Showing posts with label Other Desert Cities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Other Desert Cities. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The 2012 OUT 100: The Broadway Connection, Part 2

The Covers
Well, it's the end of November, and at last the rest of the 18th Annual Out 100 list is out!  The initial roll out featured 8 gentlemen with Broadway connections (read about them HERE).  Here are 8 more - 16 out of 100, not bad!  And the rest of the list is equally full of veterans of the stage and the new generation of theatrical movers and shakers.  Best of all, though, these artists represent the very best of their craft, and as people who lead and live by example.  They are role models, envelope pushers, champions and heroes.  Together, they (and all of the 100) move us even closer to a day when we might celebrate the 100 greatest people of the year - gay, straight or whatever.



Here are the rest of the theatre people celebrated on this year's Out 100!

Jon Robin Baitz: Playwright



Theatre Connection:  Well, he writes plays (and TV that more resembles theatre than television).  Most recently, he stunned with Other Desert Cities, his first play to make it to Broadway.

Walter Bobbie: Actor, Director



Theatre Connection: There are those of us old enough to remember know Bobbie was in the original cast of Grease, and we were probably old enough to have actually seen him in the much-beloved 90's revival of Guys and Dolls.  But I can almost guarantee that if you are reading this you have probably seen his directorial work - last year, he made sure the stage was smoking hot with David Ives' erotic thriller, Venus in Fur.  And for as long as most of us can remember... a little show called Chicago.

Boy George: Singer, Song Writer, Actor (OUT Magazine's Legend of the Year)



Theatre Connection: It's been awhile, and we'd love to have him back!  He was the star, the composer and lyricist and subject of Taboo.

Simon Callow: Actor, Director



Theatre Connection: Though this Brit is a living legend in his native country, Broadway has had the pleasure of his company twice: as director of Shirley Valentine and as performer in The Mystery of Charles Dickens.  Come back soon, Simon!

Jane Lynch: Actress (OUT Magazine's Entertainer of the Year)



Theatre Connection: The former Love, Loss and What I Wore star is probably best known as Sue Sylvester, the terror of McKinley High in the theatre-friendly Glee, but a better friend to the arts would be hard to find in real life.

Andrew Rannells: Actor (OUT Magazine's Ingenue of the Year)



Theatre Connection: Hello!  The Tony-nominated star of The Book of Mormon is now wowing the country in the hit TV series The New Normal.  I hope we haven't lost him completely to Hollywood...

Michael Urie: Actor



Theatre Connection: Since his acclaimed stint in TV's Ugly Betty, Urie has been no stranger to the New York stage, including equally acclaimed turns in The Temperamentals and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.

Matthew Wilkas: Actor



Theatre Connection: This fine slice of beefcake (like you don't see it...) currently stars in Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark as bad boy Flash, and several ensemble roles.  He also understudies the web-slinger himself, Peter Parker/Spider-Man!

To see the full 2012 OUT 100, click HERE.  All photos by M. Sharkley.


Before you go... (Click the blue links!)
Check out these reviews: 
Check out these Broadway Babies:
PLUS: Don't forget to VOTE in this week's "HOT or NOT": Bare Cast! (Please do BOTH parts!)  CLICK HERE!

4.088
Jeff

Friday, June 29, 2012

HOT/HOTTER: The Semi-Finals: Round 3


BE SURE TO TAKE THIS MONTH'S THEATRE POLL - TO YOUR LEFT!

Well, we are half way there picking The Elite 8!  To see who has made the cut so far, click on the "Hot/Hotter" tab at the top o the page.

The HOT/HOTTER "tournament" is back!  Over the winter and spring, we selected the "Sweet 16" on our way to finding Broadway's most uniquely good-looking guy, and over the next two weeks we will narrow it down to"The Elite 8".  Each Friday, there will be 2 pairs of Broadway Boys, and you will pick the hottest guy of EACH pair. (You will pick TWO guys each week.)  This week is Mark Aldrich vs Matthew Risch and Adam Chanler-Berat vs Bobby Steggert!  I think there is someone here for any type you could ask for!  Good luck!

To see who won last week and to check out the entire "The Sweet 16" click HERE.

NOTE: Your participation in this or any survey on this blog is anonymous.

THE HOT/HOTTER TOURNAMENT 
SEMI-FINALS: ROUND 3
(Be sure to scroll down and vote for BOTH pairs!)

PAIR #1: Which guy is the hottest? 
Peter and the Starcatcher's Adam Chanler-Berat or 
Ragtime's Bobby Steggert?



ADAM CHANLER-BERAT (LEFT) AND BOBBY STEGGERT (RIGHT)




ADAM CHANLER-BERAT (TOP, RIGHT) AND BOBBY STEGGERT (BOTTOM)

PAIR #2: Which guy is the hottest?
Newsies' Mark Aldrich or 
Other Desert Cities' Matthew Risch?




MARK ALDRICH (LEFT) AND MATTHEW RISCH (RIGHT)





MARK ALDRICH (TOP, 2ND FROM LEFT) AND MATTHEW RISCH (BOTTOM)

Be sure to scroll down and complete BOTH polls.  
Hit "Submit" each time.






THANKS FOR VOTING!  LOOK FOR ROUND 4 NEXT FRIDAY!
AND WHILE YOU ARE HERE, VOTE IN THIS MONTH'S THEATRE POLL 
(TO YOUR LEFT)



Jeff
3.305
@jkstheatrescene (Twitter); jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com (email); Comment below (Blogger)

Sunday, June 17, 2012

A Desert Cities Re-visit


BEFORE YOU ENJOY TODAY'S BLOG, TAKE A MOMENT TO VOTE IN THIS WEEK'S "HOT/HOTTER" CONTEST AND THIS MONTH'S THEATRE POLL!  BOTH ARE TO YOUR LEFT.

Review of the Saturday, June 16 matinee performance at the Booth Theatre in New York City.  Starring Stockard Channing, Stacy Keach, Elizabeth Marvel, Thomas Sadoski and Judith Light.  Directed by Joe Mantello. 2 hours, 15 minutes including one intermission.  Closes today.


Grade: A

It is always great to see a long running show that is as fresh and intense in its final performances as it was when it first opened.  Such is the case with Other Desert Cities, the Tony-nominated play by Jon Robin Baitz, which I had the good fortune to revisit just yesterday, at its third to final performance.  It is just as intense and wickedly funny as it was when I first saw it several months ago.  In fact, in some ways, it is even more so than before.  That I knew how the play would end (or I thought so, anyway) actually only added to the experience.  Searching the first act for clues to the ultimate plot twist yielded me nothing in terms of plot revelations, but I did find some really exquisite acting moments from each actor in the show.  But the chief difference - and, actually, mostly an improvement - comes from the change in two of the actors from my first visit.

Let me just reiterate that I loved the play the first time I saw it and I still do.  What was great about the technical aspects of the show are still great.  What was excellent about Joe Mantello's direction remains just as excellent.  And with the addition of original cast members Elizabeth Marvel and Thomas Sadoski, one can see that Mantello's direction can be slightly altered to adjust for character interpretation, and it is even more apparent just how richly the characters are written by Baitz.  Both Ms. Marvel and Mr. Sadoski play their roles as the children of the Wyeth family pretty differently than their Broadway predecessors, Rachel Griffiths and Justin Kirk.

The chief, and most significant, change is in the family dynamic brought about by this casting change.  Under the care of Ms. Griffiths and Mr. Kirk, the Wyeth kids, Brooke and Trip, were much more introspective, willing only to be truly honest with each other when alone.  It was only when push (from the parents) came to shove (when the past came back to haunt them) that either of these siblings gathered the strength to fight for their place in the family and for the truth about their loss of their brother.  In effect, they drew strength from each other, and as a unit,  behaved much as their father, Lyman (Stacy Keach).  On the other hand, with Ms. Marvel and Mr. Sadoski, while they, too, gain strength and more honesty with each other, it is more a gathering of resources in order to combat their strong, willful and steely mother, Polly (Stockard Channing).  The irony here, which really adds to the dramatic layers of the story, is that in being somewhat stronger, they don't wait to be manipulated, they are ready and even attack first, and are, in effect, behaving like their mother.  What is great about that is that both dynamics are viable choices.  With Griffiths/Kirk, their much lower key way in act one makes the confrontations and reveals in act two more startling; with Marvel/Sadoski their more intense approach makes the explosiveness of act two even more intense, if less shocking.  The icing on this delicious family drama cake is that both brother/sister pairs manage to find temperance, forgiveness and humanity from their struggling Aunt Silda (Tony-winner Judith Light), which in turn informs the delicate balance between the sisterhood of Polly and Silda.  What remains true is that both casts shed light on an all too American family that is too strong for its own good and whose flaws cause a walking-on-eggshells difficult delicacy.  Families are only as strong as they think they are when they have to confront their weaknesses.


As much as I enjoyed Justin Kirk, I found Mr. Sadoski much more compelling and riveting.  Every time he was on stage, I found myself wanting to see what he was up to, whether he is delivering one of a few really great speeches, or standing in the background taking it all in.  His reactions, both outward and in introspection are sensational, his acting so real and effortless.  Ms. Marvel, who shows a much wider range of emotion than Ms. Griffiths' more subdued, fragile take on the character, verges occasionally on overdoing it.  Her facial expressions, in particular, are very "big and actor-ish."  And yet, just about everything about her performance rings true considering that her character has been on the brink for most of her life, and she is now fighting for her life - to be heard, to heal, to honor her lost brother.  The best thing about seeing the show twice, with different actors, is that they are all so good that I have two great memories, filled with different things to love and contemplate.  How often does one get that priviledge?

Interestingly, I don't think this huge change has changed the fundamental performances of the senior members of the Wyeth family.  Sure, their reactions to the "children" have been adjusted and are a bit more intense, the wonder is that neither Keach, Channing nor Light have changed their interpretation in the overall scheme of the play.  If they had, I think the play would be weakened instead of maintained or made stronger.  After all, Lyman is at heart a good man, who wants to do the right thing even in the face of profound tragedy; Polly is still a tower of cold strength who battles her own personal demons by making everyone around her stronger by the sheer force of her righteousness and will; and Silda is more heart and love than tragic and flawed by the alcohol she abuses just to cope.  These three are settled in their ways and built up a fortress of resolve around themselves to protect their family and survive.  Secrets and truths can destroy or elevate families, and the Wyeths know this all too well.




Mr. Keach continues to be a curious mix of submissiveness and inner strength as he struggles to keep the family balance.  Ms. Light mines the humor and pathos of a flawed, but essentially good woman - she earned that Tony, for sure.  And Ms. Channing is truly a marvel - a superb interpretation of a complex woman who you can like in one second and recoil from in horror the next.  That she manages to keep her family and the audience simultaneously at arms length AND in a near embrace is both tribute to the character as written and the skill of one of her generation's great stage actresses.

I have to say that this change in casting has made me appreciate this wonderful play all the more.  As a fan of Baitz's television program Brothers and Sisters, I really appreciate his uncanny ability to join political agenda with family values, flawed and perfect.  He creates interesting characters and familial hierarchies, but his best efforts - at least in the TV show and this play - are in the relationships of siblings, and in turn, their relationships with their parents.  Baitz lets us see people that probably aren't like ourselves in the larger sense, but allows us to relate to them in the all too human details.

(Photos by Joan Marcus)

Jeff
3.288
@jkstheatrescene (Twitter); jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com (email); Comment below (Blogger)


Thursday, May 24, 2012

Broadway on YouTube: The 2012 Tony Nominees: Clybourne Park and Other Desert Cities

FINAL DAYS TO NOMINATE YOUR FAVORITE SHOWS AND STARS
FOR THE 2ND ANNUAL JKTS AWARDS!  
CLICK HERE FOR THE NOMINATION BALLOTS!


Today's blog is about two of the Tony Award nominees for Best Play: Clybourne Park and Other Desert Cities.  Their advertising approaches couldn't be more different.

CLYBOURNE PARK







An old time family film roll - the kind Lucy and Ricky or Ozzie and Harriet might have shown at a post-vacation dinner party - tells us instantly that Clybourne Park has something to do with an America of a bygone time.  White suburbia - a car in front of every garage, lush green lawns, and 2.5 kids and a dog is on full display.  Oddly, a somewhat solemn violin underscores the wordless commercial.  Perhaps all isn't well in an idealized America.  Then, at the very end, the "film" melts to reveal the road sign logo, announcing we are at an intersection of Clybourne Park.  What happens during the film, though, gives us the most information.  The play comes to Broadway by way of an Off-Broadway debut, several regional productions and the West End.  And along the way it has picked up some awards - The Olivier for Best play in London and no less than the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. But lest we get too serious, the critical quotes tell us how remarkably funny the play is.  Without saying a word, we know the play is important and entertaining.  Can the Tony be far behind?  The ad will let the play speak for itself. A


OTHER DESERT CITIES





The longest running of the four nominees, Other Desert Cities comes to Broadway after an acclaimed Off-Broadway run, so its critical response is a given.   The draw of the play is really the masterful plot and the star filled cast.  The ad capitalizes on both.  Animating the show logo - the shattering of a perfect scene - bookends the commercial, and provides a visual metaphor for the play.  Then in flashing bits, the plot of the play is revealed by the stars of the show in character: Stockard Channing, Stacy Keach, Rachel Griffiths and  Justin Kirk.  Then in the middle of it all, an intense Judith Light warns, "Don't back down!"  What an attention-grabber!  Bingo! You have conflict, intensity and drama.  Everything a fan of Broadway plays loves.  While the 30 second ad doesn't capitalize on the show's award nominations, it really doesn't need to.  A


For more of my Tony Awards coverage, click the "Tony Awards" tab at the top of the page.


Jeff
3.266
@jkstheatrescene (Twitter); jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com (email); Comment below (Blogger)

Saturday, April 21, 2012

JKTS Interactive: HOT/HOTTER: Round 13: The Replacements, Part II

LAST WEEK TO VOTE IN THIS MONTH'S THEATRE POLL - TO YOUR LEFT!

A couple of weeks ago, record numbers of you voted on who was hot and who was hotter: Godspell's original Jesus (Hunter Parrish) or his replacement (Corbin Bleu).  And one of the first rounds had you choosing the hot/hotter/hottest "Finch" (Daniel Radcliffe, Darren Criss or Nick Jonas).  This week, you'll have THREE more great looking Broadway guys to vote on!

One of this season's biggest hit plays, Other Desert Cities, has had three actors play the role of Trip Wyeth, all three very talented, exciting, and, yes, hot!  Remember you are not rating them on their careers or on how well they play this role.  No, we are being much more objectifying than that!  This week be sure to RATE ALL THREE guys.  Think they are all cute?  Rate all three highly!  Find one or two cute and the other not so much? Give all three different numbers!  BUT VOTE FOR ALL THREE!!!


As usual, I'll start with a couple of pictures of each, then you'll find the survey, and then some more pictures to help you out with your decision.  Enjoy!  This poll will close at 6PM on April 27!



THOMAS SADOSKI


JUSTIN KIRK


MATTHEW RISCH







THOMAS SADOSKI: Candids, Head shots, Production Photos



reasons to be pretty

Reckless

Other Desert Cities

JUSTIN KIRK: Candids, Head Shots, Production Photos


Angels In America

Love! Valour! Compassion!

The Understudy

Weeds

MATTHEW RISCH: Candids, Head Shots and Production Photos


Other Desert Cities; Guys and Dolls

Pal Joey

Sycamore Trees

Remember: RATE ALL THREE GUYS!


Jeff
3.233
@jkstheatrescene (Twitter); jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com (email); Comment below (Blogger)

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Looking Back at Winter

Before I offer up my preview of the coming spring months of theatre-going later this week, I thought I'd take a look back with a review of the previous three months, December - February.  As usual, there were great shows and not so great shows, and even a surprise or two.

December had three of my best theatre-going experiences of the year:


  • Bonnie and Clyde (A) with its GREAT SCORE, awesome performances from Laura Osnes, Jeremy Jordan and Melissa Van Der Schyf. 



  • Lysistrata Jones (A) with a hilarious, smart book, and stand out performances from Patti Murin, Josh Segarra and Lindsay Nicole Chambers. 




  • And the very cool opportunity to see a "tech-in" performance (and the very 1st performance of the National Tour) of American Idiot, which I did not review, but loved more than the Broadway version.  How truly disappointing that both Bonnie and Clyde and Lysistrata Jones closed so fast.  


January proved slower, but not uneventful.


  • I made a return visit to Follies before it closed and it was as good as, if not better, than the first time I saw it!  (Man, Bernadette Peters and Jan Maxwell were amazing!)  I didn't re-review it - it is still an A+



  • The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess (C+) with all of its controversy proved, for me at least, to be much ado about nothing.  Boring, overwrought and ugly to look at, the show had all of its merit in five central performances: Joshua Henry, Nikki Renee Daniels as the loving young couple doomed to fate, Philip Boykin as the evil bad guy, and Porgy and Bess themselves, Norm Lewis and Audra McDonald.



  • I did finally get to see Harry Connick, Jr., which turned out to be a disappointment, as he showed little stage presence, and his legendary voice struggled to be heard over the orchestra.  On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (C--) proved to be a disappointment over all.  With a truly ugly set, lackluster staging and a concept that had great potential but played way too safely, the show was still somewhat entertaining, due largely to a debut performance from Jessie Mueller, and a cuddly, warm performance from the always charming David Turner.


February was a light, but good month of going to the show.


  • The Encores presentation of Merrily We Roll Along (A-) did not disappoint at all!  The score sounded great, and it was a real treat to see an all-star cast perform it.  I especially enjoyed Colin Donnell, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Celia Keenan-Bolger and the always delightful Elizabeth Stanley!



  • The truly amazing theatre experience of the month (and for some time) was Other Desert Cities (A+).  The gripping script by Jon Robin Baitz was wonderfully executed by the cast, led by Rachel Griffiths, Judith Light and the incomparable Stockard Channing.



  • Silence! The Musical (A-) ended the winter with a snow flurry and a side-splitting laugh fest.  Jenn Harris and David Garrison are a scream!


There was the good.  There was the bad.  But there was always something of value to see in each production I saw this winter.  And Spring started with an amazing show...

Jeff
3.194
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