Saturday, February 28, 2009
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Monday, February 23, 2009
Event - Forever Plaid, The Movie
Original Plaid Boys Larry Raben and David Engel, along with Stan Chandler (pictured) and Daniel Reichard, costar in the new movie version of Forever Plaid, to be screened on March 14 at a very special gala in Long Beach for Musical Theatre West. There's dinner with the stars to proceed the screening. Contact Musical Theatre West!!
Saturday, February 21, 2009
review - Divorce! The Musical
review: Backseats & Bathroom Stalls
RECOMMENDED
Backseats & Bathroom Stalls
written & directed by Rob Mersola
Lyric-Hyperion Theatre Cafe
Fridays & Saturdays at 10pm
through March 28
This adult late-nighter is just what the doctor ordered: it's laden with sex, dirty talk about sex and plays more genuinely funny than many legit comedies around town.
Regarding the relationships of 2 roommates - one straight female and one gay male - it explores what happens to young people who want more out of a relationship than just sex - or do they? He sleeps with her boyfriend, not aware of who he is. She sticks her nose into his business and offers the wrong advice to one of his tricks. The trick's fiancee - that's right, he cannot make up his mind about his sexuality - and a horny Italian, whose mother had gypsy blood in her and who's out to make every woman on the planet - somehow work their way into the main characters' lives. What results is mayhem! More bloody mistaken identities than a Shakespearean comedy! More laughs than 2 sitcoms rolled into 1!
The actors are all fabulous, with special attention to Jeni Pearsons and Sadie Alexandru as the fiancee and roommate respectively. They will make your neuroses seem tame and are wacky, laugh-out-loud hilarious! Joshua Bitton, Daniel Ponickly, Michael Alperin are just great and Anil Kumar steals the show as Giuseppi.
New York, like LA, engenders neurotic souls, but never before have they been served up so damned enticingly! Mersola has penned a minor cult classic.
Due to adult language, no kids allowed!
Suggestion: some nudity could add titillation to the promiscuous fun! It fits the bill.
4 out of 5 stars
Monday, February 16, 2009
CABARET REVIEW
Sterling's Upstairs @ Vitello's
Saturday, February 14
Sandy Zacky and Mike Clifford have been a popular singing team for the last 20 years, and I must admit this is the first time I have seen them perform. But, God willing, it will certainly not be my last. This was their second appearance at Sterling's - a sold-out concert - and a stunning evening of cabaret. Both singers bring a warmth and love to the work that is unforgettable.
For me, Zacky is a cross between Rosemary Clooney and Ella Fitzgerald. She is a truly great singer with consummate phrasing. I agree with her when she says, "Music is my soul."
Clifford, singing since 1959 with Patience and Prudence and with the pop hit "Close to Cathy" (1962) to his credit as well as the very first touring company of the Broadway classic Grease, has a velvety smooth delivery and style reminiscent of Vic Damone. Both Clifford and Zacky know their way around a song. As Zacky said, "I love lyrics. They tell a story. Each song is a one-act play." She was not referring to just any music, but to the great standards of George Gershwin, Cole Porter, and Rodgers and Hart. She sang an abundance of these, thank goodness, including: "Our Love Is Here To Stay", "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" and, of course, this being Valentine's Day, the Rodgers & Hart favorite "My Funny Valentine". Another beautiful arrangement for Zacky was Gershwin's "Embraceable You" and a tribute to her husband "The Very Thought Of You".
Clifford's high points included a medley of Barry Manilow songs: "Daybreak" and "Could It Be Magic". Another terrific moment came with Jimmy McHugh's "Sunny Side of the Street".
Together Zacky and Clifford soared with "Come In From the Rain", "Love Is Everything" (from their popular CD ), "Evergreen", "For Once In My Life" and "Bye Bye Blackbird".
Backed by the fabulous Matt Harris Trio, Zacky and Clifford created real magic and made my Valentine's Day, as well as that of every other cheering member of the packed room at Sterling's, a truly memorable one.
This is one of the finest examples of what good cabaret is all about. Zacky and Clifford are a class act. Don't miss them when they return! I know I'll be back.
visit: http://www.myspace.com/sandyzackymikeclifford
Post Note: It was a real treat to see actress Elena Verdugo, friend of Clifford and Zacky, introduce their act. She is still spunky and adorable!
Saturday, February 14, 2009
review - Dracula
CRITIC’S PICK
Bram Stoker’s
Dracula
written by
Hamilton Dean and John L. Balderston
conceived and directed by Ken Sawyer
NoHo Arts Center Ensemble
through March 22
The very first screen Count Dracula that comes to mind is Bela Lugosi, who bared his fangs and scared the world. Next, in a TV film, came Jack Palance, offering a more sympathetic, even pitiable perspective of the man doomed to roam the streets at night for all eternity, as the leader of the undead. Then in the late 70s Frank Langella portrayed the infamous Count on stage and film, painting a much more romantic side. Bram Stoker, after all, wrote about the power of love, and in the newest stage version of the classic Dracula at the No Ho Arts Center, directed meticulously by Ken Sawyer, it is love that reverberates and perseveres.
For any one that does not know the story, rent one of the aforementioned movies, as my intent is to talk about the production values of this new Dracula. Set in Whitby, England in the1920s at a mental asylum and its surroundings, there is abundant opportunity presented by the script to display vast, dark, gothic interior and exterior spaces. The NoHo Arts Center with its expansive stage and wide open space in which entrances and exits may be made from the back as well as the front, including movement down and up stairs through the audience, provides the perfect theatrical ambiance. Aided by the brilliant ingenuity of scenic designer Desma Murphy and lighting designer Luke Moyer, the entire space becomes the living, breathing demonic playground of Count Dracula. Renfield (a very nimble Alex Robert Holmes) scales the entire stage wall and cavorts high up on the outer ledge of an upper story window - which appears much farther up than it actually is - as does intern Butterworh (Chad Coe, lending a subtle creepiness to a supporting character). This is but one example of how well the space and set - a principal character here - enrich the visual experience. Sawyer’s imaginative staging, making use of every crook and cranny of the large space, is fascinating, as are the prolonged silent pauses that he allows in the action. The actors move in silence, and then, as if from nowhere there are instantaneous, terrifying moments like the sudden appearance of an undead child surrounded by a burst of burning light in a hall window.
Let me add that the love scene between Dracula and Lucy is deliciously sensuous, as is Dracula’s opening seduction of Mina in the nude.
The entire cast is solid, including the before mentioned Holmes and Coe, Robert Arbogast, underplaying Dracula, Joe Hart as Van Helsing, Karessa McElheny as Dr. Seward, Darcy Jo Martin as Lucy, J. R. Mangels as Jonathan Harker, Tahni DeLong, making the maid Wells interesting to watch and lovely Mara Marini as Mina.
This entire production is a treat – one of the best Draculas I’ve seen - due mainly to the splendid creative team led by Ken Sawyer’s artful vision.
Parental guidance is suggested due to partial nudity.
5 out of 5 stars
Friday, February 13, 2009
review - Man of La Mancha
review -Time Stands Still
Sunday, February 8, 2009
review - A Don't Hug Me County Fair
RECOMMENDED
A Don't Hug Me County Fair
book & lyrics by Phil Olson
music by Paul Olson
directed by Doug Engalla
staging by Stan Mazin
LCGRT
through March 22
Seeing an Olson Brothers' show, set deep in the heart of Minnesota, may be an unbelievably perplexing experience for first-timers. Do these Norwegians actually talk this way and behave as if they were living in a 60s time warp? We may be witnessing life on another planet. Cartoon or reality? Remember Rose Nyland of The Golden Girls? Once in a childlike mindset, you will have a grand old time, like eating bacon and gravy on a stick - well, it's better than it sounds! A Don't Hug Me County Fair, now onstage at LCGRT in North Hollywood, is the third installment in the Olsons' parodies and offers a barrel and a half of laughs.
This is unsophisticated humor, which tends toward downright crudity sometimes. Like Gunner implies, if you want polite, hang around Canadians! Men ogle and grope their women, treat them like crap, and the women do little about it except to whine and, in this case, join a local competition - for Walleye Queen - where they may find some appreciation and perhaps a teeny bit of self-esteem in this macho fisherman's world. I've never thought much of Redneck humor, but I have to admit, I fell right on into the gags of this show and ended up loving the clever one liners, sincerely innocent tunes and genuinely talented cast.
Tom Gibis is a hoot as Gunner/Trigger. "There's no way I'm gonna be here when she's here". He makes his Trixie as overtly and obnoxiously unsensuous as humanly possible. Judy Heneghan makes a perfectly sensible Clara and beautiful Katherine Brunk, a voluptuous Bernice. Tom Lommel is an approriately annoying Kanute, and Brad MacDonald plays Aarvid as the super flashy loser that he is.
Tunes "When Ya Need to Share Your Feelings, Get a Card" and "Bunyan Bay" are favorites and go a long way to bring an endearing sense of charm to the otherwise Beverly Hillbilly-type foolishness.
Praise to Chris Winfield for all the detail in his set design of the bar and to Stan Mazin for his engaging dance movements, especially for the surprise rap at Act I's finale.
All in all, a fun romp that is bound to be a popular superhit for GRT.
4 out of 5 stars
Thursday, February 5, 2009
review - Minsky's @ The Ahmanson
CRITIC'S PICK
Entertainment will always offer the common man a chance to unravel: it did circa 1930 during the depression and is currently doing so, once again in hard economic times. Although a period piece, Minsky's is hardly dated. True, we no longer attend burlesque, but its emphasis on beautiful women, mounds of flesh, and hysterical blackout sketches that are fast-paced and off-the-wall is still a part of contemporary theatre. It is little wonder that audiences are thoroughly enjoying Minsky's at the Ahmanson, produced by MGM On Stage (they gave us the film The Night They Raided Minsky's, the basis for this show) and ingeniously directed by Casey Nicholaw, who so brilliantly helmed The Drowsy Chaperone a mere 3 years ago. Minsky's pluses do not stop with Nicholaw; also featured is the ultra-spirited music of Charles Strouse (Bye, Bye Birdie and Annie), and an upbeat book by Bob Martin, who also wrote and starred in Chaperone, etc, etc, etc. This team is amongst la creme de la creme of American musical theatre.