Monthly Archives: April 2015

LCT Review of AVENUE Q

LCT_VThis review has been reposted courtesy of the League of Cincinnati Theatres. For more LCT reviews click here to visit their reviews page.

Think “Sesame Street on Crack” and you will get a little insight into what AVENUE Q the musical is all about, now onstage at Miami University. AVENUE Q presents a whole unique set of challenges for any theatre, especially a college theatre. That being said, Miami University’s production handles the show well. The most characteristic challenge is creating puppets that are humanistic and interesting enough for us to look at the entire show. As with the PBS hit series that teaches young children their ABC’s, numbers and other life lessons, this adult version of the avenue, continues to teach us, but perhaps topics that are just a bit different and perhaps a might naughtier.  With a book written by Jeff Whitty and music and lyrics by Jeff Marx and Robert Lopez (the same guys who brought us The Book of Mormon) this is not a show that will have you humming the tunes, however it will have you laughing and will definitely put a smile on your face and a warm feeling in your heart.

MU_Avenue Q logo2A bunch of racist, horny and sexually confused puppets (magnificently designed by Grant Lemasters in an homage to the late Jim Henson) from AVENUE Q  are the “leading characters” in this musical that is very difficult to execute for a myriad of reasons.

The cast was led by a quad of four strong performers: Kelcey Steele and Taylor Hayes as Princeton and Kate Monster, and the loveable duo of Josh Stothfang and Sean Davis as Rod & Nicky (think Bert & Ernie meets Will & Grace). Princeton (Kelsey Steele), a recent college graduate with a useless BA in English, is trying to find his life purpose and through his foibles and follies, including some invasive Bad Idea Bears, the other furry and not so furry residents on the block are able to find new meaning in their lives. Of course this is all done through songs such as “Everyone’s A Little Bit Racist”; “The Internet Is For Porn; “If You Were Gay”; “You Can Be As Loud As The Hell You Want When Your Making Love” and “Schadenfreude”.

For their human neighbors, it gets no better than Cara Hihn as Christmas Eve who makes Hunter Dobereinder’s Brian all the more hilarious.   Then there is Sean Davis whose crisp, funny and vocally limber performance and puppetry with Nicky is better than the original Broadway creator of the role.

With a cast that innately understands the actor/puppet relationship and a technical team that lets the show seamlessly unfold, this is a production that could run for years.  The amazing part of this production is that the actors, who become puppeteers, do so to perfection, in no small thanks to the puppet coach Aretta Baumgartner. The vocals were spotty here and there, but never enough to get in the way of the story or characters. In fact, the puppets they handle become a true part of them and even though we see their actual faces as they operate the characters, we forget that it is the human we are watching or hearing as we are focused on the puppets in the play.  As stated, the technical side of this AVENUE Q is near perfect as the puppets come to life in the design by Lemasters, and coached by Aretta Barumgartner.  It’s clear these actors lived with and through their puppet counterparts as seen in their ability to bring these characters to life with their acting and singing.

Gion DeFrancesco’s scenic design is reminiscent of the original; and as usual, This production is hard to say anything in the least bit negative about (with the exception of erratic spotlights and some sound issues)– it is solid from the beginning to the end with no downtime in between. The actors are having as much fun telling us this story as we are having watching it unfold. They have heart and they become very real to us.  So if someone can’t tell you how to get to that other street, have your GPS point you to AVENUE Q at Miami University.

For more information on the production, click here.

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LCT Review of DEATH AND THE MAIDEN

LCT_VThis review has been reposted courtesy of the League of Cincinnati Theatres. For more LCT reviews click here to visit their reviews page.

The more theatre I experience, the more I realize how important basic sound design is to a production.  If an audience cannot hear the actors during a performance, than the performance does not exist.

This is the case of DEATH AND THE MAIDEN, produced by the Diogenes Theatre Company at the Jarson-Kaplan Theater at the Aronoff.  I wish the playbill talked more about Diogenes, a new theatre company in town, but unfortunately the group seems indiscernable in the program despite highlighting the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company’s Brian Isaac Phillips and a back cover with the CSC Season 21 schedule.

Annie Fitzpatrick as Paulina Salas & Michael G. Bath as Gerardo Escobar. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Annie Fitzpatrick as Paulina Salas & Michael G. Bath as Gerardo Escobar. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

DEATH AND THE MAIDEN is set in a beach house in Chile after a long period of dictatorship. The set design on the massive stage consisted of a few boxes to simulate furniture, a chair, a table set in front of several vertical, fan-blown, opaque, gauzy strips of cloth that filled in for the ocean.  An annoying ocean wave sound that got worse the farther you sat from the stage further interfered from hearing the un-miked action on stage.

Michael G. Bath plays Gerardo Escobar, who has just been assigned to a very important committee looking into human rights violations during the recent dictatorship. Anne Fitzpatrick is Paulina Salas, Gerardo’s wife, who happens to be a little insane and seriously off-kilter as she is suffering from a torture and rape experience by secret police working for the dictator. Giles Davies is Roberto Miranda, and he is the only cast member who remotely looks Chilean.

It so happens that Miranda rescues a stranded Escobar – he had a flat tire – and he ends up returning to Escobar’s later that night. He begins to ask very detailed questions about the commission (at least the ones I could hear). He stays the night by sleeping on the three boxes under a flimsy blanket—this is a bare-bones set.

In the morning, crazy Paulina is sure that Miranda is one of the dictator’s doctors who defiled her 15 years ago. She attacks the sleeping man, ties him to a chair, and in what is one of the best scenes I’ve experienced this year as an LCT panelist, removes her nylons, stuffs them in Miranda’s mouth, and then duct tapes it shut! Fitzpatrick plays her role in over-the-top fashion as she points a gun at the sniveling man.

She demands that Miranda confess to the crime and bullies her husband to assist. Unfortunately, much of the tense dialogue was reduced to whispers and turned-to-the-back-of-the-stage readings. Many plot points were lost. [As a further note, the audience is barred from sitting in the first four rows of this production, and the twelve or so ushers made sure of that.]

This production should have been in the Black Box space on the other side of the Aronoff. The big size of this little theater space swallowed the action on stage. These are great local actors, but their talent was not used to full effect. The high union cost to stage a show at the Aronoff apparently limited this production. The director, Lindsey A. Mercer, just didn’t get the basics done.

For more information on the production, click here.

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Auditions Announced for Summer Show at Know Theatre of Cincinnati

KTC_Know Season 18 logoAudition Notice Bengsons Musical Project

Auditions: April 25, by appointment
Callbacks: April 26, 11:00am-­4:00pm

Know Theatre of Cincinnati seeks musician-­performers for a theatrical musical storytelling project by The Bengsons, to be produced as part of Know Theatre’s 18th Mainstage Season.

In this project the band makes up the entire cast. We’re looking for a diverse collection of instrumentalists and vocalists who can sing, love storytelling, and have a real sense of stage presence.

Breakdown

Musicians

  • Drummer -­ Kick ass kit player.
  • Electric Bassist & Cellist -­ If you play either, we’d love to hear you.  If you play both, double bonus!
  • Guitarist -­ Play both acoustic and electric. Triple bonus if you’re a wizard with pedals and sonic manipulation!

If you have *proficiency* in other instruments (like brass, woodwinds, concertina, accordion, melodica, whatever) we’d love to hear what you can do.

We’re seeking instrumentalists who play and sing simultaneously (unless you’re playing a wind instrument, as we recognize you’re (probably) only human), but we’re flexible depending on the final composition of the cast.

Vocalists

In addition to our instrumentalists, we’re looking for vocalists of any vocal type: if you’ve got stage presence and love musical storytelling, we want to hear you!

Audition Requirements

All applicants should be prepared to sing acapella one song that is *not* from a musical.

Audition slots will be 10-­15 minutes, and will include some musical coaching and singing of harmonies. When appointments are made, instrumentalists will be sent charts, and both instrumentalists and vocalists will be sent sample tracks from the show.

Group callbacks will be scheduled for the 26th with schedules distributed by midnight on the 25th.

Compensation
This is an 8 week contract, paid at $250 per week.

Calendar:
Rehearsals begin on or around June 29.
30 hour rehearsal weeks, Tuesday-­Sunday.
Technical rehearsals July 18-­19.
Opening July 24.
Closing August 22.

Performances:
Wed-­Saturday at 8pm
Sunday at 3:00pm.

Contact Know’s Producing Artistic Director Andrew Hungerford at: andrewh@knowtheatre.com with the subject line “Bengsons Audition” to schedule an audition.

About the Bengsons
Married duo The Bengsons blend soaring vocals, frenetic rhythms and rousing all join hands choruses to create new hybrid indie rock/art/theater performances. Their Americana-­influenced brand of Indie Rock has received accolades from fans and critics alike.

The Bengsons have appeared at such venues as Joe’s Pub (NYC), NYU’s Skirball Center (NYC), La MaMa (NYC), MASS MoCA (North Adams, MA), FlynnSpace (Burlington, VT), Z Space (San Francisco), On The Boards (Seattle), Artists Rep Theater (Portland, OR), Know Theatre (Cincinnati, OH), and the Market Theater (Johannesburg, South Africa).

About Know Theatre
Know Theatre is Cincinnati’s alternative theatrical playground, and is dedicated to producing explosive and evocative live entertainment in the heart of Cincinnati’s Over-­the-­Rhine.

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LEND ME A TENOR Runs May 22-31

FFL_Lend me a Tenor logoLEND ME A TENOR
Presented by Fairfield Footlighters
May 22-31
Fairfield

Directed by Heidi Schiller

Cast: Ryan Shafranek as Max, Katie Groneman as Maggie, Kevin Noll as Saunders, Coby Osborne as Tito Merelli, Mary Puetz as Maria, Taylor Greatbatch as the Bellhop, April Osborne as Diana & Melissa Noll as Julia

LEND ME A TENOR is a door-slamming, dress-dropping farce with mistaken identities, mischievous misunderstandings and compromising positions. It is the biggest night in the history of the Cleveland Grand Opera Company, and world-famous Italian tenor Signor Tito Merelli will be their guest artist in Otello, the highlight of the company’s most important fundraiser for the 1934 season. But Tito’s troubled life, his hot-headed wife, and a “Dear John” letter, mistaken as Tito’s suicide note, sends everybody’s head swimming. No Tito, no $50,000 in ticket sales. Meanwhile, Max, an opera-singer-wanna-be, is coerced into impersonating the Italian great to save the show. In costume, wig and make-up, he’s is a dead ringer for the dead singer. But can Max find the courage to go on with the show? The surprises have just begun in this superbly crafted, eye-watering farce.

  • Fri-Sat, May 22-23 at 8pm
  • Sun, May 24 at 2pm
  • Fri-Sat, May 29-30 at 8pm
  • Sun, May 31 at 2pm

Official page |

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Auditions Announced for 2015-2016 Resident Dance Company at Exhale Dance Tribe

May 29 from 7:30-9:30pm

Planet Dance Cincinnati
2230 Gilbert Avenue
Cincinnati, OH 45206

Exhale Dance Tribe is rooted in rhythmic storytelling, existing to leave an emotional imprint on our audiences. Exhale is currently seeking dancers for the 2015-2016 season. Auditions are being held for Ballet, Jazz, Hip Hop, Free Form/Authentic Movement, Modern and Contemporary style dancers. Male dancers encouraged.

EDT_Auditions

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