Monday, May 21, 2012

Who Needs the Body? The Human Head Is Subject Enough at Galerie Hertz


Untitled, earthenware with underglazes,
vitreous slip and copper oxide, Tom Bartel.

Motley Crew: Rachel Clark and Tom Bartel

Reviewed by Keith Waits

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

Rachel Clark and Tom Bartel are artists who are domestic partners. Their individual reputations and previous body of work stand on their own merit, but the distinction becomes an important aspect of their first exhibit together, “Motley Crew,” currently on view at Galerie Hertz.
Batboy, earthenware with underglazes,
vitreous slip and copper oxide, 2010,
Tom Bartel.
Both are presently preoccupied with the human head as a subject, with Mr. Bartel’s work continuing a fascination with earthenware head forms sporting distinctive textures, while Ms. Clark’s broadly conceived oil paintings represent a departure and deliberate attempt to create images with a relationship to her partner’s sculptures.
In his statement accompanying the exhibit, Bartel speaks of the head as “the center of ourselves,” and of the “worn” surfaces he imposes serving a narrative function, as the human skin becomes a repository of stories and experiences catalogued over a lifetime. Although he builds the forms in a traditional coil method and carefully fashioned details, they share a fundamental commonality of feature that would indicate use of a mold or form, so strong is the vision in the artist’s mind of the family of characters he is creating over time. There are undeniable changes of countenance and alterations of the shape, yet there is most definitely a “genetic” relationship that carries across most of the sculptures:  they all share the same basic DNA. In a few instances, he has added other, contrasting materials to represent hair or ornamentation; but most of them are hairless and primal in their impact. The skin is rarely smooth and unblemished; more often it exhibits rough textures and eruptions suggestive of dried or hard-baked earth, the weathered layers beginning to reveal something mysterious and dark but as yet unidentifiable. The limited palette of colors used in the surface treatment, dull but evocative earth tones that seem pulled from the subterranean, reinforce the elemental, macabre nature of the forms.
Mom Nose Best, oil on panel, 2012, Rachel Clark.
Rachel Clark’s paintings are tightly composed, framing each individual face in an almost confrontational manner that forces an attitude on the viewer. The portraits are exaggerated, often for comic effect, in a style that echoes R. Crumb and other underground comic artists who originally came to light in the 1960s; the upturned noses, garish teeth and pop eyes would fit right in. Yet there is something more innocent but also more psychologically complex about Ms. Clark’s characters. We see no bodies or environments, so the faces are presented with little or no context, just the rubbery features that often seem to be experiencing some measure of paranoia, however comically presented. One set of portraits, on round panels instead of square, represents a slightly different attitude.  Almost existing in another time from the rest of her work, they are comparable in their simplicity but conjure up formal vignette portraits from the early part of the 20th century. (A man with a full reddish blonde beard and another with a shaved head, handle-bar mustache and misshapen ear certainly seem from another age.) The latter title being “Wrestler with Cauliflower Ear” only strengthens this impression, yet it is here one also finds “Mom Nose Best,” which fits more appropriately with the other pieces that are more certain in their contemporary tone.
Oldham, oil on panel, 2012, Rachel Clark.
In the inevitable compare-and-contrast that occurs between the two artists' works, it is interesting to note how the geometric restrictions of the panels confine the subjects and in their unforgiving framing it might be fair to say “imprisons” them, while the three-dimensional heads are allowed to exist more fully in our world and occupy the gallery space itself as an environment. The painted characters cry out for release while the sculptures freely occupy the “real” world. The simian characteristics of “Pink Fuzz Head” and the demon doll quality of “Batboy” only seem to confirm our fears that we have been invaded by fantastical creatures. They are all on display at Galerie Hertz through June 16.  
Galerie Hertz
1253 South Preston Street
Louisville, KY 40203
Tuesday-Friday 11 am-5 pm; Saturday 11am -3 pm and by appointment
www.billyhertzgallery.com
(502)581-8277


       


Thursday, May 17, 2012

Patrick Dougherty’s Snake Hollow: A Report from the Front Lines


By Taylor Crush

Entire contents are copyright © 2012 Taylor Crush. All rights reserved.

The finished installation, Snake Hollow. Photo by Taylor Crush.
Perseverance, hard work, over 50 volunteers, many willow saplings, and, primarily, Patrick Dougherty’s artistic vision and instruction are the aspects that make Snake Hollow a worthwhile visit. Dougherty’s recent installation project from his Stickwork series is now available for viewing and exploration at Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest. Dougherty’s sculpture installations are temporal works made from natural materials such as willow saplings that are native to the area. Depending on the weather and type of sculpture, each installation can last up to two years. His designs involve weaving and binding sapling branches together to form flowing patterns and maze-like structures that visitors can walk through. Snake Hollow shares these qualities, which transforms the audience into a whimsical state of mind as they walk through the nature-based installation that, due to the leaning walls, tall ceilings, and twisted doorways, has the feeling of a Dr. Seuss illustration. It is welcoming to all ages that appreciate nature, interactive installations and playground-like settings.

Entering the installation. Photo by Taylor Crush.
I had the privilege of working with Dougherty several times throughout the creation of this installation as one of the volunteers. Learning the techniques of binding and weaving sapling branches together to form walls and ceilings was quite an experience. Dougherty took the time to meet and teach each volunteer the technique of working with saplings, adding value to the installation experience. Each stage of the project – starting with the layout design of the installation to the very last bunch of leaves stuffed in the walls of the structure – provided each volunteer with a new skill. I was able to participate three different times throughout the duration of the project. From those visits, I saw how the previous volunteers dug and replanted willow trunks into the ground to become tall posts for the wall supports. I learned how to weave branches around the base posts for the walls on several sides of the structure. The others who helped with this worked along the ground, while Dougherty stood on scaffolding to weave the taller parts of the walls. And finally, I helped with the final stuffing of the willow leaves into the walls. This part was important because it not only contributed to the thickness of the wall, but also formed the flowing patterns along the structure, which seem to guide you through the tunnels. One of my favorite memories of the project was during the “stuffing” stage in the last week of work. The willow leaves were releasing their seeds (which resemble flowing snowflakes) as we worked in the tunnels creating a magical environment, even though it made us sneeze.

Patrick Dougherty with Taylor Crush.
Photo by Mark K. Wourms,
Executive Director of Bernheim.
What was fascinating about this project were the vast ages and backgrounds of the volunteers who worked together to help make this installation happen. Over the course of about one month, the installation of Snake Hollow not only made an exquisite sculpture, but also formed a community of people who shared a deep appreciation of the arts, whatever their previous experiences. The location of this work next to the Visitor Center was ideal for non-volunteer visitors to observe and speak with Dougherty as he created the installation. In my own interaction with Dougherty, I discovered that he preferred to work in a public setting rather than in a studio because he valued the importance of audience interaction while he created his work. Public participation is a vital part of Dougherty’s installations from the time the first branch is woven until the installation’s inevitable destruction. The patience, perseverance, and positive instruction from Dougherty are the qualities I hope show through for every visitor who wishes to explore the project.  

Located next to the Visitor Center, this installation has easy access for all visitors who are interested in walking around and through the flowing maze of Snake Hollow. Bernheim is open from 7 am until sunset. On weekdays there is no fee. On weekends, however, non-members are asked to pay $5.00 per car. 

For more information about Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest, please visit: http://www.bernheim.org/; and for more information about Patrick Dougherty’s installations, please visit http://www.stickwork.net/ or http://www.bernheim.org/dougherty.html.

Hardly More Than a Ghost


Ghosting
by Kirby Gann
Brooklyn, New York:  Ig Publishing
286 pp.; $15.95

By Katherine Dalton

Entire contents copyright © 2012 by Katherine Dalton. All rights reserved.

Some reviewers have described Kirby Gann's new novel as “hillbilly noir.” In doing so they have given his publisher a useful two-word summary to use with booksellers – and it is certainly true that Ghosting is a dark mystery set in the harsh economy of rural drug-running. 

But “hillbilly noir” implies that Ghosting is genre fiction, when it is not. It is much better than that, and offers more than the typical genre novel's thinness of character and overemphasis on plot. If this is a murder mystery, it is one set on its head, with no clear answers as to whodunit or even what was done. Like any good novel, Ghosting is driven by character, and the main lesson for all of its principal actors is the discovery of everything they will never know. It is a beautifully imagined book.

The story opens with a flight through an old abandoned seminary that feels like a dream – a flight in which the game-legged central character, Cole, is left behind. Described as “an obedient and guileless spirit adrift from all familiars,” he spends the rest of the novel trying to catch up with his half-brother, Fleece, who has disappeared with the proceeds of a large marijuana buy. No one admits to knowing where he has gone, or if he is alive or dead. Cole makes it his mission to find out.

In doing so, he becomes a mule for the same syndicate his brother worked for, a pothead-innocent in a dangerous game; and he soon finds himself so implicated and bloody-handed that there can be no turning back, whether he discovers the fate of his brother or not. 

Kirby Gann (real name:  Kirkby Gann Tittle) grew up in the Beuchel neighborhood of Louisville, and there is plenty of Kentucky in this novel, from the landscape and the aphorisms to some of the state's better-known oddities. One character has the blue skin of methemoglobinemia, made famous by the Fugate family of the Red River Gorge area. 

Now the managing editor of Sarabande Books in Louisville, Gann is the author of two earlier novels, The Barbarian Parade and Our Napoleon in Rags, and with Kristin Herbert co-edited the anthology A Fine Excess. 

When he was a teenager, he spent a memorable night at the old St. Thomas Seminary off Brownsboro Road, being chased and shot at by the caretaker – a piece of his life he drew on for a short story that later became this novel. 

Some of the characters quickly got too big for a short story, he says – particularly his aging and ailing drug supplier Mister Gruel, with all his “cheerful viciousness”; Cole's pill-addicted mother, Lyda Skaggs; and the preacher of Abundance Gospel, Brother Gil Ponder.

Gann says he knew from the start that the book would have some mystery to it, but he didn't want to write a typical murder story. He wanted to take another tack. “The idea was, how do you make it new? To me that's what you're always doing as a writer, on any project. We're so far into the history of literature that pretty much all stories are taken, all genres are taken, and now it seems you can play with those genres with the idea of how do you renew it.”

Hence this story, which centers around a disappearance that may or may not be a death, in which Cole stumbles over clues that may or may not clarify his brother's disappearance, and finds patterns that may or may not really be there. 

One of the virtues of the book is the way Gann expresses the thoughts of his characters through what he calls a “heightened language.” While this language may not be plausibly realistic (would the inarticulate Cole really think this clearly?), it greatly enriches the book.

Gann is a lover of Dostoevsky, and points out that while we know Dostoevsky was a Christian, he gave his nihilistic, anti-Christian characters “just as much space. He didn't come out and say, 'These people are wrong,' but he tried to dramatize by their actions what can go wrong by going this route as opposed to another route.

I think moral ambiguity within a character is more true to life, because no one is all good or all bad,” Gann says. He wanted to give all his characters “their due. I tried to understand where they were coming from, why they might make the decisions they've made and be okay with it.”

There is an unreadable torture scene in this book, lewdness and plenty of tough subject matter. But while many writers chronicle the down-and-out in a way that is as degrading for the reader as it is for the characters, Gann has written a story that is ultimately transcendent. 

Nothing is clearly solved, nothing is finally resolved, and nothing is morally paid for in full by this varied group of characters who have their limitations, terrible weaknesses and cruelties. But there is love in this book as well. And if love fuels a lot of the misery of this story, it also transcends that misery and makes the misery potentially worthwhile. Cole longs for his brother, and we care about Cole because he does, even as that love sends him lower and lower into a pit where finally we lose sight of him.  

Ghosting is a tragedy in the classical sense of the word:  a story of men and women imprisoned by the fecklessness and blindness of their own flaws, who are caught up in disaster due to factors both beyond and within their control, but whose humanity makes them worth caring about. And by the end of the book, the reader has walked in the shoes of all these people long enough to understand them in a way that is necessarily the beginning of charity.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Young Actors Handle Difficult Material “Like Professionals” in Walden Theatre’s Titus Andronicus


Allison Spanyer as Lavinia in Titus Andronicus.
Photo by Harlan Taylor.
Titus Andronicus

By William Shakespeare
Directed by Charlie Sexton

A review by Kate Barry

Entire contents are copyright © 2012 Kate Barry. All rights reserved.

Walden Theatre offers an opportunity for youth in the area that is quite special. The Theatre offers chances for young students to watch, perform and engage in works that might sometimes not be available in the area. These productions provide learning tools to help youngsters understand these plays, the verse as well as the characters and their stories. With Titus Andronicus, Walden Theatre has provided what Charlie Sexton refers to in his Director’s Note as Shakespeare’s “satire” of “blood, gore and revoltingly shocking ending.”

With young actors, it is important to remember that these folks are developing their skills and finding their artistic voices. These characters have been shaped to fit the framework of a youth conservatory. At times the adjustments work in favor of the production; other times, it leaves something to be desired. Calvin Baron as Aaron, a Moor, beloved by the Queen of the Goths, is rebellious and cunning. As an actor, Baron provides mature promise for leading roles later in his acting career. As one of the Queen’s minions, Aaron is himself in control of Demetrius and Chiron, played by Sean Campbell and Elliot Vitaz, respectfully. Baron's, Campbell's and Vitaz’s understanding of the verse as well as their delivery only added to their strong and evil performances as they partook in cruel actions.

Emma Wesslund and Clara Burton play Titus Andronicus and Marcus Andronicus. Casting women in strong male roles was a powerful and bold choice. These young actresses gently yet bravely handled the emotional burdens of the reign of terror set in motion by Tamora, Queen of the Goths, played with seductive power by Callie Trawick. Wesslund's and Burton’s performances are only strengthened by Allison Spanyer as Lavinia, Titus’s daughter, who perhaps suffers the most extreme terror throughout the play. Providing an innocent and pretty demeanor, Spanyer’s eyes and facial expressions scream of fear and trauma in the latter half of the play.

The material and subject matter in this piece are very controversial, even by today’s standards. Under the direction of Charlie Sexton, these young theatre students handled the mature subject matter like professionals. The wide range of talents within this young cast is a perfect example of how Walden Theatre is an actor’s breeding ground and how classic theatrical pieces are major tools to help these gifted youngsters grow and astonish. In Titus Andronicus, these young actors do just that. 

Titus Andronicus

May 14, 15, 17, 20, 22

Walden Theatre
1123 Payne Street
502-589-0084


Monday, May 14, 2012

Clarksville Little Theatre Production of Superstar “Not to Be Missed”

Left to right:  Brian West, Brian Morris and Greg Wood
in Jesus Christ Superstar. Photo by Bunny Miller.
Jesus Christ Superstar

Lyrics by Tim Rice, Music by Andrew Lloyd Weber
Choreography by Rebecca Chaney
Music Director Doug Jones
Directed by Janet Morris

Reviewed by Craig Nolan Highley

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

The Clarksville Little Theater certainly has ups and downs when it comes to the quality of their productions. But when they are on – they are on. And that is certainly the case with their latest production, a revival of the classic Rice/Weber rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar.

It was originally conceived as a two-record concept album released in 1970 before moving to the Broadway stage in 1971 and has been revived countless times all over the world. Once considered highly controversial (the original album was banned from BBC radio for being sacrilegious), it’s now beloved: a passion play set to rock music that’s just infectious. Taking a lot of liberties with the Sacred Texts, the opera dramatizes the final week in the life of Christ and casts Judas Iscariot, one of the Bible’s most hated villains, in a sympathetic role.

This interpretation of the story presents Jesus as a tortured soul, struggling to reconcile his Divinity with his humanity as he leads his apostles in the way of the Lord. His best friend and confidante Judas is increasingly more disturbed by the road his Master is taking, to the point that he worries about Jesus’ true motives. Both men seem to have a less than pure interest in the lovely former prostitute Mary Magdalene, who struggles with her own feelings for the Son of God.

Everything about CLT’s current production is stellar, starting with the casting. As Jesus, Brian Morris gives the performance of his career. His singing is flawless and he certainly looks the part, but he has found the character’s emotional center and at times he is heartbreaking to watch. Similarly, Jason Potts’ Judas (arguably the show’s true leading role) is an emotional wreck and Potts lets raw emotion trump the character’s high notes with an amazing skill.

Carrie Cooke’s Mary Magdalene is just lovely both in looks and voice. We can feel her struggle against her baser instincts, especially on the show’s two best numbers: “I Don’t Know How to Love Him” and “Can We Start Again Please.”

The show’s more villainous roles are also given a nice touch here, from the Matrix- and Hellraiser-inspired interpretations of the High Priests (Mason Stewart, Dan Canon and Jeff Mangum) and the completely cartoonish King Herod (Greg Wood, in the show’s most rousing song-and-dance performance). Bo Cecil also gives a nicely sympathetic turn as a tortured Pontius Pilate, especially with the touching “Pilate’s Dream” number.

Janet Morris continues to top herself with each new show she directs, at CLT and elsewhere, and this is no exception. She has staged some amazing set pieces, and has directed a huge ensemble, expertly allowing every single cast member their own moments to shine.

Finally, the set design (by director Morris and stage manager Kevin Butler) is simple yet effective, evoking traditional Passion Plays with a nicely anachronistic modern twist, complemented by multiple-period costume designs (by Morris, Jayme Thomas, Katie Hay, Bryce Blair, Rebecca Chaney and Jennifer Starr Tennant). All of this is given life by the moody and beautiful lighting designs of Nick Dent.

The real magic of Jesus Christ Superstar may well be the way it can be enjoyed by everyone, no matter what your religious beliefs. (In fact, I happen to know that among the cast and crew there is an amazing diversity of faiths, even a few agnostics and atheists.) But no matter what your personal belief system may be, I challenge you to try to keep a dry eye at the show’s emotional and ominous conclusion, which doesn’t even provide a curtain call to break the levity.

By far one of the best pieces of Community Theater I have seen in quite some time. Not to be missed!

Jesus Christ Superstar

Featuring Polina Abramov, John Aurelius, Bryce Blair, Dan Canon, Bo Cecil, Carrie Cooke, Ellie Delap, Eddie Dohn, Elisa Freeman, Katie Hay, Nicholas Johnson, Karissa Kathryn, Jeff Mangum, Brian Martin, Martha McLain, Mike Miller, Drew Moore, Brian Morris, Mary Rose Pinotti, Heidi Platt, Jason Potts, Andrea Rose, Mason Stewart, Jennifer Starr Tennant, Laura Van Fossen, Brian West and Greg Wood.

May 11-20, 2012

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

With “The Snowflake Theory” The Bard’s Town Is The Place to Be for Local Playwrights

Left to right:  Laura Ellis, Scott Goodman, Carol T. Williams &
Susan Crocker in The Snowflake Theory. Photo by Doug Schutte.
 
The Snowflake Theory

By Nancy Gall Clayton
Directed by Kathi E.B. Ellis

Reviewed by Craig Nolan Highley

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

The Bard’s Town is rapidly becoming the place to go in Louisville to see strong performances of alternative theater. Longstanding groups such as Finnigan Productions and Le Petomane have started performing there, and it is home to its own company, The Bard’s Town Theater. I’ve gotten familiarized with the place through such productions as the first Ten-Tucky Festival, the latest Finnigan Festival, and most recently A Derby Carol – mostly very off-beat and eccentric productions to say the least.

So I was pleasantly surprised to see that the latest show to tread their boards is Nancy Gall Clayton’s far more traditional and down-to-earth The Snowflake Theory.

It’s a Neil Simon-esque story with heart, and avoids the pitfalls of a lot of local original plays like clunky dialogue and a penchant for self-indulgence. It is a briskly paced tale of changing family values peopled by characters we can relate to. It is light comedy to be sure, and never gets big laughs; but it doesn’t need them as it does elicit a lot of smiles.

Carol T. Williams anchors the show with her strong performance as Marge Klein, a widowed Jewish mother coping with two children whose lives are not going where she would have wished. Her perpetually single daughter Rebecca (Susan Crocker, in a lovely and subdued turn) has given up on ever getting a husband and has had herself artificially inseminated. Her son Clark (Scott Goodman) plans to quickly marry his flighty-headed girlfriend Violet (Laura Ellis) and enlist in the Army. When Marge enlists the aid of her new Rabbi (Ted Lesley), she decides to do some matchmaking that doesn’t quite turn out the way she intends.

Very strong performances all around bring this well-written show to life, and Kathi Ellis’s sure direction keeps everything moving at just the right pace.

The work of an uncredited set designer is also worth noting, creating two believable locations on the Bard’s Town’s small stage: Marge’s kitchen and the Rabbi’s office. This is the first time I’ve actually seen an attempt at a realistic set in this space, and it really is a nice effect.

You’re not going to take any life-altering lessons away from this warm and friendly piece, but it’s a solid production and definitely worth seeing. And there’s a restaurant attached, so it’s a perfect date night!

Featuring Susan Crocker, Laura Ellis, Scott Goodman, Ted Lesley and Carol T. Williams.

The Snowflake Theory

 May 10 – 20 @ 7:30 p.m.

The Bard’s Town Theatre
1801 Bardstown Road
Louisville KY 40204
(502) 749-5275

Community Theatre in Hayswood Provides a Rip-Roaring Good Time with “Blazing Guns”


Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch

Written by Shubert Fendrich
Directed by Kathy Norton

Reviewed by Cristina Martin

Entire contents copyright © 2012 Cristina Martin. All rights reserved.

Tom Gudding, Charley Swarens and Elizabeth Whittinghill in
Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch. Photo courtesy of Hayswood Theatre.
Corydon, Indiana’s Hayswood Theatre is a gem. In a picturesque town mighty proud of its culture and history, Hayswood’s comfortable 70-seat auditorium hosts audiences year-round; its 2011-2012 season lineup consists of no less than six full-scale productions in addition to a summer children’s workshop. This would be impressive in itself, but the most inspiring aspect of Hayswood is that it’s community theatre in the truest and finest sense of the term.

Kathy Norton, Director of the current production of Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch, readily admits that the show is not Hamlet or Death of a Salesman – it’s a light Western, set sometime in the early 1900s, and Norton’s goal is to give the audience a “rip-roaring good time.” Author Shubert Fendrich embraced the melodrama genre proudly, penning dozens of plays before his death in 1989. Along the way, he founded Pioneer Drama Service, now one of largest dramatic publishing and licensing companies around, with the specific goal of making his work available to community theatres and to all who wish to perform. Other credits include Give My Regards to Broadway (book) as well as an adaptation of The Pirates of Penzance – familiar material designed to entertain and to uplift.

Blazing Guns takes place in the lobby of the Roaring Gulch Hotel. In short order, we meet earnest hotel clerk Barney Black (Chris Wells), plotting proprietress Widow Black (Debbie Smith), and cute-as-a-button Sheriff Willie Lovelace (Elizabeth Tuell Whittinghill). Add resident actress Martha Muldoon (Patty McClure) and the travelling troupe of gentlemanly Colonel Crabtree (Charles Swarens) with his adorable showgirls Flora (Sue McMonigle) and Dora (Shelly Knear), and you’ve got quite a colorful bunch.  And of course, where would a good Western be without the Villain? Enter Snipe Vermin – what a name! – (Tom Gudding), with his guitar-playing sidekick Bill Filbert (Bob Jackson). Hot on Snipe’s heels is Pinkerton detective Harry Heartstone, who shows up at the Roaring Gulch Hotel, too. And ain’t it curious: I reckon there’s quite an uncanny resemblance there, Pardner, between Snipe and Harry…

We’re treated to love interests, gunfights, greedy intrigue, a bank robbery, a spell of amnesia, and the reunion of long-separated family and friends. And thank heavens – and I don’t think I’m giving too much away here – everything turns out a-ok in the end.

Some scenes were slow on opening night, but others brought down the house. One of my favorites consisted of actress Martha Muldoon doing a recitation of “My Loooove is Like a Red Red Rose,” by “Bobby Burns,” as she put it. Patty McClure’s looks and gestures were priceless. Her Martha is every bit the Grande dame of the acting world who manages nonetheless to retain a very appealing sweetness. Sheriff Willie, too, is played appealingly by Elizabeth Tuell Whittinghill. Many, if not all, the actors break the fourth wall in asides to the audience, but Willie’s establish an especially good rapport as she shares her thoughts. She’s determined to do what’s right, even if it means self-sacrifice, and it’s gratifying to see it all work out in her favor. 

Barney Black, likewise, comes out on top, and we’re happy to see him get what’s rightly his. Chris Wells plays him with energy and animation, a good anchor behind the front desk of the hotel and a great foil for his boss (and stepmother), Widow Black. Debbie Smith does a wickedly fine job as the evil widow, whose smoldering looks and signature cackle thrill the audience. 

Snipe is also wonderfully menacing from the moment we meet him. With his hat pulled low over his eyes, his voice gravelly, and his face set in a scowl, Tom Gudding plays an excellent Bad Guy – and a first-rate Good Guy, too, for he plays Sherlock Holmes-esque Harry Heartstone as well. To flip back and forth from one character to another in successive scenes can be very challenging for an actor, but Gudding does it seamlessly and transforms himself from one character to the other thoroughly and believably.

Snipe rides into town with Bill Filbert, but it soon becomes clear that Bill is actually a good soul who got mixed up with the wrong kind. Bob Jackson plays a funny and likable Bill who promptly decides to give up his life of crime when he catches the eye of showgirls Flora and Dora. Sweet and wholesome flirts with irrepressible giggles, the audience found them irresistible, too. Charles Swarens is stately and benevolent as their manager, the Colonel, who is more than happy to see their sojourn in Roaring Gulch result in the addition of a few more players to his troupe.

Kathy Norton has designed a lovely set, constructed and decorated cleverly by many of the cast and their family members. She incorporates some great directorial touches, too, particularly ones having to do with the use of the stairs leading up to the hotel’s rooms and of the glimpse of hallway we see on the second floor. Martha Muldoon uses the stairs for her memorable recitation, but so does Widow Black, slinking around corners and laughing maniacally. The Colonel and his girls are especially funny at one point as they set off to find their rooms, turn down one corridor, and then go traipsing along the hallway in the opposite direction, swinging their suitcases. 

The design and execution of the lighting is very effective, especially in the actors’ aforementioned asides, and the staging of the gunfights very adept.  I’ll leave it to you to wonder how Snipe and Harry face off if they’re both played by the same actor…

The actors’ costumes strike just the right note, evoking the era without being overdone, and the ladies’ vintage jewelry is lovely. Whether or not a Pinkerton detective would wear a Sherlock Holmes cape in the Wild West is questionable (mightn’t he be a little overdressed for the weather?), but its inclusion is hilarious!

It’s not easy to faint believably (or even melodramatically) on stage, but both Harry and Widow Black do it with artful comedy. Sitting in one of the last two rows, however, it was impossible to see them once they had sunk to the floor, and a bit of the comedy was lost. Indeed, any action that takes place downstage and low to the ground is probably lost on all but maybe the front third of the audience. Fortunately, there are only a few brief moments staged like this, but it’s a shame for anyone to miss any of the action at all.

It must be mentioned that the play itself is preceded by an extraordinary performance by The Roaring Gulch Band, consisting of Music Director John Douglass (who is presumably also the fiddler, though the program doesn’t say so), Lee Cable on guitar and vocals, Marty Purdy on mandolin and vocals, and John Driver on banjo and vocals. Norton herself sings, too. The band plays seven songs in succession, in a heartfelt and beautiful cowboy ballad/Bluegrass hybrid style. I wish it had been announced that we’d first hear the concert in its entirety and then the play would begin. Though there were songs listed in the program, I expected to hear maybe just one or two before the curtain opened and the rest in the course of the play. Curiosity as to just when the play would start kept me from appreciating the music to the fullest. But having Flora and Dora lead the audience in singing along to cowboy classics like “Home on the Range” was fun, and the musicians were talented. Perhaps another time to include a portion of this musical entertainment might be at intermission, when Flora and Dora are already visiting and interacting with the audience.

One last constructive suggestion, offered in the kindest possible spirit: please proofread.  And then proofread again, and have several people do it. I was dismayed to see “gulch” spelled incorrectly on the programs and publicity posters, and performers’ names spelled variously on the theatre’s website and in the program (e.g., John Douglas vs. Douglass; Shelley vs. Shelly Knear). And is there really a place called Loredo, or was the band actually singing about the streets of Laredo? With the incredible attention to detail that I know from experience goes into a show’s production, I’m amazed at how often our meticulousness drops off when it comes to printed materials. And yet these are the very tools meant to draw the public in, a theatre’s golden opportunity to make a crucial first impression. May we all strive to make this first impression as carefully orchestrated and as polished as the shows we promise.  

In all, I’m incredibly heartened whenever I visit Hayswood because of the genuine enthusiasm for and support of theatre that I sense there. Even a stranger is enfolded into this community of people who come together around the age-old art form, bringing their talents and efforts and resources to bear for the sheer creative delight of it all.

One of the most heartwarming moments I experienced on opening night of Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch occurred when the Colonel stepped on stage for the first time. The little girl behind me nearly fell out of her seat, overcome with excitement, exclaiming, “It’s Grandpa!! Look – Grandpa!!!” I had to smile. How wonderful that she could watch and root for her Grandpa on stage, and what a great example he was providing of involvement in the Arts. Mr. Swarens happens to be a seminal member of Hayswood Theatre, with many acting and directing credits to his name. Would that we’d all be as enthusiastic, proud and supportive of our fellow members of the theatre family as is his granddaughter.

Blazing Guns at Roaring Gulch

May 11-27, 2012
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
Sundays at 2 p.m.
Hayswood Theatre
115 S. Capitol Ave.
Corydon, IN 47112
(812) 738-2138