Category Archives: League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews

LCT Review of LITTLE WOMEN

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

Cincinnati Shakespeare Company’s “Little Women” is a fine production of a beloved classic story, staged and performed in a way that preserves and honors the novel. The show should please everyone who has fond memories of reading it as a child.

“Little Women,” written in 1868 by Louisa May Alcott, is the story of the March family of New England during and just after the Civil War. The ‘little women’ are the family’s four daughters – Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. When the play opens, Mr. March is serving as a chaplain in the Union Army. Mrs. March and teenage daughters are keeping a poor but loving home.

(Clockwise from top) Maggie Lou Rader as Jo, Kelly Mengelkoch as Meg, Courtney Lucien as Amy, Annie Fitzpatrick as Marmee, and Caitlin McWethy as Beth. By Mikki Schaffner Photography.

(Clockwise from top) Maggie Lou Rader as Jo, Kelly Mengelkoch as Meg, Courtney Lucien as Amy, Annie Fitzpatrick as
Marmee, and Caitlin McWethy as Beth. By Mikki Schaffner Photography.

The script, so faithful to the novel that it lifts actual lines of dialogue, spans several years to follow the sisters through spats, love interests, marriages, illness, and even death.

The backbone of the family is Mrs. March (we never do see Mr. March). She is wonderfully played by Annie Fitzpatrick, who evokes the character’s calm dignity, quiet resolve, and compassion. Fitzpatrick does get some emotional scenes, though – the finest when she learns her at-war husband is ill and she must go to him.

Dominant of the sisters is the tomboy Jo, who has no use for airs and pretension. Maggie Lou Rader is terrific in the part, displaying a fiery energy and a “what you see is what you get” temperament – all her emotions are on display. Rader developed a perfect signature gesture for Jo of flouncing into a chair sideways, arm flung over the back.

The role of the youngest, Amy, is possibly the most difficult. Actress Courtney Lucien has to evolve from a prissy preteen with ringlets in Act 1 to a beautiful young woman in Act 2, while still keeping some of her self-centered traits. Lucien brings the audience right along with her.

There is great supporting work from the rest of the cast. Notable is Abby Roward as Aunt March. Believable makeup and a great physical acting job turn Roward into this elderly woman with a sharp tongue, but the ability of wealth to make a difference in the March sisters’ lives.

Director Sara Clark keeps the acting focused and the pacing tight through a show that spans several years and multiple locations.

The multifunctional set has the ability to serve many locales but still keep certain areas fixed in the audience’s mind – the attic where Jo writes, the bedroom where Beth dies, and the family living room where all gather. There is good use of projected images to let us watch the passing of the seasons out a window and images of dancers at a ball to create the illusion of more people on stage.

Cincinnati Shakespeare’s production is an excellent adaption of “Little Women,” both for those who love the work and those seeing it for the first time.

The show continues weekends through March 21. Call 513-381-2273 or visit www.cincyshakes.com.

For more information on the production, click here.

Leave a comment

Filed under League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews

LCT Review of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT

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

“They call me MISTER TIBBS”

So says black Pasadena Homicide Investigator, Virgil Tibbs, strongly played by Derek Snow in the Falcon Theatre’s production of In the Heat of the Night.

It’s the early sixties, and Tibbs is traveling in the deep South. He is waiting for a bus in Argo, Alabama when he arrested by the local hayseed cops for a murder. Virgil confronts racism and prejudice while helping the local sheriff solve the murder mystery.

Michael Hall as Gillespie & Derek Snow as Tibbs. Photo by Mikki Schaffner Photography.

Michael Hall as Gillespie & Derek Snow as Tibbs. Photo by Mikki Schaffner Photography.

This production of In the Heat of the Night is outstanding. Small intimate spaces like the Falcon put the audience close to the action of the stage. Director Ed Cohen smartly places all the actors behind a scrim, reminding the audience of the ensemble, which is very good. Each actor of the 10-person troupe was well-prepared for their roles. Derek Snow was solid throughout, commanding each scene. He needed a good counterpoint for his strong, laconic role of Mr. Tibbs and he got it in Michael Hall’s interpretation of Sheriff Gillespie, an outsider hired to be sheriff. Hall’s performance matched Snow’s, and you really felt his transition from desiring to be accepted in a bigoted town to accepting the new world where a black man could be equal.

Cohen used the actors to change the set and this technique moved the play along at a brisk pace. Simon Powell and Dan Maloney played police officers and both were very fine. I like when actors project their voices toward the audience! Tom Peters also stands out, playing two crucial roles.

Special mention must be made for the production music provided by two actors on stage, Rich Setterberg and Allison Evans. Rich played three roles, and played bass lines of popular tunes from the era (and harmonica). Allison provided a drum beat and did a good job playing her character.

The lighting in this show was also very fine. The Whiskey Shambles Band played some blues tunes before the show. This was a great way to set this fine period piece by John Ball.

Falcon is celebrating its 25th season. Falcon Producer Ted Weil wears more hats than the inventory of Batsakes Hat Shop downtown. Lighting design, set design, set construction, sound design. In addition, Falcon Theatre has successfully purchased the building and have made serious improvements to the theatre space.

Greater Cincinnati theatre lovers are lucky to have the Falcon Theatre as one of the many theatrical treasures available. Go see this show!

For more information on the production, click here.

Leave a comment

Filed under League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews

LCT Review of AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY

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

Any family has its ups and downs, issues and secrets. The Westons have that and then some. As literature, “August: Osage County” by Tracy Letts is a masterful work. It is multilayered and multi textured but not all of the layers are things you really want to explore. The story of the Weston sisters and their parents and relatives, who come together during a family crisis, reflects and absorbs the energy of many families; sometimes the mirror reflects humor, sometimes naked raw emotion.

Christine Dye as Mattie Fae & Bob Allen as Charlie.

Christine Dye as Mattie Fae & Bob Allen as Charlie.

Untethered Theatre made a bold choice in choosing this piece, perfectly aligned with their mission, but not with their sight lines, and eliminating seating for the audience. Perhaps there were other answers to the sprawling set in the cramped, yet intimate space. Could the bunkbed and study have been switched for audience comfort? Or was it a conscious effort to make the audience squirm and turn in their seats? As each layer is ripped away, the audience should become more uncomfortable at the sight of their own wounds.

With those details aside, it is a powerful play, where layer upon layer it is revealed that this family has been poisoned and eaten away by a complicated web of lies, denial, illness and the sweet allure of whiskey, pills, weed or wine.

The highlights of the evening are performances by Dale Hodges (Violet Westin), Christine Dye (Mattie Fay), Bob Allen (Charlie), Carter Bratton (Little Charlie) and Mindy Heithaus. Strength of focus, crafting people rich and full in detail confirm these actors as Cincinnati treasures. Another audience member summed up Dale Hodges’ performance “How she made me detest this complicated woman and then be hopeful for her well-being by the end of the play was lovely to watch.” The others rounding out the cast of 13 (!) fulfill their roles well, in a true ensemble cast. Costumes and lighting were appropriate.

I highly recommend this show. It is not for the easily offended. It is long, but most of it flew by as we were all entranced by this wonderful theatre making brave, bold choices.

For more information on the production click here.

Leave a comment

Filed under League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews

LCT Review of LES MISERABLES

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

I am a self-proclaimed connoisseur of Les Miserables. And I think maybe it’s because I went in with such high expectations, that I was disappointed in NKU‘s mounting. With the choice to use minimal sets and props, as opposed toNKU‘s typical grandiose musical stagings, it felt like a lightly blocked concert. Knowing that Ken Jones was in charge of the beast, I entered expecting his usual all around fully polished direction, but he missed some spots on this one. To begin with, this show is too big for educational theatre. It’s too big for most theatre. Taking the reigns as the reformed convict Jean Valjean was NKU music Professor Jason Vest, who has studied opera performance around the globe. I’ve never been a proponent of guest artists in educational theatre, but in a show revolving around said guest performer’s role, I fail to see the benefits for the student cast, especially when NKU has so many capable musical theatre and vocal performance majors. Vest has the vocals down, but I kept waiting for more emotional expression. It is a tough gig, moonlighting as one of the more hyped and challenging roles in all of musical theatre. I always look forward to “Valjean’s Soliloquy”, which occurs a few numbers into the show. The song is designed to suck the audience in and allow witness to Valjean’s moral transformation. It sets the tone for the rest of the sojourn, however, in this production it felt rushed and unimportant. One of the beautiful aspects of the Valjean character is his vocal range, which needs justification through subtext, but in the end it felt like a very talented opera performer singing pretty words for the crowd.

NKU_Les Miserables1When reflecting on Les Mis, I always ask myself if Inspector Javert’s lifelong and obsessive disdain for Valjean is justified by the actor’s choices. While Brandon Huber as Javert is vocally strong and one of the better interpretations I’ve seen,  I had trouble pondering this question due to the little emphasis placed on the conflict between the two, even in the famous “Confrontation”. Without the sizzling passion between the foes, which should ultimately be realized through Javert’s ethical and religious plight, that major plot point is lost. I honestly barely remember the two being on stage together (kudos, however, to Jones for Javert’s final scene, seriously well done). Another important question is how well the director handles Valjean’s sudden and rapid aging/declining health at the end, which more often than not is thrown to the wind. While many brush it off as an error in the script, it’s there for a reason and I feel it is the director’s responsibility to interpret this phenomenon, which Jones has not.

Definitely familiarize yourself with the story before you head to the theater. The story takes place over several decades in post-revolution France, focusing on the lives of over a dozen named characters.  It was a very fast paced three hour production. So much was rushed, specifically in the introductions of major characters, so anyone not familiar with the plot would have trouble keeping up. Everything felt safe, which at times was confusing, especially the decision to have Marius sing ‘Empty Chairs at Empty Tables’ while sitting on another character’s death bed, with no chairs or tables in sight. The sound was all over the place, with mic issues, I’m assuming a result of super quick costume changes and fight/dance choreography. The lighting was distracting, primarily during solos with no spotlights. As previously mentioned, there was barely a set. You don’t necessarily need turntables or an elaborate set to stage Les Mis, but you need to throw the audience a bone, draw them into the story, give the actors more to interact with. We saw half hints of city buildings on the edges of the stage which I kept waiting to roll out, but never did. We saw a completely nondescript mass in the middle of the stage, which, while providing some layering to the staging, had no meaning to me whatsoever.  What sets they did drop down, like the gate for Cosette’s home and the arch for the wedding, felt cheap and flimsy, almost comical.  And of course, there was the most blatant miscue of all–engraving “Les Miserables” in stone on the floor of the set to scream to the audience, “Yes, we are doing Les Miserables”. This was really to me symbolic of the entire show, Ken Jones basically asking the audience to concentrate on the vocal performance.

With all of this being said, there were some fine performances. The Barricade Ensemble saves the show. Cason Walden as Enjorlas and Miki Abraham as Eponine, both hailing from Paducah Kentucky, were absolutely stellar. Both have an undeniable presence, with the skills to back it up. You should see this show for their performances. The entire Barricade crew, for that matter, was truly delightful. Every one of them has some major acting and vocal chops, and is probably capable of playing the previously mentioned out-sourced lead. It is nice to see Abraham go out on such a strong note, and comforting to see a fresh crop with Walden.

This production just felt incomplete. If you want to do a concert version of Les Mis then fine, do that, and call it that. And this would have been a fine concert version. But to stage a production and then undercut it like this leaves the performers and the audience out in the cold.

For more information on the production cilck here.

Leave a comment

Filed under League of Cincinnati Theatres Reviews