Yearly Archives: 2012

L.A. Theatre Works presents THE RIVALRY at Miami University on Feb. 7

Robert Parsons as Abraham Lincoln. Photo by Matt Petit.

Just in time for the 2012 election campaign, L.A. Theatre Works returns to the Miami University Performing Arts Series with its acclaimed radio-theater production of The Rivalry, at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, February 7th at Hall Auditorium, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.

Shannon Cochran directs Robert Parsons and Josh Clark as Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, heated rivals for the U.S. Senate seat in Illinois. Rebecca Mozo co-stars as Adele, the young wife of Senator Douglas through whose lens we witness the proceedings.

The Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858 tackled the day’s most passionate issue – slavery. Taken directly from the transcripts, The Rivalry recreates the face off between Abraham Lincoln, rising Illinois legislator and abolitionist candidate of the newly formed Republican party, and Senator Stephen A. Douglas, the Democratic incumbent and champion of states’ rights. The series of seven debates that took place in seven Congressional districts were conducted in a fever of partisanship as the nation listened. Brass bands played, and the press vilified or glorified theopponents, depending on which side they took.

“What is so heartbreakingly different from today’s political scene is how principled they both were, putting the nation before their own hopes,” notes L.A. Theatre Works Producing Artistic Director Susan Loewenberg.

Although Douglas was re-elected Senator from Illinois, the debates brought Lincoln into the national consciousness and helped send him on to the presidency.

For three decades, L.A. Theatre Works has been the leading radio theater company in the UnitedStates, committed to using innovative technologies to preserve and promote significant works of dramatic literature and bringing live theater into the homes of millions. The company’s public radio series, featuring stage plays performed by America’s top actors augmented by interviews with the artists and others, can be heard in over 100 markets nationwide and can also be streamed on demand at http://www.latw.org. Over 9,000 libraries carry LATW’s plays on audio, and recordings and teaching materials are used by over 2,000 middle and high schools across the country.

L.A. Theatre Works’ The Rivalry is presented by the Miami University Performing Arts Series and sponsored by Kona Bistro and the Western College Alumnae Association, with media partners 88.5 WMUB and 91.7 WVXU. Tickets are $20 for adults, $19 for senior citizens, and $9 for students and youth. For tickets or more information, order online at http://www.muohio.edu/PerformingArtsSeries or call the Miami Box Office at (513) 529-3200.

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New Edgecliff Offers Regional Premiere of ST. NICHOLAS

Vampires take center stage in powerful one-man show 

Michael Shooner. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

New Edgecliff Theatre today announced an exciting addition to NET’s performance line up with the regional premiere of Conor McPherson’s “St. Nicholas”. This chilling one-man show features NET Executive Director Michael Shooner and is directed by Brian Robertson. “St. Nicholas” will run in NET’s newly-created major production slot, Feb. 23-March 10.

In “St. Nicholas”, a burned-out, cynical theatre critic becomes infatuated with a young actress. Leaving his wife and children in Dublin to pursue his obsession, things become complicated in London when he finds himself in the employ of a coven of vampires! Already a metaphorical vampire himself, his confrontation with very real ones forces him to face his own demons and earn some measure of redemption. The New York Times says, “The narrative swings through so many forms of storytelling — from self-serving lies born of drunkenness to a proper Brothers Grimm-like fable…McPherson’s ear for detail is devastating.”

“St. Nicholas” was written by Dublin playwright Conor McPherson. His plays include “The Seafarer” (premiered on Broadway in 2007), “Poor Beast in the Rain”, “Port Authority”, “Dublin Carol” (premiered on Broadway in 2002), “The Weir” (premiered on Broadway in 1999), and “This Lime Tree Bower”. He was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play in 2006 for “Shining City”, which premiered on Broadway in 2006; nominated for the 2002 South Bank Show Award for Best Play for “Port Authority”; received the 1999 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Play, the Evening Standard Most Promising Playwright, the Critics Circle Award for Most Promising Playwright and was a finalist for the Lloyds Bank Playwright of the Year Award for “The Weir”; and was the joint winner of 1997 George Devine Award and the winner of the Meyer Whitworth Award for “St. Nicholas”.

New Edgecliff founder Michael Shooner returns to the NET stage for the first time since his CEA-nominated turn as Dysart in 2009’s “Equus”. Other roles at NET have included Willy Loman in “Death of a Salesman”, Roma in “Glengarry Glen Ross”, Teach in “American Buffalo” and Cliff in “The Woolgatherer”. His first one-man show was also NET’s inaugural production, Eric Bogosian’s “Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll”, in 1998. He was seen in the Cincinnati Playhouse production of “The Hostage” and has also performed at Cincinnati Shakespeare Company in “The Weir”, “Romeo & Juliet” and “All My Sons”.

Originally from Los Angeles, Brian Robertson has spent much of his time working in film and television in the area of cinematography, as well as working as a director and stage manager in Theatre and Opera. He received his MFA in Directing from CCM. Locally, Brian has been teaching in the NKU Theatre and Dance department since 1998, as well as functioning as a guest director and instructor at CCM. He has worked for Cincinnati Opera, Sarasota Opera, Bay View Music Festival, Greenbrier Valley Theatre, Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati, Opera North, and Des Moines Metro Opera among others.

“St. Nicholas” runs from February 23 – March 10, 2012, Thursday through Saturday evenings at 7:30pm. The Columbia Performance Center is located at 3900 Eastern Avenue, near Terry’s Turf Club, Allyn’s, Bella Luna, Tostado’s and The Precinct. Single ticket prices range from $15-$23. Discounts are available for students, seniors and groups as well as Enjoy the Arts members. To purchase tickets or for more information call the NET Box Office at 888.588.0137, or go online at http://www.newedgecliff.com.

For mature audiences only.

NET is a grateful recipient of the League of Cincinnati Theatres’ Local Guest Equity Support.

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ALMOST, MAINE runs Feb. 24-March 3

ALMOST, MAINE
Presented by Sinclair Community College Theatre
Feb. 24-March 3
Dayton

Reviews: Dayton Most Metro |

A series of vignettes about love guaranteed to heat up a chilly winter date night. Amidst the glow of the northern lights, the residents of the mythical town Almost, Maine find themselves falling in and out of love in unexpected, and often hilarious, ways. Knees are bruised. Hearts are broken. But the bruises heal, and the hearts mend—almost—in this delightful midwinter night’s dream.

Directed by Kimberly Borst

Cast: Jenna Burnette, Angela Dermer, Cameron Elliot, Chris Hahn, Amanda Hanisch, Michael Marvin, John Ray, Becca Sebree & Josh Smith

  • Fri-Sat, Feb. 24-25 at 8pm
  • Sun, Feb. 26 at 2pm
  • Wed, Feb. 29 at 10am
  • Thu, March 1 at 7pm
  • Fri-Sat, March 2-3 at 8pm

Official page | Online ticketing | FaceBook event |

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TREY SONGZ: ANTICIPATION 2OUR on Feb. 23

Trey Songz.

TREY SONGZ: ANTICIPATION 2OUR
Presented by Cincinnati Arts Association
Feb. 23
Downtown

Hot off his 2010 BET Award as Best Male R&B Vocalist, Trey Songz will criss-cross the nation on his ‘Anticipation 2our’ (which is the name of his upcoming album), with special guest G.O.O.D. Music/Island Def Jam recording artist Big Sean.

  • Thu, Feb. 23 at 7:30pm

Official page | Online ticketing | Goldstar discount |

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DEAD ACCOUNTS Review

Links to all reviews can be found on the BTC REVIEWS page. Blog postings, links and more are available on my FaceBook fan page. You can receive updates on Twitter from @BTCincyRob.

Stephen Barker Turner as Jack & Susan Greenhill as Barbara. Photo by Sandy Underwood.

DEAD ACCOUNTS presented by Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park through Feb. 11. You can read the show description here.

Being a born-and-bred Cincinnatian, raised Catholic on the west side in the ’70s, I had high hopes for DEAD ACCOUNTS. Based on the preview articles and interviews posted by the local media, the “love letter” to the midwest that I expected never materialized.

I’m not saying this to be harsh, but overall I found the show to be shallow and emotionally flat. The characters were uninteresting and very stereotypical. If you remove all the Cincinnati references (which ALWAYS generate a laugh) there are few moments in the show that actually speak to Cincinnati.

Let’s start with “golden boy” son Jack. It bothers me that he is not successful due to his own merits (or that midwest work ethic), but simply married into money. Through nepotism, he was handed an executive position at his father-in-law’s bank. After seven years of marriage, and in response to his wife’s decision to divorce him, he commits a major white collar crime and hightailes it home to Cincinnati.

Carly Street as Lorna & Haynes Thigpen as Phil. Photo by Sandy Underwood.

At his childhood home, surrounded by pints of Graeter’s ice cream, Jack is confronted by sister Lorna, one of his five siblings (and the only one we actually meet). Lorna is single and living at home help their mother tend to an ailing father (who to me would be the embodiment of the  midwest work ethnic, but he is confined to bed off-stage for the entire show). As luck would have it, Lorna is, like all mid-westerners, on a diet, so there is much pining over the ice cream (and pizza, and coneys). Thankfully, both men in the show are there to tell her she doesn’t need to lose weight.

Stephen Barker Turner as Jack. Photo by Sandy Underwood.

Next we are introduced to poor, befuddled mom Barbara. The character seems designed mostly for comic relief and hand-wringing. In fact, she even has her own comic tag line, something like, “I raised six kids, there are whole years I don’t remember.” As a change of pace, mom doesn’t chide her daughter for her weight, but instead reminds Loran that she isn’t as bright as Jack.

The second man I referred to earier, is Jack’s childhood friend Phil. Picked up on a food run, Phil is a single, middle-aged, accountant, who still conveniently has that high school crush on Lorna. I don’t think it gives too much away to say that they couple up.

Victoria Mack as Jenny, Susan Greenhill as Barbara & Carly Street as Lorna. Photo by Sandy Underwood.

Rounding out the cast is Jack’s wife, Jenny. She is written as a typical, raised-with-money, nose-in-the-air, NYC bitch. As such, there is the obligatory general condemnation (during a cell phone call) of the midwest pride in where/how we were raised and specifically her mother-in-law’s choices in decor, dishes and flatware. Thankfully Barbara overhears the conversation and is quick to point out that she does have nice dishes and silverware…in the china cabinet. That certainly puts Jenny in her place.

Interesting themes such as Jack’s crisis of faith (isn’t divorce a Catholic fail?), his refusal to visit his ailing father who is BEDRIDDEN UPSTAIRS, and the effects of the current economy on the midwest middle class are brought up and quickly abandoned.

Stephen Barker Turner as Jack & Haynes Thigpen as Phil. Photo by Sandy Underwood.

The press materials call Jack “the prodigal son,” which references the Bible story taught at all Catholic schools. Hasn’t Jack “returned” to what he turned his back on when he left for New York? Isn’t he seeking solace in his family, friends, and memories of his childhood?

Where is the close-knit family that grew up in a too-small house, who circle the wagons in time of crisis? Where are the Catholic names, the obsession with local sports, the use of the word “please?” Where is the heart, the love and the values that Cincinnati represents to many of us? I expected little nods to Cincinnati to be peppered throughout the play. Instead we were hit over the head with local favorite foods. We are so much more than what we eat.

Regardless of how much you enjoy the performance, the lackluster non-ending of the show begs the question, “Where is the third act?”

Click here for a complete list of show times, articles and other reviews for DEAD ACCOUNTS.

I would enjoy hearing what you think about the show or my review. All I ask is that you express your opinion without attacking someone else’s opinion. You can post your comments below.

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