Category Archives: League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews

LCT Review of DETROIT ’67

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 Ensemble Theatre CINCINNATI’S production of DETROIT ’67 is a winner. The set/lighting/props/sound are all stellar, a delicious time capsule from the 60s.

I remember being invited to a “basement party” back in the 60’s in the hood where, for a small cover, you got great music, a bar, and for a white girl like me, dance lessons! I still feel those were the best moves I ever had!

Darnell Pierre Benjamin as Sly & Bryant Bentley as Lank. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Darnell Pierre Benjamin as Sly & Bryant Bentley as Lank. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

The basement in the ghetto neighborhood of Detroit serves as the underground after hours party place for locals and is a major source of income for Chelle and Lank, the sister and brother who grew up in the house and live there now as adults. They have recently inherited the house from their deceased parents. A stairwell bisects the stage and distinguishes life above ground and the life that goes on underground. The actors are constantly climbing down or up and traveling between worlds. Above the basement stairs, just a hint of the hallway and the house beyond leads your eyes to a long span of dark shadowy cityscape that reminds you where you are. The sound was marvelous. Who doesn’t want to listen to old Motown, the Temps, Marvin Gaye and the like? But in the background, muted sirens scream that the rioting isn’t far away. An old stereo that plays 45s keeps skipping to the irritation of Chelle.

The play flows through the five days and events of the 1967 Detroit riots like the music which characters turn to constantly; music for the nightly party, music to wait by, to dance to, to celebrate a moment, to tolerate a moment, to dream to, to delight one other. The characters are struggling with who they are, to the world, to each other and what stands in their way, whether it’s their own beliefs, the color of their skin, or the limits of the culture of the times they live in.

The acting is energetic and consistent, honest and earnest – not a false note in the show. Bryant Bentley as Lank, a Dayton native now in Columbus, is particularly good as he conspires with his best friend Sly, Darnell Benjamin, performing locally and teaching with Pones Inc., Know Theatre and across the Tri-State, who mollifies his sister Chelle. Burgess Byrd’s Bunny is a sight to behold. She is cast beautifully and fills the role with sexy gusto. Zina Camblin’s Chelle is sweet in her pedal pushers and sleeveless shirts, playing Lank’s big sister and is touching as she tries to keep everyone and everything safe from the troubles outside. Sly, all legs and fedora, is enthusiastic beyond all measure, Lank’s best friend and would-be beau of Chelle, if she’d take him seriously. And Leslie Goddard’s Caroline, is strong and problematic and gives her role nice complexity, so that you can’t easily tell if she’s a good girl or not. She’s a savory mystery. All the actors work beautifully together.

The production is one not to be missed!

For more information on the production, click here.

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LCT Review of THE MARVELOUS WONDERETTES

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

If you like 1950’s music sung with 1950’s women’s quartets and enough plot to make it a musical instead of a concert, you will like THE MARVELOUS WONDERETTES at the Covedale. The 4-women ensemble consisting of Kate Elliott, Grace Eichler, Lauren Carr and Blair Godshall sing, dance and act well enough to provide an entertaining evening out of pretty thin material. The first act of the show is about four high school seniors at their 1958 prom who have been asked to provide the entertainment by creating a girl singing ensemble called the Marvelous Wonderettes. The second act shows the four women 10 years later at their high school reunion and we find out what has happened to each in the meantime. Their stories are told through their songs including 1950’s and 1960’s pop songs such as “Mr. Sandman”, “Lollipop”, “Dream Lover”, “It’s my Party” and “You Don’t Own Me”. The harmonies improved as the night progressed, plagued somewhat by early miking issues. The singers have powerful voices and I’m sure it will improve. The choreography is simple yet typical of the female (and male) groups of the day. The set is typical 1950’s high school gym/stage with a basketball scoreboard, a stage at the back and minutiae such as graffiti on the wall. This show is not Shakespeare but it is fun, entertaining and energetic led by a captivating and talented cast. It’s Wonderette enough. And, going to the Covedale is always a treat.

For more information on the production, click here.

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LCT Review of TRANSMIGRATION

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

If you haven’t seen Transmigration, the CCM student written marathon of short, 30 minute plays, make a plan to go next year! It’s fun, fast, and furious and you get a peak into what’s on students’ minds. Many of the vignettes centered on making some sort of “migration, or journey to find something, leave something, or transform,” sort of like moving from schooling into the professional world and working their way through the intense four year journey through the CCM odyssey.

CCM_Transmigration photoThe students have a scant 2 weeks to write, rehearse, and perform the 30 minute pieces. It shows what these talented students can do with very little of the technical support they enjoy in a full production at CCM. Here’s a taste from each. Sadly, there are no students’ names in the program for individual praise:

Coulter Cliffs is sort of Grand Budapest Hotel meets The Shining. A hotel where once you enter, you can’t leave until a new person arrives to provide a swap. The audience votes on who can leave (or “win”) based on the most compelling story. Sort of like what happens when they graduate. Some have been there for 149 years—they never age of course. Who knows what’s waiting for them in the “real” world. The characters who made bold choices were the most successful in winning their escape. It was enjoyable and fun connecting to the characters.

A Fool’s Paradise was a favorite among the reviewers and is a community theatre in Boca Raton Florida; probably the worst graduation nightmare for these talented students! Hilarious musical compositions by the students and sung with great bravado, most notably by the “Mayor” of Boca, the old curmudgeon who leads this cast. The director-diva,Peaches Montgomery, the scariest fool in the “paradise” for her power and control over her universe, exhorts us to have a “Peachy Day” as she blindly props up her son, the piano player, who played expertly. We meet familiar characters like the perennial leads, so often seen in community theatre. Here they are brother and sister vying for Romeo and Juliet and happily provide the audience an “eeewww” factor in the love scenes. The football hero turned “actor” with Brad Pitt good looks, and the fresh newbie, are all drawn, no doubt, from the students’ own pre-CCM experiences.

Seven Feet Under was different from the other concept pieces and drew on a more dramatic through line that didn’t rely solely on humor. The vain and selfish Snow White sends the seven miners on a mission below to find “the treasure” and must face the monster the get it, another graduation truth. Nice monster puppet was created with cardboard and burlap and even some dry ice for effect.   The “dwarves” were a good ensemble and played on their strengths as actors so that we very quickly identified and cared about their journey and demise.

cult(ured) was akin to drinking the Kool-Aid in this woodland cult of characters led by an iconic mother nature figure trolling for recruits–just like CCM. The characters, like the sanguine loner who promoted cocaine-flavored yogurt, were engaging, and the show had smartly showed transitions and the passage of time.

Neutral and Non Partisan: Very well written and performed! This cautionary tale about the very real possibility of big brother watching random, “average” Americans under the guise of psychological research. This employed great use of multi-media combined with layered performances.

Mandatory Fun:  This was the only piece that was less than enthusiastically received by the panelists. In a robot game show where humans battle each other, the plot seemed too obvious and the characters shallow.

Well, you can’t win them all but even with a clinker or two, this is an exceptional evening celebrating enormous creativity and, as we always know we’re going to get from CCM,talent!

For more information on the production, click here.

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LCT Review of PETER PAN

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 story of Peter Pan never grows old when performed by the extremely talented CCM team. This old chestnut is enlivened by a frenetic group of dancers and singers who consume the stage with energy while telling the timeless fantasy tale of the orphan boy from Neverland written by James Barrie. The frenzied action, outrageously hued costumes, and set which morphs from a typical English nursery in the early 20th century—not to mention the phantasmagoria of color and ever-changing lighting set against a decrepit amusement park set representing Neverland—sweeps the audience along on a roller coaster ride. Keeping with the tradition of having a woman play the part of Peter Pan (started by Mary Martin), CCM follows suit with two alternating actresses playing the lead role. In the production that I saw, Peter was portrayed by Hannah Zazzaro, who captivated the audience with the proper amount of braggadocio and charm while still hinting at the inherent loneliness of the character. She also belted the songs and danced very well. She did swallow some of her lines, however. The other tour de force was Nathaniel Irvin, who played jointly Mr. Darling and Captain Hook. It is an interesting juxtaposition between a proper English gentleman and a smarmy, evil yet cowardly pirate in Hook. He seemed to be having a good time playing Hook.

Senior Musical Theatre majors Hannah Zazzaro as Peter Pan and Nathaniel Irvin as Captain Hook. Photography by Mark Lyons.

Senior Musical Theatre majors Hannah Zazzaro as Peter Pan and Nathaniel Irvin as Captain Hook. Photography by Mark Lyons.

Two scenes in particular stand out in their frenzied best. The first is the fight and then reconciliation between the lost boys and the Indians and the second is the battle between the pirates and everyone else in the final act. Several dozen actors, dancers and singers are in constant motion during both scenes. It is a bit like trying to follow a multi-ring circus simultaneously.

There were some opening night glitches and, at times, the frenzy on stage tended to overwhelm the storyline but the enthusiasm of the company overcame those issues.

Kids should also enjoy the show although, with a three act construction, the play is longer than many. I recommend the show.

For more information on the production, click here.

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LCT Review of FOUND A PEANUT

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

Miami University’s Found a Peanut, by Donald Marguiles, is about eight children, ages 5-14, on the last day of summer vacation before the new school year begins.  This day, in a Brooklyn yard, they lose their childhood innocence and experience the difficulties of growing up.  While digging a grave to bury a dead bird, they discover a bag filled with money (“It looked like a lot more,” says Jeffery Smolowitz).  The quarrel resulting from their discovery results in greediness, violence and finally leads to the disruption of a friendship. The death of a neighbor coinciding with the death of the bird triggers a change in attitudes as the children start seeing death in relation to themselves.  This may be the death of their summer vacation, but it also the death of innocence and their childhood.

MU_Found a Peanut logo2It takes a few minutes to get past the college actors playing children in this production. The program’s cast list stated their age but several of them, at least, through their physical appearances didn’t match the age described for the characters. Mike (11, played by Richard Dent) is drawing a game on the cement as is milquetoast buddy Jeffrey (also 11, played by Caleb Schemer) hangs around trying to learn to play catch with his Pensy Pinky ball.  Mike’s 8-year-old sister (Jordan Gravely) comes bouncing in troubled that she’s her house keys. for tomorrow she becomes a latch-key kid.  Her fat friend, Joanie (8, discerningly played by Kaela Smith) comes out to play followed by Little Earl (a superb and humorous Aidan McBreen playing a believable 5-year-old).   Nothing much happens.  The day, and the plot, gradually unfold and the summer-time world we all remember just moves along like a long summer day. Playwright Donald Margulies staged the setting behind an apartment building in Brooklyn, NY in 1962, however, this play could have been from any other time period. The only prominent issue to mark the time was mentioning of the movie “Psycho”  which was released in 1960. But the play quickly wears out its welcome as Marguiles plays to stereotypes.  Initially it is an adjustment believing the characters are children, but through the characters you see some of the old neighborhood kids on your block.  It wasn’t the overall script that kept me interested but the individual moments that caught me (and other audience members): the agonizing over picking up a dead bird with two sticks only to quickly push it toward the garden soil; or, Little Earl giving voice to his plastic T-Rex and the epic battle between the Rex and an old roller skate.   Director Joshua Horowitz did his job and it’s evident that he put a lot of thought into the direction. The often overlapping of action and dialogue, unless well-thought and well-rehearsed, could have turned into cacophony. Mr. Horowitz marvelously crafted and developed the young actors throughout the play, especially during those overlapping moments. The compositions, especially with six or seven actors in the play area at one time, were well-orchestrated; however, some of the characters lost their spontaneity when taking over their positions that came across as a taut and rehearsed movement rather than logical steps. The play works very well in the Studio 88 space. Set designer Todd Stuart’s staging is simple yet sublime in recreating the chalked concrete we all remember.  The subtle fencing around the studio space and the choice to play the production “in the round” really brings the joy of the childhood back to our memories. The young performers attempted their best and gave it all they had. Their genuine sincerity was easily sensed as they attempted to make the play a notable one. They must be applauded for that. It is truly commendable to take such initiative developing young actors who will hopefully embrace acting and become pros at it some day in near future.

For more information on the production, click here.

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