Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Santa is Coming to Main Street

Kathy Wenerick-Bell, Grace La Count, Joseph Mariano
Photo by Larry Simmons
 
 


Laurel Mill Playhouse opens its annual holiday show this Saturday night with the classic, “Miracle on 34th Street,” adapted from the novel by Valentine Davies; George Seaton wrote the 1947 movie starring Maureen O’Hara, John Payne, and a very young (6-year-old) Natalie Wood.
Set in New York City, the story centers on a Macy’s Department store Santa, a seemingly eccentric old gentleman named Kris Kringle, who claims to be the real McCoy. When Kringle ends up in court defending his sanity, the innocence of childhood goes on trial.
Veteran Laurel Mill Playhouse Director Michael Hartsfield has assembled the following cast:
 Craig Allen - Johnny’s Parent/Al
Derek A. Cooper - Mr. Halloran
Sarah Criscuolo - 3rd Pedestrian/Lou
Morgan Delk - Sylvia/1st Pedestrian
Katie Estep - Sharon
Mike Galizia - Kris Kringle
Sharon Gilbertz - Elf Q
Henry Green - Mr. Bloomingdale/Mr. Finley
Shirley Greenwald - Dr. Pierce
Ed Higgins - Mr. Sawyer
Deborah Hokanson - Megan
Stacy Hokanson - Bag Lady/Megan’s Parent/Newscaster
Anne Hull - Ms. Shellhammer
Malcolm Humes - Mr. Macy
Lillie Jewell-Dean  - Dutch Girl/Janet Mara
Ashley Kelley - Rich Person/2nd Pedestrian
Grace La Count - Susan Walker
Joseph Mariano  - Fred Gayley
Kendra Maurer - Ms. Mara
Raquel McRae  - Dutch Girl’s Foster Mother
Grant Myers - Sharon’s Parent/Mr. Duncan
Sophia Riazi-Sekowski - Johnny
Amanda Smith - Elf Z
Amy Vecheck  - Elf R
Kathy Wenerick-Bell - Doris Walker
Tim Wolf  - Judge Harper
Nicole Woody - Elf J
Kayleen Yermal  - Elf W
Shaelyn Yermal - Child #1/Child #2
 Miracle on 34th Street" runs from Dec. 3 to 18 at Laurel Mill Playhouse at 508 Main Street in Laurel. Friday and Saturday night curtains rise at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees Dec. 4, 11 and 18 at 2 p.m., along with a special matinee Dec. 17 at 2 p.m.
Tickets are $13 for general admission. Students (18 and under), active duty military and seniors (65 and over) pay $10. For further information visit www.laurelmillplayhouse.org or contact Producer Maureen Rogers at maureencrogers@gmail.com.
Look for my review in the Dec. 8th Laurel Leader.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Christopher Dong Vocal Recital

Christopher Dong

   Laurel Mill Playhouse audiences have seen Christopher Dong perform in "Company" and "Rent" (see my review) over the past couple of seasons. A competent performer, Dong – who’s also a gymnast and known for performing unexpected, signature “flips” on stage – gave very respectable performances in both musicals.
            An aerospace engineer by day, Dong co-founded the APL Drama Club a couple of years ago. Recently he’s been doing some film work and taking voice lessons from Mary Wierick. Some of his lucky friends, peers, and acquaintances were invited to attend “I Am I!” – a private vocal recital that Dong presented Nov. 14th at the Parsons Auditorium after hours at The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel.
            Accompanied by Wierick on piano, Dong sang an eclectic score of songs that showed off his improved vocal range, beginning with the traditional folk song, Shenandoah arranged by Frank Ponzio, and ending with I Don Quixote from “Man of La Mancha.”
            And it was quite an ending.
 Joking at the reception afterward that Dong’s natural range of expression usually tends to range from 1-3 (Dong said he was surprised they estimated it so high), pleased audience members complimented his wonderfully expressive presentation and the excellent quality of the recital overall.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

In the Next Room (or the Vibrator Play) at Laurel Mill Playhouse

     Sara Ruhl's "In the Next Room (or the Vibrator Play)" continues its run at the Laurel Mill Playhouse at 508 Main Street in Laurel through Nov. 20th. The show debuted on Broadway a couple of years ago.

Michael Hartsfield, Eric Henry, Ann Turiano, Dana Medford, Brian Binney, 
Nikki Smallwood, Paula Rich, George Tamerlani
      Pelvic massage really was used to treat hysteria in women (and sometimes men) in Victorian times. Based on documented medical history of the electromechanical vibrator, "In the Next Room" takes place in the late 1800s in the home of a well to do gynecologist. 
     Dr. and Mrs. Givings have just installed electricity in their parlor and the room next to it, which Dr. Givings calls his "operating theater." He treats patients for hysteria in this operating theater as Mrs. Givings listens, befuddled by the sounds, through a locked door. One evening she breaks into the room with a hat pin while the good doctor is out and discovers the mysterious instrument, which she says "looks like a farming tool."
     But when Mrs. Givings figures out that the device has recreational as well as therapeutic value, a series of hysterical developments result. Director Michael Hartsfield handles the intellectual comedy with his usual finness and the Victorian trappings lend a demure quality to the production.
George Tamerlani, Paul Rich, Dana Medford, 
Nikki Smallwood
     But don't take your kids. Although there is no nudity or offensive language (in fact, Ruhl's formal English adds much to the play's charm), patients appear to be masturbated onstage in full view (underneath the sheets of course). And the medical procedures are discussed in graphic detail.

George Tamerlani, Paula Rich

     


Be prepared to laugh, to cry, and squirm a bit through this one. Unraveling Ruhl's ambitious themes in the second act may prove a challenge, but it's worth it.

     See my review in the Laurel Leader.

"In the Next Room (or the Vibrator Play)" continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Nov. 20, with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. on Nov. 13 and 20. Tickets are $13 for general admission; and $10 for students (18 and younger) and seniors (65 and older). For reservations, call 301-617-9906 and press 2. For more information, visit www.laurelmillplayhouse.org. 

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Starry Night Fundraiser at 2nd Star Productions

     Folks who like to attend musical theater mostly for the show-stopping numbers have an opportunity to enjoy the best of a decade of 2nd Star Productions musicals in one evening. For 50 tax deductible dollars, patrons can reserve a seat at the little theater in the woods, a.k.a. the Bowie Playhouse, on Sunday, November 13th.
     The evening starts at 8 pm with music direction by Donald K. Smith, and performances by local artists reprising their favorite performances from 2nd Star musicals, as follows:

Damn Yankees -  Dean Davis, Wendell Holland
The Sound of Music  - Barbara Hartzell
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum -  Brian Douglas
Something's Afoot
- Duncan Hood and Shannon Benil
My Fair Lady - Pamela Day    
A Funny thing Happened on the Way to the Forum - Nathan Bowen
Anything Goes - Drea Elward    
Oliver  - Tiffany Shannon
Oliver - Zac Fadler , Michael Mathes, Brian Jolly, Stevie Mangum
Annie - Vivian Wingard, Tabi Thornhill, Leela Dawson, Angeleza Anderson, Kashamere Maria
Pirates of Penzance
- Tania Rosa Bindhoff Frieswyck
The Secret Garden - Samantha Feikema, John Day, Eddie Chell,  Vivian Wingard, Zac Fadler
King and I - Wendell Holland
Cinderella - Malarie Novotny, Lisa Gregg, Pam Shilling
Brigadoon -  Barbara Hartzell, John Day
Damn Yankees - Hannah Thornhill
Into the Woods - Christine Asero, Pamela Day, Brian Douglas
The Music Man - Julie Kurzava
The Man of LaMancha
- Michael Galizia

     Light refreshments and a silent auction will be served at the intermission. 
     Seating is limited and prepaid reservations should be made very soon. Call 410-757-5700  or 301-832-4819. For more information and directions, go to the 2nd Star home page.
     Watch for Vivian Wingard's and Zac Fadler's performance from The Secret Garden.  Vivian Wingard is the teen granddaughter of Janie Wingard, owner and founder of the theater, and Janie described their performance of "Wick" as one of her proudest moments in the theater's history when we talked last spring. (See  The Force Behind 2nd Star Productions)

Friday, October 14, 2011

"Our Town" at the Cheapeake Shakespeare Company


Fall seems to be the season to revisit classic American Theater – The Chesapeake Shakespeare Company is currently staging Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town” at the outdoor ruins of the Patuxent Female Institute Park behind the courthouse in Ellicott City.  Most theater fans have seen the show more than once, and it really takes that to appreciate the depth of the show’s central themes. Artistic Founding Director Ian Gallanar, who directed this production, said it best for Tony Sclafani’s preview article in the Howard County Times.
Gallanar's memory of "Our Town," he says, was that, "It was a sweet little play about a young couple" and the inherent sweetness of the townsfolk. But this time out, he found it was nothing of the sort.
"I found it to be a very powerful play about how fast time moves through our lives and how our lives go from one place to another without us taking any time to look at what's around us."
Patuxent Female Institute Park
Ellicott City, MD


Staging the show in the park where the ruins of the old girls’ school serve as a stand-in for the town requires audiences to physically go from one place to another and creates a visually exciting presentation.  I found no “old hats” in sight here – just particularly beautiful period costumes designed by Marilyn Johnson and orange glow stick necklaces handed out at the admissions gate that made audience members visible in the dark.
Walking up the hill from the parking lot was a great warm-up to following the story around all evening. The House Mangers gathered everyone at the starting point of the show, Gallanar gave a casual welcome spiel and invited audience members to “eavesdrop,” and the show began.
During the two intermissions on opening night, hot chocolate, hot cider and snacks were served by vendors in woodsy animal costumes (we were, after all, in the woods).
For more about how Gallanar adapted “Our Town” to the Chesapeake Shakespeare Company’s fall “moveable” production and the excellent quality of the direction and acting, see my review article in the Howard County Times.
The Chesapeake Shakespeare Company’s “moveable” productions accommodate smaller audiences than traditional stage settings and sell out quickly. For more information, go to www.chesapeakeshakespeare.com.

"I Never Sang for My Father" at Laurel Mill Playhouse


Ed Higgins, Hillary Mazer
After finishing the summer one-act festival (see feature article) with an interesting crop of unknown works, the Laurel Mill Playhouse is revisiting classic American Theater for one more weekend with “I Never Sang for My Father” by Robert Anderson. Baby boomers may remember Gene Hackman’s Oscar-nominated movie performance as Gene Garrison, the son caught in a life-long web of father-son conflict who can’t turn his back on filial duty.
         The show is very well played by Donald Neal, Ed Higgins, Maureen Rogers, Hillary Mazer, Rob Allen, Shenna Ross, and Henry Green. 
          The following is a quote from my review that came out in the Laurel Leader, which doesn’t appear to be available online, but is likely hanging on the bulletin board at the theater.
Ed Higgins, Henry Green, Shenna Ross, Maureen Rogers, Donald Neal
          “Edgy and earnest, “I Never Sang for My Father” doesn’t really have a resolution, just an end to Gene’s mental snapshots but not to his yearning for paternal love. It does raise provocative questions about filial duty, while providing a showcase for some fine acting, and the folks at Laurel Mill Playhouse are up to it.”
          The final performances are Friday, and Saturday, at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. (Oct. 14-16). For more information, go to www.laurelmillplayhouse.org.


Thursday, September 22, 2011

2nd Star Productions


Last month, 2nd Star Productions reprised Larry Shue's "The Foreigner" at the charming little theater in the woods, Bowie Playhouse. After performing there for Director Jane Wingard fifteen years ago in the same play and with the same lead (Steve English), I had to check out the final performance.
This show was excellent! A high compliment from an audience member predisposed to hope that the production wouldn't be quite as good as ours had been. But it was, and even better as an ensemble. There's no point in writing a review, now, but suffice it to say that the review of opening night that came out in Bay Weekly is right on the mark.
Bay Weekly Review of The Foreigner
The final performance blew the audience away.

Bowie Playhouse, White Marsh Recreational Park, Bowie, MD

Last spring, Wingard graciously spent some time answering questions and discussing the history of 2nd Star Productions. See The Force Behind 2nd Star Productions.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

John Brown's Body

The story that I promised to post at the end of my entry on February 15 (see Valentines and Time) follows:

Haunted by History by Patti Restivo

           The city of Elkridge nestles alongside the Patapsco River at the confluence of Howard, Anne Arundel, and Baltimore Counties. Five years after the Thomas Viaduct was built in 1835 allowing rail access to the unpopulated region across the river from Baltimore City, Judge George W. Dobbin built his summer estate on the top of the “Hill.” Fellow attorneys and friends quickly followed, Judge Dobbin moved in permanently, and the close-knit Lawyers Hill community was born.
 During the turbulent 1860s, the residents of Lawyers Hill were as divided by the War Between the States as the rest of the country. But, when Union troops camped on Lawyers Hill to guard passage into Baltimore City, neighbors protected each other’s properties and remained loyal to one another despite conflicting sympathies.
          And when the worst of the mayhem of the war was done, they built a neighborhood parlor to serve as a place for the survivors to mend their torn emotions.
          Tucked away on a corner and across the way from a field, past curving bends, the Elkridge Assembly Rooms have been refurbished. The exterior of the log-cabin type building appears much like it must have in the beginning, when it became a neutral meeting place offering entertainment and companionship to battle-weary residents.
          Today, the sun is setting on the little hall that sits alone on the corner of Lawyers Hill and Old Lawyers Hill Roads. There is no traffic or human-made noise, and if I turn my back on the paved road and ignore the port-a-pot to focus on the sound of birds while entering this quaint wood-shingled dwelling, I can almost believe it’s 1871, shortly after the theater was built.
           But it’s not. It’s the spring of 2001.
           And I am here to perform in the Columbia Community Players’ staged reading of Stephen Vincent Benet’s Pulitzer prize-winning John Brown’s Body for one brief weekend.
      I had originally committed to direct this show when the Players' Executive Board voted to stage John Brown’s Body as our contribution to the Howard County Sesquicentennial Arts Celebration. We agreed to finance the show, and the Arts Celebration’s Vision Howard County committee put me in touch with Sally Voris from the Lawyers Hill Community homeowners group to arrange the venue.
           In those days I was serving as Communications Director for the Columbia Community Players, an organization run entirely by volunteers. Almost immediately after Voris signed an agreement to open John Brown’s Body on Lawyers Hill the first weekend in June, I realized the only way to get it produced was to take on that job as well, in spite of doubts about trying to manage such pressing responsibility on top of directing and my day job.
           While brainstorming how to move forward with friend and stage/film actor Charles Maloney, I tossed out the idea of swapping commitments. (Maloney is not only a veteran community theater director and one of the mentors who taught me to direct plays, he is an avid Civil War buff and Vietnam war veteran.) Caught by the artistic poignancy of staging John Brown’s Body in an authentic civil war setting, Maloney agreed to direct the reading instead of appearing in it as an actor, allowing me to focus my energies on producing and publicizing it.
          With the Executive Board’s approval, we quickly reorganized and assembled a cast of a dozen actors and musicians – Dan Bravmann (who also served as Musical Director), Delia Chiu, Steve Bruun, Ed Kuhl, Mark Allen, Richard Bloomquist, Todd Cunningham, Nancy Dall, David O’Brien, Heidi Toll, Susan Weber, and me – with Steve Teller providing technical direction.
     The show received generous press coverage from the Howard County Times and the Baltimore Sun; we open on Friday night to a good house. Although historically preserved (sans modern amenities like rest rooms and running water), the building does have some electricity. As the darkness descends outside, gentle lighting sparks the usual stage magic.
           Our audience is reverent.
           Benet’s Pulitzer prize-winning poem is a magnificent piece that begins with the singing of first-generation slaves imprisoned on a ship headed for America. Sweeping to John Brown’s guerilla raid on the federal garrison at Harper’s Ferry and through the war experiences and romances of Yank Jack Ellyat and Reb Clay Wingate, the poem lends beautifully to dramatic interpretation by voice, banjo, and cello. I cannot imagine enacting its stories in a more soulful setting or in better company.
           Maloney has dressed us in stage black and composed the set using our bodies and symbolic visual elements – the confederate and union flags hang strategically and a touch of blood-red color peeks from an upstage bench. We twelve (and the banjo and cello) remain onstage for the entire performance, sinking deeply into Benet’s language that powerfully evokes illusions of burning mansions, complex love stories, and historic political crises.
      Benet wrote John Brown’s Body to be read, and we understand that we are performing a theatrical rendition of a poem rather than the poetic presentation of a play. Maloney has split the three intended roles into multiple characters to create an overlapping, dueling vocal effect that at times allows pandemonium.
           We recreate Grant and Lee and the other generals alongside fictional characters as diverse as giggling debutants at a house party, an exhausted soldier suffering nightmares, and a steely but fragile Southern mother. There are few human emotions that aren’t laid bare by the time the poem ends.
           Lyrics from Benet’s version of “John Brown’s Body Lies A-Mouldering in the Grave” point to the final crescendo:
John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave.
Spread over it the bloodstained flag of his song,
For the sun to bleach, the wind and the birds to tear,
The snow to cover over with a pure fleece
And the New England cloud to work upon
With the grey absolution of its slow, most lilac-smelling rain,
Until there is nothing there
That ever knew a master or a slave
When Ed Kuhl as Jack Ellyat stylistically removes the confederate flag in staggering silence during the last seconds of the show, there is not a dry eye in the house, onstage or off. It is safe to judge that Opening Night has been a success.
       Saturday night is foggy. The pitch-blackness descends quickly and seems thicker; there is an eerie resonance present. With one show down and three to go, we’re revved for the night’s performance. But for me, something is very different. Perhaps it’s the seclusion and the absence of streetlights that seem to isolate us, or the fog that is pricking at my senses.
            Actors always live out their stories in real time onstage, but it feels like we’re being watched (and not just by the audience) – that we’re sharing an empathetic moment in time and space with the ghosts who lived this melodrama. I’ll never forget the sensation. Maybe Grant and Lee are really haunting us this night. They’re here in my mind.
      Or maybe the hall is just haunted. Donald Hicken, who’s directed at Center Stage in Baltimore and the Smith Theater at Howard Community College in Columbia (but not part of this effort), tells an amusing story. He says that some people believe theaters are haunted for a while after every show…that actors project so much energy while performing that it doesn’t dissipate when the show closes, but floats instead to the top of the theater…and that bits of the characters they’ve created remain.
           The sun shines on the tiny theater/dance hall that sits alone on the corner of Lawyers Hill and Old Lawyers Hill Roads. There is no traffic or human-made noise, and if I turn my back on the paved road and conjure the port-a-pot that was rented for the audience into my peripheral vision, I can almost believe it’s 2001, and I am about to perform in John Brown’s Body.
           I don’t go in.
Photoshop Composition by Patti Restivo
     But I can hear Bloomquist (who passed away five years ago) strumming his banjo and singing out in a booming baritone as I think about the memories our little troupe of actors and musicians made, of the lovely dinner and companionship that the John Brown’s Body cast shared between the matinee and evening show on Sunday.
     As a giant General Lee gazes out the window and the face of General Grant wafts serenely in the shadows near the roof, the hall shines like a symbol of peace.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Man Who Knows to Appear in Laurel

             Laurel audiences will have a rare opportunity to see Las Vegas showman, “The Man Who Knows,” perform in person. Alain Nu will be appearing May 21 and 22 at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory’s Kossiakoff Center in Laurel as a fundraiser for the Laboratory’s APL Drama Club.
            Nu is a cable television host and author of the book, Picture Your ESP!. He playfully challenges the laws of physics by using weird science and psychological suggestion to do things that appear impossible. The charismatic performer often leaves audiences exclaiming that they “can’t explain how he did that!”
            The dark-eyed Nu has headlined at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas for four years running and can be heard making predictions on Baltimore’s 98 Rock radio.
            He hosted TLC’s four-episode series, The Mysterious World of Alain Nu, in 2005, and performed live for the living recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor at the Salute to Heroes Inaugural Ball celebrating President Obama’s inauguration.
            Part-mentalist, but foremost an entertainer, Nu beseeches his audiences to open themselves to the mysteries of the universe. His one-man show promises to provoke a physics-savvy audience of scientists and mathematicians – watching viewers react as Nu demonstrates seemingly impossible phenomena should present lively entertainment.
            The members of the APL Drama Club appear to share Nu’s love of stirring up audiences.
            Last August, the club disproved the old theater stereotype that tech folks aren’t really cut out to be stage actors. More than 350 happy APL patrons attended its debut production of Randy Wyatt’s “Said and Meant,” a wild contemporary comedy about communication gone awry.
            “Said and Meant” was so well received that the troupe was invited to reprise the show as guest performers at the non-profit Laurel Mill Playhouse last fall, and did so to packed audiences.
            This spring the troupe shed their minimalist black costumes and recruited a larger cast to present their second production in full set and color.
            “The Mouse That Roared,” a cold war satire based on the book by Leonard Wibberley and adapted to the stage by Christopher Sergel, filled the Kossiakoff Center with the boisterous laughter of a growing following of APL staff and their families and friends during two performances in April.
            The Alain Nu fundraiser runs May 21 at 8 pm and May 22 at 1 pm; advance tickets start at $25 for individuals and $60 for families, and can be purchased from members of the APL Drama Club.  Proceeds will help sponsor future productions at the Kossiakoff Center.
            For more information about the APL Drama Club, visit
www.apldrama.com or contact Production Manager Lynn Reggia at lynn.reggia@jhuapl.edu.

Friday, March 25, 2011

One Man's Entertainment...

     After attending a quarterly meeting of the Greater Baltimore InDesign User Group this week that was quite entertaining to me, I wrote the following article. Many of the performing arts begin with printed meda: playscripts, screenplays, books that grow into screenplays, musical scores and lyrics, etc. Some of my artist friends (except for the graphic designers) may be only vaguely aware of how innovation in the print industry is redefining the way we create and appreciate art.

Designing to Read  by Patti Restivo
       The wonders of technology never cease to amaze this baby boomer. Even as we read, the open access revolution (unlimited access to information made possible by digital technology) marches on. Do you have an iPad? Own a Kindle or other eReader tablet? You may want to consider getting very acclimated to the latest gadgets very quickly. Graphic designers and authors like David Renard (The Last Magazine) convincingly predict a massive shift from print to online publications within the next five years.  And the print design industry is scampering to keep pace.
      At the quarterly meeting of the Greater Baltimore Chapter of the InDesign User Group at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory on March 22, Noha Edell of Cross Media Publishing Solutions presented a demonstration of the new Adobe® Digital Publishing Suite, which converts print documents into interactive “experiences” for mobile devices and the Web. We looked specifically at the first digital issue of Martha Stewart Living that was created with this model for the iPad.
     To me, online magazine design is inherently more beautiful than web site design, and Martha Stewart Living is a high priced, glossy publication. Anyone (and isn’t almost everyone?) practiced in surfing the web will be comfortable navigating the digital issue. Sophisticated interactive features (360° views, videos, audio, animated info-graphics, photo slideshows, hyperlinks, and scrolling options) present a portal to multi-sensory exploration and total reader absorption.
      For designers, the Adobe® Digital Publishing Suite offers full-service tools to create and convert print publications to e-publications. Similar to web design, the files must be meticulously organized. The three-part software package (InDesign, Bundle, and View) automatically creates a Table of Contents page with thumbnails, writes code to create the interactivity, and facilitates viewing and troubleshooting.
       But, it only works with Creative Suite 5. And if you want the layout of your pages to change with vertical or horizontal viewing, depending on how the device is held, you’ll need to design two separate layouts. (National Geographic Magazine doesn’t bother.)
       Don’t plan on using Flash animations. They won’t work on iPads or tablets. Michael Witherell, Owner and President of JetSet Communications, Inc. and a JavaScript expert, grumbled privately in the audience that Adobe needs to catch up with the latest technology, “and now.”
       Expected to be released during the second quarter of 2011, the Adobe® Digital Publishing Suite will not be available online as a software package like the latest Creative Suite. It will be custom-priced and likely only affordable to large publishing houses. There will be subscription and service fees.  Designers who want to play around with it can join the prelease program at adobe.com, but there is little point unless they’re positioned to subscribe.
       Renard predicts that print magazines will be “dead” in 20 years. Are we really going to lose sight of our favorite print magazines and books? Open access doesn’t guarantee accessibility. Will libraries provide entry to expensive online publications to folks who can’t afford the latest gadgets, or seniors who don’t know how to use them?
        E-publishing innovation is exciting to designers, but as a consumer, I don’t want to sacrifice the tactile experience of touching paper, the smell of the ink, or the rhythmic turning of pages while propped on my favorite pillow with my glasses shoved above my forehead. I want it all. My surprise that digital natives in today’s workforce have never written a check or mailed a letter also makes me question whether future generations will know what it feels like (or have the patience) to read a good old-fashioned book or script in a quiet moment.       

Woman in A Man's Suit Documentary

     Georgie Jessup's Woman In A Man’s Suit is a critically acclaimed CD that led to a documentary of the same name, which premiered and won Festival Favorite at the International GLBT Film Festival put on by PITA (Pride In The Arts) in Roanoke last June. You can listen to excerpts and buy the CD at itunes.
     In the film, Jessup performs some of her most heart-wrenching, bluesy songs and reflects candidly on her life. The setting is Jessup’s home built on family land in Jessup, Maryland. I watched the doc and interviewed Jessup last winter. While I thought the content was good (particularly Jessup's performances), it didn't quite capture the artist (see my article, Georgie Jessup On the Fringe), and there were some very noticeable tech glitches. The version I saw really needed another strong pass at editing. Hopefully, that was done before it began airing on cable television in Northern Virginia this month.
     Fans in Arlington County have two more chances to see Woman In A Man’s Suit without buying it. The doc will air on Comcast Channel 69 and Verizon Channel 38 on Saturday, March 25, at 11 am and again on Wednesday, Mach 29 at 10:30 pm. You can order a DVD from Arlington Independent Media for $25 (call 703-524-2388).

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Blood Brothers


Silhouette Stages’ rendition of Blood Brothers by Willy Russell closed at Slayton House in Columbia last weekend while I was out of town. Fortunately, I did get the chance to see the show the weekend prior. In fact, John Harding of Patuxent Publishing kindly assigned me to review it.
This was the first show I’d seen by Silhouette Stages, although I’d heard some about the troupe. As sad as I am to see the Columbia Community Players dark (and I do hope that situation is temporary), it appears that Silhouette Stages is more than filling the gap for Columbia audiences and for some of the players. But they’re doing full-scale musicals (CCP seldom ventured into musicals), and although the proscenium stage at Slayton House poses some challenges for staging musicals, what I saw was excellent. This was the first time I had the pleasure of meeting Mo Dutterer, although I knew the name and reputation.
I included a summary of the story in the linked review, which came out this week in the Howard County Times and the Columbia Flier.


If you didn’t catch this show, keep an ear out for other productions of Blood Brothers. It's well worth seeing.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Just Passing Through

      When unknown musicians answer an ad to work on a recording project and stick through years of music making to forge a bond unbroken by drifters or even death, an album will emerge when the time is right. And the time is now. Check out Just Passing Through by All Good Things at iTunes (linked below), released today.
      Over a decade ago, local musician Chris Gallerizzo advertised in the Washington City Paper for seasoned musicians to work on a recording project and the band began. In spite of some eccentric characters ambling in and out, the core members of All Good Things found their common creative ground. But once Gallerizzo, John Mullaney, Tim Aquilino, Raymond Tripp, and Jeff Miles discovered how much fun they could make making music together, making the album became secondary. And so they played on for almost a dozen years.
     This album is a tribute to Tripp, who sadly passed away in the summer of 2007, and to lasting friendships. The band eventually lost touch with Jeff Miles, who did most of the drum work, and makes a point of thanking contributors whose names have been, literally, forgotten.
     I’m not a music critic, but I do know what I like. I had the opportunity to hear a full preview of all the original songs on Just Passing Through yesterday. South of the Border is my favorite.
     The CD cover could use a makeover, but Aquilino tells some interesting stories on the inside front cover (perhaps good material for new songwriting?).
     The digital age is giving audiences much easier access to the work of indie artists and I can easily agree with Aquilino.
     “It’s all good.”

Just Passing Through
Genres: Rock, Music
Released: Mar 01, 2011
© 2011 All Good Things


Credits
   Chris Gallerizzo  (Guitars, Vocals)
   John Mullaney (Bass, Vocals)
   Nancy & Margaret (Background Vocals)
   Tim Aquilino  (Keyboards, Vocals)
   Raymond Tripp  (Slide Guitar)
   Jeff Miles  (Drums)

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Does Anyone Remember Michael Cristofer’s The Shadow Box?

The Columbia Community Players were snowed out the first weekend of their production of Michael Cristofer’s The Shadow Box in the early eighties, and this was probably a good thing since I was so exhausted from rehearsing every night after working all day. But during the second weekend, after our very last performance, something unforgettable happened.
Laurence Bory, who later became one of my directing mentors, had boldy cast me as Agnes, the daughter of a dying woman, in an intense play about three terminally ill patients set in a hospice. I hadn’t a lick of acting experience, only an expressive intelligence and an experienced director with the confidence to guide me to a respectable performance. An odd place to start a lightweight perhaps, but this one delivered me to a lifelong passion as no light comedy could have.
It wasn’t the thrill of performing or the strokes or even the terrific new friends who were so much fun to work with  – it was a single person who spoke to me once in my lifetime for a very brief moment who did it.
Want to imagine a scary audience? Think about performing your first show in a raw play about death to a hospice network – that final Sunday matinee performance had sold out to a group from Howard County and I was as terrified as I have ever been.
The show went very well. My character took over when the lights came up and (as always) I forgot who was in the audience. But after the curtain call and all the accolades, slipping away from the after-show reception to take one last look from the audience’s perspective at the stage in solitude wasn't going to happen. Emotionally and physically exhausted (community theater is very hard work), I had absolutely no plans to spend my life loving this art form, and wanted to say farewell to the set in a private moment in my own way.
But, a nice-looking man from the audience (he looked a little older than me but not by very much) followed me.
 “I saw from the program that this was your acting debut. Is that really true?”
 “Yes. This is my first show.”
 “How did you do it? Have you lived this experience? Did you lose someone close to you?”
 “No. I did nurse my mother once when she was very sick, but the miracle happened and she recovered.”
 “Well, the miracle didn’t happen for me. My mother died a few months ago and you expressed every emotion I’ve struggled with since beautifully. Thank you. It helps.”
I realized in the second that our liquid eyes met while thanking him for coming to the show that this art is more important than any of the players who flock to bask in the stage lights. What started with a playwright’s words and morphed through layers of the interpretations of diverse egos really meant something to this one person. And over the past thirty years, at least one person has always been out there somewhere and one person has always been enough.
Although The Shadow Box is currently out of print, it won a Pulitzer Prize and a Tony Award for the Broadway production in 1977. The screenplay, directed by Paul Newman, received a Golden Globe Award and was nominated for an Emmy. Cristofer’s done a lot of acting in his own right and directed some big names in film since. See www.imdb.com/name/nm0188165/ if you’re curious.
For me, theater isn’t so much about acting or directing anymore as it is really about audience. It’s about life, both real and imagined. And for now, it’s about watching both.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Valentines and Time

A couple of weeks ago, a local singer/songwriter offered me a tiny glimpse of music production, which I know absolutely nothing about. I sat in Georgie  Jessup’s living room as she explained a bit about audio “diamonds,” which I didn’t quite grasp (I will look into that further very soon), mostly because I was justifiably distracted and then blown away listening to what amounted to a private performance.
I’ve heard Jessup perform with her band locally, purchased some of her music (you can buy it at CD Baby and iTunes), and spent some time interviewing her. I wasn’t surprised when she played a “before” recording of herself at the keyboard singing her newest song. I was surprised when she played the finished track (without vocals) and sang it live about three feet from me, but that didn’t stop me from closing my eyes and letting my face melt.
Who’s Going to Be My Valentine is Jessup’s newest release. You can hear it in this video produced by her friend, Bonnie Schupp. It will appear on Jessup’s as yet nameless next album that is about halfway into production.
Almost a decade ago, Jessup married her valentine on February 14th at the courthouse in Annapolis. That’s not particularly unusual (my husband and I eloped on Valentine's Day 32 years ago), but sadly for Jessup, the marriage did not survive.
Jessup is transgender, and although she never claimed to be a man during the ceremony, she passed as one. Born male, she had gender transformation surgery and was already legally a woman before she married Angie. When Jessup's gender status was discovered about a year after the ceremony, "Marrying Judge" Robert P. Duckett of Anne Arundel County declared it invalid, as if it had never happened. But for a while, Jessup and Angie lived as the first same-sex married couple in Maryland. Unfortunately, their out-of-time relationship as lovers did not last.
Now, nine years later, the Baltimore Sun reports that only one more senate vote is needed to pass same-sex marriage legislation in Maryland.

My Valentine

My valentine and I skipped out of town over the weekend to celebrate our wedding anniversary at the Battlefield Bed and Breakfast Inn in Gettysburg. Pondering how real events inspire art, I couldn’t help but remember another authentic Civil War era building (albeit not as beautiful as this one) where the Columbia Community Players staged a reading of Stephen Vincent Benet's poem, John Brown’s Body, as part of the Howard County Sesquicentennial Arts Celebration in 2001. I was supposed to direct that difficult piece but wisely handed the responsibility off to a close theater friend and mentor, Charles Maloney (a Civil War buff and Viet Nam war veteran). So, I was able to focus instead on producing the event and performing in the show. Now that one of my sons has been to war, I feel an even deeper appreciation for this very poignant theater memory. That story will be coming soon.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Closer to the Edge

I’ve only been to the Silver Spring Stage twice and once was a very long time ago, but its production of Blackbird by contemporary Scottish playwright David Harrower last month caught my interest. The show impressed me, and in spite of a gentleman snoring in the row behind me (how in the world could anyone sleep through such a gripping story?), the rest of the audience appeared captured by the performance. The show certainly wasn’t perfect (when is live theater ever perfect?), but impressive enough that I am interested in seeing more. This theater’s following appears to really appreciate edgy material, as do I, and it’s worth going out of my neighborhood to find it. My review follows. (I cut the last paragraph since the show has closed.)
Broken Wings at Silver Spring Stage

Staging an intense contemporary drama about child molestation poses considerable hazards for a community theater. The harsh subject matter demands that the cast, director, and audience tackle disturbing topics head on. In a very small cast, the actors must stretch their memories and concentration skills well beyond the usual.
Silver Spring Stage bravely confronts enormous challenges in its rendition of Scottish playwright David Harrower’s Blackbird, directed by Craig Allen Mummey. The play, which premiered in Scotland in 2005, runs without intermissions through the end of January.
Blackbird is intended to be uncomfortable to watch. The language is so coarse at times that even the actors seem uneasy. But the audience finds its rewards as Mummey competently guides his cast through a series of stark transitions that probe the boundaries between passion and perversion and love and hate. Although his blocking may be a little obvious in spots, the physical scenes work well enough.
Harrower’s tale is a hypothetical reckoning between Una (a disturbed young woman played by Lenora Spahn) and Ray (her childhood molester played by Ted Culler). The plays opens when Una abruptly appears at Ray’s workplace fifteen years after the crime. He is out of prison and building a new life. She has never healed.  The script is noticeably more powerful than the Silver Spring Stage production of Blackbird, but it is always gratifying to see a community theater reach.
Spahn steps up to create many of the play’s best moments. Una appears as rigidly fractured as the half-completed sentences and raw language that make her dialogue darkly poetic. Harrower leaves it to the audience to decide whether it was the molestation and Ray’s abandonment or enduring the aftermath, which she describes in brutal detail, that has broken her.
Culler is less believable as Ray. Shocked to find the 27-year-old Una confronting him when he planned never to see her again, Ray ushers her into the deserted lunchroom where overflowing trashcans symbolize the messes people make of their lives. Perhaps because Culler looks older than his character and reminds one of an upstanding high school principal, or perhaps because Ray and Una make too little eye contact, the expected sexual tension doesn’t build as the pair retrace the events that led to their disastrous “affair.” 
Ray protests that he is not a serial pedophile, that he had inappropriately but sincerely loved the 12-year-old Una, and that he has found redemption. She vacillates between wanting to hurt Ray and trying to rekindle their relationship. “Am I too old?” she snipes.

Both actors do an admirable job of handling so many lines. If they give the impression of acting more at than with each other at times, and if the occasional comic relief falls flat due to inconsistent timing, Spahn and Culler still manage to keep their audience focused. Culler’s greatest strength lies in his reactions and audience members will learn the most about Ray by watching those closely.
The script is based loosely on the true story of Toby Studebaker, a middle-aged U.S. Marine who seduced a prepubescent British girl over the Internet and disappeared with her for five days in the summer of 2003. Jailed for child molestation and related charges first in Britain and again in the United States, Studebaker is credited with prodding Scotland to outlaw the internet grooming of children.
 
Commissioned by the Edinburgh International Festival in 2005, Blackbird received the 2006 Critics’ Award for Theatre in Scotland for Best New Play and the 2007 Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play.
The production crew includes Mummey as Set Designer, Chris Curtis as Lighting Designer, Kevin Garrett as Sound Designer, and Brian Dettling as Combat Consultant. Stage Manager Laura Rogers appears onstage briefly as Girl in the surprise ending. 

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Laurel Mill Playhouse Gala Awards

The Laurel Mill Playhouse almost burst its seams Sunday evening. Attendance was by invitation only at the 2011 Awards Gala at 508 Main Street in Laurel, MD, where almost 80 guests were up for awards. I attended the gala for the first time last year, and once again, I was impressed with what the playhouse has come to mean to its Laurel community.
Set for the upcoming production of The Man Who Came to Dinner, the stage offered the illusion of convening in a charming and private drawing room. The “audience” sat across from the folks onstage:  Marv and Mo Rogers, Dan Staicer, and Mary Dodd. Marv serves as President of the Laurel Mill Playhouse and Mo is the Public Liaison officer. Dan often mc’s playhouse events and Mary supports every show. It was a treat to see the “fabulous four” dressed in semi-formal attire, especially Marv. Usually decked out in blue jeans and wielding maintenance tools, he looked quite sophisticated in a tux. They all looked great, but it’s not so unusual to see the other three dressed to the nines.
In between some pretty impressive entertainment (pulled from the guest list of actors, singers, directors, tech folks, and supporters), Mo called each person or family onto the stage to thank them for their unique contributions to the playhouse’s success. Mary helped hand out the trophies and personalized certificates.
Laurel Mill Playhouse is one of the few non-profit theaters to own its stage, which contributes to a homey atmosphere. After opening on Main Street in the spring of 2003, the theater wavered painfully for several years. Two conflicting boards of directors fought for control of the newly renovated performance space. One side even initiated litigation but that was eventually withdrawn.
As gratifying as it is to see community theaters reach to explore contemporary works, Laurel Mill Playhouse stumbled hard artistically while attempting Durang’s Betty’s Summer Vacation in its first year. Poorly interpreted (at least in my opinion), the content also didn’t suit the Main Street audience. Several folks walked out during a performance and reviews were disparaging.
The summer youth productions have been a staple since the playhouse doors first opened. But in 2005, two adults from the theater were arrested for disorderly conduct outside a performance of Music Man, Jr., further damaging the theater’s reputation.
Observing the folks who came to the gala on Sunday evening, it is obvious that the playhouse has grown into a very different niche.
Not that the theater is prudish by any means, but recent shows reflect the values of the people running it and the audiences who have become loyal. Kaufman and Hart’s The American Way (a patriotic musical) proved wildly successful last fall, as did the youth’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
And it’s not that Laurel Mill Playhouse avoids mature contemporary themes (Rent opens in May); it’s just unlikely that audiences will ever again be subjected to characters carrying around dismembered private body parts (as in Betty’s Summer Vacation). Musicals and plays with proven appeal to broader audiences appear to be what works in this town. And the folks running the theater now are as steady as rocks.
When I interviewed Marv a few months ago to get his story on building the playhouse (yes, literally), one of the things he told me was that watching the youth perform was his biggest thrill. As Jocelyn Knasik (one of the teen performers at the gala) sang a solo, I was struck by how paternally proud Marv looked. Almost as proud as Musical Director Stu Knasik (Jocelyn’s father), who also sang at the gala.
The strong sense of extended family that permeated the evening is telling. The colloquial charm of Laurel Mill Playhouse and the diversity of the talent performing there is refreshing when you consider how quickly some critics jump to mock mainstream performers. But this group appears to know what its audiences and supporters want. And they’re doing it well.
Run entirely by volunteers, Laurel Mill Playhouse has come a very long way.
For many young actors preparing to leave home for college next fall, the evening tasted bittersweet. For Doug Silverman and Irene Patton, two senior citizens who performed a beautiful staged reading of Gurney’s Love Letters last fall, it was a chance to socialize with many of their friends. Everyone seemed touched by the graciousness exuded by Mo, who began organizing the annual galas to thank all playhouse volunteers four years ago. And everyone went home with an award.
There was love of theater, of friends and family, and of life in the air.
Although they were all very good, one of the evening’s most impressive performers, Ed Higgins (aka Captain Hook) sang excerpts from Robinson’s Peter Pan, The Musical.
He is one to watch going into the future.