the first act but really took off in the second act. Ian Shaw (Friedrich) was also quite good once he decided to stop shouting so much. The ensemble member singing lead in the folk songs had a particularly poignant and beautiful voice. All three of the horse teams were brilliant, but I loved the team performing Topthorn. Their performance was wonderfully spirited.
I think NTLive might need to readjust lighting design for these live streamed productions though. Several scenes were quite dark on film, which makes me think that they didn't adjust anything for the live stream. That's a small quibble, however.
There are three more encore performances this month at Symphony Space on April 3, 11, and 16. I highly recommend that you see this if you didn't see it when it was in New York. General admission tickets are $23 (regular), $21 (students and seniors), and $19 (Symphony Space members). If you're not in New York, performances near you can be found here.
And if you need some convincing first, see the videos below.
TED Talk featuring Adrian Kohler and Basil Jones (Handspring Puppet Company).
Joey in action at Sandown Park, Esher Park.
But seriously...go see the show. You won't regret it.
Selasa, Februari 11, 2014
Not Your Mama’s Fairytales or: In Real Life Everything Sucks
Last week, I went to the TRUF at the Chain Theater in Long Island City to see a series of three, one-act plays which were all postmodern-ish retellings/adaptations of fairy tales. At the heart of all three plays were major existential themes: what things drive us to self-destruction? Is death a form of freedom...from endless wants, trauma, duty, or circumstances beyond our control? While admirable and relevant, the plays varied greatly in terms of their execution and quality.
Little Red - written by Billy Aronson, directed by Paul Urcioli, choreographed by Stacey Abeles
This play was the first out of the gate and definitely the weakest of the bunch. It attempts to put a more adult twist on the tale of “Little Red Riding Hood.” The story follows the trajectory of the fairytale, but the familiar characters are fleshed out in less innocent ways. For example, Red’s mother is overbearing and harbors murderous fantasies toward her own mother. The Hunter is turned into Red’s incompetent father. Red and the Wolf’s encounter in the woods is sexually charged, and both Red and her grandmother desire to be eaten by him. Red, in the end, is forced to live “happily ever after” despite wanting to die.
The thought that kept occurring to me as I watched Little Red was that the budget was used in all the wrong ways. Sets were changed through these moving projection screens that seemed to eat up the production costs. Actors had to mime props like the table, food, flowers, and Red’s basket. Because of this, the production came across as quite amateur and high school-ish, despite the actors’ valiant efforts to lift it. The dance at the start to Sam the Sham and the Pharoah’s “Little Red Riding Hood” was unnecessary and not very well executed on the small stage. Rick Cekovsky, who portrayed the Wolf, had on these terrible ears. They were quite a shame as he was quite handsome and could have sold the performance well sans ears. Overall, it seemed like Urcioli had good ambitions but didn’t really consider the realities of the space. And the production suffered because of that.
Forever Neverland - written by Mike Swift, directed by P. Adam Walsh
I fear my reception of this play was colored by my dismay at the first piece. Finding Neverland takes place in a carriage on the ferris wheel at Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch...though it took me reading the synopsis to fully figure that out. The carriage lifts off with two Lost Boys named Billy and Gene (ba-dump chink), the Prince, and the Prince’s pet chimpanzee. They are joined at the last minute by a girl named Mary Martin (Clever? I’m ambivalent...) who is disguised as a boy. She has cancer and believes that the King of Neverland will heal her. However, they only treat little boys in Neverland, so when her gender is discovered, she escapes by jumping into the same Ferris wheel carriage. All sorts of hijinks and death ensue because of the Prince’s sadistic tendencies and the randomly violent chimpanzee. Towards the end, the only two characters left are Mary and and Billy. Their conversation reveals that the King has prevented Neverland’s Lost Boys from growing up by sexually assaulting them. Their only escape is to “fly away” (i.e. leaping to their deaths).
Forever Neverland, again, had good thematic intentions but wasn’t executed well. The first two thirds or so had some serious pacing issues and had me looking at my watch several times even though it was only thirty minutes long. I was very confused for much of the play. It improved, though, as characters left the set. The ending was poignant, but it was hard work getting there.
Swift’s writing needs some work, especially at the beginning, because the premise isn’t immediately clear. You don’t know who the characters are and why you should even care. Production elements like the fake blood are unnecessary, especially in a small space. Part of me wonders if it was imagined far more cinematically in the playwright’s mind. Structurally, it seems like certain plot points would be difficult for any director to bring to life on a stage, especially one as intimate as the TRUF.
The Weight of Wishing - written by Sarah Gallina, directed by Sharone Halevy
This play made the other two worth sitting through. The Weight of Wishing tells the story of Daisy, who lives life as it were a fairy tale. Her world comes crashing down around her as the realities of every day life show her that happy endings may, in fact, only exist in stories.
The Weight of Wishing sparkled in a way that the other two didn’t. The dialogue was beautiful and the direction was nuanced. For once, it didn’t feel like the actors (who were good in all three plays) were trying to make up for deficiencies in staging or production. Michaela Morton (Daisy) and Nick Masson (Mark) had brilliant on stage chemistry as sister and brother. Halevy, unlike Urcioli and Walsh, seemed to understand the limits of performing in a black box theatre and made it work. The only thing I didn't love was the cardboard flower shop. It just didn't look good.
If anything, I think some of the opening conversation between Daisy and Mark could be made clearer. Her initial “real-life” state could be better established in that conversation, so that her journey becomes all the more poignant. This play has the most potential of the three presented, and I hope to see it in another incarnation.
(press ticket, fourth row center)
Isnin, Januari 27, 2014
My Daughter Keeps Our Hammer
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| Katherine Folk-Sullivan (left) and Layla Khoshnoudi (right) Photo credit: Hunter Canning |
With a 65 minute run time, Brian Watkins' My Daughter Keeps Our Hammer is a short and provocative one act play. It is well worth your time.
The premise is one that the typical New Yorker or urbanite will find foreign. Two sisters, both college uneducated, living in the middle of a prairie out West. The elder sister Sarah is burdened with maintaining the family home/land and caring for her ailing mother and a lone sheep named Vicky, while the younger sister Hannah works every day at a roadside diner wrestling with a mild wanderlust and an Isuzu that won't take her anywhere. Yet its very foreignness is what makes the play all the more poignant when you start to relate to these characters.
The story is told through a series of monologues by the two sisters. As they state at the beginning, they don't talk much to each other, even as they recall the same events. Estranged by bitterness, jealousy, and the memories of happier times, Sarah and Hannah's relationship is simultaneously archetypal and personal. The raw honesty and frequently irreverent humor of their stories highlight the deeper, darker things that often motivate actions. The strength of this work lies in the characters' step-by-step decisions and tiny explosions of violence, which have the power to transform us from humans with delusions of moral decency to stumbling unrecognizable creatures. (I once heard a variant of that phrase used with regards to Breaking Bad...it seemed applicable here.)
I'll leave my description at that because I don't want to give too much away. Production-wise, the choreography of light was quite brilliant (Was that too punny?) - from flashlight to overhead lamp to flame. The performance by Katherine Folk-Sullivan (Sarah) was top notch. She especially shone in the moments when Hannah was speaking and you could see the play of emotions across her face. Layla Khoshnoudi was delightfully funny and insightful as Hannah.
This was my first Off-Off-Broadway play. I loved the intimacy of the theatre (only two rows of seats), but it was a very wide stage which made views slightly uncomfortable. Granted, I was sitting at the end of a row. I kind of wonder if this play might work in the round...but, random musings. Final verdict: I highly recommend it. This is a journey worth going on with Sarah and Hannah.
My Daughter Keeps Our Hammer is playing at The Flea Theater (41 White Street) through February 15.
(press ticket, second row, far left)
Isnin, Disember 16, 2013
Big Fish
Though Big Fish will be closing on December 29, I figured that it was worth a review because its feel-good quality may be the sort of diversion people are looking for during the holiday season.
Based on the novel by Daniel Wallace (though people may be more familiar with Tim Burton’s screen adaptation), Big Fish tells the story of Edward and Will Bloom, an estranged father and son. Edward, played by Norbert Leo Butz, has a penchant for telling autobiographical tall tales - full of mermaids, witches, and giants - that constantly aggravate his more practically minded son Will, played by Bobby Steggert. The musical follows the grown Will as he tries to figure out the truth behind his father’s fantastical stories, while he himself is expecting his own son and Edward’s health is failing. Despite my issues with some aspects of the production, I shed some tears at its heartwarming conclusion.
Norbert Leo Butz is a formidable star and his performance alone makes this production worth seeing. His changes in physicality for Edward’s life stages and well as his magnetic stage presence carry most of Act I, though perhaps to the detriment of his costars. Kate Baldwin, who played his wife, was overshadowed quite a bit. At the particular performance that I attended, it also took Steggert a while to settle into character.
The show lacked focus at its start, but tightened up towards the end of Act I and moving into Act II. I felt that some of the production elements, namely the visual projections, hindered the show rather than helped it. They were particularly distracting and unnecessary in the Witch’s number; Stroman’s choreography alone would have created the desired visual effect. The story is ultimately about fathers and sons, and I felt that Big Fish fell into a common Broadway trap - just because you can do [fill-in-the-blank-with-a-fancy-expensive-stage-trick] doesn’t mean you ought to.
It’ll be interesting to track the life of Big Fish past its Broadway closing date. A cast album is slated for release in February, but I’m not sure how much it will help the brand as Andrew Lippa’s music and lyrics are pop/rock-y cute but not particularly memorable. If taken on the road, Big Fish will need to tighten its first act so that it doesn’t rely so much on its lead actor. National tours do not usually feature stars that can draw crowds like Butz,. Also, the show needs a bit of pruning to make the musical’s narrative theme - that of familial reconciliation - stand out more.
In spite of my nitpickings, Big Fish is a sweet musical with a lot of heart. If you're looking for non-holiday themed, but heartwarming entertainment for this time of year, I recommend it.
Playing at the Neil Simon Theatre, Friend-of-a-Friend Comp Ticket, Center Orchestra Row R
Ahad, November 24, 2013
Hello! My name is...
Hello, gentle readers,
My name is Aya, and I am honored to be joining Show Showdown as a contributor/reviewer. Thought I would write a few introductory words...
Who am I? (24601) I am a recently minted Ph.D. candidate in Musicology at the Graduate Center, CUNY, and hoping to successfully navigate the edges of the black hole called the dissertation within three years or so. My main area of research involves musics created by participatory science fiction fans. My secondary research area is musical theatre. Strangely enough, these two areas have a surprising amount of overlap.
I have always been a huge musical nerd. Often, I break out into song and dance in public places, to the chagrin of my friends. You remember when Facebook used to have that bumper sticker app? I think I received the "I wish life were a musical" sticker eight different times from FB friends who did not know each other.
For a long time though, I did not know that musical theatre studies was a legit area of research inquiry until I took a grad seminar on the rock musical by my now mentor and Show Showdown writer Liz Wollman. It opened up a whole new world. I'm particularly fascinated by how musicals function as vehicles for the performance of personal identity. My main work-in-progress is an article on Bill T. Jones' FELA!; I'm also interested in recent new media musicals like Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, Smash, and Nashville. (Sorry, Glee jumped the shark for me midway through season three.)
While I mainly channel my nerdy energy into academic pursuits, I am lucky enough to live, work, and hang out with several people who are involved in the theatre industry. My two roommates - one of whom is a professional stage manager and the other an actress, general manager, and producer - keep my head from getting too inflated with academic pondering. I also volunteer with a community theatre on Roosevelt Island and have had the opportunity to work with some crazily talented teens and children, some of whom are currently starring in film, Broadway, off-Broadway, and web serial productions.
I am so looking forward to writing for you all. Bonus points if you caught all my musical references...Till next time!
My name is Aya, and I am honored to be joining Show Showdown as a contributor/reviewer. Thought I would write a few introductory words...
Who am I? (24601) I am a recently minted Ph.D. candidate in Musicology at the Graduate Center, CUNY, and hoping to successfully navigate the edges of the black hole called the dissertation within three years or so. My main area of research involves musics created by participatory science fiction fans. My secondary research area is musical theatre. Strangely enough, these two areas have a surprising amount of overlap.
I have always been a huge musical nerd. Often, I break out into song and dance in public places, to the chagrin of my friends. You remember when Facebook used to have that bumper sticker app? I think I received the "I wish life were a musical" sticker eight different times from FB friends who did not know each other.
For a long time though, I did not know that musical theatre studies was a legit area of research inquiry until I took a grad seminar on the rock musical by my now mentor and Show Showdown writer Liz Wollman. It opened up a whole new world. I'm particularly fascinated by how musicals function as vehicles for the performance of personal identity. My main work-in-progress is an article on Bill T. Jones' FELA!; I'm also interested in recent new media musicals like Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, Smash, and Nashville. (Sorry, Glee jumped the shark for me midway through season three.)
While I mainly channel my nerdy energy into academic pursuits, I am lucky enough to live, work, and hang out with several people who are involved in the theatre industry. My two roommates - one of whom is a professional stage manager and the other an actress, general manager, and producer - keep my head from getting too inflated with academic pondering. I also volunteer with a community theatre on Roosevelt Island and have had the opportunity to work with some crazily talented teens and children, some of whom are currently starring in film, Broadway, off-Broadway, and web serial productions.
I am so looking forward to writing for you all. Bonus points if you caught all my musical references...Till next time!
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