BCS Spotlight

Displaying items by tag: theatre

In 2020, the Ovals of Ostropol, the fictional troupe of travelling players that bring the story of Hershel and the goblins who menace him to life in Strawdog Theatre Company’s holiday tradition, were forced to spread Hanukkah cheer and occasional chills online. This year, the Ovals are back in a surprisingly rollicking (given the size of the troupe) live production of Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins, adapted from the children’s book by Eric Kimmel by Michael Dailey, with music and lyrics by Jacob Combs.  Tickets are free, making this story accessible to all, though donations are welcome and well-deserved. Director Hannah Todd has marshalled a team of designers and performers that create a charming and joyful holiday entertainment for the whole family. The enthusiastic cast play multiple roles and instruments, using deliberately low-budget stage magic to transport the audience to the town of Chelm, where they must convince the community that stories are worth retelling...and that performers are deserving of food and shelter. Only the most jaded will not be convinced.

Eric Kimmel’s children's book tells of one man’s efforts to save Hannukah from the goblins who have taken over the old synagogue and who, for reasons unknown, hate Hanukkah and blow out the candles and throw the latkes on the floor whenever anyone tries to celebrate the holiday. Michael Dailey’s adaptation frames the story with a troupe of down-on-their-luck traveling players, including a descendant of the book’s principal character, also named Hershel. This year’s company, wearing Oval-branded masks against the anachronistic COVID-19 pandemic, are a troupe of vaudevillians whose skills do not earn them enough to pay their dinner, though they make for an entertaining pre-show. Which brings them back to Chelm—the town where Hershel’s grandfather set out to outwit the series of goblins. Hoping to find a warm welcome, windows lit with Hanukkah lights, and food and shelter, the troupe instead finds a dour shopkeeper who explains that the town has no need for stories and turns them away. After some cajoling and bullying Hershel convinces her to listen to the story of how his ancestor defeated the goblins and then make her decision. The troupe scrambles to put together the show, sharing all the elements that will become the props and goblins through theatrical magic and commitment.

Hannah Todd and the ensemble of performers and designers have created an accessible, low-tech performance that relies on mild Catskills-style humor, slapstick, and some dance and acrobatics. Nothing fancy. The Ovals seem to rely more on charm than skill, which explains their destitution. However, they have charm in spades, which makes it nearly impossible not to root for them. Todd does an excellent job of keeping the pace moving, allowing just enough time for laughs (or groans) and audience responses, and, finally, a moving celebration of stories and community. She introduces all the elements of the play-within-the-play either in the preshow, or in the “panic” to pull together a show in a moment’s notice, and it is fun to see how the elements are transformed when the story of Hanukkah-hating goblins is performed. The cast convey the urgency of their characters predicament without ever losing their connection to the audience and their message of togetherness. As Hershel, Morgan Lavenstein plays Hershel with just the right amount of swagger, easily switching between physical humor and solemn songs of the season, which beautifully ground the production. She also does a great job of encouraging the moments of audience participation. As Hershel’s foil and partner, Leor, who does not share Hershel’s faith that all will be well, Charlie Baker plays multiple roles, including a greedy goblin who must battle a pickle jar, with physical aplomb and comic timing. The droll Rebecca Marowitz as Max teams with Baker for vaudevillian hijinks and brings the Innkeeper to life. LaKecia Harris as Sara brings energy and warmth to her role in the ensemble, as well as a big vocal presence as one of the more menacing goblins. Christopher Thomas Pow and Amy Gorelow provide the musical spine, with Pow on violin and Gorelow on the upright bass underscoring and accompanying much of the play. Pow also voices an oddly charming, tiny tong-goblin, and Gorelow adds some comedy with her character’s attempts at acrobatics. The whole company does an excellent job of manipulating the objects that comprise the set, props and goblins. There’s even a goblin-brawl!

Scenic designer Caitlin McLeod has created a puzzle-box wagon that contains the entire play, with a few scenic touches that unite cast and audience in the spirit of Hanukkah. The wagon provides a backdrop for the Ovals’ act, holds chests of props and accessories, and then transforms into a stage. Lighting designer K Story subtly shifts focus from exterior to interior, allows the “candles” to shine, and helps create the dramatic Goblin King entrance and the miracle of the Hanukkah lights that eventually comes to pass. The props by Foiles, and puppets by Foiles and McLeod, with Stephanie Diaz serving as puppetry consultant, exemplify stage magic—common objects are transformed into goblins of all shapes and sizes, including an initially terrifying Goblin King. Both the design and performance of these puppets are delightful. Daniel Etti-Williams’s sound design relies heavily on old-fashioned Foley effects, which adds to the sense of theatricality; the coming of the King of Goblins is particularly foreboding. The movement by choreographer Amanda Crockett, incorporates acrobatics, vaudeville and traditional dance elements to tie together the worlds of players and play. Gregory Grahams costume designs bring the story closer to modern times, early in the 20th century, with a mix of urban and rural styles. Music director Ricky Harris deploys the considerable instrumental and vocal talents of the cast to perform Jacob Combs’s klezmer-inflected score, creating a rich musical backdrop for the play. From the energetic Dreidel song, which provides a good primer of the rules of the dreidel game—helpful for later in the play—to spare settings of the Hanukkah prayer that accompany the lighting of the candles, to goblin encounters and a final musical lesson on latke-making, Harris’s musical direction fills the space.

Even the youngest members of the audience will be able to figure out what will transpire long before it does, but in the hands of Strawdog’s energetic ensemble, Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins is a fast-paced, magical love letter to storytelling and community. Though Hershel and the goblins both are delighted by geld, Hershel and his company ultimately desire just enough to keep themselves fed and sharing stories. Though enjoyable for children of any age (there was only one child in attendance at the performance, but he represented his generation well), this show will delight younger theatergoers with opportunities to join in songs, offer advice and dance along. Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins is a joyful and moving part of the holiday season, and well worth a visit.

Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins, now in its fourth consecutive year, runs through December 12, 2021 at Rivendell Theatre, 5779 N. Ridge Ave. in Chicago. Tickets are FREE and currently available at www.strawdog.org. Please note that audience members 2+ must wear a mask, and all audience members 12+ must provide proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test before entering the theater. Performances take place Saturdays and Sundays at 1 pm and 4 pm, and there will be an added understudy performance on Friday, December 10 at 7:30 pm.

Published in Theatre in Review
Tuesday, 16 November 2021 22:06

CHICAGO DANZTHEATRE PRESENTS THE YELLOW WALLPAPER

Dancing normally isn't my thing, but literature is. And "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is, surprisingly, a better candidate than most short stories for a dance interpretation. It starts as something quaint, recognizable, and spirals its way into madness: something dance and music can convey potently.

Gilman's feminist classic "The Yellow Wallpaper" brought much-needed light to the issue of women's mental health when it was published in 1892, and it still sheds light on this often misunderstood experience today.

The postpartum-suffering protagonist of this story wants to be heard, but her husband silences her at every turn — confining her to the house, isolating her from friends, even discouraging her from writing — leaving her anxiety and confusion nowhere to turn but inward. She starts seeing things in the yellow wallpaper of her bedroom. She sees a woman trapped behind bars, her own situation playing out in the wallpaper every night. By the end, she and her hallucination are one and the same. With no other outlet for her emotions, she's turned herself into something flat and silent, but weirdly free.

And to see this all acted out through dance is visceral and wonderful.

 

the-yellow-wallpaper-wallpaper.jpg

 

This joint production by Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble and RE Dance Group comprises of two shows: "The Attic Room" by RE Dance and "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Danztheatre. The choreography by Michael Estanich and Ellyzabeth Adler, respectively, is desperate and graceful, the characters losing control in one moment and suspiciously, blithely sedated the next. The dance incorporated into the story was emotive and seamless. As a dance dummy, these vague terms are the best I can use to describe it, but what I can say is it made me feel things.

What was an unreliable narrator on paper, too wrapped in her psychosis to describe herself objectively, is now right in front of us, slowly losing it and crying out for help. While "The Attic Room" is more abstract, both productions depict a slow undoing of a character's reality, and the helplessness and confinement of not understanding her own mind.

"The Attic Room" and "The Yellow Wallpaper" are playing November 19th & 20th at 8PM at 1650 W Foster Ave. Tickets at Danztheatre's website.

Published in Theatre in Review

This is the third year that Strawdog Theatre Company is presenting its adaptation of Eric Kimmel’s children’s book Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins, but this is 2020 and a pandemic has forced the performance to go online. The outlines are still there: a traveling troupe of vaudevillian players fallen on hard times barters with an innkeeper for room and board, sharing a story for food. Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins is that story, about the wily grandfather of the troupe’s leader and his efforts to save Hannukah from the goblins who have taken over the old synagogue and who, for reasons unknown, hate Hannukah and blow out the candles and throw the latkes on the floor whenever anyone tries to celebrate the holiday. The cast is talented and energetic and give their all, interacting with the unseen virtual audience, but the absence of that audience casts a pall on the proceedings. The show is still a sweet reminder of the traditions of the season: the food, the lighting of the menorah, the dreidel, and, most importantly, the community and generosity that is celebrated. But without an audience of children to play along, the show struggles to take off. That said, Strawdog has done what they can to ensure that families (though not reviewers watching in their living rooms with blind cats in their laps) can create a fun and festive event with a little advance preparation. There are coloring pages that help tell Hershel’s story and there are moments when parents can guide their offspring to offer magic words or evaluate the quantity of gold required for a dreidel game. There is a song to guide the making of latkes, and songs to light each candle. If you are a parent of kids, especially those under 10, who wants to create a live living room experience, the ingredients are all available.

Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins recalls the stories of Sholem Aleichem, with the title character tasked with outwitting an ever-more threatening gaggle of goblins to save Hannukah, which the town has not been able to celebrate since the goblins took up residence in the creepy, old synagogue. Director Spencer Ryan Diedrick has recruited a young, musically talented ensemble to tell the story, and even tries to recreate the live theater experience with a pre-show warm-up of songs and knock-knock jokes. All the actors take on multiple roles and perform from their own homes. Diedrick has ensured that props make their way smoothly from screen to screen, the action is fast-paced, and the cast connect as best as they can with their young spectators. The spritely songs by Jacob Combs, mostly performed live by the cast under the musical direction of Celia Villacres, are klezmer-based but with an appealing contemporary beat to make them accessible and danceable for audiences new to the genre. Even though the performance would not exist without the magic of technology, this is a decidedly low-tech adaptation, with actors employing masks, puppets, costume accessories, acoustic instruments and papier-mâché props to tell the story. Aly Amidei’s costumes are reminiscent of the early 19th century, but also reflect the homespun aesthetic of the “traveling” company. The props by Manny Ortiz are bold and colorful and easy to manipulate onscreen. The masks and puppets that represent the goblins are a clever range of folded paper puppets to sock puppets to baroque papier-mâché masks which convey the ever-more-menacing goblins. No need to worry about frightening the children, though; these goblins are not the sharpest demons in the drawer and should not give even the youngest and most sensitive viewers any trouble sleeping.

The cast, led by Rebecca Keeshin (who also plays a mean ukulele) as Hershel, and including Julia Atkin, Sonia Goldberg, and Ian Minh, interact as best as Zoom will allow with each other and the audience. They quickly add costume pieces to take on different roles, share songs and jokes, and gleefully inhabit various goblins (or interact with different goblins, in the case of Keeshin). Their performances will no doubt encourage young people to talk to the screens in front of them.

Though the end of Hershel’s quest is never in doubt, any more than the players’ welcome into the community, Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins will provide a joyful diversion for families of young children willing to add some spirit at home. Despite the opportunities offered by moving the show online, Strawdog Theatre Company has opted for a stripped-down, old-fashioned children’s theater experience. If you have a young audience at home, and want to take them to the theater, clear some space in front of the screen and play along. Then they can color in the show-related pictures and help make latkes. It will take some effort at home, but the Hannukah show can be saved.

Hershel and the Hannukah Goblins will be performed live, online, through December 20, Saturdays and Sundays at 1pm and 4pm. Tickets are $25 - $30 and are available at www.strawdog.org.

Published in Theatre in Review

With Renee Zellweger just having won the Academy Award for her portrayal of Judy Garland, focus on Garland’s legacy has been renewed. Local actresses Nancy Hays and Alexa Castelvecchi, along with music director Robert Ollis, reconstruct an iconic moment in pop culture history. A young Liza Minnelli performed just one time with her mother Judy Garland on the Palladium stage in London in 1964. The evening was recorded, and the album proved a highpoint for both Judy and Liza.

“Once in a Lifetime” is not exactly song for song as they appeared on the album, but this cabaret is a touching tribute to Judy and Liza. With Hays as Garland and Castelvechhi as Minnelli, the two take turns singing their favorite songs from the album and relay the history of how it came to be. Though they’re both dressed in character, this is more of a concert than a play.

What remains impressive about this once in a lifetime evening in 1964 is how great the arrangements were. Each song plays to the strengths of these two legendary performers. Judy Garland was in her prime in 1964 and Liza was about a year away from winning her first Tony Award. The song selection is quite a charming playlist. The evening was a love letter to each other. Given the tragedy Judy would endure by the late 60s (including her untimely death), this album remains a time capsule of a happier time in Judy’s life. It also foreshadows the show business powerhouse Liza would become in her own right.

Both Hays and Castelvecchi dispense with all too easy impressions of Judy and Liza. Instead, they both knock it out of the park in the intimate cabaret space at Victory Gardens’ Greenhouse. Castelvecchi really taps into the bluesier aspect of Liza Minnelli’s vocal range. Hays probably has a better voice in 2020 than Judy had by 1964, and her renditions of the jazzy standards are a real treat. All together, “Once in a Lifetime” is a fun hour and a half filled with the enchanting music of Harold Arlen, George Gershwin and Jerry Herman.

At Greenhouse Theater Center through April 5th

Published in Theatre in Review
Thursday, 05 March 2020 16:52

'Middletown' takes us on the ride of our lives

Dan Clancy’s Middletown is a very true-to-life rollercoaster ride involving two couples that befriend each other in the prime of their lives and remain friends through their senior years. They have dinner every Friday night for thirty-three years and share everything with each other – the good and the bad. They lean on each other and, in many ways, become closer than family.

After a series of successful runs around the country over the past few years, Middletown now makes its temporary home in Chicago’s Apollo Theater in Lincoln Park. The mid-sized venue is a cozy home for the play to settle into for its month-long run. The show is different than most as it comes without a set or props and has the actors reading directly from scripts and writer Dan Clancy has his reasons for this. “I wanted to tell a relatable ‘every-person’s’ story in a direct and straightforward manner where human emotions are front and center – without bells, whistles, special effects, or props,’ says Clancy. “I wanted the show to speak for itself.” 

Adrian Zmed (left) and Donny Most in 'Middletown' at Apollo Theater Chicago through March 22nd

And his approach is very effective, perhaps thanks to the caliber of actors involved. In fact, we are given a powerhouse of talent in this show, each actor skillfully navigating their widely-ranged roles through calm waters and rough waves. Sandy Duncan is a sheer delight to watch as Peg as she pairs with Adrian Zmed, who deftly plays her husband, Tom. It’s clear the two love each other no matter what - through the good and bad times – and they meet plenty of challenges along the way that put their love to the test. Donny Most also delivers an outstanding performance as Don, while Kate Buddeke shines as his wife, Dotty. Even though the actors are delivering lines from a script, so convincing is the quartet, it isn’t long before one forgets they are even reading, and we are just lost in a tremendous relationship between two couples.

The shows starts with a bang as the actors charge into the stage area to a Bruce Springsteen song. An enthusiastic Duncan, Most, Buddeke and Zmed each greet the crowd before heading to their assigned locations. It is then Duncan briefly addresses the audience to prepare them for the show while pointing out, “I’m at the age where I’m not sure if I don’t remember something or if I never knew it in the first place.” 

Middletown is a unique theatre piece. The lack of on-stage distractions has theatre goers really focusing on its rich content, which is exactly Clancy’s intention. It also allows for us to grow more intimately with each character. The show has plenty of humorous moments, plenty of difficult moments and a handful of surprisingly heavy moments. Like I said earlier, it’s a rollercoaster ride. Says Donny Most in describing Middletown, “It’s really a wonderful play that takes you through so many different emotions. There is comedy and then there are very heartfelt moments and very dramatic moments in the play. I think it’s something so many people will relate to.” Most continues, “There is something for everybody. It will hit a chord within, and you’ll have a smile on your face, with that recognition, or the pang deep down where you feel the pain and the emotion. It’s that kind of a piece.”

The story in itself is absorbing from beginning to end and its journey through life is sure to be relatable to most that see this play. Though it’s the story of Tom, Peg, Don and Dotty, it’s also the story of so many we know if not our own. Middletown is the story of friendship – the best kind - plain and simple.

Superbly directed by Seth Greenleaf, Clancy’s story hits its target on point and the special cast that has been assembled performs beautifully and truly connects with the show’s audience, making Middletown a masterfully delivered event to remember.

Highly recommended.

Middletown is being performed at The Apollo Theater Chicago through March 22nd before taking on dates in Tampa Bay and Miami. For tickets and/or more information visit www.MiddletownPlay.com or www.ApolloChicago.com

To read our very entertaining interview with star Donny Most, click here.  

Published in Theatre in Review

Where’s Plano? I’m not sure, but it’s a place some characters of the namesake play like to visit often. Perhaps Plano doesn’t even exist.

Presented as part of Steppenwolf’s LookOut Series and directed by Audrey Francis, this Will Arbery’s dark comedy is progressively more disturbing. All of its characters seem to be suffering: Genevieve (Ashley Neal), the outspoken artsy sister, is very unhappy but won’t say why. Her husband Steve (Andrew Cutler) has a split personality disorder, quite literally actually. Anne (Elizabeth Birnkrant) feels un-loved and worthless, and in her quiet desperation she fills her time with killing slugs in her apartment. Her husband John (Chris Acevedo) who is suffering from a “small feet curse” that runs in his family, is “probably gay”. And, according to her cruel sisters, he’s using Anne to get his green card. The youngest sister, Isabel (Amanda Fink), is in most pain because her mysterious illness is spiritual in nature. Which, naturally, makes her a saint. Not to mention that she has a “friend” (Faceless Ghost, played by Andrew Lund), who intermittently acts as her mate and her illness. But if you think the sisters are mad, you should see their mother, Mary (Janice O’Neil). This is no ordinary dysfunctional family, it’s a study in subclinical mental illness: not quite ill enough to seek help, but really, really unwell. Kind of like most of us.

Plano is staged with an admirable efficiency: great use of props (scenic design by Kristen Martino) and clever use of language, which helps to effortlessly span long durations of time and various spaces, bringing continuity to the events without having to change decorations or go through many props. Excellent acting and intimate space that’s First Floor Theater will leave you feeling like you’ve just visited with your own dysfunctional family. It’s funny, all right, but the underlying sadness subtly gets in the way, making Plano more “dark” than “comedy”.

Plano runs through March 28th at Steppenwolf’s 1700 Theatre. www.FirstFloorTheater.com.

 

Published in Theatre in Review

Kids these days…

I went into opening night of Gift Theatre’s production of Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman only knowing that my 16-year-old daughter was excited to be my date. “It’s dark, Dad,” she warned me. Boy, was she right. “But it’s amazing, Dad,” she also assured me. And boy, was she even righter on that count.

So, dark and amazing. The Pillowman is both of these. But what is it?

A buddy cop piece. A murder mystery. The touching tale of two brothers, each all the other has in the world. A warning from some dystopian dictatorship. A volume of grim, gruesome fairy tales. The Pillowman is all of these things, and more. Much more.

I haven’t enjoyed a play this much since Goodman’s Jeff-winning 2018 production of The Wolves. And that’s because — along with McDonagh’s masterful book, Laura Alcala Baker’s visionary direction, and Lauren Nichols and Courtney Winkelman’s dark, stark scenery, of course — the four actors who tell The Pillowman’s story (and its stories within the story) give what’s a pretty soulless premise a whole lot of soul. The four-person cast is The Pillowman’s beating, battered, bleeding, bloody heart.

A word of warning. This play is dark. And shocking. And violent. It’s about child murders. And even worse, childhood trauma. But even more shocking is, coming from the mouths of a couple of the characters, a word I’d figured was too taboo to have to hear in today’s world. The R Word. Of course, its use speaks volumes about the characters who use it. Even as it’s used to describe Jay Worthington’s Michal, a developmentally disabled fellow. Worthington, to his credit, plays Michal with incredible restraint and empathy, never using the character’s condition and lot in life for laughs. Whether climbing the walls or crawling the floor, whether admitting to the unthinkable or revealing unthinkable trauma, Worthington’s Michal draws the eye whenever he’s onstage — an incredible character, but just as incredible a performance.

Michal’s brother Katurian, the play’s main character, is a storyteller and tells this story to us, the audience. Tucked away in some future police interrogation room for the duration of the play, Katurian begins the show with a bag over his head, as in the dark as his audience — us — is. Martel Mannin’s face and expressions do the same heavy lifting that Michal’s physicality do, manufacturing suspense, shock, and sorrow — a lifetime of sorrow. And, along with inventive ways of illustrating Katurian’s twisted children’s tales, Mannin’s face and voice keep the audience enraptured as he tells one story after another, each designed again to suspend belief, to shock sensibilities, and to create a world of sorrow.

In Katurian’s world, his cement holding cell, we also meet the two cops investigating a series of incidents seemingly copied straight from the pages of the fictional storyteller’s fictional stories. Gregory Fenner’s Ariel comes off at first as the prototype “bad cop” (I think one of the two even identifies him as such), threatening (and carrying out) acts of brutality, puffing on a vape, and stalking the concrete cube that is the play’s entire world. But look closer and it’s Fenner’s eyes that tell deeper stories that come to the fore as the play progresses. In Ariel’s eyes, ferocity morphs into fear.

But in a cast where each member could lay claim to being the MVP, my award goes to Cyd Blakewell. Her role, Detective Tupolski — it seems both from the play’s unchanged dialogue and a bit of internet perusing I did after the house lights came on — was written for a man. (Jeff Goldblum played the role in New York.) This is a physical (and violent) play, and Blakewell’s easy and subtle physicality looms throughout, even as others are applying electrodes and murdering children and climbing and crawling and crying and creating dark imaginary worlds, as she just pretends at being the “good cop.” (Full disclosure: when Blakewell first started her bit, my daughter turned to me and said, “It’s mom!” at the same time I turned to her and said “It’s your mom!” so maybe her performance hit close to home.) And it’s the story that Blakewell’s Tupolski tells near the end, using just a blackboard and a piece of white chalk, that was for me the best scene in a play full of contenders.

So if you’re up for a very dark evening of entertainment, you’ll be entertained. And if you can get past some pretty unsettling content in order to admire acting and storytelling at its finest, The Gift Theatre’s The Pillowman is for you, now through March 29.

Published in Theatre in Review

It's been 24 hours since I enjoyed this play and I'm still reeling from the super intelligent "trance-formation" delivered with rapid fire accuracy by Robert Dubac's one man show Book of Moron. Dubac plays out the thought patterns of a man who has traumatically lost a portion of his memory and is trying to "remember what he has forgotten". Along the way he employs the inner voices of His Common Sense, His Voice of Reason, His Scruples, His Inner Moron, His Inner Child, His Inner Moron and His Inner Asshole. Dubac even throws in a little real stage magic to show the audience how his character finds his way to the Truth.

In Dubac's world, even The Truth is a multi-leveled thing and he begins opening the doors in his brain to The Illusion of Truth, The Truth and The Whole Truth and Nothing but The Truth.  Along the way, Dubac uses props like a box he climbs in and out of  to represent our thinking "inside the box" and demonstrates clearly how TV has dumbed down an entire population by bombarding us with 9th grade reading level clichés and factoids about the Kardashians. 

Dubac tackles Sex, Media, Politics, and other inflammatory subjects like abortion and the death sentence with humor by pointing out the inconsistencies in thinking behind each and possibly aggravating all the different groups. But he manages to bring it all together by turning a literal mirror on the audience and concluding that when all the other letters of the "Illusions" are erased from the blackboard of his mind all that is left is "US". 

Dubac points out the obvious thing we have all forgotten that we are people who all share the same heartbeat, the same planet who have much more in our minds that unite us than the "Illusions of Truth" we have been programmed to accept which divide us. 

Dubac is also the author of the one man show The Male Intellect, An Oxymoron? and told the audience he is developing a new show called Stand Up Jesus.

I was completely blown away by his total control of his complex, fast moving text AND his audience’s reactions for 90 straight minutes with no intermission that I went to purchase his DVD The Male Intellect, an Oxymoron? After the show, because that's a subject I really love to examine. 

Dubac welcomed a just few questions from the audience at the end of the show because it was a "union house and he needed to get out of the theater faster than usual" but after the show at his merch table I got to ask him my burning question - he brought up Jesus several times during the show and seemed to be working his way to a higher spiritual "Truth" in the show but never really reached it . So, I asked him "Do you believe in Jesus?" 

Without any hesitation at all he smiled broadly and said "Oh, I AM Jesus!" and I laughed and tapped him on the heart center and said without hesitation, "Me too!" 

The show was so full of provocative ideas delivered in such a way to disarm and inform us that it made me eager to see the process of his developing of his new piece, Stand Up Jesus which he will be workshopping at Zanies next Monday (March 2nd) and Tuesday (March 3rd) here in Chicago.  

Book of Moron was delivered in a way that reminded me of a much funnier version of the 1970's transformational group EST,  "It Is" , The Werner Erhard Training which over the course of 48 hours caused participants to rethink their entire belief systems in such a way as to free their minds from the belief systems that were holding them back. 

Dubac manages to do almost the same thing in a record breaking 90-minute show. 

Enjoying Book of Moron live feels much like slowing down your brain long enough to clean it with fizzy water and then hitting it with a pleasant jolt of electricity to get it started again. 

I highly recommend seeing this marvelous and fast paced show right now, especially for thinking people who have become brain weary and overwhelmed by the last few years of the "fake facts' mentality.

You can catch Robert Dubac’s Book of Moron at Broadway Playhouse through Sunday, March 1st. for more show information click here or visit www.RobertDubac.com.  

Published in Theatre in Review

There’s something about a good mystery that keeps us engrossed. Maybe it’s the colorful suspects, maybe it’s the dissecting of clues involved, maybe it’s our own morbid curiosity that comes with murder - after all isn’t Forensic Files still one of the most watched TV shows? We like the detective work, plain and simple – the search for motive and opportunity and the gathering of evidence. And we certainly like the thought that everyone in the room is a suspect, no matter how unlikely they might seem. There’s a reason that Shear Madness has been running for forty years and is now one of the longest running non-musical plays ever (the whodunnit The Mousetrap leads all stage productions with the longest ever run). Well, amateur detectives, get ready because there’s been another murder in Chicago and your help is needed to solve the case. Once a mainstay in Chicago from 1982 through 1999, Shear Madness has returned, this time making its temporary home at Mercury Theater.

Taking place inside Shear Madness, a Chicago salon, life seems normal for the most part until the landlady upstairs is brutally murdered – stabbed repeatedly with a pair of – guess what - shears. But fortunately, Detective Nick Rossetti (Joe Popp) has been working undercover and is on the scene and through a bit of interrogation and deducing we find that everyone has a motive. Suspicion runs rampant as accusations fly everywhere and it soon becomes clear – the audience will need to help in bringing the killer to justice.    

Like in any engaging whodunnit, Shear Madness gives us a handful of intriguing characters and though the play starts off a bit sluggish to the point where one asks themselves where the story could possibly be going, the excitement quickly accelerates once the murder occurs and its direction is no longer in question. After a few scenarios are tossed around onstage, Detective Rossetti asks the audience to participate as the cast reenacts everything that had happened prior to the murder with as much detail as possible. If something is amiss or does not match what had actually happened, theater goers are invited to call out the discrepancy to help the detective put the pieces together. We are then encouraged to toss out any theories we might have to Detective Rossetti during the intermission where he makes himself readily available, at the same time we prepare questions to ask the play’s characters once the second act begins. Yes, we get to interrogate the suspects.

Best put, Shear Madness is just plain old fun. It’s a hilarious show that gives us a chance to crime solve along with the detective, some of its funniest moments the participation between audience and cast. Also entertaining are the many references to Chicago and several jokes that have been updated to include todays politics and pop culture. Sure, some of the humor is dated. The show was created in 1980. But it works – and works well. Thanks to Warner Crocker’s well-piloted direction and a superb cast that works well together and can also seamlessly interact with the audience on the fly, we see that funny is funny no matter when it was written so long as it’s delivered well. And no one was off limits. Touching on famous personalities from Taylor Swift to Bill Clinton to Joe Biden to Rod Blagojevich to dot, dot, dot, the play certainly takes its share of swipes. And while some of its jokes might be geared to ruffle a few feathers, the audience clearly takes them as just that – jokes. Even in its more contrived moments where predictable humor is used, a laugh is usually found. In the end it’s a silly comedy, not a show to be taken seriously, and lord knows we could all use a laugh or two.

The show does get a boost from audience involvement and even some good-natured heckling, but it naturally relies heavily on its cast. Ed Kross is a sheer delight to watch as Tony Whitcomb, the flamboyant salon owner, both his well-timed innuendos and physical comedy garnering one laugh after another. Mary Robin Roth as Mrs. Schubert also has many scene stealing moments as does David Sajewich as “used antique dealer” Eddie Lawrence while Brittany D Parker’s Barbara DeMarco hits the mark, as well. Detective Rossetti’s partner Mikey Thomas is played well by Sam Woods to round out an overall solid cast. Joe Popp as Detective Nick Rossetti is perhaps the most noteworthy of the bunch, as his character is kind of the glue that holds everything together in this production. As theater goers bounce one question or theory off the detective (sometimes with spot on observations and often quite absurd), Popp impresses repeatedly never wavering from his character and never absent of a quick, often humorous, response.

Shear Madness is also a play that can be enjoyed more than once. The story has four possible outcomes based on how the audience votes, and even if one gets the same outcome twice, you can be sure the audience participation will differ each and every time.

A unique theatre experience that has the audience laughing as much as it has them guessing, Shear Madness breaks down the fourth wall and delivers two one-of-a-kind fun-filled hours.

Shear Madness is being performed at Mercury Theater through March 29th. For tickets and/or more information visit www.MercuryTheaterChicago.com.           

    

Published in Theatre in Review

Chicago is just days away from ‘Middletown’ hitting the stage with its nearly four-week run taking place at the Apollo Theater. The play, produced by GFour Productions (Menopause the Musical and Fiddler on the Roof), kicks off on February 27th and centers around two couples that share the roller coaster of life together – the highs, lows and in-betweens. But Middletown is different than most stage productions in that the actors read directly from scripts with minimal use of a set.

“I wanted to tell a relatable ‘every-person’s’ story in a direct and straightforward manner where human emotions are front and center – without bells, whistles, special effects, or props,” says writer Dan Clancy, best known for his play The Timekeepers, which ran Off-Broadway and in Israel for 13 years. “I wanted the words to speak for themselves.” 

The play also comes with a powerhouse quartet of actors comprised of Sandy Duncan, Donny Most, Adrian Zmed and Kate Buddeke. The talent in this show is undeniable and coupled with a work that has already received such critical acclaim (including a Carbonell nomination for ‘Best New Work’ in 2017), Middletown should be on everyone’s radar over the next couple of months.

A fan of his while growing up, I had the chance to catch up with cast member Donny Most fresh off recording some new tracks in Nashville for his upcoming album. Most, probably best known for his role of Ralph Malph on Happy Days, has not only left an impression with his acting work, he has also worked behind the camera as a director. But perhaps most impressively (this coming from a fellow musician), Most has recorded a handful of albums, his latest ‘D Most Mostly Swinging,’ an ode to the standard singing greats. Most, who began studying music at an early age, clearly has the chops to take on such a monumental task, even taking his act on the road with ‘Donny Most – Sings and Swings’ tour. 

Most’s career is well-rounded, and he really seems to enjoy the change of pace. Looking forward to taking the live stage again and spending time in Chicago, the veteran actor/musician talks Middletown, his path into both an acting and music career and even has some fun stuff to say about his Happy Days pals.  

Ken Payne - Thank you for giving me the opportunity to chat for a few minutes. I’ve been looking forward to this and it’s a thrill to speak with you.

Donny Most - Sure. I appreciate that. Thank you very much.

Ken - Oh, you bet. So, I read that you originally started out studying engineering and then went into business. And then I saw that you landed Happy Days on your third audition and what was that like?

Donny - You have some of it right, but you are missing some key elements so let me expand the picture a little bit. What happened was, I grew up in Brooklyn, New York and at a pretty young age I started really wanting to pursue acting, singing, all that. Initially, I went to a private studio in Manhattan to a class to learn singing and dancing and acting. I was like thirteen, fourteen years old when I got picked to be part of a professional revue they put together with the teenagers and I was singing in the Catskill Mountains one summer at all of those nightclubs up in the hotels for the summer. So, I was really going after it from a pretty young age. Then I switched my gears after that summer and started working at an acting workshop and it was a much more serious class than I had been doing previously. The one prior to that was more focused on music.

Ken – So quite the switch of direction at that point.

Donny – Right. So now I was switching my focus to acting. I was in this class for a couple of years while I was in high school. Through that teacher, I was introduced to a manager and I started going out on auditions in New York and read a lot of commercials. I did about 40 commercials over the next four years, and some of that was while I was going to Lehigh University in Pennsylvania. So, I was involved in a theater club at Lehigh and was driving into Manhattan a lot for these auditions and doing commercials and back and forth a lot. I got my engineering and business degree because my parents wanted me to have a college degree - and something as a backup, as opposed to majoring in theater. After my junior year, I went out to California for the summer to make some contacts for after I graduated. I wanted to expand the possibility because most of TV and film was being done in LA and not in New York, so I wanted to have that as an option as well. So, I went to Los Angeles for the summer, went on auditions and landed a few guest starring roles. I was supposed to go back to Lehigh for my senior year after the summer, but the agents convinced me that I had some good momentum going and that it would be silly to stop that flow. “Take six months off of school. You have something cooking, let’s see where it can go.” So, I did. I decided to take six months off and stayed out in LA and landed another role. And then I got nothing for several months and I thought “oh, I made a big mistake,” but then the audition came up for Happy Days. I think the three that you mentioned is because I went back a second time and then they called me back a third time for a screen test. But I had already landed guest starring roles on three other shows before Happy Days.

Ken – Gotcha. Your Wikipedia page makes it sound like you jumped into Happy Days out of nowhere. I was like WOW, that’s pretty fortunate!

Donny - Yeah, Wikipedia page… I thought I should fill in the blanks.

Ken - It sounds like you were into music at a very young age and I noticed that you tour as a musician with ‘Donny Most Sings and Swings’ - which I thought was super interesting. You cover many standards, which is one of my favorite types of music and I thought that was fascinating.

Donny - Great!

Ken - Is that something you are still doing today? Touring as a music act?

Donny - I am still doing it. I haven’t been doing it quite as much as I was about a year or two ago because I got very busy with film projects and other theater projects. I was doing a movie over the summer in Michigan called Lost Heart with a great production company called Collective Development, Inc. It was my second film with them. I also acted in a film with them a year ago called, MBF: Man’s Best Friend, which was actually just released a month ago on Amazon Prime. It’s a really interesting film. Pretty powerful movie and I play a defense attorney defending a wounded vet in the film. It’s a dramatic role and completely different from my past. After Lost Heart this past summer, I did the play Art up in Canada. And then I came back and did a little more music. I did a show a few weeks ago, a cabaret in New York, for two nights. And this past Friday night, I was a guest with Linda Purl, who I’ve done some shows with. She is an actress/singer, as well. So, I’m still doing music but not as much only because I got busy with a few different projects. And now I’ve got Middletown coming up. On that note, I’m near Nashville and I just came out of a meeting because I’m recording with a producer here. We are having a session tonight. We have done four songs so far and I’m doing another four this week. And after Middletown in Chicago, I’ll do the last four songs. So, yeah, I’m juggling the singing and acting, which I love. I love mixing them up and going from one to another.

Ken – We’re certainly looking forward to having you in Chicago. As far as Middletown goes, what was it that attracted you to work on that project? I know the play has a stellar cast with Sandy Duncan, Adrian Zmed, Kate Buddeke and yourself.

Donny - The play is the thing. I really liked the play a lot. And I’ve also worked with Adrian before. See, we’ve done this play in the spring for the first time at a theater in Las Vegas, The Smith Center for the Performing Arts. I did it with Adrian and then we did it at Bucks County Playhouse in Pennsylvania and now we are doing it in Atlanta for a week and then coming to Chicago. I’ve done a tour with Adrian, a Broadway tour of Grease years ago, and Adrian and I have also played ball together- we are on the same softball team. So, I knew it would be great to work with Adrian. I have not worked with Sandy, but I’ve heard great things about her, as everyone knows with her reputation from people who have worked with her. And the play itself, more than anything, because if you don’t like the material, you know, it’s nice to work with friends and people you like, but you have to love the material. So, it’s really a wonderful play that takes you through so many different emotions. There is comedy and then there are very heartfelt moments and very dramatic moments in the play. I think it’s something so many people will relate to.

Ken – Based on what I’ve read about it, I think you’re exactly right when you say the play will hit home for many theater goers.

Donny – For sure. Middletown is about two couples who have been friends for 30 something years and they have dinner every Friday night. You see them at the beginning when they are a little older, but then you go back to see how they became friends and the audience goes on this journey with them as they go through life whether it be their friendship, and having children, and marriage challenges, and then getting older and dealing with all kinds of things. It’s a real rollercoaster. I love that kind of material where it runs the gamut. It’s not just a comedy. It’s not just a drama. It’s like life is- it combines the two in a way that is very fulfilling. So that’s the main aspect. And also, that they are doing the design of the play was not to do it - you know how Love Letters was done by the actors reading the script. It’s similar in that regard. We are reading. There is some staging and minimalist kind of staging, but it’s pure. It’s pure storytelling with great characters and great words and great vehicles for actors. So that was interesting to me to do it in that manner. It really works. I didn’t quite know what to expect, but it surprised me when I did do the play how powerful it was doing it in this fashion.

Ken - So this story, about two couples meeting together for some 30 years, I looked it up and it looks like you have been married for about 38 years, if I’m right?

Donny - Yeah, it will be 38 in a couple of weeks.

Ken - Congratulations! I was wondering if this play had any parallels in your own life. And maybe that was also something that kind of grabbed your attention when considering this role.

Donny - Um, I would say that I was aware when I was reading it that I was like, “Oh wow, this is sort of uncanny about marriage and something from my life,” but there were enough moments in the play that, yes, I felt like I had experienced this, and I think everybody will have that same kind of feeling and reaction. There is something for everybody, you’ll recognize, it will hit a chord within, and you’ll have a smile on your face, with that recognition, or the pang deep down where you feel the pain and the emotion. It’s that kind of a piece. There wasn’t anything that was like, “My god, this is my story,” but there was enough in there that everybody will feel a connection to it.

Ken - When was the last time you visited Chicago and what are you looking forward to the most? You are going to be here for almost a month.

Donny - Yeah. I am looking forward to it. I was in Chicago, I performed at a place called Andy’s Jazz Club about three and a half, four years ago with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra. I always enjoyed the city very much and I’m looking forward to taking it in and being in the downtown area. You know, I grew up in New York, so it has a similar feel to me in terms of a cosmopolitan kind of a city. There is so much to do and the bustle of it and the variety of it and the food and the music and everything that a great city has to offer. I’ve had the wonderful opportunity to play softball in Wrigley Field a couple of times. Happy Days had a softball team and we played at Wrigley Field before their regular game with the Cubs. We were playing there, twice. And I was with another team called the Hollywood Allstars, a celebrity softball team that played at Wrigley Field, so I think I played at Wrigley like three times. That ballpark holds a special place in my heart, being a huge baseball fan growing up. Unfortunately, I will be there right before the new season begins, so I won’t get to go to a game, but it will just be great to be back in Chicago again. I’m really looking forward to it.

Ken - So, as far as Middletown goes, after the Chicago run, are there any plans to continue this play with the same group of actors in other locations?

Donny - They are talking to other theaters in other cities and I know they are lining them up. I think there will be a break after Chicago. There will be a bit of a break until they have coordinated them all. But the plan is to do it. The cool thing about it is when I did it in Las Vegas last spring and in Buck County, Cindy Williams played my wife and Didi Conn was playing Adrian’s wife. But they weren’t available, so in Atlanta, Didi is going to be able to do it, but then she’s not available after that. That’s why they brought Sandy [Duncan] in and a local actress that has done a ton of stuff in Chicago and stuff on Broadway, Kate Buddeke.

Ken – Sure. Kate is great. We are very familiar with her work here.

Donny – Kate is playing my wife. I’ve met her on Skype and she is lovely and I know she has done a ton of theater so I’m looking forward to working with her. What I was getting at, is that I think they will have some select pool of actors that work for this, but if some aren’t available, then you have this group doing the play in this city. And then it might be a mix and match for the next one. That kind of thing. Keep doing it and who knows, maybe it will go Off-Broadway. It’s all kind of fluid right now. I know they are lining up other theaters as we speak.

Ken - That is great to hear because it sounds like a terrific show and we are excited to have it run here in Chicago’s Apollo Theater. So, back to Happy Days because I have to ask for all the Chicago fans of that show - I was curious if you are you are still in contact with any fellow cast members at all, and it sounds like you have been with Cindy Williams.

Donny - Yeah, Anson [Williams] and I are tight, maybe tighter than we have ever been. We see each other and talk to each other all the time. As a matter of fact, he filled in for me, after Bucks County Playhouse. They had a production in Delaware, and I couldn’t do it, so Anson filled in for me for that particular run. Anson and I, we are in constant communication. And then the others - I happened to see Scott Baio just the other day. And Ron [Howard], he’s a very busy guy, but we will stay in touch by email and I’ll see him once or twice a year, that kind of thing. I had lunch with him about eight, nine months ago out in LA. And Henry [Winkler], I spoke to just about two, three weeks ago, and we are supposed to get together for lunch once I get back from Chicago.

Ken - That’s always good to hear because you watch these shows, we grow up with them, and sometimes you find out later that the cast never speaks to each other afterwards and it pops the bubble a little bit.

Donny - Yeah, we were very lucky that we had such a great relationship - and got along so well - and it was a very fortuitous casting, whatever you want to call it. You must give the Happy Days’ producers and the casting people a lot of credit. It was one of those things that happens occasionally where you bring a group of people together and they just hit it off professionally and personally - and we really did become a family. It sounds like a cliché, but it totally was the case with our group. So, we will always have that. I saw Marion Ross not that long ago and she is still doing amazingly well. I think she is 91-years-old and she looks like she could be my age. She’s amazing. We will always have that feeling. It’s almost like when we see each other, it’s like seeing your cousins and aunts and uncles, that kind of feeling. You could be away from each other for a while, but you still have that bond and you have all those feelings for each other.

Ken – Fantastic! So, I’ll just finish with one more question, I wanted to backtrack since you mentioned that you are recording in Nashville and are currently laying down some tracks and will be recording some more after this run. Are these standards that you are doing? And, when can we expect to hear the new music?

Donny - Good question. There are some standards that are going to be on this one, but not quite as much, it’s a little different. I have a CD that is out now called “D Most: Mostly Swinging” and those are all great standards with a big band and it’s “mostly swinging”. Those are all jazz standards that [Frank] Sinatra’s done and Bobby Darin and all the people that I loved growing up and listening to. What happened is I was introduced to a producer in Nashville and he saw what I was doing, and he really liked it. And when we talked and he came out to LA for something and we met, he said he thought I should do something more in his wheelhouse, but he also thought it would be a good move for me. It wouldn’t be just strictly the jazz kind of thing and that style. It’d be a little more contemporary, but we could still maintain some of the jazz feel while maybe including songs that weren’t jazz standards but were standards to my generation - songs that they were well known songs from the late sixties, maybe seventies, from  the classic rock era - open it up a little bit more so it wasn’t just the jazz standards. So, it’s a whole new thing, it’s a little different, but I’m enjoying it because we are still able on some of the songs to put in some of the jazz feel that I love. But I also love a lot of the other music. I have an eclectic kind of taste. It was a renaissance of music in the late sixties when after The Beatles and after classic rock. People were doing all kinds of mixing rock with jazz, or rock with folk, or rock with blues, progressive rock, all kinds of things. It was so experimental. So, I grew to love a lot of that music as well. It’s kind of fun for me to integrate some songs that are not part of the old jazz standards and do some of the stuff from a different era of my life. I’m enjoying that. ***

Be sure to catch Donny Most along with Sandy Duncan, Adrian Zmed and Kate Buddeke in Dan Clancy’s Middletown during its run at The Apollo Theater (2540 N. Lincoln Ave) February 27th through March 22nd. For tickets and/or more information visit www.apollochicago.com.

Published in BCS Spotlight
Page 4 of 27

 

 

         19 Years and counting!

Register

     

Latest Articles

Does your theatre company want to connect with Buzz Center Stage or would you like to reach out and say "hello"? Message us through facebook or shoot us an email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

*This disclaimer informs readers that the views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author, and not necessarily to Buzz Center Stage. Buzz Center Stage is a non-profit, volunteer-based platform that enables, and encourages, staff members to post their own honest thoughts on a particular production.