Yearly Archives: 2017

Disney’s HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL JR. Runs May 5-21

THT_Disneys High School Musical JrDisney’s HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL JR.
Town Hall Theatre
May 5-21
Centerville

Official cast list |

Winter break is over at East High. And it’s back to the grindstone—classes, sports, hanging with friends, and finding young love. Basketball captain Troy is all set to get back into his routine…until he learns that Gabriella, the girl he met at karoke during his ski trip, has just enrolled at East High. Together, they shake up and surprise the school when they decide to audition for the winter musical. But can their passion for the stage encourage students around them to not “Stick to the Status Quo”? Recommended for ages 4 and up.

  • Fri, May 5 at 7pm
  • Sat-Sun, May 6-7 at 3pm
  • Fri, May 12 at 7pm
  • Sat, May 13 at 11am & 3pm
  • Sun, May 14 at 3pm
  • Fri, May 19 at 7pm
  • Sat-Sun, May 20-21 at 3pm

Official page |

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THE SAVANNAH SIPPING SOCIETY Runs May 5-20

SSP_Savannah Sipping Society logoTHE SAVANNAH SIPPING SOCIETY
Sunset Players Inc.
May 5-20
Arts Center at Dunham [West Price Hill]

Directed by Don Frimming

Cast: Cathy Woodruff, Marcia Grant, Carrie Mees & Dawn Lindsey

Meet four Southern women who all need to escape the sameness of their day-to-day routines are drawn together by Fate—and an impromptu happy hour—and decide it is high time to reclaim the enthusiasm for life they’ve lost through the years. Over the course of six months filled with laughter, hilarious misadventures, and the occasional liquid refreshment, these middle-aged women successfully bond and find the confidence to jumpstart their new lives.

  • Fri-Sat, May 5-6 at 8pm
  • Fri-Sat, May 12-13 at 8pm
  • Sun, May 14 at 3pm
  • Thu, May 18 at 7:30pm
  • Fri-Sat, May 19-20 at 8pm

Official page |

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ALL THE ROADS HOME Review

ALL THE ROADS HOME presented Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park through April 23. Click here for more information on the production. I attended the opening night performance.

ALL THE ROADS HOME follows the stories of mother, daughter and granddaughter in three thirty-minute pieces to form one over-arching story.

In the first third of the play, we meet Madeleine, a 17 year-old small-town Massachusetts girl who runs away to New York City with dreams of becoming a dancer. But “runs away” is actually an open-ended visit that drops her into the middle of her sister’s strained marriage. And “dreams of being a dancer” is more of a pipe dream since Madeleine has never taken a dance lesson in her life. It only takes one mention of her attraction to her brother-in-law to know how this part of the story is going to end.

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Tramell Tillman as Michael & Rebecca S’manga Frank as Madeleine. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

The play then jumps two decades in the second arc, where Madeleine’s daughter (who renames herself Max) is obsessed with both being a cowboy and Dolly Parton (apparently because she is a lesbian in the 1970s, I guess). It all just seems random and unmotivated. Several earnest talks with her mother and multiple visits from “Dolly” does little to advance the story or offer much insight into Max’s character. A friendship with transfer student, Phoenix, offers Max an escape to a more open-minded San Francisco, which she decides not to pursue.

PIP_AllTheRoadsHome_04

Libby Winters as Dolly Parton & Tina Chilip as Max. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Finally, three more decades later, we have Madeleine’s granddaughter Nix. She has realistically pursued her dream of becoming a performer in that she can actually play a guitar and sing. She travels the country from one city to the next, performing anywhere that will have her. A chance encounter with a three-person act of two sisters and a brother offers Nix a chance at a “family” she didn’t know she wanted, but this leaves her questioning the life she has chosen.

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Tramell Tillman as Trace, Tina Chilip as Mercy, Libby Winters as Nix & Rebecca S’manga Frank as Ade. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

The official description of the shows talks about “three generations of women and the legacies they inherit”. Personally I’m pressed to find any legacy between the characters aside from blood. Perhaps, if the topic of Max’s parentage had been pursued in some form, it could have provided a through line that carried into Nix’s story. I also found the lack of connection between the three generations strange.

The small ensemble shows good range in multiple roles, but as written I found the characters to be mostly superficial. Director Lee Sunday Evans staged the play heavily forward, creating many less-than-ideal sight lines for the audience to the left and right of the stage.

Overall, I found the script to be clichéd and lacking in characterization and substance.

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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Falcon Theatre’s Production of MASTER HAROLD…AND THE BOYS to Open May 5

FT_logoNewport, KY — April 5, 2017 — Falcon Theatre closes out its 2016-17 season with Athol Fugard’s intensely powerful MASTER HAROLD…AND THE BOYS. Set in Apartheid South Africa of the 1950s, Master Harold explores racism, hate, and how intertwining relationships affect each other, both for good and for bad.

The story recounts a long and rainy afternoon that a white teenager named Hally spends with Willie and Sam, black servants who work in the tearoom owned by Hally’s mother. Sam has affectionately regarded the teen almost as a nephew since Hally was a child and has tried to shepherd the youth into adulthood. The afternoon’s friendly conversations of pleasant, shared memories and of Hally’s current life are halted by the news that Hally’s absent alcoholic and racist father is coming home from the hospital. Knowing that his father’s tyrannical presence will make his home life unbearable with his drinking, fighting, and need for constant attention, Hally becomes distraught and lashes out at his longtime mentor. The possibly permanent rifts that the teen causes in the relationship become the focus of the story.

The play won the 1982 New York Drama Desk Award and the 1983 London Critics’ Circle Award for Best Play. Zakes Mokae earned a Tony Award for his portrayal of Sam in the original Broadway production.

The production is directed by Ted Weil and features the following cast:

  • Sam: Ken Early*
  • Hally: Rupert Spraul
  • Willie: Deondra Means

Performances will be May 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 18, 19, and 20 at 8PM. To purchase tickets online please visit www.falcontheater.net or you can call the Box office at 513-479-6783

*appears courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association.

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Auditions Announced for BONNIE & CLYDE The Musical at Beavercreek Community Theatre

bctOpen auditions for BONNIE & CLYDE The Musical at

Beavercreek Community Theatre
3868 Dayton-Xenia Rd.
Beavercreek, OH 45432

Auditions are April 17-18 at 7pm
Added audition date: April 22 from 3-4pm

Directed by Chris Harmon

Performance Dates: June 16-25, 2017

Please prepare a short Broadway style song, an accompanist will be provided. You will be taught and asked to perform a short dance routine so dress appropriately or bring a change of clothes. There will be cold readings from the script.

At the height of the Great Depression, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, went from two small-town nobodies in West Texas to America’s most renowned folk heroes and Texas las enforcements worst nightmare. Bonnie & Clyde’s mutual cravings for excitement and fame immediately set them on a mission to chase their dreams. Their bold and reckless behavior turns the young lovers’ thrilling adventure into a downward spiral, putting themselves and their loved ones in trouble with the law. Forced to stay on the run, the lovers resort to robbery and murder to survive. As the infamous duo’s fame grows bigger, their inevitable end draws nearer.

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