I Never Sang For My Father

Relationships with one’s parents are often mined for drama and comedy.  The Thanksgiving table can sometimes seem like immersive live theater.  Once in a while, a playwright uses his personal experience to explore his own feelings.  Robert Anderson does that in his deeply introspective I Never Sang For My Father.

Son Gene is picking his parents up from the train in New York City as the play opens.  Their snowbird months are over and it’s time to return to Westchester.  Mom is suffering from cancer, heart attacks and arthritis.  She seems to be a cheerful soul.  Dad is a retired Brigadier General who only watches westerns on television.  He has a nagging cough but will not see a doctor.  Self-absorption fuels his interactions with family and strangers.

Tom and Margaret are fairly ordinary parental types.  She is kind and defers to her husband.  When he banned their daughter for marrying a Jewish man, she acquiesced.  His philosophy is staunchly mid-century white American male.  “Any man with a sound body can achieve whatever he wants within reason.”  The first argument is between father and son concerning the route to drive home.

Even though we’ve seen these people before (on stage and off), they are defined individuals and believably developed. The audience bonded with them early.  Jokes about driver’s licenses and handkerchiefs elicited knowing laughs of recognition.  With a simple stage of black boxes, director Richard Hoehler creates smooth transitions, notably from the backyard garden to Schraft’s restaurant.

After a fight over who is paying for dinner, Gene implores Dad not to order dinner based on the lowest priced option.  We have seen and heard all of this before so what makes this play needed?  Mr. Anderson is writing from a very personal space.  The mood is melancholy.  The pace is very measured.  The result is a production that feels excruciatingly long.

Details are repeated over and over throughout the play.  Some are critical to the plot such as Dad’s narcissistic obsession with telling his life story to anyone who will listen.  Others just slow down the momentum like references to westerns and the father’s pained relationship with Gene’s grandfather.  The tone feels intentional and intimately personal.  The story is not incredibly unique so the oft-repeated points become barriers to absorbing the emotions of the play.  Instead, the audience is enduring a marathon of familial analysis.

Mr. Anderson’s writing contains some very thoughtful observations.  One of my favorites was from Mom.  “What a shame children cannot see their parents when they are young and courting.”  Many of the scenes are well-done.  The acting is good despite fairly generic characters and situations.  The role of Gene flips repeatedly between narrator and son.  Portrayed by David Lee, the effect is a clinical study rather than an emotional journey.  Whether or not intended, the result is to create distance between the viewer and the family.

As Gene’s parents, Michael S. Horowitz and Georgia Buchanan have created nicely shaded portrayals of elderly parents in decline.  The highs and lows of a full life lived are etched in their words and mannerisms.  Another highlight was the assorted characters played by Elizabeth Maille in supporting roles.  Different accents were employed and they were immensely fun to watch.  That’s a good thing and a bad thing.  I thoroughly enjoyed her interpretations as the core drama was plodding along.

I Never Sang For My Father is clearly a heartfelt meditation of a son’s coming to terms with the distant relationship he had with an overbearing, selfish, wildly successful father.  The average theatergoer, however, will not have enough patience to experience this journey despite its realness and importance to the author.

I Never Sang For My Father will be performed at The Chain Theatre through September 22nd.

www.thechaintheatre.org

Bad Penny and Sincerity Forever (Flea Theater)

“I do not feel compelled by reason to accept this theory of evolution, nor the periodic table of elements, nor the theory of global warming, nor the supposed crimes against the Jews attributed to one Rudolf Hitler.”  Bad Penny and Sincerity Forever are Mac Wellman plays originally staged in 1989 and 1990.  Absolutely nothing is dated or stale in his evisceration and condemnation of America and its “littleness and stupidity and bitterness and rage and greed.”

Bad Penny is the first production performed in the new outside venue of Pete’s Courtyard at the Flea Theater.  I took my seat at the picnic table.  There were chairs, blankets and mats.  The audience is an intimately-sized two dozen.  The cast trickles in.  Some lightly humorous cornhole is played.  Then Woman #1 (Emma Orme) begins ruminating on the nature of the sky.  Is it “one big fake, one great big, vast, optical illusion”?

Before the play begins, Man #1 (Joseph Huffman) enters carrying a tire and noticeably bearing an unseen weight on his shoulders.  He’s an ex-football jock from Big Ugly, Montana whose car has broken down.  He is crossing the park in search of a repair shop.  He works at a nuclear toxic waste site.  He spars with Woman #1.  Others jump on the easy judgmental band wagon.  He’s a “lazy good-for-nothing.  I mean look at that look on his face.”  Thirty years later, the American pastime of criticizing others with little knowledge is now an art form practiced by Facebook ranters, quick-thumbed Tweeters and leaders of the free world.

Another woman denounces “Mr. Minder-of-Other-People’s-Beeswax.”  Later she comments that “you can tell just by looking at her that she is a floozy, or homeless, or damaged goods…”  The toxicity of the human race is the thread running through this rambling play.  Surrealism and absurdity seem to be the intention but much of the performance is flat and lacking depth.

As Man #1, Joseph Huffman develops a fully fleshed out persona.  His dejected all-American hangs onto the belief that “nobody but fools believe in anything but power, money, muscle and good old-fashioned American cheese.”  There are many witty lines and ripe targets splattered throughout Bad Penny.  This production, however, is like watching an acting exercise of widely varying quality.

A retrospective of Mr. Wellman’s work is being staged at the Flea, a company he co-founded.  Five works are being presented.  Later the same evening I sat down to watch Sincerity Forever which was originally dedicated to Senator Jesse Helms “for the fine job you are doing of destroying civil liberties in These States.”  If Bad Penny is the intellectually amusing but ultimately bland appetizer, Sincerity Forever is the juicy entree – medium rare, bloody, succulent and hilarious.

When this play opens, Judy asks “Molly, do you know why God created the world the way he did?  so complicated I mean?”  Both are wearing their KKK garb.  Molly doesn’t care that she knows nothing.  “The most important thing is not what you know, but whether you’re sincere or not.”  Seven sincere young people who are members of the Invisible Nation are skewered for their vapidity and ignorance.  Directed by Dina Vovsi, the entire ensemble nails the perfect tone for this comedic tirade.

Mr. Wellman is not subtle when he satirizes bigoted white kids.  Two young men lift their hoods to reveal inner thoughts, if you can actually call them thinkers.  “I, too, may be as dumb as a post, and unclear about the multiplication table, the boundaries of more than half dozen states, and unable to repair my own toilet, but dammit, Hank, if the English language was good enough for Jesus H. Christ…”  I laughed out loud frequently.  Nothing I heard seemed remotely dated, sadly.

Two Furballs from the tribes of Belial and Abaddon throw in their two cents.  Belial is the Hebrew and then later Christian personification of the devil.  Abaddon is the realm of the dead.  These characters are the punkish, gothic kids who are disgusted by these “smarmy goody-two-shoes” and their “chintzy, cheesy, boring mediocrity.”  The question lingers.  What exactly is good and right?  If god does exist, what would she think?

Thankfully we do not have to guess.  Jesus H. Christ (Amber Jaunai) shows up sporadically in the form of an African American woman.  She stands up, screams and condemns her misguided flock of hypocrites in a blistering monologue.  In 1990, Mr. Wellman wrote this line for Jesus:  “I got nothing to say to you, America.”  Both barrels, right between the eyes. The rage is palpable, effective and thrillingly theatrical.  Would Jesus have any different view today about a land of unceasing gun violence, brown-skinned child abuse and abject derision of any moral code?

Not every moment in Sincerity Forever swings a sledge hammer.  When the righteous Thor takes a pause, we see these misguided youth growing up worrying about dating and the meaning of life.  That ordinariness is what makes Sincerity Forever so very real, if grotesquely exaggerated and lampooned for effect.  So very real, so very funny, so very scary and so very disheartening.

I’m glad I saw both of Mac Wellman’s works revived on the same evening and now.  America is nothing if not a country overwhelmingly draped in (and hideously proud of) false sincerity.  Find a bad penny and pick it up…

Mac Wellman: Perfect Catastrophes is a festival of five plays running through November 1st.  Bad Penny and Sincerity Forever will be performed through October 7th and mostly on the same evening.

www.theflea.org

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/wellman/achronicleofthemadnessofsmallworlds

Boogieban

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is the mental health condition explored in DC Fidler’s play Boogieban.  Lieutenant Colonel Lawrence Caplan is a veteran of the Vietnam War.  He now works for the military evaluating soldiers and their emotional fitness.  Specialist Jason Wynsky is his newest charge, a man recently returned from Afghanistan.  This two character play sets up a stimulating juxtaposition of the experience of war and its impact on men from different eras.

Caplan is just one week from retirement.  Boxes are beginning to be filled with his books.  His wife is nagging him on the phone to come home and go sailing.  Wynsky is going to be his last patient.  Their meetings will proceed from vaguely innocuous (and sometimes snarky) chatter to a deeply riveting meditation on what our brave soldiers have and continue to endure.

This playwright has over four decades of clinical psychiatry and psychology expertise.  The story is definitely written to be therapeutically redemptive for those individuals and their families who may have endured similar scarring journeys.  “We know how to send our young to war.  We know to welcome them back with parades, garlands and trumpets.  We have never known how to bring home their hearts and souls.”

David Peacock portrays the older Caplan.  Wiser from age and experience, he understands the military is where “mature farts exploit immature farts.”  Living and breathing a call to serve, his son followed in his footsteps and died.  The American flag box sits prominently on a shelf.  Caplan is the stiff-upper lip type but tinged with the weariness of a man who has seen enough suffering in this lifetime.  He heals others while still quietly healing himself.

Specialist Wynsky is played by Travis Teffner.  There is a casualness to this  performance that is endearingly relaxed and original.  The role could easily be hard-nosed, defensive and off-putting, especially at first.  The character is not an amalgam of PTSD stories previously chronicled elsewhere.  Instead, this unique individual is filled with his own interesting, personalized details (such as the T-Rex).

As you would expect, Wynsky’s protective emotional battle armor will eventually reveal a complicated core.  His troubled mother gave birth to her son at the age of fourteen but abandoned him to be raised by his grandmother.  The structure of the army as a way out and forward is clear.

Over the course of nearly two hours, Boogieban will alternate between the evaluation sessions and ruminations from the elder Caplan.  There are multiple sections which do seem long and meandering.  The payoff in the last thirty minutes, however, is worth the investment.  What are this young soldiers nightmares all about?  Director Sean Derry guided a powerful finale filled with heightened dramatic tension which hits hard and then sustains its compelling focus.

There is a convenient coincidence introduced near the end of the play which feels forced and unnecessary in order to have both men provide solace to each other.  However, the multi-generational framework and the ability to think about right and wrong with the wisdom of experience hits the mark and is effective.  This play has a soul.

DC Fidler’s Boogieban does contain some broad commentary about the long-lasting damage inflicted upon our American troops.  Since we are a country always at war now, his heartfelt plea for greater understanding, empathy and treatment is critically important.  If this play can provide a beacon for healing to anyone in need, then this important mission will have been accomplished.

Boogieban is being presented by none too fragile theatre based in Akron, Ohio at the 13th Street Repertory Theatre through September 29th.

www.nonetoofragile.com

www.13thstreetrep.org

August 2019 Podcast is now LIVE

The August 2019 Podcast is now live and available on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify or by clicking the Buzzsprout link below.

Episode 22 concludes coverage of the New York Musical Festival which ran for four weeks this summer.  Under the headline “rave reviews” I discuss two Broadway musicals:  Be More Chill and Beetlejuice.  This month also includes Bat Out of Hell based upon the Meat Loaf album.  A visit to Brooklyn for Company XIV’s latest burlesque extravaganza, Queen of Hearts.  Plus a surprise pop in to a small community theater in Glen Arbor, Michigan and their take on The African Queen.

The mission of theaterreviewsfrommyseat is to record my experiences in concise summaries without plot spoilers in order to share my love of theater.  I hope to inspire you to see a play, musical or theater company you may not have known about.  Free email subscriptions for newly published reviews are available at www.theaterreviewsfrommyseat.com.

I hope you enjoy the August 2019 Podcast.  Comments and suggestions are always welcome.  Please send any thoughts to this email: theaterreviewsfrommyseat@comcast.net.

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/august2019podcast

Beetlejuice

“This is already the best exorcism I have ever been to!”  That line should help inform your proclivity towards Beetlejuice.  When it opened last spring, a number of critics wrote that the funhouse antics (predictably) overwhelmed their delicate senses.  Au contraire!  Based on the 1988 Tim Burton film, this adaption is absolutely everything you want a big Broadway musical comedy to be.

The atmosphere is already percolating when you take your seat.  Chandeliers are outfitted with green lights.  The super friendly ushers seem to be in the best mood.  (Note to theater owners and house managers:  pop in to the Winter Garden and see what great customer service can look like.)  Multi-colored spotlights enhance the party vibe.  A BETELGEUSE sign hangs with an arrow pointing to a small opening in the curtain.  Smoke is billowing out.

A funeral opens the show and Lydia’s mother has passed away.  Beetlejuice jumps in on the action to let us know that this is a show about death.  “The Whole ‘Being Dead’ Thing” is a riotous kickoff setting the stage for the gazillion one liners, hilarious meta theater references and insanely clever visuals that follow.

Beetlejuice is a demon from hell and describes himself as “a ghost zombie Jesus.”  He is invisible to living beings.  His devilish plan can be enacted if someone will say his name three times.  Barbara and Adam are a childless married couple.  “What’s the point of having children when you are drowning in debt?”  They quickly die.  Beetlejuice intercepts their Handbook For the Recently Diseased so they remain earthbound for haunting purposes.  Will someone say his name three times?  You betcha.

Charles and daughter Lydia buy the recently available home and move in with Delia, Lydia’s moronic grief adviser and Daddy’s secret lover.  The stage is set for haunted house hijinks.  Sophia Anne Caruso (Lazarus) is a gothic and moody delight as Lydia.  Her “Dead Mom” solo is one of the many high points delivered by an exceptionally accomplished cast.

Rob McClure (Chaplin) and Kerry Butler (Mean Girls, Xanadu) are the newly diseased trying to learn how to be scary in “Fright of Their Lives.”  Both shine brightly in creating these adorably inept ghosts.  Adam Dannheisser (Oslo) and Leslie Kritzer (The Robber Bridegroom) are priceless as the unfeeling Dad and the dimwitted psychotherapist.  Ms. Kritzer also plays a second character in Act II because she is so damn funny.  Why not?

Alex Brightman is extraordinarily entertaining as Beetlejuice.  He is both the ringmaster and the clown in this tongue-in-cheek spookfest.  Line after line lands a bulls-eye.  The varied vocalizations he employs are remarkably effective.  I loved his performance a few years back in School of Rock.  This performance is at another level and, in my mind, is clearly the best one from this past Broadway season.  Michael Keaton was vividly memorable in the movie.  Mr. Brightman impressively manages to eclipse that memory.

Eddie Perfect’s music and lyrics are witty and tuneful.  The book by Scott Brown and Anthony King is sharp and smart.  Everyone seems to relish the source material and has lovingly transformed the story.  This production is not simply a rehash of the film like many other Broadway recreations.  Beetlejuice has been reimagined for the stage.  At the same time, this musical is incredibly faithful to the film’s reliance on wild antics and Tim Burton’s unparalleled style.

If all that weren’t enough, the creative team deserves kudos for countless moments of ungodly excess.  David Korins’ scenic design is gloriously inventive, adding splendiferous visuals to this manic mayhem.  The costumes (William Ivey Long) approach musical comedy perfection and, in the case of Ms. Kritzer’s Act II gown, exceed it.

Connor Gallagher’s choreography was fantastically possessed and energetically executed.  The ensemble is used brilliantly and sporadically.  They aren’t forced into scenes unnecessarily.  When they are utilized for the big numbers, the impact is stronger as a result.

All credit for this avalanche of musical theater otherworldliness must be given to director Alex Timbers (Moulin Rouge!, Peter and the Starcatcher).  When you aim to take the ghoulish fun of Halloween, blow it up into a spectacular amusement and succeed to this level of excellence, I must invoke the Broadway poltergeists and chant “Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice.”  Three visits to this oddball Broadway charmer might be the ideal dosage for happiness on any spiritual plane.

www.beetlejuicebroadway.com

Midsummer: A Banquet

Immersive, site specific theater is flourishing in New York City.  One of the most accomplished troupes is Third Rail Projects.  Co-produced with Food of Love Productions, this newest entry is an attempt to bring Shakespeare and dinner theater to Manhattan.  Midsummer: A Banquet presents the Bard’s play while serving a multi-course meal and drinks for purchase.

My first encounter with Third Rail Projects was Then She Fell back in 2012.  That phantasmagoria of Alice in Wonderland and its author Lewis Carroll is still running and worth seeking out.  Subsequently I caught The Grand Paradise and Ghost Light which were both interesting, site specific tours in highly imaginative environments.

Café Fae is the location for this experience.  This theater is the former Union Square home and studio of celebrated expressionist painter Willem de Kooning.  The room has interesting old features.  Tables are set up to suggest a bistro environment.  The cast is flitting about chatting with guests and playing music.  The audience is nibbling on tasty crudités and accompanying dips while sipping wine and eagerly anticipating the show.

Zach Morris and Victoria Rae Sook have adapted A Midsummer Night’s Dream for a cast of eight.  Mr. Morris also directed and choreographed this production.  The storytelling is clear and efficient.  This comedic tale concerns events surrounding the impending marriage of Theseus, Duke of Athens, to Hippolyta, the former Queen of the Amazons.  The intimate dinner theater idea feels like a smart and natural choice to revisit this comedy.

When the play begins, there is hardly any change to the lighting in the room.  The setting never visually transports the audience to a magical forest filled with faeries up to no good.  Courses of diminishing quality are served by the cast in a clunky manner during the presentation.  The food distribution is uneven and sparkling wine for a toast is roughly poured into barely half-full glasses.  (Partially empty bottles are quickly whisked away.)  Everything comes across as awkwardly rushed service rather than an incorporation into the action.  With a $200 top ticket price, promised refreshments and a producer named “Food of Love,” the dining execution is subpar.

The first act dragged on for me and I was bored.  Thankfully, the second half was far stronger and the farcical elements of the plot were well-handled by an accomplished group of actors.  The four young Athenian lovers are amusingly played by Caroline Amos (Hermia), Joshua Gonzales (Demetrius), Alex J. Gould (Lysander) and Adrienne Paquin (Helena).  When the faeries (simply represented by lit Mason jars) bewitch them, the strongly staged chaos of realigned amorous yearnings is a smile-inducing delight.

Co-adapter Adrienne Rae Sook portrays both Titania and Hippolyta.  Her partner is Ryan Wuestewald as Oberon and Theseus.  Both deliver the required cunning performances.  The star of this show, however, is unquestionably Charles Osborne.  He deliciously overplays the pompous and self-adoring Bottom, the hammy actor who is part of the group preparing to perform a play during the wedding ceremonies.

The play within the play is finally performed for the newly married couple and the silliness is inspired.  Midsummer: A Banquet is a evening spent with talented performers who are having some fun.  In the view from my seat, the investment is too high for the intermittent rewards.

www.foodofloveproductions.com

www.thirdrailprojects.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/ghostlight/thirdrailprojects

Waiting For Johnny Depp (Rave Theater Festival)

Rita Donatella is a struggling wannabe actress working in a science lab and donning the white coat.  She’s “analyzing feces inside a rat” and declares “I’m not loving that.”  Her agent calls and her dreams are finally realized.  She’s going to star in a movie with an A-list actor.  Waiting For Johnny Depp is a semi-autobiographical musical comedy chronicling the perilous world of self-absorption and career angst.

Janet Cole Valdez and Deedee O’Malley wrote the book and lyrics with Bettie Ross collaborating with them on the score.  At the start of this show, they inform us that the events may seem increasingly preposterous but they are true.  The adventure presented is a rags to riches to rags tale of an actor’s quest to land the role of a lifetime.

Rita is a plucky young woman who leaps before she looks.  Thrilled that she booked the film, Rita quits her job and sings “Kiss My Ass.”  Uh-oh, there’s not a contract yet.  Egads, there’s a change in the film’s direction.  Oh no, there’s another twist contemplated for her character.  Meanwhile her big $2,000 savings account is evaporating.

The trials and tribulations are a familiar jumble of Hollywood expectations for females.  When told she needs to lose twenty pounds, Rita dives into Zumba and then informs us that “I’m injecting a pregnant woman’s pee.”  Donna Vivino creates a strong impression early on as Rita banters with the audience in this one woman show.  Frequently breaking the fourth wall was a smart choice.  The candy scene was especially funny and gave the impression of a friend recreating (and embellishing) her personal journey for our entertainment and bemusement.

Things continue to head south for poor Rita.  Lose the New York accent.  “What are they TAWKING about?”  More complications and adjustments.  Thin morphs to voluptuous.  A very feminine role becomes masculine.  Driven Rita will do “Anything For My Craft.”  What about money?  “Craigslist” is a song which spells out a solution.

One young man who answers an ad to buy her stuff falls for her.  “Flowers From Phoenix” is the singular musical high point of this score.  The clowning briefly pauses and a touching glimpse inside Rita’s emotional core emerges.  As the show progresses, the initial lunacy wears thin.  Scenes such as the one with the Barbie doll might be conceptually amusing but they slow the story’s momentum.

This solo performance is a marathon of costume and personality changes.  Ms. Vivino is a game performer and keeps our interest throughout even when the material loses steam.  She has quite a few cellphone conversations; some with recorded vocals.  Many are with her kvetching mother who has typical, yet still funny, lines.  This musical might benefit with the addition of a second performer physically playing her mother, the agent, the boyfriend and so on.  The part could add hilarious camp to these silly, largely lightweight reminiscences.  Even Johnny Depp could be impersonated to great effect.

Near the end of the play, there is a trauma and Rita will learn lessons about life and love.  Three seconds after that happens, there is another quick turn of events.  Rita’s narcissism blooms and the sight is oddly unappealing.  The story may be true but in a show like this one, we probably need to see more than momentary depth of character.

Waiting For Johnny Depp is part of the inaugural Rave Theater Festival.  Featuring a diverse roster of new shows, the emphasis of this month long event is on quality of writing and creativity.  While this musical was a quirky and fun idea, it was overlong with mostly average sounding tunes.

www.ravetheaterfestival.com

Queen of Hearts (Company XIV)

Enter the rather run down looking entrance of a building in Bushwick, Brooklyn.  Immediate pass a bar serving cocktails named “Off With Your Head” and “Paint the Roses Red.”  Cheerful ushers will greet you and take you to your seat. The men are in fishnet stockings, tuxedo jackets with tails and high heels.  Not to be outdone, the ladies are scantily clad as well.  This is the world of Austin McCormick’s latest burlesque extravaganza, Queen of Hearts.

This time capsule combines the aesthetic decadence of Weimer era cabaret mixed with a dusty recollection of Versailles.  The room is bathed in red lighting.  Old chandeliers hang from the ceiling.  There’s a vague fog reminiscent of smoky dens from long ago nightclubs.  A packed house settles in with their drinks eagerly anticipating the vivid dreamscape which will follow.

Music selections are inspired and eclectic, contemporary and nostalgic.  Neil Sedaka’s “Alice in Wonderland” sets the playful mood.  Wearing a Marie Antoinette outfit, Lady Alice (Lexxe) opens the show.  She will go down the rabbit hole with “less clothes.”  The show bills itself as a baroque burlesque which is exactly right.  Queen of Hearts is sprinkled with tongue-in-cheek humor to accompany the overflowing sexiness.

A few political jabs make very brief appearances.  Hard to have a Mad Hatter without the obvious target called out for ridicule.  This spectacle is more concerned with the glories of burlesque, circus acts, musical interludes, dance and comedy.  Over three acts, the unending succession of high quality showmanship is exhilarating to experience.

Many Alice in Wonderland characters and vignettes are lovingly showcased.  The surprises consistently delight and will remain unwritten here for your viewing pleasure.  All the classic favorites will be employed including Tweedledee & Tweedledum, some mushrooms, the caterpillar and a Cheshire Cat.  Turns out there is quite a bit a fun to be had with a teapot and “meow” songs.

In the section captioned “Eat Me” Ashley Dragon performs on a cyr wheel.  Her version was top notch.  When it’s nearly time for the first intermission, the card reads “Drink Me.”  Laszlo Major is a muscular merman preening in a human sized champagne coupe glass on the bar.  Carried off to the stage, he then spins gymnastically around two poles in a scintillating display of athleticism.

The Mad Tea Party is, as you might expect, a definite centerpiece of this show.  Michael Andrews’ “Mad World” is employed to bring us back down to earth (and reality) a little bit even as singing aerialist Marcy Richardson dazzles from above.  There are no lulls in this cavalcade of imaginativeness.  Finally the titular character arrives.  Storm Marrero’s entrance and performance as the Queen of Hearts is flawless.

Mr. McCormick’s creative team has created a resplendent world which enhances the exotic curiosities performed on stage and in the audience.  The lighting design by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew bathes the performers in richly atmospheric colors and multi-angled spotlights.  Zane Pihlstrom’s costume and scenic designs are transportive.  This entertainment is an elegant and stylized cousin to Cirque de Soleil.  The intimate setting and exquisite choreography elevate Queen of Hearts to much higher artistic heights.

The vision of Austin McCormick and his Company XIV are not too be missed.  Defining themselves as both high and low-brow entertainment, their sensual and decadent spectacles reimagine classic ballets and fairy tales for contemporary audiences.  The previous show I saw was last year’s excellent retelling of Ferdinand.

Queen of Hearts has been extended until November.  Nutcracker Rouge follows in time for the holidays.  Treat yourself to a world of splendor, glamour, high camp, sexuality for all persuasions and extraordinary talent.  This show is not lewd but is also not for the prudish and judgmental types.  In Alice in Wonderland, the Duchess says, “if everybody minded their own business, the world would go around a great deal faster than it does.”  Like minded souls should pounce on this one.

www.companyxiv.com

YouTube/QueenofHeartsPromotionalTrailer

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/ferdinand

Bat Out of Hell

On July 22, 1978, Meat Loaf played in concert at the then-named Garden State Arts Center.  His debut album was now an established hit and would eventually sell an estimated 43 million copies.  Bat Out of Hell was so popular for so long that it stayed on the charts in the United Kingdom for 485 weeks.  Only Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors lasted longer.  On that hot summer night in July, all of the lifeguards from the Oakcrest Swim Club in Edison, New Jersey made the trek to sit on the lawn and rock.

Jim Steinman wrote the music and lyrics which contain a heavy dose of Bruce Springsteen-flavored surburban teenage angst.  The genius of this record, however, is the bombastic operatic scale of the production and vocals.  The lyrics were catchy, clever and often funny.  The mood suggested trouble right from the first line:  “the sirens were screaming and the fires were howling way down in the valley tonight.”

Many of the songs on Bat Out of Hell were intended for a musical Mr. Steinman had been writing.  After all these years, he has finally written a book for a fully staged concept.  All songs from this iconic recording are included in the show plus a smattering of hits from the two other Bat Out of Hell albums which followed.  The music is so grandiose and the lyrics are often so intimately conversational, the theatrical promise is clearly evident in this well-known material.

Now for the very good news.  Despite a dreadful sound design, the music is faithfully rendered.  The band was certainly “All Revved Up With No Place to Go.”  Meat Loaf’s vocals are forever linked with these songs and I certainly had expectations of disappointment.  This entire cast was big voiced and kicked some serious ass in the belting of these rock-n-roll classics.

The plot involves a group of lost kids who have some disorder whereby they never age past eighteen.  They live underground in a tunnel “frozen in the aquastage before the good things come.”  Huh?  The big evil corporation is called FALCO.  The daughter of the company chief is enamored with a boy who won’t grow up.  The Peter Pan references are so thick that one character is named Tink.

There is nothing inherently wrong with the story.  It’s a bit silly and not totally coherent but then again so are some of the songs.  The major problem of this show is the tone.  The title track suggests “there’s evil in the air and there’s thunder in the sky and a killer’s on the bloodshot streets.”  What appears on the stage, unfortunately, is a production which feels like an episode of the television show Glee.  Maybe a better analogy would be Mad Max as updated by the Mickey Mouse Club.

The direction by Jay Scheib does not help elevate a somewhat ambitious jukebox book musical.  The main storyline is the romance between Strat (Andrew Polec) and Raven (Christina Bennington).  His rendition of the title song and her “Heaven Can Wait” were high points.  If there were darker elements incorporated into the staging and character development, there might be some depth to the storytelling.  There’s just no observable edge to these kids despite their phenomenal vocals and nice chemistry.

The veterans fare much better.  As Falco, Bradley Dean (Dear Evan Hansen, The Last Ship) completely develops his evil corporate despot.  His droll, martini loving wife Sloane is an exceptional foil in this unhappy marriage.  Tony Award winner Lena Hall (Hedwig and the Angry Inch) is as entertaining as Mr. Dean.  Over dinner with their daughter Raven, there is a superbly executed time travel back to their early days when it was “Paradise By the Dashboard Light.”  These two blew the song through the rafters and nearly stopped the show.

Why was the ensemble standing behind them doing idiotic spasmodic movements?  For crying out loud, the intense moment between these two “praying for the end of time” was riveting stuff.  The dancers looked ridiculous and were enormously distracting.  Xena Gusthart’s choreography seemed to be an awkward meshing of dystopian aerobics and voguing.

The lighting (Patrick Woodroffe) was also not particularly good.  The spotlights shone too brightly on the lead performers.  If you are putting on a book musical and not a concert, there should be some expectation of mood setting.  Never mind, just turn the sound up to arena levels and hope no one notices.

Jon Bausor’s set design was very memorable.  Half the stage is the tunnel “where the deadly are rising.”  The other half is the towering FALCO building with a hint of guitar neck in its linear structure.  The set allowed for multiple scene changes and some nicely executed live videography work.  Mr. Bausor also created the costumes.  They were better than the zombie in a bag variety you can buy at Party City for sure.  But they were awfully generic leather and fringes for a world in which “nothing ever grows in this rotting old hole, and everything is stunted and lost.”

Three of the songs from the original album were originally written by Mr. Steinman for Neverland, his planned futuristic update of Peter Pan.  That idea is perhaps sprinkled a bit too literally in this final version.  As a result, his moody and introspective songs of teenage angst told from an adult perspective are diluted.  They are, however, enjoyable to hear and extremely well sung.

The saddest part of Bat Out of Hell is the missed opportunity.  In the right hands, this one might have been a campy classic.  At the performance I attended, the audience was indeed laughing.  Not with the show but at it.  I wanted to say to them, “you know, that’s not ideal.”  I needed them to reply, “You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth.”

www.nycitycenter.org

The African Queen (Glen Arbor Players, MI)

We noticed a small colored poster plastered on a bulletin board while standing in line to checkout at the single supermarket in town.  The African Queen was going to be presented at Glen Lake Church during the week we were visiting this beautiful area of “up north” Michigan.  Was this going to be a showing of the famous movie over four nights?  The poster hinted otherwise with the co-director credits.

The price of admission was free with refreshments provided.  Donations appreciated.  We circulated the idea of attending this very off-off-off-off Broadway event and friends began to get very excited.  It turns out that they are rabid fans of Waiting For Guffman.  That 1996 mockumentary film by Christopher Guest and Eugene Levy spoofed a community theater and its quirky amateur performers.

Given this blog, my monthly podcast and those reviews I have written for other online sites, the anticipation escalated.  The group hilariously postured that I was the Guffman character, a critic from New York planning to review a local community theater production.  We arrived at the church and were warmly greeted.  The audience totaled a dozen people.  We were four of them.

The African Queen is based on the 1951 movie and was performed as a staged reading in two acts with fourteen scenes.  With scripts in hand, the movie is reenacted with four roles.  Rapids were traversed and bullets flew as the adventure unfolded.  The entire play felt a bit long to be honest.  The material is so visual that it is quite difficult to conjure up all the imagery needed to effectively dramatize this adventure.  Some scenes probably should have been shortened and others sped up.  Janet Stilpicevich was very good as the narrator and could certainly have been utilized to provide more descriptive color.

Like nearly all theatrical endeavors, there are positive aspects of this production to celebrate.  First is the set design.  The African Queen was an outline of PVC pipes with a black barrel and painted smokestack placed in the center of the deck.  The ship filled the entire stage and was a believable rendition of the boat assembled with little money and winning creativity.

My second call out is for the sound design by lead actor Ron Smith.  This play utilizes sound effects from the movie frequently throughout the performance.  Water rushing, bullets flying and the musical soundtrack are heard.  I have to say that I was impressed by how accurately that was incorporated into the play.  The timing was spot on.  I’ve seen plenty of shows with much greater budgets and significantly higher ticket prices not achieve this level of accuracy.

Last but not least are the actors playing Charlie Allnut and Rose Sayre.  Kathering Hepburn famously played Rose and Janice Ross showed us some of her prickliness.  An early scene in Act II where the two were arguing was the best one of the show.

Humphrey Bogart won an Oscar for portraying Mr. Allnut.  Ron Smith was quite entertaining as this larger than life character.  The drinking scene that ends with him passing out on the deck was a high point.  Slightly older actors take a few extra seconds to collapse into a drunken slumber.  The slow motion effect was very fun indeed.

The two leads were also the co-directors of this play.  At the beginning of the performance, Mr. Smith explained that his cousin suggested The African Queen for their next production.  Both were life-long vacationers to this picturesque locale of natural beauty.  His cousin is now suffering from Parkinson’s Disease along with serious dementia.  The moment was touching and nicely expressed the feeling of community that this small troupe works hard to nuture.

One friend was chatting with a woman at the reception table who told us she will be directing a show later this year.  He volunteered to try out and received an email the next day about auditions for the October run of The Long, Hot September.  Whether he will summon the nerve and put on the greasepaint remains to be seen.  (He did say privately, however, that he will not do any nude scenes.)  The Glen Arbor Players are a community theater creating their own brand of magic in a very small town.  Guffman was happy to make an appearance and support their mission.

www.facebook.com/ReadersTheaterGlenArbor