The First Couple Goes Broadway

My friend Tom happened to be at Joe Turner’s Come and Gone last evening where coincidentally the President and First Lady were in attendance. Here’s what he said to me about the experience:

“So I kinda watched a Broadway show with Barack and Michele Obama tonight. Surreal? Yeah, a bit. I don’t quite know what to make of the fanaticism he draws, but I have to say I loved every darn minute of the spectacle it turned out to be (including being shoved aside by an NYPD officer while trying to get remotely close to the theatre!!)! And Joe Turner’s Come and Gone was a great show too! :)”

I responded. “I’m curious how their presence impacted the performance onstage… was it a distraction with them being there?”

Tom replied, “It was REALLY hard to focus on the show at first – it took me a good 20 minutes, at least, to have the faintest idea what was happening on stage. And then after intermission, the curtain was up already when they got back to their seats and people were flashing photos for a good 5 minutes, totally ignoring the actors….and the show started an hour late. haha. So, yes, it definitely impacted it but I do think they gave a great show and I ultimately was moved by it!”

Walking Among My Yesterdays: ‘Gypsy’ (2004)

When I was a senior in high school, we had a new principal who used to sign off from her daily morning address with a clinical admonition of “The choices you make today, shape your world tomorrow.” Given that she was new and ingratiating (imagine a cross between Hillary Clinton and Miss America), we were reluctant to take anything she said seriously. However, I sit here this evening and I realize just how right she was.

You see, it was five years ago today that the revival of Gypsy starring Bernadette Peters closed on Broadway, and to this date that sole theatre experience has had a greater impact on my life than any other.

When it was announced for the second time that Gypsy would definitely close at the end of May, I decided it was time for me to get my rear in gear and see the show. I had never seen Gypsy, one of the best shows ever written, live. While browsing online at Telecharge, I noticed that tickets were available for the very last performance and I decided I would jump at the opportunity. I had never attended a closing before. On a whim I bought two tickets.

Then came the problem: no one wanted to go with me. “Some people can’t even give it away” rang true as I counted down to the big event. The day of the show I managed to get in contact with a friend from high school, who dropped everything and rushed to meet me at the train station. Sam is a writer and was just beginning studying to be a playwright at SUNY Purchase, so she was interested to look at it from that perspective, since she had only heard selections of the score and was almost wholly unfamiliar with the work.

That day, Bernadette and co. blew the roof off of the Shubert Theatre. The announcement of Marvin Laird as the musical conductor brought cheers from many regulars. That overture. That titanic overture brought the crowd to a standing ovation (something I’ve never seen before or since). In a few short minutes, the words “Sing out, Louise” rang out and the audience once again flew out of their seats to cheer Bernadette as she made her way from the back of the house to the stage. In spite of any critical misgivings certain people (Riedel) might have had, Ms. Peters delivered nothing short of a powerhouse performance as Madame Rose, with absolutely no vocal trouble and passionately intense acting. The energy was palpable, the book was ripe and Bernadette’s Rose finagled, seduced, charmed and ultimately horrified when she brought the house down on itself with “Everything’s Coming Up Roses.”

At intermission, Sam and I became engrossed in conversation with the woman to our left, who was there with her young son, who couldn’t have been more than seven, looking dapper in his suit. Turning to each other, we discussed the show from a written perspective. Sam had never heard “Everything’s Coming Up Roses” in its context before, so she floored at the underlying subtext. A younger gentleman making his way back to his seat in our aisle passed by as I was discussing the definitive nature of Ethel Merman with the role of Rose. Sam alerted me that someone behind me was disagreeing with me. I turned and had a congenial debate with the young, passionate theatregoer, who admired the theatre and in particular this production. We discussed all the actresses who have inhabited the part of Rose, having as big a conversation in about 6 or 7 minutes than many people have in an hour.

Then came the second act. Every song brought great applause; half the house even stood for the three strippers. Tammy Blanchard had to work hard on “The Strip,” though she didn’t quite pull off the transition from Louise to Gypsy Rose Lee. Then came that moment to end all moments. A dead, palpable silence filled the theatre as an embittered Rose emerged from the dressing room where she had just thrown down with her daughter. Rejected, vilified, humiliated yet defiant, she once again stood her ground by defiantly shouting to the empty stage that she could have been better than everyone else. This embittered cloud exploded into the storm that is the eleven o’clock number to end all eleven o’clock numbers: “Rose’s Turn.”

Bernadette Peter’s Turn was as devastating and cathartic as you could imagine; an emotional breakdown as you watched her seams come apart. On the final “For me!” The audience stood and cheered and cheered and then cheered some more. Bernadette bowed. And bowed. And bowed. Then she froze in character to wait for the applause to end, only to continue bowing as Tammy Blanchard entered clapping. This Gypsy still played to the more positive (and superior) ending, with both leaving arm in arm, the audience emotionally drained yet exhilarated.

I had hoped to say goodbye to the young man, but missed him as we exited the theatre. Someone else from my high school happened to be there and had grabbed my attention and focus. Such is the case with so many of the theatregoing acquaintances you meet, or as I like to call them: show friends. You share two to three hours with one another; if you’re lucky they are vibrant and intelligent conversationalists. But for the most part you never see them again.

The day also marked the first time I went backstage at the Shubert. Sam and I have a mutual friend from high school whose father was subbing in the pit that final week, and he arranged for us to get a brief impromptu tour of the wings and backstage area. We got to venture down into the pit and look up at the Shubert from the most unusual vantage point, the three tiers towering above us. It was a surreal and wonderful experience, especially as we emerged from the stage door and the crowd, expecting the stage stars, exhaled dismissively.

The next day, I posted something incredibly specific about the production on All That Chat and lo and behold, my theatregoing friend and I reconnected. We took our conversation to instant messenger, and I made a fast friend named Noah Himmelstein, who shared an exuberant passion for theatre, and in particular, musical theatre. Unbeknowst to me, he also met someone at the performance who also loves the live theatre experience and is always in the endless pursuit of entertainment. I would meet Our Sarah only briefly a year later at the Theatre World Awards. Within the next two years we developed a sturdy friendship that involved theatrical excursions and outings. It was due mostly to Noah and Sarah’s encouragement that I started writing anonymously as the Theatre Aficionado at Large back in October ’07.

Life has a funny way of leading you into unexpected territory. Though I wrote some theatrical criticism in college, I never loved it. In fact I rather hate it. When forced to turn a critical eye to everything, there is the risk of missing out on enjoying the experience and being in the moment. It was due mostly to Noah and Sarah’s encouragement that I started writing anonymously as the Theatre Aficionado at Large back in October 2007. The very first thing I wrote was “I refuse to be a critic.” This blog is my compromise, and I still don’t consider myself critic. At first I didn’t take it seriously, only occasionally posting and not thinking I would stick to it and frankly not sure anyone was reading what I was writing. However, I kept at it. As a result, I’ve made some wonderful friends; people I would never have met otherwise. I look forward to seeing them on a daily basis via their websites and twitter feeds, and also on their woefully infrequent trips to the New York City, where we gather for food, drinks, endless banter and of course, theatre. Whenever any of us get together, it is unquestionably an epic win.

Five years removed, I look back nostalgically on the friendships I treasure and look excitedly toward the next five. So to celebrate this anniversary, I raise a toast to all those good and crazy people, my theatre friends. Thanks for the laughs, the memories and the good times. My world is a better place because you are all a part of it.

And here’s to Bernadette Peters, for starting it all.

This Is All Very New to Me

I have never interviewed anyone in my life. I’m hardly prime material to take on the hotbed issues and figures for “20/20” or “Dateline.” Suffice it to say, on Wednesday I was considerably uncertain what to expect as I made my way down to the Atlantic Theatre Company school, where the Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival is currently in rehearsal for its 2009 season.

The HVSF, which starts its 23rd season next month, performs on the grounds of Boscobel in Garrison, NY. Every summer, the crew sets up a large tent on the lawn while theatregoers can revel in the gorgeous view of a sunset on the Hudson River, all the while taking in three of the Bard’s works in repertory. The annual theatre fest is a staple of the Hudson Valley, hugely popular with audiences who return year after year and continually bring friends with them (trust me, it’s a great introduction to Shakespeare for anyone who might feel a disconnect from his plays). They were also the subject of the documentary Shakespeare on the Hudson which aired on WNET (PBS in NYC) in 2008, narrated by Kristin Chenoweth.

Their mission statement enough is alone to entice an avid theatregoer to make the trip to Putnam County:

“The Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival is dedicated to producing the plays of Shakespeare with an economy of style that focuses our energy and resources on script, actors, and audience.

We communicate the stories with energy, clarity and invention and we distill rather than embellish the language and action. We challenge ourselves and our audiences to take a fresh look at what is essential in Shakespeare’s plays.”

Anyway, when I was asked if I’d like to sit in on a rehearsal, I jumped at the opportunity. And as soon as I jumped, I panicked as I didn’t know what to expect or what would be expected from me. But settling into my table in the rehearsal room, I receive a warm greeting from the actors, stage management and Terrence O’Brien, founding artistic director of the Festival as well as the director of both Pericles and The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged). (The third offering is the immortal Much Ado About Nothing directed by John Christian Plummer).

I am fascinated by the processes and techniques bringing actors through rehearsal and into performance. There was no exception here, as it was the first time I had been in a rehearsal room in almost five years. It was a place enveloped in fresh ideas and an excitement and passion for theatre that transcends the work they do on Shakespeare.

The actors (including Christopher Edwards, Michael Borrelli, a striking Gabra Zackman, Wesley Mann and Katie Hartke) got right back to work as if I weren’t there. For the next hour, they worked on a three to four minute scene, fine-tuning their blocking and making discoveries and breakthroughs right before my very eyes. I marveled in the rehearsal atmosphere; one of such intelligence and comfort. The room was full of congenial dialogue over actions in the scene, actors honing their performances with considerable lucidity. The rapport is genuine as many of the actors have worked with the Festival for many years, coming back every summer to live as a family for the duration.

For three solid hours, I got to see Terry at work with his actors, as well as the chance to converse with him as well as cast members Hartke and Jason O’Connell over lunch. (Joining us was the delightful Marcia Clark, who made the entire experience possible!) Our talk actually started when I inadvertently pulled my copy of The Norman Conquests out of my bag. That got all of us talking about what we had seen and what we wanted to see (sound familiar, bloggerati…?) Over the course of an hour we covered everything from Mary Stuart to August: Osage County to the worlds of opera and Shakespeare.

The director and some of the cast members get together during the off-season to work on the American Shakespeare Lab. Working with improvisatory exercises, the actors work to embody the text, making the dialogue seem natural and spontaneous. Part of our discussion was in regards to American actors performing Shakespeare. There is an unspoken stigma to the idea, especially many American actors tend to ape the British style, usually coming across as stilted (Keanu Reeves in Much Ado About Nothing, anyone?)

Terry and his actors work to bring Shakespeare to contemporary audiences while both revering the text and finding new ways of exploring it. One of his fundamental ideas is getting the actors to live with the discomfort of not knowing what’s going to happen next. Actors return year after year (though not strictly the same people, as he’s a firm believer that new blood keeps actors on their toes).

But as I probably could have spoken to the actors and director for hours upon hours, they had to get back to work. This time around they moved onto running scenes from the uproarious Complete Works. In what is essentially a raucous lampooning of Mr. Shakespeare’s folio, three actors deconstruct his works (think Anna Russell’s “Hamletto, or Prosciuttino” only faster and more absurd). The play, written by the Reduced Shakespeare Company, was first performed in 1987 at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and has considerable breathing room for comic actors to do what they do best. The HVSF actually performed this one as part of last season, but proved so overwhelmingly popular that it is being given an encore this summer.

The Festival is offering one of the more rare opportunities to see Pericles. The play is one of Shakespeare’s later works and there is some debate as to how much of it he wrote. It is generally believed that George Wilkins wrote at least the first nine scenes, and Shakespeare the last thirteen, marked by a stylistic contrast. Whatever the case may be, it’s a play that has been produced repeatedly in the UK though it’s never been seen on Broadway. The critics may not be kind, but the play has proven popular with audiences.

One of the topics of discussion was my blog. Part of our discussion involved my blogging and twittering, as Terry has only recently started blogging himself and has put the HVSF on twitter. The reason I was in attendance was the company’s attempt to reach out to fellow bloggers as the new media takes a greater foothold in how people are talking about the theatre today. All in all, it was a most pleasant afternoon and I can’t thank them enough for the privilege or their unending hospitality.

The actors continue their rehearsals until June 6, when they head up to Boscobel to settle in for the beginning of previews on June 16. The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) opens June 20; Much Ado About Nothing on June 27 and Pericles on July 4. All three shows run through September 6. I look forward to seeing all of them.

"Sue Me"

Unfortunately for me, I wasn’t a Broadway regular at the time Guys and Dolls opened at the Martin Beck in 1992. Fond memories of the production and the leading performances (including a Tony winning turn from Faith Prince as Adelaide) abound, especially now that a less-than-beloved revival is currently playing at the Nederlander Theatre. Here’s Nathan Lane and Faith performing “Sue Me” on “The Tonight Show.”

"Reasons to Be Pretty," "Billy Elliot," & "Universal Robots" take top honors in first ever Theater Blogger Awards!

The Independent Theater Bloggers Association (www.TheaterBloggers.com) is thrilled to announce the winners of the first annual ITBA Awards for Excellence in Broadway, Off-Broadway and Off-Off Broadway theater.

The ITBA (Independent Theater Bloggers Association) was formed in 2009 by a group of the most passionate theater bloggers on the World Wide Web (partial list below). The members of the Association blog about all aspects and all varieties of both commercial and non-profit theater, from big Broadway musicals performed in Times Square, to the most unique forms of entertainment performed off-off Broadway on the Lower East Side, as well as productions all over the country and all over the world. Together they see thousands of productions, and, without being paid or prodded, they write about them.

Ken Davenport, founder of the ITBA, said, “The Association was formed out of a desire to provide structure to the quickly growing theatrical blogosphere, as well as to give the new media voices a chance to recognize excellence in three of the very distinct theatrical markets that make up the New York City theatrical landscape: Broadway, Off-Broadway and Off-Off Broadway.”

In true “new media” style, there will be no live awards ceremony for the ITBA Awards. Instead, there will be a virtual awards ceremony, with video acceptance speeches for the winners posted electronically in the coming weeks on ITBA’s website, www.TheaterBloggers.com.

This year’s winners of the ITBA Awards are as follows:

BROADWAY

BEST BROADWAY PLAY
Reasons to Be Pretty

Written by: Neil Labute
Directed by: Terry Kinney
Produced by: Jeffrey Richards, Jerry Frankel, Gary Goddard Entertainment, Ted Snowdon, Doug Nevin/Erica Lynn Schwartz, Ronald Frankel/Bat-Barry Productions, Kathleen Seidel, Kelpie Arts, Jam Theatricals, Rachel Helson/Heather Provost and Scott M. Delman

BEST BROADWAY MUSICAL
Billy Elliot

Music by: Elton John
Lyrics by: Lee Hall

Book by: Lee Hall
Directed by: Stephen Daldry
Produced by: Universal Pictures, Working Title, The Old Vic Company, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Jon Finn and Sally Greene

BEST BROADWAY REVIVAL OF A MUSICAL
Hair

Music by: Galt MacDermot
Lyrics by: James Rado, Gerome Ragni
Book by: James Rado, Gerome Ragni
Directed by: Diane Paulus
Produced by: The Joseph Papp Public Theater / New York Shakespeare Festival, Jeffrey Richards, Jerry Frankel, Gary Goddard Entertainment, Kathleen K. Johnson, Nederlander Productions, Fran Kirmser Productions/Jed Bernstein, Marc Frankel, Broadway Across America, Barbara Manocherian/Wencarlar Productions, JK Productions/Terry Schnuck, Andy Sandberg, Jam Theatricals, The Weinstein Company/Norton Herrick and Jujamcyn Theatres

BEST BROADWAY REVIVAL OF A PLAY
The Norman Conquests

Written by: Alan Ayckbourn
Directed by: Matthew Warchus
Produced by: Sonia Friedman Productions, Steven Baruch, Marc Routh, Richard Frankel, Thomas Viertel, Dede Harris, Tulchin/Bartner/Lauren Doll, Jamie deRoy, Eric Falkenstein, Harriet Newman Leve, Probo Productions, Douglas G. Smith, Michael Filerman/Jennifer Manocherian and Richard Winkler

OFF-BROADWAY

BEST OFF-BROADWAY MUSICAL
Fela!

Book by: Jim Lewis and Bill T. Jones
Directed by: Bill T. Jones
Music and Lyrics by: Fela Anikulapo Kuti
Add’l Music by: Aaron Johnson and Jordan McLean
Add’l Lyrics by: Jim Lewis
Produced by: Ruth and Stephen Hendel and Roy Gabay

BEST OFF-BROADWAY PLAY
Ruined

Written by: Lynn Nottage
Directed by: Kate Whoriskey
Produced by: Manhattan Theatre Club and Goodman Theatre

BEST OFF-BROADWAY REVIVAL (PLAY OR MUSICAL)
Our Town

Written by: Thornton Wilder
Directed by: David Cromer
Produced by: Scott Morfee, Jean Doumanian, Tom Wirtshafter, Ted Snowdon, Eagle Productions, Dena Hammerstein/Pam Pariseau, The Weinstein Company, Burnt Umber Productions,

BEST OFF-OFF BROADWAY PLAY
Universal Robots

Written by: Mac Rogers
Directed by: Rosemary Andress
Produced by: Manhattan Theater Source

BEST OFF-OFF BROADWAY UNIQUE THEATRICAL EXPERIENCE
Suspicious Package

Written by: Gyda Arber & Aaron Baker
Directed by: Gyda Arber
Produced by: The Fifth Wall as part of The Antidepressant Festival

CITATION FOR EXCELLENCE IN OFF-OFF BROADWAY THEATER
Flux Theatre Ensemble

Members of the ITBA include:

Bill Brown
www.creatingtheater.com

Linda Buchwald
Pataphysical Science
www.pataphysicalscience.blogspot.com

Donald Butchko
Me2ism?
www.me2ism.blogspot.com

Chris Caggiano
Everything I Know I Learned from Musicals
www.ccaggiano.tyepad.com

Zack Calhoon
Visible Soul
www.zackcalhoon.blogspot.com

Jodi Schoenbrun Carter
www.off-stage-right.com

Corine Cohen
Corine’s Corner
www.corinescorner.com

Kevin Daly
Theatre Aficionado at Large
www.theatreaficionado.com

Ken Davenport
The Producer’s Perspective
www.theproducersperspective.com

Ryan J. Davis
Ryan J. Davis Blogs
www.ryanjdavis.blogspot.com

Jeremy Dobrish
Jeremy’s Green Room
www.JeremysGreenRoom.com

Donelle Foreman
The DJF
www.thedjf.blogspot.com

Michael Gilboe
Broadway Bullet
www.broadwaybullet.com

Dan Gilloon
One NYC StageHand
www.onenycstagehand.blogspot.com

Diana Glazer
Lezbehonest
www.lezbehonest.tumblr.com

Byrne Harrison
www.stagebuzz.com

Leonard Jacobs
The Clyde Fitch Report
www.cyldefitch.blogspot.com

Patrick Lee
Just Shows to Go You
www.justshowstogoyou.blogspot.com

James Marino
Broadway Stars
www.broadwaystars.com

Tulis McCall
Usher Nonsense
www.ushernonsense.com

Jesse North
Stage Rush
www.stagerush.blogspot.com

Aaron Riccio
That Sounds Cool
www.thatsoundscool.blogspot.com

Sarah Roberts
Adventures in the Endless Pursuit of Entertainment
www.sarahbsadventure.blogspot.com

Michael Roderick
One Producer in the City
www.oneproducerinthecity.com

Adam Rothenberg
Adaumbelle’s Quest
www.adaumbellesquest.com

David Spencer
Aisle Say
www.aislesay.com

Ethan Stanislawski
Tynan’s Anger
www.tynanasanger.com

Gil Varod
Broadway Abridged
www.broadwayabridged.com

Kim Weild
www.kimweild.com

Wolverine & Bond Team Up

Michael Riedel is reporting in today’s NY Post that Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig will headline the original Broadway production of Keith Huff’s A Steady Rain this fall. The play would mark Jackman’s first return to Broadway after his Tony-winning triumph in The Boy from Oz five years ago while Craig would be making his Broadway debut. As for the drama itself, it concerns “two Chicago cops whose lifelong friendship is put to the test when they become involved in a domestic dispute in a poor neighborhood.” With two of the world’s biggest movie stars on board, this should easily be one of the hottest tickets this fall.

The Aficionado at 500: History Repeats Itself

Still experiencing the high from last night’s performance of Hair. Here is the new Broadway cast appearing on the “Late Show with David Letterman”. Coincidentally, the original cast performed the same numbers on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in the very same theatre over forty years ago, inundating Ed with flowers and dancing through the audience.

You know I’m reaching musical theatre zen when I want to repeat an experience as often as possible.

After a year and a half, I can hardly believe that I’ve reached my 500th post. Hope you all stick around for the 1000th!

Quote of the Day: Jessica Biel Edition

“I auditioned for a summer production of Guys and Dolls at the Hollywood Bowl. I thought, ‘Well, I’m not a soprano anymore, but I guess I’ll go in for it.’ I literally walked in and said, ‘I can do this song but we’re going to have to drop it down a few notes.’ Actually, I did pretty well and I got the part of Sandy, which I’ll be performing later this summer.

-Jessica Biel, to Parade, on being cast as SARAH in this summer’s concert…