Friday, June 22, 2012

Moments that bare the truth......


For many of us who have a passion for the experience of live theatre and have been lucky enough to have seen some of the best in the world, we tend to avoid non-professional theatre productions.  It's not because we've become snobs, at least not all of us.  It is simply because we have become spoiled by some of the best live experiences in the world and we can be disappointed quickly.  So we just don't venture out to those experiences that we anticipate won't meet up with the best that we have seen.

 The best food requires the best ingredients and someone who really knows how to put those ingredients together in a way that gives us the best in food experience.  How many times have you gone out for an evening and  known right away which restaurant that you don't want to go to as well as which one you wish you could afford?  But every now and then you find yourself in that middle-of-the-road restaurant that you may not have chosen first.  And when you do, you find that your expectations have been met.  You may generally find the meal adequate but nothing that makes you want to return.  You are wishing that you would have saved your money and ate at home or at least ponied up the cash for what you felt sure was what you really wanted.

But then there are those times when you are at a middle-of-the-road restaurant with a new cook and you find something in the meal that is just memorable.  No the whole meal isn't perfect, but wow, you just can't forget the sensational taste of that special surprise you discovered part way through the meal.  What you have found is a place where the cook may be gifted with talent but they may not yet have become a chef.  And in spite of yourself you find you are telling a friend to try this restaurant. You might even be reminding them that they should try it now before that cook becomes a chef and moves on.

Well, I ventured out and tried the fare at a non-professional theater, and I witnessed some very special moments.  Playhouse South, in Kettering, Ohio is presenting "A Pop Opera" called BARE, a musical story of 2 young male lovers who struggle to confront their self-acceptance in the midst of their community's non-acceptance at a small Catholic boarding school.

It is a demanding work presented in a challenging environment.  In a barn-like auditorium with barn-like acoustics, with a sound system that wasn't always clear and was intermittent when it worked, the heat was tiresome with no air-conditioning on the first day of summer.  And yet there were moments in the performance that were so good that we forgot about those things.

The biggest surprise was the quality of many of the voices.  This cast has some really good voices.  BARE is nonstop singing and although most were good, some were really excellent.  Peter (Mike Embree) and Jason (Zach King) play the room-mates/secret lovers.  Both voices command attention and are well worth the evening.  Clean and clear and strong, both actors attack their roles with vigor and a passion that creates some of the special moments that bare the truth of the story.

Although large musicals are sometimes about the big cast numbers, this production’s most special moments are the small scenes.  Nadia’s (Lindsay Sherman) “Quiet Night At Home” is a stand out as is “See Me & Warning, Warning” with Clair (Anne Potter) and her son Peter.  Jason’s efforts to seek forgiveness from his priest (Eric Bracht) is a clarifying and moving moment. The performances are so strong in these small scenes that we are taken into their worlds and their pain and struggles.  They make us forget that we are in a hot barn struggling to hear talented musicians and vocalists.  They take us into the story.

Although this production’s director may be as green as the lettuce in your dinner salad, he has good instincts.  He let the performers follow their passion for the story.  And that is, after all, why we come to the theatre, for the story.

There is only one performance left of BARE.  If you can handle a good challenge and the surprises that may be your reward, catch the last performance of BARE.

(For information on BARE go to: http://www.playhousesouth.org/  )





Thursday, March 29, 2012

HRTC's GEM OF THE OCEAN


In the play of the same name, the ‘Gem Of The Ocean’ is a ‘ship’ that one may take on a journey to redemption, traveling through the reality of ancestors that have gone before.  Director, Mark Clayton Southers has shown us a window on this world with the most skillful direction of August Wilson’s play that takes us to an American past we are in danger of forgetting.

Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, August Wilson, has achieved a monumental task by creating a ten cycle series of plays that chronicles African American life throughout the 20th Century.  Gem of the Ocean is the first in this cycle giving us a transom to the first decade in the 1900’s.

The story’s center is an African American home in 1904 Pittsburgh, when slavery was still part of current memory, where sanctuary and the meaning of freedom were still central subjects of daily life, and when discussions of the distribution of power and money where not that different than today.  Wilson’s play is a tapestry of metaphor, allegory and hard cold reality woven in manner that keeps us watching and thinking about what comes next and what it means.  What is enchanting about this experience is how Wilson and Southers transport us back in time and move us seamlessly from the daily reality of this 1904 Pittsburgh home, peppered with delicious and meticulous stories, to the lyrical and spiritual experience of the grand life guide that is former slave, Aunt Ester.  She is 285 years of memory that has the power to anchor who we are and where we go as we struggle to find our way into the 20th century.  And this journey is powerful, and dare I say delightful.

There is not a weak link in the cast.  Dwandra Nickole brings to life Aunt Ester Tyler in a rich and rock-solid performance of the story’s clever spiritual guide.  Young actors should watch and learn from this performance.  Alan Bomar Jones presents us the quality that we have come to expect with his endearing and solid performance of Solly Two Kings.  Kevin Brown (Eli), Jonathan Berry (Citizen) and Bryant Bentley (Caesar), all talented actors, each give us grounded performances that are true to the playwright and this important work.

Marva Williams' performance as Black Mary is singular in this production as she provides us an emotional truth and unyielding connection to the turn of the century reality which has long escaped our memory.  Watch for her in the future, as she is a skilled actress to follow.  Scott Stoney plays Rutherford Selig, and once again makes us marvel at his complete immersion into character.  The simple truth of his work brings us into the story, as we have all known a hard-working, good-hearted, salesman with the gift of gab and a heart to match.

The Human Race Theatre has twice before presented us the work of August Wilson.  Each time has been a significant artistic event for our community.  This presentation is no less important.  Take sanctuary for an evening.  Make this journey with these artists to a place that has past us by but should not be forgotten.  It’s quite something to see.

(August Wilson's GEM OF THE OCEAN. Produced by The Human Race Theatre Company. March 29 - April 15, 2012 at The Loft Theatre)   http://humanracetheatre.org/1112goo.php

Monday, March 19, 2012

GOING TO ST. IVES

As I was going to St. Ives, I had a show with several lives.  That may be the refrain that Director Greg Smith might pronounce at the end of the run of the play Going to St. Ives by Lee Blessing currently at the Dayton Theatre Guild.

Live theatre is often about surprises.  Sometimes the surprises are those one can do without and others are those one can never envision, onstage and off.  The production of Going to St. Ives, currently at the Dayton Theatre Guild presents for you exactly what playwright Lee Blessing intended, a story with many levels of surprise.

A renowned British eye surgeon living safely in the village of St. Ives and the mother of a merciless African dictator come together with requests of each other that not only provide a bit of surprise but a basis for both to explore their own truths and life dilemmas.

Cast in this production are Katrina Kittle and Catherine Collins, both experienced actors.  Directed by Greg Smith, also a veteran of the theatre, this cast and production have also seen their share of surprises.  Moments before this production opened, Catherine Collins became seriously ill and was unable to continue.  A surprise one can do without.  Moments before the open, Director Smith found himself convincing a gifted actress, Marianna Harris, to step into the role of May N’Kame with no time for rehearsal.  She would have to go onstage with a script in hand.  A surprise neither could have envisioned.

Then the biggest surprise of all came for the audience.  It worked.  It made no difference.  These two talented actors did not let a script-in-hand or their worry about a colleague’s health or anything else get in the way of the story.  They connected and they made a little magic on the stage at the Guild.

The actress Marianna Harris incorporated this book in her hand as a prop and it became part of the story.  The character May N’Kame may well have been looking at her notes that she wanted to remember as she spoke to her doctor.  She didn’t miss a beat.  Her performance was not about the prop, it was about the life and conflict of May N’Kame.  And it was May who we came to know.

Katrina Kittle is a successful and talented novelist and her notoriety might bring some into the theatre to see her.  They will be disappointed.  She’s not there.  She brings Dr. Cora Gage to life in a sensitive way that compels you to pay attention to her story.  Her work is about the play.  She rolls with the challenges of the cast change and for the audience it is seamless.

What is fascinating about this event in the theatre is that in spite of the fact there are these other ‘reality’ stories behind the scenes, both of these talented actresses are able to take us past any other reality and straight to the story of Going to St. Ives, straight to the engaging story that Lee Blessing wrote.  And we are engaged and we are moved.

Live theatre is a collaborative storytelling effort.  Go to this theatre and take advantage of this collaboration.  After the playwright has finished penning the last line and the Director has given the last note, the actors are the final link in the collaboration.  This link is strong.  You have until April 1, 2012.   Spread the word and do yourself a favor.  Go to St. Ives.   Watch the magic.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

SEEING RED


The HRTC production of RED is what live theatre is about. It is why we choose to be a part of live theatre instead of going to a movie, watching the latest DVD, or even reading a book. When done well, the experience is unlike any other form of story telling. And this production is done well, very well.

Richard Hess has directed this work with a careful eye and keen sensitivity to John Logan’s play. For those of us who have spent time in our own art studio, we find that Logan and Hess have created an environment that is eerily familiar and draws our sympathy to the creative atmosphere and the characters in front of us. For those of us who have never been in that creative space, Logan and Hess have created a window into that world and the time capsule of this ageless story.

Michael Kenwood Lippert and Will Alan are simply excellent. Both performances are rich and real and transport us to a conversation on art and it’s meaning that is both visceral and intellectual. How easy it might have been for Hess, Lippert and Allan to have talked down to us. It is a trap they never fell into. They stayed true to the words and the heart of the work.


I have seen Lippert’s work in the past. This performance is as giving and serious as any he has shared with the public. He still inspires. I have never seen Allan perform before but now I want more. His talent and energy is a strong match for Lippert’s. We don’t know who put Logan, Hess, Lippert and Allan together. We do know the combination is inspired.


This production is a work of art that was truly collaborative and the combination of these giving artists, Logan, Hess, Lippert and Allan, brings a gift to our community that makes live theatre viable and important. Each of us deserves a gift to ourselves now and then. Allow this production to be that gift. For an evening of the best in intimate, personal and live theatre, see RED.


Thursday, January 19 at 8:00pm at The Loft Theatre