Lead image: Geoff Knox, from left, as Henry, Scott C. Hare as Deacon Ball and Terry Burgler as Waldo. Photo | Celeste Cosentino

Ensemble’s ‘The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail’ is transcendent

By Bob Abelman

“It’s a marvel to hear the way the words roll out,” says the illiterate Bailey after listening to the philosophical musings of his young Harvard educated cellmate early in Robert Edwin Lee and Jerome Lawrence’s “The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail.”

“A marvel” perfectly describes Ensemble Theatre’s eloquent staging of this loquacious, occasionally sanctimonious play originally earmarked for production by community and collegiate theaters.

In 1846, the essayist, philosopher, abolitionist, naturalist and scofflaw Henry David Thoreau spent a night in jail after refusing to pay tax money that would support the war President James Polk singlehandedly waged against Mexico. This incident later provided the basis for Thoreau’s essay “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience” and serves as the inspiration for Lee and Lawrence’s fictionalized account of that evening and the events leading up to it.

And while the play offers insight into the man and his meditations – his transcendentalist world view, his witty disregard for organized religion, and his penchant for nature and civil disobedience – it also concerns itself with what weighed heavy at the time of its writing 125 years later.

In their 1955 play “Inherit the Wind,” Lee and Lawrence turned the 1925 Scopes “Monkey Trial” debate over evolution into not-so-clandestine commentary about America living under mid-century McCarthyism. The playwrights used the teaching of creationism as a metaphor for anything that limits the right of a free people to think.

So while their 1971 play “The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail” takes place in 19th century Concord, Massachusetts and addresses the unjust American-Mexican war, it is very much a stone-cold treatise about the unjust war in Vietnam.

True to Thoreau’s transcendentalist leanings, the play bounces around with little attention to the confines of linear storytelling, which director Celeste Cosentino turns into creative and wonderfully theatrical staging. Scenic designer Stephen Vasse-Hansell’s rendering of a skeletal jail cell serves as the central location around which various scenes from various times occurring in assorted locations revolve. To the left and right of the cell and its two wood benches are large screens that display projected images to help track a particular time and place.

And true to the central tenet of transcendentalism, Cosentino has allowed the divine master plan that connects all nature and humanity to guide her casting of the featured players in this play.

Geoff Knox as Henry David Thoreau, Joe Pine as his brother John, and Terry Burgler as his mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson are a company member, an associate producer/performer, and a founding artistic director/performer with Akron’s Ohio Shakespeare Festival, respectively.

As if intended by divinity to serve as preparation for this particular production, their training and years of performance of Elizabethan plays have provided a skillset that translates marvelously to a work like this. Each actor has the ability to master volumes of text, can eloquently and effectively execute poetic prose, and uses the language their characters are provided to give them definition and dimension.

And the rest of the 15-member ensemble – particularly the charming Sara Bogomolny as the love-interest of the Thoreau brothers, Allen Branstein as the buffoon Bailey, Scott C. Hare as the insufferable Deacon Ball, Leslie Stager as the endearing Lydian Emerson, and Whit Lowell as the clueless Sheriff Sam Staples – follow suite.

The only hiccup occurs late in the play, when Lee and Lawrence try their hand at overt artistry to drive home a poignant point. Here, they theatrically transport Thoreau into the middle of the Mexican-American war. Intended to be a surreal nightmare layered with cannon blasts and a blur of activity, dramatic lighting and special effects, Cosentino’s staging of this scene is woefully underwhelming.

It also misses an opportunity to reinforce the relevancy of this play to modern day America. The projected images from the Mexican-American and Vietnam wars could have been infused with images from Afghanistan and Iraq, and the subtle underscoring of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young tunes could have also employed something more contemporary.

Still, Ensemble’s “The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail” is a wonderful night of theater – as genuinely thought-provoking as it is beautifully performed. CV

On stage

WHAT:  “The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail”

WHERE:  Ensemble Theatre, 2843 Washington Blvd. in Cleveland Hts.

WHEN:  Through Dec. 11

TICKETS & INFO:  $12-$24, call216-321-2930 or visit ensembletheatrecle.org


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 Nov. 19, 2016.

Lead image: Geoff Knox, from left, as Henry, Scott C. Hare as Deacon Ball and Terry Burgler as Waldo. Photo | Celeste Cosentino

Bob Abelman, left, arts critic for the Cleveland Jewish News, interviews Joel Grey, an actor, writer and Cleveland native. Photo | Amanda Koehn

Grey discusses memoir, life on stage and in Cleveland

By Amanda Koehn

Actor, writer and Cleveland native Joel Grey told 460 people at the Mandel JCC’s Cleveland Jewish Book Festival on Nov. 14 about growing up Jewish in Cleveland, his initiation into theater and lessons learned from a lifetime in acting.

Grey is best known for starring in Broadway musicals such as “Cabaret” and “Chicago.” He is also a singer, dancer, television actor and photographer. This past February, his memoir, “Master of Ceremonies,” was published.

During the keynote interview with Bob Abelman, arts critic for the Cleveland Jewish News, Grey discussed growing up in University Heights in the 1930s and ’40s and being “afraid of everything except acting.” He said he was most afraid of his mother’s erratic mood swings, anti-Semitism and being outed as gay, which he came out as in 2015.

“If you read the book, you know that there was a lot of adversity to come to where I am today. There was a lot of soul searching, and looking at life as it is and trying to look at the past fairly and truthfully and make some sense of why people do things, and why I do things,” Grey said.

Abelman asked Grey about overcoming a lack of confidence early in his career, to which he said, “success helps, and psychotherapy.”

“My passion for the art form of the theater has never left me. When I go to see anybody, I have that moment when the lights go down and I think, ‘I’m going to see something I’ve never seen before, or feel something I’ve never felt before,’” Grey said.

Grey frequently deviated from the question-and-answer format to break out in song and act out impressions of his father. Keeping in sync with Grey’s unstructured demeanor, given the chance to submit questions, at least two audience members wrote notes regarding family members who either knew or dated Grey during his teen years in Cleveland.

Although Grey said he anticipates acting again, he will likely never do another musical.

“It’s definitely a been there, done that, plus the preparation to do a musical is like being a crazy athlete, you give your life away in a way,” he said. “And I did it and I loved it and I had a lot of fun.”


Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Nov. 16, 2016.

Lead image: Bob Abelman, left, arts critic for the Cleveland Jewish News, interviews Joel Grey, an actor, writer and Cleveland native. Photo | Amanda Koehn

Derdriu Ring and Jeffrey Grover Photo | Brian Kenneth Armour

none too fragile’s ‘Annapurna’ offers epic love and loss in one act

By Bob Abelman

Homer’s 8th-century BCE poem, “The Odyssey,” is about the Greek hero Ulysses, who is presumed dead by his wife and son after he is sent on a 10-year journey after the decade-long Trojan War by the displeased sea-god Poseidon.

In Sharr White’s fractured, one-act treatment of this epic tale – which received its Off-Broadway premiere in 2014 – Ulysses has finally come home. And home is a dilapidated trailer squatting somewhere in an unattractive part of the West Elk Mountain range of Colorado.

The play is getting a beautifully performed but anemically designed production at none too fragile.

In “Annapurna,” the grizzled Ulysses (Jeffrey Grover) – a once-celebrated cowboy-poet, English professor and notorious drunk – is destitute, dying from emphysema and lung cancer, and unexpectedly visited by his ex-wife Emma (Derdriu Ring), who has remarried.

They haven’t seen each other in the 20 years since she fled with their 5-year-old. But now Emma has tracked down Ulysses to prepare him physically and emotionally for his estranged son’s arrival after the young man discovered a stockpile of hidden, unopened and unanswered letters from his father.

The play is a 90-minute confrontation between ex-spouses. But “Annapurna” is also a lyrical meditation on love and loss that centers on two decent but badly damaged people. And it unfolds in several distinctive movements that have their own rhythms.

The play starts with a comedic allegro vivace encounter between Ulysses and Emma upon her entrance. She arrives at the trailer with suitcase in hand, a body full of pronounced bruises and a disagreeable attitude at the ready. He greets her while frying sausage in nothing but a skimpy apron around his waist, a breathing apparatus strapped to his back and a perplexed expression on his face.

The play slows to an intimate and emotional andante, as the indelible impressions these two have left on one another are revealed and performed with great delicacy. And it ends in a moving adagio moment of revelation (for us as well as Ulysses, who has lost years of memory to alcoholic blackout) and resolution. There’s a metaphor to boot, in the form of Ulysses’ most recent poem, which is written on paper towel and tissues and likens his marriage to scaling Annapurna, one of the most dangerous and beautiful mountain ranges in the Himalayas.

Actually, the play is considerably less fluid and more predictable than just described. But under Sean Derry’s direction and with the talented Grover and Ring beautifully handing the very naturalistic dialogue the playwright provides, this production unfolds with remarkable grace and dexterity.

Grover, despite an accent that comes and goes of its own free will, makes us feel the struggle of every laborious breath he takes and see the poet’s sensitive soul beneath the rebel spirit, the dismissive demeanor and the bitter anger. Ring beautifully balances Emma’s rage, disappointment and overriding compassion.

The only thing that detracts from their fine performances is the astounding lack of attention to detail given to the scenic design by Derry and Marina Lauff.

Claims of blistering midday heat and impressive vistas are undermined by nothing but black curtains outside the windows and open door. And Emma’s dismay over the trailer’s sordidness – the piles of decaying garbage, the ants, the cockroaches and the remnant dog feces – are contradicted by a pristine interior with nothing but a small stack of books on a table and a few dishes in the sink to represent squalor.

Some of the evening’s best acting comes from Ring repeatedly cleaning areas that are spotless while marveling at the mess and from Glover not flinching at the absurdity of this while sucking deeply from his oxygen tank.  Both are displays heroism that would have made Homer proud. CV

WHAT:  “Annapurna”

WHERE: none too fragile, 1835 Merriman Rd., Akron

WHEN: Through Nov. 19

TICKETS & INFO: $20, visit nonetoofragile.com


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 Nov. 5, 2016.

Lead image: Derdriu Ring and Jeffrey Grover Photo | Brian Kenneth Armour

The ensemble of “Finding Neverland” | Photo / Carol Rosegg

More lost boy than pan, ‘Finding Neverland’ crows, but doesn’t fly

By Bob Abelman

It may help resuscitate fairies, but no amount of clapping can reconcile what the musical “Finding Neverland” is and the kind of musical it wants to be.

Following the popular and often unfortunate trend of turning feature films into Broadway musicals, “Finding Neverland” – which opened in New York in 2012 and is on tour and on stage at Playhouse Square – is based on the 2004 biopic about the Scottish-born playwright J. M. Barrie, the creator of Peter Pan.

Both works explore Barrie’s friendship with the Llewelyn Davies boys, how young Peter inspired the now-famous tale and its featured character, and Barrie’s complicated relationship with their mother, Sylvia.

But while the film embraces the rather gloomy story of a depressed and depleted playwright whose latest work flopped horribly, whose wife left him for another man, and whose scandalous relationship with the married Sylvia ended with her death from heart cancer, the musical douses the darkness with treacle.

Sorted details about Barrie’s psychological state and Sylvia’s marital status and illness, which are central to and unavoidable in the biographical story being told, are glossed over and presented with overt sentimentality in James Graham’s script.

Barrie (Kevin Kern) now struggles against his own inhibitions rather than his inner demons, while Sylvia (Christine Dwyer) is conveniently widowed and doesn’t cough until well into Act 2.

Life’s harsh realities and stifling Victorian era mores are personified by Sylvia’s protective mother (Joanna Glushak) and reduced to life-affirming messages relayed through Gary Barlow and Eliot Kennedy’s syrupy and wholly unmemorable music/lyrics.

And everything that moves is set to Mia Michaels’ theatrically exaggerated choreography, imbued with eye-candy special effects by Paul Kieve and Daniel Wurtzel, and placed within Scott Pask and Kenneth Posner’s picture postcard set and lighting designs.

Everything is enriched by Jon Driscoll’s ambient animated projections that include passing clouds over the rooftops of London, birds flying through Kensington Gardens, and starry skies.

Under director Diane Paulus’ staging, “Finding Neverland” more closely resembles the stylistically oversaturated Disney stage version of “Mary Poppins” than anything associated with Peter Pan, including the original 1954 Broadway production, and tries way too hard to do so.

All this flies in the face of the trajectory of the biodrama that drives this musical. In fact, there are times during the production when songs seem disruptive and unwelcome, suggesting that this musical should not be a musical at all.

And yet, if seen through the eyes of a child – who must surely be the target audience for this affair despite claims to the contrary by its producers – “Finding Neverland” is thoroughly entertaining.

Kern as Barrie (a role he understudied on Broadway) and Dwyer as Sylvia have incredible voices and sell their story with immense passion and precision. The same goes for Tom Hewitt, who employs his impressive stage presence, comic timing and booming voice to great effect as both Barrie’s benefactor Charles Frohman and Captain Hook.

And the talented ensemble, who anchor each elaborate production number and take on roles as servants, strolling citizens and members of Frohman’s theater troupe, are superb. Matt Wolpe and Dwelvan David are particularly delightful, while the dance between Dee Tomasetta as Peter Pan and Adrianne Chu as Wendy during a brief scene from Barrie’s first staging of “Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up” is wonderful.

The actors playing the four Davies children on opening night – Eli Tokash as Peter, Mitchell Wray as Jack, Finn Faulconer as George and Jordan Cole as Michael – are enchanting. They are natural in their playfulness and handle all the key acting moments that come their way. So does Sammy, who plays Barrie’s dog and never misses a cue.

In short, the stage explodes with energy and impressive execution. And all that highly stylized choreography, eye-candy effects and animated projection, which undermines its source material, is mesmerizing nonetheless.

The production opens with the bright light of Tinker Bell beckoning us to come with her behind the closed curtains for a great adventure. What awaits us there is the Peter Pan story as told by the Lost Boys from Barrie’s novel, who crow loud and long but never quite get off the floor to fly.

“I think to have faith is to have wings,” says Sylvia sometime during “Finding Neverland.” In the world of musical theater, it takes a bit more than that. CV

“Finding Neverland”

WHERE: Connor Palace Theatre, 1511 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Nov. 20

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$100, call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.com


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 Nov 2, 2016.

Lead image: The ensemble of “Finding Neverland” | Photo / Carol Rosegg

Cleveland Play House’s romantic comedy ‘Sex With Strangers’ seduces, satisfies

By Bob Abelman

The Cleveland Play House’s intimate, subterranean Outcalt Theatre is quickly becoming the place where carnality and clever writing come together for an evening of mutual and consensual gratification.

Following in the footsteps of recent productions of David Ives’ psycho-sexual drama, “Venus in Fur” and Sarah Ruhl’s sex comedy, “In the Next Room, or the Vibrator Play,” Laura Eason’s “Sex With Strangers” is on stage under Joanie Schultz’s superb direction.

The play received its world premiere production in 2011 at Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago.

Snowbound in a cozy Michigan B&B and working on her latest novel after the first earned only a modicum of success amid high expectations, Olivia’s (Monette Magrath) cherished quiet time is disrupted by a late-arriving guest.

Ethan (Sean Hudock) is a professional blogger whose sleazy online reports of his numerous one-night stands with strangers have been turned into wildly successful books. He has come to the B&B to escape his newfound fame, edit the screenplay for the optioned film, and work on the serious novel he knows he has within him.

With the internet down, no television set available and the fireplace glowing, the arrogant and attractive 28-year-old Ethan and the insecure and nearly 40-year-old Olivia fall into each other’s arms. And they do exactly what the characters in “Venus in Fur” and “In the Next Room” did: talk about sex with some explicitness and go off stage to have at it.

Throughout their physical lust-fest and the truly impressive make-out sessions that are nicely choreographed by Schultz, Eason’s characters also lust after each other’s accomplishments. Olivia craves Ethan’s notoriety; he craves Olivia’s credibility.

As the two become increasingly involved in one another’s lives and the B&B in Act 1 gives way to Olivia’s Chicago apartment in Act 2 – both of which are authentic and beautifully appointed locations designed by Chelsea M. Warren and lit by Michael Boll – red flags surface regarding their true intentions and potentially hidden agendas. This hints at the possibility of sexual and emotional gamesmanship being played.

What makes this play so very interesting in not just the seduction being performed by and between Ethan and Olivia; it’s the seduction of the audience by the playwright who, as a writer for Netflix’s hit political drama “House of Cards,” has mastered the dark art.

Eason lures us in with sex, romance and absolutely engaging writing, while managing to subtly introduce issues of substance. While the players strut and fret upon the stage in their underwear, accompanied by the sexy blues and hard-driving rock of Grace Potter and the Nocturnals (courtesy of sound designer Thomas Dixon), the playwright explores the evils of ambition, the power of the internet to invent or reinvent identity, and the continuing struggles of women artists.

The actors are busy seducing the audience as well, by hinting at but never quite revealing their characters’ true intentions. We can sense an undercurrent of mistrust and tension as Hudock and Magrath recognize and ride the play’s shifting rhythms and dynamics, but it is never fully exposed until the end of this two-hander.

It is testimony to these actors’ fine performances and remarkable chemistry that Ethan’s virile arrogance is such a perfect fit with Olivia’s vulnerability that their mutual attraction seems plausible. And as the play evolves and each characters’ strong suits and debilitating weaknesses shift power positions – artistically represented by an intriguing shift in scenic design – that, too, is believable.

At the end of last Saturday night’s performance, more patrons than usual appeared to be rushing outside for a smoke. If that isn’t a sign of a satisfying sex comedy, I don’t know what is. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Sex With Strangers”

WHERE: Outcalt Theatre, 1407 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Nov. 13

TICKETS & INFO: $25-$90, call 216-241-6000 or visit clevelandplayhouse.com


 

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 Oct. 30, 2016.

Lead image: Monette Magrath (Olivia) and Sean Hudock (Ethan). PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

 

Rick Montgomery Jr., from left, Anne McEvoy, Julia Kolibab and Richie Gagen | Photo / Kathy Sandham

Beck’s ‘Body Awareness’ so low key it unlocks very little

By Bob Abelman

The New Yorker wrote last year that “we’re lucky to be living in the era of Annie Baker” when discussing the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright “who listens to people so carefully, who recreates human speech with such amusement and care, that her characters feel startlingly familiar.”

This was clearly a skill set acquired over time, for her Off-Broadway debut in 2008 in a one-act comedy, “Body Awareness,” is a decisively lesser work. It is getting a rather mundane staging at the Beck Center for the Arts in Lakewood.

Set in a small college town in Vermont, the play features three characters who spend their time side-stepping each other’s psychological soft spots. They are Joyce (Anne McEvoy), a high school cultural studies teacher who identifies as lesbian after a failed marriage; her 21-year-old son Jared (Richie Gagen), who has all the telltale signs of Asperger syndrome but vehemently denies this; and Phyllis (Julia Kolibab), a feminist academic and Joyce’s live-in partner. 

With Phyllis’ college commemorating “Body Awareness Week,” a celebrated photographer of nude women and girls named Frank Bonitatibus (Rick Montgomery Jr.) is invited as a guest artist and, in one of the play’s most implausible plot points, is invited to stay at Phyllis’ home. 

Joyce finds Frank and his work alluring, Phyllis finds them repulsive, and Jared – who is socially ill-equipped to engage with others – finds them and everything else he encounters “stupid.” 

Frank’s presence so disrupts the household dynamics that Joyce, Phyllis and Jared soon find themselves pressing and occasionally pouncing on those aforementioned soft spots. All of this unfolds in Baker’s typically understated and anti-theatrical voice, where much of the humor can be found in the things left unsaid and in the pauses that exist between exchanges. 

Performing Baker’s work not only requires the mastery of the scripted words and its essential silences, but a delicate and unpretentious handling of the subtle comedy. When it all comes together, as it did in Dobama Theatre’s productions of “Circle Mirror Transformation” in 2011 and “The Aliens” in 2014, the results are miraculous and reinforce all “The New Yorker’s” accolades. 

But “Body Awareness” needs some help finding and cultivating the laughs, which this production does not offer under David Vegh’s direction. Little attention is given to the pacing, which drags. Nearly everything is flat and very little is funny.

Gagen as Jared cannot be blamed, for his affectless tone and stiff physicality sets up and serves as a wonderful and implicitly comedic counterpoint to the terse aggressiveness and quirky obsession with etymology that Baker bequeaths the character. 

But potentially funny lines aimed at his mother or Phyllis, like “Maybe you have Asperger’s.  You’re 55 and you’ve never read ‘Crime and Punishment,’” tend to result in a dramatic reaction or, worse, no reaction from McEvoy’s Joyce and Kolibab’s Phyllis, which cuts off the comedy at its source. And although their performances are deft, engaging and authentic, McEvoy and Kolibab rarely inspire much to laugh at on their own.      

Enter Frank. His scripted political incorrectness regarding Jared, lack of awareness of Phyllis’ unease with his art and “male gaze,” and absence of empathy regarding Joyce’s fragility are all intended to serve as a catalyst for humor. 

But Montgomery’s depiction of Frank has none of the ingredients necessary to make that happen. What he does bring to the table – a laid-back demeanor and devil-may-care attitude – is often at odds with the machismo or creepiness or pretension that Baker’s script seems to call for. 

This is particularly evident during one of the potentially funniest scenes in the play, where Frank gives Jared misguided and inappropriately explicit advice about approaching and sexually pleasing women. The set up and the execution seem forced and the scene is one of many that go nowhere.   

All this takes place in a home so startlingly normal in its layout and design – as rendered by Aaron Benson and lit by Marcus Dana – that it begs for something out of the ordinary to happen there. As does the audience. CV

On Stage

“Body Awareness”

WHERE: Beck Center for the Arts’ Studio Theater, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood

WHEN: Through Nov. 6

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$31, call 216-521-2540 or visit beckcenter.org


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

Orginally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Oct. 9, 2016.

Lead image: Rick Montgomery Jr., from left, Anne McEvoy, Julia Kolibab and Richie Gagen. Photo| Kathy Sandham

A potent group of smaller stages are growing and strengthening Northeast Ohio’s theater scene around headliner Playhouse Square

Story by Bob Abelman
Illustration by Jon Larson

Like Broadway in New York and the Loop in Chicago, downtown Cleveland’s Playhouse Square is the hub of the city’s theater scene as well as the nation’s second largest unified performing arts center. 

Its original five venues – the Ohio Theatre, Palace Theatre, State Theatre, Allen Theatre and Hanna Theatre – were constructed in the early 1920s as houses for vaudeville, movies and legitimate theater. 

Now fully restored after years of abandonment, fire and vandalism, the historic theaters house top-tier national Broadway tours, serve as the home to Cleveland’s classic theater company, play host to America’s first professional regional theater, and offer concerts, comedy shows and dance performances. 

Yes, Playhouse Square on Euclid Avenue between East 14th and East 17th streets is thriving. But the true sign of a city’s evolving theater scene can be found on the roads less traveled. It’s there that smaller stages are producing innovative, avant-garde and contemporary plays as well as original works by local playwrights. 

Every city known for its performing arts has followed this off-the-beaten path.

New York’s Off-Broadway and Off-Off-Broadway movements began in the early 1950s as a reaction to the commercial theater that dominated the mid-town area.  Located largely on the Lower East Side and the Upper West Side, away from Time Square, these indie theaters provide an outlet for each new generation of creative artists whose voices are not being heard elsewhere.

The 1960s and ’70s saw an explosion of homegrown theaters in Chicago, called “Off-Loop,” which are still performing in unorthodox and inexpensive settings away from the mainstream venues in the city’s downtown Loop area.

The 99-Seat Theater scene evolved in Los Angeles during the 1980s, when many of the larger, nonprofit professional theaters found themselves dependent on box office sales for most of their income and less likely to engage in creative risk-taking. 

And now, Cleveland’s theater scene is undergoing its own version of an Off-Broadway, Off-Loop, 99-Seat Theater movement. 

Located on the East Side and West Side, away from Playhouse Square, these professional playhouses welcome diverse perspectives not only in who is telling the story and what the story is about, but how the story is told. Some are venturing into the use of immersive, interactive technology for their storytelling that create virtual worlds onstage. Others are blurring the line between theater disciplines. And they are all tapping local talent with distinctive voices. 

Let’s call these theaters “Outside-the-Square.” Here are a few worth visiting:


“Bat Boy: The Musical” was performed in October 2015 at Blank Canvas Theater. Photo | Andy Dudik

“Bat Boy: The Musical” was performed in October 2015 at Blank Canvas Theater. Photo | Andy Dudik

Blank Canvas Theatre
78th Street Studios
1305 W. 78th St., Suite 211, Cleveland
440-941-0458 or blankcanvastheatre.com

In search of an identity in Cleveland’s highly diverse performing arts marketplace, the upstart Blank Canvas Theatre has waffled between modern classics, such as “Twelve Angry Men” and “Of Mice and Men,” and cultist musical comedies that include “Debbie Does Dallas,” “Psycho Beach Party” and “Bat Boy.” The theater, in its fifth year, also provides a performance space for founder and artistic director Patrick Ciamacco’s sketch comedy troupe, The Laughter League.

This is part of Ciamacco’s master plan to lure younger audiences to the theater via offbeat offerings and then strategically introduce them to the modern classics. “Or vice versa,” he notes. “We want a typical theatre lover who would normally only see a classic to enjoy it so much they go outside their comfort zone and show up to have blood splattered on them while watching ‘The Texas Chainsaw Musical.’”


convergence-continuum
Liminis Theater
2440 Scranton Road, Cleveland
216-687-0074 or convergence-continuum.org

“Most theaters are like mirrors, reflecting the familiar,” suggests convergence-continuum mission statement. “Everything is nicely laid out for you as you view what is comfortably, safely beyond that wall, confident that you will be made, indeed are expected, to understand the experience in terms of conventional logic. Aren’t we all tired of that by now?”

con-con prides itself on taking risks and confronting conventions, and has done so under the supervision of Clyde Simon, who has served as artistic director, director, actor and set designer since the theater’s founding in 2000. The immensely intimate Liminis performance space offers an up-close-and-personal theater experience in an effort to fully engage its audiences’ senses and imaginations.


“Three Sisters” was performed in June 2015 by the Mamaí Theatre Company. Photo | Erik Johnson

“Three Sisters” was performed in June 2015 by the Mamaí Theatre Company. Photo | Erik Johnson

Mamai Theatre Company
Cleveland Masonic Performing Arts Center
3615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland
440-394-8353 or mamaitheatreco.org

Mamaí is passionate about offering audiences canonical works from dramatic literature. They do so, according to co-founders Bernadette Clemens, Wendy Kriss, Christine McBurney and Derdriu Ring, “without filtering what might be denser, older or more rarely performed out of a fear that contemporary audiences cannot or will not engage with classical playwrights.”

Their 2013 inaugural production of “Medea” did just that. “Good classical theater need not be watered down, dumbed down or used as a rare spice to blend into a contemporary season,” says Clemens. Adds McBurney, “For me, one of the biggest returns from our first season was learning that audiences do respond to plays that do not resemble sitcoms; plays with big ideas, complexity and beautiful language.” Next season, Mamaí will move downtown into the 150-seat Helen Rosenfeld Lewis Bialosky Lab Theatre after having established its reputation just east of the Square.

Mamaí is attempting to counter the tendency of many other theaters to make play choices that are heavily weighted toward male casts by ensuring that, for Cleveland’s professional theater community, women will have increasing opportunities to work.


Playwrights Local
Waterloo Arts
397 E. 156th St., Cleveland
216-302-8856 or playwrightslocal.org

Newly formed Playwrights Local, located in the revitalized North Collinwood neighborhood, is the city’s first theater company exclusively dedicated to new plays by local playwrights.

After obtaining nonprofit status and finding a work space at Waterloo Arts, artistic director David Todd and managing director Tom Hayes created a laboratory environment where directors, actors and dramaturgs provide feedback on new work, as well as space for table readings, rehearsals and public staged readings.

In November, the company will orchestrate its second annual two-day Cleveland Playwrights Festival that will feature workshops, panel discussions and staged readings of short works by David Hansen, Lisa Beth Allen, Eric James Dahl, Craig Joseph and Luke Brett. Says Todd, “We want to raise awareness for Cleveland as a playwriting city and add another facet to what is going on in the arts.”


“Tall Skinny Cruel Cruel Boys” was performed in October and November 2015 by Theater Ninjas. Photo | Anastasia Pantsios

“Tall Skinny Cruel Cruel Boys” was performed in October and November 2015 by Theater Ninjas. Photo | Anastasia Pantsios

Theater Ninjas
440-941-1482 or theaterninjas.com

Theater Ninjas is the food truck of Cleveland theater; a nomadic company that seeks out new and challenging performance spaces such as the repurposed recording studio at 78th Street Studios. “Working in nontraditional venues gives us an opportunity to reimagine how and why we tell stories,” suggests artistic director Jeremy Paul, “and helps us to create deep, fascinating worlds for the audience to explore.” 

For instance, “The Excavation” was staged at the Cleveland Museum of Art, where audience members chose their own path through different “exhibits” that used humor, science, tragedy, puppets and multiple artistic disciplines to celebrate cultural legacies, mortality and our deep curiosity about the lives of other people. “It’s the kind of show that couldn’t be done in a traditional theater or by any other company in Cleveland,” says Paul. Other productions have been staged at the Rising Star Coffee Roastery, the Canopy Collective and the Guide 2 Kulchur bookstore.

Jon Seydl, former curator at CMA, described Theater Ninjas as operating “on the end of the theater spectrum; the place where theater connects to other forms of performance.” 


none too fragile
1835 Merriman Road, Akron
330-671-4563 or nonetoofragile.com

Promotional ads for none too fragile boast: “We don’t just push the envelope. We lick it.” Shock value is what this theater is known for, starting with the ritual shot of Jameson whiskey that is distributed to audience members before each performance.

The Akron-based theater company was created in 2012 by Sean Derry and Alanna Romansky after an earlier experiment by Derry, called the Bang and the Clatter Theatre, proved too adventurous and bold for downtown Cleveland denizens.  This new theater picks up the mantle of providing principle-challenging, character-driven, and often funky storytelling. 

“Professional indie theater” is the way managing director Jaysen Mercer describes the types of plays they produce. “I believe that we offer our audiences something very unique that may not be possible at larger venues,” suggests Derry, “and that is true, intense intimacy with the artist and his/her material.”


Several progressive theaters of note initiated the “Outside-the-Square” movement before it was fashionable. Below are two of the most prominent.


“Incendiaries” was performed in January 2016 at Cleveland Public Theatre. Photo | Steve Wagner

“Incendiaries” was performed in January 2016 at Cleveland Public Theatre. Photo | Steve Wagner

Cleveland Public Theatre
6415 Detroit Ave., Cleveland
216-631-2727 or cptonline.org

Cleveland Public Theatre’s mission is to “raise consciousness and nurture compassion through ground breaking performances.” CPT develops new, adventurous work by Northeast Ohio artists, undertakes nationally significant second and “early” productions of new scripts, and develops devised, ensemble-based theater as well as radical reinterpretations of existing work.

Located in the Gordon Square Arts District, CPT was founded in 1981 when James Levin returned from New York City and was determined to form an experimental theater group similar to Off-Broadway’s Cafe LaMama, where he worked as an actor and director.   

Over the past 10 years, executive artistic director Raymond Bobgan has expanded this mission. “We want people to leave CPT feeling like they have seen something extraordinary – something that they couldn’t have witnessed anywhere else in the region.” The CPT believes that theater can be at the center of community dialogue and, notes Bobgan, “personal transformation.”


Dobama Theatre
2340 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights
216-932-6838 or dobama.org

Founded in 1959 by Donald and Marilyn Bianchi, Barry Silverman and Mark Silverberg, Dobama Theatre has worked consistently to produce innovative plays of consequence.

The vast majority of the theater’s productions are regional, American or world premieres of the best contemporary plays by established and emerging playwrights.

“We honestly don’t go out of our way to do ‘edgy’ material, whatever that means,” says artistic director Nathan Motta. “However, if the material is something that might challenge our audiences – that is, if it’s thought-provoking, moving and relevant, with strong dialogue, layered characters and a unique or interesting premise – that work is certainly not something we’re going to shy away from.”

Since its origin, Dobama has always taken risks and, according to Motta, “asked its audiences to take the risk with us. This is an artistic decision we make knowing full well that it may prove challenging in terms of marketing, and in some cases, selling tickets.” CV

Juan Rivera Lebron as Orsino and Cassandra Bissell as Viola disguised as Cesario. | Photo / Ken Balze

Dark underbelly of romantic comedy ‘Twelfth Night’ exposed

By Bob Abelman

For those keeping score, this is the seventh time that Great Lakes Theater has presented “Twelfth Night, or What You Will,” which is one of Shakespeare’s most popular comedies.  Although the story is the same, as are many of the actors, the current production could not be more different than the last time the play was seen on the Hanna Theatre stage.

“Twelfth Night” features a pair of fraternal twins – Sebastian (Jonathan Christopher MacMillan) and Viola (Cassandra Bissell) – who are separated by a shipwreck and carry on their lives thinking the other dead. Landing on the coastal city of Illyria, Viola disguises herself as a man for protection and to honor her brother, calling herself Cesario.

She finds employment with Orsino (Juan Rivera Lebron), the Duke of Illyria, with whom she secretly falls in love. The Duke is in love with the Countess Olivia (Christine Weber) and sends the cross-dressing Viola to woo her on his behalf. The guarded Countess allows herself to fall in love with the disguised Viola, but accidently beds and weds Sebastian when he happens into town.

In line with the driving subterfuge of gender duality, Shakespeare has given “Twelfth Night” ample doses of both comedy and melancholy, as characters pursue what and who they desire but cannot have.

In 2009, under Charlie Fee’s direction, the Great Lakes production leaned heavily toward the laughs. It did so by lightening up Illyria with Mediterranean sensibilities and allowing the players to play broadly, boldly and in the spirit of Feste’s line “Foolery, sir, does walk about the orb like the sun; it shines everywhere.”  

Under director Drew Barr’s creative vision, the play is remarkably dark and restrained. Fully embracing the notion of night referenced in the play’s title, everything in the world of this production exists in evening’s shadows where the boundaries that define period, place and persona are ambiguous or obscured.

Although the language and musical interludes are Elizabethan, the acting and instrumentation (Jillian Kates on electric guitar) are contemporary. 

Costuming designed by Kim Krumm Sorenson is dark and timeless and, like the casting, dabbles in androgyny. 

And every location takes place in the same setting – a once elegant but now faded estate designed by Russell Metheny and dimly lit by Rick Martin – where one scene transitions into the next while characters from the previous or next scene linger on or around the stage.

All this adds texture to the questions Shakespeare raises about love and desire, but it plays havoc with the humor. This is particularly so in the subplots that were built specifically with comedy in mind. Their implicit buoyancy clashes with the weight and density that has been added to this production. 

The Countess’s outrageous cousin Sir Toby Belch (Aled Davies) and his foolish drinking buddy Sir Andrew Aguecheek (Tom Ford), for example, come across as sad clowns rather than incorrigible rapscallions, which is a shame. When their raucous laughter fades, an undercurrent of pathos lies in wait. 

Veteran performers Davies and Ford play this well, but their hands are tied by the emotional strings attached to their undeniably hilarious dialogue.    

The same can be said for the wonderful M.A. Taylor’s portrayal of Feste the fool. Taylor, at times, appears to be champing at the bit to trade in his character’s poignancy for a little more playfulness.   

As Malvolio, the self-impressed steward to the Countess who mistakenly believes he can win her hand, Lynn Robert Berg plays his defining pomposity relatively straight. The famous scene where Malvolio reads a letter of seduction supposedly written by the Countess but actually penned by Olivia’s gentlewoman, Maria (Laura Perrotta), is an understated affair compared with David Anthony Smith’s 2009 full-throttled performance, which is a shame as well. 

But it does set up Berg’s particularly audacious selection of cross-gartered yellow stockings – per the letter’s request – most remarkably. 

Despite the production’s veil of darkness, Weber’s Olivia manages to maintain her giddy delight when she falls for Cesario and Bissell as Viola/Cesario is just plain delightful. 

In contrast, MacMillian’s Sebastian has completely lost his sense of humor and seems overcome by melancholy to the point of clinical pathology. It’s one thing turning a comedy dark; it’s another turning it into a Shakespearean tragedy.

Taken as a whole, this production of “Twelfth Night” may not be what you will, but it makes for a truly intriguing evening of theater. CV

On Stage

“Twelfth Night”

WHERE: Hanna Theatre, 2067 E. 14th St. and Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Oct. 30

TICKETS & INFO: $13 – $80, call 216-241-6000 or visit to greatlakestheater.org.


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 Oct. 4, 2016.

Lead image: Juan Rivera Lebron as Orsino and Cassandra Bissell as Viola disguised as Cesario. Photo | Ken Balze

Michael Mauldin as Harold Carver and Mary-Francis Renee Miller as Daphne Anderson | Photo / Celeste Cosentino

Lightning strikes thrice with Great Lakes’ ‘My Fair Lady’

By Bob Abelman

Shortly after the record-breaking, award-winning production of “My Fair Lady” opened on Broadway in 1956, the show’s playwright and lyricist, Alan Jay Lerner, remarked that “the right people at the right moment in their lives embarked on the right venture.”

The same can be said for Great Lakes Theater’s most remarkable rendition of “My Fair Lady.” 

Artistic Director Charlie Fee hired just the right director who brought in just the right designers and performers to take all that is charming about this musical and make it captivating. And while all the show’s special moments have been mined over six decades of reproductions and four Broadway revivals, the Great Lakes Theater company has managed to find more by stripping the show’s production values down to the essentials while adding rich dimension to each and every character.    

“My Fair Lady” is most remembered as an Academy Award-winning film, made in 1964 during an era when hit Broadway musicals were routinely turned into elaborate Hollywood productions. The Broadway production on which it was based, which first introduced Fredrick Loewe’s irresistibly hummable music and Lerner’s memorable lyrics, won six Tony Awards. 

But “My Fair Lady” is grounded in the story “Pygmalion,” written in 1912 by George Bernard Shaw. It tells the tale of a high-handed, high-brow British phonetician named Henry Higgins, who places a wager with his priggish sidekick Colonel Pickering that he can transform Eliza Doolittle, a young Cockney guttersnipe, into a duchess simply by improving her manner of speech.    

Shaw’s writing, in turn, was inspired by “Metamorphoses” – a simple play written by ancient Greek poet Ovid about a sculptor named Pygmalion who falls madly in love with one of his ivory statues and his passion fuels the desire to bring her to life.

It is these seminal elements – the love and passion that drives the story and the unpretentious simplicity that constitutes the storytelling – that inspire this absolutely enthralling Great Lakes Theater production. 

Under the creative vision and virtuosic direction of Victoria Bussert, every design element comes in shades of black and white. 

Scenic designer Jeff Herrmann represents the cityscape of Edwardian London with three black on white line drawings that fill the space between huge white pillars, which rotate to reveal the whitewashed bookshelves of Henry Higgins’ Wimpole Street apartment and rotate again to offer a simple and serviceable backdrop for every other scene in the production. 

Each scene is imbued with just a few pieces of white furniture that are whisked on and off the stage by ensemble members with the same fluidity as the gorgeous choreography and musical underscoring they are provided by Gregory Daniels and Joel Mercier, respectively. The ensemble wears spectacular period costuming by Charlotte M. Yetman that also comes in shades of black and white. 

Only Eliza Doolittle’s costumes add a splash of color, as does actress Jillian Kates in the role. She is a delightful performer with a remarkable voice that shows its impressive range and variability during Eliza’s transformation between “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” and “The Rain in Spain.” And though her transformation is traditionally attributed to Higgins’ teachings and the enticement of chocolates, it is clear in this production that the strong-willed Eliza is an equal partner in the enterprise. 

Her verve and intelligence not only keep Higgins on his toes, but it underscores the shortcomings of her head-over-heels suitor Freddy, as he paces the street where she lives. He is played by the adorable Colton Ryan, who was purposefully cast young and who plays even younger, which adds humor and dimension to “Show Me,” where Eliza demands that he put up or shut up. 

As Higgins, Tom Ford is playful, passionate and absolutely charming – 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” are humorous reflections on Higgins’ worldview rather than harsh barbs thrown at others.  They are also so much more interesting when sung than when spoken, as was done by Rex Harrison, who famously created the role on stage and screen. As a result, Higgins’ 11th-hour “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” is more than a song of regret; it is heartbreaking.

As Eliza’s ne’er-do-well dad Alfred Doolittle, master clown M.A. Taylor’s performance is remarkably textured and always interesting. The scene where he comes to the Wimpole Street apartment to coerce cash from Higgins for stealing his daughter is the perfect storm of brilliant writing and inspired performance. 

Even Pickering – a steadfastly one-dimensional character – is all heart and sentimentality in the hands of Aled Davies. In fact, every small role is enhanced by the immense talents of Laura Perrotta, Jodi Dominick, Lynn Robert Berg and others.

Lightning certainly struck on Broadway in 1956. It struck again in Boise, where this Great Lakes Theater production opened in July in partnership with the Idaho Shakespeare Festival. And, now well-rested and fully tested, it strikes once more on the Hanna Theatre stage. CV

On Stage

“My Fair Lady”

WHERE: Hanna Theatre, 2067 E. 14th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Oct. 29

TICKETS & INFO: $13-$80, call 216-241-6000 or visit greatlakestheater.org.


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 Sept. 26, 2016.

Lead image: Michael Mauldin as Harold Carver and Mary-Francis Renee Miller as Daphne Anderson. Photo | Celeste Cosentino

Michael Mauldin as Harold Carver and Mary-Francis Renee Miller as Daphne Anderson | Photo / Celeste Cosentino

Bad timing tames but doesn’t trump ‘Margin of Error’

By Bob Abelman

Turn on Samantha Bee’s “Full Frontal,” “The Daily Show” with Trevor Noah, or any of the other late-night TV comedy shows and listen to how studio audiences respond to the partisan puns and whoopee-cushion commentaries.

These days, we seem less likely to laugh out loud at the sorry state of our nation’s political affairs, preferring instead to shake our heads in quiet consternation.   

Our morale has been shaken by a disconcerting televised debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. 

Our minds are reeling from the onslaught of negative ads and acidic tweets, leaked emails of the Democratic National Committee, and the latest, a viral release of Trump’s inflammatory rhetoric during a videotaped deposition. 

So the timing of local playwright Eric Coble’s political comedy “Margin of Error” – a beautifully constructed one-act play receiving its regional premiere at Ensemble Theatre – couldn’t be worse. Too soon. And too close to home.

Coble’s play takes aim at the Machiavellian masterminds behind the scripted, spun, leaked and manipulated misinformation that drives contemporary American politics. It features the two-faced, morally corrupt and ethically bankrupt Harold Carver (Michael Mauldin), who is the most successful and sought-after Republican political strategist in the nation. 

For the duration of the play, the speed-talking wordsmith is stuck at Gate C19 of Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, while campaigns in Vermont, Oregon, Louisiana and Oklahoma, a disintegrating marriage, and an FBI probe into his dubious practices vie for his attention. Carver is aided by an eager young intern, Daphne Anderson (Mary-Francis Renee Miller).

Each concern is given its own color-coded cellphone, so we are able to eavesdrop on Carver’s behind-the-scenes message massaging (“People are as predictable as a pop song”) and witness his personal ideology (“You know who my God is? Victory”) and political philosophy (“A lie is only a lie until it becomes the truth”) at work. The damage they do appear in the newscasts blaring from the airport television monitors. 

Mauldin relishes every opportunity to play this man of no conscience as big and bold as possible and, under Eric Schmiedl’s direction, he masterfully rides the play’s comedic rhythms with just the right pace and with just the right tone.

Coble provides Carver with frequent outbursts – including a wonderfully heartfelt personal disclosure comprised largely of fiction and an impassioned battle cry to inspire his Louisiana candidate just before he speaks in front of the Baton Rouge Rotary Club – which Mauldin milks for all its worth. “This is your day, Auggie Diggs,” Mauldin screams into the yellow phone as sweat flies in every direction. “This is your Battle of Chancellorsville, your Normandy Beach, your Desert Storm, your Navy SEAL raid on Bin Laden – God has put you here, of all men on earth, you, to complete this mission.”

And yet laughter was limited during the show’s opening-night performance, in part due to the unfortunate timing of the play, but also due to the lack of comic timing and chemistry between Mauldin and Miller. 

Miller, as Daphne, is at her best when impressing Mauldin’s Carver with her intelligence, resourcefulness and like-minded passion for politics. But she has yet to find the core of her character when enacting the weaknesses Carver senses when he demands that she pull up her “big girl panties, grab a pitchfork and join the rebellion.” 

With nothing else to look at for 90 minutes, save the six seats that represent Gate C19, every action and emotion offered by the actors is under close audience scrutiny and needs to ring true to be effective.

“Margin of Error” runs through Oct. 23, during which two more presidential debates will take place. For the sake of this production, though not necessarily the state of the union, let’s hope the candidates give us something to laugh at. CV

On Stage

“Margin of Error”

WHERE: Ensemble Theatre, 2843 Washington Blvd., Cleveland Hts.

WHEN: Through Oct. 23

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$35. Call 216-321-2930 or visit ensembletheatrecle.org


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

Orginally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Oct. 4, 2016.

Lead image: Michael Mauldin as Harold Carver and Mary-Francis Renee Miller as Daphne Anderson. Photo | Celeste Cosentino

Photo:  Ensemble of “Fun Home” | Photo / Joan Marcus

‘Fun Home’ on tour thrives on its creative contrasts

By Bob Abelman

“Dad and I both grew up in the same small Pennsylvania town. And he was gay, and I was gay, and he killed himself, and I became a lesbian cartoonist. … Caption – My dad and I were exactly alike. Caption – My dad and I were nothing alike.”

These lines from the opening scene of “Fun Home,” the 2015 Tony Award-winning musical that is launching its national tour at Playhouse Square, perfectly sum up the play’s remarkably simple story and the astoundingly complex characters who populate it.

It’s this creative juxtaposition of simplicity and complexity, and the heart wrenching and theatrical intriguing moments it produces on stage, that makes this musical such a welcome addition to this season’s lineup of Broadway roadshows

“Fun Home” is a one-act memory play based on a 2006 graphic novel memoire by Alison Bechdel. It features 43-year-old Alison in her studio drawing illustrations of her family and attempting to capture the perfect captions. Memories from her youth and young adulthood unfold on the stage around her as she tries to reconcile the enigma that was her father.

Each scene is a selective, sentimental and occasionally surreal remembrance of a happy family and a healthy home. These out of sequence memories subtly give way to repressed truths about her dad’s tortured soul and shed light on the family’s dysfunction. And, as is the case with all memory plays, the standard rules of musical theater don’t apply.

None of the songs serves to move the story along its dramatic arc or add heightened vision to the storytelling, as they do in most musicals. Instead, with music by Jeanine Tesori and lyrics by Lisa Kron, they merely reflect a simple observation, express a single thought or capture an isolated emotion. Their austerity renders them particularly beautiful and surprisingly poignant.

Liberties are also taken with the portrayal of Alison. The history of lesbians as featured protagonists in musical theater is sparse to say the least, and this show’s queer identity is one of the things that makes it special. But it is the division of Alison into three characters at different stages in her life that makes it intriguing.

As Small Alison at age 9, Alessandra Baldacchino is magnificent. Honest in her expression of emotion and authentic in her relationships with her bothers – played well by Pierson Salvadore and Lennon Nate Hammond – Baldacchino captures all the complexities of this character. She is also blessed with a lovely voice that absolutely crushes the song “Ring of Keys,” where Small Alison recognizes herself in a butch delivery-woman who walks by.

Magnificent also describes Abby Corrigan’s portrayal of Medium Alison at age 19, whose deliciously awkward insecurities and puppy-love crush on college classmate Joan – a delightful Karen Eilbacher – are a pleasure to watch. The song where she declares she is changing her major to Joan is one of the show’s highlights.

Another is “Telephone Wire,” where the adult Alison – portrayed by the immensely talented Kate Shindle – goes for a car ride with her father during a college-era memory flashback rather than her college-age self. The effect of this existential moment and the song that accompanies it is haunting.

Robert Petkoff is mesmerizing as Bruce, Alison’s deeply troubled father, particularly when his intense self-denial loses the battle with his homosexual urges in the company of Roy, Mark, Pete, and Bobby – all played by Robert Hager.

This plays havoc on his family and reduces his wife Helen to a lost soul, which is handled with remarkable delicacy by Susan Moniz.

In the original production of “Fun Home,” which opened and recently closed at Broadway’s Circle in the Square, all these intimate moments and dulcet disclosures were delivered bare-boned and in-the-round with no permanent scenery and before no more than 700 patrons at a time.

Such intimacy and perspective are sadly sacrificed in this touring production, where cavernous theaters like the Conner Palace force proscenium stages and seating for significantly larger and physically distanced audiences on the show’s creative team.

Director Sam Gold and designers David Zinn (scenic), Ben Stanton (lighting) and Kai Harada (sound) do what they can to compensate.

They place the magnificent string-heavy six-piece orchestra, under Micah Young’s direction, on stage behind the performers, which adds charm.

And they add scenery and family furnishings to fill the expansive space on stage. They do so by degree and in accordance with the distance of Alison’s memories, which works beautifully. The stage is barer and the details of the home are less complete when looking back at Alison’s youth; they are more fleshed out when seen through the memories of Alison’s young adulthood.

Still, the touring production seems more staged and less intimate than originally conceived. This is a shame and would be a problem, if not for the exquisite performances by this cast and enrapturing nature of the material they deliver.

On Stage

“Fun Home”

WHERE: Connor Palace Theatre, 1511 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Oct. 22

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$100, call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.com


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 Oct. 7, 2016.

Lead image: Ensemble of “Fun Home.” Photo | Joan Marcus

Steve Vinovich, center, as President Lyndon Baines Johnson, and members of the ensemble of “All the Way.” | Photo / Roger Mastroianni

Cleveland Play House’s ‘All the Way’ riveting Elizabethan drama

By Bob Abelman

Richard II. Edward III. Henry VIII. LBJ.

These famous figures from another time – with their larger-than-life personalities, excessive appetites, unfillable holes in their egos and Rabelaisian crudity – are the focus of historical dramas that offer insight and perspective on the turbulent and heroic past.

And while “All the Way” is a 2014 Tony Award-winning drama that chronicles the first year of Lyndon Baines Johnson’s accidental presidency in 1964, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Robert Schenkkan’s play is no less epic in scope, no less Elizabethan in style and no less theatrical than the works penned by William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe.

And it is no less enthralling.

The play at Cleveland Play House under Giovanna Sardelli’s superb direction, opens just after the assassination of JFK. It explores LBJ’s (Steve Vinovich) efforts to maneuver members of Congress to enact the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and support his candidacy for the upcoming election. 

This is done through backroom deals with assorted southern senators (Stephen Bradbury and Timothy Crowe), showdowns with Alabama Gov. George Wallace (Greg Jackson) and FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover (William Parry), and the strategic manipulation of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (Jason Bowen) and his advisers and NAACP colleagues (Biko Eisen-Martin, Eddie Ray Jackson, Jeffrey Grover, Joshua David Robinson and Charles E. Wallace).

And because historical dramas are nothing without the vantage point of a fortunate fly on the wall behind closed doors, we get to witness LBJ’s love for Lady Bird (Laura Starnik), his tumultuous relationship with liberal senator Hubert Humphrey (Donald Carrier), and the undying support offered by his aide, Walter Jenkins (Chris Richards). 

As such, we get to see all sides of LBJ – the intimidating and savvy politician, the tortured soul, the man-child – all of which are mastered by Vinovich in a true tour-de-force performance.  Vinovich captures the spectacle of the time and the awe-inspiring power in the man. And, unlike the Broadway production of “All the Way,” this is done without prosthetics to help capture LBJ’s character-defining facial features.    

Of course, realism is not an appropriate marker for judgment in historical dramas like “Richard II” and “Edward III,” which were written 200 to 300 years after the fact. And even though many audience members have memories that date back to the 1960s, imitation is significantly less important in “All the Way” than capturing the essence of the time and the people who populated it. 

In this regard, this CPH production nails it. David Kay Mickelsen’s period costuming helps, but the entire ensemble conveys their characters interestingly and absorbingly, all the while delivering often wordy, narrative-driving, fact-filled lines in the quick, direct and stylized manner required of historical dramas.    

The thing is, historical facts and figures rarely lend themselves to interesting theatrical representation. While Shakespeare and Marlowe necessarily infused their work with heightened language stuffed with gorgeous rhetoric, witty word-play and lyrical poetry, “All the Way” embraces LBJ’s penchant for homey adages, Texas slang and profane storytelling.   

It also employs spectacular projections to help establish a sense of time and place and to move along the storytelling. Where the Broadway production offered these images behind the actors, Dan Scully’s vivid projections appear on the surrounding curved walls of Robert Mark Morgan’s gorgeous oval office facsimile in this CPH production. The office doubles as all other locations as well, courtesy of Michael Lincoln’s isolating lighting and director Sardelli’s clever staging.

One of the most clever and dramatic examples is when LBJ and others are lamenting the escalation of the Vietnam war in the background while, in shadow inches from the audience, FBI agents dig, discover and remove from the ground the body of James Chaney – one of the three young civil rights workers who were murdered by local police in Neshoba County, Miss. 

This moment can’t help but call to mind the “Alas, poor Yorick” scene in “Hamlet,” where another frustrated leader faces mortality by an open grave. 

But, more significantly, this moment and others throughout the play remind us that many of the issues and injustices faced by LBJ in the 1960s – the civil unrest, the white police killing black men, the dirty politics and the deplorable politicians – are identical to those we face today.

Like every Elizabethan historical drama that came before it, “All the Way” reminds us that the more things change the more they remain the same. CV

On Stage

“All the Way”

WHERE: Allen Theatre, 1407 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Oct. 9

TICKETS & INFO: $25-$100, call 216-241-6000 or visit clevelandplayhouse.com


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 Sept. 24, 2016.

Lead image: Steve Vinovich, center, as President Lyndon Baines Johnson, and members of the ensemble of “All the Way.” Photo | Roger Mastroianni

Jason Leupold and Neely Gevaart. PHOTO | Kathy Sandham

Lakeland Civic Theatre’s ‘The Last Five Years’ charming in spite of itself

By Bob Abelman

At the heart of Jason Robert Brown’s intensely personal musical “The Last Five Years” is a simple story about a singular event: The failed marriage between Cathy Hiatt, a young, aspiring but unaccomplished New York actress, and Jamie Wellerstein, a highly successful first novelist.

The play begins with Cathy at the depressing end of the relationship, where she sings the tender-to-the touch torch song “Still Hurting.” Jamie is at the relationship’s joyful beginning, singing about a girl he just met in the upbeat “Shiksa Goddess.” As the play progresses, their respective timelines converge, cross and once again careen in opposite directions, leaving Cathy at the conception of the relationship and Jamie at its conclusion as the lights fade to black.

This remarkable piece of slice-of-life storytelling, first staged in Chicago in 2001 and then produced Off-Broadway in 2002, is told exclusively through songs that run the gamut in range, tempo and temperament. Nearly every one of them is an intricate and strenuous vocal callisthenic that tests the mettle of the performers.

The songs require singers who can deliver them without stress or strain and make it look easy.

And, in order for the audience to invest in Cathy and Jamie and care about the demise of their relationship, the production requires actors who are immediately likable – no, lovable – despite their characters’ unpleasant attributes, namely his raging ego and her debilitating insecurities.

The show also requires performers comfortable enough in their own skin to stand alone and exposed during most of this one-act, 90-minute production, for there is little actual interaction between the two as they go their separate ways.

Neely Gevaart and Jason Leupold possess all of these qualities in this enchanting Lakeland Civic Theatre production.

Gevaart immediately wins over the audience upon uttering her first lines of lament over the failed marriage. The lyric “Jamie is over and Jamie is gone/Jamie’s decided it’s time to move on” is profoundly heart wrenching and beautiful when executed by this gifted singer. She has remarkable vocal control and though she does devastation well, Gevaart handles elation even better. Her rendition of “I Can Do Better Than That” is delightful.

Although Leupold doesn’t quite master Jamie’s self-absorbed drive – often substituting hyperactivity for passion – he is endearing from the get-go and a commanding presence on the stage. His rendition of “The Schmuel Song” – a pep talk to Cathy that encourages her to follow her dreams in the form of a fairy tale about a tailor too busy to dream – is absolutely charming.

The one drawback in this number is that director Martin Friedman has Jamie delivering the song to an empty chair rather than the audience or Cathy just out of sight. This turns us into voyeurs rather than engaged participants and suggests an emotional chasm between Jamie and Cathy at a time in the play when it doesn’t exist to that extent.

Actually, this is one of several efforts by Friedman to take a simple story and do something creative with the staging, which is admirable and well intended but often off-base.

Another is providing both performers with a collection of closet sectionals on wheels that contain character-defining artifacts, keepsakes and clothing. These clearly establish each character’s personal space and emotional baggage, and cleverly serve to disguise costume changes between songs.

But they are cumbersome to move – particularly while singing – and their relative placement does not always coincide with the relational timeline of the characters. This lack of attention to detail confuses matters rather than provides clarity.

One creative choice that works particularly well is having the wonderful orchestra – a piano (conductor Jordan Cooper), violin (Rachel Gante), cello (Olivia Clark) and bass (Tim Keo) – on stage behind the performers, which reinforces the play’s emphasis on song over dialogue and adds to the sound quality. Their silhouettes under Christina Pierce’s lighting design are gorgeous.

The conductor performing in shorts and sandals, however, underscores the aforementioned lack of attention to detail. While distracting, the voices, presence and lovability of Gevaart and Leupold still manage to bring all the attention back to where it belongs. CV

On stage

WHAT: “The Last Five Years”

WHERE: Lakeland Civic Theatre, 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirkland

WHEN: Through Oct. 2

TICKETS: $7 – $15, call 440-525-7134 or visit lakelandcc.edu/arts


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

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Sept. 23, 2016.

Lead image: Jason Leupold and Neely Gevaart. PHOTO | Kathy Sandham

Lindsey Mitchell, from left, Matthew Wright and Calista Zajac. PHOTO | Kathy Sanham

Beck Center for the Art’s ‘Ruthless!’ goes for broke, pays huge dividends

By Bob Abelman

One can only imagine the dead silence in the room when lyricist Joel Paley and composer Marvin Laird pitched their idea for “Ruthless!” to off-Broadway investors back in 1992.

It probably matched the silence that engulfed the Beck Center for the Arts’ boardroom when artistic director Scott Spence pitched this show for the main stage season opener.

“Ruthless!” is an outrageously campy, thoroughly self-aware musical comedy mash-up of late-1950s and early-1960s psychological thriller films that simultaneously pokes fun at its muses.

The show revolves around a precocious song-and-dance sociopath named Tina Denmark, played to perfection by 11-year-old triple threat Calista Zajac, who knocks off a rival in her grade-school play in order to land the lead role. Like her character’s inspiration – the similarly named Rhoda Penmark in the film “The Bad Seed” – young Zajac’s feigned syrupy sweetness seamlessly transitions into the death stare of a natural born killer.

If you ever wondered what ever happened to Baby Jane in the film about a deranged former child actress played by Betty Davis, well, here’s the backstory.

The show also borrows from “Gypsy,” where consummate stage mother Rose – played on Broadway by the likes of Patti LuPone, Bernadette Peters, and originally, Ethel Merman – introduces her daughters to the hardships of show business.

In “Ruthless!” Tina’s vacant-eyed, homemaker mom Judy – portrayed by silver-throated and downright hilarious Lindsey Mitchell – turns diva and distant when she learns from her mother that she was adopted and (in another nod to “The Bad Seed”) that her birth parents were show business legends.

What may well have sold this show to the Beck Center’s board of directors is director William Roudebush’s promise to go for broke regarding this musical’s camp quotient, which he delivers in spades and most distinctively in his casting of Sylvia St. Croix, the talent agent/publicist who takes young Tina under her wing.

Armed with Davis’s formidability, adorned in makeup applied with a spatula by Baby Jane’s cosmetologist, and imbued with Patti LuPone’s extraordinary sense of self is the classically trained actor Matthew Wright in drag, who steals the show.

Not an easy task considering the other talent that rounds out the ensemble and their displays of impeccable comic timing.

Paying homage to Ethel Merman is the wonderful Carla Petroski as Judy’s mom, Lita Encore, who is a caustic theater critic that once caused famous actress Ruth DelMarco to kill herself after a particularly negative review, leaving the Great White Way forever … ruthless. Even if the show’s thinly camouflaged show biz in-jokes go underappreciated or unrecognized, the more subtle ones – like Encore’s clever signature song “I Hate Musicals,” which comes with an encore – most certainly will not.

Kate Leigh Michalski is a delight as the boozy and bitter Miss Thorn, who is a failed actress that has reluctantly fallen back on teaching third-grade drama. Her “Teaching Third Grade” number is sidesplitting. Also delightful is Brittni Shambaugh Addison as the envious and backstabbing personal aide to the now-famous Judy Denmark.

All this is accentuated by Eisenhower-era scenic design by Aaron Benson, resulting in a stylized playhouse of a home for the Denmarks in Act 1 and its posh New York apartment equivalent in Act 2. Like-minded costuming is designed by Aimee Kluiber and lighting that quickly shifts from ambient to melodramatic to sinister and back again comes courtesy of Marcus Dana.

The one disappointment in this otherwise spectacular production is that it is accompanied by piano only, under Larry Goodpaster’s direction, rather than a full orchestra. This offers thin support to the songs and their singers. Worse, it flies in face of Roudebush’s “go big or go home” mantra and occasionally undermines the key ingredient that lifts silly to a higher art form.

Fortunately, there is enough outrageousness in this show and these performances to go around. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Ruthless!”

WHERE: Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood

WHEN: Through Oct. 16

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$31, call 216-521-2540 or visit beckcenter.org


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

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Sept. 23, 2016.

Lead image: Lindsey Mitchell, from left, Matthew Wright and Calista Zajac. PHOTO | Kathy Sanham

Photo | Steve Wagner Photography

Dobama’s ‘The Mystery of Love & Sex’ found wanting

By Bob Abelman

Black/white. Jewish/Christian. Gay/straight. Single/divorced. Yankee/southerner.  Daughter/son.

These ties that divide are the stuff of Bathsheba Doran’s comedy/drama “The Mystery of Love & Sex,” which received its world premiere production at Lincoln Center in 2015 and serves as Dobama Theatre’s season opener under Shannon Sindelar’s direction.

The play revolves around two lifelong best friends whose love and sex lives are being re-evaluated now that they are 21 years old and contemplating the future. Complicating matters is the reality that Charlotte is white, Jewish and may be gay, while Jonny is black, Baptist and a virgin.

Add to the equation Charlotte’s parents – Howard, an author of detective fiction and an aggressive, self-centered New Yorker, and Lucinda, a Southern belle and lapsed Catholic – whose conflicting world views, clashing parenting styles and troubled marriage complicate matters even further.

This is familiar familial territory for Doran, whose modern-day dramedy “Kin” – which played at Dobama in 2014 – similarly explored the intimate relationships of its characters in order to unlock the mystery of who they really are. The playwright is fond of reminding us that we all have emotional baggage and is skilled at revealing, through clever dialogue and rich characters, their interesting points of origin.

But while “Kin,” also directed by Sindelar, accomplished this by employing 20 short, fast-moving and mostly two-person scenes, “Mystery of Love & Sex’s” four-person cast labors harder, in half as many scenes, and is less successful.

The reason is that each actor seems to be performing in a fundamentally different play rather than finding what it takes to blend into this one.

As Charlotte’s obnoxiously controlling dad, the wonderful Scott Miller appears to have pulled his character from something written by Neil Simon and produced by Mel Brooks. His comparatively broad emotional and physical overreactions – while very funny and quite endearing to this expatriate New Yorker – would be more so if they better complemented the character choices and acting styles of the others who share the stage.

Heather Anderson Boll as the sardonic Southern-bred mother, for instance, is busy performing in a Tennessee Williams’ play. She is wonderful in it but the dramatic edge and self-aware introspection she offers seem out of place here, particularly since the playwright gives Lucinda the most comedic one-liners and the responsibility of articulating her rather mystical outlook on life’s mysteries.

And Wesley Allen, as Charlotte’s childhood neighbor and earnest best friend, has yet to find his play. He is searching – for defining character traits, for vocal inflection, for his lines – for much of the production. Jonny’s intimate relationship with Charlotte, his tender relationship with Lucinda and his complicated relationship with Howard are undermined as a result.

Only Tess Burgler as the troubled Charlotte finds the authenticity desired by the playwright and written into the very fabric of the script, which calls attention to just how much she stands alone in this regard.

Each scene – which, collectively, span five years in the lives of these characters and unfold in designer Jill Davis and Marcus Dana’s sparingly built and beautifully lit dorm room, family living room set and backyard – is detailed and unhurried. Only Burgler finds the right tempo while Miller rushes, Boll meditates and Allen meanders.  And she appears to be working too hard to lead her cast mates to that elusive common ground.

Not working hard enough is sound designer Cyrus O. Taylor, whose musical segues between scenes enter and end abruptly for no clear reason.

There are certainly moments in this production where everything clicks. When the tense and rhythmically-challenged Charlotte tries to unwind and dance with the similarly hampered Jonny, the result is absolutely charming.  So are the two isolated incidencts of nudity, the first intended for and achieving dramatic effect and the second bravely and very effectively going for the laugh.

There are beautifully tender moments as well, between Howard and Lucinda when he delivers a wedding dress for Charlotte and between mother and daughter throughout the production.

There’s also a sweet 11th-hour cameo appearance by long-time character actor Donald Krosin as Howard’s father.

But one of the mysteries of “The Mystery of Love & Sex” should not be why this Dobama production does not have more moments like these.

On Stage

WHAT:  “The Mystery of Love & Sex”

WHERE:  Dobama Theatre, 2340 Lee Rd., Cleveland Hts.

WHEN:  Through Oct. 2

TICKETS & INFO:  $10 – $32.  Call 216-932-3396 or visit dobama.org.


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

 Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on Sept. 4, 2016.

Lead image: Heather Anderson Boll (Lucinda), from left, Scott Miller (Howard), Tess Burgler (Charlotte), and Wesley Allen (Jonny). Photo | Steve Wagner Photography

Leah Smith as Chloe and John Busser as Rob. PHOTO | Cory Molner

convergence-continuum’s ‘Selfies at the Clown Motel’ an intriguing but two-dimensional portrait

By Bob Abelman

Evocative but empty.

This describes the abandoned pair of oversized, fire engine, red clown shoes laying in the middle of the convergence-continuum performance space, as well as the world premiere production of local playwright Christopher Johnston’s “Selfies at the Clown Motel” taking place around them.

Disheartened, despondent, middle-aged Rob (John Busser) has left his unfulfilling marriage and unsatisfactory job to move in with a young circus clown named Chloe (Leah Smith), who walks the high wire without a net and owns the shoes. Their place of temporary residence — and the play’s only locale — is an unairconditioned room at a sleazy, clown-themed motel in the Nevada desert, which is managed by the unstable Agnes (Lauri Hammer) and her socially-awkward man-child son Skar (Jack Matuszewski).

The play begins where the story ends — with Rob’s death while making love to Chloe — and steadily regresses to the moment when Rob is about to meet up with Chloe in the Clown Motel’s empty parking lot, which is where the story begins and the play ends.

Imagine Harold Pinter’s “Betrayal,” as staged by Sam Shepard and performed in rainbow wigs.

Not much happens in the 18 short scenes that take place between those two plot points, save for some piecemeal illumination of Rob and Chloe’s backstories and a series of random, on-stage selfies that are projected onto a billboard located in the motel parking lot.

Minor set changes are performed by a menacing, fiendishly masked clown cleaning crew (Hammer, Matuszewski and Gideon-Patrick Lorete), who are guaranteed to freak out anyone with the slightest leanings toward coulrophobia.

There’s also an ill-timed intermission that does not appear in the original script and unnecessarily disrupts the storytelling.

Most of the play’s acerbic dialogue serves to define its characters and set the disturbing tone for the play, but it does not propel the backward-thinking storyline forward with any sense of purpose or urgency.

Every now and again, however, characters stop to reflect on an important or particularly troubling moment in their respective lives. When these moments occur, Johnson’s prose reads like lilting poetry, the acting is absolutely hypnotic, and Clyde Simon’s direction — complete with Beau Reinker’s thematic soundtracks, Tom Kondilas’ projections and Cory Molner’s dramatic lighting — hits on all cylinders.

Chloe dreamily narrates a recurring, haunting tightrope walking nightmare, which Smith enacts with remarkable physical and emotional dexterity.

The predatory Skar — which Matuszewski serves up as a fully formed freak show, complete with stalker eyes, a disturbingly halting cadence, and no sense of personal space — sadistically unveils the details of his bizarre relationship with Chloe.

Rob romantically recounts a lonely late-night road trip through the moonlit Mojave Desert, which Busser beautifully embellishes.

But these monologues are too few to offset the more monotonous moments in the production, which are often delivered by Hammer’s comparatively undeveloped and underplayed Agnes.

And had Simon turned the cleaning crew’s pedestrian set-changing buffoonery into more menacing and masterful clowning, the creepy payoff — the one that taps what many people fear more than cyber-terrorism, bio-warfare and public speaking — would have paid dividends.

One of them would have been making the abandoned red clown shoes spied at the top of the production seem a little less empty upon its conclusion. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Selfies at the Clown Motel”

WHERE: convergence-continuum’s Liminis Theatre, 2438 Scranton Road, Cleveland

WHEN: Through Sept. 17

TICKETS & INFO: $10 – $15. Visit convergence-continuum.org or call 216-687-0074.


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

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

LEAD PHOTO: Leah Smith as Chloe and John Busser as Rob. PHOTO | Cory Molner

Doug Kusak as Sir Roderick, left, and John Polk as the Steward. PHOTO | Bob Perksoski

Mamaí Theatre Company resurrects, reanimates lost lampoon, ‘The Woman-Hater’

By Bob Abelman

Not long ago, the remains of Shakespeare’s Curtain Theatre — built in 1577 and the site where “Henry V” and “Romeo and Juliet” were first performed — were discovered beneath a graveled yard in congested east London.

Although to passersby they were just a bunch of bricks and decaying wood foundation walls, to experts from the Museum of London Archaeology the remains “clear away the miserable piles of Victoriana and Empire, revealing the wild, anarchic and joyous London lurking beneath.”

Like-minded though less expressive enthusiasm surrounded the rediscovery of the play, “The Woman Hater,” a long-forgotten and never-performed satire written between 1796 and 1801 by Frances Burney, an influential novelist but comparatively inconsequential and infrequent playwright.

The play resurfaced in 1945 when the New York Public Library acquired a collection of Burney’s novels, letters and plays. The work was published for the first time in 1995, received its first production in Montreal in 2003, and is currently on stage at Mamaí.

Theater historians have called “The Woman Hater” the “missing link between Richard Brinsley Sheridan and Oscar Wilde” — a satirical indictment of the excesses of privileged men and women that puts on display Burney’s wily and insightful protofeminism, which fits nicely into Mamaí’s artistic wheelhouse and mission statement.

To casual observers, however, the play is pretty much a period piece that bears all the hallmarks of its time: lengthy, long-winded and laden with identities that are mistaken, social pretensions that are exposed, and a happy ending that is as hard-earned as it is abrupt upon arrival.

And the play, as do others from that era, requires the audience to pay close attention from the get-go, for it opens with an abundance of exposition intended to launch the intrinsically connected sub-plots that have been in the making 17 years before the curtain rises.

We learn that Sir Roderick and his sister Eleonora were set to marry another pair of siblings, the Wilmots. Just before their wedding, Sir Roderick was abandoned by his fiancée who then married Lord Smatter. And despite Sir Roderick’s vows to disinherit his sister if she followed through with her own marriage to Wilmot, she did, and the couple fled to the West Indies.

As the play begins, we are introduced to the titular hero, the jilted Sir Roderick (Doug Kusak). He has become a curmudgeon and a fanatical misogynist, who lives to denounce women and verbally abuse his steward Stevens (John Polk) and the other servants (Dylan Freeman and Gus Mahoney).

He shares his home with an heir, the young Jack Waverley (Evan Thompson), but promises to disinherit Jack and toss out his sycophantic father (Michael Regnier) if they detour from devout bachelorhood. Of course, Jack is a bundle of raging hormones and incapable of controlling himself.

Sir Roderick’s former fiancée, Lady Smatter (Carrie Williams), is once again single and has turned into a voracious reader with a tendency to misquote from novels and plays, driving her maid (Marcia Mandell) and everyone else crazy.

And Eleonora (Rachel Lee Kolis), having left her jealous husband Wilmot (TJ Gainley) years ago, has returned to the English countryside with their daughter Sophia (Natalie Welch) and a maid (Shannon Sharkey).

Wilmot has also returned to find and apologize to Eleonora, though he too has a young girl (Meg Martinez) and her nurse (Khaki Hermann) in tow, whom he believes to be his daughter.

Both girls seek out Sir Roderick for financial support, though one of them mistakes Old Waverley for her uncle.

For nearly three hours, 18th century insanity ensues as Sir Roderick steams when confronted by females, Lady Smatter misquotes, young Jack Waverley seduces, Old Waverley is befuddled, and Wilmot theatrically laments. And we are introduced to Bob (Nate Miller), the idiot nephew of the steward Stevens.

Under Christine McBurney’s stalwart direction, all this makes absolute sense and unfolds with remarkable dexterity, speed and humor. In fact, “The Woman Hater” is thoroughly entertaining. Expedient and interesting scene changes on an all-purpose, period-appropriate set designed by Don McBride, accompanied by period-appropriate segue music designed by Richard Ingraham and adorned with Angelina Herin’s costuming, help hold our attention.

The entire ensemble delights in the satirically melodramatic dialogue the players are handed and create rich, relatable characters that at first appear preposterous and foreign, but quickly grow on you. The featured players — particularly Kusak, Gainley, Regnier, Kolis and Williams — are remarkably adept at speed-reading as well as stage presence, while Polk, Welch and Martinez are absolutely charming.

The excavation of Shakespeare’s Curtain Theatre may have revealed the wild, anarchic and joyous London lurking beneath it, but Mamaí’s resurrection of Frances Burney’s “The Woman Hater” has given it voice. CV

On stage

WHAT: “The Woman Hater”

WHERE: Cleveland Masonic Performing Arts Center, 3615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Sept. 4

TICKETS & INFO: $15-$22. Call 216-382-5146 or visit mamaitheatreco.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 Sept. 2, 2016.

LEAD PHOTO: Doug Kusak as Sir Roderick, left, and John Polk as the Steward. PHOTO | Bob Perksoski

Playwright Local’s ‘Objectively/Reasonable’ hits home in recalling 2014 deadly shooting of Tamir Rice

By Bob Abelman

Dontre Hamilton. Eric Garner. Ezell Ford. Akai Gurley. Michael Brown Jr.

Do you recognize these names? If not, you’ve stumbled onto the reason behind “Objectively/Reasonable,” a dramatic work receiving its world premiere at Playwrights Local.

These names represent just a few of the unarmed black men in America recently killed by white police officers. “Objectively/Reasonable” serves to call attention to these deaths and the Black Lives Matter movement by drawing focus to Cleveland and the fatal 2014 shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

Tamir became a sad statistic on a cold November afternoon under the gazebo of Cudell Recreation Center and will be forever linked to the phrase “objectively reasonable,” which has become the legal standard for justifiable force in local law enforcement. But will the things that made him unique and will the truly tragic circumstances of his demise be remembered?

Like Bruce Springsteen’s “American Skin (41 Shots)” — a song about the 1999 New York police shooting death of Guinean immigrant Amadou Diallo — this play serves to keep Tamir in our thoughts.

And like Abel Meeropol’s “Strange Fruit” — a song most famously performed by Billie Holiday that was inspired by the 1930 mob lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith in Marion, Ind. — this play keeps the topic of racism in America a part of the national conversation.

Unlike these and other related works, however, “Objectively/Reasonable” is devised from actual reactions to and opinions about the shooting by anonymous neighbors, friends and community leaders. These have been compiled and turned into dramatic monologues by local playwrights David Todd, Mike Geither, Tom Hayes, Lisa Langford and Michael Oatman.

These slice-of-life monologues are strung together to form a narrative of the Tamir Rice tragedy and come in varying shades of anger and disillusionment that do not shy away from ardent social commentary. Under Terrence Spivey’s direction, they pulsate with purpose and artistic integrity.

Each monologue is delivered by one of 10 actors on a simple, dramatically lit platform stage designed by Margaret Peebles, while the other actors are frozen in tableau or engaged in theatrically exaggerated activity that offers context for the commentary and visual framing for the performance. A series of projected photographs, designed by A. Harris Brown, appear on a small screen to the right of the stage that helps establish a sense of time and place for each vignette.

The performers — Ashley Aquilla, Kaila Benford, India Burton, Samone Cummings, Ananias Dixon, Kali Hatten, Jameka Terri, Lashawn Little, Brenton Lyles and Nathan Tolliver — are fully engaged and very engaging, though some stumbling over lines on opening night managed to expose the fine-line artifice associated with a play dependent on turning transcripts into live theater.

For the most part, however, the realism that results from the transcribed nature of this play enhances the power of the words being spoken. This is particularly evident in the play’s final vignette, where the wonderful Ashley Aquilla delivers the tender and heartbreaking remembrances of Tamir Rice’s mother, Samaria.

But the play is occasionally hamstrung by this quality as well. Despite the playwrights’ intervention and invention, some monologues reflect the verbatim verbosity of their sources and brutal honesty is occasionally paired with a lack of theatrical eloquence. And, by clocking in at 90 minutes, the play is often repetitive and tends to drive home a point by driving it into the ground.

Despite its warts, a great good emerges from this production. The story of Tamir Rice’s life, the tragedy of his death, and what they say about the state of the union will survive, while the names of other victims and the gazebo at Cudell Recreation Center will sadly fade from memory. CV

On stage:

WHAT: “Objectively/Reasonable”

WHERE: Waterloo Arts, 397 E. 156th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Sept. 4

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$15. Call 216-302-8856 or go to playwrightslocal.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 Aug. 19, 2016.

LEAD PHOTO: Ashley Aquilla as Samaria Rice. PHOTO | Tom Kondilas

Heather Anderson Boll as Mrs. Erlynne, from left, Rachel Lee Kolis as Lady Windermere, Chris Ross as Lord Windermere. PHOTO | Bob Perkoski

Girls gone Wilde best part of Mamaí Theatre’s ‘Lady Windermere’s Fan’

By Bob Abelman

Men are immoral cowards and incorrigible fools and, though they become old, they never become good.

So says playwright Oscar Wilde in his 1892 high-society comedy, “Lady Windermere’s Fan,” and he reinforces his position by offering his male characters the wittiest self-incriminating one-liners (“Good heavens! How marriage ruins a man! It’s as demoralizing as cigarettes, and far more expensive.”) and most emasculating dialogue.

It’s the women in this play — who, while privileged and well-positioned, live restricted and unsatisfying Victorian-era lives — take the moral high ground. And a few are supplied with Wilde’s most poignant, empowering soliloquies and pointed social commentary.

“Lady Windermere’s Fan,” staged by Mamaí Theatre under Bernadette Clemens’ direction, revolves around the virtuous and recently wed young Lady Windermere (Rachel Lee Kolis). After the gossip-mongering Duchess of Berwick (Laura Starnik) fuels rumors about Lord Windermere’s (Chris Ross) intentions toward the mysterious newcomer, Mrs. Erlynne (Heather Anderson Boll), Lady Windermere considers having an affair of her own with the charming Lord Darlington (Nate Miller).

She is rescued from this lapse of good judgment by none other than her suspected rival, which unfolds with as much melodrama as the unveiling of the reasons behind Mrs. Erlynne’s uncharacteristic act of heroism and unprecedented self-sacrifice.

All the men in this production are played with broad-based buffoonery befitting a Wilde satire, doing so with ease and an air of authenticity.

This is most effectively showcased in the third of the play’s four acts, when Lord Darlington returns home at 2 a.m. after a long evening at the club, along with Lord Windermere, the lovable and love-sick Lord Augustus (Robert Hawkes), the dispassionate Mr. Dumby (Stuart Hoffman), and the flamboyant Cecil Graham (Patrick Mooney).

The gentlemen engage in a delightfully drunken discussion of the differences between wicked and good women. Their exchange is as insightful regarding the sexual hypocrisies of the time — when England was experiencing the crumbling of the most formidable conventions and firmest convictions — as it is well-timed and very funny.

But Mamaí’s greatest strength is its ability to assemble an ensemble of remarkable female performers, and it has certainly done so in this production. In particular, Kolis allows us to see through Lady Windermere’s relentless puritanism and find someone we can relate to. The same is true for Anderson Boll’s Mrs. Erlynne, whose winsome and wonderfully manipulative flirtation gives way to a good heart as admirable today as it was back in the day.

Where this production falters is in its inability to portray a high society where style, we are told repeatedly, means more than sincerity.

Budgetary constraints seem to curtail creative decisions, so the same proscenium archway with three entrances designed by Don McBride and lit by Robert Peck serves as every location in the play save for adjustments in the color of the drapes that hang from each entrance, rearrangements in the limited, non-period furnishings, and the insertion or removal of a fireplace. Although Suzy Q. Campbell’s period costumes are stunning, this is not quite the highly stylized opulence one expects in a Wilde play.

And while it is not at all difficult to find contemporary relevance in Wilde’s words, torch songs by Joan Baez are inserted into set changes that are as out of place as they are unnecessary.

Late in the play, Mr. Dumby suggests that, “In this world there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it.” Both tragedies are in evidence in this otherwise lovely production of Wilde’s comedy. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Lady Windermere’s Fan”

WHERE: Cleveland Masonic Auditorium, 3615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through July 31

TICKETS & INFO: $15-$22. Go to mamaitheatreco.org or call 216-382-5146


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 July 19, 2016.

Lead image: Heather Anderson Boll as Mrs. Erlynne, from left, Rachel Lee Kolis as Lady Windermere, Chris Ross as Lord Windermere. PHOTO | Bob Perkoski

Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Theater critic Bob Abelman reviews a handful of productions from the 2016 Shaw Festival in Niagara-On-The-Lake, Ontario, Canada

By Bob Abelman

‘Mrs Warren’s Profession’ still provocative

Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

“Mrs Warren’s Profession,” under Eda Holmes’ direction, is superb in so many ways that a few demand discussion.

Bernard Shaw’s play centers on the relationship between Mrs. Kitty Warren (Nicole Underhay) and her 22-year-old daughter Vivie (Jennifer Dzialoszynski), who just completed a degree at Cambridge and is transitioning to a career as an actuary in London.

Vivie learns over the course of the play that her mysteriously single and long-estranged mother is a former prostitute and current brothel owner. When confronted, Kitty boldly defends her career choice in light of the limited employment opportunities available to poor women in Victorian Britain. Prostitution, she argues in one of Shaw’s most commanding monologues, is not a moral issue; it’s an economic one. Vivie calls her mother “stronger than all of England.”

But when she learns that her mother continues to work in this profession, driven by the social standing her wealth provides, Shaw — through Vivie — offers biting commentary on the hypocritical state of the Union Jack.

Though Shaw completed the writing of this play in 1893, it was banned by censors and rejected by at least 12 theaters, two music halls, three hotels and two picture galleries because of its focus on — and sanctification of — the oldest profession.

That is, until 1902, when a private performance was presented at a small London theater club exempt from The Lord Chamberlain’s Examiner of Plays.

This private performance becomes the dramatic device for Holmes’ current production. We discover this upon entering the theater as the four well-dressed gentlemen already on stage — present-day members, we are told, of the New Lyric private men’s club (Thom Marriott, Wade Bogert-O’Brien, Gray Powell and Shawn Wright) — welcome us to their performance of “Mrs Warren’s Profession.”

This clever conceit immediately places all of Shaw’s social commentary into a contemporary context without the obvious and often strained artifice of setting the play itself in a more modern time (see my review of “A Woman of No Importance”).

And it gives license to the actors to disregard the Victorian stereotypes on which their characters are drawn and find something more interesting, honest and profound in their portrayals. Underhay’s powerful Mrs. Warren is more savvy entrepreneur than battle-worn whore, and Dzialoszynski’s wonderful Vivie is an intelligent, young pragmatist rather than a morally rigid New Woman.

And by creating a play within a play, the actors start each act by reciting the long narrative stage directions that Shaw is known for, which are often as insightful, interesting and eloquent as the writing that comes after. This also allows the set and scenery to be described rather than constructed, using the New Lyric Club drawing room — gorgeously rendered by Patrick Clark using dark woods and rich leather, and dramatically lit by Kimberly Purtell — as the play’s central location.

All this serves to place our attention on the immensely talented actors on stage and the provocative words Shaw has conjured for their use.

Which is how it should be at a festival that bears his name. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Mrs Warren’s Profession”

WHERE: The Royal George Theatre, 85 Queen St., Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario

WHEN: Through Oct. 16

TICKETS & INFO: $35-$117. Call 800-511-7429 or visit shawfest.com.


‘Alice’ curiouser but none the wiser

Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

It may be one of the most published books in history, but Lewis Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” — with its literary nonsense, disorienting rhythms and fantastic characters — does not translate well to the stage. At least not in the production currently on stage at the Shaw Festival.

Director Peter Hinton’s musical adaptation, which has been three years in the making, embellishes the surreptitious imagination that drives young, Victorian-era Alice’s journey into a rabbit hole and the upside-down world she encounters there. And he does so by using state-of-the-art technology and brilliant design to create visually stimulating and often astounding images.

But the story gets blinded by the dazzling special effects, sacrificing emotional resonance for theatrical extravagance. And then it gets blindsided by the original but mind-numbing songs by music director Allen Cole.

The show opens in true Shaw Festival fashion — with the performance space filled with glorious stagecraft that immediately establishes a vivid sense of time, a profound sense of place and a singular perspective. And it displays painstaking dramaturgy, for the curtain rises to reveal a recreation of the origin of this now-classic tale.

We find Charles Dodgson (Graeme Somerville), an Oxford mathematician and clergyman who would call himself Lewis Carroll in his writings, improvising his surreal story while rowing down the Thames on a lazy summer afternoon with the daughters of his employer — one being 10-year-old Alice Liddell (a terrific Tara Rosling).

The mechanized boat floats across the stage as if on water, which is a remarkable illusion created by the reflective surface of Eo Sharpe’s set, Kevin Lamotte’s lush lighting, John Lott’s ambient soundscape, and Beth Kates and Ben Chaisson’s animated, pastoral projections on a rear screen. The scene is further enhanced by William Schmuck’s perfectly period costuming.

And when Alice tumbles into the rabbit hole, the illusion is manifested by a combination of these elements plus flight rigging and another layer of animated projection on a transparent scrim that drops in front of the action. The effect of deeper, richer dimensionality on stage is absolutely mesmerizing.

As the play progresses, more of the same follows — more elaborate staging, more exquisite costuming, more layered projections — which soon overpowers the story and draws our attention away from those who populate it. And the music, which contributes nothing to the play’s progression and even less to the development of its characters, sucks some of the life out of the room.

The production also offers moments of truly inspired and understated artistry, such as constructing the Caterpillar Alice encounters out of six actors (headed by Jay Turvey) who move in synchrony by way of Denise Clarke’s imaginative choreography. But such moments are too few and far between to carry this show or keep those overstimulated but underserved souls who left during intermission from doing so. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Alice in “Wonderland”

WHERE: The Festival Theatre, 10 Queen’s Parade, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario

WHEN: Through Oct. 16

TICKETS & INFO: $35-$117. Call 800-511-7429 or visit shawfest.com.


‘Our Town’ hits home

A scene from Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town.” PHOTO | David Cooper

A scene from Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town.” PHOTO | David Cooper

The poignancy of Thornton Wilder’s 1938 classic “Our Town” — its ability to inspire reflection on what the show’s narrator refers to as the “way we were in our growing-up and in our marrying, and in our living, and in our dying” — is particularly present in this Shaw Festival production.

In part, this is because the flower-lined streets of historic Niagara-on-the-Lake just outside the playhouse entry bear uncanny resemblance, in disposition and design, to the early-1900s New Hampshire town of Grover’s Corners so beautifully described by the play’s stage manager (the gently authoritative Benedict Campbell).

It’s not just the summer humidity that hits you hard upon leaving the conditioned air of the theater; it’s the nostalgic reverie hitting home while walking through a living, breathing Grover’s Corners equivalent.

But mostly, it’s the artistic vision of director Molly Smith and the outstanding performances of the ensemble cast that bring out the overriding innocence that permeates this play and all the emotion we attach to that quality.

At its core, the quiet and contemplative “Our Town” tells the story of neighborhood playmates George Gibbs and Emily Webb (the charming and very approachable Charlie Gallant and Kate Besworth), who fall in love over an ice-cream soda at Morgan’s corner drugstore, marry in the Grover’s Corners Congregational Church after graduating from high school, and go their separate ways when Emily dies bearing their second child.

This production embraces all the stripped-down and now-clichéd theatricality required of any performance of “Our Town.”

Ken MacDonald’s set design offers the indispensable, dreamlike limbo of an empty stage accented with just a few white chairs, a floor of white wooden planks, a white scrim backdrop, and oversized white stepladders and fly-in fencing that help establish locations.

Lighting designer Kimberly Purtell and costume designer William Schmuck provide just enough color to give life to the phantoms on stage who represent town physician Dr. Gibbs and his wife (Patrick Galligan and Catherine McGregor), newspaper editor Mr. Webb and his wife (Patrick McManus and Jenny L. Wright), and all the others who have been called back into existence for the sake of storytelling.

Actors pantomime props and provide just enough comic relief to reflect the foibles of the human condition deemed particularly noteworthy by the playwright. And performances are pitch-perfect save for a few New Hampshire accents that come by way of Boston.

But director Smith brings just a little bit more to the table, which adds to this play’s poignancy and the gratification of witnessing it.

During introductions of characters and pivotal moments in the narrative, actors briefly freeze in midmotion to create the kind of experiential snapshots that make up our long-term memory.

When Emily, now passed, foolishly chooses to revisit a day in her life and learns the play’s key moral — that no one ever realizes life while they live it — props replace pantomime, which adds cumbersome weight to the land of the living and subtly drives home this point.

And in the graveyard, when we share time with the dead in the final act, the white color of the floor has seeped into the clothing, as if they have blended into their final resting place. Their very existence, it seems, becomes increasingly invisible to the living and the living become increasingly inconsequential to them.

By merely augmenting the world created by Wilder rather than giving into the temptation of re-envisioning it, as many contemporary productions have, all the intended human truths are revealed in all their intended simplicity. As such, this is as fine a production of “Our Town” as one is likely to find. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Our Town”

WHERE: The Royal George Theatre, 85 Queen St., Niagara-on-the-Lake

WHEN: Through Oct. 15

TICKETS & INFO: $35-$117. Call 800-511-7429 or visit shawfest.com.


‘Uncle Vanya’ offers melancholy by the metric ton

A scene from “Uncle Vanya.” PHOTO | Emily Cooper

A scene from “Uncle Vanya.” PHOTO | Emily Cooper

Anton Chekhov sure is a buzz kill.

It’s been said that, through stories like “The Seagull” and “The Three Sisters,” the late-19th-century Russian playwright explores the depths of human nature by crossing the fine line between comedy and tragedy.

Perhaps, but his “Uncle Vanya” certainly tilts toward the tragic.

It takes place on the deteriorating country estate of the widower Serebryakov (David Schurmann), an aging academic who now lives in the city. Running the estate are his daughter Sonya (Marla McLean) and his brother-in-law Vanya (Neil Barclay), who use the earnings from the property’s farm to support Serebryakov. He returns with the intention of selling the estate to help support his new, much younger wife, Yelena (Moya O’Connell), whose beauty and disengagement entrance everyone.

The reason it does is because everyone in this play is needy and hopeless and yearning for the one thing they will never obtain, and they see Yelena as the source of their satisfaction: Serebrayakov seeks respect, Vanya wants to be appreciated, Sonya desires love, the country doctor Astrov (Patrick McManus) pines for any kind of connection, and so on.

As for Yelena, she wants everything she has sacrificed by marrying this old, ill, self-involved man, which is nothing that can be supplied by anyone in the room.

Shakespeare famously wrote “all the world’s a stage.” For Chekhov, all the world’s a stage of chronic depression.

Artistic director Jackie Maxwell not only selected this challenging play for her final season at the Shaw, placing herself as director, she also chose Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright Annie Baker’s adaptation of the work.

Baker contemporizes “Uncle Vanya” — that is, she turns classic melodrama into rich and weighty melancholy, translates Russian values into something more universal and modern, and transforms things that are acidic into bittersweet. This requires a superb core of actors to pull it off and a game director to steer them in the right direction.

She does and they do.

Free of accents and exaggerated affectations, performances are honest and accessible. While the original story and text remain intact, Baker provides greater opportunities for humor and tenderness, which the cast handles with aplomb and, no doubt, an immense sense of gratitude.

One such opportunity comes on a sleepless night in the second act, when Astrov shares a late-night meal and intimate conversation with Sonya, and then Sonya drunkenly shares her attraction to the doctor with Yelena. Both the actors and the audience get to exhale for the first time in this play.

Rambling speeches, of which there are plenty and most often assigned to Astrov, play easier on the ear with their newfound modern vernacular and contemporary cadence.

And Chekhov’s proclivity for pregnant, overly dramatic pauses is better used to capture the boredom of life on the farm and the overriding dissatisfaction characters feel in each other’s miserable company, which is where more humor resides.

Sue LePage’s simple costuming and set design decorate the Court House’s open performance space with heavy wools and just enough dark wood furnishings and period artifacts to set the scene. This grounds all that is innovative in Baker’s writing and Maxwell’s direction in things traditional, which helps maintain the integrity of the original.

Chekhov is still a buzz kill. But here, there’s more pleasure in the pain. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Uncle Vanya”

WHERE: Court House Theatre, 26 Queen St., Niagara-on-the-Lake

WHEN: Through Sept. 11

TICKETS & INFO: $35-$117. Call 800-511-7429 or visit shawfest.com.


‘A Woman of No Importance’ undermined by its updating

“A Woman of No Importance” runs quite the elegant gamut. PHOTO | David Cooper

“A Woman of No Importance” runs quite the elegant gamut. PHOTO | David Cooper

No, Oscar Wilde’s “A Woman of No Importance” is not the best of the four society comedies he wrote between 1891 and 1895.

It’s been said that while “Lady Windermere’s Fan,” “An Ideal Husband” and “The Importance of Being Earnest” swim in melodrama, this one fails to come up for air.

And while Wilde’s plays typically offer a handful of likable characters, this one has none and everyone’s lines are lessons in conventional Victorian morality.

But no play better chronicles the pleasure of belonging to the best of high society and the pain of being cast from it, which evocatively reflects the public shaming Wilde was experiencing while this was in performance at London’s West End.

Being found guilty of subversiveness and sodomy destroyed Wilde’s career — a career that too quickly went from poetry to prose to prison — and, ultimately, destroyed the playwright himself.

But not before Wilde penned this portrait of the shame of an unwed mother desperately trying to conceal the truth from her son and an unforgiving society.

At a gathering at the Hunstanton estate in England, a group of high-society friends is celebrating the presence of the much-adored Lord Illingworth (Martin Happer) and his recently appointed secretary, Gerald Arbuthnot (Wade Bogert-O’Brien). This is a big promotion for young Gerald, who grew up without resources, prospects or a father. But when his mother Rachel (Fiona Byrne) realizes that her son’s new boss is actually his father — the man who abandoned her as a pregnant teen — she tries to put a stop to it.

Wilde most succeeds in this play when he moves from preaching about social injustice, albeit with delicately rounded sentences, to pleading for tolerance in a world that is apt to be harsh. He gives Rachel a voice and a platform for it.

Where this otherwise well-acted, beautifully produced production falters is in director Eda Holmes’ decision to take this play out of Wilde’s time and into 1951.

The purpose of this temporal transportation is to bring this work closer to our own time in the hope of revealing how similar social injustices still exist. Wilde’s England was experiencing an end to Victorianism and the crumbling of the most formidable conventions and firmest convictions. In the early 1950s, when the Conservatives ousted the Labour government after the end of the World War II, gender roles and moral codes also were in transition.

Going from 1883 to 1951 also gives license to designers Michael Gianfrancesco (set and costume), Kevin Lamotte (lighting) and John Gzowski (music and sound) to stretch and strut their craftsmanship, which they do marvelously.

But this time shift is a distraction considering how the words, wit and exposed hypocrisies are so deeply tied to Wilde’s era. And, of course, it draws the play away from Wilde’s own turmoil.

The thing is, those in the audience are more than capable of drawing parallels between Wilde’s timeline and our own — on our own. Case in point: Early in the play, estate owner Lady Hunstanton (Fiona Reid) observes that “politics are in a sad way everywhere … they certainly are in England.” In light of Britain’s recent withdrawal from the European Union, the audience laughed larger, louder and longer than the line would otherwise have warranted.

If you can get past this production’s creative misstep, there’s still plenty in this play and its presentation to relish. CV

On stage

WHAT: “A Woman of No Importance”

WHERE: The Festival Theatre, 10 Queen’s Parade, Niagara-on-the-Lake

WHEN: Through Oct. 22

TICKETS & INFO: $35-$117. Call 800-511-7429 or visit shawfest.com.


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 from June 29 through July 3, 2016.

Lead image: Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Curtain rises on 10 plays at annual Shaw Festival in Niagara-On-The-Lake

By Bob Abelman

The Shaw Festival, which runs from April to October, is in full bloom. Since 1962, our neighbor to the north has offered plays that range from the provocative to the traditional, from musical to melodrama, and from the hands of George Bernard Shaw (who wrote 65 plays from 1878 to 1950) and his contemporaries to modern-day Shavians who share Shaw’s incendiary exploration of society, love of language and celebration of humanity.

Ten plays, produced in staggered repertory, are built from scratch and performed by a residential, 62-member ensemble under artistic director Jackie Maxwell’s creative vision.

Designers William Schmuck and Kevin Lamotte lead teams that collaborate with each production’s director to create set, sound, costumes and lighting that complement the play’s time and text. Meticulous historical and dramaturgical research is combined with creative instincts and artistic risk-taking. As a result, The Shaw’s production values are celebrated as among the best in the world.

The playhouse in which it is staged further enhances each production. The four theaters, a short walking distance from one another, include the modern, 869-seat proscenium-arch Festival Theatre, which caters to large-scale productions; the 327-seat performance space in the Court House Theatre, which was built in the 1840s; the intimate 1913 vaudeville house, called the Royal George Theatre, seating 452 in its main theater; and the 200-seat Studio Theatre with its flexible stage space.

All this takes place in the heart of the charming, historic town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, where the Niagara River meets Lake Ontario. The town — a four-hour drive from Cleveland — is filled with boutique shopping, fine dining and small hotels, and surrounded by bike paths, B&Bs and wineries.

Here is a description of this season’s 10-play repertoire. After 13 years at the helm, this is Maxwell’s final season as artistic director and quite a few creative gambles have been taken. Whether they’ve paid off will be explored in future reviews.

Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

“Alice in Wonderland”

This is a newly commissioned musical adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale of 10-year old Alice’s trip down a rabbit hole into an astonishing world populated by remarkable characters like the Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter, the Mock Turtle and the Queen of Hearts. The result merges a deep love and knowledge of the Victorian period with truly innovative contemporary technology. On stage through Oct. 16. Read the full review.

 

 

“A Woman of No Importance” runs quite the elegant gamut. PHOTO | David Cooper

“A Woman of No Importance” runs quite the elegant gamut. PHOTO | David Cooper

“A Woman of No Importance”

In Oscar Wilde’s witty and piercing look at social order, we join the women on the terrace at Lady Hunstanton’s country house to learn how public values affect private lives. It chronicles the pleasure of belonging to the best of society and the pain of being cast out from it. On stage through Oct. 29. Read the full review.

 

 

 

A scene from “Uncle Vanya.” PHOTO | Emily Cooper

A scene from “Uncle Vanya.” PHOTO | Emily Cooper

“Uncle Vanya”

Funny and heartbreaking, Anton Chekhov’s masterpiece about family loyalty lays bare his characters’ passions, hopes and desires with warmth and poignancy. This new version by Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright Annie Baker offers a fresh look at this deeply human story. On stage through Sept. 11. Read the full review.

 

 

Jesus regards the Black Girl. PHOTO | David Cooper

Jesus regards the Black Girl. PHOTO | David Cooper

“The Adventures of the Black Girl in Her Search for God”

When a young African girl is abandoned by her missionary for asking too many questions, she takes the phrase ‘Seek and ye shall find’ a little too literally. She sets out on an adventure to try and find God. But which one? Bernard Shaw’s short story is reimagined as a one-act play by Lisa Codrington in this comic and irreverent adaptation. On stage through Sept. 11.

 

A scene from Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town.” PHOTO | David Cooper

A scene from Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town.” PHOTO | David Cooper

“Our Town”

Grover’s Corners, an ordinary town in New Hampshire, is rendered with extraordinary care in this American classic. In a play stripped to its essence, we are invited into the everyday lives of the town’s inhabitants and through them witness enduring truths of the human condition. First produced in 1938, this Pulitzer Prize-winning drama has become an American classic and is Thornton Wilder’s most renowned play. On stage through Oct. 15. Read the full review.

 

Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Comfort is key in “Mrs. Warren’s Profession.” PHOTO | David Cooper

“Mrs. Warren’s Profession”

Kitty Warren has worked hard to provide for her daughter, and now that Vivie is about to strike out on her own, her mother decides it’s time for her feminist daughter to finally learn the truth about her mother’s profession. This is a contemporary look at a classic Bernard Shaw play that still challenges our notions of motherhood and the business of sex. Originally banned from public performance, it was first staged at a private men’s club and the production in New York led to arrests. On stage through Oct. 23. Read the full review.

 

Bursting into gleeful song in “Engaged.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Bursting into gleeful song in “Engaged.” PHOTO | David Cooper

“Engaged”

A comic look at love, marriage and money. We’re in Scotland as yet another train is derailed and the passengers have to stay the night. They include a wealthy bachelor who can’t see a pretty girl without proposing to her and within minutes he’s gotten engaged – twice. And he’s already engaged! Written in 1877, a year before Gilbert and Sullivan’s “H.M.S. Pinafore,” the celebrated team’s librettist, Gilbert, created this satire, which went on to inspire the comedies of Shaw, Oscar Wilde and Noel Coward. On stage through Oct. 30.

“Master Harold’ … and the Boys”

Port Elizabeth, South Africa 1950. In a tea shop owned by his parents, on a long and rainy afternoon, 17-year-old Hally (“Master Harold”) and two middle-aged servants of his parent’s household recall fond memories of times spent together. But when news comes that the boy’s tyrannical father is returning home, the personal becomes political. First produced in 1982, the play was initially banned in South Africa and has since become an enduring, modern classic that continues to speak to inequality and injustice. On stage through Sept. 10.

“The Dance of Death”

Isolated on an island in a reclaimed fortress, Edgar, an army captain, and his wife, Alice, have been tormenting each other for 25 years. Their children have fled, no servant will stay, and when Kurt, Alice’s cousin, arrives, he finds himself drawn into their deadly games. August Strindberg’s darkly comic play has been called the forerunner to Coward’s “Private Lives” and Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” in its bleakly comic look at the travails of marriage. On stage through Sept. 10.

“Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street”

Two men arrive in London — one young and hopeful, the other damaged and brooding — and become inextricably linked in a tale of love, revenge and a mysterious secret. Darkly comic and brilliantly unsettling, this is one of Stephen Sondheim’s most celebrated musicals. On stage through Oct. 19. CV


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 June 27, 2016.

Lead image: Quite a range of characters populates this “Alice.” PHOTO | David Cooper

Colleen Longshaw as singer Deloris Van Cartier. PHOTO | Bob Christy

Porthouse Theatre performs minor miracle with its ‘Sister Act’

By Bob Abelman

It’s hard to pinpoint the precise moment when nuns became fun. It may have started with the 1985 creation of “Nunsense,” which, along with many sequels, turned singing and dancing sisters into a musical comedy franchise.

So it was no surprise that the 1992 nun-on-the-run motion picture “Sister Act” was turned into a Broadway musical, given that the film starred comedian Whoopi Goldberg, featured music by Alan Menken (“The Little Mermaid”), witty lyrics by Glenn Slater (“School of Rock”), clever repartee by Cheri and Bill Steinkellner (TV’s “Cheers”) and one-liners by shtickmeister Douglas Carter Beane (“Xanadu”).

Like the film, the musical tells the tale of Deloris Van Cartier, a wannabe nightclub diva whose life takes a turn when she witnesses a murder and the cops hide her in a down-on-its-luck, inner-city convent. Disguised as Sister Mary Clarence, she finds herself at odds with the cloistered lifestyle but manages to use her talents to save the local church. While helping tone-deaf choir members find their voices, Dolores finds her own.

For its retrofitting from screen to stage, the location was changed from Reno to Philly, the timeline shifted from 1992 to 1977, and the soundtrack was inspired by soulful, period rhythm ’n’ blues and disco.

The short-lived show received five 2011 Tony Award nominations — it won none — and was called “tame, innocuous and frankly a little dull” by The New York Times. Its national tour, which came through Cleveland in 2013, lived up to the press and was a huge disappointment.

Despite that legacy, the production staged at Porthouse Theatre hits on all cylinders.

It’s a musical theater miracle more accurately attributed to the creative invention of director Eric van Baars than to divine intervention.

As if to compensate for or distract from the often-mediocre material, the original and touring productions of “Sister Act” filled the stage with high-octane staging complete with towering stained glass walls, looming statues of saints and elaborate, eye-candy costuming. At Porthouse, van Baars simply fills the parquet floor and sparsely set performance space with talent.

His gifted cast mines every funny line and tender moment in the script, embellishes but never overplays the lovable and quirky qualities of the archetypal characters featured in the film, and soldiers through the script’s less memorable moments. And every member of this sizable ensemble executes Kelly Meneer’s playful, ’70s-era choreography with boundless energy.

But mostly, they sing the heck out of the song list, beautifully accompanied by 10 musicians under Jennifer Korecki’s superb direction.

The jubilant gospel number “Raise Your Voice,” the show-stopping “Take Me to Heaven” and the finale, “Spread the Love Around,” showcase the members of the cloister, featuring the wonderful Hannah Quinn as jocular Sister Mary Patrick, Katelyn Langwith as mousy Mary Robert, Terri Kent as sarcastic Sister Mary Lazarus, along with Bernadette Hisey, Jess Tanner, Kristen Hoffman, Emily Kline, Abby Morris, Katey Sheehan, Lindsay Simon, Michaella Waickman and Emma Wichhart. Their “It’s Good to be a Nun,” sung when first introduced to Deloris, is hilarious.

The immense charm generated by Tracee Patterson, as the disapproving Mother Superior, and Tyrell Reggins, as Eddie the kindly policeman, are best on display in her “I Haven’t Got a Prayer” and his tender “I Could Be That Guy.” Also charming is Rohn Thomas as Monsignor O’Hara, who sells Mother Superior on the witness protection program and becomes one of Deloris’ biggest fans.

Joey, Pablo and TJ, the inept bad guys, are given their own novelty number, “Lady in the Long Black Dress,” which Jim Bray, Jimmy Ferko and William Tipton perform with abandon and riotously smarmy sex appeal. They are just as funny as backup dancers during head henchman Curtis’ “When I Find My Baby,” which Jim Weaver delivers with the perfect balance of sensuality and sadism.

These performances and the seamless execution of this show by its designers, crew and altar boys are more than sufficient to erase any negative impressions one might harbor from the touring production. But Coleen Longshaw’s winning personality and pitch-perfect vocals in the lynchpin role of Deloris will seal the deal. She is flat-out sensational in everything she does on stage.

Longshaw is so good she will make you wish that the creators of “Sister Act” would consider turning “Sister Act 2” into a musical, just so it could be performed at Porthouse Theatre with Longshaw in the lead. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Sister Act”

WHERE: Porthouse Theatre, 3143 O’Neil Rd., Cuyahoga Falls

WHEN: Through July 2

TICKETS & INFO: $25 – $36, call 330-672-3884 or visit porthousetheatre.com


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 June 20, 2016.

Lead image: Colleen Longshaw as singer Deloris Van Cartier. PHOTO | Bob Christy

The Company performs ”Masquerade.” PHOTO | Alastair Muir

Touring ‘Phantom of the Opera’ too big to fail, too good to miss at Playhouse Square’s State Theatre

By Bob Abelman

In 1992, investors doubted that the Tony Award-winning “The Phantom of the Opera” would be financially or theatrically successful outside of New York City and London’s West End.

A touring production this large and cumbersome — involving 30 cast members, a huge contingent of crew and key orchestra members, and 20 truckloads of costumes, wigs, scenery, set pieces and technology — would not draw audiences and earn a profit if it skimped on its expensive production values and it could not earn a profit if it did not skimp on its expensive production values.

Wrong on all fronts.

In addition to being the longest-running production on Broadway after 28 years (and counting) and having a record-breaking run in London after 30 years (and counting), “Phantom” also has been seen on tour by more than 140 million people in 160 cities across 35 countries.

There are currently nine productions of the pop-operetta around the world, including the latest U.S. tour that is residing for the next four weeks in Playhouse Square’s State Theatre.

This is “Phantom’s” sixth visit to our city since 1993. For the handful of readers who have yet to see this show, “Phantom” is based on the 1911 novel “Le Fantôme de L’Opéra” by Gaston Leroux, with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, lyrics by Charles Hart, book by Richard Stilgoe and Andrew Lloyd Webber, and orchestrations by David Cullen and Andrew Lloyd Webber.

It tells the tale of a deranged and hideously deformed musical genius (Chris Mann), who lurks in the forgotten catacombs beneath the stage of the Paris Opera House in 1911. He falls in love with an innocent young soprano, Christine Daaé (played this night by understudy Kaitlyn Davis), and devotes himself to creating a new star by secretly nurturing his beautiful protégée’s talents and paving performance opportunities through a reign of terror.

This touring production, directed with precision and passion by Laurence Connor under the baton of Dale Rieling, is a remarkable piece of work. Its tragic love story is evergreen and still riveting. Webber’s romantic score is still dazzling. Maria Björnson’s original costumes — both for the staged opera scenes and those that take place behind the scenes — are still astounding. And the talent on stage in lead, featured and supporting roles is first-rate in all the ways that matter in musical theater.

But this tour also boasts a creative revisiting of the work, complete with alterations in the majestic staging by Connor, a freshening of the choreography by Scott Ambler, jaw-dropping set and lighting design by Paul Brown and Paule Constable, respectively, and breathtaking pyrotechnics.

At the center of all this is a foreboding, 10-ton rotating rotunda that opens at different phases of its orbit to reveal the Corps de Ballet dressing room, the ostentatious and comically overcrowded opera manager’s office, the opulent opera house stage, the underground labyrinth underground, and the Phantom’s lair.

The original staging by Harold Prince and Gillian Lynne was dramatic and the epitome of theatricality and precision. It still is, but much of the movement has been brought down stage — including the Act Two-opening “Masquerade” number — that makes the production more accessible to the audience. Gone is the dramatic sweeping staircase for this scene, which might upset “Phantom” traditionalists, replaced by mesmerizing mirrors and mazes.

Some of the characters have been revisited as well. The owners of the opera house (David Benott and Price Waldman) are no longer as clownish as past productions, though they are still wonderful and necessary comic relief.

There’s also a decidedly muted quality to the passion in the love triangle between the Phantom, Christine and her suiter Raoul (Storm Lineberger). With an understudy in the leading role, it is hard to tell if this dynamic is a creative choice or a matter of circumstance. Davis’ Christine seems more strong-willed than past ingénues and less drawn to Raoul’s advances. And Mann’s Phantom, while very dangerous, seems particularly vulnerable. Both are intriguing twists to roles thought etched in stone since the original production in 1986.

Only Mick Potter’s sound design gets in the way of the fine performances by balancing orchestra and vocals to the point where there is no distinction between them during group-sing numbers like “Notes/Prima Donna.” Lyrics and musical phrasing occasionally get lost in the mix.

This would be a problem if not for the fact that most people in attendance know the lyrics by heart and Webber’s music has so much repetition that those lost phrases are bound to come back around in time.

So will this tour, given the show’s history to date. But don’t wait. This rendition is one worth seeing. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Phantom of the Opera”

WHERE: State Theatre, 1519 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through July 10

TICKETS & INFO: $50-$150, call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.com


 

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 June 19, 2016.

Lead image: The Company performs ”Masquerade.” PHOTO | Alastair Muir

Natalie Green as Sarah and Ellis C. Dawson III as the Toxic Avenger. PHOTO | Steve Wagner

Cain Park’s ‘Toxic Avenger’ goes from intoxicating to punch-drunk

By Bob Abelman

“The Toxic Avenger,” at Cain Park, is the love-child of “Little Shop of Horrors” and “Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

No, that’s not really how this offbeat, Off-Broadway rock musical came into being. But it’s so much easier to envision this kind of conception than the fact that such a conspicuously silly sci-fi farce was written by the same fellows — Joe DiPietro (“I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change”) and David Bryan (keyboardist for the rock band Bon Jovi) — who won a Tony Award for writing the comparatively straight-laced musical “Memphis.”

Based on the 1984 low-budgeted B-movie by Lloyd Kaufman, “The Toxic Avenger” features nerdy Melvin Ferd III (Ellis C. Dawson III), who is in love with the blind town librarian Sarah (Natalie Green) and is on a mission to clean up the nuclear waste in his hometown in New Jersey.

The corrupt mayor of the town (Kate Leigh Michalski), whose shady business deals are responsible for the toxic dump, attempts to foil Melvin’s plans by having her thugs (Codie Higer and Mariah Burks) dump him into a vat of toxic goo. He emerges as a deformed, radioactive mutant with superhuman strength, hell-bent on righting wrongs and breaking into song with little provocation.

DiPietro’s script is hilarious and uses every sci-fi genre trope, musical theater convention and New Jersey failing as its plaything. But what is delightfully outrageous and deliciously idiotic out of the gate becomes tedious as audiences grow accustomed and then numb to things sick, shocking and sarcastic. And while the running gags associated with Sarah’s blindness and actors playing multiple characters (including Malik Akil and Trey Gilpin as the all-purpose Black Dude and White Dude) are very funny at first, they elicit a gag reflex the fourth or fifth time around.

The same goes for David Bryan’s score, which wedges witty wordplay into generic musical theater genres that become indistinguishable over time despite a superb band under Jordan Cooper’s direction. Sound designer Richard B. Ingraham earns his keep balancing the contrasts in the songs’ volume and lyrical density as well as the ambient music flooding into the canvas-covered Alma Theater from the catty-corner concert venue in Cain Park.

During the somber Last Supper scene in last year’s production of “Godspell,” when Judas was betraying Jesus, you could hear Gary Lewis and the Playboys’ melancholic hit song “Sealed With A Kiss” being performed next door. Last week, during The Avenger’s tender ballad “You Tore My Heart Out,” the infiltration of Béla Fleck & The Flecktones’ funky jazz was less suitable.

Lighting designer Trad A Burns fights and wins his own battles with intruding outside light and the tough angles created by scenic designer Stephen Vasse-Hansell’s staging, which places much of the play’s action in the areas that border the rotating toxic dump that sits center stage.

Despite its creative and technical challenges, this production of “The Toxic Avenger” is a success. The reason is the seven exceptionally talented, fully committed, and unflinching performers who operate under Nathan Motta’s immensely playful direction and choreography.

Their flawless comic timing matches their vocal and dancing abilities and every performer exudes the charm sorely missing in the material. They wink and nod their way through the show’s foolishness, which at once acknowledges and fully embraces the lunacy they perform.

Dawson’s portrayal is particularly intriguing, for he manages to display remnants of Melvin’s geeky sweetness even after morphing — thanks to P.J. Toomey’s special effects and Tesia Dugan Benson’s comic book costuming — into a hideous green hulk.

Green finds the perfect balance between victim and vixen in her delightful portrayal of Sarah, while Michalski turns in a tour de force performance as the Mayor, Melvin’s mom and both simultaneously.

“The Toxic Avenger,” warts and all, is a welcome addition to the serious shows now playing in many of the surrounding theaters. And it is a welcome escape from all the real-world turmoil that sadly exists outside of them. CV

On stage

WHAT: “The Toxic Avenger”

WHERE: Cain Park, 14591 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights

WHEN: Through June 26

TICKETS & INFO: $28-$30, call 216-371-3000 or ticketmaster.com


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 June 12, 2016.

Lead image: Natalie Green as Sarah and Ellis C. Dawson III as the Toxic Avenger. PHOTO | Steve Wagner

Tia Karaplis as Heather Duke, from left, Kayla Heichel as Heather Chandler and Amy Kohmescher as Heather McNamara. PHOTO | Patrick R. Murphy/PRM Digital Productions

‘Heathers: The Musical,’ Beck Center for the Art’s black farce, slays audiences

By Bob Abelman

With its regional premiere production of “Heathers: The Musical,” the Studio Theater in the rear of the Beck Center for the Arts has firmly established itself as a safe haven and the go-to performance space for dark, delightfully deranged musicals.

Its reputation was built on past performances of the slightly askew rock musical “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson,” the bizarre operatic rendition of the syndicated trash talk show “Jerry Springer,” and the splendidly sordid musical versions of the films “Evil Dead” and “Reefer Madness.”

But now, with this adaptation of the iconic 1989 cult comedy classic “Heathers,” audiences should forever expect irony, an adrenaline rush and a splash zone when entering the intimate arena. And be thoroughly entertained by the time they leave.

The film, “Heathers,” with its cynical worldview, vicious dark streak and snappy dialogue, wasn’t just a precursor to “Clueless” and “Mean Girls.” It offered a heavy dose of teenage angst with a body count and became one of the most scathing indictments and engaging explorations of high school populism ever produced.

Laurence O’Keefe and Kevin Murphy’s musical adaptation, which played briefly off-Broadway in 2014, is mostly true to its source material.

Smart girl outcast Veronica Sawyer (Madeline Krucek) is accepted into the inner circle of popular girls known as the Heathers (Kayla Heichel as Heather Chandler, Amy Kohmescher as Heather McNamara, and Tia Karaplis as Heather Duke) because of her forgery skills and high cheekbones. But with this rise in social status comes a sadistic cruelty and cultish groupthink that Veronica can’t accept. She defects once she hooks up with the new kid in school — the moody bad boy J.D. (Shane Lonergan) — and becomes complicit in his homicidal leveling of the social playing field.

Key to deriving pleasure from a show like this — which deals so sardonically with school bullying, date rape, teen suicide, campus shootings and bomb threats — is to give into its satirical world, buy into the cynicism of its characters and ignore that part of your brain that is shouting loudly: “This is so very wrong on so many levels.”

See the anthropological dissection of high school cliques amid the grossly stereotypical depictions of characters named Beleaguered Geek (Zach Landes), Preppy Stud (Greg Good), Hipster Dork (Joe Virgo), New Wave Party Girl (DeLee Cooper), Stoner Chick (Kacey Faix) and Young Republicanette (Gabi Shook). And take pleasure in the remarkable harmonies they generate in every ensemble number, of which there are many.

Accept the subversive and profane language, and while doing so, embrace the hard-rocking music these crazy kids seem to love, magnificently performed by a seven-piece off-stage band under Larry Goodpaster’s baton; it effectively captures the satirical tone of the film.

And take solace in the sensational performances turned in every actor.

Though less edgy than their cinematic counterparts Christian Slater and Winona Ryder, Lonergan as J.D. is a very sympathetic psychopath and the silver-throated Krucek is an intriguing Veronica. Many of her self-reflective monologues in the film have been turned into songs here, and Krucek and Lonergan’s duets — particularly “Seventeen” and “Our Love is God” — are breathtaking.

As the inconsequential and interchangeable adults, Matthew Wright, Amiee Collier and Paul Floriano are brilliant. And their songs — the hysterical “My Dead Gay Son” sung by two dads, and the gospel-inspired “Shine a Light,” sung by hippie teacher Ms. Fleming — are among the show’s best.

Nearly stealing the show is the outrageously profane “Blue,” which the remarkable Riley Ewing and Jonathan Walker White perform in Act I as jocks Ram and Kurt, and “Kindergarten Boyfriend,” which the wonderful Molly Millsaps sings in Act II as hapless victim Martha Dunnstock.

Heichel, Kohmescher and Karaplis as the Heathers who cause most of the angst that drives this musical, are triple-threat performers and absolutely perfect in these roles. Their initial entrance on a carpet of dry ice through a dramatic parting of the scenery while the company serenades them with the anthem “Beautiful” couldn’t have been better conceived or executed.

In fact, Beck Center’s design team under Scott Spence’s creative vision and superb direction makes it easy for audiences to suspend reflection on the serious subject matter and simply enjoy themselves.

Eye-catching, character-defining choreography and costuming designed by Martín Céspedes and Aimee Kluiber, respectively, conspire to help drown out that shouting, disapproving part of your brain by constantly stimulating the endorphin-producing part.

The scenery that surrounds the performance space consists of layer upon layer of brightly colored school lockers designed and lit by Trad A Burns, so that the stage resembles an old “Betty and Veronica” comic book. This offsets all that is dark and disturbing in this play, which adds yet another layer of irony to the clever storytelling.

All that’s missing in this production is the splash zone. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Heathers: The Musical”

WHERE: Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood

WHEN: Through July 2

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$31. Call 216-521-2540 or go to beckcenter.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 June 5, 2016.

Lead image: Tia Karaplis as Heather Duke, from left, Kayla Heichel as Heather Chandler and Amy Kohmescher as Heather McNamara. PHOTO | Patrick R. Murphy/PRM Digital Productions

Kim Sias as Principal Beverly Long. PHOTO | Steve Wagner

Cleveland Public Theatre carves out powerful ‘Lines in the Dust’

By Bob Abelman

“The people came out of their houses and smelled the hot stinging air and covered their noses from it. … The men were silent and they did not move often. And the women came out of the houses to stand beside their men — to feel whether this time the men would break. … The children peeked at the faces of the men and women, and then drew careful lines in the dust with their toes. … Then they asked, ‘What’ll we do?’”

This excerpt from John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath” lays bare the quiet desperation of poor families driven from their homes by drought, dust and the economic hardship of the 1930s. And it shows us the things despondent people will do to survive with dignity.

“In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this earth, I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny, and I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”

This excerpt comes from George Wallace’s inaugural address, delivered in 1963 following his election as governor of Alabama. And it shows us the things defensive people will do to keep others from surviving with dignity.

Crossing a dividing line in the dust that separates a better life from those who desire it is a high-risk endeavor, regardless of whether it is drawn in the dead corn fields of Depression-era Oklahoma, the cold concrete portico of the civil rights-era Alabama State Capitol building or — as demonstrated in Nikkole Salter’s 2014 play — in the war-zone classrooms of contemporary Newark, N.J.

“Lines in the Dust,” at Cleveland Public Theatre, finds Denitra Morgan (Nichole Sumlin) losing the charter school lottery for her daughter and having to find another way to escape their woefully underperforming neighborhood school. Illegal district-jumping to the nearby upper-class white suburb seems the most viable option until the Morgans, who are black, fall under the scrutiny of Millburn High School’s investigation into school residency fraud.

The investigation is spearheaded by black interim principal Beverly Long (Kimberly Sias), a sympathetic Newark native and Princeton graduate. Hired by the school board to conduct an enrollment audit that will result in student expulsion is Mike DiMaggio (Skip Corris), a white, blatantly bigoted private investigator personally vested in the Millburn neighborhood.

At first glance, “Lines in the Dust” is one of those issue-driven, pontificating public-service plays that are more edifying than entertaining. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

In this commissioned work by New Jersey’s Luna Stage, the playwright was asked to use the life and work of Robert L. Carter as inspiration. Carter had a significant hand in many historic legal challenges to racial discrimination, none more momentous than Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark 1954 case that led to a U.S. Supreme Court decision abolishing legal segregation in the public schools.

The script, which fictionalizes the current state of apartheid schooling in our country while infusing it with plenty of facts about functional illiteracy and its ramifications, is long. It contains lengthy speeches filled with admonishment that are meant to be loudly delivered. And, according to the New York Times review of the world premiere production at Luna Stage, the work is “unsatisfying” and “heavy-handed.”

Not in this CPT production. Under the compelling direction of Beth Wood, “Lines in the Dust” is wonderful.

The work is tempered by immense artistry that finds a calming rhythm for the play’s impassioned argumentation, bolsters the smaller, personal moments cowering amid the politics and community outreach, and milks all the drama in the diatribes.

Set designer Douglas Puskas helps filter out much of the oppressive realism in the script by devising an airy impression for the play’s locations. A wall-less principal’s office with an empty archway for a door is created for Beverly, bordered by appropriate artifacts like whiteboards and diplomas that are suspended from the ceiling. On both sides are islands with one or two pieces of furniture that represent other settings.

In the background, running the height and length of the performance space, is a chain-link fence that, when backlit by Wes Calkin, makes for a dramatic rendition of the line in the dust between Newark and Millburn. When characters precariously cross it during scene segues, they are accompanied by an effectively haunting, pulsating soundtrack devised y Daniel McNamara.

But what turns the play’s education into entertainment are the three incredible actors, who not only give voice to cogent arguments but do so with honest expression, raw emotion and layers of complexity and creativity. Sias, Sumlin and Corris make both sides of the line seem viable, which makes for great theater. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Lines in the Dust”

WHERE: Cleveland Public Theatre, 6415 Detroit Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through June 18

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$30. Call 216-631-2727 or visit cptonline.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 June 10, 2016.

Lead image: Kim Sias as Principal Beverly Long. PHOTO | Steve Wagner

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

Courtney Brown, from left, Rocky Encalada, Lisa Langford, Anne McEvoy and Amy Schwabauer. PHOTO | Bob Perkoski

Feminism a dish best served hot in Mamaí Theatre Company’s ‘Top Girls’

By Bob Abelman

The dinner table — where two or more contrary characters are required by convention, circumstance or social obligation to sit and talk — is often used as the centerpiece of great plays. It’s where proper etiquette and unpleasant temperament collide, resulting in character-defining discomfort, unexpected disclosure and some really good theater.

Shakespeare had Macbeth join Lady Macbeth and various Lords for dinner only to find his place occupied by Banquo’s ghost. The Bard served up some chilling cuisine during the notorious family feast in “Titus Andronicus.”

The extent of southern family dysfunction and the epitome of narcissistic Bohemian behavior unfold over dinner in Tracy Letts “August: Osage County” and Noel Coward’s “Hay Fever,” respectively.

It can be argued that some of the most memorable moments in thrillers such as Patrick Hamilton’s “Rope,” comedies like Bernard Shaw’s “You Never Can Tell,” dramas like Tennessee Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire” and such sentimental storytelling as Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” take place at the table.

This is certainly the case with “Top Girls,” Caryl Churchill’s treatise on women breaking the glass ceiling that premiered in 1982 at London’s Royal Court Theatre on the cusp of the equal rights movement at the start of the Thatcher era. The Mamai Theatre Company is staging an intriguing production of the play.

The first of its three acts takes place in a restaurant where the self-assured Marlene, played to perfection by Lisa Langford, is celebrating her promotion to managing director of an employment agency. Churchill invites to the dinner party five prototypical guests who have, in their own unique way, redefined the role of women.

But they are not the usual suspects of second-wave feminists. Instead, there’s a martyred female pope from the Middle Ages, who orders cannelloni and salad. She is perfectly underplayed, with wonderfully subtle humor, by Amy Schwabauer. A 13th century concubine turned Buddhist nun, whom the delightful Anne McEvoy portrays with saintly resignation as she describes Lady Nijo’s rape as a young woman, joins Pope Joan.

Also sharing the meal is a folkloric Flemish peasant warrior, immortalized in a 1562 painting by Bruegel the Elder, who will now be remembered for the clever antics bestowed upon her by Courtney Brown when the character is not engaged in dinner conversation. Joining the party is the celebrity Victorian naturalist and explorer Isabella Bird, who opts for chicken and soup but is nicely played with layers of “non-kosher meat” by Rocky Encalada. The last to arrive is the too-obedient wife from Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales,” Patient Griselda, whom Cassandra Miller plays with refined dignity.

Inviting strong females from fiction and the faded past allows Churchill to not only champion their achievements but comment on the costs — the moral compromise of subservience, the physical toll of sexual abuse and political wrath, the personal sacrifice of being married off as teenagers and having female children killed by their husbands — associated with obtaining them.

To reinforce this poignant point, the dinner party decays into drunken, self-absorbed rants during which the women vie for attention and dominance — characteristics typically associated with the alpha males who ruled their existence. Director Jaime Boluvier orchestrates this scene perfectly by counterbalancing all the overlapping dialogue with distinctive, character-defining action by the players and dressing all in detailed character-defining costuming by Suzy Q. Campbell.

Boluvier is not as successful in making the other scenes in the play as interesting. They are less absurd, and Churchill narrows her focus on Marlene, her coworkers and clients, her estranged sister, niece and the niece’s young friend — all played by the aforementioned actresses, including the delightful Isabel Wang.

These scenes are overwritten, perhaps purposefully, to emphasize the magnitude of the multitude of arguments being made about whether women can have a family and a career, and whether they can have both at the same time.

But words get lost in the sound-absorbing confines of the performance space when there are fewer actors in it than during the iconic opening. And these scenes are less interesting visually in this scenery-less setting despite scenic designer Don McBride’s effort to narrow the space by creating a series of receding proscenium arches adorned with bunting.

Still, this play and this production amount to an extraordinary accomplishment in retention of the playwright’s message and her means of delivering it. Nothing feels dated, even though the work is specific to England in the 1980s. Using an ethnically diverse cast of women helps along these lines. Casting extraordinary talented women helps even more. CV  

On stage

WHAT: “Top Girls”

WHERE: Cleveland Masonic Performing Arts Center, 3615 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through June 19

TICKETS & INFO: $15-$22. Call 216-382-5146 or visit mamaitheatreco.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 7, 2016.

Lead image: Courtney Brown, from left, Rocky Encalada, Lisa Langford, Anne McEvoy and Amy Schwabauer. PHOTO | Bob Perkoski

From left, Erika Rolfsrud (M’Lynn), Allison Layman (Shelby), and Elizabeth Meadows Rouse (Truvy). PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Female-driven comedy ‘Steel Magnolias’ hilarious at Allen Theatre while marking a historic collaboration between Cleveland Play House and Playhouse Square

By Bob Abelman

Robert Harling’s “Steel Magnolias” at the Allen Theatre, is a mani-pedi of a play — an estrogen-driven, southern comfort comedy set exclusively in Truvy’s Beauty Shop in Chinquapin Parish, La.

The drawling dialogue revolves around local gossip, recipe exchanges and Shelby. Shelby (Allison Layman) is an endearing, headstrong young woman whose diabetes and disappointing marriage lead to personal setbacks, medical complications and tough-love doled out by her ever-vigil but adoring mother, M’Lynn (Erika Rolfsrud).

The play also features the salon owner Truvy Jones (Elizabeth Meadows Rouse), her born-again assistant Annelle (Devon Caraway), and a duo of lovable and devoted locals — Clairee (Charlotte Booker) and Ouiser (Mary Stout) — who come in for a wash and a rinse, but stay to dish and offer astute observations about life and love.

Throughout the play, these women share in Shelby’s pain and pleasure and, by doing so, invite us to do the same.

“Steel Magnolias,” which premiered Off-Broadway in 1987, will be familiar to those who’ve seen the 1989 film starring Sally Field, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, Dolly Parton, Daryl Hannah and Julia Roberts or the 2012 remake on what has become the natural habitat for sisterhood stories like this: the Lifetime Channel.

But this particular production is also historic, for it is the first time the Cleveland Play House has mounted a co-production with Playhouse Square. This means that a show featured in the KeyBank Broadway series, which typically caters to productions of national tours and has more than 32,000 subscribers, has been built in Cleveland for Clevelanders.

And it is likely the first time the Play House has featured an all-female design team (Vicki Smith, scenic; Jen Caprio, costume; Jennifer Schriever, lighting; Jane Shaw, sound), spearheaded by local director and Play House artistic director Laura Kepley.

Also momentous — and, perhaps, testimony to the thriving state of professional theater in Cleveland — is that, on an opening night that coincides with an NBA playoff game that could (and did) launch the Cavs into the finals, there was a large audience with significant male representation.

And this is not an easy play for some men to love. Its preponderance of personal disclosure tends to exclude any man in the audience not willing to be one of the girls for a few hours. As if to punctuate this point, as well as bolster the notion that these women are the strong and independent Southern belles suggested in the title, the men in the play are merely talked about and never make an appearance.

What makes this play so very entertaining and appealing is that the writing is filled with clever, country-fried witticisms and hilarious one-liners, and the characters are affable and absolutely charming. When they are played well, both their gentility and inner-strength ring true.

They are most certainly played well in this production — all six women are clearly defined and always interesting — but gentility tends to take a backseat to strength in this female-driven production, which comes with some pros and cons.

Consider M’Lynn, the emotional anchor who puts on a brave face when dealing with her daughter Shelby’s fragility. Because all the characters in this production are played with a heightened sense of resiliency and strength, actress Erika Rolfsrud’s portrayal of M’Lynn’s female fortitude gets heightened even more. She comes across as overbearing, which is unattractive and unrealistic in a play set in Dixie in the 1980s, when feminism has yet to make its way from the Northern states.

Yet, when M’Lynn finally has an emotional outburst toward the end of the play, the floodgates open so wide that the intensity of the hurt, the rawness of Rolfsrud’s expression, and the naked honesty behind the other actresses’ reactions — under Kepley’s sensitive direction — is extraordinarily overwhelming.

Also hit and miss are some creative choices made regarding the show’s production values.

Kepley has opted to swap out the scripted prerecorded radio music and voiceovers between scenes for Emily Casey on guitar and Maggie Lakis on ukulele/banjo, who also provide the narrative. This adds immense charm to the proceedings and makes the minor set changes nearly invisible.

Not so covert is the makeover given Truvy’s Beauty Shop, which is expansive and over-accessorized in order to fill the vast Allen Theatre stage. Foliage runs along the lattice work of the proscenium arch, so that the set resembles a picture postcard sent from Chinquapin Parish rather than a modest backwoods Louisiana enterprise.

This is a minor concern, really. Particularly for a production that manages to make its patrons — including the men — feel the cotton balls between their toes and joy in their hearts by the play’s end. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Steel Magnolias”

WHERE: Allen Theatre, 1407 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Aug. 21

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$80, call 216-241-6000 or visit clevelandplayhouse.com


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 May 29, 2016.

Lead image: From left, Erika Rolfsrud (M’Lynn), Allison Layman (Shelby), and Elizabeth Meadows Rouse (Truvy). PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

From left, Michael Regnier (Rabbi Isidore), Robert Branch (Simcha Bergman) and Kelsey Angel Baehrens (Rachael Bergman). PHOTO | Dale Heinen

Engaging ‘To the Orchard’ pits tradition against desire at Waterloo Arts and Dobama Theatre

By Bob Abelman

Local playwright Les Hunter’s latest contemporary drama is getting its world premiere as the first full-length production of the newly formed Playwrights Local 4181. It is taking place at Waterloo Arts in Collinwood and, later in the run, at Dobama Theatre in Cleveland Heights.

“To the Orchard”— which is about making mistakes, repairing the damage, and reconciling religious traditions with personal desires — was a top 10 finalist in the 2016 Jewish Play Project, received a National Foundation for Jewish Culture New Play Development Grant, as well as a production grant from the Arch and Bruce Brown Foundation.

The play takes place during the 30 days of shloshim — the Jewish ritual of mourning — which happens to coincide with Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, and tracks Brooklyn College student Rachel Bergman’s (Kelsey Angel Baehrens) coming to terms with her homosexuality.

Upon the death of her mother, Rachel decides to come out to her estranged Orthodox Jewish father, Simcha Bergman (Robert Branch) — the starting anew associated with the first holiday. We soon learn that Simcha has been battling his own internal demons, and must forgive himself for past indiscretions before he can forgive others — the atonement associated with the latter holiday.

Throughout the play, Rachel seeks the comfort of her queer studies professor Tracie Braggs (Andrea Belser) while Simcha seeks the counsel of an addled old family friend, Rabbi Isidore (Michael Regnier). And though the play is set in the here and now, spiritual guidance is also provided through dreamlike visitations by 1970s rocker Robert Plant (Regnier), turn-of-the-century author Virginia Woolf (Belser), and 19th century financier August Belmont (Baehrens).

This touch of magical realism adds some light moments to an otherwise intense work, made even more so by some stiff dialogue early in the play and the intimate confines of the Waterloo Arts performance space.

Despite the tight quarters, director Dale Heinen stages an appealing production, using T. Paul Lowry’s superb animated projections to establish a sense of place, Jonathan Maag’s lighting design to manipulate attention and establish a sense of time, Daniel McNamara’s sound design that cleverly merges klezmer with classic rock and roll, and four excellent performers to keep us fully engaged.

During those occasional bouts of stiff prose, the acting comes across as stilted and forced. But the performances soar when Hunter’s words seem to fly from the page and are as poetic as they are poignant, which happens often.

Such is the case with the final scene in Act I, when Rabbi Isidore compels Simcha to recite the Al Chet and the two men rhythmically admit their sins while alternating between Hebrew and English. “For all these, O God of forgiveness,” says the Rabbi as he beats his chest during the confession, “forgive us, pardon us, grant us remission. Simcha, the gates are not closed. This is my gift.” This beautifully sets up the healing that takes place in Act II.

The play’s many short scenes and frequent set changes can be taxing. And set changes performed by the actors rather than a crew are a distraction and detract from the production’s professionalism. But not enough to undermine Hunter’s work, which is thoughtful and so very intriguing.

“To the Orchard” is a welcome addition to the homegrown plays that are being supported, developed and produced in Cleveland. And Playwrights Local 4181 is a welcome addition to the companies lending support and doing the development and production. CV

On stage

WHAT: “To the Orchard”

WHERE & WHEN: Waterloo Arts, 397 E. 156th St., Cleveland through June 5; Dobama Theatre, 2340 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights, June 10-12

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$15, call 216-302-8856 or visit playwrightslocal.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 May 30, 2016.

Lead image: From left, Michael Regnier (Rabbi Isidore), Robert Branch (Simcha Bergman) and Kelsey Angel Baehrens (Rachael Bergman). PHOTO | Dale Heinen

Patrick Ciamacco plays a vaudevillian clown with a voracious appetite for women. PHOTO | Andy Dudik

Voices soar, but staging stalls in ‘The Wild Party,’ a Prohibition-era production at Blank Canvas Theatre

By Bob Abelman

“Some love is fire: some love is rust/But the fiercest, cleanest love is lust.”

So begins Joseph Moncure March’s seedy, Jazz Age narrative poem “The Wild Party,” on which Andrew Lippa’s lyrical musical of the same name is based.

Both lure you into a Prohibition-era world that reeks of cheap perfume, gin-saturated sweat and raging pheromones. The dark and ominous musical, whose 2000 Off-Broadway run garnered Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle and Obie awards, does so with a brilliant and boozy score. It is currently on display at Blank Canvas Theatre.

The play’s action takes place in a steamy Manhattan apartment where vampish vaudeville performer Queenie (an alluring and accessible Trinidad Snider) throws a decadent all-night party to test the mettle of her brutal boyfriend Burrs (Patrick Ciamacco in full brooding mode), who is a vaudevillian clown with a voracious appetite for women.

Among the eclectic guests, including ensemble members Curt Arnold, Emma Beekman, Joel Fenstermaker, Richie Gagen, Kevin Kelly, BJ Colangelo and Sidney Perelman, is friend and former prostitute Kate (Neely Gevaart), who shows up with a newfound boy-toy, Mr. Black (Nathan Tolliver). He takes an immediate shine to the hostess. It is reciprocated by Queenie.

As revenge, the coke-snorting Kate seduces Burrs. The drugs, drink and rampant lust spark a dangerous love quadrilateral that inspires a musical score with jazz-infused period tunes — such as the ensemble number “A Wild Wild Party,” Queenie’s “Out of the Blue” and Kate’s “Life of the Party — as well as more contemporary Broadway ballads and belters, including Queenie’s “Raise the Roof,” Burr’s “What is it About Her” and Mr. Black’s “I’ll Be Here.”

The show also has its share of vaudevillian-esque novelty songs for comic relief, such as “An Old-Fashioned Love Story” sung by the lesbian stripper Madelaine True (a delightful Kate Eskut) and “Two of a Kind” with thuggish boxer Eddie and his petite girlfriend Mae (a winning Zac Hudak and Betsy Kahl).

Like the characters themselves, the music is diverse and often dissonant (think Fosse meets Brecht), offers complex and dramatic key-changes, and has moments that approach atonality which foreshadow the strong likelihood that things will not end well for anyone.

It is the performance of this music that is Blank Canvas’ strength and salvation, for the show’s staging does much to undermine this production.

With Ciamacco doing double duty as Burrs and the show’s director, the production values lack attention to detail and an artistic vision beyond mere functionality. The apartment, also designed by Ciamacco, is inauthentic and woefully unimaginative. Cory Molner’s lighting design fails to facilitate the play’s dark palette, decadent overtones, and mood swings. And the sound design, which is understandably not attributed to anyone, too frequently cancels out vocals in favor of the orchestra.

Fortunately, the six-piece orchestra under Ian Huettel’s direction is outstanding and the vocals that come through during the quieter show tunes are jaw-dropping. While not everyone on stage seems to be living in the 1920s, living in the moment, or capable of executing Katie Zarecki’s high-energy and always interesting period choreography with necessary grace and abandon, everyone is in top voice and sells each and every song like they own it.

Snider as Queenie, Ciamacco as Burrs, Gevaart as Kate and Tolliver as Mr. Black are truly exceptional vocal talents. Their solo numbers are astounding. But the Act I duet between Burrs and Queenie in “What Is It About Her,” the Act II duet between Mr. Black and Queenie in “Come With Me,” and the four-part harmonies delivered by these four featured actors in “Poor Child” and “Listen to Me” represent some of the best musical performances seen on a Cleveland stage.

While Gevaart and Tolliver still seem to be searching for their characters, such is not the case with Snider and Ciamacco, who are mesmeric. So are Hudak, Kahl, Justin Woody and Liz Woodard, who do much of the featured dancing and add much of the ambient decadence that is so important to this musical. In all likelihood, it is their cheap perfume, gin-saturated sweat, and raging pheromones that linger in the cramped performance space.

The lingering on the night of my attendance was due to a lack of air circulation and conditioning in the theater. While steamy and sticky are not ideal conditions in which to see musical theater, it sure works to the benefit of “The Wild Party.”

If you go, and go you should, choose a night with a high relative humidity. CV

On stage

WHAT: “The Wild Party”

WHERE: Blank Canvas Theatre, 1305 W. 78th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through June 4

TICKETS & INFO: $18, call 440-941-0458 or visit blankcanvastheatre.com.


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 May 27, 2016.

Lead image: Patrick Ciamacco plays a vaudevillian clown with a voracious appetite for women. PHOTO | Andy Dudik

Photos in lead image from left to right: Brian Zoldessy, Scott Miller, Joel Hammer, George Roth and Jeffrey Grover in a scene from “On a Technicality”; Jeffrey Grover as “Howard” preparing for a take for "On a Technicality"; and George Roth as “Bruce” in "On a Technicality." Photos courtesy of g2h films; illustration by Jon Larson.

From Hollywood productions to Northeast Ohio-made indie films, moviemaking on the ‘Third Coast’ is a growing industry and art form

By Bob Abelman

The “Third Coast.” That sure sounds better than “mistake on the lake.” Cleveland’s new and improved moniker comes courtesy of its recent emergence as a hub for international, regional and local movie making and exhibition.

And it’s not just Cleveland. There has been an onslaught of high-profile films hosted by Cincinnati, Cleveland and Columbus, including “Draft Day,” “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “The Ides of March,” “Carol” and “The Avengers.”

Those films and others have created more than 1,700 full-time equivalent jobs and generated more than $400 million in spending in Northeast Ohio in the past five years, according to a recent study conducted by the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.

During the “Avengers” shoot, for example, locals were hired for location scouting, camera operation and loading, electrical and construction crews, as well as security, signage, catering and cleanup. Local actors have been cast as extras and in featured speaking and nonspeaking roles in such recent releases as “My Blind Brother,” “The Bronze,” “With This Ring” and “The Bye Bye Man.”

Much of the praise for this development goes to the Ohio film credit incentive program, created in 2009. The Ohio Development Services Agency offers refundable credits to film companies for up to a quarter of what they spend in the state and 35 percent for Ohio resident wages, with a cap set at $5 million per film and $20 million per year.

A consulting firm called Film Production Capital, which rates states by their film production incentives, gave Ohio three stars out of five, which puts the Buckeye State on par with other coastal states known for their moviemaking: New York and California.

Earning more stars are places like Louisiana (“Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter,” “Green Lantern”), Georgia (“Lawless,” “The Blind Side”) and North Carolina (“Iron Man 3,” “Hunger Games”), where they offer even greater financial incentives. Because of this, according to Ivan Schwarz, president of the Greater Cleveland Film Commission, Cleveland lost “Ant-Man” and the next two “Avengers” movies to Atlanta, “even though Marvel Studios loves working here.”

While we may not yet be attracting as many film production companies as some other states, the Cleveland International Film Festival (CIFF) has no problem attracting independent films from around the globe and the people who love them.

The very first CIFF ran from April 13 through June 2, 1977, showing eight films from seven countries. They were seen by a handful of subscribers and their guests. Last year, the CIFF’s 39th, 193 feature films and 238 short films representing 60 countries were seen by 100,204 people over 11 days, making it a go-to destination for independent filmmakers and their fans.

Though the festival is truly international in scope, 32 films made by Ohioans were on display at CIFF39 in 2015, warranting their own “Local Heroes” category. This speaks volumes about the quality of the films being made locally in recent years.

One of those films, which received its world premiere at the CIFF, was “On a Technicality” – a short film (22 minutes) made on a small budget ($21,000) and shot in three days, though the editing took more than 100 hours. Written by local actor Jeff Grover, who was featured in and co-produced the film, it was directed by Andrew Gorell and co-produced by Steven Hacker, who was also the film’s cinematographer.

Their positive CIFF experience and that of Cleveland cast members George Roth, Brian Zoldessy, Scott Miller and Joel Hammer reflect well on the burgeoning cottage industry that is local filmmaking. So does the journey “On a Technicality” took afterward.

The entirety of “On a Technicality” takes place in the back booth at Jack’s Deli on Cleveland’s East Side, where five old friends examine the value of friendship during a troubling time – the illness and subsequent death of one of their own – over a series of brunches. Days before the film’s debut, the actors – actually old friends – sat down to chat about the film and did so with the same witty banter that saturates their characters’ exchanges.

“Clearly, the moviemaking scene in Northeast Ohio is thinking globally but acting locally.”

Canvas: What is it about eating that filmmakers find so intriguing and revealing? It plays such a central role in films like “Chef” (2014), “Waitress” (2007), “Ratatouille” (2007), “Babette’s Feast” (1987), “My Dinner With Andre” (1981) and so many others.

Roth: There is something so communal about eating, particularly at a deli. Audiences will automatically find the setting of our film comfortable and the shorthand that we speak between and during mouthfuls to be immediately recognizable.

Grover: Also, what people choose to eat and how they eat communicates so much about a person. For filmmakers, one bite is worth a thousand words.

Canvas: While having actors confined to a booth is probably a dream for directors (easy to capture on camera) and costumers (no need for pants), does it create any particular creative challenges for you?

Miller: For the record, I believe all of us were wearing pants. Maybe not Joel.

Roth: The seating actually helped inform the relationships between these five guys. We developed a more intimate relationship with the fellows sitting next to us, which comes across in the film and makes the friendships seem more realistic.

Zoldessy: With so little movement, the focus is on what we say and the emotional connection between us.

Miller: And it was nice to know that, no matter what, I was always hitting my mark.

Grover: Joel lucked out by being seated in the middle of the booth. We wouldn’t let him out for bathroom breaks which, I think, added some interesting texture to his performance.

Hammer: I’m normally an aisle seat kind of guy. In case of fire.

Canvas: How does being friends in life inform your portrayal of friends on film?

Roth: We’re playing characters, but because our real-life relationships were established before this film began, our reactions to each other’s scripted dialogue are very authentic.

Hammer: Plus we did not have a lot of time to work on this, so being friends allowed us to be authentic without needing a lot of rehearsal.

Grover: Although we haven’t known each other since grade school, as have our characters, we still have a chemistry and sense of fun that were captured on camera. Both of those qualities proved to be essential for the story we are telling, particularly when illness intrudes on the inner circle of these five old friends.

Canvas: What do you hope to be the audience’s take-away from this film?

Miller: This film is about friendship. It’s about sticking it out, being there for each other, supporting each other, belonging. Friendships are families of choice. I hope this movie reminds people to treasure those they have chosen to include in their inner circle.

Zoldessy: Yes. Family is broader than blood.

Grover: I hope that the audience will be able to imagine the “what ifs” in life and know that good friends will always have their back.

They did.

The film was very well received at the CIFF and, bolstered by its success and notoriety, went on to several other festivals, including the New York Independent Film Festival, Cincinnati Film Festival, Kansas City Jewish Film Festival, and NST/SFF on Long Island. Grover and his colleagues are also considering web-based options to make the film easily accessible to others, including Video on Demand, Amazon and VIMEO. Also underway is “On a Technicality II,” a working title, with the same collaborators under the auspices of a new production company, g2h films. There are three other projects in production as well.

Clearly, the moviemaking scene in Northeast Ohio is thinking globally but acting locally. Additional proof came June 29, when Ohio Governor John Kasich has signed into law a revised Ohio Motion Picture Tax Credit, passed in May by the Ohio General Assembly. The move raises the annual incentive cap to $40 million, removes the $5 million per project cap, and changes the incentive rate to a flat 30 percent on all production dollars spent in Ohio.

Translation:  More incentive for Hollywood to come to Northeast Ohio, and more reason to believe Cleveland may be bumped up in status to the “Second Coast.” CV


Photos in lead image from left to right: Brian Zoldessy, Scott Miller, Joel Hammer, George Roth and Jeffrey Grover in a scene from “On a Technicality”; Jeffrey Grover as “Howard” preparing for a take for “On a Technicality”; and George Roth as “Bruce” in “On a Technicality.” Photos courtesy of g2h films; illustration by Jon Larson. 

 

The ensemble from “Matilda The Musical.” PHOTO | Joan Marcus

While on stage at Playhouse Square, touring ‘Matilda’ stays true to Roald Dahl’s dark, delightful children’s book

By Bob Abelman

One of the four Tony Awards won by “Matilda The Musical” in 2013 was Best Book of a Musical for playwright Dennis Kelly’s adaptation of Roald Dahl’s children’s story.

The award was well deserved, for it is remarkable how well Kelly’s script captures the darkly satirical, warped and wonderful world created by Dahl — a world vividly imagined during bedtimes in millions of homes where children begged their parents for “just a few more minutes” to finish reading a most remarkable chapter.

The story revolves around an ignored 5-year-old girl who uses the power of her mind and her love of books as weapons against ignorant, demoralizing and vicious adults.

Ignoring the advice from her self-absorbed mother that “looks is more important than books,” Matilda’s first impulse — like that of Lemony Snicket’s Violet Baudelaire and J.K. Rowling’s Hermione Granger from more recent novels — is to solve problems with her intelligence, deal with conflict with her imagination, and write her own narrative.

“Matilda” is Dahl’s only female-centric work and is told from a child’s perspective. As a result, the world in this musical version of the book — now on national tour and on stage at Playhouse Square — is abundantly playful.

And it is comprised of comically exaggerated characters like Matilda’s outrageous parents (the hilarious Quinn Mattfeld and Cassie Silva), the bullying Olympic hammerthrower-turned-psychotic headmistress Miss Trunchbull (a brilliant David Abeles in drag), and the angelic teacher Miss Honey (a silver-throated and absolutely charming Jennifer Blood).

Despite Kelly’s best efforts, the writing in the musical also inherits Dahl’s unpolished prose. This makes for some awkward, inconsistent and improbable storytelling, which plays better on the page than it does on stage.

Some of this is sidestepped by Kelly taking poetic license with the source material’s telling of Miss Honey’s backstory. Here, it is revealed through a story Matilda believes she invented that she shares, in bits and pieces, with the librarian Mrs. Phelps (a very endearing Ora Jones).

The story, which is beautifully and theatrically enacted during Matilda’s recitation, also reveals Matilda’s feelings about her hideous family, adds dimension to the powers she possesses, and offers much-needed tender moments to the production.

Dahl’s eccentricities are also addressed by the show’s producer, Britain’s Royal Shakespeare Company, employing the same strategy found in their production of “Les Miserables” — throw plenty of songs and huge production numbers at the show.

Many of Tim Minchin’s songs are wordy, quirky affairs made tedious by poor sound mixing that has plagued the tour since its start nearly a year ago. Lots of lyrics go unheard (so do some British accents, but the problem there is not technical nor as troublesome).

But some songs, like the exuberant second act opener “When I Grow Up” and the anthem “Revolting” that closes the second act, are absolutely delightful. And all of the songs are infused with impressive visual and sound effects, solid accompaniment by an orchestra directed by Matthew Smedal, and astoundingly innovative, Tony-nominated choreography by Peter Darling.

As he did when choreographing “Billy Elliot,” Darling complements each song’s sentiments with impulsive, pulsating movement that is absolutely mesmerizing. It is executed to perfection by an exceptionally talented ensemble of kids and young adults, and takes place within a gorgeous set designed by Rob Howell to resemble a pop-up picture book.

Sarah McKinley Austin as Matilda (she alternates the role with Lily Brooks O’Briant and Savannah Grace Elmer) is an adorable and impressive performer if not a completely engaging one. She hits all of the marks designed by director Matthew Warchus and hits all her notes, but with rote mechanics that lack the kind of charm one remembers from the book and the 1996 film featuring Mara Wilson.

Though the music in “Matilda The Musical” is not, collectively, memorable, Dahl’s story and this production’s eye-candy storytelling most assuredly is.

“Matilda The Musical” comes with a ready-made audience, so tickets will likely be scarce. Since the Broadway production will close at the end of the year after 1,555 performances, the touring production may be your last chance to see this musical. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Matilda The Musical”

WHERE: State Theatre, 1519 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through May 22

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$110, call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.com


 

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 May 8, 2016.

Dobama Theatre’s ‘Marie Antoinette’ promises cake, provides crumbs

By Bob Abelman

Had psychotherapy been around in the late 18th century, Sigmund Freud would have had a field-day with fellow Austrian Maria Antonia Josepha Johanna von Habsburg-Lothringen, better known as Marie Antoinette.

One of 16 children and the eighth daughter and second youngest child of the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I and Maria Theresa, archduchess of Austria and queen of Hungary and Bohemia, Marie had issues.

She was afraid of her forbidding mother and intimidated by her oldest brother.

She was functionally illiterate though very well versed in the empty enterprise of self-indulgence.

She was culturally and socially isolated prior to being sent off as a 14-year-old to wed Louis-Auguste, the heir to the throne of France, and she was even lonelier during her time as queen.

Which wasn’t very long. Marie was famously imprisoned and beheaded during the French Revolution at the age of 37.

In “Marie Antoinette,” first performed in 2012 and on stage at Dobama Theatre in Cleveland Heights, playwright David Adjmi does Freud’s work by bringing to the surface all that ails Marie. And he uses the therapist’s dialogue-driven clinical methodology to do so.

We overhear Marie (Carly Germany) sharing gossip and fashion tips with her ladies-in-waiting (Lara Mielcarek and Rachel Lee Kolis), disclosing Louis XVI’s failings as a leader with her brother Joseph (Robert Hunter), and discussing the king’s failings as a lover with a dashing courtier (Joe Pine). We eavesdrop on her conversations with a sardonic sheep (Abraham Adams), as she learns about the angry world outside her gilded cage.

As does this play, recent works by other playwrights have re-envisioned and stylistically brought into the modern era historical figures. A young Andrew Jackson is portrayed as a radical rock and roller in “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson” and founding father Alexander Hamilton is a rapper in “Hamilton.” Adjmi depicts Marie Antoinette as the poster child for the extravagant consumerism, outlandish sense of entitlement, and astounding superficiality displayed by today’s rich and famous 1-percenters.

When revolutionaries outside her gate shout “Fraternite,” the clueless Marie hears “fraternity party.”

Adjmi’s characters speak in contemporary vernacular, wear lavish period costuming (courtesy of Tesia Dugan Benson) that has pop fashion flair, and have the same soullessness and unchecked appetites common in characters in Adjmi’s other plays, including “Stunning,” “Elective Affinities,” and “3C.”

While the musicals “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson” and “Hamilton” fill their stages with a raucous score and elaborate choreography, “Marie Antoinette” director Nathan Motta similarly saturates Dobama’s performance space. But he does so with wonderful projections of animated imagery (designed by Mike Tutaj), fashion model runway lighting (designed by Marcus Dana), and a rich soundtrack (designed by Richard Ingraham) between scenes.

All this marvelously embellishes the many moods of and dramatic moments in this play, and complements the purposefully minimalistic but still-effective exhibition of opulence (designed by Ben Needham) of the palaces at Versailles and Paris.

The downside of this dynamic display of sight and sound is the void it leaves in its absence. Despite terrific performances by every actor — particularly Dan Hendrock as the incessantly whining King and Germany as the easily distracted and, later, terribly distraught Marie — the script is pale and plods along when left to its own devices.

Worse, the play is sometimes aimless and unsure of what it wants to say. After two hours of putting Marie on the therapist’s couch, “Marie Antoinette” fails to provide the necessary Freudian insight to turn smart dialogue and awesome production values into something more meaningful.

When watching “Marie Antoinette,” it’s as if the playwright wanted the audience to eat cake but only provided handfuls of delectable but ultimately unsatisfying breadcrumbs. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Marie Antoinette”

WHERE: Dobama Theatre, 2340 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights

WHEN: Through May 22

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$28. Call 216-932-3396 or visit dobama.org.


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

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

Lead image: Lara Mielcarek, from left, as Polignac, Carly Germany as Marie Antoinette, and Rachel Kolis as Lamballe. PHOTO | Steve Wagner Photography

Ensemble Theatre has a hit with its rendition of dark comedy ‘Jerusalem’

By Bob Abelman

Like the opening moments of a contemporary staging of a Shakespeare play, it takes a while to adjust to the unfamiliar rhythms that flow through Ensemble Theatre’s staging of Jez Butterworth’s “Jerusalem.”

It’s not so much the West Country English accent of the characters that takes some getting used to; it’s the dangerous undertow lurking just beneath the play’s brash and occasionally crude comedy.

Fortunately, the show clocks in at three hours, so there is plenty of time to get one’s bearings. And this terrific staging of this intriguing play provides plenty of incentive to do so.

The story revolves around the slow-moving but quick-witted Johnny “Rooster” Byron (Mitch Rose), an inert anarchist who lives in a run-down trailer in the Wiltshire woods in southwest England. The surrounding encampment, littered with discarded furniture and empty beer cans, serves as a safe haven, playground and pharmacy for the aimless, ostracized teens (James Rankin, Kyle Huff, Michael Johnson, Becca Moseley and Leah Smith) who Rooster attracts.

Part of the attraction is the attention and backhanded affection Rooster doles out with each gram of cheap narcotic. He calls the kids “beloved spongers.” But it is also his evocative storytelling grounded in magic and mythology, for Rooster is a battle-scarred and war-weary holdover from a forgotten time — equal parts dragon-slayer and Pied Piper — and these latter-day Lost Boys and Girls are in desperate need of enchantment and a champion.

Modern dragons in need of slaying include local authorities (Valerie Young and August Scarapelli) and homeowners from the encroaching neighborhoods, who are mounting a battle to get Rooster evicted. They see him as little more than a property squatter and bad influence. His ex-girlfriend (Brittni Shambaugh Addison) sees him as a deadbeat dad lost in what he affectionately refers to as an “alcoholic, bucolic frolic.”

So do we, at first. But then we listen to his tall tales, masterfully presented by Rose with a mesmerizing combination of mischief and mysticism.

We hear romantic soliloquies about the bygone days of ancient heroes, spoken by the delightful, drug-addled “Professor” who occasionally ventures into the encampment and is brilliantly portrayed by Dana Hart.

We watch pub owner Wesley, played with immense tenderness by David Vegh, as he loses his dignity and cultural identity to corporate franchising.

And we observe a young girl (Katja Yacker) in an angel’s costume attempting to sing a verse from William Blake’s short, nationalistic poem, “Jerusalem,” only to be drowned out by blasts of head-banging rock ‘n’ roll.

And it then becomes clear that Rooster is the keeper of the nation’s history and heritage, which is being forgotten or forsaken with each passing generation. And we realize that the undertow lurking beneath the play’s humor is the possibility of its disappearance forever.

“Jerusalem” is at once irreverently funny and quite foreboding, and director Ian Wolfgang Hinz and his extremely talented, fully committed ensemble perfectly balance the humor and drama. Contributions by Hinz’s designers (set by Walter Boswell, lighting by Bryanna Bauman, costumes by Meg Parrish) are invaluable in this regard.

While it takes a bit too long for Rose’s Rooster to win us over in the opening scene — in fact, everyone involved seems to be working too hard to establish their characters — win us over he does. And he holds court for the rest of this three-act play.

“Jerusalem” reports on the state of the nation, that nation being Britain. But its themes and its characters resonate in the U.S., as was demonstrated in the immensely successful 2011 Broadway run and in this wonderful Ensemble Theatre production. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Jerusalem”

WHERE: Ensemble Theatre, 2843 Washington Blvd. in Cleveland Hts.

WHEN: Through May 21

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$24, call 216-321-2930 or visit ensembletheatrecle.org


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

Originally published in the Cleveland Jewish News on May 1, 2016.

Lead image: From left: Michael Johnson as Davey, Becca Moseley as Pea, James Rankin as Ginger, Mitch Rose as Johnny “Rooster” Byron, Kyle Huff as Lee and Leah Smith as Tanya. PHOTO | Celeste Cosentino

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

 

 

Christopher Tocco (Berowne), from left, Nick Steen (Dumaine), Jonathan Dyrud (Ferdinand) and Jeb Burris (Longaville). PHOTO | Ken Blaze

Great Lakes Theater finds joy in Shakespeare’s ‘Love’s Labour’s Lost’

By Bob Abelman

In her program notes for Great Lakes Theater’s current production of “Love’s Labour’s Lost,” director Tyne Rafaeli calls the play “a polyphonic explosion — a feast of style and language.”

An explosion it is, but the writing is more smorgasbord than feast.

Rather than choose one of the poetic styles in fashion in London in 1589, the young and cocky Will Shakespeare included them all: sonnets, rhyming couplets, lengthy quatrains, puns in English and Latin, a seemingly endless supply of alliterations, and a constant stream of quick-witted wordplay.

There are more speeches by more people in this lesser comedy than in most of Shakespeare’s later works, as well. And by writing a play that is both a celebration and condemnation of poetry and puns, there are plenty of inside jokes about language whose meaning and cleverness have not traveled well across the centuries. Starting with the title.

It is little wonder that this overstuffed and comparatively unrefined play, with its boisterous opening and sober conclusion, went largely unproduced for much of its early history. Few theater companies have the talent to do this play and fewer still have it in the bulk required to do it well.

The Great Lakes Theater does and it most certainly has the talent. They manage to turn all the heightened language and immense loquaciousness into a joyous affair.

What helps make “Love’s Labour’s Lost” manageable to perform is its very simple plot.

King Ferdinand of Navarre (Jonathan Dyrud) and his privileged pals — Berowne (Christopher Tocco), Longaville (Jeb Burris) and Dumaine (Nick Sheen) — swear by an idiotic oath to spend the next three years engaged in deep study, far from the distraction of women.

Within moments of signing the oath, the Princess of France (Erin Partin) and her attendants — Rosaline (Laura Welsh Berg), Maria (Christine Weber) and Katherine (Heather Thiry) — arrive for a visit. They are as beautiful as they are smart and cynical. And they do not suffer fools gladly.

Let the battle of the sexes in the war of words — in their many manifestations and significant measure — begin.

Each of the eight featured and immensely gifted performers in this play manage to create rich, interesting characters defined by their own particular brand of wordplay.

But it is the scenes that focus on the secondary characters — the Spanish braggart Don Armado (David Anthony Smith), the clown Costard (Juan Rivera Lebron), and the pompous schoolmaster Holofernes (Dougfred Miller) — that are the funniest. Miller is particularly ingenious in his delivery of the character’s random Latin phrases, unbearably precise and pompous expression, and excruciating redundancy.

The play’s poetic styles are so many that Shakespeare adds numerous ancillary characters to the festivities to showcase them, including the constable Anthony Dull (Tom Ford), the curate Nathaniel (M.A. Taylor), the Princess’ attendant Boyet (Chris Klopatek), and the dairy maid Jaquenetta (Maggie Kettering). Director Rafaeli wisely casts excellent performers in these roles, adding a layer of humor to the mix.

As if to reward us for listening so intently for so long to Shakespeare’s folly, Rafaeli gives us lots to look at.

There is plenty of playful, physical humor worked into this production, which is cleverly choreographed by Jason Paul Tate. And each character is adorned with colorful and contrasting modern costuming, designed by Andrea Hood. The single set piece, designed by Kristen Robinson, is a mountainous hardwood library that expands the full width and height of the stage, with a grass-covered floor that appears to have been overtaken by nature. Like the oath sworn by the boys, the stage itself pits instinct against intellect.

The bookshelves are filled with hardbound texts, various literary artifacts and, in one of the best scenes in the play, the boys themselves. Ferdinand and his cronies comically plow through shelves of books in an effort to escape the palace’s inner sanctum to get at the girls outside. And, when trying to avoid being seen while eavesdropping on each other’s failed attempts at seduction, the boys hang precariously from ladders and the edges of the highest shelves.

This play is most certainly not Shakespeare’s best. But the folks at Great Lakes have made the most of it. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Love’s Labour’s Lost”

WHERE: The Hanna Theatre, 2067 E. 14th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through April 24

TICKETS & INFO: $13-$70. Call 216-241-6000 or visit greatlakestheater.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 11, 2016.

Lead image: Christopher Tocco (Berowne), from left, Nick Steen (Dumaine), Jonathan Dyrud (Ferdinand) and Jeb Burris (Longaville). PHOTO | Ken Blaze

John de Lancie (Mr. Wolf) and Juliet Brett (Theresa) PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Cleveland Play House’s ‘Mr. Wolf’ is a brilliant play, astounding production

By Bob Abelman

Surely you followed the real-life drama of Michelle Knight who, in 2002, was abducted by Ariel Castro and finally rescued from his Tremont home after spending 11 years in captivity.

Leave it to Cleveland-born playwright Rajiv Joseph to find poetry in such pathology.

His “Mr. Wolf” revolves around a 15-year-old girl who, when she was 3, was abducted and hidden from the world by an astronomer who believes she can unravel the mysteries of the infinite expanses of the universe. By doing so, she will find God and save Humankind.

Rather than being mistreated, Theresa’s intelligence and inquisitive nature are nurtured by her abductor, Mr. Wolf, who sees her as a prodigy and a prophet. Equal parts Stockholm syndrome and genuine affection forge Theresa’s attachment to Mr. Wolf, which is all-encompassing, and after 12 years of isolation, all that she knows.

A play like this coming from Joseph is no surprise, for he has a remarkable proclivity for examining big-ticket issues by way of small-scale stories and unlikely spokespeople.

In “Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo” — a 2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist — he exposed the self-destructive nature of the human species by examining the atrocities of the Gulf War and giving voice to a philosophizing feline. His “Guards at the Taj” offered an existential treatise on the human costs of Man’s self-aggrandizement, delivered by two simple-minded 17th century sentries at the Taj Mahal.

In “Mr. Wolf,” the passionate pursuit of astronomy and the infinite possibilities of the universe are counterbalanced by the comparatively infinitesimal heartache of a parent losing a child and the astronomical odds of finding her alive after all these years.

Find her they do, and after some unsavory revelations about Mr. Wolf’s quest for the one true prophet, the story turns its attention to psychological and spiritual healing. The scenes involving Theresa and her parents’ adjustment to their reunification are as tenderly conceived, brilliantly constructed and emotionally engaging as the ones that came before.

The staging for Cleveland Play House production of “Mr. Wolf,” which is the centerpiece of the CPH’s 2016 New Ground Theatre Festival, is sparse, so as to keep our focus on the story and less on the storytelling.

However, director Giovanna Sardelli employs plenty of technological bells and whistles — such as a receding set piece and a rising platform (Timothy R. Mackabee), overtly dramatic lighting (Gina Scherr), and haunting sound design (Daniel Kluger) — to underscore the cold loneliness that resides in the vastness of the space Theresa and Mr. Wolf contemplate, in the isolation of her captivity, in the world of a father who is desperately searching for his child, and in the soul of a mother who has given up hope. The effect is chilling and powerful.

Sardelli delivers a cast whose acting and listening skills are so exceptional that they make it hard to separate the writing from its onstage rendering or shift attention to admire the stagecraft surrounding them.

Juliet Brett — barefoot and a bundle of autistic tendencies, genius eccentricities and sheer intensity — is an incredible, surprisingly endearing Theresa. Her fingers twitch as if engaged in phantom activities. Her eyes, when not avoiding contact, demand it. And her analytical pattern of speech shows no signs of long-repressed and now-foreign emotions, except when Mr. Wolf introduces her to new life experiences and then in the most delightful manner.

John de Lancie, who originated the role of Mr. Wolf in last year’s world premiere at South Coast Repertory in California, anchors this production as well. Never does his Mr. Wolf show anything but genuine affection for his misappropriated mentee and dedication toward their mission, despite an undercurrent to the contrary — which is a fascinating choice by de Lancie and Sardelli. And when Theresa sees Mr. Wolf’s face on the detective who rescues her and the doctor who then examines her, de Lancie manages to be those people but with subtle traces of Mr. Wolf in the mix.

Theresa’s father, mother and stepmother are all people damaged by the trauma of losing a child. But Todd Cerveris, Rebecca Brooksher and Jessica Dickey create rich and complicated characters above and beyond this plot point. Their pain from Theresa’s absence is convincing, but the resultant dysfunction and often comical awkwardness upon her return are remarkable.

Michelle Knight’s dramatic story, which has since been turned into a Lifetime Channel made-for-TV movie, is a fear-inducing survivor’s tale about the evil that lurks in the heart of Man. Joseph’s imaginative “Mr. Wolf” is certainly more uplifting. And by setting its sights on the cosmos and our place in the universe, it is significantly more thought-provoking. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Mr. Wolf”

WHERE: Outcalt Theatre, 1407 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through April 24

TICKETS & INFO: $20-$90, call 216-241-6000 or go to clevelandplayhouse.com


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 9, 2016.

Lead image: John de Lancie (Mr. Wolf) and Juliet Brett (Theresa) PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Robert Hawkes, left, as John and Adam Heffernan as Ian. PHOTO | Kathy Sandham

Beck Center for the Arts’ yarn, ‘Shining City,’ inspires a yawn

By Bob Abelman

Irish playwright Conor McPherson is a master storyteller whose tall tales, often told in short form, overflow with brilliant passages and vivid imagery that are both powerful and poetic.

Each of his plays — of which there are 15 — take place over a short period of time, which generates a strong sense of immediacy and urgency. The person telling the story does so with extended monologues that tend to be more confessional than theatrical. And there is always a quirky, other-worldly element that bites at the heels of the play’s otherwise stark and quite dramatic realism.

“Shining City,” first produced in 2004 and on stage at the Beck Center for the Arts’ intimate Studio Theater, is all of these things. And it is very much a ghost story.

This tale is mostly told by a middle-aged businessman and recent widower named John (Robert Hawkes) during his therapy sessions with Ian (Adam Heffernan). He is the first patient of Ian’s, who has recently left the priesthood and hung his shingle in a rundown office building in downtown Dublin (nicely rendered by designer Aaron Benson). John keeps seeing his wife, Mari, who died in a car crash and whose vision so frightens him that he has traded their haunted house for residence in a local B&B.

John’s uncomfortable, ineffective and disconnected encounters with the dead aren’t all that different from Ian’s conversation with his estranged girlfriend, Neasa (Ursula Cataan), who is raising their baby alone and in unfriendly surroundings. Or the conversation Ian has with Laurence (Nicholas Chokan), a down-on-his-luck acquaintance whom he seeks out for comfort.

Everyone in “Shining City” is living in a state of discomfort and is lost in his or her haunted loneliness. And that is pretty much the point of McPherson’s one-act character study masquerading as a 100-minute play.

As if to emphasize their loneliness and discomfort, none of the characters in this play have a home to call their own, all of them have sought out sexual encounters that are as unsavory as they are unsatisfying, and no more than two of them are on stage at any given time.

And everyone in this play is an inept and ineffective communicator, speaking in fragmented, frequently interrupted half-thoughts laced with Harold Pinter pauses and David Mamet-like pacing and abundance of profanity that loses its meaning and menace because of its frequency.

Like actors in a Mamet or Pinter play, those in this one require a special set of skills to properly execute what playwright McPherson has rendered.

Hawkes is called on to do most of the heavy lifting. And while his character’s drollness and the immense weight of his sorrow come through nicely, his stuttering delivery during his sustained monologues grows increasingly tedious. Worse, it keeps much of the tension and subtlety in the script at bay by sputtering past those necessary pauses. This makes it difficult for audiences to see themselves in John’s awkwardness and inadequacies.

Hawkes is not done any favors by director Bernadette Clemens, who keeps Ian on the periphery — pinned behind his desk or at a significant distance from John — when all eyes are on Hawkes. Neither the actor nor the audience can benefit from Ian’s reactions.

Heffernan does a masterful job of playing the anguished, mortally and morally wounded Ian and executing the playwright’s complicated writing. And Cataan, despite her relatively brief time onstage, is just as effective. Neasa’s pain is palpable and the dialogue she is given in her irritatingly disconnected exchange with Ian comes across as so very real.

This is not the case with Chokan, who does not really bring much to Laurence’s short and admittedly difficult scene with Ian.

Also disappointing is the execution of some of the small production elements on opening Saturday night. A missed lighting cue and a quirky play-ending special effect wouldn’t normally mean much in the course of a play. But they weigh particularly heavy in a play like this, where everything — such as a faulty busser that admits patients to Ian’s office — has significance.

In “Shining City,” and all of McPherson’s plays, the devil is very much in the details. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “Shining City”

WHERE: Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood

WHEN: Through May 1

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$31, call 216-521-2540 or visit beckcenter.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 3, 2016.

Lead image: Robert Hawkes, left, as John and Adam Heffernan as Ian. PHOTO | Kathy Sandham

From left, Wesley Allen, Rochelle Jones, Michael May and India Nicole Burton. PHOTO | Tom Kondilas

‘Bootycandy’ looks at black culture through blackout sketches at convergence-continuum’s Liminis Theatre

By Bob Abelman

Theater at convergence-continuum can, at times, be provocative, profound, perverse and very funny. Robert O’Hara’s “Bootycandy” is all of these things at once, though not always in balance or with consistently satisfying results.

The play, which premiered in 2011, serves up for our consideration the playwright’s experiences as an effeminate, gay man living in an uncompromising black culture. And it does so through a series of vignettes that range from smartly satirical to stone-cold sobering rather than a traditional running narrative.

By presenting these personal experiences unconventionally and through the filter of outrageous exaggeration and social satire, “Bootycandy” isolates and exposes toxic African-American attitudes toward homosexuals. The hope is that, through our collective laughter, those attitudes and the stereotypes they generate will be undermined, dissipate and disappear.

Most of the 10 vignettes feature Sutter (Wesley Allen), the playwright’s alter-ego, in revealing slice-of-life moments that take place in his childhood home, a nursing home and a local bar.

We see a very young and curious Sutter asking his woefully ill-equipped mother about his private parts. Later, an adolescent and decisively gay Sutter falls victim to an impromptu intervention by his parents, who attempt to set him straight by recommending that he put down Jackie Collins novels, take up sports, and “bend at the knees when you pick stuff up.” Later still, at some dive, an older Sutter and a friend pick up and accommodate a drunk, depressed and straight white guy who wishes to be sexually humiliated.

Four actors play the other characters in Sutter’s scenes, and each is also given a tangentially relevant vignette of their own. There’s an inspirational sermon by a cross-dressing preacher (Michael May), an over-the-top phone conversation between four friends (all played by India Nicole Burton and Rochelle Jones), one of whom is pregnant and plans to name her baby Genitalia Lakeitha Shamala Abdul because she likes the way it sounds, and an intense monologue that offers the victim’s perspective (Nate Miller) of a late-night mugging.

And, as if an afterthought, there is a scene — one of the evening’s best — where the playwright cunningly comments on the challenge of writing plays like this with vignettes like these for predominantly straight, white audiences like us.

Most of the vignettes are laced with thematic and graphic profanity. Many, but not all, are cleverly conceived and very well executed by a talented and fully committed cast. One offers gratuitous male nudity.

Director Terrence Spivey does yeomen’s work, aligning the assortment of comedic and dramatic blackout sketches that is “Bootycandy” to create an evening of coherent and entertaining social commentary. What he failed to achieve on opening night was consistency, for his actors were often on a different page regarding how broad satire should be. At times some went significantly overboard, which got the laughs but turned the production into something less desirable and impactful than what the playwright had in mind.

And, too often, actors went unseen. Jim Smith’s set design scatters three separate performance spaces amid three clusters of tiered audience seating in con-con’s intimate theater. Everyone in attendance has an obstructed view and an awkward vantage point some time during the performance.

The production’s miniscule budget does nothing to harm this play, but there are plenty of missed opportunities. This is particularly evident in the way of Malikah Johnson Spivey’s costume design, which would have enhanced the humor and poignancy in the phone conversation sketch, among others.

“Bootycandy” is most certainly an audacious piece of work, which is why it premiered at the Wooly Mammoth Theatre in Washington, D.C., and had an Off-Broadway run in 2014.

Audacious is what con-con tends to do best. CV

On stage

WHAT: “Bootycandy”

WHERE: convergence-continuum’s Liminis Theatre, 2438 Scranton Road, Cleveland (Tremont)

WHEN: Through April 16

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$15. Call 216-687-0074 or visit convergence-continuum.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 27, 2016.

Lead image: From left, Wesley Allen, Rochelle Jones, Michael May and India Nicole Burton. PHOTO | Tom Kondilas

Geoff Knox and Rachel Lee Kolis. PHOTO | Brian Armour

‘A Kid Like Jake’ at none too fragile theater is a captivating, contemporary Cinderella story

By Bob Abelman

Daniel Pearle’s one-act play, “A Kid Like Jake,” on stage at none too fragile theater, provides a landing pad for helicopter parents — those cossetting caregivers who hover over their children in order to maximize their potential for greatness.

Alex (Rachel Lee Kolis) has given up a legal career to be the perfect mom and is now fully committed to getting her bright and precocious 4-year-old son, Jake (who remains unseen), into a top-tier private kindergarten.

And by fully committed, we’re talking obsessed.

She sends out applications, which have been written with great care and then rewritten again and again, months in advance. She works diligently with Judy (Laura Starnik), the placement adviser at Jake’s fancy preschool, to best prepare the boy for the battery of assessments that are part of the application process. She neglects her husband Greg (Geoff Knox), a clinical psychologist, who taps his infinite patience and vast knowledge of crazy behavior to keep his wife from imploding.

Despite everyone’s best efforts to act in Jake’s best interest, no one quite knows how to handle the boy’s enthusiasm for “gender variant play,” such as dressing up as Cinderella and favoring dolls over toy trucks. Jake, it seems, is starting to identify as female.

Judy recommends that the family embrace Jake’s proclivities and capitalize on them by going after the private schools’ diversity quota. Greg suggests placing Jake in therapy. Alex casts blame. She blames her husband’s permissive parenting and the allure of Disney’s animated princesses. She blames the subtle influence of Judy’s lesbian leanings. And she blames her faulty womb, which miscarriages children when not instilling them with confusion.

“A Kid Like Jake” is very much a domestic drama about what happens to a family when childcare is turned into a blood sport. But it also raises questions about the current state of primary education and whether human intelligence and gender identity are created by nature or molded through nurturing.

And it does so with an excess of dialogue and a paucity of action, as if the playwright — like Jake — was repeatedly told by his parents to “use your words” rather than act out emotions.

The awkward imbalance of these ingredients, plus an odd dream sequence involving a grown-up Jake (played here by Katie Wells), earned mixed reviews during the play’s 2013 premiere at the Lincoln Center Theater in New York. Many noted that audiences could not find much sympathy for the highly volatile, monomaniacal Alex.

Everything falls into better alignment in this none too fragile production, under Sean Derry’s direction. He acknowledges the issues being raised in the script, appreciates the precision in Pearle’s dialogue, and allows his actors to weigh the impact of their words. But he also insists that their characters be compassionate and conversational. Though affluent, they remain unpretentious and relatable. Derry also keeps the pace of this production moving ever forward.

One way of achieving this is foregoing scenery and realistic set pieces, replacing them with a black curtain backdrop and simple wood crates. The crates are rapidly repositioned between scenes to create an office or a living room, while actors quickly change costumes in the corners of the small performance space. When not rushing back into action, they sit and observe from the sideline.

The thing is, this is not the kind of play that benefits from or is conducive to such metatheatrical treatment. In fact, its sharp contrast to the realistic dialogue taking place in realistically devised scenes is a constant distraction and artistic misstep.

Fortunately, the acting is so superb that it serves as a salve for what ails the script and is absent from the scenic design.

Although the character of Greg is underwritten in comparison to Alex and can come across as quite submissive — and intentionally so — Knox turns this into benevolent acquiescence, which is so much more interesting and engaging. Knox’s Greg may often be in the background, but he never fades into it.

And despite Alex’s accusations and the script’s inclinations, Starnik’s Judy never comes across as manipulative when championing Jake. This is a more honest, albeit less dramatic, depiction and a good fit for this production.

The most remarkable performance of all is turned in by Kolis, who makes Alex and her Type A personality relatable long before the playwright offers insight into her family history toward the end of the play. In fact, Kolis manages to make Alex vulnerable and likeable.

Pearle’s drama is smart, frequently funny and given a particularly good turn at none too fragile. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “A Kid Like Jake”

WHERE: none too fragile, 1835 Merriman Road, Akron

WHEN: Through March 26

TICKETS & INFO: $20, visit nonetoofragile.com


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 20, 2016.

Lead image: Geoff Knox and Rachel Lee Kolis. PHOTO | Brian Armour

Joe Kendere, from left, as Richard Hannay, Kevin Kelly as Clown No. 1, Michael Prosen as Clown No. 2 and Rachael Swartz as Annabella/Pamela/Margaret. PHOTO | Andy Dudik

Blank Canvas Theatre’s film noir parody ‘The 39 Steps’ takes flight but cuts corners

By Bob Abelman

In the opening scene of Patrick Barlow’s aerobic stage adaptation of the classic, 1935 Alfred Hitchcock spy movie “The 39 Steps,” dashing and abundantly bored Richard Hannay seeks “something mindless and trivial, something utterly pointless” to amuse himself. So he goes to the theater.

Once there, he inadvertently gets mixed up with double agents, accidentally uncovers a plot to steal vital British military secrets, gets framed for murder and, of course, takes it on the lam.

Audiences also seeking something mindless will find it in Blank Canvas Theatre’s thoroughly entertaining but relatively low-risk production of this 2008 Tony Award-winning play.

“The 39 Steps” is a romp from beginning to end — a parody of film noir romantic thrillers with their low-budget aesthetics, gentlemanly heroes with mysterious femme fatales, dark and misty ambiance, and abrupt twists and turns. Every cinematic cliché, every cloak-and-dagger genre convention, and every Hitchcockian quirk is accentuated in this immensely clever play.

All this is handled nicely by the talented cast, consisting of Joe Kenderes as our square-jawed and thin-mustached hero Richard Hannay, Rachael Swartz as all of the female protagonists found in film noir storytelling, and Kevin Kelly and Michael Prosen as everyone else.

However, much of the work’s theatrical extravagances and creative indulgences are rendered a tad less theatrical and indulgent in this production.

Under Patrick Ciamacco’s vision and direction, this production circumvents the prerequisite and much relied upon athleticism of the cast and the imagination of the audience as everyday objects get turned into objects d’art reflective of Hitchcock’s psychological thrillers. Instead, it often takes technological short cuts.

Case in point is the wonderful chase scene atop a speeding train which, as originally conceived, was meant to be executed with only a handful of wood crates, some dramatic lighting, and the immense physicality and miming skills of the performers. Here at Blank Canvas — in opposition to its namesake — the train is given form and animation by projected imagery designed by Perren Hedderson.

While this certainly adds an intriguing cinematic component to a play that parodies Hitchcock’s signature cinematography, it misses the point — and much of the fun — of having to manufacture on stage and from scratch what was made for the screen.

In addition to technological short cuts, this production somewhat diminishes the archetypes that define film noir. Kenderes’ frenzied Hannay is a delight, but he strays from the character type’s perpetually cocked eyebrow and cavalier approach to danger. And Ciamacco abandons the play’s tendency to make its characters overtly self-aware and who seem, to our amusement, to recognize their own absurd melodrama. Here, they just talk back to the audience.

Also, as Clown No. 1 and Clown No. 2 — roles crafted to deliver vaudevillian showmanship, particularly in scenes requiring quick costume and character changes — Kelly and Prosen lack the necessary speed, dexterity and collective comic timing to pull it off. Instead, they merely clown around. Fortunately, Kelly is particularly adept at manifesting and milking very funny moments outside the script.

In short, Blank Canvas has prioritized silly over style, which while playful and very entertaining, is pedestrian. This production takes “mindless and trivial, something utterly pointless” a bit too literally. CV

On stage

WHAT: “The 39 Steps”

WHERE: Blank Canvas Theatre, 1305 W. 78th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through March 19

TICKETS & INFO: $18, visit blankcanvastheatre.com or call 440-941-0458


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 17, 2016.

Lead image: Joe Kendere, from left, as Richard Hannay, Kevin Kelly as Clown No. 1, Michael Prosen as Clown No. 2 and Rachael Swartz as Annabella/Pamela/Margaret. PHOTO | Andy Dudik

Andrew Gombas and Dorothy Silver. PHOTO | Steve Wagner Photography

Thin, implausible ‘Revisionist’ fully fleshed out in ‘enjoyable, thought-provoking’ Dobama Theatre production

By Bob Abelman

“Write what you know” is usually the advice fledgling authors follow when they first put pen to paper.

Such is the case with actor-turned-playwright Jesse Eisenberg. He has so mastered the art of depicting patronizing, self-centered, socially awkward characters in films like “Social Network” and “Now You See Me” that he has created similar characters to portray in his own plays, “Asuncion,” “The Revisionist” and, most recently, “The Spoils.”

In “The Revisionist,” which premiered off-Broadway in 2013 and is on stage at the Dobama Theatre, a young American writer named David arrives at the run-down Polish city of Szczecin and the well-worn flat of his second cousin Maria. Self-absorbed, high-strung and thin-skinned, David has come hoping that the isolation and radical change of scene will allow him to concentrate and complete his new novel. He makes no effort to be gracious to Maria or show any appreciation for her hospitality.

The septuagenarian Maria thinks David has come to visit her and learn about the family they lost in the Holocaust and the many others depicted in the cherished photographs that cover every surface in her modest apartment, designed with wonderful attention to detail by Aaron Benson and Marcus Dana.

Both David and Maria are in desperate need of human contact and personal connection, but their generational, cultural and culinary differences create barriers that only a bottle of vodka and some serious truth telling can penetrate.

This is a lovely story but, as with the early works of many fledgling authors, it is thinly told and full of implausible, forced and structurally graceless moments. What should be a small, delicate watercolor portrait is rendered with expressionistic subjectivity, broad strokes and unrefined technique.

Fortunately, it fell into the hands of director Leighann Delorenzo. Her delicate touch has tapped all that is heartfelt and beguiling in the script. And her eye for casting has allowed it to take form on stage.

Dorothy Silver captures in tone, temperament and physicality a woman who has turned self-preservation into a going concern. Her character’s rock-solid defiance and effortless ability to laugh at herself and others — all masterfully put on display by one of Cleveland’s finest actors — were Maria’s survival strategies during the war and work for her still. It is a testament to Silver, not the script, that Maria appears so genuinely robust and fully fleshed out.

And it is a testament to Andrew Gombas that David’s defenses break down and he becomes increasingly vulnerable and likable as the play progresses, something Eisenberg never accomplished in his world-premiere Cherry Lane Theatre production. David is a lost soul, not a lost cause. Without Gombas’s effective communication of this, neither Maria’s affection nor our investment in his well-being would have been justified or so richly rewarded.

Also superb is John Busser as Zenon, a brash and burly taxi driver who has befriended Maria and serves as brief comic relief. His Polish seems authentic but, more importantly, so do his warmth and gruff charm.

“I am an open book,” Maria tells David when he finally gets around to asking her what happened during the war. She is not. And neither is this script. But this Dobama production does a fine job of making it an enjoyable and thought-provoking read. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “The Revisionist”

WHERE: Dobama Theatre, 2340 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights

WHEN: Through April 3

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$28. Call 216-932-3396 or visit dobama.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 7, 2016.

Lead image: Andrew Gombas and Dorothy Silver. PHOTO | Steve Wagner Photography

The “Luna Gale” cast, from left, Jeremiah Clapp (Peter), Megan King (Karlie), Lee Roy Rogers (Caroline), and Kenneth Lee (Cliff). PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Though well written and excellently acted, Cleveland Play House’s issue-driven ‘Luna Gale’ too edifying to entertain

By Bob Abelman

A year or two ago, a short play called “Legally Addicted” toured Cleveland-area schools and dramatized the opiate epidemic among teens in order to educate and advocate. Many of the kids in attendance — who received community service credit or reduced probation to be there — felt trapped within a public service announcement as the play’s didactic earnestness and frequent teaching moments overpowered things meant to be merely entertaining.

Rebecca Gilman’s “Luna Gale” seems to have had a similar effect on its opening night audience at Cleveland Play House’s Allen Theatre.

Gilman has made a name for herself exploring sensitive and complicated social issues in her dramatic plays, such as racism and white hypocrisy in “Spinning into Butter,” rape and victimhood in “Boy Gets Girl,” and the glass ceiling of social class in “Blue Surge” and “The Glory of Living.” Her latest play, which premiered at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago in 2014, is no exception.

“Luna Gale,” set in present-day Cedar Rapids, Iowa, examines the fate of a baby who has been taken from her young, crystal meth-addicted parents (Megan King and Jeremiah Clapp) by Caroline (Lee Roy Rogers), the beleaguered social worker assigned to the case. The baby, Luna Gale, is placed in the temporary custody of her born-again grandmother (Angela Pierce), who is receiving spiritual support and legal guidance from Pastor Jay (Donald Carrier).

As is her tendency, Gilman steers the core storyline into even deeper waters.

She underscores the inadequacies of underfunded and understaffed social service agencies by serving up a social worker worn thin and numb by decades of dysfunctional families and an impersonal bureaucracy, as personified by Caroline’s officious supervisor, Cliff (Kenneth Lee).

To further emphasize the sorry state of child and family services in this country, we witness one of Caroline’s success stories — a promising young woman named Lourdes (Athena Colon), who just aged-out of the system — quickly crash and burn.

As the play progresses, Gilman unveils repressed family secrets associated with sexual abuse and the legacy of alcoholism.

And, by having Caroline compromise her own unflinching integrity in order to help the recovering parents regain custody of their baby, Gilman examines the moral ambiguities associated with having to make bad choices when better choices are just not available.

In short, this play is overburdened with weighty, complex, highly dramatic issues and the probing questions they raise.

But this does not account for the opening night audience’s consternation, for this play is beautifully written.

The playwright earned a Pulitzer Prize nomination and a Guggenheim Fellowship for her earlier work and “Luna Gale” received the 2014 American Theatre Critics Association’s New Play Award as well as the Cleveland Play House’s Roe Green Award, which brings the country’s best playwrights to town to develop new work like this.

And the acting by this ensemble of players is excellent as well.

King and Clapp as Luna Gale’s strung-out yet sympathetic parents, Karlie and Peter, are particularly superb. Their talents are best displayed when, late in the play, one of them rises to the challenge of sobriety while the other falls. Both portrayals are layered with realism.

Pierce, as Karlie’s devout and estranged mother, and Lee as Caroline’s micromanaging supervisor, handle the playwright’s abrupt shifts in their characters’ intentions with incredible dexterity and conviction.

And while Rogers is not always on sure footing during the opening night performance, her depiction of social worker Caroline’s unsentimental professional detachment — and the reveal of her reasons for it — are intriguing.

The problem with this production lies in its direction by Austin Pendleton.

It starts with the decision to turn this two-act play (as produced by the Goodman) into an unrelenting two-hour one-act. It continues with the meta-theatrics of having each of the play’s six locations on stage simultaneously and side by side. Purposefully exposed support beams are seen in each of Michael Schweikardt’s set pieces and behind them is the theater’s barren backstage.

Characters walk through one set to get to another and make eye contact with others who are loitering on stage and not in their scene. Each scene is announced with a dramatic light shift and accompanying sound effect, designed by Keith Parham and Joshua Schmidt.

All this is an obvious but curious effort to accentuate artificiality in the storytelling, which flies in the face of the realism generated by the playwright and embraced by the performers. As such, this production of “Luna Gale” calls to mind low-budgeted PSA programming like “Legally Addicted,” which places the obligation to educate over the desire to entertain.

Perhaps the opening night audience would have been less disquieted if they received community service credit for their attendance. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “Luna Gale”

WHERE: Allen Theatre, 1407 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through March 20

TICKETS & INFO: $20-$78, call 216-241-6000 or visit clevelandplayhouse.com


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 6, 2016.

The ensemble of “And Then There Were None.” PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Whodunnit revealed in Great Lakes Theater’s ‘absolutely enthralling’ production of Agatha Christie’s ‘And Then There Were None’

By Bob Abelman

It is a long-standing theater tradition that those who attend an Agatha Christie murder mystery must never expose its secrets to those who will be attending it next.

This tradition ends here, for this review will divulge — against better judgment and the expressed wishes of the theater’s artistic director — precisely whodunnit in the current Great Lakes Theater production of “And Then There Were None.”

But, as befits the murder mystery formula, a little context must first be presented to set up, in dramatic fashion, the big reveal.

Christie’s ingenious play is based on the best-selling author’s biggest-selling novel, written in 1939. In it, 10 individuals — strangers to each other but apparently known to their affluent but absent hosts, Mr. and Mrs. U.N. Owen — are lured to a secluded home on a private island off the coast of Devon, England.

Each one of them, we are told by a recorded message upon their arrival, has blood on his or her hands.

Over cocktails and uncomfortable conversation, the guests start dying one by one in ever more inventive fashion and in accordance with a macabre nursery rhyme called “Ten Little Soldier Boys” that is framed and hanging (yes, hanging … cue murder mystery music) by the fireplace mantel.

The original, racially insensitive title of this rhyme — which was sung as a standard in blackface minstrel shows in the United Kingdom — was the novel’s original title as well. It was subsequently changed to “Ten Little Indians,” and for obvious reasons, was changed again to “And Then There Were None,” as were later printings of the novel and adaptations for film, television and the stage.

What has this to do with revealing whodunit? Nothing whatsoever. This was just a distracting and infuriating red herring, of which there are plenty in this play.

Those left standing after each murder, and all of us sitting in the audience in the intimate Hanna Theatre, desperately try to figure out just who the murderer might be. The trick is to do so by the end of this play’s two intermissions and before the last body hits the ground.

But enough exposition about a play famous for it. Whodunnit?

Was it Jonathan Dyrud as thrill-seeking Anthony Marston, who loves fast cars, fine drink, and preferably, both at the same time? Perhaps it’s Nick Steen as the dashing Philip Lombard or Laura Welsh Berg as the Owens’ spicy secretary Vera Claythorne.

Could it be Tom Ford as the officious Honorable Lawrence Wargrave or David Anthony Smith as William Blore, a retired detective?

How about Dougfred Miller as irascible Dr. Armstrong, Laura Perrotta as cold-hearted missionary Emily Brent, or Aled Davies’ despondent General Mackenzie?

Perhaps it’s M.A. Taylor as manservant Rogers or Maggie Kettering’s Mrs. Rogers.

The answer is … yes (cue murder mystery music). All of them are responsible for turning this chestnut of a play and its game-board characters into a most remarkable, absolutely enthralling production. They all dunnit.

Leave it to Cleveland’s classic company, with an ensemble of actors trained in Shakespeare-speak and years of the Bard’s dramas and comedies under their belts, to find layers of complexity in these simply drawn characters and master the precise rhythms and melodramatic moments in this murder mystery.

Just watch these players when they are not speaking and see all that they do to add texture to the scene, build anticipation toward the next spoken line, and create dynamic tension in this production. They are in the moment every moment. And so, vicariously, are we.

And they don’t dunnit alone. Director Charlie Fee beautifully choreographs the dance these characters do as they try to expose each other without exposing themselves. Count the beats it takes a character to avoid suspicion by moving from one spot in the spacious living room to another, and then move on again, and you’ll get a sense of the intricate coordination and immense artistry that go into staging 10 actors who share the same space. And then nine. And then eight.

The spacious, gorgeous post-deco living room, a glass-enclosed rotunda that overlooks nothing but sky and a menacing crag that buttresses up against the house, is designed with superb attention to detail by Russell Metheny. It is beautifully lit by Rick Martin and enhanced with ambient sound — waves, gulls, storms (cue murder mystery music) — by Joe Court. And the period costumes by Kim Krumm Sorenson are exquisite.

Everything in this production is done with complete conviction, resulting in an evening of theater as surprising as it is engaging.

But don’t tell anyone. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “And Then There Were None”

WHERE: Hanna Theatre, 2067 E. 14th St., Cleveland

WHEN: Through March 20

TICKETS & INFO: $13-$70. Call 216-241-6000 or visit to greatlakestheater.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.

Lead image: The ensemble of “And Then There Were None.” PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

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.

From left, Beth Wood, Nicole Sumlin, Abigail Anika Smigelj, Trey Gilpin PHOTO | Steve Wagner

Grand ambitions, good intentions not quite realized in Cleveland Public Theatre’s regional premiere of ‘Mr. Burns, A Post-Electric Play’

By Bob Abelman

Maybe it’s our newfound awareness that pollution and overconsumption are driving the planet to ruin. Perhaps it’s our increasing dependence on technology or the tension generated by the current state of global politics. There’s been a rash of post-apocalyptic fiction and television in recent years, from “The Hunger Games” trilogy and “The Maze Runner” to “The Walking Dead” and “Falling Skies.”

None is as funny as Anne Washburn’s wild, three-act dystopian comedy “Mr. Burns, A Post-Electric Play,” which opened at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., in 2012, had an Off-Broadway run in 2013, and is getting its regional premiere at Cleveland Public Theatre.

While the play is poignantly wrought and addresses serious, big-picture issues like the nature of human resilience, the importance of community, and the power of storytelling to sustain humanity and salvage culture, “The Simpsons” – TV’s longest-running sitcom – serves as its source material, which adds a delicious, head-shaking absurdity to the entire affair.

It is more than appropriate that “Mr. Burns” is being performed by the CPT — whose mission is to raise consciousness through adventurous new work — in its dilapidated Gordon Square Theatre space, where Wes Caulkin’s bare-bones set and dramatic lighting make it easy to imagine the apocalypse.

At the helm is Matthew Wright, whose brilliant direction kick-started CPT’s inventive and hilarious production of “Spirits to Enforce” not long ago.

The first act of “Mr. Burns” takes place in the immediate aftermath of a global apocalyptic event, as a group of worn and weary strangers gather around a campfire. To distract each other from the recent calamity and help stave off the gloom, they collectively recount classic tales, settling on — of all things — the second episode of the fifth season of “The Simpsons,” called “Cape Feare.”

In the second act, seven years later, the survivors are a touring theatrical troupe and the keepers of our culture. They barter for goods by recreating, re-enacting and embellishing memories of the sacred stories of episodic television, with commercials, and performing a hilarious medley of tunes by Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, Kanye West, Beyoncé and others, set to Holly Handman-Lopez’s fun choreography. By doing so, they keep the pilot light of civilization burning in this dark, post-electric world, even though stories have now become monetized and the memories they share are grounded in painful nostalgia.

By the final act, 75 years into the future, “The Simpsons” is the stuff of cultural mythology. The meaning of the show’s stories is profoundly allegorical and the characters’ status has been raised from lovable archetype to iconic hero.

Staged as a pompous Gilbert and Sullivan musical pageant a la “The Mikado,” with a score by Michael Friedman (“Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson”), the entire “Cape Feare” episode is performed. In it, a young Bart Simpson (a wonderful Nicole Sumlin), his father Homer (a spot-on Trey Gilpin), mother Marge (Beth Woods) and sister Lisa (Abigail Anika Svigelj) are stalked by the murderous Sideshow Bob/Mr. Burns (Evan Thompson) and his henchmen Itchy (Cathleen O’Malley) and Scratchy (Tim Keo).

All this, with the addition of Megan Elk, performing operatically in classical Japanese Noh style, is done in eerie Simpsons-inspired masks and costuming, designed by Chialla Geib-Fenske and Inda Blatch-Gelb, and accompanied by the haunting rhythms of musicians Brad Wyner and Ryan McDermott.

Some degree of Simpsons literacy, a working knowledge of the 1991 Martin Scorsese film “Cape Fear” on which the Simpsons episode is based, and a passing familiarity with contemporary pop music are certainly pluses when watching this show, if not required.

What is required is stamina, for this clever play is given a rather plodding production.

Hindered by voices that often fail to reach beyond the sixth row of seating in this cavernous theater, it is hard to pick up on many of the play’s clever references, access its layers of serious intention, or feel engaged in the witty exchanges between members of this talented troupe. Too much of the intrigue and momentum generated in Act 1 dissipates during a leaden and occasionally clumsy Act 2 and drags to a conclusion in an Act 3 that seems to go on forever.

Midway through, when the touring theater troupe is working on the staging of “Cape Feare,” they discuss amping up the realism. “Meaningless entertainment,” someone suggests, “is actually really hard.” So, apparently, is doing meaningful entertainment in the guise of something meaningless. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “Mr. Burns, A Post-Electric Play”

WHERE: Cleveland Public Theatre, 6415 Detroit Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through March 5

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$30. Call 216-631-2727 or visit cptonline.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 Feb. 21, 2016.

Lead image: From left, Beth Wood, Nicole Sumlin, Abigail Anika Smigelj, Trey Gilpin PHOTO | Steve Wagner

Ellis C. Dawson III, center, with the cast of “In the Heights.” PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

Phenomenal storytellers help raise up Beck Center’s ‘In the Heights’

By Bob Abelman

The Upper Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights has gone through many changes since the early 1900s, when it was largely populated by Jewish and Irish immigrants from Europe.

By midcentury, Soviet refugees were the dominant demographic, who were then replaced by families from the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Puerto Rico. By the 1980s, gang activity infiltrated Washington Heights, resulting in a crime rate that rivaled nearby Harlem. In the 1990s, the neighborhood became the largest drug distribution center in the five boroughs and beyond.

This is not quite the welcoming world that’s been created by Lin-Manuel Miranda (music/lyrics) and Quiara Alegria Hudes (book) for their 2008 Tony Award-winning musical “In the Heights.” Their Washington Heights is a highly romanticized and thoroughly sanitized celebration of three generations of Hispanic families who are just trying to carve out a living and make this piece of the island their home.

And it is on display at the Beck Center for the Arts in Lakewood.

Like the cups of cafe caliente, liviano y dulce that the Latin-American locals purchase each morning from the corner stop-n-shop, this musical’s hip-hop-and salsa-based score is hot, its slice-of-life storytelling is light and easy, and it is told by abundantly sweet and absolutely endearing characters with sentimental simplicity.

Even the spray-painted images that cover the buildings in this little neighborhood, courtesy of Graffiti Pete (Warren Egypt Franklin), are art rather than an artifact of gang activity, delinquency or territoriality.

This delightful, feel-good musical explores small problems of the heart rather than anything overtly serious or dramatic. We are invited into the Heights to observe the budding romance between a shy Usnavi (Ellis C. Dawson III) — the show’s lovable, rap-happy narrator — and the gorgeous Vanessa (Christiana Perrault), experience the elderly Abuela Claudia (Jessie Cope Miller) winning the lottery, and share the hardship of Camila and Kevin Rosario (Kelsey Baehrens and Jared Leal) selling their struggling gypsy cab company to pay for their proud daughter’s college tuition.

But there is also an undercurrent of urban renewal and gentrification, which is threatening to change the area’s complexion once again as locals discuss moving to more affordable Bronx and Queens.

The threat is very real in this particular production of “In The Heights,” for director Victoria Bussert singlehandedly advances the neighborhood’s urban renewal ahead of schedule by casting African-American and Caucasian actors in roles built specifically for Latinos.

This is not intended to make a statement of any kind. The production is a collaboration with Baldwin Wallace University’s music theater program and at the mercy of the existing talent pool and the school’s recruitment efforts.

Still, such ethnic-insensitive casting is so counterintuitive in a show like this — with songs like “Inutil,” “No Me Diga” and “Siempre” in Act I and “Hundreds of Stories” in Act II — that it unavoidably undermines Lin-Manuel Miranda’s efforts to showcase Latino talent and culture, albeit within Broadway musical theater parameters and with Broadway musical theater sensibilities. And it is impossible to ignore.

Fortunately for us, BW’s recruitment efforts attract some of the best and hardest- working actors, singers and dancers in the country. These young, talented performers understand full well Broadway musicals and, under Bussert’s creative vision and supervision, fill the stage with energy and remarkable execution. The result is an immensely entertaining production.

The adorable Dawson is an immediately accessible, always interesting Usnavi. He handles all the character’s freestyling wordplay and narrative responsibilities with ease and notable grace.

Other standout performers in an ensemble where everyone delivers include Livvy Marcus as Nina, the Rosarios’ daughter, whose beautiful and heartfelt rendition of “Breathe” is breathtaking; Michael Canada as Sonny, Usnavi’s hustling cousin; Malik Victorian’ as Benny, who is Nina’s earnest love interest; and Isabel Plana and MacKenzie Wright, as the gossiping beauty shop owner Daniela and her sidekick Carla, who deliver much of the show’s comic relief with enormous charm.

Scenic and lighting designers Jordan Janota and Jeff Herrmann beautifully replicate the busy corner of Washington Heights found in the original and touring productions, while adding conductor David Pepin and his incredible nine-piece band on stage in the shadows of the George Washington Bridge. Pepin’s efforts, and those of hip-hop/merengue choreographer Gregory Daniels, drive this music-centric show and are the sources of its much-needed Latin soul.

Not long ago, this column revealed how a Semitic-lite community theater production of “Fiddler on the Roof” managed to thrive on the brilliance of the music and the merits of the story. This Latino-lite “In the Heights” soars because of its phenomenal storytellers. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “In the Heights”

WHERE: Beck Center for the Arts, 17801 Detroit Ave., Lakewood

WHEN: Through Feb. 28

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$31, call 216-521-2540 or go to beckcenter.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 Feb. 15, 2016.

Lead image: Ellis C. Dawson III, center, with the cast of “In the Heights.” PHOTO | Roger Mastroianni

The cast of “If/Then.” PHOTO | Joan Marcus

There’s much to love in touring ‘If/Then’ at Playhouse Square, but not enough

By Bob Abelman

The 2014 Broadway musical “If/Then,” now on tour and on stage at Playhouse Square, revolves around newly divorced 38-year-old Elizabeth, an urban planner living in Phoenix who moves to New York City for a fresh start.

The play opens with Elizabeth (Jackie Burns) meeting up with new friends Kate (Tamyra Gray) and her girlfriend Anne (Janine DiVita), who insist she go by the freewheeling “Liz” as a sign of her new attitude and openness to new experiences.

She also runs into old boyfriend Lucas (Anthony Rapp), a social activist, who recalls her drive and passion and suggests she reclaim her college nickname, “Beth,” and start making professional connections in the city.

When she meets the thoroughly likable Josh (Matthew Hydzik), Elizabeth has an important life-altering decision to make: carouse as Liz or build a career as Beth. Not an easy choice for a woman who has a tendency to make all the wrong choices and then second-guess herself by wondering “what if?”

Rather than address Elizabeth’s midlife crisis, this musical avoids it by exploring the parallel paths of both Liz and Beth to see how each plays out. Think “It’s a Wonderful Life” with dance breaks.

It matters little that no explanation is given for why or how Elizabeth’s trajectory divides, for this musical is an exposition-heavy, song-saturated fable by Tom Kitt (music) and Brian Yorkey’s (book and lyrics) as envisioned by director Michael Greif.

The New York City in this “If/Then” is a highly sanitized, color-saturated, ultra-contemporary version of the real thing, comprised of minimalistic, handsomely crafted set pieces by Mark Wendland and a backdrop of beautifully conceived digital animation designed by Peter Nigrini and Dan Scully. The production values are astounding.

This world is populated by young, affable and good-looking characters with nary a care save for personal growth and professional development. Even people wandering city streets and riding subways fit this description, moving in perfect unison to the rapid-fire rhythms of Larry Keigwin’s modern dance choreography, which is at once beautiful and bizarre.

As Liz, Elizabeth marries Josh and becomes a caring, devoted mother and teacher.

As Beth, she becomes a calculating, high-powered city planner under the tutelage of married but interested mover-and-shaker Stephen (Daren A. Herbert).

We glimpse each of these lives by way of alternating scenes and musical numbers performed by exceptional, Broadway-seasoned featured players and an equally talented eight-member ensemble. A superb orchestra comprised largely of local talent under Kyle C. Norris’ direction accompanies their efforts.

There is much to love in this musical. But you will surely find yourself second-guessing some of its production choices and, like Elizabeth, wondering “what if?” throughout.

The songs seem to have been written for a different musical. Dichotomous drama is nothing new to Kitt and Yorkey, who created the Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning “Next to Normal.” That offered a dark and vivid portrait of a bipolar, manic-depressive and delusional woman whose disease infiltrates and infects her family. Each song was an expression of excruciating frustration and heartbreak.

The similarly sensitive and reflective compositions of “If/Then” come across as dreary and monotonous coming out of the mouths of these comparatively privileged, healthy and one-dimensional characters.

What if … the music better matched the show’s message and motif?

Another problem is Idina Menzel’s fingerprints all over this production. “If/Then” was showcased in Washington, D.C., in 2013, opened on Broadway in 2014, and went on tour in Denver in 2015 with the distinctive, Tony Award-winning Menzel playing Elizabeth. She left the tour in Dallas just weeks before the Cleveland engagement and Burns – who understudied for her on Broadway and on tour – took over.

Burns is a performer of incredible vocal strength, range and tone. She absolutely soars in the closer, “Always Starting Over.” But she doesn’t yet own it or any other trademark power ballad built for Menzel.

What if … these songs were performed on Burns’ terms?

A final and, perhaps, the biggest concern is that neither variation of Elizabeth’s life is that compelling. This leaves audiences less likely to wonder “what if” when both are explored for nearly three hours than repeat the title of a song early in the musical where neither Liz nor Beth can believe her own poor choices. The song is called “What the F—-?” CV

On Stage

WHAT: “If/Then”

WHERE: Connor Palace, 1511 Euclid Ave., Cleveland

WHEN: Through Feb. 21

TICKETS & INFO: $10-$100, call 216-241-6000 or visit playhousesquare.com


 

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 Feb. 12, 2016.

Joseph Milan as Glas, from left, Leah Smith as Rosie, and Nathan Tolliver as Randall. PHOTO |Celeste Cosentino

Ensemble Theatre’s ‘Slow Dance on the Killing Ground’ stumbles despite graceful production

By Bob Abelman

A young black fugitive, a political refugee from Nazi Germany, and a Jewish girl seeking a backstreet abortion walk into a room.

This sounds like the setup for a bad joke with a distasteful punch line, but it is the plot summary of William Hanley’s three-act play “Slow Dance on the Killing Ground,” at Ensemble Theatre.

Written at a time when the existential plays of Jean-Paul Sartre, the avant-garde work of Samuel Beckett, and the biting dialogue of Edward Albee offered theatergoers creative, cutting-edge social commentary, Hanley’s drama was more concerned with the social dynamics — the slow dance — that take place when a diverse group of helpless, victimized strangers are confined to the same small space and bare their wounds.

Never a crowd-pleaser — an early New York Times review noted that the words coming out of actors’ mouths seemed to be accompanied by the sound of typewriter keys — “Slow Dance” lasted a mere 88 performances on Broadway in 1964. Its Off-Broadway revival in 1970 stayed less than a month.

Recent productions have not fared any better. The more removed the play is from its roots in the theater scene of the ’60s, the more contrived this chance meeting in a Brooklyn candy store on the night that war criminal Adolf Eichmann was executed seems to be. And with each passing year, the time-locked dramatic license that allowed characters to break into brooding self-disclosures and lengthy, hyper-theatrical monologues grows increasingly dated.

Although an odd choice by Ensemble Theatre, its production does come with some creative decisions by director Greg White and his design team (Ron Newell, Meg Parrish and Steven Barton) that mask much of the play’s unsightly age spots.

One of the boldest was combining the three acts of “Slow Dance” — which the playwright labeled Pas de Deux, Pas de Trois, and Coda — into two. This speeds along and even circumvents some of the characters’ endless introspection and allows the audience to better connect with each character without so many intermissions. The downside is that the slow dance becomes a tarantella at times in order to keep each act from running too long, which sacrifices some drama for alacrity.

Three of the best decisions were casting Nathan Tolliver as the talkative, tormented, game-playing Randall; Joseph Milan as the world-weary shop owner Glas, who wants nothing more than to suffer in silence and solitude; and Leah Smith as Rosie from Riverdale, whose insecurities about her looks and personality define her existence.

These actors brilliantly capture the psychological essence of their characters, as well as their distinctive speech patterns, and prioritize authenticity over the playwright’s fascination with the metaphoric.

Case in point: Late in the play, it is revealed that each character bears the immense guilt of having denied life to another person, which Hanley uses as a device to add mystery to the proceedings and stir up the group dynamics. But these actors wear the weight of those feelings on their sleeves from their opening scenes. This gives their characters an added layer of complexity and makes for some truly intriguing acting choices on stage that are not in the script.

This production tries and most often succeeds in finding a balance between the realism the performers embrace and the outdated theatricality the script demands. Sometimes, however, both approaches end up leading the slow dance, resulting in the production stepping on its own toes.

This happens during each character’s confessional monologue, which White stages at the very edge of the performance space and inches from the audience. The speech could either be the hyper-theatrical moment it was intended to be, where the actor is bathed in isolating light and delivers the speech to the universe. Or the actor could break the fourth wall and have a genuine moment with the audience. Instead, these moments are stuck in the middle, with the actor talking at us but not with us, and production values never shifting to facilitate the storytelling one way or the other.

“Slow Dance on the Killing Ground” is most certainly a troublesome play, but Ensemble Theatre works valiantly to make it an accessible and interesting piece of work. CV

On Stage

WHAT: “Slow Dance on the Killing Ground”

WHERE: Ensemble Theatre, 2843 Washington Blvd., Cleveland Heights

WHEN: Through Feb. 28

TICKETS & INFO: $12-$24, call 216-321-2930 or visit tickets@ensemble-theatre.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 Feb. 8, 2016.