Red Emma and the Mad Monk (The Tank)

Once in a blue moon (or should I now say red?) you take in a new work off-off Broadway and walk out of the theater wholly impressed.  Such is the feeling generated by the musical Red Emma and the Mad Monk being presented this month at The Tank.  Writer Alexis Roblan and Director Katie Lindsay co-created this original and ambitious piece composed by Teresa Lotz.  Twelve year old Addison is in her room doing the usual internet surfing and tweeting.  Addison is also a history buff.  The show is set in the United States in 2017 “where the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries exist side by side, online and in a theatre.”

Addison has an imaginary best friend in the Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin who elevated himself from poverty to holy man.  Or is that charlatan?  This monk was a healer to the last tsar’s son prior to the Russian revolution and all of their assassinations.  She is also obsessed with Emma Goldman, the writer who was a pivotal figure in the development of anarchist political philosophy in the early 20th century.  Along with her lover Sasha Berkman, they planned but failed to murder steel industrialist and union-buster Henry Clay Frick in support of the worker’s movement.

Incidentally, Addison also has her own young person’s life crises to manage.  What emerges from this richly conceived phantasmagoria is much more than a history lesson juxtaposed with school age internet drama.  Red Emma and the Mad Monk confronts the politics, trials and tribulations that lead to anarchies both large and small.  This musical contemplates the internet, our news cycle and oppressive systems of government by imaginatively combining and contrasting these stories.  Complexity is embraced and analyzed.  What is the best way to make change?  Is there a best way?

Now for the cherry on top.  Surprisingly, Red Emma is funny and very entertaining.  Drita Kabashi’s performance as Rasputin is light as air yet mystical and substantial, filled with thoughtful, sometimes hilarious observations on life.  (Her eyes should have a curtain call.)  As Addison, Maybe Burke believably grounds this story so we experience thought processes from a twelve year old’s point of view.  In multiple important roles, Jonathan Randell Silver was spot on in each characterization.

The creative team did truly inspired work in mounting this production, notably the set design by Diggle.  When you enter the theater, you immediately feel that you are in a young person’s bedroom.  The lighting, costumes and, in particular, the direction of Red Emma and the Mad Monk inventively showcased this unique musical.  So many topical themes and ideas poured from the stage.  America is and may always have been the promise of freedom but that doesn’t necessarily happen in practical terms.  Some impressive new voices in theater worth a serious listen.

www.thetanknyc.org

Moulin Rouge! The Musical (Boston)

Why does every other show these days have to use the phrase “The Musical” in its title?  I presume it is a dumbed down marketing thing although I’m not convinced anyone would buy tickets to Moulin Rouge! thinking it was a play.  Walking into Boston’s gorgeously renovated historic Emerson Colonial Theatre, opulence is the word that comes to mind.  Walking to your seat, a sumptuous red valentine of a set screams theatrical grandeur.

Adapted from the Academy Award nominated film by Baz Luhrmann, this new musical is decidedly connected to the 2001 film in spirit but has been significantly updated in its contemporary jukebox musical selections.  No song list has been written into the program and that is a good thing.  There are surprises in store and they are fun.  The overall verdict for the show, however, is a mixed bag.

The core problem for me (and those I attended with) was that there was little chemistry between the two romantic leads played by Karen Olivo (Satine) and Aaron Tveit (Christian).  Both sing beautifully but  their voices do not match well in duets.  The acting by Mr. Tveit (Next To Normal, Catch Me If You Can) is, frankly, bad.  There are far too many moments where he stands with his hands down at his sides offering no energy as a leading man.  The effect is boring male ingenue who only comes to life during his musical solos.  Ms. Olivo (West Side Story) fares better (and seemingly works harder) but she has little energy from her costar to play off and her performance (and disappearing accent) suffers.

As a result of muted star power, the rest of the cast blooms brightly and makes this show entertaining to watch.  Six time Tony nominee Danny Burstein is the nefarious owner of the Moulin Rouge and he will certainly be nominated for another Tony if this show transfers to New York.  He nails a ruthless character yet manages to conjure believable, vulnerable emotion with his star Satine.  In a romantic melodrama, that intensity needs to be with the central couple not only with the showgirl and her boss.  Moulin Rouge! slows down for a minute in Act II and Mr. Burstein performs the Florence and the Machine song “Shake It Out” with some of the ladies.  The moment is a high point.

As the villainous Duke of Monroth who desperately wants Satine as his mistress, Tam Mutu exudes power, malevolent motives and sex appeal.  Sahr Ngaujah and Ricky Rojas are Christian’s newly found buddies in Paris and their acting, stage presence and characterizations are so strong that you don’t see Mr. Tveit’s Christian as the center of the show during their scenes together.  Another huge plus is the sultry dancing of Robyn Hurder as one of the ladies of the cabaret.

The creative team has done outstanding work here as the sets (Derek McLane), the costumes (Catherine Zuber) and the lighting (Justin Townsend) were magnificently eye-filling.  Alex Timbers (Peter and the Starcatcher, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson) is a director whose work I admire.  In this endeavor, Act II is overlong and drags on, never more so than during the “Roxanne” number, a holdover from the film.   In Moulin Rouge! The Musical, the elements needed for a crowd pleasing hit are in abundance.  For this to be a top tier Broadway show, Mr. Timbers needs to focus his efforts on his proven talented leads and make us care about the romance at the heart of this spectacle.  Maybe then the dull and emotionless ending would not just seem a placeholder prior to a sensational finale and curtain call.

www.emersoncolonialtheatre.com

Beach City Bimbo (Provincetown, MA)

No trip to Provincetown is complete without taking in a show.  At the Art House, Jinkx Monsoon is in residence with her accompanist Major Scales at piano.  The show Beach City Bimbo is drag catnip.  Musical numbers and randy jokes are to be expected.  Here they are delivered ingeniously.  Jinkx apparently has been told her other shows are too serious so she has to camp it up raunchily for the P-Town crowd.  She succeeds.

Ms. Monsoon was the winner of the fifth season of Ru Paul’s Drag Race.  I had not yet seen that television show so I learned of this talented performer when the New York Times raved about their musical revue The Vaudevillians.  Two legendary performers were buried alive in an avalanche but, thanks to global warming, they thawed out and their old act survived!

What makes Beach City Bimbo a unqualified top notch drag show is the technical proficiency of this act.  Ms. Monsoon can sing well.  Along with a very busy Major Scales, there are major musical numbers with fun choreography.  The pantomime scenes are priceless for their length and skill in execution (“That took us five months of rehearsal.”)  A music video break for a costume change is not merely filler, it is a stylized homage to the best MTV had to offer.  Super smart humor combined with a send up (and embrace) of the drag show formula, Beach City Bimbo is an excellent example of the genre as practiced by one of the most creative talents in the business.  This piece should be recorded for a Netflix special.

After The Vaudevillians, I saw Jinkx Sings Everything.  If you cannot get to PTown over the next month, these two sublime entertainers will be in London the week of October 24th with that show.  Treat yourself, laugh and smile.  A few months ago I reviewed another show that would be a perfect  fit for Jinkx, The Confession of Lily DareAs I’ve discovered, it’s always Monsoon season.

www.provincetownarthouse.com

www.jinkxmonsoon.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/theconfessionoflilydare

If you want a taste of the Jinkx Monsoon sensibility, try this You Tube video for the single, “Cartoons and Vodka.”

www.youtube.com/cartoonsandvodka

Fairview (Soho Rep)

When exiting the theater after Fairview has come to an end, my first reaction was a need for reflection time.  Jackie Sibblies Drury has written a shockingly fascinating big broad comedy that is structurally dissonant (for lack of a better term).  I will not spoil the enjoyment of this play for anyone.  Ms. Drury has serious observations to share on the subject of race.  How we think about race.  How race is used for entertainment.  How race is divisive.  How human beings are all the same underneath a layer of skin.

Fairview begins as an African American family comedy.  It’s Grandma’s birthday and her daughter is throwing a bash at her house.  Her demanding and critical sister arrives.  Her husband is helping her get ready but her stress level is so high she cannot relax.  The family revels in the fact that they are known for dancing.  Dancing does indeed happen and the entire family’s spirit soars together, if only for that moment.  Familial comedies with bite are common.  What makes Fairview so unique are the layers that get added on and then multiply.

Sarah Benson’s direction is assured.  This is a complicated, absorbing piece of theater which respects the audience but forces them to think outside the box.  Raja Feather Kelly choreographed Fairview and her work has a big impact.  The entire cast miraculously balances caricature and farce with layered dimensions of depth and realness.  But the playwriting is the star here.  Ms. Drury has many surprises up her sleeve.  I won’t spoil them and you should not miss them.  This play is a co-production with Berkeley Rep which will present Fairview in October.

www.sohorep.org

www.berkeleyrep.org

Hello, Dolly!

The current revival of Hello, Dolly! has been a phenomenal success.  Bette Midler headlining as Dolly Levi proved to be a casting gold mine.  Her fanbase enveloped her with rapt adoration and she won every award possible.  I was a bit less enthralled about her performance than the majority.  She was indeed funny, as always.  She has outstanding presence.  I thought her vocals weren’t quite up to the challenge of the material.  I also felt she played Bette Midler not necessarily Dolly Levi.  I will admit that the role is certainly a star vehicle and I assume the role’s originator, Carol Channing, oozed Carol Channing.

I decided to see two-time Tony winner Donna Murphy’s version of Dolly which she does on the days Ms. Midler does not perform.  What was a fun revival became a celebration of this beautifully created old school musical.  First, her performance is surprisingly bigger.  The scene at Miss Malloy’s Millinery was elevated from spirited hijinks to outrageous tomfoolery.  As a replacement in the role of Barnaby, Charlie Stemp was not only a welcome physical comedian but also an excellent dancer.

Ms. Murphy also brought some additional vulnerability to the character which helps deepen her relationship with Horace Vandergelder (David Hyde Pierce, superb).  The show seemed more in balance and the conclusion more organically reached.  Yes, she’s a meddling matchmaker and a wisecracker.  But she’s also a widow who knows it is time to move on.

As for the singing, Ms. Murphy knocked everything out of the park and I finally heard the version of “Before the Parade Passes By” that I was craving.  While the entire Harmonia Gardens Restaurant scene is still a little flat (or maybe dated), the title song is a joyous Broadway top shelf masterpiece and the audience was beside themselves with the exquisitely executed version here.  Jerry Herman’s score is so good; I was thrilled to hear it performed this well.  The standing ovation at the end of the show was deafening.  And well deserved.  I am sorry Hello, Dolly! is closing later this month because Ms. Murphy is still crowin’ and still goin’ strong.”  Hurry if you can as her performances are not sold out.  They should be standing room only.

www.hellodollyonbroadway.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/hellodollybettemidler

Southern Gothic (Windy City Playhouse, Chicago)

The program informs you that “You’re Invited” to the birthday celebration of Mrs. Suzanne Wellington on June 30, 1961.  Mr. Beau Coutier and Mrs. Ellie Coutier are hosting the party at their home in Ashford, Georgia.  The telephone rings.  The caterers have been in a traffic accident.  Heavens to Betsy!  What shall we do?  Leftover jello salad in the fridge can be repurposed!  No need to panic, however, as the booze appears to be plentiful.  Although Virginia Woolf has not been invited to this party, in Southern Gothic her spirit is alive and well.

When entering the theater at the Windy City Playhouse, as an invited guest you are entering the Coutier home.  You sit on the perimeter (or stand) in the kitchen, living room, dining room, whatever suits your fancy.  This is immersive theater and you are free to move around.  The 28 audience members are silent but visible witnesses to the comings and goings of four couples who have scintillating melodrama bubbling close to the surface.  Introduce alcohol and let’s find out who’s a thief, who’s a philanderer and who gets a dish best served cold.

The ingenious set design by Scott Davis is a remarkable time capsule.  The kitchen in particular is classic formica and stainless steel 1950’s perfection.  (I want to buy the table when the run is over.)  As voyeurs, follow various parts of this story, some of which occur in different rooms simultaneously.  You already surmise that our birthday girl gets sloppy drunk.  She’s not alone.  Everyone has significant personal dramas, some self-induced, some the product of living in the South during this era.

The skilled performances are impressively focused  given that the audience is in such close proximity.  Drinks are even handed out should you want to toast Mrs. Wellington.  My pick for Best in Show would be the charmer politician Charles Lyon (played by an ideally cast Victor Holstein).  Or maybe the slightly simple Beau Coutier (Michael McKeough)?  Can’t forget his jittery wife Ellie (Sarah Grant).  Never mind, all eight actors shine brightly (or vividly flame out in a supernova implosion) as needed.  Written by Leslie Liautaud, Southern Gothic is a terrific entertainment given a memorable staging by director David H. Bell.

www.windycityplayhouse.com

Something in the Game: An All-American Musical (Northwestern University, Chicago)

As a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and a current season ticketholder to its football team, I am clearly in the bullseye for the target audience for a musical based on its legendary football coach, Knute Rockne.  Something in the Game: An All-American Musical had its first outing ten years ago and was then titled Knute Rockne:  All-American.  The name change makes sense.  This show is certainly about the famed, larger than life man.  The bigger story involves his personal orbit (family, players, coaching highlights) and a growing college which at the time attracted unwelcome minorities, notably immigrants and Catholics.

Can a rags to riches story centered around football be successfully turned into a big musical?  The answer is yes although the scoreboard might read field goal instead of touchdown.  For Notre Dame fans the score might instead read touchdown with a missed extra point attempt.

The show begins as Knute is leaving South Bend for an opportunity to coach at Columbia University.  Immediately we have family conflict as his wife was not consulted.  Both Stef Tovar (Knute) and Dara Cameron (Bonnie) deliver heartfelt, strong characterizations.  The story then tracks Knute from his arrival at Notre Dame where he meets his new roommate Gus Dorais (a period perfect Neal Davidson) who also plays football.  The two worked together to create many memorable developments in their sport, notably popularizing the forward pass in a historic win over Army in 1913.  There is a musical number incorporating this concept, “Completing the Forward Pass,” which is surprisingly effective storytelling and fun.

The football scenes are the winning part of the formula here.  The team’s famous use of “The Shift” allows for some very creative scrimmage line inspired choreography.  The Artistic Director for Northwestern’s American Music Theater Project David H. Bell directed and choreographed Something in the Game.  The crop of young actors from the student body (and even some from their football team) added a real sense of athleticism to the show.

The superhero star of Notre Dame football and of this musical is George Gipp who played from 1917 until 1920.  He became a legend, immortalized by Ronald Reagan in the 1940 film Knute Rockne: All American.  Adrian Aguilar’s extraordinarily fine performance hints at why the show changed its name.  The musical is at its best when this talented young man is overachieving on the field while sinning and gambling off the field.  “Welcome to the Bottom” is a showstopper when things go wrong for George which he sings with the speakeasy’s owner and singer.

The focus on George Gipp, the Rockne family troubles, tensions with University clergy and a coach with massive self-promotion instincts make for a very full book.  A few minor scenes should probably be reconsidered.  The staging of Jimmy the Goat’s saloon felt inauthentic as well.  A drinking, gambling hangout around the time of Prohibition in South Bend, Indiana would likely be a bit grittier than suggested by the smiling flapper tappers on display.  (More like Chicago than Crazy for You.)  Importantly, the score is strong with many memorable ballads and jazzy songs including Bonnie’s gorgeous “If There Had Been Roses,” Gipp’s “Confession,” and the title song.  For the Notre Dame faithful, no need to fear.  Our fight song makes a welcome appearance.  Go Irish!

www.somethinginthegame.com

NYMF Best of Fest (New York Musical Festival, Part 8)

Over the last four weeks, I attended 21 performances of new musicals in development; every full production and reading at the New York Musical Festival.  At tomorrow’s awards ceremony, they will present the NYMF Best of Fest awards.  The cream of the crop this year compares favorably with the top NYMF shows I have seen in the past.

In alphabetical order, my top four shows (full productions) of 2018:

An American Hero:  A New World War II Musical

accomplished show… the score is filled with gems…. all of the battle scenes were superbly staged…. fought back tears

Between the Sea and Sky

richly woven fable… atmospherically moody yet fun… the surprises delight… every performance was excellent

Emojiland

catchy and delicious Broadway pop… ready for prime time… classic character song greatness

What’s Your Wish?

truly enjoyable… endlessly inventive staging… witty dialogue… high entertainment value

From the group of 9 readings, my standout favorite was:

Storming Heaven: The Musical

score is excellent… realistic, believable characters… a winner

Sign up for an email subscription and receive all new posts.  Here are the links to the original posts for the above mentioned NYMF Best of Fest:

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/anamericanhero

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/betweentheseaandsky

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/emojiland

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/whatsyourwish?

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/stormingheaven

 

 

NYMF: The Gunfighter Meets His Match, Sonata 1962, Between the Sea and Sky (New York Musical Festival, Part 7)

The final three productions in this year’s New York Musical Festival are diverse in style and subject matter.  One takes place out west where guns rule and there are plenty of saloon gals.  Another harkens back to 1962 and considers how society, families and the medical profession dealt with homosexuality at the time.  The last show takes place on Diamond Beach, the location of an eerie mystery from the past.

The Gunfighter Meets His Match (Production)

There is a lovely piece of theme music that weaves throughout The Gunfighter Meets His Match.  The trumpet is featured in the melody and you can conjure up the wild west from old memories when this genre was popular in the movies and on television.  I expect there were other songs I could select as particularly melodious but this production was so busy, it was hard to focus.  As a ballad was sung, six people would be encircling the performer for no reason and with unflattering choreography.  This musical was written by Abby Payne who also plays the saloon’s piano player, May.  The story is basic and there is little in the way of character building.  A woman from the city moves to the west, gets married, then meets the gunfighter who teaches her to shoot.  Along the way he sings, in the same song, “let me show you a little lovin’ darling” and “why don’t you teach me how to love?”  This small, underwritten story could not bear the weight of the staging.  As the title character, I enjoyed Michael Hunsaker’s performance.  The tone of his characterization was probably where this musical should have grounded itself.

Sonata 1962 (Production)

In “Making The Day” Margaret Evans sings “do what you should and nothing will ever go wrong.”  FORESHADOWING, in capital letters.  Soon thereafter her daughter Laura enters and is visibly suffering through headaches.  They are a side effect of her undisclosed treatment.  My guess was that she had a lobotomy.  The musical then goes back in time to tell the story of Laura, a supremely talented pianist who receives a scholarship and goes off to college.  She meets and falls for Sarah.  The chemistry exhibited by Christina Maxwell and Anneliza Canning-Skinner brightens this musical considerably, notably in “Movie Theater.”  All the other characters are one-dimensional.  Things predictably get serious and the medical profession’s barbaric treatments for sexual deviancy and sociopathic disorders are brought front and center.  Sonata 1962 has some interesting moments and there are a number of tuneful songs including “I Will Run.”  Toward the end of this musical, mom gets to sing “Take It Off,” a bizarrely out-of-place distant cousin to “Rose’s Turn” from Gypsy.  A few too many reprises and a message heavy lament close this underdeveloped show.

Between the Sea and Sky (Production)

When a musical has a soaring, intricate score, I sometimes find myself focusing on the music rather than the staging.  Under Michael Bello’s accomplished direction, that was impossible as I wanted to see every moment of this atmospherically moody yet fun show.  In 1999, two sisters are sent to their grandmother’s beach house for the summer as their parents are getting a divorce.  This community certainly has its share of elderly folk who remember a mysterious death that occurred when hippies were in town thirty years earlier.  In the opening number, a woman appears as a specter.  Who is she?  The elder sister is currently reading Shakespeare’s The Tempest and sees a beach mystery that needs solving.  Between the Sea and Sky is a richly woven fable which managed to effectively balance its ambitions as part musical comedy, part cryptic puzzle and part lushly imagined fantasy.  Luke Byrne wrote the book, music and lyrics to this show and its cohesiveness is abundantly clear.  Songs make sense for the story, the characters and add significantly to the mood.  The surprises delight.  Every performance was excellent.  I loved this new musical which has been optimally showcased to reveal its charms.  A grand finale to the festival; feeling fortunate that I chose to see this show last.

www.nymf.org

July 2018 Podcast

The July 2018 podcast is now live.  You can click the buzzsprout link below or search for theaterreviewsfrommyseat on iTunes, Spotify or Stitcher.

This episode includes coverage on Broadway (The Boys in the Band, Head Over Heels), off-Broadway (Second Stage, Atlantic Theater, Irish Rep) and various productions and readings of new musicals in development at the New York Musical Festival (NYMF).

The mission of theaterreviewsfrommyseat is to record my theatergoing experiences in concise summaries without plot spoilers in order to share my love of theater and inspire you to see a play, musical or theater company.

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/July2018podcast