Another Meeting of Minds: Voltaire, Martin Luther, Florence Nightingale, and Plato

Last night, we went to the Steve Allen Theatre to see another episode in the recent theatrical revival of Steve Allen’s Meeting of Minds. As I got home too late last night, I figured I’d take some time over lunch to write this. This production was episode #9, and featured:

  • Martin Luther (Ron Perlman) – (1483-1546); German protestant reformer
  • Voltaire (Ray Abruzzo) – (1694-1778); French writer, philosopher & moralist
  • Plato (Harold Gould) – (429-347 B.C.); Greek philosopher
  • Florence Nightingale (Sharon Lawrence) – (1820-1910); British hospital reformer; founder of nursing
  • Steve Allen (Gary Cole) (1921-2000) – The host and moderator. Writer, composer, inventor of late night TV, creator of Meeting of Minds

This was a second season episode, and it was clear that Steve Allen hadn’t had as much time to refine the scripts, for this episode was less a true dialogue and more a series of introductions into the four characters at the table. It is likely the dialog aspect grows in the second half of each episode pair, but those haven’t been produced yet. As a result, in this episode, we spent a bunch of time with Voltaire, and then Martin Luther, and then Florence Nightingale, and finally Plato. So let’s look at each performance and performer.

Gary Cole (Steve Allen) is the one common element in these performances. He does a good job of moderating, but doesn’t always capture Allen’s jocularity. He also occasionally slips up in the staged reading, but some are better at cold reads than others. Ray Abruzzo (Voltaire) gave a strong performance: he had Voltaire’s energy and condescending nature down — you can tell he was on the side of reason and against the religious faith-based notions of Martin Luther. Abruzzo did well with the cold reading. Ron Perlman (Martin Luther), however, was the weakest of the group this time: his reading was very quiet and subdued (some in the audience even asked him to speak up), and he didn’t have the firebrand energy I expected from Luther. As such, his discussion took much longer than it should have. Luckily, this quiet mood changed when Sharon Lawrence (Florence Nighingale) came to the table. Although she entered looking feeble with her cane, she proved to have strong energy and fire and passion about the poor conditions of the British soldiers during the Crimean War. Last to the table was Harold Gould (Plato), looking quite old (he almost reminded me of George Burns in “Oh God”). You could tell he was the consummate actor: he gave a nuanced performance above and beyond the reading, and reacted well to the mocking that his notions about science and the origins of man received.

This performance had more ad-libbing from the original script than I’ve seen before. Abruzzo ad-libbed, when he screwed up a French name, to “Pardon my French, I haven’t used it in 300 years”. Perlman made a simlar ad-lib when screwing up the German (“Pardon my German, I haven’t used it in 400 years”. Lawrence had her own more appropriate script change, when she broadened the power of the media to explicitly include the Internet, which Allen hadn’t mentioned in his 1978 script. I believe that Cole also had an ad-lib making fun of Scientology in response to a comment by either Plato or Luther.

This episode was not as energetic as the first season episodes, and expanded beyond the nominal hour it should have taken. It was still good, but the subdued nature of Perlman as Martin Luther was a significant weakness.

Technically, the show was simple. A table, some chairs, some water on the table. The production was directed by Frank Megna; no other technical credits were provided in the program. Lighting was simple. I do have one technical comment. At the first episode we saw, a representative from Working Stage got up and introduced the program, indicated what they were trying to do with the revival, and (of course) requested that beeping devices be disabled. That wasn’t done at this performance, and I missed it. All we had was someone standing up and pointing to their cellphone. As I said on the last episode, I think that bringing back this introduction would be a good thing for the series overall.

The next episode of “Meeting of Minds” only had the date and actors announced: Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 7pm, featuring Gary Cole, Joe Mantegna, Ernie Hudson, France Nguyen, and Richard Gilliland (Eventbrite Page). Given the ethnic mix of the cast, this looks to be Episode #7:

  • Frederick Douglass – (c.1818-1895); black American abolitionist
  • Empress Tz ‘u-hsi – (1835-1908); Dowager Empress of China
  • Marchese di Bonesana Cesare Beccaria – (1738-94); Italian philosopher & politician
  • Marquis Donatien Alphonse Francois de Sade – (1740-1814); French revolutionary

This should be an interesting discussion about, among other things, the role of torture. It may create some interesting parallels to what has happened during the Iraq war.

Upcoming Theatre: We currently have no theatre scheduled over the next two weeks, due to Halloween on Saturday and Erin’s Homecoming D&D game the following Saturday. Still, if I find the right production, the Sundays are open. November 11th (Veterans Day) we’re at a Day Out With Thomas at Orange Empire Railway Museum. The following weekend Erin is going to the TMBG concert at UCLA, while we will attending Havdalah with Peter Yarrow at the American Jewish University. On November 22 at 2pm we return to REP East Playhouse for “M*A*S*H”, followed by the next installment of Meeting of Minds (pending ticketing). Thanksgiving weekend is currently open; however, it might be taken by a shift of our production for the following weekend (“Baby Its You” at the Pasadena Playhouse, December 5 at 8pm… which, by the way, features the actress who played Marie Antoinette), due to the fact I head out the morning after we see it for ACSAC in Hawaii. That same weekend (December 3, 4, 5) also brings “The Taming of the Shrew” at Van Nuys HS — we’ll likely be going to the Friday, December 4 performance. I fly out to Hawaii for ACSAC on 12/5 (hint: registration is now open and we have a great technical program — so come to the conference). While there, I hope to get together one night with shutterbug93 and see some local theatre. I return 12/12 (and, alas, this is why we can’t see Equus at LA Valley College the weekends of 12/3-5 and 10-12). December 20 brings “Mary Poppins” at the Ahmanson. As always, I’m looking for suggestions for good shows to see, especially if they are on Goldstar or LA Stage Tix.

Disclaimer: In light of the upcoming rules, you should know that nobody paid me anything to write this review. In fact, I receive no remuneration for any reviews I write.

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A General, a Queen, a Theologian, and a Revolutionary Walk Into a Room….

I’ve written in the past of my admiration for the Steve Allen series “Meeting of Minds”, where four historical people are brought together for a roundtable discussion. Working Stage Productions has brought back the series as an ongoing series of staged readings. Last night was their third production, episode #3, featuring a discussion between President U.S. Grant (Dan Lauria), Dr. Karl Marx (Ed Asner), Queen Marie Antoinette (Meeghan Holaway), Sir Thomas More (Bruce Davison), and moderated by Steve Allen (Gary Cole). As usual, it was thought provoking and excellent.

Steve Allen wrote these scripts in the 1960s, and they were first produced for television in the 1970s. Thus, they contain some very slightly dated dialogue that is more emphasized in this particular episode than others, such as the references to Henry Kissinger as Secretary of State or the intense hatred for Karl Marx (which was very much a product of the Cold War). Still, this episode does have some topics that resonate today, such as the attempts by the United States to intervene in the affairs of other countries in order to promote democracy. This is highlighted when Karl Marx points out that it is difficult to argue for democracy when the problems of world hunger and world poverty are not being solved. Could this apply to the situation in the Middle East? Could the reason that the US is not embraced be that the US values haven’t improved the quality of life? These discussions make you (at least) think about the issue, and how we can work better to make the world a better place.

Still, the main focus of this episode is not Karl Marx — in this episode, he serves more as historian and adjunct moderator than civil agitator. His story, as well as that of Sir Thomas, comes out in Episode #4. This episode focuses more on the lives of U.S. Grant and especially Marie Antoinette and the philosphy behind the French Revolution. As such, the theme is more the disconnect of the nobility, how rulers can distance themselves from the rules, and ultimately, how civil wars are savage. It also emphasizes how the danger can come from either side: Antoinette was beheaded by the left-wing, and More by the right-wing.

In terms of acting and theatricality, this was a staged reading. Scripts were on stage, costumes and makeup were simple and suggestive (Grant’s uniform, Antoinette’s dress and hair). There were the occasional line hesitations (mostly from Gary Cole). Still, some superb theatricality shone through. I was particularly taken by Ed Asner, who conveyed Marx’s disgust with a number of the responses with simple facial gestures and movements, going above and beyond the script to establish the character. Meeghan Holaway also did an excellent job with Antoinette, especially in the scenes where she talked about her imprisonment and the revolution — she gave a good sense of non-chalance about the pesentry, and was truly moved to tears when talking about the life and death of King Louis. She also had a lovely French accent (unlike Asner, who didn’t attempt a Prussian accent, or Davison, who didn’t have an English accent). It was a bit disconcerting when she took off her wig (something that doesn’t happen in the original), but I guess it was wobbling and she thought it better to take it off and retain control. As Grant, Lauria provided some excellent gruff and bravado (as one would expect), but also conveyed his tender side well. Great performances.

Technically, the show was simple. A table, some chairs, some water on the table. The production was directed by Frank Megna; no other technical credits were provided in the program. Lighting was simple, and the program was recorded. I do have one technical comment. At the first episode we saw, a representative from Working Stage got up and introduced the program, indicated what they were trying to do with the revival, and (of course) requested that beeping devices be disabled. That wasn’t done at this performance, and I missed it. I think that bringing back this introduction would be a good thing for the series overall (and, of course, would goad those that forgot to silence their cells).

Another minor complaint, which I’m sure is due to scheduling, but never explained: For seasons 1, 2, and 3, there were two episodes with each set of four. We see the first, but never the second. It might be better to do these productions as a two-act show with each episode being an act, as opposed to the seeming approach of eventually doing the second episode. That, at least, would provide more even coverage to the four historical characters.

According to the program, the next episode in “Meeting of Minds” will be episode #9, featuring Martin Luther (Mark Moses), Plato (Harold Gould), Voltaire (Ray Abruzzo), Florence Nightengale, and Steve Allen (Gary Cole). It will be Sunday, October 25 at 7pm, presumably at the Steve Allen Theatre. The ticket page is not yet up.

Upcoming Theatre: Our next scheduled theatre is Sunday October 18, when we’re seeing the Donmar workshop version of “Parade” at the Mark Taper Forum. The next weekend will see two productions: “Guys and Dolls” at Cabrillo Music Theatre on Saturday October 24 @ 8pm, and (pending ticketing) “Meeting of Minds” Episode #9 (Martin Luther, Plato, Voltaire, Florence Nightengale) at the Steve Allen Theatre on Sunday October 25 @ 8pm. Halloween weekend is currently open. The following weekend is currently blocked off for “A Day Out With Thomas” at Orange Empire Railway Museum (although we may do it Veterans Day instead). The following weekend Erin is going to the TMBG concert at UCLA, while we will attending Havdalah with Peter Yarrow at the American Jewish University. On November 22 at 2pm we return to REP East Playhouse for “M*A*S*H”. Thanksgiving weekend is currently open; however, it might be taken by a shift of our production for the following weekend (“Baby Its You” at the Pasadena Playhouse, December 5 at 8pm… which, by the way, features the actress who played Marie Antoinette), due to the fact I head out the morning after we see it for ACSAC in Hawaii. That same weekend (December 3, 4, 5) also brings “The Taming of the Shrew” at Van Nuys HS — we’ll likely be going to the Friday, December 4 performance. The rest of December is currently open, but I know that sometime in December I’ll be attempting to ticket “Mary Poppins” at the Ahmanson (HotTix were supposed to go on sale 10/23, but may not as per the postscript below). As always, I’m looking for suggestions for good shows to see, especially if they are on Goldstar or LA Stage Tix.

An interesting postscript to the above: There may not be HotTix to “Mary Poppins”. According to my contact in Audience Services at CTG, Disney and Center Theatre Group are in the midst of negotiations for HotTix. Disney is not in favor of having discount tickets and CTG would like to continue the HotTix program for this show. I’m waiting for the final answer on this, but we might be up in the balcony for that one.

Disclaimer: In light of the upcoming rules, you should know that nobody paid me anything to write this review. In fact, I receive no remuneration for any reviews I write.

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A Truly Intellectual Discourse

I am reminded again what a visionary and talent Steve Allen was.

Perhaps I should explain. Back when I graduated high school in 1977, Steve Allen started a series on KCET (our PBS channel) called “Meeting of Minds”, where he would bring together four historical figures for a roundtable discussion. Disguised as theatre, this was education. Those speakers from the past spoke to the problems of the 1970s and 1980s, reminding people how we could learn from history. Alas, the program has never made its way to DVD, it existed as memories… and scripts.

Luckily, the good folks at Working Stage (led by Dan Lauria) decided to do something about it, and have (with the blessing of the Allen family) brought “Meeting of Minds” back to life. Tonight they did their second production of an episode. Tonight’s was episode #1, and featured Gary Cole as Steve Allen, Danica McKellar as Queen Cleopatra, Joe Spano as Father Thomas Aquinas, Steven Culp as Thomas Paine, and Bill Smitrovich as President Theodore Roosevelt. I should note this was a staged reading: the actors had the scripts in front of them, and there were occasional line hesitations and restarts. That goes with the territory of a staged reading.

Watching the performance, I was reminded of the vision of Steve Allen, and how the history echoes what is happening today as well. Consider the following exchange:

ROOSEVELT: I also persuaded the big lumber corporations to adopt selective cutting techniques so that future generations would have timber in this country.
ALLEN: Well, I imagine all of this must have made you even more of a national hero.
ROOSEVELT: Don’t you believe it. The people often didn’t know what I was trying to do for them, and the big interests and their lackeys in Congress responded with hysterical charges…”

Exchanges like this resonate today with the hysteria in the healthcare debate.

Consider the following, referring to Roosevelt’s work in ensuring pure unadulterated food:

ALLEN: What accusation were made against you, Mr. President, when you tried to protect the public in this controversy?
ROOSEVELT: Oh, we were all called Socialists, among other things.

Sound familiar?

Dialogues such as these are remarkable for teaching history in the guise of theatre. Dan Lauria talked a bit about the effort of reviving this program: they plan to do a episode monthly, and would like to get universities to invite their group to present episodes on campus. They would record the episodes, and get them broadcast on NPR. He mentioned that actors are calling him to get involved: Keith Carradine (who was in the audience) has already indicated a desire to play Thomas Jefferson, and Lou Diamond Phillips was interested in playing Emiliano Zapata. He also indicated they have name writers lined up (I heard David Mamet mentioned) to write new episodes. This is an effort I really hope gets off the ground. He indicated that the next episode should be at the Steve Allen Theatre on October 5th (which is a Monday, so I’m not sure the date is correct).

As a theatrical staged reading: This was thoroughly enjoyable. As education: this was great. As a reminder of my college years, where I touted this program reguarly, it was priceless. Kudos to the folks at Working Stage, the Center for Free Inquiry, and the Steve Allen Theatre.

Other notes on the night: My wife got the opportunity to talk to Danica McKeller, and complimented her on her book on how girls can do math, and how important math education is. If you didn’t know, McKeller is a graduate of the UCLA Math Department (we both have BS degrees in Math, although I went on to an MS in Computer Science). I also got the opportunity to meet rialtus and his lovely wife, and got to introduce ellipticcurve to Meeting of Minds. All wins in my book.

Upcoming Theatre: We have a bit of a break before our next theatre: currently the next weekend devoid of theatre, and the following weekend brings not a theatrical event but a concert: Tom Paxton at McCabes on 9/13. The following weekend also has no theatre, but brings Rosh Hashana and the birthday party for a rediscovered childhood friend. The following weekend (9/25) sees us back at the Pasadena Playhouse for “The Night Is A Child”. The first weekend of October brings “The Hound of the Baskervilles” at the REP on 10/3 @ 8pm and hopefully another “Meeting of Minds”. Either the weekend of 10/10 or 10/17 will be “Parade” at the Mark Taper Forum (HotTix go on sale 9/3; the show runs 9/24 through 11/15). The following weekend (10/24) will bring “Guys and Dolls” at Cabrillo Music Theatre. Halloween weekend is open. November brings Thomas the Tank Engine at OERM, TMBG for Erin at UCLA, and somewhere in there, M*A*S*H at REP East. As a reminder, I’m also always looking for interesting productions on Goldstar and LA Stage Tix, so if you have a production to recommend, please do so.

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A Delightful Little Bomb

No, they are not talking about the play we saw Friday night, which although delightful, was no bomb. Rather, there was a bomb in the play. No, make that three bombs.

Perhaps I should start at the beginning. Last night we saw The Beastly Bombing (A Terrible Tale of Terrorists Tamed by the Tangles of True Love). This is a play about two White Supremacists who plan to blow up the Brooklyn Bridge. The only problem is, they’re not the only ones. You see, this is also a play about two Al Quaeda members, who plan to blow up the Brooklyn Bridge. It’s also a play about these two ditzy blonds, who like their mushrooms, along with other hallucinogens. When the Supremacists meet the Al Quada members at the bridge, they each toss each other’s bombs in the water. To escape the police when the bombs explode, they need to hide. First, however, they discover they have something in common: they hate the Jews. To hide from the police, they run into a clothing store… owned by a Hassidic Jew… who also hates the (secular) Jews. Then the Supremecists and the Muslims, dressed as Jews, run into the girls, and get arrested for drugs. Then the Brooklyn Bridge is really blown up (by someone else). The President is called in, but his bravado is a bluff, especially when he learns that his two blond daughter have escaped from drug rehab. That’s just the first act. In the second act, you add Jesus appearing to the President in real life in an extremely sexual number; a priest singing about about man-boy love; a President who decides to bomb Chad for blowing up the bridge after picking it out on a spinning globe (because he didn’t want to bomb his friends in the house of Saud); a love story where two of the bombers fall for the girls (and marry them), and two bomber leaders fall for each other (and get married), and … and… well, you’ll just have to see it, but trust that love conquers all. If you want the full synopsis, look here.

Now, I should point out that this wasn’t just a play. Rather, it was an operetta, with a score reminiscent of Gilbert and Sullivan. Songs in the score included (links are to MP3) samples) “A Delightful Little Bomb“, “We Like Mushrooms“, “Our Ideology“, “Song of the Secular Jew”, “Song of the Sensitive White Supremacist“, “Forgiveness is Nice“, “I Am The Bravest President“, “My Savior Did Appear”, “People Who Love Like Us”, “The Morals of Society“, “House of Saud“, “Drop The Bomb on Chad”, “With Drugs We Did Experiment”, “Back in 1944”, “Drop the Bomb on Japan”, “Zog Has Lost”, There Still is Love“. Here’s an idea of the lyrics (from the House of Saud):

(advisor) But sir, they’ve got no Democracy
(president) What’s so bad about Theocracy?
(advisor) But they observe no human rights.
(president) If I could do that too, I just might.

Sound like any President we know? Do give the samples a listen.

At this point, you’re likely wondering: How could you stomach this show? After all, you’re Jewish, and there are songs where people sing about hating the Jews, and fighting the Zionist Occupational Government. Actually, this show skewers everything and everyone: Supremacists, Arabs, Jews, Catholics, Christians, Christ, idiotic Presidents,… you name it. Most theatres wouldn’t even go near this. This is something that could only be done at the Steve Allen Theatre¤ at the Center for Free Inquiry-West. CFI is an interesting organization: they’re the folks that publish Free Inquiry and focus on critical thinking. The theatre is appropriately named after Steve Allen (one of my favorite actors), who was well known as a free thinker (I suggest you read his book Dumbth). My point is that CFI thinks nothing is sacred: you need to be able to be free to look at everything with a critical eye. This play does that.

Back to the play. The play was produced by the Secret Order of Revolutionary Operetteists, it was written and directed by Julien Nitzberg¤, with music composed by Roger Neill. It was produced by Rorry Daniels and Amit Itelman¤. It was spectacular. I’d recommend you go see it, but it closes next week. It will be back in January, though.

The cast was great (full credits here). The production starred Jacob Sidney* (Patrick), and Aaron Matijasic (Frank) as the Supremacists; Katie Coleman¤ (Elyssa) [subbing for Heather Marie Marsden*¤, who had a hand injury], and Darrin Revitz*¤ (Clarissa) as the President’s daughters; Andrew Abelson¤ (Abdul) and Russell Steinberg* (Khalid) as the Al Quaeda terrorists; and Jesse Merlin¤ [the excellent mistermerlin] (President). Others in the cast, playing multiple roles, were Matt Cornell, Norge Yip, Natalie Salins*, Joel Bennett*, Michael Stuart, Curt Bonnem*, and Kevin Remington. Standouts in the production were mistermerlin, who has a remarkable singing voice and stage presence; Katie Coleman and Darrin Revitz… hell, all the leads were great. There were one or two sound glitches, but otherwise the technical aspects were also well done. The show could use with a slightly larger stage, with stronger sets (the sets were light due to the need to share the space with a different show). The show does have a MySpace page.

Here are some other reviews: Frontiers Magazine, Variety, LA Weekly, Los Angeles Times.

As always, the upcoming theatre calendar: Sister Act, The Musical, 11/18 @ 9pm; Dirk, 11/19 @ 2pm; and A Light in the Piazza, 12/3 @ 2pm; Santaland Diaries/Seasons Greetings, 12/23 @ 8pm …plus I’m still working on tickets for 13 (12/30). As for this weekend… come out to Orange Empire Railway Museum and spend A Day Out With Thomas (he’s a really useful engine). My schedule is posted here.


*: Member of Actors Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States, SAG, AGMA, or AFTRA.
¤: Myspace Page.

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