Tuesday, September 18, 2012

An Interview with Brian Stokes Mitchell

By Scott Dowd

Entire contents copyright ©Fearless Designs, Inc.  All rights reserved.


Louisville Orchestra returns to its home in the newly renovated Whitney Hall this month with its traditional opening night gala concert, Fanfara. Music Director Jorge Mester has invited Principal Pops Conductor Bob Bernhardt to share the Fanfara stage in a show of force to launch the Orchestra’s seventy-fifth season. An audience favorite for three decades, Berhardt has loaded the scales with a stellar Pops Series to mark his own milestone season with the organization. Next month, he and the Louisville Orchestra will be joined by Tony Award-winner Brian Stokes Mitchell – the versatile star of Broadway, television and film – who will sing some of his favorites from the best days of the Great White Way. I caught up with Stokes as he was navigating his rental car through crowded New York City streets. He was heading toward a recording studio in Yonkers where he was putting the finishing touches on his new album, Simply Broadway, which he just released on August 31. 




BSM: I’ve been working on this album of classic Broadway tunes. My last solo album was more Broadway classics from my point of view, utilizing influences from many different styles, including jazz and world music. This time I decided to do a classic Broadway-style album with selections from the 1940s to the 1970s. I’m a big baritone singer, and that’s the kind of music I’ve found people like to hear me sing. Composers of that era really wrote for baritones in a way that allows me get under them.

SD: What are some of your favorite songs that you really enjoy singing?

BSM: They are the songs that I and people who appreciate Broadway love – like “Impossible Dream”; “This Nearly Was Mine”; Stephen Sondheim’s “Sorry-Grateful,” which is a song of his I love from the show Company; and another one of his from the early ’80s called “Finishing the Hat.” Camelot has a lot of great possibilities, and I’m doing “How to Handle a Woman.” I have a concert planned at Lincoln Center around this project, and I’ve done it a few times lately in preparation for releasing the album in time for Christmas and the holidays.

SD: Is this concert you’re doing similar to what you will bring to Louisville?

BSM: Louisville is more orchestral, but there will be some crossover. The concert in Louisville is, of course, with a big full orchestra, and that is very different from the album. The album is much more simple and bare bones in its approach, because I really wanted to put the focus on the singer and the song.

SD: You have performed with a number of other major orchestras, including the National Symphony Orchestra with Leonard Slatkin. When did you decide you wanted to sing with orchestras?

BSM: That happened almost nine years ago when my son was born. I decided to take a bit of a sabbatical from Broadway, and the natural thing to do was to go into concerts. I started off small with cabaret. That took off and quickly grew into performances with orchestras.

SD: Is that pretty steady?

BSM: As you well know, orchestras can be up and down with their season and their finances. We were actually first scheduled to do this concert a year ago. I didn’t know if it would happen, and I am ecstatic that the concert has been rescheduled because it means the community is supporting the orchestra and that those musicians are able to make a living. I’m glad to be coming and really happy that things are going better in Louisville.

SD: Have you ever worked with Bob Bernhardt before?

BSM: I sure have. I love Bob.

SD: One of the challenges to putting on a concert like this is the charts – usually the soloist has to provide his or her own.

BSM: A lot of people have written for me over the years. My first solo orchestral concert was at Carnegie Hall. To prepare, I contacted all of my favorite orchestrators – people I had worked with and had come to know during my career. Among them was Jonathan Tunick who is, of course, Stephen Sondheim’s orchestrator; Don Sebesky, one of the greatest orchestrators on the planet who did the orchestrations for Kiss Me, Kate and a lot of other shows and a number of albums; Jorge Calendrelli and Larry Blank, both great orchestrators. I chose people whose music I knew and who think about music in a way that makes sense to me.

SD: You have worked with these people throughout your career, which has been exceptionally broad and successful even in show business terms. That career has even taken you twice to the White House. How was that?

BSM: The first time I performed in the White House was for President Clinton. It was the first time I was ever in the White House. So to be performing for the President of the United States and his wife, who are sitting ten feet from you, looking at you, watching you perform in the East Room filled with politicos from all over the world, who you’ve seen on television day-in and day-out – it was like, “Oh man! This is an incredible life experience!” Overall, it was a good feeling, but also a little frightening.

SD: Was there a difference in the feeling the second time for President Obama?

BSM: They were all very warm and genuine people. I first met President Obama at a fundraiser here in New York. It’s interesting: my wife noted the difference between the two. When Bill Clinton walked into the room, everybody’s head turned because he comes in with this great presence. Obama was just suddenly there talking to everyone. He was already engaged and connected to people, but there was no fanfare. He does it in a very quiet way. It’s similar, I think, to their presidencies and personal manner as well.

SD: It sounds like a humbling experience.

BSM: It was. But when you’re walking all over the White House looking in rooms and places most people don’t get to go, you begin to feel like this special VIP!

SD: Right now you’re working on the new album, Simply Broadway, and doing benefit concerts for the Irish Rep, among others. What’s next for you? Are you going back to Broadway at some point?

BSM: I’m not looking at anything for Broadway right now. I’ve done two episodes of Glee for television as one of the character Rachel’s two dads; Jeff Goldblum is the other father. They have asked us to do more, but I don’t know when those are going to be. I just finished a voice-over for a PBS show on presidents and religion, which is really fascinating. It’s about the separation of church and state, how that came about and why. But concerts are the main thing I’m doing now. I love them because I have nearly complete control to sing what I want, say what I want, go where I want. Sometimes it’s just with a pianist. I work with a jazz quartet a lot, and sometimes it’s with a full symphony orchestra. For me, it doesn’t get better than that and it’s not eight shows a week.

SD: That you love to sing is a given, but do you miss acting when you are away from it for a while?

BSM: Yes and no, because I also act in my concerts. It fills all my needs. I have a connection to a live audience, which is very satisfying to me. My approach to a song is more as an actor than a singer. I look for the acting beats in the song. The songs that tend to appeal to me are the ones with strong emotional arcs. They are like mini-scenes to me, so I feel I’m giving a full-on performance with each one.

SD: You received the Tony Award for Best Actor in 2000 for your portrayal of Fred/Petruchio in Kiss Me, Kate, and you have been nominated for three other Tonys. You were Mr. Watson in the TriStar feature film Jumping the Broom last year. You were a regular on the television series Trapper John, M.D. and now have a recurring role on television’s Glee. You mentioned that you’ve done voice-overs, released solo albums and built a successful concert career. Is there any unexplored direction that interests you?

BSM: You know, I call myself the luckiest actor in the world because I seem to have gotten to do all the things I ever wanted to do and more. I’ve always enjoyed my career, no matter where it’s been. Whether I was working for almost no money in a repertory company, doing television, on Broadway, or now doing concerts – I’ve enjoyed every minute of the journey.

SD: Was it tough for you breaking into the business?

BSM: No. I never had to wait tables or pump gas…I never even borrowed money from my parents. That’s why I’m so lucky as an actor. I’ve been able to make my living doing just that since I was 17 years old. Because I’ve been doing it so long, it has allowed me the opportunity to do a lot of different kinds of things. What I would like to do, actually, is more television.

SD: What is it about that medium that appeals to you?

BSM: It fits my schedule and lets me better manage my personal and family life. I enjoy doing it, and the exposure is great. I love working with the level of talent there, and it flexes a different set of muscles. But if the right Broadway show came along, I would absolutely do it.

SD: What was it like standing on stage accepting the Tony Award?

BSM: That’s a milestone like performing at the White House. Every performer dreams of winning a Tony, or an Oscar, or an Emmy…and to finally have that dream come true is a really neat thing. But it’s only partially about talent. It’s also about timing and getting in the right show. You may give a great performance in a mediocre show, but you won’t get the awards – that happens all the time. I have tried to never live for the awards. When I talk to young people at colleges or universities, I always tell them not to make that their goal. For me, the goal was always to work consistently and to work with great people. The Tony then becomes the icing on the cake. It’s not the award itself – it’s the fact that you got it. What’s more important is that I have “Tony Award-winner” that now goes along with my name as a permanent attachment.

SD: You also hold the title of Chairman of the Board.

BSM: I do chair the board of the Actors Fund, and I am glad for the opportunity to give back. I feel very blessed. So whether it’s kids, the Actors Fund, a charity event like a fundraiser for the Irish Rep, or a retired member of IATSE [the stagehands union] who needs a hand, I’m glad to lend mine. I just think it’s good karma.

SD: The New York Times once called you “the last leading man.” How do you feel about that?

BSM: I’ve always thought of myself as a character actor. People see me as a leading man, but I’m kind of like a character actor in a leading man’s skin. For me, Fred Graham and Petruchio [Kiss Me, Kate] and Coalhouse Walker [Ragtime] are character roles. People think of the “leading man” as the big handsome man who comes on and sings the big-hit song, charms all of the ladies, and leaves. Those are not the most interesting roles for me.

SD: You’re heading up to the recording studio in Yonkers. Everyone has their own style for managing a session. How do you approach it?

BSM: I wear a lot of hats. This is a minimalist album, and I’ve been working with pianist Tedd Firth on it. I wanted to keep the original spirit of these songs but rethink the arrangements. When people listen I don’t want them to think, “Oh, that’s really different.” I want them to feel like it’s an enhanced arrangement or maybe even the original. I’ve played the piano since I was six; I’ve studied orchestration, conducting and film scoring – and even did some film scoring when I was in Los Angeles. Music is constantly playing in my head like a radio station, so I’m always hearing different things and I get different versions of a song as I’m thinking about it. Then I work with Tedd – he has the facility I wish I had. We think about music in similar ways, so I can say, “I want to do something impressionistic here,” or “Let’s do something kind of silly and wacky.” From there, we go back and forth and he’ll usually have better voicing or harmonic ideas. Then I take that back to the studio in my apartment and do the editing with Pro Tools.

SD: You are producing the album as well?

BSM: I am. As I’m editing the tracks, I’m listening to us work through maybe thirty takes of a song and refining it as we go along. That might be something I release for students some day.

SD: Audio engineering isn’t the kind of thing everyone just picks up. How did you get into that?

BSM: My dad was an electronics engineer back in Seattle and built the hi-fi stereos we had in our house. He’s 92 now and still a gigantic fan of jazz. Growing up, we would wake up to these beautifully rendered jazz recordings playing on state-of-the-art equipment. As he replaced it, my brother and I would get the old equipment. So from the age of eight or nine we always had a tape recorder that we could play with. First it was a reel-to-reel, then reel-to-reel with sound-on-sound so you could get the feel of multiple tracks, and then more and more advanced. When I got out on my own, I bought an 8-track recording system, then a 16-track, then a 16-track digital system, and grew along with the industry. Since I am largely self-taught, a professional can do it a lot faster. It’s a lot of fun to do it, but it’s also incredibly tedious.

SD: Speaking of industry changes, the way music is distributed continues to evolve at quantum level. How are you navigating it?

BSM: I’m glad you asked me that, because I am producing this album without the backing of a record company. The huge record companies are dying because they don’t really have anything much to offer an artist anymore. In the old days they would front the cash and handle the distribution to record stores and slip some payola to the right people to get it on the radio. Now most people get their music from the internet. There aren’t even record stores anymore! When I debuted my last album in 2007, we were at the largest record store in New York City – Virgin Records on Times Square. It doesn’t exist now! So I thought, “All I need to do is put out product and let people know where to get it.” If you make it, they will come…and that’s how I’m going to market this album.

SD: I imagine that will be on your web site?

BSM: Yes, at www.BrianStokes.com. I’ll also have information about the album when I come to Louisville in October to sing with Bob and the Louisville Orchestra. It’s going to be an entertaining evening; and anyone who loves classic Broadway fare will, I hope, walk away happy and satisfied.

Brian Stokes Mitchell will sing with the Louisville Orchestra as part of the 2012-13 Pops Series in Whitney Hall on October 13 at 8 p.m. For ticket information, call The Kentucky Center Box Office at 502.584.7777, or go to www.kentuckycenter.org.



Monday, September 17, 2012

How “Wicked” Is It?


Wicked
Music and Lyrics Stephen Schwartz
Book Winnie Holzman
Director Joe Mantello
Choreographer Wayne Cilento

Review by Kathi E. B. Ellis.
Entire contents are copyright © 2012 Kathi E. B. Ellis. All rights reserved.


Jeanna de Waal as Glinda and Christine Dwyer as
Elphaba in the national tour of Wicked.
Photo courtey of PNC Broadway in Louisville.

I’m probably in a minority, but, Wicked underwhelmed me when I saw it – for my first time – on opening night at the Whitney Hall. I’ve known about it of course; heard “the” song sung in many contexts; seen images of both Elphaba and Glinda; and learned of its origins in the book of the same name by Gregory Maguire which, he avers, is a not-prequel to L. Frank Baum’s classic The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

So why did I feel underwhelmed last Thursday? Certainly, it was a full house, with energy buzzing as folks settled in with cursory glances at the map of Oz on the show curtain, occasional glimpses of the spot operators situated on either side of the proscenium, and the brooding mechanical dragon overseeing all from atop the proscenium arch. The set by the legendary Eugene Lee is impressive, a series of interlocking, oversized moving parts reminiscent of late 19th century science fantasy.  Susan Hilferty’s costumes are bold and quirky, clearly placing us in a parallel quasi-Gothic dystopia.

And, in this touring production, maybe that is where my problem lay. None of the performances were outsized enough to top the production values – with the exception of Madame Morrible (Marilyn Caskey). To be fair to the performers, neither the score nor the book helps them out much. With themes of difference and ostracization, power and corruption, finding one’s truth – really big ideas – it would be powerful to have these ideas articulated in ways more layered than how these characters are constructed. Certainly, the themes from Mr. Baum’s books have been debated for more than a hundred years, with his characters pulled metaphorically into current events across the decades. But there’s not much metaphor in the musical Wicked. The tropes here are leaden and obvious. The inevitable adaptations from novel to musical book may have contributed to a flattening out of more complex themes.

Ms. de Waal’s Glinda is charming and bubbly (literally) and she hits the popular-girl notes with assurance, especially in the scene when she attempts a makeover of Elphaba (‘Popular’). There’s a delightful moment at the beginning of the second act when Glinda, now working with the Wizard (Paul Kreppel) and his press secretary Madame Morrible, greets the Citizens of Oz in a tableau with a wink and a nod to Evita. Christine Dwyer’s Elphaba is fierce and powerful, but is undercut by indeterminate staging, which frequently leaves the performer disconnected from setting and others. She and Dr. Dillamond (Timothy Britten Parker) share one of the show’s few successfully understated moments, “Something Bad,” lifting what could have been a merely stereotypical moment of alienation into a poignant exploration of otherness. Ms. Caskey’s Morrible morphs deliciously from the headmistress who favors the wealthy and attractive, to the manipulative on-message PR aide. Paul Kreppel’s Wizard is disarmingly charming, down to the soft shoe shuffle – you see it coming a mile away, but his charm defuses the predictable moment into a delighted smile. Fiyore (Billy Harrigan Tighe) is appropriately straw-headed; Boq (Michael Wartella) is every teen’s nightmare of a rejected crush; and Nessarose (Catherine Charlebois) is, for me, the least successfully drawn character, moving predictably from cliché to cliché. Dashi’ Mitchell’s Chistery was fascinating to watch; the complete commitment to that character’s physicality frequently drew my attention to this silent character.

The one take-away number from this production is, of course, “Defying Gravity” – and I found myself waiting for it during Act One. And yet, when it arrived, this too was one of the moments in which I was underwhelmed. Ms. De Waal and Ms. Dwyer were committed to the moment. But I was all too aware of the limitations of gravity in the way this is staged. With this title, clearly an audience can anticipate an airborne moment; the broomstick flies on mid-song – great, this is a good start! Equally clearly, anytime a performer is flown safety is paramount. However, the clunkiness of the process of getting Elphaba into the final, impressive moment of the act detracted from the brilliance of Kenneth Posner’s radiant lighting effect, surrounding Ms. Dwyer’s defiant, triumphant face centrally-suspended within the proscenium arch.

On opening night I spent much of the ensemble numbers trying to understand the lyrics in the moment. The balance between the orchestra – which included nine local musicians in addition to the regular ensemble that travels with the production – and the voices was challenging. While understanding the pressures of a touring production, this is one area that can make or break an audience’s response to a performance. The opening night’s audience’s response was overwhelmingly positive, with each number receiving generous applause and a widespread standing ovation at the end of the performance.

As a sometime man of the theatre, one wonders how Mr. Baum would have responded to this theatrical extravaganza, embodying the creation of a parallel world to the one his original books created for children.

Wicked

September 12- 30, 2012

PNC Broadway in Louisville
The Kentucky Center
501 West Main Street
Louisville, KY, 40202
502-589-7777

Spider Woman Is a “Landmark” Production for Pandora


Kiss of the Spider Woman

Book by Terrence McNally
Music by John Kander, Lyrics by Fred Ebb
Based on the Novel by Manuel Puig
Directed by Michael J. Drury

Reviewed by Craig Nolan Highley

Entire contents copyright © 2012 by Craig Nolan Highley. All rights reserved.

Janelle-Renee Hunnicutt as the Spider Woman and
Neill Robertson as Molina in
Kiss of the Spider Woman.
Photo by Michael Drury
There are times when I write these reviews that I struggle for days to find the right words to convey my opinion of a given production. There have been times when I try very hard not to be too cruel to a production that is lacking, or not to gush too overtly about a show I found to be really outstanding. But I can’t recall when I have ever had the extreme number of superlatives that come to mind when I try to describe Pandora’s latest production.

I believe I am not exaggerating when I say that this is one of the greatest locally produced theatrical pieces I have had the pleasure of seeing. It is certainly the best thing I’ve seen in the small space of the Henry Clay Theater, and truly a landmark piece for Pandora. The company will be hard pressed to ever top it.

On the surface, it’s an ugly story that takes place during a particularly ugly place in history. In 1977, when Argentina is in a state of political uproar, an effeminate gay man called Molina (Neill Robertson) is thrown into a hellish prison on a trumped-up charge. Molina is obsessed with the movies, and only manages to survive his state by dreaming up memories of his favorite movie star, Aurora (Janelle-Renee Hunnicut).

His new cellmate is Valentin (Mason Stewart), a political prisoner and part of a revolutionary group trying to overthrow the government. The two men form an uneasy friendship that may or may not lead to love, but is complicated by a sadistic warden (Andy Epstein) and his guards as they try to force Molina to spy on Valentin.

It is a very dark tale from start to finish, and the attention to detail is astonishing. In the shadows behind the main action, for example, we can see the other prisoners living in as bad or worse conditions. In one corner a man flagellates himself after being sodomized by his cellmate; another rocks and murmurs to himself. It truly creates a realm of humiliation and human decay, and to call the effect unsettling is an understatement.

In stark contrast, the score by Kander and Ebb, especially the numbers performed by Aurora, are bright and ebullient. It is easy to see why Molina wants to escape from his nightmarish existence into this fantasy world.

That’s not to say that the music doesn’t have its poignant moments as well. The soulful, heart-wrenching songs performed by Molina and Valentin, together and separately, are as powerful as the nightmarish imagery.

This fantastic production is carried by two amazing performances by Robertson and Stewart. Robertson avoids any camp or caricature in his portrayal of Molina, giving the character a fragile dignity that never feels forced as the character arcs from the frail victim to the strong hero he ultimately becomes. As Valentin, Stewart is also amazing as we watch him travel almost a complete reversal of Molina’s arc; starting off as brash and swaggering, but showing more and more of a sensitive side as the play goes on. Absolutely stellar work.

Hunnicut has a lovely voice and is a beautiful woman but strangely underplays the role of Aurora; it’s a role that calls for a larger-than-life persona, and she doesn’t quite pull it off. It isn’t a bad performance by any means, but not quite big enough. It’s the only thing about this production that didn’t quite work.

In the supporting roles, nearly everyone in the cast gets his or her moment to shine, with especially strong work by Epstein, Carol Tyree Williams, Joseph Hatfield, Ben Gierhart and Patrick Vaughn.

On the technical side, things are just as amazing, especially the way the wrinkles in the black curtains of the backdrop combine with lighting effects to create a giant spider web. Costumes and props are also period appropriate. The choreography by Christopher Gilbert is also spectacular and deserves a mention.

It’s not exactly a feel-good show, but nonetheless very moving and one I have not been able to stop thinking about.

Kiss of the Spider Woman

Featuring Blair Boyd, Patrick Brophy, Adam Caperton, Nick Duett, Andy Epstein, Ben Gierhart, Christopher Gilbert, Joseph Hatfield, Janelle-Renee Hunnicut, Steve Jones, Sean Patrick, Gerald Robertson, Neill Robertson, Eric Sharp, Mason Stewart, Patrick Vaughn and Carol Tyree Williamson.

September 13- 23

Pandora Productions
at The Henry Clay Theatre
604 S. Third St.
Louisville, KY
(502) 585-5306

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Walden Theatre presents Summer Brave, or Picnic, Take Two

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Playwright William Inge

Summer Brave

Written by William Inge.
Directed by Charlie Sexton

Reviewed by Keith Waits.

Entire contents are copyright © 2012 Keith Waits. All rights reserved. 

Summer Brave is a curiosity: an instance where a noted playwright was dissatisfied enough with a hugely successful work that he felt compelled to rewrite it. William Inge wrote the classic Picnic in 1953 and watched it win awards, launch careers, enjoy a long run on Broadway and then be adapted into a popular, if overly glossy film. Yet three years later he felt compelled to rework the material into this script. Never produced during his lifetime, it finally was presented in New York in 1975 and received a lukewarm response from both critics and the public.

The story follows the original fairly closely, with drifter Hal Carter entering a small Kansas town where his “one friend” from college, Alan Seymour, lives. Alan courts “the prettiest girl in town,” Madge Owens; and we know there will be a triangle formed among these three. But small differences emerge that separate the two stories until they become mirrored realities –  similar explorations that result in different endings.

Watching this production, it occurred to me that the bad rap Summer Brave gets may be the inevitable result of comparison to a play that has become a classic milestone of mid-century American theatre. At first it appears these characters are playing out the same dramatic arc, but without the iconic dialogue and references that were codified in the popular culture by Joshua Logan’s movie adaptation. Picnic, for better or worse, is seen as a great romantic soap opera; where the relationship between Hal and Madge is depicted as “true love.” It is an impression that the film lifts to giddy heights, with glamorous movie stars who never convince they belong in a small town in Kansas.

But in Summer Brave, Inge almost seems to be reacting to the sweep and swoon that had come to characterize the previous work, keeping the relationships grounded in the base reality of lust and envy and avoiding the cliché of a “happy ending.” Hal is opportunistic in his forceful reach for Madge, and his seduction seems motivated as much by anger at Alan as it is desire for her. Likewise for Rosemary, the “old maid school teacher” who desperately pleads with her indifferent beau, Howard Bevins, to marry her in the wee hours of the morning. Yet this part of the story hasn’t changed as much as the central relationship.
It is interesting to see how the playwright plays with the sequence of events to alter their meaning, and how he sacrifices a healthy degree of the sympathy we feel for the same characters when we encounter them in the first play. Of course, thus may be why Summer Brave is often thought to be the lesser play. It is not as easily marketable as its progenitor.

Director Charlie Sexton leads his well-chosen cast with a sure understanding of the material. There are few attempts to ingratiate and considerable concentration on honing in on the truth of the character. Jake Nichols captures Hal’s charisma and easy charm, but is also unafraid to render his narcissism and braggadocio in vivid terms. Callie Trawick likewise was tender but appropriately self-absorbed as Madge, even if the latter quality also lent itself to a degree of self-consciousness in her performance. Ethan Corder as Alan underscored the fact that this version of Alan is an improvement on the original, bringing complexity to an easily misunderstood and undervalued character. Courtney Doyle was splendid as Madge’s younger sister, Millie, while Clara Burton was a forceful presence as their mother. As Rosemary, Brooke Morrison seemed to be searching for a balance of tempo that eluded her somewhat in the first act, earning laughs by overplaying a bit. Yet she found some truly fine observations and a more subtle approach playing the pathos of the character in act two. DJ Nash was a solid Howard, giving the slightly dull figure some interest in his second act interactions with Ms. Morrison.

The sets by Clayton Marshall and Alec Volz were evocative but not distracting, while Laura Patterson’s costumes had much the same effect, unobtrusively supporting the character presentation and establishing period. The low-key design work was accentuated by a score consisting of lesser known fifties R&B standards that nicely reinforced the themes. This is a period that lends itself to cliché, and the consistently understated design work avoids it. 

By play’s end, we are left with a slightly darker resolution for the familiar scenario – one that anyone looking to tie up loose ends may not find satisfying, but in which the audience is engaged to ponder what happens next in the lives of these characters. Their fates are by no means a certainty, and that ambiguity makes Summer Brave worth seeing.
  
Summer Brave

September 13-15 and 20-22 @ 7:30
September 15, 22 @ 2:00pm

Walden Theatre
1123 Payne Street
Louisville, KY
(502) 589-0084



Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Clarksville Little Theatre Dusts Off a Stalwart Mystery in Dial


Playwright Frederick Knott
Dial “M” For Murder

By Frederick Knott
Directed by Andrew K. McGill

Reviewed by Craig Nolan Highley
Entire contents copyright © 2012 by Craig Nolan Highley. All rights reserved.

Dial “M” for Murder is one of those theatrical stalwarts that every theater company tackles at one time or another. It’s an extremely popular piece, which is surprising, since it is also one that is very difficult to get right. The script shows its age; it’s creaky and often slow, and requires strong performances and creative directorial touches to keep it interesting.

Clarksville Little Theater mostly gets it right with their current production, thanks mainly to some very solid acting and lighting effects, enhanced by a fantastic set and period-correct costumes. This is especially impressive considering the show’s troubled production history:  Due to an emergency the original director had to drop out halfway through rehearsals, allowing actor Andrew K. McGill to make his helming debut.

Originally performed as a BBC television play before transferring to London’s West End, and then to Broadway (all three productions in 1952), Dial “M” became legendary when Alfred Hitchcock filmed it two years later. It is an early example of the “howcatchem” genre of murder mystery (later popularized by the Columbo television series) in which the audience knows full well whodunit; the suspense is derived by figuring out how they will get caught.

The story focuses on has-been tennis star Tony Wendice, living off the graces of his wealthy wife, Margot. When his plot to have her killed goes horribly awry, he switches gears and manages to frame her for murder.

Jason Potts lays on the oily charm as Tony in what is undoubtedly the show’s best performance. Adrielle Perkins is also spot-on as Margot, creating a real flesh-and-blood person as opposed to simply playing the victim. Director McGill makes the most of his brief turn as the ill-fated hired killer, and Larry Chaney is completely believable as the smarter-than-he-seems detective on the case.

The set (designed and built by ten credited persons) is really something, believably conveying a 1950s-era London apartment for the affluent; and Mr. Chaney’s moody lighting design truly builds suspense during many dimly-lit moments in the play.

On the downside, the show does have some pacing problems, with far too many dramatic pauses and a lot of air between the lines. And it is in those moments that the age and dryness of the script really come through. Also some music would have helped set the mood, especially during the show’s nearly wordless murder sequence. But if you can overlook those shortcomings, the plot should hold you in suspense.

Overall, the production overcame its shortcomings and created a solid atmosphere of mystery and intrigue, a promising debut by a new director on the local theater scene.

Dial "M" For Murder

Featuring Adrielle Perkins, Matthew Browning, Jason Potts, Andrew K. McGill, Larry Chaney and Howard Whitman.

September 7, 8, 9, 13, 14 and 15 at 8:00pm

Clarksville Little Theatre
301 E. Montgomery Ave. 
Clarksville, IN 47129
812-283-6522

Sunday, September 9, 2012

“This Feels Good”

Bob Bernhardt. Photo courtesy of
The Louisville Orchestra.

Jorge Mester. Photo courtesy of
The Louisville Orchestra.

The Louisville Orchestra: Fanfara

A review by Scott Dowd.
Entire contents are copyright © 2012 Scott Dowd. All rights reserved.

As I took my seat in the Grand Tier of Whitney Hall for last night’s Fanfara concert, I found myself scanning the stage for familiar faces. I’ve been attending performances for more than twenty years. I have also worked with and for the Louisville Orchestra off-and-on over those two decades and have come to know many of the musicians professionally and personally. It has been a difficult year for the musicians, and some familiar faces were missing. But, I was grateful to see the many who remain, including principal flautist Kathy Karr – more on her later.

Last evening was laden with event potential. That Mayor Greg Fischer personally recognized its importance from the Whitney Hall stage may in past years have seemed pro forma. Last night, however, this gesture carried a great deal of significance for a community that identifies so heavily with the arts. Not only was last evening the opening of the Louisville Orchestra’s seventy-fifth season, the beginning of principal pops conductor Bob Bernhardt’s fourth decade with the ensemble, and the resolution of a year-long fermata; it was also the christening of the newly renovated home of the organization. In past seasons, The Louisville Orchestra has performed its variety of series in multiple venues. This season all of them – Classics, Coffee, orKIDStra, NightLights, Pops, Wow! – will all take place in the space named for the founding conductor of the Louisville Orchestra, Robert S. Whitney.

For last night’s performance I was seated in the Grand Tier, traditionally a focal point for sound in that venue. Perhaps it was wishful thinking but to my ears the acoustics in Whitney Hall seemed vastly improved.

Music director Jorge Mester created a program for last night’s season opener designed to showcase the strengths of the orchestra and its musicians. In an unprecedented move, he invited principal pops conductor Bob Bernhardt to conduct the second portion of the concert, which also demonstrated the organization’s ability and willingness to supplement the core ensemble with quality musicians as necessary.

The evening began with Paul Hindemith’s Symphonic Metamorphosis, which he composed in 1943, three years after immigrating to the United States. In creating this piece, Hindemith anticipated a trend in the American music scene that was to be epitomized five years later by the Louisville Orchestra’s commissioning project. American Orchestras were looking for music by living composers that allowed them to stretch themselves artistically. The work highlights the talents of the orchestra’s individual sections, juxtaposing strings and winds, brass and percussion in a constant state of transition. Periodically members of the orchestra are lifted up individually or in small ensembles-within-the-ensemble. This is particularly true of the principal flute; Hindemith has written one of the most nefarious flute solos in the repertoire, beautifully performed last night by Kathy Karr. The musicians of the Louisville Orchestra are part of a long tradition of virtuosic interpretation of contemporary classical music and demonstrated last night that that elemental aspect of the ensemble’s personality remains strong in these musicians. The ensemble, individually and as a whole, was more than up to the challenge. But I do want to point out the contributions of two musicians often overlooked, but invaluable to the success of a work like this one: principal timpanist James Rago; and principal percussionist John Pedroja, whose faultless precision is exemplary.

In his choice of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K. 503, music director Jorge Mester demonstrated again his canny ability to balance the various, sometimes opposing, aspects of presenting serious music to the public. With this concerto, Mozart subtly but dramatically adjusted the relationship between the soloist and the orchestra by establishing a partnership between the two. The requirements on pianist Jeremy Denk were undiminished by the composer; this concerto is, in fact, considered to be among Mozart’s most challenging. Denk obviously enjoyed challenge as he made an unassuming entrance on the heels of the string’s virtuosic introduction. Together Mester and Denk luxuriated in the music extending tempos without self-indulgence. 

Bob Bernhardt was unusually quiet during the second half of the concert, leaving the patter to front man Steve Lippia. But at one point the emotion of the evening was apparently too much and the thirty-year L.O. veteran captured the feelings of everyone in the hall, typical boyish earnest, “I just have to say…this feels good!” His statement brought another round of applause, laughter and – I suspect – lumps to a few throats.

The orchestra swelled to seventy-seven members for the Pops portion of the evening that included two drum sets and a much-expanded horn section proved worthy enough to give it that beefy Las Vegas sound associated with Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack. It costs a lot of money to rent charts – the musical arrangements. To keep expenses down, the L.O. had been relying heavily on their own library prior to the break. I suspect the rather tepid arrangement of Themes from West Side Story that opened the second half was an artistic concession. Still, Bernhardt and the musicians were able to wring out everything that score had to offer, and the audience responded with enthusiasm.

Steve Lippia is easy on stage. He knows how to bring the audience in and make them comfortable, even in a space as large as Whitney Hall. I’ve seen plenty of big name entertainers who shine in more intimate venues lose their edge in that space. Lippia is not an impressionist, but somehow he manages to evoke the spirit of great singers like Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Bobby Darrin and Tony Bennett while maintaining his own artistic integrity. With every downbeat, Bernhardt elicited waves of anticipation from the audience as they prepared to receive another great American Standard and Lippia delivered over and over again with hits like "My Way," "Mack the Knife," What Kind of Fool am I?" and "Luck Be a Lady." It was after eleven when the balloons signaled the end of the evening. But, for me, the evening was over much too quickly.

According to Dr. Mosley’s program notes, Mozart originally performed his twenty-fifth piano concerto in a Viennese casino. Putting this piece on a concert that includes a Las Vegas mainstay like Steve Lippia smacks of Jorge Mester’s impish sense of humor and underscores the fact that the organization’s future remains uncertain. The management, board and musicians are betting that Louisville audiences will embrace the orchestra once again and imbue the organization with the cultural relevance of the past. The ball is in play.

The Louisville Orchestra: Fanfara

September 8, 2012

Kentucky Center for the Arts
501 West Main Street
Louisville, KY 40202
502-584-7777