Category Archives: Theatre

‘Jersey Boys’ Finally Heading to the Big Screen – The Moviefone Blog

This is great news.  Ever since I saw this for the first time in New York, I thought it would be an even better film than a Broadway show.  I hope they do this right….

Oh, what a night — if there’s one musical Hollywood’s been eager to get its hands on, it’s ‘Jersey Boys’ — also known as the story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. The production has done killer business, pulling in over a billion dollars worldwide since its debut five years ago, while also earning four Tony Awards (including the weighty Best Musical) and a Grammy when the tunes were put on CD.

With solid success, ‘Jersey Boys’ powered forward with no Hollywood plans in sight, but all of that changed six weeks ago. The screen rights were made available, an auction commenced and after a big seven-figure deal, Graham King’s GK Films will whip the stage story into a feature film.

via ‘Jersey Boys’ Finally Heading to the Big Screen – The Moviefone Blog.

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“The Glass Menagerie” at Triad Stage

We had the privilege of seeing the last performance of “The Glass Menagerie” at Triad Stage tonight.  Our season tickets are usually for earlier in the run, but we had to  move them later due to a conflict.  I really wish we had seen it earlier so I could encourage more people to go see it.  It was truly stellar.

Preston Lane’s post-modern staging, incorporating video and a striking, yet minimalist set was brilliantly executed.  His direction was spot on.  Preston and Triad Stage always do good work when presenting Tennessee William’s work, but they really raised the bar with this production.

While I love Tennessee Williams and know his work very well, “The Glass Menagerie” is usually my least favorite of his plays.  It could have something to do with  Southern Mother thing hitting a little too close home!  But, anyway, this was a whole new take on the play.  I’ve seen this play many, many times and for the first time, to me,  it really seemed to be Tom’s play and it was not overshadowed by Amanda.

All four actors gave lovely performances. It was a beautifully balanced ensemble consisting of Kate Goehring as Amanda/The Mother,  Cheryl Koski as Laura/The Daughter, Matthew Carlson as The Son/Tom and Tyler Hollinger as Jim/ The Gentleman Caller.  Great work by all.

If you missed this one, you really missed a treasure.  It’s nights like this that I am grateful that we have Triad Stage here in Greensboro.  Innovative, interesting theatre is always a treasure, but even more so when it’s in your own backyard.

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Eileen Farrell

I discovered Eileen Farrell when I took a chance on a CD at Best Buy about 20 years ago.  I had never heard of her, but she was one of my great discoveries.  Steve and I both have loved her for years.

Eileen was an Opera Singer.  She was a Diva who sang at the Met, but  left it all to marry a Cop and move to Brooklyn.  She was later a college professor in Maine, but then she sang standards in her later years.

She’s not well known today, but she’s one of my favorites…

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Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work

Steve and I just got in from seeing this great documentary about Joan Rivers and Show Business.

I strongly recommend it!

It’s playing locally at the Carousel Grand….

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Robbie Williams

I’ve watched this guy for almost 10 years now.  I’ll admit, I’ve had a Man Crush on him for years.  It’s okay…Steve knows…

Robbie could be have been one of the greats.

But… He always seems to choke when the opportunity for greatness presents itself.  He may be this generation’s male Judy Garland.  Without the honesty and the guts.  God knows, he’s beat her record at re-hab.

He’s the biggest pop star in Europe, but he’s never made it here in the States.  He is so versatile… and that seems to scare him…

When Hugh Jackman left “The Boy from Oz” on Broadway, they offered him the part of Peter Allen.  It could have been “The Break.”  It could have made him here.

But he was too scared of people thinking he was gay.  So he turned it down….out of insecurity.

I don’t know if he could have done the part –much less 8 shows a week without missing show– like Hugh did.

But… if he could let loose and get a grip on himself…and get some discipline… I bet he could have.  He just can’t let loose…or get that discipline you have to have to be one of the Greats.

Robbie always seems to want to take the easy way….

That’s why he’s touring this year with “Take That” , the boy band he broke out of years ago…

I hate to see talent wasted, but I understand insecurity.  I just don’t understand not working through it.

Anyway….

Here are some great clips from his “Sinatra” concert at the Royal Albert Hall almost 10 years ago that show what he could have been.

This was his moment to transition and he blew it….

If only….

If he only hadn’t been so scared.  If only he hadn’t been badly managed.  If only he had the guts to take it forward…

Maybe one day he’ll still move forward  and realize his potential…

I hope so…

But my gut tells me he missed his moment….

The guy’s too talented to let it go to waste singing bubble gum rock at 40….but that seems to be where he’s headed….

But there is still hope…

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The One That Got Away…

This is the one Broadway show I still regret missing– at least during the time I could have gone to New York and seen it.

I really hate I didn’t get my act together to go see Rebecca Luker, Lonette McKee and the others in  the 199o’s revival of “Show Boat”.  It seems most similar to the 1930’s film that I love.  The 1950’s MGM version is just too bland…

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The Local Theatre Scene: Shows I Would Like to See

I’ve never understood how anyone can think Greensboro is boring. In addition to all the sports stuff- that I do not follow- we have an excellent and diverse performing arts scene. Our biggest problem, personally, is finding the time to attend all the things we would like to see.

There are so many different theatre companies in the Triad. They each seem to have their niche and we are blessed with that kind of diversity in theatrical options. Then we also have so many excellent College and University Theatre Departments.

I have had very enjoyable evenings at the Theatre over the past year at Triad Stage, The  Broach Theatre, Paper Lantern Theatre Company, Bennett College Theatre, NC A&T Theatre, UNC-G Theatre, GTCC Theatre and several others.

My main concern is that some of them keep doing the same shows over and over or shows that other companies have done.  I understand there is a segment of the local audience who will go see “Steel Magnolias” and “Driving Miss Daisy” over and over.  But I think even they must have had enough by now!  Some shows have just been done too much.  There are other options.

There are so many wonderful plays out there, I just hate to see our local talent and audiences limited to the same old war horses…

With that in mind, I thought I would list some of the shows I have seen in New York and other places that I would love to see done locally. These are shows that I think would appeal to the local theatre-goers.  I also hope they would not be too technically demanding for one or more of our Triad based companies to take on.  These may not all be great plays, but they were plays and musicals I greatly enjoyed.

I guess I would call most of these “audience pleasers”.  Others are just plain good plays that ought to be seen locally.

Who knows?  Maybe someone will actually decide to do one of them.  And if they do, I would go to see it.  And bring friends…

Again, these are just the suggestions that come to the top of my head.  I’m sure I’ll think of more to add later.

  1. “The Exact Center of the Universe”- we saw this Off Broadway several years ago with Frances Sternhagen.  I immediately turned to Steve and said:  “I wish someone would do this in Greensboro with Betsy Brown.  She would be wonderful!”  It would also appeal to the “Driving Miss Daisy” and “Steel Magnolias” crowd.  It’s about an older Southern woman and her son in the 1950’s and 1960’s.  Here is a link to a review that tells you more:  http://www.curtainup.com/exactcen.html
  2. “The Lady With All the Answers”- We just saw this Off Broadway last December with Judith Ivey playing Ann Landers.  It’s one character, set in her living room.  It’s a marvelous, funny play.
  3. “Dinah Was”-  This is one I really don’t understand why it hasn’t been done here.  It’s about Dinah Washington and her life and career.  It opens with her sitting in the lobby of the Sahara Hotel  in Las Vegas in the 1960’s.  She is sitting in the lobby in her slip and a fur coat with a bottle of champagne and mad as hell because they hired her to perform but won’t let her stay in the hotel because she is black.  Lillias White played Dinah Washington and was amazing.  Adriane Lenox almost stole the show as the hotel maid who brings down the house at the end.  This could be done here on a small stage with a very small orchestra.  I wish someone would do it–if they can find the right actresses.
  4. “The Life”-This was Cy Coleman, the composer of “Sweet Charity”‘s, last show on Broadway.  It is a great show.  I think people are afraid to do it because it is a large cast and is about hookers, pimps and hustlers in New York in the early 1970’s.  But it’s a great show.  Entertaining and with a lot of heart.  Here is a clip of this one:
  5. “Orson’s Shadow”- I posted about this one recently.  Again, I saw this Off Broadway.  Basically, it’s the story of Orson Wells, Laurence Olivier, Vivian Leigh and Joan Plowright working on a theatrical project together.  Ms Plowright was Olivier’s wife after Miss Leigh and their affair is in the early stages in this play.  It’s a great backstage story about theatre and theatrical egos.  You can find my previous post using the Search Feature on the Blog.  I can’t seem to get links to work…
  6. “The Dazzle”- This Off Broadway show was about Homer and Langley Collyer, the original hoarders.  I loved it.  Here is a link to a review that tells you more: http://www.curtainup.com/dazzle.html
  7. “The Temperamentals”– Another Off Broadway Play I posted about recently.  There is a large Gay and well-educated audience here that I think would embrace this play.  Use the Search feature on this blog for “Temperamentals” and you can see my previous post and some scenes.
  8. “Last Fall”- We just saw this in June on Broadway at the Helen Hayes Theatre.  Search the Blog with “Next Fall” to see my detailed thoughts in my earlier post.  Here are a couple of clips with a little more information
  9. “Dying City”- By Christopher Shinn.  I saw this at Lincoln Center and thought it was one of the best new plays I had seen in a while.  It’s about a woman who’s husband dies in Iraq who is visited by his identical twin brother about a year later.  It was an amazingly well written and moving play.
  10. “August:  Osage County”- by Tracy Letts.  I loved this family comedy/drama when we saw it on Broadway a couple of years ago. When the daughter screamed at the Mother at the formal dinner table and said:  “Eat the f#@king fish, bitch”  I turned to Steve and said “These are my people.”  Again, this is a large cast, but I think it would be a crowd pleaser.  It was a big hit on Broadway and they are working on the movie now.  Here is an advertisement and a story about the show:    

Just some thoughts…I’m sure others have some suggestions to add.

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Triad Stage: My Thoughts on “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You” and “The Actor’s Nightmare”

I have some good news and some bad news.   Good News:  I had a great time at Triad Stage’s UpStage Cabaret last night seeing these two shows.  Bad News:  I saw the last performance so it’s too late for you to go…

These shows are part of the repertory summer season that Triad Stage does with UNC-G.  I don’t know the details around this, but the Actors appear in the main stage show and after hours in these two shows as well as in another production.  I have attended these late night shows in the past and also had a great time.  I recommend you keep an eye out for these opportunities to see these late evening shows in the Upstage Cabaret.  They are a great addition to the main season at Triad Stage.

I also love the space where these shows are held.  I wish Triad Stage would use it more.  It would be a great place for small concerts, Cabaret acts as well as theatre.  And you can drink during the show…

The plays themselves are two short plays by Christopher Durang.  I always enjoy his work when it is done well-as it was last night.

“The Actor’s Nightmare” is very short and very funny.  Anthony Scarsella did a great job as the lead with able support from the rest of the cast.

The longer play, “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You”, is totally dependent on the actress playing Sister Mary for the play to work.  Leah Turley was delightful.  Although she is too young for the part, as written, she made it work beautifully.  I would love to see her do this again in about 20 years.  She was also a stand out in the main stage show at Triad Stage.  I hope we get to see more of  her here in the Triad.

The entire cast of “Sister Mary” was excellent. Outstanding work by the entire cast including Catherine Delaney, Matthew Delaney, Izzy Goff, Dylan Weikel-Feekes and Nick Albrecht.  Especially, Dylan Wiekel-Feekes.   As the perfect Catholic schoolboy, he almost stole the show.

Both plays were also extremely well directed  by Kate Muchmore, for “Actor’s Nightmare” and by Bryan Conger for “Sister Mary”.

We are lucky to have several good College theatre programs here in the Triad.  I applaud Triad Stage for their support and partnership of these groups.

Congratulations to UNC-Gs’ Theatre program for such fine work during this Summer Rep series.  Many thanks to Triad Stage for providing such fine facilities and support to these young artists.

I can’t wait until next year!

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“Providence Gap” at Triad Stage: My Thoughts and Review

I just got home from the longest night I have ever spent in a theatre.  I hate to be negative, but friends don’t let friends see bad theatre.  I have seen hundreds of shows in my life and nothing prepared me for the mess that is “Providence Gap”at Triad Stage here in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Let me start by saying I love Triad Stage.  We have been season ticket holders since they first opened.  We have seen every production they have ever mounted.  I donate money to them.  Often, they do wonderful work.  But when they miss, they miss big.  “Providence Gap” is a huge miss.

Let me also say Preston Lane, who I do not know personally, can be a wonderful director.  “Picnic”, an old warhorse of a play that I was dreading, turned out to be a magical evening in the theatre– largely due to his direction.  He has created magic many times in the past at Triad Stage.  Just not when he is writing/adapting and directing at the same time.  Starting with “Julie’s Dance”, most adaptations or new works I recall that he has both written and directed have been, at best,  tedious.  I couldn’t even look him in the eye as we left tonight I was so embarrassed for him.

Let me also say that Laurelynn Dossett wrote and performed some beautiful music.  However, it was lost in this mess of a show.  In every collaboration she does at Triad Stage, her music is always the high point.  The book of the show is always the low point.  And usually the Direction.

For the record, I also simply hated their previous collaboration “Beautiful Star”.  I know it sold well for Triad Stage, but it was still, at best, mediocre.  It seemed to me to be more appropriate for the Barn Dinner Theatre than a professional company like Triad Stage.  “Bloody Blackbeard” had great music and a wonderful set, but seemed like a rough draft of a show.  “Providence Gap” has beautiful music, but seems like, at best,  a very rough first draft of a show.  Laurelynn’s music is usually the only saving grace of these collaborations, but even she couldn’t save this mess.  I would have bought the CD, but I didn’t want to risk mental flashbacks to the show.

I felt sorry for the very talented actors.  Most of them are from UNCG-G’s Theatre program.  They were all extremely talented and did the best that could be done with what they had to work with in “Providence Gap.”  The best thing I can say to them is to be grateful that they learned early in their careers what it’s like to be part of a really bad professional show.

There were about 4 or 5 plays in “Providence Gap.”  It could have been a fascinating story about how “hillbillies” came down from the mountains to work in the cotton mills.  It could have been a fascinating story about mountain people.   But, Mr Lane was overly ambitious.  We did not need a 2 and a half hour allegory.  It did not work.  We did not need to hear it as representing the 20th Century changes in lifestyle for mountain people.  If I had heard the phrase “Twentieth Century” from the narrator/ MC one more time, I think I would have climbed over the seats and beaten him with my program.  The woman character “representing” the 20th Century was confusing, annoying and should have been cut.  The Radio Show format simply did not work.

The characters were poorly developed and, as the man behind me said, “turn on a dime”.  These were sketches, not characters.  They were not “real” people.  And, while I know what he was trying to do,  the character names seemed  more appropriate to a Jackie Collins novel than mountain people in the early 20th Century.  The plot was both obvious and contrived.  It was totally predictable and the prediction was not good.

As I said, I felt sorry for the actors and appreciate their fine work in making these characters as honest as they could.  They did not have a lot to work with in the script.  I hate to say it, but there really was not a book here.  At least not a coherent one.  Especially not one worthy of Laurelynn Dossett’s music.  I hope she steps away from this type of collaboration before her reputation is tarnished by association.  She deserves better than this…She and her fine musicians were misused on stage in this show.  They were neither fully integrated into the show nor appropriately featured to “comment” on the action.  This was part of the weakness in both the book and the direction.

Usually, one can at least love the set in a Triad Stage production.  Even that did not work tonight.  It was boring and depressing with no focal points.

I really hate to be so harsh in this review, but I look at it as “tough love”.  Triad Stage needs to stop this foolishness before they hurt their reputation even further. I did not hear one positive word from anyone in the audience tonight.  I’m sure there were some people who liked it, but I didn’t hear it.  All I heard walking back to the car were comments similar to mine.

I must say, it is admirable that they are trying to feature North Carolina History and music but, frankly, this is not working.  I can’t be an enabler.

I beg Triad Stage to end the Appalachian saga while they are behind, but before they further damage their reputation.  This was, frankly, abysmal.  They don’t need this kind of word of mouth when they are trying to build and retain an audience during tough economic times.  They are too important to us in the Community for me not to call them out on this–even if no one there reads it.

But then, who am I to judge?  I’m just a guy who sees a lot of theatre, in a lot of places, who won’t be seeing anything else in this genre at Triad Stage.  You couldn’t pay me enough.  I can’t even think of anyone to whom I would do the disservice to give them our season tickets for something like this show.  I was embarrassed for them that they put this on their stage.

As a supporter of Triad Stage, I’ve had my say….I just hope we can move on to bigger and better things next season.  I wish Laurelynn Dossett and all the talented actors all the best.  Triad Stage and Preston Lane can and should do better…

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