Monthly Archives: August 2014

CSP(OH) Announces Auditions for Two Christmas One-Acts

CSPO_logoCenterStage Players announces auditions for their Christmas program of two one-acts, “A Charlie Brown Christmas”  and “A Seussified Christmas Carol”  Sunday September 7th, 2014  3-5pm and Monday September 8th, 2014 6:30-8:30pm at the North College Hill City Center 1500 Galbraith Road, Cincinnati 45224. Auditions will consist of reading from the script, some movement and group singing. Bring a list of conflicts. Call backs will be on Tuesday September 9, 2014   6:30-8pm

Production dates: Dec. 4-7 and 12-13. Rehearsals will start in October. No rehearsals the week of Thanksgiving. 

We are looking for actors of all genders, ethnicities, sizes, shapes, ages 6-96 and types.  All you need is a willingness to play and a lack of preconceived ideas to portray these whimsical, cartoon and reimagined characters.  Questions? Contact the director, Karen Vanover at karenmdv@aol.com, subject line-Auditions. 

Cast of Characters for A Charlie Brown Christmas:

  • Charlie Brown
  • Lucky
  • Linus
  • Pig Pen
  • Frieda
  • Schroeder
  • Violet
  • Sally
  • Shermy
  • Snoopy

Cast of Characters for A Seussified Christmas Carol:

  • Narrators 1 & 2
  • Jake Marley
  • The Scrooge
  • Bob Cratchit
  • Be-Headed Fred
  • Solicitors 1 & 2
  • The Ghost of Christmas Past
  • Young Scrooge
  • Belle
  • Belle’s Husband
  • The Ghost of Christmas Present
  • Mrs. Cratchit
  • Timmy Loo Hoo
  • Bed-Headed Fred’s Wife
  • Voices at Party 1, 2, 3 & 4
  • Sven (The Ghost of Christmas Future-non-speaking)
  • A Boy
  • A Maid
  • Old Fezzwig (Non-speaking)

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HARRY AND THE THIEF Review

Jon Kovach as Overseer Jones & Darnell Benjamin as Knox. Photo by Deogracias Lerma.

Jon Kovach as Overseer Jones & Darnell Benjamin as Knox. Photo by Deogracias Lerma.

Links to all reviews can be found using the REVIEWS link at the top of the page. Blog postings, links and more are available on my Facebook fan page. You can also receive updates on Twitter from @BTCincyRob.

HARRY AND THE THIEF presented by Know Theatre of Cincinnati through Aug. 30. Read the show description.

Having tackled television with their summer theater experiment SERIALS!, Know takes on the summer movie blockbuster with HARRY AND THE THIEF.

The talented ensemble, under the direction of Holly L. Derr, does a great job of bringing this quirky script to life. Kudos to Keisha Kemper, who stepped in last minute on the first weekend, for an ailing actress.

I think the concept of the show is smart. If Hollywood can turn the story of “Noah’s Ark” into an overproduced special effects summer blockbuster, surely the inspirational story of Harriet Tubman could benefit from the same treatment. Simply add time-travel, modern weapons and explosions. The script touches upon some important social topics without getting heavy-handed.

Sola Thompson as Vivian, Ken Early* as Maddox, Burgess Byrd as Shiloh, Darnell Benjamin as Knox & Keisha Kemper as Harry. Photo by Deogracias Lerma.

Sola Thompson as Vivian, Ken Early* as Maddox, Burgess Byrd as Shiloh, Darnell Benjamin as Knox & Keisha Kemper as Harry. Photo by Deogracias Lerma.

Video (designed by Doug Borntrager & Andrew Hungerford) is used to set the scene locations and provides some fun visual gags throughout. Excellent costume design by Noelle Wedig, especially for the character of Anita.

Overall a strong production of an uneven script. The writing has some great moments, but could use a bit more polish.

More information |

My rating: 3.75 out of 5

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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MPI Announces Auditions for THE GLASS MENAGERIE

Mariemont Players Announces Auditions For 
The Glass Menagerie
 
mpi_logoDirector Laura Boggs will hold auditions for the Mariemont Players production of The Glass Menagerie, the classic drama by Tennessee Williams, at the Walton Creek Theater, 4101 Walton Creek Road (just east of Mariemont) at 7:00pm on Sunday, September 14th and at 7:00pm on Monday, September 15th, 2014. 
 
In Tennessee Williams’ shattering classic, an aging Southern Belle longs for her youth and dreams for a better life for her children. Her restless son Tom — a would-be poet and the story’s narrator — gets swept up in his mother’s funny and heartbreaking schemes to find his painfully shy sister, Laura, a husband. The Glass Menagerie is considered to be one of the most beautiful dramas in American theatre.
 
The cast consists of two women and two men: 
 
Amanda Wingfield (Age is flexible, at least mid to late fifties and older):
The Mother
Clings desperately to another time and place.  She is sometimes unwittingly cruel to her children, but is well-intentioned.  The actor playing this role must find the humanity in her and not play her as a villain.
 
Laura Wingfield (Age: Twenties, though flexible):
The Daughter
Crippled by a childhood illness, Laura is afraid of the world and lives a life of fantasy through her fragile glass collection.
 
Tom Wingfield (Age: Older than Laura, probably mid to late twenties/early thirties):
The Son
Tom is a poet at heart, trapped in a blue-collar job, living a life he hates.  He is desperate to escape, but is the only hope for his mother and sister.
 
Jim O’Connor (Age: Similar age to Tom, mid to late twenties/early thirties):
The Gentleman Caller
Nice, ordinary young man.
 
Those auditioning are asked to prepare a short monologue, plus there will be readings from the script. 
 
The production will be staged January 9th through January 25th, 2015.
 
Questions about auditions? Contact the director at 859-512-2693 or laura.m.boggs@gmail.com

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IF CINCY Runs Sept. 12-13

IFC_logoIF CINCY
Cincinnati’s first national improv festival
Presented by OTRimprov
Sept. 12-13
Over-the-Rhine

We have an amazing lineup:  Headliners Susan Messing and Kevin Crowley, troupes from Chicago, New York, Detroit, and many more. It will be two nights of really amazing improv, with renowned national acts learning what a great place Cincinnati is to work and play, and local acts showing how strong the local improv scene has grown.   

Official site |

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PIP Launches 55th Season with SHERLOCK HOLMES… Sept. 6-Oct. 4

CINCINNATI PLAYHOUSE LAUNCHES 55TH SEASON WITH SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB, SEPT. 6-OCT. 4, 2014

PIP_Sherlock Holmes(CINCINNATI) – The world’s most famous fictional sleuth adds a novel chapter to his repertoire with playwright Jeffrey Hatcher’s electrifying new whodunit SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB, which opens the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s 55th season. The play is an inventive mash-up of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s iconic characters and the Robert Louis Stevenson short story “The Suicide Club,” providing a clever, intricately woven new mystery for Holmes to deduce. SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB runs Sept. 6 through Oct. 4 in the Robert S. Marx Theatre.

Sherlock Holmes has never shied away from danger, but his latest adventure may be his most treacherous ever. The members of London’s Suicide Club play a harrowing game of Russian roulette to determine their role as victim or executioner. When the brilliant sleuth finds himself entangled in their secretive web, his own life hangs in the balance … and it’s not clear whether he wants to be saved.

Playhouse Associate Artist KJ Sanchez, who is directing SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB, is excited that Hatcher’s play offers a fresh view. “First, this is Sherlock in 1914, which means he’s 60,” she explains. “This is a very different Sherlock from any of the movies or television shows. Because of his age and experiences, he’s smarter, quirkier, suffers fools less and is hitting that familiar wall of ‘is this all there is?’ He’s solved all there is to solve, and if he doesn’t get a great case soon, he might find good use for the suicide club. Needless to say, he does find a great case and that’s our play.”

More than a century after his creation, Sherlock Holmes’ popular appeal remains overwhelmingly contemporary, as evidenced by current movie and television adaptations starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Robert Downey Jr., Jonny Lee Miller and Ian McKellen

The world premiere of Jeffrey Hatcher’s SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB was commissioned and produced by the Arizona Theatre Company in 2011. The Playhouse production marks the eighth time a Hatcher play has been performed here. The well-respected and prolific Steubenville, Ohio, native was the fifth winner of the Playhouse’s Lois and Richard Rosenthal New Play Prize for Scotland Road, which premiered in 1993. Other Hatcher shows at the Playhouse include Ella (2008, with Rob Ruggiero, Dyke Garrison and Danny Holgate), Murderers (2007) and The Turn of the Screw (1997).

SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB is sponsored by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation. Barbara and Bill Weyand are the show’s design sponsors, and Huntington Bank is the artist sponsor for Sherlock Holmes.

Steven Hauck makes his Playhouse debut as Sherlock Holmes. Additional cast members include Douglas Rees as Dr. John H. Watson, Joel Reuben Ganz as Mr. Williams/Mr. Roundy, Tonya Beckman as Club Secretary, Cary Donaldson as Prince Nikita Starloff, John Feltch as Mr. Richards/Mycroft Holmes, Aaron Christensen as Mr. George/Inspector Micklewhite, Jonathan Gillard Daly as Mr. Henry/A.C. Crosse, Dale Hodges as Mrs. Hudson/Lucy O’Malley and Jenny Mercein as Christiane de LaBegassier. The creative team includes set designer Wilson Chin, costume designer Matthew J. LeFebvre, lighting designer Thomas C. Hase, sound designer/composer Matthew M. Nielson and projection designer Alex Koch. Jenifer Morrow is the production stage manager; Andrea L. Shell is the second stage manager.

Ticket prices for SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB start at $30. Prices are subject to change, and patrons are encouraged to buy early for the best seats at the best prices. Teen and student tickets are $30 each. The show is recommended for ages 12 and up.

New for the 2014-15 season is Sunday College Night, with tickets to all 7 p.m. Sunday performances (not including A Christmas Carol) priced at just $10 with a valid student ID. Student tickets are just $15 on the day of the show for all other performances.

Previews are at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 6; 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 7; 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9; and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 10. The official opening night is Thursday, Sept. 11, at 8 p.m. Performances take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 8 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays.

Free post-show Meet the Artists programs that allow audiences to interact with cast members and others associated with the production will be offered at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 14; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17; 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 28; and 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2.

SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB will be audio described for those with visual impairments at 4 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, and signed for persons with hearing impairments at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 28. The Playhouse is fully accessible. Audio enhancement receivers, large print programs and complete wheelchair access are available.

Tickets to SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE ADVENTURE OF THE SUICIDE CLUB are on sale now. For more information, call the Playhouse Box Office at 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana at 800-582-3208) or visit http://www.cincyplay.com. Call 513-345-2248 for Telecommunications Device for the Deaf accessibility.

The 2014-15 Robert S. Marx Theatre season is sponsored by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation, and Macy’s is the Robert S. Marx Theatre season design sponsor. The season sponsor of new work is The Lois and Richard Rosenthal Foundation.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of the community contributors to the ArtsWave campaign.

The Ohio Arts Council helps fund the Playhouse with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

The Playhouse also receives funding from the Shubert Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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