I Got Rhythm / I Got Music / I Got My Gal / Who Could Ask For Anything More?

Last night, some dear friends invited us to join them in their box seats for an evening at the Hollywood Bowl. For those unfamiliar with the bowl, it is one of the largest natural amphitheaters in the world, with a current seating capacity of just under 18,000. Opened in 1922, the Hollywood Bowl has been the summer home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and, in 1991 gave its name to a resident ensemble that has filled a special niche in the musical life of Southern California, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.

Last night’s program was the first program in a multi-day George Gershwin celebration. The program featured the LA Philharmonic, with Leonard Slatkin conducting and Jean-Yves Thibaudet at the Grand Piano, doing:

The Grofé and Bennett pieces were in the program because they were long-time arrangers for George Gershwin. This program is repeated this coming Thursday. Attendence was around 8,700.

This was my first time at a true concert in ages. I found it very relaxing: the wine, the cheese, the fruit, the company, the music. It was also my daughter’s first time at a concert such as this. Initially bored (and wishing she had brought Wicked to read), I think she got into it by the end. All I know is that I’m tired today: we didn’t get home until around 11:30pm… and I get up at 4:30 am!

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So it’s very shrewd to be / Very very popular / Like me!

And very, very popular it is.

Yesterday afternoon, we went to go see Wicked at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. This is an immensely popular show. To my knowledge, it is sold out: we certainly saw long lines waiting for cancellations and the ticket lottery. There were also folks trying to buy our tickets as we walked to the show.

For those unfamiliar with the story, Wicked tells the “pre-story” of the Wicked Witch of the West, asking the question: Are people born wicked, or do they have wickedness thrust upon them? It is based on the excellent book by Gregory McGuire. It tells the story of the relationship between Elphaba (whose name consists of the first syllables of “L. Frank Baum”) and Galinda (later Glinda). Elphaba is your traditional outsider: rejected by everyone based on her green skin and attitude to match, whereas Galinda is the bubblehead blonde popular girl. How these two become best friends, and change the face of Oz (while still interconnecting with the classic movie and books) is the story. This story has many levels and great questions that can be discussed, ranging from the nature of good and evil (is it all perspective), to the importance of being true to yourself, vs. the desire to be popular. As such, it speaks to all ages.

We had the national touring cast for our production, with one understudy, Maria Eberline, filling in for the injured Stephanie Block. Maria did an excellent job. Others in the cast included Kendra Kassebaum as Galinda/Glinda, Carol Kane as Madame Morrible, David Garrison (one of my favorite actors) as the Wizard, Derrick Williams as Fiyero, and Logan Lipton as Boq. I have to say the cast was excellent, and more importantly, seemed to have a lot of fun doing the show (which always comes through, and does improve the performance).

As I alluded to at the start, this show is very popular. I haven’t seen such an enthusiastic audience in my years attending the theatre. This crowd was into the show, and the energy it gave in the entire theatre was remarkable. I truly enjoyed the production, and I enjoyed the message:

I’ve heard it said
That people come into our lives for a reason
Bringing something we must learn
And we are led
To those who help us most to grow
If we let them
And we help them in return
Well, I don’t know if I believe that’s true
But I know I’m who I am today
Because I knew you:

Like a comet pulled from orbit
As it passes a sun
Like a stream that meets a boulder
Halfway through the wood
Who can say if I’ve been changed for the better?
But because I knew you
I have been changed for good

Next up: Purlie at the Pasadena Playhouse on July 23rd. This is a show with great music, and one that just got an excellent writeup in the Los Angeles Times. After that is the Cabrillo Music Theatre production of The Wizard of Oz on July 31st.

[Cross-posted to socal_theatre]

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Leaving Things in Doubt

DoubtI just got back from the the Pasadena Playhouse, where I saw the play Doubt by John Patrick Shanley (shanleysmoney -at aol.com, yes, it was in the program). The play starred Linda Hunt as Sister Aloysious, Jonathan Cake as Father Flynn, Mandy Freund as Sister James, and Patrice Pitman Quinn as Mrs. Muller.

This play was excellent, and did what a classic good play should do: it made you think! The play takes place in 1964, just as the Vatican II reforms are starting to creep in. It takes place in a Catholic School, presumably in MA. The school is run by an old-school Mother Superior (Sister Aloysious), who is instructing her young new teacher (Sister James) that she has to be strict with the students, watch and protect them, not be compassionate or believe what is on the surface. She asks her to be especially suspicious when the new young priest is alone with the boys. Well, a report comes in, and then Sister Aloysious goes on a witch hunt against the father. The questions that are raised relate to the power of gossip to destroy a reputation, and how doggedly we should pursue our convictions even in the light of protestations they are wrong. In the end, Sister Aloysious ends up driving the father out of the school, but she admits she lied about part of the evidence…. but he wouldn’t had left had the lie been false. Would he? You walk out of the theatre questioning who was right: Aloysious or Flynn. This is good theatre.

I also found it timely to be seeing this play on the day of the passing of Pope John Paul II. The Pope had his faith, his certainty, on many issues that others disagreed with him on. The Pope presided over the church in a time of scandel in the priesthood. Did he have his doubts? Did these doubts shape his actions? All of these are good questions.

Talking Broadway, when reviewing the New York production of the play (which is running concurrently with the Playhouse production) noted: A play this thoughtful, this well-crafted, this passionate is hard to ignore and even harder to resist. Yes, it addresses issues of great meaning to many: faith, truthfulness, determination to do what’s right at any cost. But those are incidental concerns. The play’s specific story – about a Bronx Catholic school in 1964, where a priest might be carrying on an inappropriate relationship with the school’s lone black student – is also beside the point. The real drama comes from how you, like the characters, deal with a situation that can’t be fully understood because it cannot be interpreted in only one way. When you’re faced with a situation like this, for which there is no single clear answer, with whom do you identify? The priest, Father Flynn, who loves teaching and takes his faith seriously, but makes perhaps too many mistakes? The school’s principal, Sister Aloysius, who uses all of her education, experience, and personal beliefs to come to a conclusion, and then sticks to her guns in order to protect the children at any cost? School teacher Sister James, who can too easily see both sides of the question? Or, the black student’s mother, Mrs. Muller, who knows elements of the truth, but might let the consequences slide in pursuit of a possible greater good?

In the review of the Los Angeles production, Talking Broadway commended the play, but didn’t like the casting as much. I disagree. I thought the casting was great. You can see a picture of Linda Hunt in the Hollywood Reporter link below. Suffice it to say here is this little over 4’9″ Mother Superior, old, standing up to this 7′ handsome young priest. Yet she has such power and presence over him. Yet there is one seen where the priest is in front of her, and she is in the back of the stage, and suddenly you feel his power.

The Hollywood Reporter notes that: Ultimately, Shanley, in dialogue that blends the poetic and the realistic (with bits of humor to lighten the load) asks whether Sister Aloysius is being overly protective or not protective enough, and whether Father Flynn’s casual approach to his students has an evil intent. All is cast in the gray area of doubt — and this is Shanley’s overall point in his timely and engrossing play.

Curtain Up notes: “John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt flowers from a conventional seed into an intricate vine whose tendrils go beyond did-he or didn’t-he to nudge ramifications of faith, justification, and even the future, where we dwell in the dubious miasma of the invasion of Iraq. But there’s nothing flowery about the exquisite clarity of this play. Unlike the heightened poetic language in the playwright’s previous works, Doubt sets its parameters out in the black and white worn by the priest and nun whose duel this is.”

ReviewPlays says: “The Doubt here is not only whether Father Flynn is guilty of priestophilia—Shanley craftily lets that decision rest squarely on the shoulders of each individual audience member—but whether Sister A’s ruthless campaign is justified in the first place. Under Claudia Weill’s taut direction on Gary L. Weissmann’s gloriously atmospheric set, this is thrilling, highly provocative theatre that does just what it’s meant to do: asks more questions than it answers. Hunt is magnificently rigid as Sister Aloysius, using her familiarly croaky voice to wonderful advantage here, although her performance is marred by fumbled words and odd little pauses, possibly waiting to hear her lines fed to her through an earpiece? Cake could not be better as the accused priest and Freund is quietly arresting as the novice nun, perfect in her subtlety as we watch her character’s sweetly guileless passion for teaching being squashed right in front of us, but it is Patrice Pitman Quinn, as the mother of the young kid Sister A suspects is performing more rituals than simply lighting altar candles, who in one brief scene offers the most memorable performance.”

This was a fascinating evening of theatre. If you get a chance to go see this play, do so. Our next play at the playhouse will be Private Lives by Noel Coward at the end of May.

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Leaving Things in Doubt

DoubtI just got back from the the Pasadena Playhouse, where I saw the play Doubt by John Patrick Shanley (shanleysmoney -at aol.com, yes, it was in the program). The play starred Linda Hunt as Sister Aloysious, Jonathan Cake as Father Flynn, Mandy Freund as Sister James, and Patrice Pitman Quinn as Mrs. Muller.

This play was excellent, and did what a classic good play should do: it made you think! The play takes place in 1964, just as the Vatican II reforms are starting to creep in. It takes place in a Catholic School, presumably in MA. The school is run by an old-school Mother Superior (Sister Aloysious), who is instructing her young new teacher (Sister James) that she has to be strict with the students, watch and protect them, not be compassionate or believe what is on the surface. She asks her to be especially suspicious when the new young priest is alone with the boys. Well, a report comes in, and then Sister Aloysious goes on a witch hunt against the father. The questions that are raised relate to the power of gossip to destroy a reputation, and how doggedly we should pursue our convictions even in the light of protestations they are wrong. In the end, Sister Aloysious ends up driving the father out of the school, but she admits she lied about part of the evidence…. but he wouldn’t had left had the lie been false. Would he? You walk out of the theatre questioning who was right: Aloysious or Flynn. This is good theatre.

I also found it timely to be seeing this play on the day of the passing of Pope John Paul II. The Pope had his faith, his certainty, on many issues that others disagreed with him on. The Pope presided over the church in a time of scandel in the priesthood. Did he have his doubts? Did these doubts shape his actions? All of these are good questions.

Talking Broadway, when reviewing the New York production of the play (which is running concurrently with the Playhouse production) noted: A play this thoughtful, this well-crafted, this passionate is hard to ignore and even harder to resist. Yes, it addresses issues of great meaning to many: faith, truthfulness, determination to do what’s right at any cost. But those are incidental concerns. The play’s specific story – about a Bronx Catholic school in 1964, where a priest might be carrying on an inappropriate relationship with the school’s lone black student – is also beside the point. The real drama comes from how you, like the characters, deal with a situation that can’t be fully understood because it cannot be interpreted in only one way. When you’re faced with a situation like this, for which there is no single clear answer, with whom do you identify? The priest, Father Flynn, who loves teaching and takes his faith seriously, but makes perhaps too many mistakes? The school’s principal, Sister Aloysius, who uses all of her education, experience, and personal beliefs to come to a conclusion, and then sticks to her guns in order to protect the children at any cost? School teacher Sister James, who can too easily see both sides of the question? Or, the black student’s mother, Mrs. Muller, who knows elements of the truth, but might let the consequences slide in pursuit of a possible greater good?

In the review of the Los Angeles production, Talking Broadway commended the play, but didn’t like the casting as much. I disagree. I thought the casting was great. You can see a picture of Linda Hunt in the Hollywood Reporter link below. Suffice it to say here is this little over 4’9″ Mother Superior, old, standing up to this 7′ handsome young priest. Yet she has such power and presence over him. Yet there is one seen where the priest is in front of her, and she is in the back of the stage, and suddenly you feel his power.

The Hollywood Reporter notes that: Ultimately, Shanley, in dialogue that blends the poetic and the realistic (with bits of humor to lighten the load) asks whether Sister Aloysius is being overly protective or not protective enough, and whether Father Flynn’s casual approach to his students has an evil intent. All is cast in the gray area of doubt — and this is Shanley’s overall point in his timely and engrossing play.

Curtain Up notes: “John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt flowers from a conventional seed into an intricate vine whose tendrils go beyond did-he or didn’t-he to nudge ramifications of faith, justification, and even the future, where we dwell in the dubious miasma of the invasion of Iraq. But there’s nothing flowery about the exquisite clarity of this play. Unlike the heightened poetic language in the playwright’s previous works, Doubt sets its parameters out in the black and white worn by the priest and nun whose duel this is.”

ReviewPlays says: “The Doubt here is not only whether Father Flynn is guilty of priestophilia—Shanley craftily lets that decision rest squarely on the shoulders of each individual audience member—but whether Sister A’s ruthless campaign is justified in the first place. Under Claudia Weill’s taut direction on Gary L. Weissmann’s gloriously atmospheric set, this is thrilling, highly provocative theatre that does just what it’s meant to do: asks more questions than it answers. Hunt is magnificently rigid as Sister Aloysius, using her familiarly croaky voice to wonderful advantage here, although her performance is marred by fumbled words and odd little pauses, possibly waiting to hear her lines fed to her through an earpiece? Cake could not be better as the accused priest and Freund is quietly arresting as the novice nun, perfect in her subtlety as we watch her character’s sweetly guileless passion for teaching being squashed right in front of us, but it is Patrice Pitman Quinn, as the mother of the young kid Sister A suspects is performing more rituals than simply lighting altar candles, who in one brief scene offers the most memorable performance.”

This was a fascinating evening of theatre. If you get a chance to go see this play, do so. Our next play at the playhouse will be Private Lives by Noel Coward at the end of May.

Note: This entry was originally posted on Observations Along The Road (on cahighways.org) as this entry by California Highway Guy. You may comment either here or there (where there are comment(s)).

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You Can’t Get A Man With A Gun

This afternoon, we went to see the Cabrillo Music Theatre (CMT) production of Annie Get Your Gun (google-cached Review). CMT is the resident musical theatre company for the Thousand Oaks Playhouse, and we’ve been subscribers for four seasons now. Their productions are consistantly high quality, and very affordable.

Today’s production was up to their high standards. It used the revised version seen on Broadway (review) in 1999. This version has a revised book from the original (revisions by Peter Stone) that rework a few songs, and get rid of three songs in their entirety: Colonel Buffalo Bill; I’m A Bad Bad Man; and I’m An Indian Too. These songs were deleted because of their lack of political correctness: either they were problematic for Native Americans or for (I guess) unwed mothers. [Article on the CMT Revision] No matter what, this is a show with some classic songs, including There’s No Business Like Show Business, Anything You Can Do, Doin’ What Comes Naturally, I Got The Sun In The Morning, and many more.

This was an excellent production, with an outstanding cast. Kevin Baily played Frank Butler. He had a remarkable voice, and even more remarkable chemistry with the Annie actress. Annie was played by Katherine McPhee, a relatively new actress with a remarkable stage presence, great facial expressions, and a wonderful voice. She will go far. Also notable in this production were Noah Rivera as Tommy Keeler and Jaclyn Miller as Winnie Tate, both making their Cabrillo Music Theatre debuts. Others in the cast included Sandy Mulvihill as Dolly Tate; Cary Pitts as Buffalo Bill Cody; Tim Polzin as Charlie Davenport; Frank Bonventure as Sitting Bull; Nick Mencola as Pawnee Bill/Foster Wilson, Tara Baumann as Jessie Oakley; Sofie Thurston as Nellie Oakley; and Eric Austin Young as Jake Oakley (I’m not listing the ensemble members).

This show closes Sunday evening, March 22. The next CMT production is The Wizard of Oz (Yip Harberg score) the last week of July and the first week of August.

CMT also announced their 2005-2006 season, which sounds like a great one: Oliver!, Forever Plaid, and Seussical. I’ve seen two of the three of these, but won’t mind seeing them again. I’ll note that CMT has great prices: Subscription prices (if they haven’t changed) are only $11 per ticket per show for the balcony on Saturday Matinees—what a great way to introduce your family to theatre!

[Crossposted to socal_theatre]

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This is the story of a little girl…

Last night gf_guruilla, ellipticcurve, S&F and I went to go see “Once On This Island” at the International City Theatre in Long Beach.

The evening started out poorly, as S&F was in a mood from being overtired. This mood spread to gf_guruilla, so that part wasn’t pretty. We all got dressed up (my wife was beautiful in a black velvet outfit; ellipticcurve was also lovely in a blue flowing dress; I wore my usual slacks, brown oxford cloth, tie and sportjacket, and S&F had one black pants and a nice red and black top… alas, in the craziness, we didn’t get pictures). However, although all of us were dressed up, we couldn’t get into a nice place for dinner. They all had wait times of 45 to 90 minutes. Later, we discovered why: The Reggae festival was in Long Beach the same weekend. Crowds, crowds.

On to the show. This was our first time at ICT, and we were impressed. The theatre is on the size of the Mark Taper Forum, with good sight lines throughout. As for the production: this was the second non-preview performance, and there were some kinks. Although the acting was marvolous (the entire ensemble was great), the sound was less than purpose. I don’t know if it was bad quality mikes or bad speakers, but things sounded speaker-ish, which is not what you want. You want to hear the actors, not the speakers.

For those not familiar with the story, here’s how ICT describes it: When peasant girl Ti Moune falls in love with wealthy landowner Daniel, the supernatural interference of four powerful deities catapults the star-crossed lovers into a fantastic swirling odyssey. Filled with hypnotic dancing, brilliant colors and beguiling music with a calypso beat, its infectious spirit and Caribbean charm are an uplifting tropical breeze that’s guaranteed to refresh! This enchanting tropical tale of romance, loss and redemption includes the songs: One Small Girl, Waiting for Life, The Human Heart, Pray, Mama Will Provide and Forever Yours.

I love the music to this show, especially the song Mama Will Provide. It is just a very uplifting show (and I could swear that the authors later reused music from this in Seussical). As I said above, the singing was great (and I got a chance to point out to Nicole that one of the singers was a UC Davis grad!)

Our next show is in early March: Annie Get Your Gun at CMT. Until then, I guess we’ll just be doing what comes naturally.

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