Catching Up: Friday Link Stew

I know, I know. I’ve been quiet all week. That’s because I’ve been busy taking care of my wife (who had shoulder surgery on Tuesday) and dealing with various work stuff… plus there haven’t been a lot of articles that caught my eye. So, while I’m back and work and eating lunch, here are a few that did:

Music:The Music of Smash (Megan Hilty): Let’s Be Bad

 

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Normal is Overrated

Da-Da-Da-Dump (snap) (snap)

Da-Da-Da-Dump (snap) (snap)

Da-Da-Da-Dump Da-Da-Da-Dump Da-Da-Da-Dump (snap) (snap)

Sing those bars of music to most adults, and they will instantly recognize the source: the gloriously wonderful television series from 1963 starring John Astin and Carolyn Jones called “The Addams Family”:

This was the first excursion for the family of characters created by cartoonist Charles Addams for the New Yorker Magazine. They have since gone through numerous movie adaptations, but have always kept their spirit of being the non-normal family that you love. I mention all of this because I fell in love with them again last night at the Pantages, with an almost perfect production of the musical version of “The Addams Family“.

The musical version of The Addams Family was not based on the television or the movies, although given that they drew upon the same characters, there are some commonalities. The musical, with book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice and music/lyrics by Andrew Lippa, was based on characters from the original Charles Addams cartoons: Gomez, Morticia, Fester, Wednesday, Pugsley, Lurch, and Grandma (these characters were named for the TV show; they were unnamed in the cartoons). Now Addams stories usually take one of two forms: normal family visits the Addams and is shocked by the family, or the Addams have to appear normal to another family. In the original Broadway production, this was roughly the form of the story: Normal family of Wednesday’s boyfriend comes to visit, so the family needs to behave normally. Meanwhile, Morticia thinks she is getting old, family is shocked by the Addams, and Wednesday is pulled in different directions by love. You can read the original synopsis on Wikipedia.

On Broadway, this didn’t work. The show was popular, but eviscerated by critics. Before the current Broadway tour, the creative team decided to rework and tweak the story (ok, they decided to fix the show). They did, and I’m pleased to say is it much stronger. This entailed cutting some songs, a squid, and adding some new ones, so if you saw the show on Broadway, you should see it again.

When the show opens, the ghoulish Addams family is visiting the graveyard for an annual gathering of all family members (living, dead, and undecided) to celebrate what it is to be an Addams. Uncle Fester stops the Ancestors’ return to their graves to enlist their help: he knows that Wednesday is in love, and he wants love to conquer all. She has invited the boy’s family for dinner, and Fester wants it to be a success. We then learn that Gomez has built his relationship with Morticia on a foundation of never keeping secrets… after which Wednesday comes  and asks Gomez to keep a secret: she is engaged to this boy (Lucas Beineke). She doesn’t want her mother to know, so he must not tell her. This sets up the rest of the show: what is the effect of keeping this secret. While torturing Pugsley on a rack, Wednesday admits that love is pulling her in a new direction. As the Beinekes arrive, Wednesday and Lucas instruct their families to act normal so they can all enjoy a simple dinner. But the moment Lurch ushers the Beinekes into the mansion, tensions begin to mount. Mal wants to tear down the old house, Alice begins to spout happy poems at random, Pugsley, Fester, and Grandma fail at acting normal, and Wednesday, after wearing black for eighteen years, appears in a bright yellow dress. Morticia, realizing something is happening, believes Gomez is hiding a secret from him. Meanwhile, Pugsley is worried that Wednesday’s lovelife means she won’t torture him anymore. He steals a potion from Grandma after she reveals it will bring out someone’s dark nature. Pugsley plans to slip it to Wednesday at dinner. At dinner, “The Game” is played, where each person at the table confesses something. Gomez tells a story about not opening secrets in a box, while Uncle Fester admits he’s in love with the moon. In a mix-up, Alice drinks Pugsley’s potion and in front of everyone declares her marriage to Mal a loveless mess as she reveals her misery and woe. As Mal, humiliated, attempts to leave with his family, Wednesday announces that she and Lucas are engaged. Chaos engulfs both families, and Uncle Fester, trying to be helpful, instructs the Ancestors to create a sudden, terrible storm, trapping everyone in the mansion for the night. This is where the first act ends; I’ll leave the second act to you (noting that, after all, this is a musical).

I think the reworking of the story made a big difference. The original had Mal Beineke falling in love with a squid, and Morticia being worried about being old. That just didn’t work. The new story creates tension that works. It also places the focus of the story where it needs to be: on the love story of Gomez and Morticia, and the ancellary stories of Wednesday and Lucas. It gives characters growth: the characters at the end of the show — all of them — are not the same characters at the beginning. Each learns and grows. I should also note that this show was one of the funniest shows I’ve seen — the only shows I’ve seen that are equally funny are Neil Simon comedies and true farces. The writing on this show was just hilarious, as was the execution. From the opening notes of the traditional theme, to the use of Thing to open the curtain, to the little references to Cousin Itt — just well executed and well thought out. The show also made very effective use of the stage curtains to portion off the stage and allow scenes to progress without the distraction of changing scenery in the background. So kudos to the writers, directors, and creative team for pulling this show together. Credit here should go to Jerry Zaks as the production supervisor, the original direction by Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch, and Steve Bebout as the Associate Director.

[ETA: As a father seeing the show the weekend before Fathers Day, I wanted to add that I found the show resonating very well with my experience as a father to a young woman. You’re happy to see your child growing up, but sad to see the little girl going away. You’re torn between trying to make your spouse happy and your child happy, when doing both isn’t always possible. And, as the show notes, we all seem to turn into our parents in some way — hopefully good ones — and we need to learn to realize that and work to combat the bad parts… or do as the Addams do, and embrace being different and being bad.]

The musical numbers were, for the most part, quite entertaining (the music is still stuck in my head this morning–a good sign). A few numbers were a little bit slow, but most did a great job of moving along the plot, illustrating characters, and explaining motivations. Again, this was improved by the rework.

The tour company does not have the marquee names of the Broadway company, but I think they did an excellent job. Lots of strengths, with only a few minor weaknesses. In the lead positions, we had Douglas Sills as Gomez and Sara Gettelfinger as Morticia. Sills’ Gomez was perfect: playful, crazy, latin, unpredictable, madly in love with his wife, a loving father to his daughter… just a perfect portrayal. Gettelfinger was good as Morticia, but no warmth came through — but I think that was the character as written. I’m not sure if it was the writing or Gettelfinger, but the character had a vocal quirk with “sh”s that was annoying. Other than that, her singing was strong, and she was fun to watch on stage. Also noticable was her stage presence, and her dress… which was (as Gomez said) cut down to Venezuela. We were all hoping for the wardrobe malfunction that didn’t happen.

In the secondary positions, we had the rest of the Addams clan and the Beinekes. Topping this group was Blake Hammond as Uncle Fester (who I think was at the table across from us when we had dinner before those show). Hammond was the only actor able to break the fourth wall and recognize that this was a show–he was a wonderful comic actor with great timing, singing and dancing well and doing a wonderful interaction with everyone. Hammond also got a wonderful second act number, “The Moon and Me”, where he got to sing a love song and dance with the moon. So playful; so wonderful. As Wednesday Addams, Courtney Wolfson was spectacular — a wonderful singing voice that I would love to hear again, great acting, great movement. Her performance was so great it made you forget that she looked a little too old for her character. That’s what good acting can do.

Rounding out the named family members: As Lucas, Brian Justin Crum brought strong singing and acting chops to his smaller role. He worked well with Wolfson as Wednesday, and had just the right off-ball nature that you could see them as equal partners. As his parents, Martin Vidnovic (Mal) and Gaelen Gilliland (Alice) were good. I liked Gilliland a little better, but I think that’s because she had a slightly more meatier, non-reactive part. However, Vidnovic was great just for the final scene. The remainder of the named Addams clan had smaller roles: as Lurch, Tom Corbeil had that zombie-shuffled down pat, and truly suprised the audience in the “Move Toward The Darkness” number. Patrick D. Kennedy did good with the smaller role of Pugsley (a character who always seems to get short shrift). Lastly, as Grandma, Pippa Pearthree had a small part (again, this seems to be the case with Grandma), but she did good with what she had.

The ensemble consisted of the unnamed Addams ancestors, who were integrated well into the revised storyline. The ancestors/ensemble were: Ted Ely, Karla Puno Garcia, Steve GearyPatrick Oliver Jones, Lizzie Klemperer, Pilar Millhollen, Christy Morton, Roland Rusinek, Geo Seery (Fight Captain), Samantha Shafer. Swings/supports were: Victoria Huston-Elem (Swing), Alexandra Matteo (Swing/Asst. Dance Captain), Brad Nacht (Swing), Jonathan Ritter (Swing, Dance Captain, Puppet Performance Captain), and Ethan Wexler (u/s Pugsley).

As I noted before, the music and the movement was great. The choreography was by Sergio Trujillo, assisted by Dontee Kiehn as Associate Choreographer and August Eriksmoen as Dance Arranger. As I noted before, the music and lyrics were by Andrew Lippa, with orchestrations by Larry Hochman. Musical direction was by Valerie Gebert. Mary-Mitchell Campbell was the music supervisor, and Michael Keller was the music coordinator. The orchestra was conducted by Valerie Gebert, assisted by Christopher D. Littlefield on keyboard. Also on keyboard was Anthony DeAngelis. Paul Hannah was on drums. Supporting them was the local orchestra who consisted of Kathleen Robertson on violin, Paula Fehrenbach on cello, Trey Henry on bass/5-string electric/fretless electric, Dick Mitchell on flute/piccolo/clarinet/alto sax; John Yoakum on flute/clarinet/bass clarinet/tenor sax/soprano sax; Wayne Bergeron on trumpet/flugelhorn; Andrew Martin on trombone/bass trombone; Justin Less Smith on guitar/ukulele/banjo; Judith Chilnick on percussion, and David Witham as the keyboard swing.

Technically, the show was magical. Part of this was due to the set and costume design of Julian Crouch, who used the stage curtains to great effect to partition the action and focus attention. It was enhanced by the lighting of Natasha Katz, who used lots of reds and purples to create the mood. Also deserving compliment is Acme Sound Partners, who finally figured out how to get the sound in the Pantages right. Also amazing was the puppet magic of Basil Twist, which could be seen in the Itt family, as well as Fester’s Moon number. Special effects, which were great, were by Gregory Meeh. Hair and wig design was by Tom Watson, with make-up by Angelina Avallone. Daniel S. Rosokoff was the production stage manager; E. Cameron Holsinger was the State Manager, Raynelle Wright was the Assistant Stage Manager.

The Addams Familycontinues at the Pantages through Sunday. Best way to get cheap tickets is to go to the box office. The tour continues to Denver CO, Kansas City MO, Washington DC, and many other places before ending up in Costa Mesa CA in December. We enjoyed the show, so if it hits your city, go see it.

Upcoming Theatre, Concerts, and Dance: Next week brings “Million Dollar Quartet” at the Pantages on June 22. July features “The Savannah Disputation” at the Colony, “The Laramie Project” at REP East, and “Meet Me In St. Louis” at Cabrillo. August is more open, but will bring “Memphis” at the Pantages and “Playdates” at REP East.  As always, open dates are subject to be filled in with productions that have yet to appear on the RADAR of Goldstar or LA Stage Alliance.

 

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Friday News Chum, with Extra Link Sausage

Well, it’s Friday at lunch, and you know what that means: time to clean out the accumulated News Chum links:

Music: When I Need You (Roger Whittaker): A Weekend in New England

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Saved!

It has been a busy week, but for a change I have a breather at lunch to share a little chum with you. Today’s chum is all about things that were saved in some way… and one horrible case where there has been no saving:

  • Burning the Mortgage. In 2001, West Hills-based Shomrei Torah had a problem. The congregation, the product of the merger of Temple Beth Ami, a historic synagogue in Reseda and Congregation Beth Kodesh in Canoga Park, had built a $7 million, 43,000 square-foot complex on Valley Circle Boulevard on 10 acres of a former ranch. But cost overruns, an exodus of members and economic losses incurred by the Northridge earthquake left Shomrei Torah struggling to pay the bills.  Luckily, some generous congregants stepped up to the plate, and this week, Shomrei Torah paid off their mortgage and is having a mortgage burning ceremony.
  • Joining Together. Merging to survive is common in valley congregations. Sometimes they work, as with Shomrei Torah above, as with Kol Tikvah, or with Temple Judea… and occasionally they don’t (as with the merger of Temple Beth Torah and Ahavat Shalom, where a group of TBT people eventually split back out). This week came the report of another merger: Ner Maarav in Encino (itself the product of a merger) is merging with Temple Ramat Zion in Northridge. This is more an absorbtion, as Ner Maarav has sold their land and building, and their professional staff is moving elsewhere. Still, it allows the spirit of Ner Maarav to survive.
  • Best Western. And for a non-Jewish save, the former Best Western DeAnza hotel on former Route 66 on Albuquerque has been saved from demolition. We often forget the role of these hotels in the building of our country in the 1930s through 1960s; further, this was one of the first Best Westerns.

And now for something that, alas, hasn’t been saved. The economy. This opinion piece from the LA Times discusses the loss, and does a nice job of highlighting the blinders many people have in this country: that greed from our corporate leaders is good, and that what is good for big business is good for the average American. If you believe electing Romney will save the economy… you’re wrong. And guess what: if you believe that electing Obama will save the economy… you’re wrong as well. And you Ron Paul folks… wrong as well. The problem is not the President, it is Congress as a whole doing bills that are not in the interest of the people at large, but are in the interest of those who make contributions, the corporate bodies, and the vested special interests that can pay to have a voice.  Fixing that is much harder than just a presidential election.

Music: My Name is Barbra, Two (Barbra Streisand): Where’s That Rainbow?

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Connections

One of the things I find interesting about Facebook are the connections it uncovers when it suggests friends. I notice this when I periodically scan the list of suggested “friends” to see if it actually found any real-life friends. In doing this, I often discover that my circles of friends intersect in all sorts of strange ways:

  • Example #1: Rabbi Lisa Hochberg-Miller. Rabbi Hochberg-Miller is a rabbi out at Temple Beth Torah in Ventura, who I’ve met a couple of times when I’ve been to her congregation. Not surprisingly, she’s friends with my cousins that live in Ventura, and some of the rabbis that I know. But, surprise-surprise, she’s also a friend of some family friends in St. Louis. How they know her, I have no idea.
  • Example #2: Mark Kaplan. Mark is a regular director out at REP East in Saugus. We’re subscribers there and have grown to be friends with the theatre’s leadership, so it is no surprise that Mark was suggested based on the theatre folk. But he’s also friends with a loads and loads (try over a dozen) people I know from camp. Now I’m wondering if I should know Mark from my years at camp.
  • Example #3: There are a large number of people that are friends from Livejournal, most coming through my connections with Nicole and the various dance groups she’s been in. It turns out these folks have mutual friends with a friend from high school I recently connected with.

So what odd connections have you discovered through what Facebook suggests to you?

Music: Buffalo Springfield (Buffalo Springfield): Bluebird

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A Very Special Birthday

Camp 60thToday, I went to a very special birthday party: a 60th birthday party for the Wilshire Blvd Temple Camps. This was a day where campers from the first year of camp (back in 1952) were invited back to Malibu to celebrate 60 years of Jewish camping on the coast. I had a blast; the day wasn’t long enough to do all I wanted to do and to take the time to see everyone I could have seen.

So let’s recap a bit what this was about, why this was special, what today was, what I saw, and what the future holds.

I’ve written about camp before, so as you might guess, this is an important place to me. The Wilshire Blvd Temple Camps — Camp Hess Kramer and Gindling Hilltop Camp — were started in 1952 and moved to Malibu in 1954 (if memory serves correct). They serve Jewish youth from about 4th grade to high school, with opportunities for older high school and college folks through staff positions. Over the years, they have touched thousands and thousands of young people, instilling in them a sense of connection to the Jewish community, and for many, a need to do service for the community at large through leadership positions, teaching, or just being good people who do good.

I attended the camps starting in 1969 and continued through 1979. I was both a camper and a counselor, but never in a “leadership” session (in my day, those were only at CHK), nor did I do a year as a CIT (counselor in training). I made a number of friends over those years — perhaps not folks I see regularly, but folks that when I do see them there is an instant bond, a hug, and a friendship where we know we would be there for each other. This is what camp does when you get to know people.

I got to see a number of folks like that today — folks who were fellow campers with me, folks that were my counselors, folks that were camp leaders. When I saw these folks, the years melted away. I didn’t seem them as “old” — I saw them as my counselors and friends, and teens and young adults they were in my memory. Last week I wrote about “Follies”, and how there were younger dancers echoing the people on stage. I think that’s how camp was: we didn’t see ourselves as the adults of today at camp; when we visit camp we are eternally young. This is one reason why this place is so special.

So you have memories combined with great people. For example, the picture at the right shows three generations of camp directors of Gindling Hilltop: from the far right to left: Steve Makoff, Andrea Cohen (the current director), and Chuck Feldman. I was at Hilltop during the years with both Steve and Chuck (and I see Andrea every Alumni Shabbat), and I don’t think I’ve seen either of them for years. It was great to reconnect with them — I got to see and talk to people that I haven’t seen in real life in ages (although, for some, I talk to them regularly on Facebook). This is just one thing that made today special.

I didn’t get to spend that much time at Hess Kramer, alas. Shortly after I got there, I had lunch and took the bus up to Hilltop, where I spent most of the midday. I did get to check on my step. which I last reported on in 2009. As background, I was running the arts and crafts group that painted the back of this step in 1979. I’m pleased to say that when I checked today, my name was still (barely) visible. I”m not sure it will last another year.

But things don’t last. One of the displays they had up in Baruh Hall was some planning sketches for future camp buildout. I’m not 100% sure I like the approach, but change is uncomfortable. The changes proposed were along the lines of the changes that were discussed four years ago in 2008:

  • At Camp Hess Kramer: They plan to build across Yerba Buena Road additional conference center and staff cabins. They will rework the entrance to bring people in closer to the field with a welcome center, with better hiding of service facilities. They plan to totally redo the old staff cabins (where the camp office and infirmary are now) to provide new multistory facilities and support around the Bruer lawn area. They also appear to want to totally revamp the cabin areas, building new two-story cabins and facilities, which would greatly increase camp capacity.
  • At Ginding Hilltop Camp, it looks like they want to increase lawn space. They would remove the existing girls cabin area and build a new area, and rework the upper area to move more staff cabins there. It also looks like there would be more nature trails and circulation.

Will these changes occur? Who knows? It is a long-term master plan, and by the time funding gets in place notions may change, or they may determine something better works. What it shows, however, is a commitment to the future, and not keeping the camps static. Keeping any facility static and dated drops participation. So whether I (as an Alumni) like it or not doesn’t matter: what matters is whether future campers and conferences facility users will like it — and I think they will. That’s what is important: keeping the pieces of the past that work, paying tribute to what built the foundation, and then moving forward to make the future successful. The planning shows that this is a goal.

It was just a wonderful relaxing day, surrounded by generally good people. Now to go “friend” some of the folks I hadn’t seen in years…

 

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Jobs, Unemployment, and Education

If you’ve been following the news at all of late, you would think there are no open jobs, and that getting a post-high school education isn’t worth the money it costs. But two articles expose that as wrong. The first article notes that there are lots of jobs for workers with the right skills; in fact, there are significant shortages. This includes jobs for people with the right college degrees (computer science being one of them), or jobs for people with appropriate technical skills. A simple high school diploma simply isn’t enough. This is echoed in another article, which talks about the tough job market for people with only high school diplomas. Quoting from that article:

A recent Rutgers University survey of young people who graduated from 2006 to 2011 finds that:

  • Nearly a third are unemployed
  • Only 27% have full-time jobs, and another 15% are employed part-time but looking for full-time work
  • Most of those working full-time earn barely enough to keep them out of poverty; their current median wage is $9.25 an hour
  • Fewer than 10% said their high-school education prepared them “extremely well” for their first job
  • Most remain financially dependent on their parents or relatives for housing or other needs
  • More than half said their generation will have less financial success than the previous generation

If you don’t get a good education, what jobs are open? Well, you could do crowd-sourced short-term labor through Amazon’s Mechanical Turk. These are “micro-gigs”, such as taking little surveys, transcribing insurance claims, writing product description, subtitling porn movies, assessing search engines. This is a growing field, but it doesn’t pay much. Crowd labor revenues were up 75% in 2011 to $375 million. And the number of crowd workers is growing even faster, climbing more than 100% last year, with about 40% of the 6-million-member workforce living in developing countries.

Music: Live in the UK (Tom Paxton): Come Away With Me

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Friday Miscellany: Entertainment News, History News, and udder stuff.

It’s Friday at lunchtime, and you know what that means — time to clear out the bookmarked links…

P.S.: Two good net comics today. College-bound and college-attending folks (such as my daughter) should appreciate today’s XKCD on college laundry  (I remember those days). Secondly, those into art and art history would appreciate today’s Dork Tower.

Music: Nunsensations (Off-Broadway Cast): Sin City Sue

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