Seclusion Smörgåsbord VIII

Excited to hear last night from a cast member that a South Korean production of Phantom of the Opera was open for business this week.  In the meantime, our far less disciplined society argues and fumbles through the pandemic.  Here are three more entries into my series of Seclusion Smörgåsbord streaming theater viewing.

Old Love Letters (Metropolitan Playhouse)

On Saturday evenings, Off-Off Broadway’s Metropolitan Playhouse streams online readings live.  Old Love Letters is short one act comedy by Bronson Howard from 1878.  In this cute relic, the charm of youthful courtship amidst the strain of Victorian societal mores is considered with the passage of time.

Mrs. Florence Brownlee is rereading old love letters “like faded rose leaves in a book” before casually tossing them into a fire.  She has been recently widowed at age 32.  A former suitor, Edward Warburton’s wife died four years ago and he is now forty years old.  “Even the warm skies of southern Italy failed to restore her.”  He is reading old love letters from Florence which were never destroyed despite his marriage to another.  “It isn’t wicked for me to keep them now.”

Edward apparently tied the letters together and planned to return them after they had quarreled.  He tells her “a hot headed young girl who imagines herself in  love is a formidable creature.”  She was nineteen at the time they parted ways.  The play is structured to allow both to consider life’s choices from the perspective of wisdom and time.  The actor’s performances and backgrounds selected were fun and nicely invoked this era.  The timing for the vocal and video streaming was off slightly.  When I stopped looking and just listened, I felt back on solid ground.

The Metropolitan Playhouse will host a double feature next Saturday, May 2 at 8:00 pm est with Fourteen by Alice Gerstenberg and Criss Cross by Rachel Crothers.

Take Me to the World – A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration

This “live” concert event was scheduled as a birthday tribute and a fundraiser for ASTEP (Artists Trying to End Poverty).  Those who endured the hilarious what-could-go-wrong-and-did horrors as the live stream failed magnificently were treated to a broadly diverse selection of Mr. Sondheim’s tunes.  These performances were all taped and the quality of the sound and video was very high.

My favorites in order of appearance.  Neil Patrick Harris (with kids) singing “The Witch’s Rap” from Into the Woods.  Judy Kuhn’s knock me off my chair rendition of “What Can You Lose?” from the Dick Tracy movie.  Katrina Lenk’s mesmerizing and plaintive vocalization of “Johanna” from Sweeney Todd, accompanying herself on guitar.  Melissa Errico’s breathtaking “Children and Art” from Sunday in the Park With George.  Elizabeth Stanley’s superlative version of “The Miller’s Son” from A Little Night Music.  Michael Cerveris lamenting at his window with a pensive “Finishing the Hat.”

The memorable four person interplay of the great “Someone in a Tree” from Pacific Overtures.  Duos and group numbers were amazingly effective notably from Meryl Streep, Audra McDonald and  Christine Baranski.  All three in white robes drinking heavily to an inspired “The Ladies Who Lunch” from Company.  And, finally, Annaleigh Ashford and Jake Gyllenhaal’s “Move On” duet.  I saw them perform George and Dot at City Center and on Broadway.  This version was as moving and Mrs. Ashford supplied the most gorgeous sounding vocal of the evening.

Of course, the musically political star of the internet and this pandemic, Randy Rainbow, made us laugh as Mrs. Lovett from Sweeney Todd singing, “By the Sea.”  This concert ended with many performers busting in to sing segments of the show stopper “I’m Still Here” from Company.  I find this hard to believe but it’s true.  Iain Armitage from television’s Young Sheldon won that battle (and his clip earlier in the show was utterly charming).  That’s a lot of high points.  The rest of the show was also very good.  A heartwarming celebration of this great composer and the theater community which adores him and his work.

Donations can be made to ASTEP through their Facebook page.  The concert is still streaming on You Tube.

Facebook/asteponline

youtube/takemetotheworld

Chimpanzee (HERE Arts Center)

A taped performance of Nick Lehane’s intensely emotional and wordless puppet play Chimpanzee was streamed by HERE Arts Center as part of its Wednesday evening HERE at HOME series.  Mr. Lehane also designed the incredible puppet and directed the piece.  This play seemed to have been written after a very sad trip to the zoo.  The empathy generated is staggering.

A chimpanzee is trapped in a cage and pacing.  Could it be a science lab?  Through a series of time altering vignettes, glimpses of her life are shared.  Memories of living with a family quickly fade to the horrors and boredom of captivity.  The three puppeteers manage to develop so much personality through movement.  The lighting is exceptional.  A heartbreaking and creatively staged piece of theater, Chimpanzee is astonishing to behold.

I was reminded of a great book I read on this subject, The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary, about a home for them after science no longer needs their bodies.  This highly recommended play is available for viewing as a video on their Facebook page.

Facebook/hereartscenter

Seclusion Smörgåsbord VI

For this entry into the Seclusion Smörgåsbord series, I will visit the National Theatre of London, Café La Mama and Michael Urie’s living room.

Treasure Island (National Theatre of London)

Bryony Lavery adapted Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic Treasure Island for this handsome production.  In this version, Jim Hawkins is a young girl.  This coming-of-age story is enhanced with an additional feminist angle and includes other female characters.  The storytelling sticks closely to the novel but does veer off notably towards the end.  Dramatic flourishes usurped clarity to a small degree.

Designer Lizzie Clachan has created a masterful set which transforms from inn to sailing ship to island in a series of jaw dropping transitions.  Below deck on the ship is superbly rendered.  Polly Findlay’s direction is appropriate for a children’s tale but, importantly, does not shy away from the darker elements of the story at all.  The lighting is extraordinary.

Ms. Ferran is an appealing and clever Jim.  You root for her as she figuratively grows up in front of our eyes.  Excellent characterizations from Aidan Kelly as Bill Bones and Arthur Darvill as Long John Silver give the tale its required treachery.  In the scene stealing role of Ben Gunn, Joshua James was funny, manic and heroic, providing a needed jolt of energy in the second act.

This memorable version of Treasure Island will be available for free streaming until tomorrow, April 23, 2020.  The next weekly show will be a version of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, the comedy of mistaken identities.

www.nationaltheatre.org.uk

Buyer & Cellar (Michael Urie’s Living Room)

Mr. Urie performed an encore version of Jonathan Tolin’s Buyer & Cellar in this live streamed event.  His award winning turn as Alex was recreated as a benefit performance for the Broadway Cares COVID-19 Emergency Assistance Fund.  I saw this play in 2013 and using his living room seemed a logical choice given the original set design.

Alex loses his low paying job at Disneyland after an ill-advised confrontation with a child.  He gets a call and lands a job as the manager of Barbra Streisand’s basement.  The comedy, the abuse and the shade are all in abundance.  There is also a deeper undertone which delves into fame, friendship and loneliness.  The acting is stellar and not to be missed.  (Highest of the high points:  the coupon.)  The direction, use of space and multi-camera angles kept the excitement and energy at a very high level.  File this one under coronavirus classic.

Buyer & Cellar was broadcast live Sunday evening but is still available for viewing – and donations!

youtube/buyer&cellar

Café La Mama Live:  Take 3

On Tuesday evenings, La Mama broadcasts weekly live performances that experiment with form.  Guest curators invite artists to share their work.  This episode had five entries.  Not all, I would say, were successful or even understandable.  The host noted after one bizarre and way too insider segment, “girl, what the hell was that?”

Three entertainers shined, however.  Jazmin Yvonne sang her new single which is about to be released.  “Ain’t That Cheap” is about a relationship gone sour.  After each performance the host does a brief interview.  Ms. Yvonne made me smile when she said, “I put on a sweater today.  I feel immensely accomplished.”

Leah Ogawa, a puppetry and movement artist, created a world made out of decorated cardboard.  A camera traversed multiple constructed locations on this adventure including a trip to Tokyo Town.  In Gray City, she proclaimed that there are “so many people in so many windows working so hard!”  This was an inspired example of budget-minded stay-at-home creativity.

Zui Gomez created video art using stop motion animation.  Nikolai Mishler composed a score to accompany her dance.  The phrase “I Love These Shoes” concluded the fun piece with a great ending.  Café La Mama is an opportunity for artists to stretch themselves and experiment with ideas.  The “let’s put on a show” vibe will appeal to those who are willing to encourage and support risk taking.  Grab a glass of wine and take a peek.  You might find something amusing to break up the monotony.

La Mama is offering many different streaming experiences which can be seen on their website including Café La Mama live on Tuesdays at 7:00 pm eastern.

www.lamama.org

Seclusion Smörgåsbord V

Earlier this month I saw two excellent productions from the National Theatre of London.  The first was the 1998 revival of Oklahoma! starring a superb Hugh Jackman.  A lot of noise was made about the recent Broadway revival as being so modern and dark.  This one was darker and told a story which made sense and had choreography that was rousing.  Even the ladies put up their dukes in this one.

The other big hit I managed to see was James Corden’s turn in One Man, Two Guvnors.  I saw his Tony winning performance in NYC which made him a star.  There are many opportunities streaming online for big companies such as these.  Small troupes are also summoning their creative spirits for our enjoyment and financial support.  Here are the next three entries into my Seclusion Smörgåsbord.

Hamlet (Shakespeare’s Globe)

Shakespeare’s Globe is located on the River Thames in London.  The theater is a recreation of one which would have housed Shakespeare’s plays back in the day.  The theater itself is stunning and it is quite amusing to consider those patrons on the floor standing through the performance.  Or better still, those lucky enough to be upfront and leaning their arms on the stage.

I have never seen a professional production of Hamlet.  This version was entertaining and fast paced.  The sheer number of famous quotes from this play is staggering to hear all in one sitting.  There was some gender bending in the casting.  It seemed as if the younger generation switched roles and the older generation was traditional.

Michelle Terry, known for her extensive work at the Globe, was a lively Hamlet.  She displayed riches of intellect underneath the lunacy and never succumbed to an excess of brooding.  I thoroughly enjoyed Catrin Aaron as Hamlet’s loyal friend Horatio.  The bond was evident.  Finally, in a smaller set of roles, Jack Laskey stood out for his Francisco, Fortinbras and, especially, his monologue as one of the Players.  This version was entertaining and staged lightly with little set.  The words were the star.  “The play’s the thing,” after all.

Hamlet from Shakespeare’s Globe is streaming free through today.  A production of Romeo & Juliet from 2009 is next.

www.shakespeareglobe.com

APPALACHIAN SPRING (Martha Graham Dance Company)

In this episode of Martha Matinee, the company uncovered a 1947 filmed version of the original cast.  Ms. Graham choreographed the piece which also starred Merce Cunningham.  The score was beautifully overlaid on top of this silent taping (notice the clapping).  Aaron Copland’s famous composition for this dance won him the Pulitzer Prize.

There were all sorts of technically difficulties getting this up and live.  The fans who patiently waited were actively engaged in dialogue, many who seemed to be dancers themselves from previous companies gathered in celebration.  This video is a worthwhile thirty minute historical journey.  American pioneers from the early 19th century gather for a spring celebration of their new Pennsylvania farmhouse.  This dance can be seen as a juxtaposition between this happy forward-looking vision – and a wedding union – with the promise of a better American future at the end of World War II.

This dance is available on the Martha Graham You Tube channel.

youtube/appalachianspring

Overtones (Metropolitan Playhouse)

Metropolitan Playhouse mines American theatrical heritage to showcase plays drawn from our culture and history.  Overtones is a fascinating one act play written by Alice Gerstenberg from 1913.  In this play, jealous rivals Harriet and Margaret are meeting for tea.  Their alter egos, Hetty and Maggie, chastise and criticize them.  Harriet married wealthy and Margaret got the painter who Harriet was smitten with all those years ago.

This play is an early example of expressionism.  The portrayal of women’s behaviors toward each other is blunt and quite harsh.  Directed by Alex Roe, the company performed this short play on Zoom and held a Q&A session afterward.  This interesting artifact was the third of Ms. Gerstenberg’s plays performed this past month.

The Metropolitan Playhouse streaming performances are only available live on Saturday nights.  For the next production, visit their website.

www.metropolitanplayhouse.org

Seclusion Smörgåsbord IV

These three entries in my home viewing series could not be more different despite the fact that each contain puppetry.  Seclusion Smörgåsbord IV bundles a drag act, children’s theater and an extraordinary production I originally saw in 2015.

Arias With a Twist (HERE Arts Center)

Drag artist Joey Arias and puppeteer Basil Twist created Arias With a Twist in 2006.  Arias was already a Vegas headliner having starred in Cirque du Soleil’s Zumanity.  I caught a “deluxe” version of this show which was remounted at Abrons Arts Center in 2011.  The bigger show had a bigger stage and, from memory, was a tighter, more focused entertainment.

The original version of Arias With a Twist takes a very, very long time to get moving and, pun intended, drags on.  You can see more than 20% of the  audience dropping off with the declining eyeball count.  Still, this spacey acid trip does have its pleasures including the improbable singing of Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir” during an alien abduction scene.  The NYC skyline invasion near the end of the show is a high point, literally.  For extremely patient fans of stylized drag only.  The puppets are terrific, notably the band.

HERE Arts Center will be streaming works from its archives including Wednesday evening watch parties of full length productions.

www.here.org

The Missing Matzo (La Mama Kids Online)

WonderSpark Puppets performed this week’s entry of La Mama Kids online programming.  In The Missing Matzo, children were called upon to assist Detective Mystery Max find out what happened.  Crying Nancy is upset because her Passover Seder matzo is gone.  A series of characters appear including the brilliantly named ginger Red Herring and Dr. Laserus, a Matz Scientist.

The puppets were cute and the show began strongly.  In the age of coronavirus, the sneezing slapstick was especially funny.  The “eat cake” section went on too long  and my interest waned.  Admittedly, I did not watch with any children present.  This company is performing a new puppet show every Friday on their Facebook page.  The performance quality of the hand puppets and vocals make this a troupe worth checking out.  For this production, La Mama Kids had an activity guide to use before and after the show.

Frequent online programming is available from La Mama.  Next week’s puppet show for kids looks promising.  It’s called Fritz’s Flea Circus and will be shown on April 23, 2020.

www.lamama.org/livestreams

Facebook/WonderSparkPuppets

 

Ada/Ava (The Tank)

The Tank co-produced Ada/Ava in 2015 with 3LD Art & Technology Center.  After seeing that production, I began following Manual Cinema, the performance collective which combines handmade shadow puppetry and cinematic techniques with innovative sound and music.  They create films live in front of an audience using vintage overhead projectors, multiple screens, actors, musicians and much more.  Watching the behind the scenes activity is as interesting as the cinema unfolding on the screen.

This story is about two elderly sisters who live in their childhood home and tend the nearby lighthouse.  The atmosphere is moody.  Shadow and lighting effects bring the story to life.  The video does an excellent job of focusing on the completed work while also showing a glimpse of the artists at work.  This art is completely unique which is why this company travels the world with its repertoire.  I’ll not say more than to treat yourself to this creatively stimulating, breathtakingly original  and wholly satisfying entertainment.  Oh, and the cinematic storytelling is simply astounding.

Ada/Ava can be seen on The Tank’s home page through April 19, 2020.

www.thetanknyc.org

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/frankenstein/manualcinema

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/mementosmori/manualcinema

Seclusion Smörgåsbord III

Greetings from my Manhattan apartment.  I am writing this blog entry on April 15, 2020.  The last time I went outside was March 15th.  As someone who averages 15-20 theater shows per month, the change has been enormous.  With the free streaming opportunities and relatively low cost (or donation) models, now is the time to try something outside the box.

The Clam (Playing on Air)

Recorded live, this short play runs 25 minutes including Q&A at the end.  The Clam was written by Amanda Quaid and stars Tony Shalhoub as the mollusk and Kristine Nielsen as his therapist.  This comedy was directed by Moritz von Steulpnagel.  The play contains silly and funny jokes.  The clam says, “I’m nervous.  I feel moist, a little…”  The therapist deadpans, “clammy.”  The clam quickly tries to shut the therapist down.  “I don’t like cracks about coming out of my shell.”

The therapy session addresses feeling stuck, being lonely and alone.  The tone is light but provides some depth when discussing the five paths to happiness.  My favorite line was when the clam stated that he was “spinning in an eddy of my own anxiety.”  I also loved, however, this insight:  “Barnacles are not the most erudite conversationalists.”  The Clam is a happy diversion.

www.playngonair.org

Night Vision (Playing on Air)

The second short play I listened to was Night Vision by Dominique Morisseau.  April Matthis and Eden Marryshow portray a couple who have just returned to their apartment in Bed Stuy (Brooklyn).  She is pregnant and feeling hurt, angry and disgusted.  They witnessed someone in a hoodie punching a woman.  Now safely home, she wants to call the police.

What exactly did the couple see?  Did they see the event similarly?  In ten minutes, this play challenges the listener to self-reflect.  Do we internalize our biases?  How do they inform our actions?   I highly recommend listening to the Q&A afterward which provides thoughtful judgment-free analysis.

www.playngonair.org

Cybertank (Episode 2)

Every Tuesday, the Tank presents an online arts variety show which remains viewable on their website.  The second episode was promisingly titled, “How can we be silly?”  While this fifty minute presentation started and ended strong, much of the time ranged between honorable attempts and strike outs.

If you’ve been to the Tank, you will definitely remember the operations manager, Collin Knopp-Schwyn.  He introduces many of the 1,000 shows this company produces each year.  His segment was a “welcome to cybertank!” via the currently popular video game cartoon Animal Crossing.  The opening was cute and inviting.  The message even more so:  “If you’ve never made art before,” there is “no better time than now!”

Mark Nunez is a “resident dance curator” who host a Sunday “sip and sweat” on Instagram.  People post their quarantine dances.  He shared excerpts of this high energy and super fun communal bonding.  Host Michaela Escarcega created a video starring herself called “Cabin Fever.”  How does an artist entertain herself and others from her seclusion?  Her creations are quirky and absolutely delightful.

Julian Shapiro-Brown introduced a new talk show, “The Social Distance.”  This inaugural outing was hit and miss but the good parts were promising.  The CDC calls COVID-19 a pandemic.  The host cleverly notes that this description is theoretically more inclusive than calling it a “bi-demic.”  His oddball sidekicks are amusing as well.  If you’d like try CyberTank, I’d recommend starting with the first episode.  That one, although more melancholy in tone, was a richer and more consistently elevated program.

www.thetanknyc.org/cybertank

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/seclusionsmorgasbordII

Seclusion Smörgåsbord II

In Seclusion Smörgåsbord II, I continue my chronicle of viewing taped and live streamed theatrical presentations viewed from the seat of my couch.

Culture Clash (Still) in America (Berkeley Rep)

This troupe has been performing for decades.  In 2002, they had a program called Culture Clash in AmeriCCa based on interviews they conducted.  Culture Clash (Still) in America is an update with some added scenes reflective of current events.  The tone is incisive satire through broadly comedic skits as filtered through a Latino lens.  Richard Montoya, Ricardo Salinas and Herbert Següenza are all accomplished actors.  Here they showcase a wide range of skillful characterizations.

The show opens at an ICE Detention Facility where a man is being detained.  We learn that he has been separated from his daughter.  The initial tone is heavy but quickly turns to a documentary style with laughs between the two agents and the prisoner.  The people we then meet include a Miami couple in the demolition business who are being interviewed on camera.  They are hilarious as they over talk each other while baring their societal prejudices and penchant for greed.  Hurricanes are good times for the demolition business.

The parade of stereotypes include a black pastor who wonders, “How did Jesus go from looking like Osama bin Laden to Brad Pitt?”  He concludes that “white Jesus was a lie, the original fake news.”  Junior is a Nuyorican who demonstrates through dance how to tell various shades of brown-skinned people apart.  There’s also a Cuban transvestitie, two men (African, Filipino) swearing in to become citizens and a couple of ex-hippie pot smoking lesbian ladies from Fresno, California.  The jokes in this section are plentiful.  Giving granddaughter a woke Barbie.  Romancing youthful revolution: “I stood for Che Guevara and Chez Panisse.”

One of the ladies says to the other, “careful honey, you’re appropriating.”  It certainly is possible that people may view sections of this satire in that vein.  What binds this particular piece together, however, is the follow up story to the original ICE detention center.  A lawyer who works on family separations is interviewed.  The story links back to the opening scene.  He asks the unanswerable about a “country that separates children” and cages them “as punitive measures.”  The dagger is then thrust:  “Can that country still be called America?”

Performances of Culture Clash (Still) in America were interrupted by the pandemic.  This Berkeley Repertory Theater production was sharply directed by Lisa Peterson with a skillful set design by Christopher Acebo.

Bindlestiff Open Stage Variety Show:  Quarantine Edition

My first visit to this monthly inclusive hodgepodge of circus acts and bizarre curiosities was back in December, 2018.  Given our stay at home situation, these performers have taken to the internet to share their talents remotely.  Keith Nelson is once again the host who performs some of his classics between acts including the spinning top and sword swallowing.  The broadcast is also a fundraiser for these artists during this difficult time.

The acts are often experimental, in development or simply just odd.  Others are impressively professional and, like the best circus acts, fill the viewer with wonderment.  Michael Rosman welcomes us to his driveway in the “deep woods of Maryland.”  He created a new quarantined tightrope act which has been “planned but not well thought out.”  He literally and figuratively performs a tightrope walking routine above two tigers and a flaming pit of fire.

Nelson Lugo impressed with an entertaining version of the shell game.  Butch and Buttercup performed their amusing lift and balance gymnastics from an empty Brooklyn warehouse.  The heavy metal musician character embodied by Brian Bielemeier rocked the silver rings.  He dedicated the show to his six ex-wives.

There are other fine acts within this nearly two hour live stream.  Naturally there are some technical mishaps and juggling calamities along the way.  The first act presented was Magic Mike.  Think a very, very, very aged version of the Channing Tatum movie persona who presents ridiculous comedic mishaps from his home with no pants on.

Zeroboy is somewhat of a sound effects master.  This act was all over the place.  When he started singing Peggy Lee’s “Fever,” a line followed:  “you gave me COVID…”  One of our housebound family members announced, “I’m out.”  This “quarantainment” is definitely (and intentionally) a mixed bag but can be an amusing diversion during happy hour.  They are planning to air this series weekly to enable these performers to continue creating their art and, hopefully, collect a few donations as well.

Bindlestiff Open Stage Variety Show:  Quarantine Edition is available on the Bindlestiff Family Cirkus Facebook home page and their You Tube channel.

youtube/bindlestiff/april6

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/bindlestiff/december2018

Seclusion Smörgåsbord I

The PR and theater company emails, Facebook ads and Twitter posts have led to an wide array of streaming theatrical events.  Some are live and some are taped.  Some are new and some are older.  On Saturday, April 4th, I decided to take in three wildly different performances.  I’m recording them here for prosperity and, more importantly, to keep my sanity in check.  The first entry in this series has been named Seclusion Smörgåsbord I.

Brittain Ashford @ 54 Below at Home

Ms. Ashford has a haunting voice which I first heard when she appeared in the excellent musical Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812.  This nightclub aired her 2017 solo debut which featured some original music and favorite covers.  She played an array of instruments along with the onstage band.  Her voice is unusual and really captivating.  The show was relaxed and tuneful, perfect for adding calmness in these nervous days.  Future 54 Below at Home events can be found here:

www.54below.com/54belowathome

50in50: Letters to Our Sons

Based in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, The Billie Holiday Theatre hosted a live Facebook presentation.  Ten actresses from around the country read stories by 50 Black women writers from across the world.  The curatorial connectivity was to “consider both the world they inherited and the one they’d like to create.”  Directed by Indira Etwaroo, the show was rich with stirring, vivid and emotional prose.

Here are a few gems I managed to jot down.  “God is nestled in the rhythm of your heartbeats.”  He “loved me like he was drowning.”  Someone was “dressed in the color bittersweet.”  Anger surfaced in various moments to effectively communicate a conviction or an injustice.  “When asking a great leader why they hurt people, they answer because I can.”

The show segued from performer to performer quickly.  As a result, there was a satisfying variety of voices and writing styles to absorb.  The speed of the transitions encouraged emotions to build and register strongly.  Occasional musical interludes from Maritri Garrett on the piano added beauty and a chance for reflective pauses.

All of the performers were compelling.  Kendra Holloway and Phyllis Yvonne Stickney were especially memorable for me.  As a Facebook live presentation, the audience was able to add comments throughout.  “Phyllis has more voices than a cat has lives.”  The group participation and reviews from all of our seats infused the entire piece with a tremendous sense of communal bonding.  “This is food for weary and worn souls.”  One of my favorite expressions of joy: “So soulful and so soulfilled – our ancestry thanks you.”

50in50 is available to view on the Facebook page of The Billie Holiday Theatre.

www.facebook.com/billiehollidaytheatre

Werq the World Live Stream

For my final show Saturday, I jarringly transitioned from 50in50 to a benefit event for out-of-work performers in the entertainment industry.  Nine drag show queens from RuPaul’s Drag Race performed mostly newly recorded videos while practicing social distancing in the process.  The evening was hosted by Bianca Del Rio (from Los Angeles) and Lady Bunny (from New York) who noted that “social distancing is easy when everyone hates you.”

Most of the queens had messages to deliver along with their performances, notably about staying home.  The first two segments featuring Gigi Goode and Asia O’Hara were my favorites.  I was also impressed by Aquaria’s entirely self-made music video from seclusion.  The hosts devolved into bawdy and raunchy humor which often works with a live drunken audience.  Here, with time delays between the two coasts, the jokes felt forced and mostly landed with a thud.

Werq the World Live Stream is available for a fee.  Portions of the proceeds (and all of the tips) are going to those performers who signed up on their website to receive financial support during this difficult period.

www.vossevents.com/werqtheworldlivestream

How Do We Choose Community Over Despair? (CyberTank Episode 1)

With all of the theaters closed, more and more websites and theater companies are taking their works online.  Some are free and some have paid subscriptions.  I frequently attend productions at The Tank, an Off-Off Broadway arts incubator.  They have just started a weekly series called CyberTank.  The first episode is appropriately themed How Do We Choose Community Over Despair?

Christian Roberson is the host.  He also submitted a documentary style hip hop video about art and racism.  The mood is very casual and apologetic as the team fumbles through the early stages of this venture.  I found myself inspired by each contributors’ passion to share feelings and art during this time of isolation.  The experiment in process is to create an e-home for e-merging artists.  Like The Tank itself, the range covers many disciplines.

Kev Berry just lost his job in a restaurant.  He has begun writing a document called “For the Sake of Heaven.”  The plan is to “capture this thing” on a day-to-day basis.  He then reads his entry from Day 2 called “Adjustments and Curry.”  Iveth Otero filmed a short belly dancing video.  The mood was dreamlike and gauzily lit.

Suzelle Palacios, who I recently saw in Birthday in the Bronx, followed with a sonnet.  She also implored artists to find ways to express their art.  She suggests trying something you haven’t done before.  The encouragement of expression drives the feeling of community evident throughout this episode.

Emery Schaffer presented a taped segment from his play A My Name is Allison.  Three friends have a game night and Allison comes to one of them.  She’s a doozy.  On a monthly basis, Ayun-Halliday hosts Necromancers of the Public Domain.  This program takes an old book from the New York Public Library and creates a one night low budget variety show.  This month’s book was 1921’s New York: The Nation’s Metropolis.  She tells us, “so I wrote this yesterday at 5:00.”  A tune follows with pictures and humor.

Ran Xia was inspired to take an eighteen day train trip, talk to strangers and create a travelogue.  In her segment, storytelling is set to a piano accompaniment.  Nikki Knupp follows with a transgender themed pop song and a fun homemade music video.  The opening line is memorable:  “Is who you are reflected in a stranger’s eyes?”

As we can never truly escape the abominations of the White House occupants, a section from The Melania Trump Road Show is played.  Lauren LoGiudice portrays the first lady.  The segment is titled Fashion Police of Politics.  “Shame on him for those eyebrows” made me laugh out loud.  Poet Mike Fracentese came next.  He began a bimonthly poetry reading series at the Tank.  The third show was cancelled due to the virus.  He shares his poem about climate change.

Constantine Jones has written a manuscript called The Gut.  It is one long poem separated into distinct movements.  Three selections highlight his project and you feel drawn into his creative process and thoughts.  “Slide Show” particularly stood out for me with the promising opening, “all the things I’d like to be.”  Finally, Julia Knobloch concluded the episode with three recently written poems.  Her themes were the dark legacy of the Nazi’s, getting older and the search for a place which bore the title, “Los Angeles.”

Mr. Roberson reminds viewers that The Tank (like all smaller non-profits) will be struggling financially through this period.  Donations are encouraged.  The Venmo accounts for most of the artists are also noted in the upper left hand of the video.  If you enjoy a performance, a tip can be easily shared from your seat.  I look forward to the next batch of experimentation and sharing.

The Tank is a Off-Off Broadway theater and arts incubator which typically puts on 1,000 shows annually working with over 2,500 artists across many disciplines.  New episodes are scheduled to go live on Tuesdays at 4:00pm eastern.

www.thetanknyc.org/cybertank

Veinticinco: a myth of the brain (The Tank)

The brain has been studied for centuries.  Veinticinco: a myth of the brain is a performance art piece that ponders that fact in a personal way.  The brain adapts, molds and transforms.  One of the four young women says “all of this I’ve been obsessed with.  So obsessed with.”

The four lobes of the brain are covered in this meditative exploration.  The temporal lobe is in charge of language.  Cleverly, the show begins with “maybe it’s the first thing you recall that starts building a language.”  The ladies then alternate snippets of the first things that they remember as a young child.  “My turtle Leo” had a name which was based on a television program.  This detail later elicits a laugh as she recounts all her turtles up through Leo seven.  When the thoughts are sharply detailed, Veinticinco is at its most effective.

Isabella Uzcátegui created this piece in collaboration with her co-performers Sofia Figueroa, Ana Moioli and Sofia Sam.  With backgrounds from Venezuela, Brazil and Peru, the languages of their own histories are addressed.  “I have to give up a part of myself to speak English.”  The English language is considered “very chewy” and makes “my brain go slightly faster.”  Emotions are “definitely for Spanish.”  Hearing foreign languages interspersed throughout the show brings these storytellers to life.

Most of the dialogue spoken is in short segments.  There is some vivid imagery developed such as equating one’s mind to mirrors and windows.  The occipital lobe controls sight and illusions.  One complements she likes the color of another’s blue shirt.  But it’s green.  It looks blue.  “It’s yellow,” concludes a third person.  The show is also a playful study on our brains; what makes us similar and what makes us different.

Directed by Attilio Rigotti, Veinticinco flows easily between proclamations, questions, insights and movement.  The lighting design by Orsolya Szánthó is particularly fascinating in its variation and choreography.  Most of the effects are hand held by the cast.  There is a feeling of analysis and of illumination.  The staging and visual impact added a nice layer of mystery.  We know what we know and we don’t know what we don’t.

“This is my dream body” is said during the segment which covers the frontal lobe.  What followed caught me by surprise.  “Wouldn’t it be great,” we are asked, “to have a second brain…  a reserve heart… that would just drop down into place when the first one breaks?”  Memorable writing is a strength of this show.

Clocking in at forty five minutes, Veinticinco is probably long enough for now.  There is a distant, lecture-like quality to this dreamlike excursion into the brain.  I found myself wanting to know more about these women which is a good sign that they drew my attention into their vision.  If each person had a short monologue or two, that could potentially allow us to get emotionally attached to their exploration rather than primarily intellectually.

Cinquanta might be a nice follow up piece twenty five years from now.  What makes artists’ tick and want to create is usually interesting and, as is the case in this unique production, often entertaining.

The Tank is a non-profit presenter and producer serving 2,500 artists in 1,000 productions annually on their two stages.

www.thetank.org

SEVEN SINS (Company XIV)

Can the biblical tale of Adam and Eve be told in stunning burlesque without upsetting any higher powers?  The audience didn’t seem to care while soaking up this witty, imaginative and delectably subversive version.  The devil opens the show with Sam Tinnesz’s “Play With Fire.”  The lyrics are altered to set the mood as in “my boys like to play with fire.”  As is usual for a Company XIV performance, things do indeed get hot.

Poor Adam is created but soon thereafter complains of loneliness.  A cleverly executed scene produces Adam’s rib, the key ingredient for making a woman.  (Are we really still teaching this in schools?)  Dean Martin’s “If You Were the Only Girl in the World” cheekily underscores their duet.  Costumes (Zane Pihlstrom) in this show are fantastically bawdy and sparkly.  Adam and Eve wear sheer material decorated to look like a nude body over their undergarments.  Remember, shame takes them a while to discover.  Scott Schneider and Danielle J.S. Gordon were terrific in their roles and atmospheric dances.

An elaborate snake dance ensues.  The temptation.  The bite.  The fall.  Adam and Eve are cast out of paradise.  There are seven paths to hell.  Seven deadly sins.  Now the cast wants to celebrate as we are getting to the pulsating heart of this show.  “Sinners, a toast… to hell!”  The spirit being conjured is summed up by the follow up remark.  “May your stay there be as fun as the way there.”

After a perfectly timed intermission, Austin McCormick’s burlesque extravaganza kicks into high gear.  The seven sins are thematically embraced in this ex-warehouse space.  The decor is described as Versailles decadence spliced with Prohibition era dance halls.  The room can definitely get a little smoky (for design effect) and the superlative lighting by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew completes the visual picture.

If you’ve never seen Company XIV before, attending is a super stylized and dreamy trip back in time.  The performers greet you and are also the bartenders.  Different types of seating are available.  This show has a few large tables in the middle of the room.  These people are served food and drinks.  They also get a close up on some of the action.  There is a party-like vibe but when the lights go down, all eyes are focused on the performers and their impressive skills.

Marcy Richardson is a peacock strutting her stuff as Vanity.  If you have seen her act before, she has an knack for aerial acrobatics while singing opera.  This time she performs “L’eliser D’amore” (The Elixir of Love) by Gaetano Donizetti.  The troupe’s trademark intermingling of musical styles is typically fascinating.  Ms. Richardson returns later in the show during Greed and delivers the best routine I have ever seen by her.  That is saying a lot if you’ve been lucky enough to catch her act before.

Lust  is appropriately placed in the middle of the show.  In an ensemble piece, two men hang upside down in a full split position from the overhead lighting fixture.  This is a brief moment in the show but it informs the high level of quality.  You notice the double lyra in the air when you take your seat.  During a Jealousy scene, Troy Lingelbach and Nolan McKew are dazzling on this apparatus.

Cab Calloway’s “Everybody Eats When They Come to My House” concludes the Gluttony section.  A little can-can nods to the Moulin Rouge feel of this nightclub.  After all, we are told, “everywhere there’s a lot of piggies living piggy lives.”  Funny, sexy, artistic, athletic, musical, breathtaking and endlessly entertaining, SEVEN SINS is a perfect introduction to this company.  Stay far away if bare buttocks and teasing sensuality offend your delicate sensibilities.

SEVEN SINS is performed at Théâtre XIV in Bushwick, Brooklyn.  The show is running until October 31, 2020.  A delicious slice at Artichoke Pizza can also be had on the nearby corner.

www.companyxiv.com

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