Tom Ford, left, as Henry Higgins and Aled Davies as Colonel Pickering in Great Lakes Theater's "My Fair Lady". Photo | Matthew Murphy

By Bob Abelman

When we reflect back on a live theater production, it is usually a specific moment that we recall – an instant when a playwright’s idea, a director’s vision, or an actor’s performance surpasses an audience’s expectations and something special happens.

Such moments seem frozen in time and suspended in space. It is these isolated, elusive and brilliant moments that keep theatergoers coming back for more and win over the next generation of subscribers.

Theatrical missteps and creative miscarriages are similarly memorable and, for the audience if not the performers or production staff, they are just as entertaining. Awe can be found in work both awesome and awful.

Here are ten of this past year’s most memorable moments – both fantastic and unfortunate – from productions that have graced Cleveland’s Playhouse Square, Outside-the-Square theaters, and other area stages.

10. I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face

Tom Ford, left, as Henry Higgins and Aled Davies as Colonel Pickering in Great Lakes Theater's "My Fair Lady". Photo | Roger Mastroianni

Tom Ford, left, as Henry Higgins and Aled Davies as Colonel Pickering in Great Lakes Theater’s “My Fair Lady”. Photo | Roger Mastroianni

As Henry Higgins in Great Lakes Theater’s “My Fair Lady,” under Victoria Bussert’s direction, actor Tom Ford was playful, passionate and absolutely charming. These are characteristics rarely associated with the role. As such, his songs “Why Can’t the English,” “I’m An Ordinary Man” and “A Hymn to Him” were humorous and thought-full reflections of Higgins’ worldview rather than the droll barbs typically thrown in other productions. And Higgin’s eleventh-hour “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” was so much more than a song of regret; it was a moment of genuine heartbreak.

9. Matthew Wright in drag

Lindsey Mitchell, from left, as Mrs. Denmark, Matthew Wright as Sylvia St. Croix, and Calista Zajac as Tina Denmark in Beck Center's "Ruthless". Photo | Kathy Sandham

Lindsey Mitchell, from left, as Mrs. Denmark, Matthew Wright as Sylvia St. Croix, and Calista Zajac as Tina Denmark in Beck Center’s “Ruthless”. Photo | Kathy Sandham

There was much to love about Beck Center’s “Ruthless” – an outrageously campy, thoroughly self-aware musical comedy mashup of psychological thriller films – starting with 11-year-old triple threat Calista Zajac as the featured sociopath. But the moment when classically trained actor Matthew Wright stepped on stage as Sylvia St. Croix – adorned in a thigh-hugging dress and makeup applied with a spatula – was the moment when the show boldly exceeded the boundaries of outrageous and dared to go well past campy.

8. Girls gone Wilde

Heather Anderson Boll as Mrs. Erlynne, from left, Rachel Lee Kolis as Lady Windermere, and Chris Ross as Lord Windermere in Mamai's "Lady Windermere's Fan". Photo|Bob Perkoski

Heather Anderson Boll as Mrs. Erlynne, from left, Rachel Lee Kolis as Lady Windermere, and Chris Ross as Lord Windermere in Mamai’s “Lady Windermere’s Fan”. Photo | Bob Perkoski

Actual actresses ruled the Mamaí Theatre’s production of “Lady Windermere’s Fan.” Mamaí’s greatest strength is its ability to assemble an ensemble of remarkable female performers, and Rachel Lee Kolis as young Lady Windermere and Heather Anderson Boll as the mysterious newcomer Mrs. Erlynne handled every one of Oscar Wilde’s poignant, empowering soliloquies and each pointed piece of social commentary with astounding virtuosity.

7. “The Wild Party” sizzles

Patrick Ciamacco, center, as the brutal vaudevillian clown Burrs in Blank Canvas' "The Wild Party". Photo | Andy Dudik

Patrick Ciamacco, center, as the brutal vaudevillian clown Burrs in Blank Canvas’ “The Wild Party”. Photo | Andy Dudik

“Some love is fire: some love is rust/But the fiercest, cleanest love is lust.” So begins the seedy, Jazz Age narrative poem “The Wild Party,” on which Andrew Lippa’s lyrical musical of the same name is based. Several moments into Blank Canvas’ summer production, the theater’s air conditioner expired and, by the second song, the steamy, sticky and sweltering atmosphere perfectly matched the sexy score and its lusty performance by a superb seven-piece band – Ian Huettel, Ernie Molner, Zach Davis, Skip Edwards, Matt Wirfel, Jeff Fabis and Jessica D’Ambrosia. Clearly, this show is best served hot and with high humidity.

6. A store-bought musical

The ensemble of Mercury Theatre's "The Little Mermaid". Photo | PRM Digital Productions

The ensemble of Mercury Theatre’s “The Little Mermaid”. Photo | PRM Digital Productions

For a theater company best known for its unbridled imagination, which earlier this year was put on display in its wonderfully minimalistic “Finian’s Rainbow,” Mercury Theatre’s “The Little Mermaid” felt like an off-season, off-strip Vegas show. The production’s eye-candy costuming was rented from The Kansas City Costume Company, its set pieces were imported from Virginia Musical Theatre, and a pre-recorded soundtrack was purchased from Music Theatre International. From the opening moment, this prefab production was absolutely beautiful to watch but so very disappointing to see.

5Once more into the fray

Krystopher Perry as Ross, left, and Don Edelman as Mr. Green in the CVLT production of "Visiting Mr. Green". Photo | Courtesy of the Chagrin Valley Little Theatre

Krystopher Perry as Ross, left, and Don Edelman as Mr. Green in the CVLT production of “Visiting Mr. Green”. Photo | Courtesy of the Chagrin Valley Little Theatre

There will not be many more opportunities for 88-year-old veteran actor Don Edelman to ride the boards at his beloved Chagrin Valley Little Theatre. After all, how many plays call for a grumpy Old Jew character that the energetic and undersized Edelman has not already mastered and performed? The moment he walked on stage as the devout and despondent title character in Jeff Baron’s endearing “Visiting Mr. Green,” which was directed with immense tenderness by Carol Jaffee Pribble, the audience was privileged to witness what talent and tenacity can achieve when given time to properly mature.

4. A bad revue

The ensemble of Actors' Summit's "Tintypes". Photo | Bruce Ford

The ensemble of Actors’ Summit’s “Tintypes”. Photo | Bruce Ford

Popular during the Golden Age of bad entertainment, the revue is musical theater’s ugly ancestor. Its place of performance has been largely reduced to cruise ships, amusement parks and, inexplicably, Akron. Actors’ Summit’s production of “Tintypes,” a revue that offered a tour through 19th century America by way of public domain ditties, was the company’s grand finale, for founders Neil Thackaberry and MaryJo Alexander called it quits after 17 seasons. They produced over 141 shows, most of them superb and some truly spectacular… just not the one that left the lasting last impression.

3. Turning the Paige

Payton St. John, right, with Kayleigh Hahn as Annie in Magnificat High School's production of "Annie". Photo | Mary Papa

Payton St. John, right, with Kayleigh Hahn as Annie in Magnificat High School’s production of “Annie”. Photo | Mary Papa

Even with a feisty redheaded orphan, an adorable dog and 40 talented teenagers on stage, it was impossible to take your eyes off of Payton St. John during Magnificat High School’s recent production of “Annie.” While ensemble members are asked to blend in and not pull focus, these were impossible expectations for the younger sister of Magnificat alum and Inside Dance Magazine’s “2015 Dancer of the Year” Paige St. John. From the moment of Payton’s first perfect pirouette, it was clear that her kind of precision, passion and stage presence can’t help but call attention to itself.

2. When locals go national

Patty Lohr, far right top-tier, and the “Kinky Boots” national tour ensemble. Photo | Matthew Murphy

Patty Lohr, far right top-tier, and the “Kinky Boots” national tour ensemble. Photo | Matthew Murphy

The Tony Award-winning musical “Beautiful,” about the life, times and tunes of Carole King, came through Playhouse Square on national tour. It brought with it Cleveland-born actor Ben Fankhauser in a featured role. When the touring “Kinky Boots” recently strutted on stage at the Connor Palace Theatre, there was local actress and Baldwin Wallace University grad Patty Lohr in a supporting role. How wonderful to witness – whether for a few fleeting moments or for the duration of a production – the high-profile success stories that got their start on Northeast Ohio stages.

1. Showcasing Stockholm syndrome

John de Lancie as Mr. Wolf and Juliet Brett as Theresa in Cleveland Play House's "Mr. Wolf". Photo | Roger Mastroianni

John de Lancie as Mr. Wolf and Juliet Brett as Theresa in Cleveland Play House’s “Mr. Wolf”. Photo | Roger Mastroianni

Playwright Rajiv Joseph has a remarkable proclivity for examining big-ticket issues by way of small-scale stories. In “Mr. Wolf,” at the Cleveland Play House, a young girl played by Juliet Brett was abducted and hidden from the world by an astronomer played by John de Lancie who believed she can unravel the mysteries of the universe and find God. Early in the play, the entire set receded deep into the far recesses of the performance space and nearly vanished among the surrounding stars, suggesting the infinite expanses of the universe as well as the astronomical odds of this girl’s parents ever seeing her again. It was a moment when the playwright’s idea, director Giovanna Sardelli’s creative vision, Timothy R. Mackabee’s innovative stagecraft and the actors’ brilliant performances became so much greater than the sum of these parts.

Here’s to more memorable theater moments in the year to come and to you witnessing every one of them for yourself.


Bob Abelman covers professional theater and cultural arts for the Cleveland Jewish News. Follow Bob at Facebook.com/BobAbelman3.

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Dec. 9, 2016.

Lead image: Patty Lohr, far right top-tier, and the “Kinky Boots” national tour ensemble. Photo | Matthew Murphy

From left, Neda Spears, Sarah Slagle, Holly Reimer, Mark Seven and Frank Jackman. PHOTO | Bruce Ford

‘Tintypes’ at Actors’ Summit is plague upon our houses

By Bob Abelman

The eighth biblical plague that tortured Egypt was locusts. If the musical revue had been invented back then, the Egyptians would have caved quicker and Exodus 10:5 would have been a much shorter read.

Popular during the Golden Age of bad entertainment, the musical revue is the ugly ancestor of musical theater sans storyline, soul and substance. Its place of performance has been largely reduced to cruise ships, amusement parks, and inexplicably, Akron. “Tintypes,” which offers us a tour through turn of the 19th century American history by way of 49 mostly public domain songs from 1890 to 1917, is currently on stage at Actors’ Summit.

Linking the musical revue to locusts is a stretch, but “Tintypes” compares favorably to the plague of cicadas presently invading Northeast Ohio.

While the cicadas surface every 17 years and live for only a few weeks at most, “Tintypes” — which was conceived by Mary Kyte with musical arrangements by Mel Marvin and Gary Pearle — appeared on Broadway in 1980 and ran for only 93 performances. Both the cicada and “Tintypes” are small in size and stature, have no bite or sting, and represent the most primitive and least attractive form of their species.

Actors’ Summit’s staging is particularly unattractive.

Its production values are limited to a bare stage equipped with assorted props, like umbrellas for twirling and American flags for waving, and pre-recorded piano accompaniment by musical director Deborah Ingersoll. She performs a score with works from George M. Cohan (“You’re a Grand Old Flag”), Scott Joplin (“Solace”), Thomas P. Westendorf (“I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen”) and others who warrant better treatment and richer orchestration.

The theater’s staging of “Ring of Fire” in 2014 was much more inventive, though that show was more tribute concert than musical revue.

“Tintype’s” cast of five, consisting of Frank Jackman, Neda Spears, Holly Reimer, Sarah Slagle and Mark Seven, work hard and master director MaryJo Alexander’s period-appropriate but rather pedestrian choreography. And the silent-film style vignettes they perform between segments titled “Arrivals,” “The Factory” and “Vaudeville” are absolutely charming.

However, these performers are not the song-and-dance professionals required to sell a work like this, and several occasionally fall out of tempo and tone with the soundtrack. They also seem rather uninspired by the job at hand. So did the audience, who were old enough to know much of the music but not so old as to feel nostalgic about songs written in the early 1900s.

According to Scripture, the Israelites were held captive in Egypt for 400 years. It only felt that long watching “Tintypes.” CV

On stage

WHAT: “Tintypes”

WHERE: Actors’ Summit, 103 S. High St., Akron

WHEN: Through June 19

TICKETS & INFO: $10 – $33, call 330-374-7568 or visit actorssummit.org.


Bob Abelman covers theater and cultural arts for the Cleveland Jewish News. Follow Bob at Facebook.com/BobAbelman.3.

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on June 3, 2016.

Lead image: From left, Neda Spears, Sarah Slagle, Holly Reimer, Mark Seven and Frank Jackman. PHOTO | Bruce Ford

Keith Stevens as Matt Friedman and Shani Ferry as Sally Talley PHOTO | Bruce Ford

‘Talley’s Folly’ given a tender rendering at Actors’ Summit

By Bob Abelman

Ohio-born, Catholic-raised, Actors’ Summit-based Keith Stevens sure makes a convincing Latvian Jew.

He does so in Lanford Wilson’s romantic comedy “Talley’s Folly,” which invites us to eavesdrop on the courtship between two thoroughly mismatched but magnetically drawn soulmates at a boathouse in rural Missouri in 1944.

The play begins with Stevens, who was born in Fairview Park and lives in North Olmsted, as 42-year-old Matt Friedman, directly addressing the audience and confiding in his plans for the evening’s entertainment. “If everything goes well for me tonight,” he says, “this should be a waltz … a no-holds-barred romantic story.”

Stevens delivers this and all of Matt’s well-structured sentences with their multisyllabic reader’s vocabulary with the Talmudic singsong cadence, over-articulation and assertiveness of an orthodox emigre. He adds to the mix the immediately ingratiating manner of a gentle man who is scarred by a traumatic past, living in a very lonely present, and in desperate need of a more pleasant, promising future.

That future is in the arms of Sally Talley, a wealthy “old maid” daughter of a bigoted Protestant textile mill owner. Sally, played with just the right touch of southern gentility and damaged-goods defensiveness by Shani Ferry, is also scarred by a traumatic past and in desperate need to break away from the toxicity of her home on the hill. But she is not at all sure if this “communist infidel” — her father’s words, not hers — or any man is her way out.

“Talley’s Folly” — the second of Wilson’s trilogy (“Fifth of July” and “Talley & Son”) about the Talley Family — won the 1980 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, so there is no doubt that this deceptively simple story is a complex, brilliantly told piece of work. The challenge facing any performance of it is doing the foreshadowed waltz with grace and conviction.

Actually, there are several dances performed in this play. There’s the one between Matt’s immense insecurities of being an immigrant Jew during WWII and his air of confidence. There’s the one between Sally’s attraction to Matt and her driving ambivalence. And, of course, there’s the push/pull that is at the heart of their relationship, grounded in his romantic tendencies and her pragmatic nature.

Do each of the actors perform their internal dance well? Yes they do.

Is the waltz between them performed with grace and conviction? So much so that you can mark the transformation from their early, awkward exchanges to the one-two-three rhythm that closes the show, facilitated in no small part by Kevin P. Kern’s sensitive-to-the-touch direction.

This production is absolutely lovely. So is Perry Catalano and Fred Seller’s construction of the well-worn boathouse exterior in which the entire play takes place. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Talley’s Folly”

WHERE: Actors’ Summit, 103 S. High Street, Akron

WHEN: Through May 1

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$33, call 330-374-7568 or visit actorssummit.org.

Bob Abelman covers theater and cultural arts for the Cleveland Jewish News. Follow Bob at Facebook.com/BobAbelman3.

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on April 18, 2016.

Lead image: Keith Stevens as Matt Friedman and Shani Ferry as Sally Talley PHOTO | Bruce Ford

 

 

Anne McEvoy and Neil Thackaberry PHOTO | Bruce Ford

Actors’ Summit serves up simple, charming ‘Chapatti’

By Bob Abelman

Place two chairs on a stage and put Anne McEvoy and Neil Thackaberry in them and great theater is likely to result. And it does in Actors’ Summit’s production of “Chapatti,” a new play by Irish playwright Christian O’Reilly.

This one-act two-hander has all the elements for which this theater and its audience have a particular fondness: Romance, good writing, simple production values, and the founding artistic director walking the boards.

The play examines the evolution of a November romance between two very lonely, very likable people who happen to live just around the block from one another. Dan, whose beloved mutt lends his name to the title of this play, lost the one woman he loved to cancer after a 30-year affair and is counting the days to his own demise. Betty, a self-confessed cat lady, lived through a loveless marriage and has given up hope of ever loving or being loved by anything on two legs.

The writing is simple, charming and more than occasionally corny, but its presentation is deceptively and enjoyably sophisticated. While the two neighbors are strangers, they speak in direct-address to the audience and narrate their sorry, unassuming lives. This turns into self-reflective monologues when the two discover each other and then evolves into witty dialogue once they connect and a relationship takes hold.

The stage is bare save for two chairs and a coat rack between them that is used alternatively by both Dan and Betty in their respective working-class homes in Dublin. The simple set is surrounded by blackness, which, while uninspiring artistically, serves to focus all our attention on the two actors and their heartfelt and empathetic performances.

McEvoy’s Betty is a warm and sensitive soul, and it takes remarkable restraint to stay in your assigned seat and not climb upon the stage to pour her tea, offer a supportive hug, and share some soft-spoken words of encouragement.

And, while up there, it would be tempting to offer some scripted words to Thackaberry, who seems to be having a tough go with the quantity of them the playwright put on his plate. Season subscribers will most certainly forgive his trespasses and get lost in his brilliant handling of the more emotional moments in the play. But others will find that his hesitation slows down the proceedings and makes it just a bit harder to connect with Dan than with Betty.

Director Brian Zoldessy does well to stay out of the way of these seasoned performers while making sure that their talents and those of the playwright are front and center. CV

On Stage
WHAT: “Chapatti”
WHERE: Actors’ Summit, 103 S. High Street, Akron
WHEN: Through March 13
TICKETS & INFO: $10-$33. Call 330-374-7568 or visit actorssummit.org


Bob Abelman covers theater and cultural arts for the Cleveland Jewish News. Follow Bob at Facebook.com/BobAbelman3.

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on March 3, 2016.

Natalie Sander Kern as Doris and Keith Stevens as George. PHOTO | Bruce Ford

Same Time, Next Year’ tickles funny bone despite dated, sitcom-like format

By Bob Abelman

While clearly not Actors’ Summit’s intention, it is impossible to sit through Bernard Slade’s “Same Time, Next Year” and not feel as if you’ve just binge-watched vintage sitcoms on Nick at Nite.

The play’s comedy and simple, predictable storyline spring from the friction created when lovable opposites attract, which was a popular ploy in Golden Age sitcoms like “Bridget Loves Bernie” (1972-73), about Catholic and Jewish newlyweds, and “Bewitched” (1964-72), about a mortal man and his witch wife.

In “Same Time, Next Year,” George and Doris sleep together and fall in love after a chance meeting at a country inn in Northern California. The two characters have fundamental differences in nearly every facet of their lives, including their education, their religion and the level of guilt they feel while cheating on their spouses. And yet the two agree to return to the exact same location — another sitcom convention — for one weekend each year to pick up where they left off.

The play also shares the episodic structure of shows like “The Flying Nun” (1967-70) and “The Partridge Family” (1970-74), where unique installments of storytelling involving the same characters unfold but do not really change the characters or the lives they lead.

“Same Time, Next Year” unfolds in six vignettes of the annual meetings between George and Doris, which span the years 1951 to 1975. And while the two characters broadly and comically reflect the specific decades of their meetings, each vignette ends in true sitcom fashion: where they began, with George and Doris very much in love and racked with guilt.

There’s also the same fast pace and excessive number of laughs-per-minute found in standard sitcoms like “The Girl with Something Extra” (1973-74) and “Love on a Rooftop” (1966-67).

And in the bedrooms of those shows, as in George and Doris’ bedroom in this play, sex may be discussed but it is never seen or heard.

These many parallels should come as no surprise considering that the playwright spent 17 years as a writer for network television. He wrote each of the sitcoms cited above before penning this play, his first, in 1975.

Shortly after its success on Broadway, “Same Time, Next Year” became a film starring Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn. But the play’s content and cultural context quickly grew outdated and productions have been largely limited to dinner theaters and cruise line cabarets. What was once a hip and risqué contemplation on ‘70s morality and mores has become a period piece targeted at those who lived through the Eisenhower administration.

And yet Actors’ Summit’s production is extremely funny. In fact, it received from the opening night audience the one thing that is standard issue in vintage TV sitcoms but was not provided by the playwright: a laugh track.

The audience laughed loud, long and often, and deservingly so.

One reason is the direction provided by Paula Kline Messner, who earned four Emmy Awards for her work as a writer/producer/actor in television. She has a great ear for the kind of comedic cadence this play requires, which is nicely executed by actors Keith Stevens and Natalie Sander Kern. Their timing is superb.

But while Stevens and Kern embrace the sitcom tendencies of the material, they also work hard to add a layer of authenticity and spontaneity to the broadly drawn caricatures they’ve been handed. Clever one-liners flow from their lips as if they were normal discourse and punchlines are never punched so hard as to leave a mark.

The show’s design team of Perry Catalano, Fred Sellers, MaryJo Alexander and Kevin Rutan create an attractive and era-appropriate world for this play. But while the actors’ costumes and wigs change with the times and for comedic effect, the bedroom’s furnishings and artwork do not. This lack of attention to detail, whether by design or oversight, calls unnecessary attention to the archaic blackout sketch quality of the material and its time on the dinner theater circuit.

While the situation in this romantic comedy no longer strikes a nerve, the play still manages to hit the funny bone.

On stage

WHAT: “Same Time, Next Year”

WHERE: Actors’ Summit, 103 S. High Street, Akron

WHEN: Through Feb. 7

TICKETS & INFO: $10 – $33, call 330-374-7568 or visit actorssummit.org.


 

Bob Abelman covers theater and cultural arts for the Cleveland Jewish News. Follow Bob at Facebook.com/BobAbelman.3

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on January 24, 2016.

Lead image: Natalie Sander Kern as Doris and Keith Stevens as George. PHOTO | Bruce Ford