Monthly Archives: October 2015

Auditions Announced for THE AMISH PROJECT at CenterStage Players

CSPOH_logoCenterStage Players announces auditions for THE AMISH PROJECT by Jessica Dickey.

Sunday, October 25, 2015 5pm – 7pm and Monday October 26, 2015 7pm-9pm at the North College Hill City Center, 1500 Galbraith Rd., Cincinnati 45231 (Marvin Ave. Intersection)

Looking for men, women and children ages 6-80.

This ensemble version of the one woman show, THE AMISH PROJECT is a fictional exploration of the Nickel Mines schoolhouse shooting in an Amish community on October 2, 2006.  All actors remain onstage throughout the entire show.

Performance dates: May 13-15 and 20-21, 2015
Characters: (Please Note! ALL actors stay onstage throughout the whole show and participate in portions of the dialogue much like a Greek chorus)
  • Carol Stuckey – Widow of the gunman, age 31, Non-Amish
  • Eddie Stuckey-The gunman of the schoolhouse shooting, age 33. Non-Amish. Killed himself at the end of the attack
  • Anna-Amish girl age 14. Victim of shooting
  • Velda-Amish girl age 6. Victim of shooting
  • Bill North-Non-Amish age 50+. Scholar and professor on Amish culture, as well as friend and spokesman to several Amish families affected by the shooting
  • Sherry Local – Non-Amish, age 50+. Resident of Nickels Mine, PA.
  • America-age 16. Hispanic, pregnant. Works in the local grocery store.
  • Ensemble and the Community of Nickels Mines, PA.
  • Fireman
  • Aaron-Amish, age 35-45, Father of Anna and Velda
  • Amish Mother, age 30-40-Wife of Aaron, mother of Anna and Velda
  • Jacob, Amish boy, age -8-12, son of Aaron
  • Reporters-male or female
  • Ray Local age 50+ Sherry’s Husband
  • America’s mother
  • Marian, Elizabeth, Catherine, Margaret, Mary, Dottie, Esther-Amish-Victims of shooting
  • Emma-Amish-Velda’s bff-victim of shooting

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LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES Brings the Party of the Season to Playhouse in the Park, Nov. 7-Dec. 20, 2015

LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES BRINGS THE PARTY OF THE SEASON TO CINCINNATI PLAYHOUSE IN THE PARK’S THOMPSON SHELTERHOUSE, NOV. 7 – DEC. 20, 2015

PIP_Low Down Dirty Blues promo(CINCINNATI) – The club may be closing for the night, but that’s just when the party heats up in Randal Myler and Dan Wheetman’s LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES, which sashays into the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s Thompson Shelterhouse Theatre for the holidays, Nov. 7 through Dec. 20. A celebratory tribute to America’s great blues tradition, the show is a sizzling musical revue that features nearly two dozen songs pulled from the greatest hits of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Big Mama Thornton and more.

The LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES cast features Felicia P. Fields, who was nominated for a Tony Award for her role as Sofia in the original Broadway production of The Color Purple; Chic Street Man, a performer who composed the music for and starred in the off-Broadway hit Spunk; Caron “Sugaray” Rayford, who was nominated for two 2015 Blues Music Awards; and keyboardist Fred Kaplan, who played with such blues greats as Big Mama Thornton and Big Joe Turner during his tenure with the legendary Hollywood Fats Band.

Myler and Wheetman share a 30-year working history, and they’ve struck box office gold — together and separately — at the Playhouse in the past, with shows including Hank Williams: Lost Highway and Love, Janis. LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES is their latest collaboration, and it has already earned raves in Chicago and Milwaukee.

“The setting is a nameless South Side Chicago blues club,” said Myler, who’ll direct the production for the Playhouse. “It’s Saturday night, into Sunday morning. The linking dialogue is from actual blues artists that we interviewed, but it’s the music that drives the piece.”

In the show, a group of veteran musicians assembles for an after-hours jam session to swap stories and share their favorite tunes. Their hot rhythms and non-stop riffs celebrate the bawdier side of the blues.

“This show sort of came out of a show we had written called It Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues,” said Wheetman, who also serves as the show’s music director. “The idea was to look at a very particular kind of blues — low down dirty blues. The early women’s blues music, especially, was very double entendre. That is how we started. As with anything it morphed into what it is today, which is a little broader.”

The double entendre in many of the show’s songs — including “Don’t Jump My Pony,” “My Stove’s in Good Condition” and “If I Can’t Sell It” — brings both humor and sensuality to the production. The stories that are interspersed between the songs add emotional resonance.

“It is a spicier kind of blues,” Wheetman said. “This was specifically about a kind of blues that has two sides to it. On one hand, it is a more intimate look, it is a smaller group and a smaller palate … This is not so much a historic thing; it is a story about the people, these people in this club and their stories, which includes the music but it is more of a personal talk about what brought them to where they are.”

The LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES creative team, in addition to Myler and Wheetman, includes set designer Vicki Smith, costume designer Gordon DeVinney, lighting designer Don Darnutzer and sound designer Jeremy J. Lee. Jenifer Morrow is the production stage manager.

LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES is sponsored by Margaret and Albert Vontz III and Moe and Jack Rouse. The cast sponsor is Bartlett & Co., and the design sponsor is the Geiler Co.

Ticket prices for LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES start at $35. Prices are subject to change, and patrons are encouraged to buy early for the best seats at the best prices. The show is appropriate for adult and older teenage audiences.

Returning this season is the popular 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.

Discounted ticket prices for teens and students are available in advance for all productions for $30 and $45, depending on seat location.

The Playhouse’s new Tasting Series continues with a Soul Food Juke Joint beginning at 6:30 p.m. before each Friday night performance of LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES. Inspired by the after-hours nightclub setting of the show, this catered event will feature live music by local blues artists and a soul food dinner served at 6:45 p.m. in the Playhouse’s Room with a View. The cost is $22 per person; for reservations, call the Box Office at 513-421-3888.

Previews for LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES are at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7; 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8; 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10; and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 11. The official opening night is Thursday, Nov. 12, at 7:30 p.m.

Performances take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays.

Free Meet the Artists programs that allow audiences to interact with the cast and others associated with the production will be held after the following performances: 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 15; 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 22; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25; and 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 10.

The Playhouse is fully accessible. Audio enhancement receivers, large print programs and complete wheelchair access are available.

Tickets to LOW DOWN DIRTY BLUES 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 www.cincyplay.com. Call 513-345-2248 for Telecommunications Device for the Deaf accessibility.

The 2015-16 Thompson Shelterhouse Theatre Series is presented by the Heidelberg Distributing Company, and the Thompson Shelterhouse season design sponsor is the Allan Berliant and Jennie Rosenthal Berliant Family Fund. 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.

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NIGHT WATCH Runs Nov. 13-22

FFL_Night Watch logoNIGHT WATCH
Fairfield Footlighters
Nov. 13-22
Fairfield Community Arts Center [Fairfield]

Directed by Kevin Noll

Cast: Dorothy Jolly as Elaine Wheeler, Dave Moak as John Wheeler, Terri Howard as Helga, Geoff Hill as Vanelli, James Ball as Curtis Appleby, Cynthia Tate as Blanche Cooke, Dan Schindler as Lt. Walker, Victoria Bailey as Dr. Tracy Lake & Bob Tyson as Sam Hoke

This ingeniously devised thriller builds steadily in menace and suspense until the final, breath-stopping moment of its unexpected, “twist” ending. Did Elaine Wheeler really see a dead man sitting in a chair in the empty tenement across from her penthouse apartment, or is she, as her husband John apparently believes, simply going mad?

  • Fri-Sat, Nov. 13-14 at 8pm
  • Sun, Nov. 15 at 2pm
  • Fri-Sat, Nov. 20-21 at 8pm
  • Sun, Nov. 22 at 2pm

Official page |

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THE HUNCHBACK OF SEVILLE Review

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

Alice Skok as Espanta. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

Alice Skok as Espanta. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

THE HUNCHBACK OF SEVILLE presented by Know Theatre of Cincinnati and UC College-Conservatory of Music through Oct. 24. Click here for more information on the production. I attended the opening night performance.

There were many individual elements that I enjoyed about this production. What wasn’t clear to me was the director’s overall concept for the show that unified them.

The ladies of the tower created some fun and zany characters, with Julie Netzer;s Innocenzia as my personal favorite. I snickered every time she closed a door. While the performances are over the top, visually it’s the opposite. All of the female characters are clean and pretty. The deformities, which could be exaggerated for some visual gags, are actually under-played. In the scenes involving 1 and 2, I understood what you were going for with the monotone delivery, but the comic timing wasn’t there to really sell it.

Colleen Ladrick as Maxima Terrible Segunda & Brandon St Clair Saunders as Talib Furozh. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

Colleen Ladrick as Maxima Terrible Segunda & Brandon St Clair Saunders as Talib Furozh. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

For the guys, Andrew Iannacci’s Christopher Columbus is almost as over-the-top, but he has a strange “self-awareness” quality that I found off-putting. Derek Snow is solid, but Abdul Haseeb seems to be the only normal person on stage. Brandon St. Clair Saunders as Talib Furozh is stuck in the middle, never quite matching the performance level of the ladies.

Emily Walton as Infanta Juana. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

Emily Walton as Infanta Juana. Photo by Daniel R. Winters.

I did find the set design rather confusing, particularly stage right. Is that an opening to the outside and a door to another room on the same wall?

This play does boast one of the most memorable endings I’ve seen, and the special effects for that were surprising and worked really well.

Overall a fun, but uneven quasi-historical romp.

My rating: 4 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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MY FRIEND THE FOX Runs Nov. 13-22

Kaitlyn Rawlings as Princess, Ben Arrington as Fox & Richie MacKnight as Justi.

Kaitlyn Rawlings as Princess, Ben Arrington as Fox & Richie MacKnight as Justi.

MY FRIEND THE FOX
Village Players
Nov. 13-22
Fort Thomas

Directed by Rex Sholar
Produced by Angela K. Forbes

Cast: Ben Arrington as Fox, Richie MacKnight as Justi, Steve Myers as King, Judy Sceifres as Queen, Kaitlyn Rawlings as Princess, Eylie Lorenz as Title Page, Rilla Foster as Lady Green, Valeria Amburgey as Lady Red, Ben Iocco as Duke Darkbeard, Will Lindsey as Worm, Tom Biltz as Sir Jasper, Sarah Cayton as Index Page, Maggie Cayton  as Turnthe Page & Sebastian Wade as Half Page

This family-friendly fable introduces us to Fox — clever and sly, but likable — who befriends Justi, a simple woodsman. Fox persuades the king that Justi is wealthy and searching for a princess to marry. These lies, of course, bring trouble, conflict and humor. Justi eventually proves his worth, however, and takes his place as the story’s hero.

  • Fri, Nov. 13 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, Nov. 14 at 4:30pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, Nov. 15 at 3pm
  • Fri, Nov. 20 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, Nov. 21 at 4:30pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, Nov. 22 at 3pm

Official page |

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