Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Dating Walter Dante @ Raven Theatre

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His first wife may or may not have drowned accidentally...
His second wife is missing...
AND NOW HE HAS A GIRLFRIEND...
final
I enjoyed this production. The script (fact-based, but we’ll get to that later) was like Special Victims Unit meets Jodi Picoult, provided moments of starting poetry & insight, and created characters that provided the 360 degrees of reaction to a central conflict. The set was forgettable & the costumes were fine. I did like the idea of costuming entirely in grayscale shades to accentuate the shadowy shades of truth.

Kristin Collins played Laura Bakersfield, our leading lady & central protagonist. She was just great in her multi-faceted performance as an authentically contemporary broad, a hopeful/hopeless romantic, & an endearing individual. In the role of our antagonist & title character, Jason Huysman could have played a bolder Walter Dante; he lacked a positive or negative charge, so seemed annoyingly neutral in his role of the possible serial killer. He was sufficient, but sufficiency does not quite suffice in such a complicated & central role. Brigitte Ditmars & Michael Boone played Suzanne & Harper Liff, Laura’s best friend & her husband. She was GREAT; he was good. As a couple, their conversation was infused with a familiar intimacy. As individuals, she seemed more at home in her role whereas he seemed like he was acting a little too much.

Scott Allen Luke played Sam Brunner, Laura’s ex-husband who still felt a sense of protectiveness over her. His performance was adequate but lacked a certain punch & authenticity. Antoine Pierre played Whitfield Russell Gibbs, the cop actively pursuing Walter Dante. He provided strong punctuating moments & I wish he’d had more stage time. Stacie Barra played Ellen, the active & present ghost of Walter’s first wife who drowned in their pool. Her role was a strange & complicated character (the ghost of a woman who doesn’t know how she was murdered & can’t shake the hold the living commit upon her). She grew on me because she was so strongly committed to her character & created a character that was striking & 3-D, despite being a ghost. She created a woman I could have envisioned alive. I wish she her costume & styling were more striking manner, but her acting & interpretation were dead-on [pun intended].


The Elephant in the Theatre
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The minimalist program desperately needed a note from the playwright or director. Chicago-based playwright Jon Steinhagen unabashedly used local non-fiction news as an inspiration for his recent Blizzard ‘67. The inspiration for this script should have been as equally openly-acknowledged. Maybe the facts behind the fiction were swept under the rug because the inspiration is contemporary & the victims‘ families are still in the thick of things; maybe because the inspiration was based on horrific crimes rather than an event naturally/organically; maybe it was a thoughtless oversight by the director. Even if the inspiration is if-y, facts are facts & paying audience members deserve as much knowledge as a theatre can share, which is why…THIS PRODUCTION NEEDED A DRAMATURGE.

Dramaturgy is an emerging field & new necessity for theatres in the post-9/11 world where audiences are smarter & need facts behind the fiction. Their primary role is to provide research & reference to enrich the experience/production for the actors, production staff, & audience. During the summer of 2005, I interned in Dramaturgy at Philadelphia Theatre Company. The play was The Beauty Inside by Catherine Filloux & the production opened in conjunction with NYC’s New Georges’ Theatre. The play centered on a 13-year-old Turkish girl who survived an honor killing & the American lawyer who takes on her case, despite the fact that the girl sides with the family that tried to kill her. My research included interviews with honor killing survivors, activists working with the U.N., imagery of contemporary Turkey for the design teams, & script stuff (dialect/definition/vernacular). This information was integral to the production because the production staff was so wholly committed to respecting & representing the authenticity of the world within the script.

As a non-native to Chicago & someone who was not wholly familiar on the Peterson case prior to seeing the show, my experience as an audience member would have improved exponentially from the infusion of the dramaturge’s efforts. I love research-based scripts & wish I had gone into the theatre knowing that’s what I was seeing. A dramaturge’s research would have helped the actors infinitely as well (I’m envisioning the psychology, knowledge on the actual aftermath in the community, & research on the people who lived in that community).

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Thursday, February 23, 2012

Project Runway's Broadway Debut!


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I loved last week’s Project Runway All-Stars. The great Stephen Schwartz presented the designer’s mission: to create a costume for Uzo Aduba in the Broadway production of GODSPELL. The parameters for the costume were that it had to be bold, conducive to the stage, & convey wealth. The winning designer’s costume will be incorporated in the Broadway production & the designer will have a bio in the Playbill (pretty much the best prize ever, IMO). Sutton Foster served as the guest judge, which I loved since she is authentically one of Broadway’s Golden Girls as opposed to some Hollywood actress who happened to set a foot on a stage once. Well done, Project Runway!
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  1. Mondo’s design won & was definitely the most striking, lively & dynamic. It seems the design was so detail-oriented that some of his vision & craftsmanship would get in a huge Broadway theatre. His design was the only one without a without a cinched waist, which would probably be helpful for a singer. But it was also very flowy, which seems like it’d be a nuisance for live theatre. I did love that jacket.
  2. Austin was our runner-up. I wanted to love his look & almost did. I loved the Gossip Girl feel of pouf skirt with cropped leggings, but the neckline & arm embellishments would also be very restrictive on-stage. He used a smart color scheme for the challenge but the overall effect seemed too juvenile.
  3. Michael got the bronze medal. I don’t get why he is on this show or why the judges put up with him. He used a cute, sassy silhouette, but chose awkward colors to convey wealth (except in the shoe choice, ironically enough). Angela Lindvall hit the nail on the head when she said, “Michael, this almost reminds me of the Chiquita Banana woman.”
  4. Jerrel came in fourth because his look was too closed-off & conservative. I would have really liked the look with a more open neckline & shorter, puffier skirt. The model had a really strange hair-do that grew on me only because it was so innovative & somehow did convey the character’s wealthy status.
  5. Kenley’s design was my personal favorite & I was surprised/disappointed with her 5th place standing. Her design seemed the most theatrically-oriented: the colors were fun & vibrant with design that would be striking even from the back of the mezzanine. It was also fitted but with some flair, so it would be easy to move in onstage. My favorite parts: the white fur trim & the hairpiece.
  6. Mila came in 6th, but probably should have been eliminated. The lime green in the skirt reminded me of Nickelodeon & the asymmetrical hemline looked accidental. I have no idea as to her point, perspective, or inspiration. Bad taste, bad execution, bad styling.
  7. Kara was eliminated. While I agree her design was pretty terrible, I do think Mila’s was worse. Kara’s design was like a poor man’s impression of rich (Nina Garcia would have thrown up in her mouth.) The bow looks like something from the Forever 21 clearance bin. It wasn’t modern; it kind of felt like the knock-off of a misinterpreted vision. I don’t appreciate that, but at least there is some reasoning behind her design whereas Mila’s made no sense in any direction.
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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

NEWS: Taylor Swift is NOT Eponine!

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Taylor Swift Is Out Of The Picture! (pun intended) This is a pleasing development.

I haven’t been all that impressed with the casting choices for this important movie; they seemed random, big-name-oriented, and, above all, disjointed. This casting (re-casting?) is a direct shift in that wind. SAMANTHA BARKS is making her film debut as Eponine, a role that marked her West End debut last year & that she revived in the Les Miserables 25th Anniversary Concert at The O2. Before playing Eponine, she finished in the Top Three in “I’d Do Anything” (the BBC search for the new ‘Nancy’ in Cameron Mackintosh’s Oliver!), workshopped Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Love Never Dies, played Sally Bowles in the national tour of Cabaret, and played the title role in Aladdin at the Theatre Royal Windsor. I’m so glad they decided to go with a true-blue musical theatre girl, especially considering the stiff competition of runners-up like Lea Michele, Scarlett Johansson & Evan Rachel Wood.

I love that Samantha Barks has a fresh face. She’s an underdog of sorts, being relatively unknown except to the musical theatre community. For the iPhone generation that will be experiencing The Great Les Miserables for the first time, it would be difficult to dissociate the familiar face of TAYLOR SWIFT with the independent & isolated character that is Eponine. Had Swift actually been cast in this role, I am completely confident that ‘On My Own’ would have ended up as a strange, re-mixed, country/radio version of a most beloved classic musical theatre ballad. Thankfully/hopefully, it will be more along the lines of this:

My favorite element of this casting development was
the musical-theatre fairy-tale manner in which it was delivered. 
Barks is currently playing Nancy in the West End’s Oliver! (after coming in 3rd place 4 years ago in “I’d Do Anything”).
 During curtain calls on January 31, Cameron Mackintosh announced that Barks had won the race for the role.
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I can’t believe I’m going to play Eponine, a role so close to my heart, a role I played in the West End. It’s the happiest moment of my life. The moment I found out I started to shake and then I started crying. I’m still shaking now."
~Samantha Barks

Thursday, February 9, 2012

NEWS: Stage 773 Announces 'Funny Women's Festival'

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This is a very exciting development. The creation of the festival (dates TBD) itself just awesome, but it also speaks volumes about the progressive nature of contemporary Chicago theatre-goers & smart insight of the theatre professionals behind this project. Chicago is not the only city to take advantage of the current spotlight on the female comedienne. From March 21-25, Boston will host the 4th Annual Women In Comedy Festival. Austin, TX has also hosts the 5th Annual Ladies Are Funny Festival! to be held May 5-7. There used to be a Pacific Northwest Women's Comedy Festival, but that expired in 2010. I am inclined to think Funny Women's Festival will provide the highest quality of performance since Chicago is known & loved for it’s strong comedic roots; Chicago (specifically Second City) has also served as the launching pad & soap box for most of our most beloved female comediennes.

I recently reviewed Bachelorette at Profiles Theatre & addressed the presence of the funny female erupting on-screen & the positive trickle-down effects this trend has had on live-theatre. Equally exciting is the recent emergence of female stand-up comediennes because these women present a new Power TriFecta: The Writer, Actress, Comedienne. The art of humor is an intimidating & difficult arena of performance to conquer; being a talented actress does not necessarily indicate the ability to stand at a microphone in front of a crowd of strangers who are expect lots of laughs, clever insight, & a certain flavor of charismatic charm. My favorite part of this trend is that it allows comediennes like Tina Fey, Chelsea Handler, and Mindy Kaling (whose blog rules) to take their writing to the next level by publishing books. And the more ladies we can get on the NY Times Best Sellers List, the better. Julie Gillis, Producer of Ladies Are Funny Festival!, hit the nail on the head when she blogged:

Women’s stories are important & there needs to be a space for them. People who have stories focused on being women, wanting to be women, what does it mean to be a woman...I have a need for these stories. I’m going to keep making a space for them to be told.  Cause I think it makes the world a more interesting place, frankly.
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Sunday, February 5, 2012

NEWS: ICEMAN Cometh to Chicago for Pre-Bway Run

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Eugene O'Neill's towering masterpiece becomes a once-in-a-lifetime theatrical event,
Welcome to Harry Hope's saloon, home to a ragtag band of drunks and dreamers who today celebrate the arrival of Hickey, the charismatic traveling salesman whose raucous presence always ensures a grand good time. But when a newly sober Hickey blows in with a renewed outlook on life, his zealous attempts to fix the lives of his old friends leads to a series of events that are at once devastatingly comic and heartbreaking—and a revelation that threatens to shatter the tenuous illusions that fuel their lives. O'Neill's monumental drama is an unparalleled theatrical journey, "as corrosive as rotgut whiskey, as morbidly funny as a funeral gone amok, as hallucinatory as an alcohol-fueled excursion into purgatory" (Sun-Times).
Runs @ The Goodman April 21 - June 10...


WHICH SUCKETH FOR 2 REASONS:  
1. It’s a really long time away.
2. The production barely missed the cut-off for the benefits from  Senate Bill 397
[otherwise known as Live Theatre Production Tax Credit], which goes into effect in July, 2012  

Chicago has long served as a cocoon for premiering pre-Broadway shows (SPAMALOT, The ProducersMAMMA MIA!, Movin' OutAIDA, The Addams Family, etc.) while simultaneously housing long-running Broadway-quality shows (WICKED, Million Dollar Quartet, THE LION KING, Jersey Boys, RAGTIME, ect.). On Dec. 16, 2011, Governor Pat Quinn signed Senate Bill 397, which gives a tax credit for live theatres with 1,200+ seats that boosts the Theatre In Chicago (the bill also benefits Sears, CME Group, & FARMERS!). Beginning in July, certain theatres (excluding those in the suburbs) that produce pre-Broadway or long-running shows with labor & marketing expenses that exceed $100,000 can receive a 20% tax application of their spending (with a $2 million cap per year).
I could not support this legislature more.

My Opinion Is Shared By The Queen & King Of Chicago Theatre:
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