🎭 HFF19 #19/#20: “[Title of Show]” / “Earth to Karen”

userpic=fringeSunday brought the end of the Hollywood Fringe Festival (FB) and our last two Fringe shows. The first was traditional theatre, ideally suited for a Fringe venue as it started life as a Fringe submission. The second was an example of the wackiness that is Fringe.


[Title of Show] (HFF19)We last saw the musical [Title of Show] just down the street from where we saw it Sunday almost 9 years ago, when Celebration Theatre was still in the space that became the pot shop. Back then, I wrote the following, which still applies (with some slight edits):

One of the things that’s rare on the stage is a truly original musical; that is, a musical that isn’t derived from some previous source material, such as a book, movie, play, or song catalog. If you look on Broadway, a truly original musical is something rare indeed. This review is about an original musical.

Back in 2004, two friends—Jeff Bowen and Hunter Bell, were trying to come up with an idea to submit to the New York Musical Theatre Festival in three weeks. The idea that they hit upon was something remarkably meta: a show about two guys writing a show about two guys writing a show. In other words: they wrote about themselves writing the show… and the result was “[title of show]”.

The show really does tell the story of its creation. Two Broadway-geeks (Jeff and Hunter) want to submit to the festival, and realize that their playful conversations are more fun than any fictional ideas, so they run with it. They bring in two of their theatre friends (Heidi and Susan) and an orchestrator (Mary), and off they go. The result is a curious mishmash that illustrates the creative and development process from the birth of an idea to the point it reaches Broadway, and along the way numerous popular culture, and even more Broadway show references are thrown around just for fun. Once presented at the festival, the show creation didn’t end, for it was updated to reflect its subsequent life Off-Broadway, on the Internet, finally getting to the point where it was mounted on Broadway (and thus, it contains some songs not on the Off-Broadway Cast Album).

As with any meta-discussion, the show plays on a number of levels. The basic story of its creation is entertaining, although there could have been some tightening in the post-Off-Broadway portions, where it got a bit dark and slow. The continuous barrage of obvious and non-obvious references is entertaining to the theatre-geek like me, but probably totally missed by much of the audience. This show has a bit of a gay theatre vibe, as Jeff and Hunter are gay. Of course, if you’re a straight theatre geek you squirm a bit, especially when they go on about the collection of Playbills and Programs that they have (and yes, I must admit to keeping all my programs as well). The music of the show is quite entertaining and engaging, although only one or two of the songs work well outside of the show: “A Way Back to Then” and “Nine People’s Favorite Thing”. The last song is perhaps the mantra of the show… and perhaps a good mantra for life: “I’d rather be nine people’s favorite thing than 100 people’s ninth favorite thing.”

The book of show is unchanged from the world premere we saw back in August 2010, and so the above still applies. The performance and venue — i.e., as part of a Fringe show, apply better. This is a show that should be done on a shoestring, and this production reflected that. A few chairs. Some cheap props. The actors also seemed well suited to the show. Sean Liang (FB) provided a very schumpy Hunter, which really fit the character better than the buff Hunter of 2010. Frankie Zabilka (FB)’s Jeff was also a very normal guy with a pleasant voice who captured the character well. These really seemed like two friends that could write a show. As for the ladies, Natalie Swanner (FB) was outstanding as Heidi, with a remarkably strong singing voice and great stage presence. Lastly there was Sara Spadacene (⭐FB; FB) as Susan, who was equally strong and sang great. Providing the musical accompaniment (as well as a few lines) was Sandy Chao Wang (FB) as Mary.

Understudies were: Amanda Richards (FB) Susan, Heidi; Devin O’Connell (FB) Jeff, Hunter; Elizabeth Curtin (FBMary.

The production was directed by Dylan Moon (FB); Devin O’Connell (FB) was the stage manager. It was an O’Kelly Campfire Production.

Overall, this was a great production of [Title of Show] that was in the perfect venue: A fringe theatre. Great performance, an always fun story, loads of references for the theatre geeks (who likely already had the show memorized).

As Fringe has ended, there are no more productions of show unless they get an encore extension. Luckily, these show did, and will have one more performance on Fri 7/5 at 9:45pm. Tickets are available through the Fringe website.


Earth to Karen (HFF19)Our last Fringe show, Earth to Karenwas a very Fringy show. Remember the story, back in 2007, of the astronaut Lisa Nowak? For those that don’t, here’s what Wikipedia has to say:

Immediately following [fellow astronaut’s] William Oefelein’s divorce, he and Lisa Nowak became involved with each other. Their affair lasted two years, with Oefelein beginning to break it off gradually near the end of 2006. It was during this time that Oefelein started a relationship with Colleen Shipman, who was working as an engineer with the 45th Space Wing at Patrick Air Force Base, Florida. Nowak drove from Houston to Orlando, Florida, on February 4–5, 2007. She packed latex gloves, a black wig, a BB pistol and ammunition, pepper spray, a hooded tan trench coat, a 2-pound (0.91 kg) drilling hammer, black gloves, rubber tubing, plastic garbage bags, approximately $585 in cash, her computer, an 8-inch (200 mm) Gerber folding knife and several other items before driving the 900 miles (1,400 km) to Florida. Early police reports indicated she wore Maximum Absorbency Garments during the trip, but she later denied wearing them.

Yes, the infamous diaper astronaut.

As author Zachary Bernstein (FB) , Nowak (renamed to Karen Spitz) is trying to recover her life in Houston after the infamous event. She’s reduced to applying for work at Subway as a Sandwich Artist, but is still living with her sister. But Subway, she learns, is just hiring her so they can trade off her notoriety.  But with no better choices, she accepts. There she meets Chet, a fellow sandwich artist. He has a special interest in baloney, and wants to open a sandwich shop that specializes in only baloney sandwiches. She agrees to help him. But when her sister, Alice, discovers that Chet is heir to a baloney fortune, she decides to sink her teeth into him. And the rest… is a musical.

Yes, it is as silly as it sounds. The story was a clever idea stretched to a Fringe show. The music, also by Zachary Bernstein (FB), is entertaining but not particularly memorable afterwards. It is an entertaining show, but very much something that [Title to Show] refers to as “Donuts for Dinner”: It sounds like a great idea, but you’re still hungry for nutrition afterwards.

The performances were strong, in particular Dagney Kerr (⭐FB) as Karen. She had a great singing voice and a very funny personality that kept the entertainment together. Also strong was Matthew Bohrer (FB) as Chet. Supporting these two in multiple roles were Rebecca Larsen (FB) Alice / Tracy and Lauren Van Kurin (FB) as Jen / F.C. / Dutch. Music was provided by an on-stage band consisting of Eric Radoux (FBBass; Gordon Wimpress (⭐FB) Guitar; and Zachary Bernstein (FB) Drums.

The production was choreographed by Sarah M. Kruger (⭐FB, FB), and directed by Guy Picot (FB). Jim Pierce (FB) was the Graphic Designer. There was no credit for the stage manager.

This was a cute and entertaining show, but doesn’t really have a life beyond Fringe. It is, essentially, an extended musical comedy sketch without significant depth. Donuts for dinner, as it were.

Although the Fringe Festival has ended, the show has received a one performance Fringe extension on Sun 7/7 at 5:00PM. Visit the Fringe website for tickets.

🎭

Ob. Disclaimer: I am not a trained theatre (or music) critic; I am, however, a regular theatre and music audience member. I’ve been attending live theatre and concerts in Los Angeles since 1972; I’ve been writing up my thoughts on theatre (and the shows I see) since 2004. I do not have theatre training (I’m a computer security specialist), but have learned a lot about theatre over my many years of attending theatre and talking to talented professionals. I pay for all my tickets unless otherwise noted (or I’ll make a donation to the theatre, in lieu of payment). I am not compensated by anyone for doing these writeups in any way, shape, or form. I currently subscribe at 5 Star Theatricals (FB), the Hollywood Pantages (FB), Actors Co-op (FB), the Ahmanson Theatre (FB) [2018-2019 season], the Soraya/VPAC (FB), and the Musical Theatre Guild (FB). Through my theatre attendance I have made friends with cast, crew, and producers, but I do strive to not let those relationships color my writing (with one exception: when writing up children’s production, I focus on the positive — one gains nothing except bad karma by raking a child over the coals). I believe in telling you about the shows I see to help you form your opinion; it is up to you to determine the weight you give my writeups.

Upcoming Shows:

Next weekend is calm, as we recover from Fringe. The second weekend of July brings An Intimate Evening with Kristen Chenowith at,The Hollywood Bowl (FB).  The third weekend of July brings Miss Saigon at the Hollywood Pantages (FB), followed by A Comedy of Errors from Shakespeare by the Sea (FB)/Little Fish Theatre(FB). The last weekend of July brings West Side Story at 5 Star Theatricals (FB). August starts with an alumni Shabbat at camp, and The Play That Goes Wrong at the Ahmanson Theatre (FB). August ends with Mother Road and As You Like It at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival (FB). In between those points, August is mostly open.

Early September is also mostly open. Then things heat up, with the third weekend bringing Barnum at Musical Theatre Guild (FB), and the fourth weekend bringing Miss Saigon at the Hollywood Pantages (FB). October starts with The Mystery of Irma Vep at Actors Co-op (FB), and concludes with Mandy Gonzalez at the Soraya/VPAC (FB).  Yes, there are a lot of open dates in there, but I expect that they will fill in as time goes on.

As always, I’m keeping my eyes open for interesting productions mentioned on sites such as Better-LemonsMusicals in LA@ This StageFootlights, as well as productions I see on GoldstarLA Stage TixPlays411 or that are sent to me by publicists or the venues themselves. Want to know how to attend lots of live stuff affordably? Take a look at my post on How to attend Live Theatre on a Budget. Want to learn about all the great theatre in Southern California? Read my post on how Los Angeles (and its environs) is the best area for theatre in the Country!

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🎭 HFF19 #16, #17, #18: “Shakedown at the Dusty Spur” / “Time Traveler’s Guide” / Wigfield

userpic=fringeThe penultimate day of the Hollywood Fringe Festival (FB) (I do like that word). Three shows, that again show the breadth of Fringe. From clowns playing around on a stage, to an inscrutable one-person show, and finally a well-realized new adaptation of a book. This is Fringe in the full range of strange and glory.


Four Clowns Presents: Shakedown at the Dusty SpurMany years ago we saw an intriguing production of Hamlet, done by the Four Clowns theatre company. Now, when you think clowns, do think of clowns in the noun form, ala Bozo or Chuckles or those numerous TV hosts. Think clown as the verb: people who revel in clowning around and having fun, and you have the basis of Four Clowns. This is an extremely inventive company that like to have fun with everything. You need to like their style (I do), and be in the right mood to be receptive for it (I always am, my wife wasn’t).

So when we learned that Four Clowns was doing a show at Fringe, we were in. Our first show Saturday was that Four Clowns show: Four Clowns Present: Shakedown at the Dusty Spur.

The basic outline of Four Clowns Present: Shakedown at the Dusty Spur is simple, and almost borders on the melodramatic: Papa Maynard has died, and has left the Dusty Spur Saloon to his eldest and only son, Ike Maynard, bypassing the smarter older daughter Marybeth, and leaving only a little to the youngest daughter Maybelline. The villains, Dallas Devereaux and his assistant Logan Lesserman, plot to get the saloon so they can burn it to the ground and fulfill a promise. They do this by swindling Ike, so the children arrange to get “the good buy” Colt “The Corpse” McCoy to fight their battle. But he lives up to his name, and they need to figure out what to do next to get their bar back.

There was plenty of audience participation (if you don’t like that stuff, don’t sit in the first row). There was loads of improvising. The general attitude was that of fun and improvisation — clowning around, as one might say.

Under the direction of Joe DeSoto (FB), artistic director of Four Clowns, all of the performances were strong. The cast consisted of Tommy Fleming (FBDallas Devereaux; Turner Frankosky Ike Maynard; Elisabeth Hower Marybeth Maynard; Benji Kaufman (FBLogan Lesserman; Liz Morgan (FBMaybelline Maynard; and Jason Poston (FBColt “The Corpse” McCoy. Of these, my favorites were Kaufman and Morgan, who were quite a lot of fun to watch.

Other production credits: Harim Sanchez (FBAsst. Director / Stage Manager; Jax Ball (FBSet Design; Aaron Lyons Sound Design; Erin Colleran (FBCostume Design; Sam Schweikert (FBPoster Design. A whole bunch of people contributed to the script, including most of the cast. Produced by Joe DeSoto (FB), Julia Davis (FB), and Harim Sanchez (FB).

As the official Fringe Festival has ended, you’ll need to check the Fringe Website to see if the show has been extended. Currently, it looks like there are two extension performances: Fri 7/5 at 9pm, and Sun 7/7 at 10:30pm. I found this to be a really funny somewhat improvised show, with lots of clowning around. Depending on your love of clowning (independent of the traditional notion of clowns), YMMV.


Time Travelers Guide to the Present (HFF19)The second show we saw on Saturday was A Time Travelers Guide to the Present. This show held such promise. The show description was:

With humanity’s fate on the line, a secret society of astronomers recruits volunteers for the world’s first time travel flight. We follow one traveler as he is catapulted on a journey through the cosmos. What begins as exploration of the mechanics of spacetime travel turns into a desperate hunt for connection. This is a one man show that mixes science, sci-fi, music, and storytelling to explore what it means to be worthy of love.

The show, which was written, performed, produced, and composed by Doug Harvey (FB), turned out to be a bit more incomprehensible. A message is received from the future, and so someone is recruited to go forward in time to stop it. Our intrepid hero is the selectee, and what then follows is the mission, with lots of time travel back and forth, reminiscent of the end of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and about at times as incomprehensible.

On the positive side, the music was great and relaxing.

The production was directed by Jake Elitzer (FB), and Rebecca Schoenberg (FB) was the Production Stage Manager. Other producers were Annie Chang (FB) and Kristina Mueller (FB). Poster art by Estevan Guzman (FB).

As the official Fringe Festival has ended, you’ll need to check the Fringe Website to see if there are any extensions. Right now, there are none shown. We found the show confusing, but the music was great.


Wigfield (HFF19)The last show we saw on Saturday was one of the best and most humorous shows of all the shows we saw. It was Wigfield, adapted by Pamela Eberhardt (FB) from the satirical novel Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not written by Amy Sedaris (FB), Paul Dinello, and Stephen Colbert. The best description I found of the novel was from this site:

Wigfield (officially known as “Proposed Super Fund Site 554”) is an ephemeral hodgepodge of shanties, porno shops, strip clubs, and used auto parts yards. When a state politician, Representative William J. Farber, proposes the demolition of the Senator Alfonse T. Bulkwaller Memorial Dam (constructed in 1931), Wigfield is faced with destruction. The dam is located just up Fresh Springs Creek from this sleepy little, glow-in-the-dark, Podunk burg and it’s the only thing keeping Wigfield from becoming a part of the creek.

In order to prevent the dam’s removal, the residents will have to prove that they’re not just a bunch of itinerant squatters and that Wigfield is indeed an actual town. Fortunately for them, “journalist” Russell Hokes arrives in “town” to get material for a book he’s supposed to be writing about the “brave lives of small-town residents… that celebrates what is best in America by showing the indomitable human spirit in times of crisis”. Hokes unwittingly ends up chronicling the Wigfield citizenry’s last days of living life as they’d known it for so long. He also learns a lot about life, love, and the ecdysiastic arts.

The stage version, as written by Eberhardt, sticks with this pretty closely. We meet Hokes at the beginning, as he gets an advance to chronicle a small town. He discovers Wigfield, and the game (and strangeness) is on. We meet the town inhabitants, each stranger and more off-beat than the next, and begin to learn of the dilemma … and the game, for the notion seems to be that if they can become a town, then they can get relocation payments due to eminent domain. But the resolution becomes more of a “be careful what you wish for”.

In the end, this becomes a cleverly disguised commentary on the weirdness of small towns and how they accept the off-beat; the whole process of eminent domain, and finally, the idiocy of FEMA.

I found the production extremely funny and extremely well done. I originally went to see it because we knew someone in the cast from our days subscribing at REP East in Santa Clarita. I left thoroughly entertained.

The cast consisted of: Joe Hernandez-Kolski (⭐FB; FB) Player A / Hollinger; Pam Quinn (FBPlayer B / Cinnamon / Prune; Connor Pratt (FBPlayer C / Dillard / Julian; Eric Curtis Johnson (FBPlayer D / Udell / Sawyer; Heather Marie Roberts (FBPlayer E / Eleanore / Lenare; Meghan Parks (FBPlayer F / Hoyt / Dottie; Bedjou Jean (FBPlayer G / Farber / Raven; Emily Clark (FBPlayer H / Mae Ella / Carla / Judge; Jeff Scot Carey (FBPlayer I / Donnie / Halstead; and Scott Golden (FBRussell Hokes. All were strong. I particularly liked the warm that Golden had, but each was great in their own wacky way.

Understudies were: Jarad Kopciak (FBPlayer D / Udell / Sawyer on June 23/30; Pam Quinn (FB) Player E / Eleanore / Lenare on June 30; and Henry Kaiser (FBPlayer I / Donnie / Halstead on June 22.

The production staff included: Arlo Sanders (FBDirector, Lighting Design; John Reza Allison Executive Producer. It was produced by The Unknown Artists (FB) and Ruckus Rockwell (FB).

As the official Fringe Festival has ended, you’ll need to check the Fringe Website to see if there are any extensions. Right now, there are none shown.

🎭

Ob. Disclaimer: I am not a trained theatre (or music) critic; I am, however, a regular theatre and music audience member. I’ve been attending live theatre and concerts in Los Angeles since 1972; I’ve been writing up my thoughts on theatre (and the shows I see) since 2004. I do not have theatre training (I’m a computer security specialist), but have learned a lot about theatre over my many years of attending theatre and talking to talented professionals. I pay for all my tickets unless otherwise noted (or I’ll make a donation to the theatre, in lieu of payment). I am not compensated by anyone for doing these writeups in any way, shape, or form. I currently subscribe at 5 Star Theatricals (FB), the Hollywood Pantages (FB), Actors Co-op (FB), the Ahmanson Theatre (FB) [2018-2019 season], and the Musical Theatre Guild (FB). Through my theatre attendance I have made friends with cast, crew, and producers, but I do strive to not let those relationships color my writing (with one exception: when writing up children’s production, I focus on the positive — one gains nothing except bad karma by raking a child over the coals). I believe in telling you about the shows I see to help you form your opinion; it is up to you to determine the weight you give my writeups.

Upcoming Shows:

As for July, it is already filling up. The first weekend of the month is still open. The second weekend brings An Intimate Evening with Kristen Chenowith at,The Hollywood Bowl (FB).  The third weekend of July brings Miss Saigon at the Hollywood Pantages (FB), followed by A Comedy of Errors from Shakespeare by the Sea (FB)/Little Fish Theatre(FB). The last weekend of July brings West Side Story at 5 Star Theatricals (FB). August starts with an alumni Shabbat at camp, and The Play That Goes Wrong at the Ahmanson Theatre (FB). August ends with Mother Road and As You Like It at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival (FB). In between those points, August is mostly open.

As always, I’m keeping my eyes open for interesting productions mentioned on sites such as Better-LemonsMusicals in LA@ This StageFootlights, as well as productions I see on GoldstarLA Stage TixPlays411 or that are sent to me by publicists or the venues themselves. Want to know how to attend lots of live stuff affordably? Take a look at my post on How to attend Live Theatre on a Budget. Want to learn about all the great theatre in Southern California? Read my post on how Los Angeles (and its environs) is the best area for theatre in the Country!

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