Sunday, April 25, 2010

'Wedding Singer' is Witty 80s Fun

By Darcie Flansburg
Real Critics Editor/Publisher

It isn't easy to reproduce a smash hit movie for the stage. There's no CG or snappy set changes on the stage. But the stage provides a realness that no movie can.
"The Wedding Singer; The Musical Comedy" is a fun musical that is still recognizable for movie fans, but also presents something a little different. The script sticks pretty close to the movie plot, but has additional songs that bring you deeper into the world of Robbie Hart and Julia Sullivan.
For those of you who have not seen the movie (which you really should), Robbie is in a successful wedding band. When he is left at the alter by his fiance and then falls for Julia, who is engaged, he starts questioning his life.
Set in the 80s the musical doesn't present any classic 80s songs, but original music with 80s flare.
Yucaipa Little Theatre's production of "The Wedding Singer" was very charming and well received by the audience at the April 18 show. The production represented every aspect of that crazy decade and had a solid ensemble of great singers with some great comedic timing.
Garrett Peters channeled his inner Adam Sandler for the part of Robbie Hart, but also gave the character his own style with a lot of heart. Peters also had great chemistry with his bandmates and with his leading lady.
Krystin Rauma was a sweet and soulful Julia Sulivan. Rauma has a fabulous voice and really played up her character's comedic moments. One of my favorite scenes was when Julia and her potential fiance Glen Guglia were at dinner surrounded by men who are loudly popping the question to their significant others left and right. Rauma and Pete Bennett, who played Glen, played off each other well, and the ensemble helped keep the pace up to provide for some really hilarious moments.
Bennett was the perfect Corporate scumball who was "all about the green" and nothing more, as the unloveable Glen Guglia. Bennett was consistently dry with his humor and quite arrogant, the perfect bad guy mixture.
Katherine Harris got a chance to show off her fabulous vocal ability as Julia's friend Holly. Harris was quirky and sassy, but could have been a bit more flirty. But I do love that in this version Holly finally sees the guy that is right in front of her and gives in to his silly charm.
Brad Allen as George and Matthew Bell as Sammy rounded out the awesome wedding band, having many comedic moments of their own. George's wigs and Sammy's hair were enough to have the audience rolling, but the two also proved to be true friends to the distraught Robbie.
And Director Courtney Fox Taylor stepped in as Rosie after Harriet Briant had to sit a few performances out due to some surgery. But Taylor brought all the necessary spunk to the part of Robbie's grandmother, nailing the rap along with Allen.
It is always amazing to see how Yucaipa Little Theatre is able to pull off the large casts and multiple set changes with such a small space. But they always manage to make it work and do so with quite a bit of style.
The set changes for this show were constant (much like a movie would be) and sometimes they were a bit clunky and took a bit too long. But with what the company is able to accomplish on that small stage, it is often worth the wait to see what will be up next.
I am glad to see that Yucaipa Little Theatre is not only trying new productions along with their bill of classics, but also that they are really able to pull these productions off and put on a great show.
"The Wedding Singer" is one of those feel good movies and this production hit home.

Yucaipa Little Theatre presents 'Aladdin' June 24 through July 11. Visit www.yucaipalittletheatre.com for details.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

All Eyes on RCC's 'Equus'

By Yvonne Flack
Real Critics Blog Editor


When Peter Shaffer’s Equus first debuted at the Plymouth Theatre in 1974, the production received a standing ovation. The New York Times reviewer, Clive Barnes, hailed the production and the play as adding “immeasurably to the fresh hopes we have for Broadway's future.” As a result, Shaffer garnered a Tony for Best Play in 1975.



More recently, however, discussion of Shaffer’s masterpiece has focused on the controversy surrounding Harry Potter film star Daniel Radcliffe’s appearance in the lead role of the troubled stableboy, Alan Strang. Parents of Harry Potter fans were outraged that the child star would be appearing on stage in a role which required nudity, ignoring the profundity of Radcliffe’s move into live theatre and, specifically into a role requiring such emotional depth and intensity.
When first written, the play was intended for popular consumption on Broadway, but it sank into psychological depths that Broadway seldom saw. It was riveting, harrowing, and, for some audience members, too close for comfort, as a portion of the audience was seated on stage within feet of the action.
This intimate staging was reflected in Riverside City College’s laudable recent production of Shaffer’s masterpiece, astutely directed by Gary Krinke. The entire audience was seated on the stage and the production was performed in the round (or in this case, in the square). The main set, designed by Jerry Longman, was comprised of a central square resembling a horse’s box stall with rails on each side and two mobile benches. Two platforms, where the actors not involved in the immediate action sat throughout the show, flanked the stall on opposing sides. The five actors who played the horses, Cy Abad, Jordan Maxwell, Matt Baxter, Tyler Maxwell and Jimmy Mobin who played Nugget and the horseman, also remained onstage for the majority of the show. Downstage was a box used to simulate Alan’s bed. Nugget’s stool rested upstage center, directly below the looming metal horse head that dominated the set and the tormented psyche of Alan Strang, passionately played by Zachary Hallet.
The closed in set mimics and reinforces the girdled mind of Alan Strang, his reluctance to open up to the child psychologist Martin Dysart, convincingly portrayed by Tom Patrick. And the uncomfortable proximity of the audience reinforces Alan’s fear of being watched. At any moment, the actors onstage could look out and see dozens of eyes staring back at them. Eyes play a prominent role in this play and are a necessary component to any theatrical act. Theatre, to be theatre, needs witnesses. Actors, like the ritualistic religious zealot Alan Strang, simultaneously fear and need to be watched. Alan was simultaneously comforted and tormented by the idea that his horse-god, Equus, was watching him.
Alan’s eyes also torment his doctor, giving him a recurring nightmare in which he sacrifices children in a ritualistic way, and as he slides his knife into their chests in a surgical way that even his dream-self shudders at, it is Alan Strang’s eyes that stare back up at him. But it is those same passionate and intense eyes that first gain the attractions of the beautiful and sexualized stablehand, Jill Mason, delicately played by Laura Delhauer.
Delhauer appeared in a bright pink, by far the brightest color in the play, off-the-shoulder sweater, and tight jeans that showed off every curve of her body. The sweater was highly unbelievable as the outfit of a stablehand, but its bright and feminine color served its purpose to portray her as a character more alive than the others, and the little exposure of skin across her shoulders painted her as more sexually liberated than the awkward, shy and repressed Alan.
Delhauer’s light and flirtatious attitude and provocative clothing introduced Alan to a woman who starkly contrasted his repressed and closed off mother, to the reality and possibility of a relationship with a woman who was nothing like the religiously repressed and oppressive Dora Strang, movingly played by Jennifer Lawson.
Lawson’s performance was a highlight in this production. She was simultaneously repressed by her husband, Frank, played by Scotty Farris, and her intense Christian beliefs, but modern enough to feel that Frank’s banning of television in the Strang house was extreme.
Patriarchy ruled over Dora’s life. Dora’s fear, anxiety and pain, as portrayed by Lawson, were heart-wrenchingly convincing. Her fear of Frank, her obvious rejection of sexuality--right down to the tall socks she wore under her shin length skirt, obscuring any glimpse of flesh--the oppressive patriarchy of the Strang house, and her mounting guilt (as she comes to question whether or not the religious zeal she pressed upon the young Alan truly could have contributed to his mental collapse) exploded in Act II when she gets in a fight with Alan at the psychiatric hospital. Dora was clearly tormented by guilt in this scene but flat out rejected any responsibility in Alan’s actions as she coldly and defensively tells Dysart, “Whatever’s happened has happened because of Alan....If you added up everything we ever did to him, from his first day on earth to this, you wouldn’t find why he did this terrible thing--because that’s him; not just all of our things added up.” Dora goes on to blame the Devil, who she claims is unquestionably real and present.
Dora’s religious zeal allows her to repudiate any guilt in how her son has turned out. Her religion is violent and may have contributed to her son’s violent reaction to the fear of his god Equus witnessing his sex act with Jill, but it is an allowed zeal. Until it turns directly violent or detrimental, almost all levels of religious ardor are endured. This is why Dora let the young and impressionable Alan put an extremely violent depiction of Jesus at the foot of his bed. When Frank takes exception to the violence of the image, he replaces it with a striking photo of a white horse which soon takes the place of Jesus in Alan’s religious framework. Thus begins Alan’s worship of the god he found in horses, the god whose name only he knew, Equus.
Alan’s worship of the horse-god Equus is frought with sexual tension. He describes the white cream which drips from the mouths of bridled horses, he speaks of them with enthusiasm as “naked,” and spends hours embracing them in the dark “like a necking couple.” The production emphasized this as the actors playing the horses appeared shirtless. Every imperfection, tattoo, hair and bead of sweat glistening on the bare backs and chests of the horses underlined the eroticism of Equus. The production was raw and almost uncomfortable as it aligned human sexuality equally with gods and beasts. The few times that Alan mounts and rides the horse-men in this production further stresses the eroticism. Alan’s descriptions of the binding of Equus with a metal bit borders on sadism while it is simultaneously linked to Jesus’s pain and humiliation at the hands of the Romans in the process of his crucifixion. Alan’s worship is pure ecstasy, and Shaffer’s play under Krinke’s direction, blurs the line between sexual and religious rapture.
It is being witness to the passion of Alan’s worship that brings Dysart into his ultimate conflict: Is it right to take away someone’s worship? When Dysart is done with Alan, and only a shell of a human remains, has he really done the boy a service? It is in his moments of crisis that Tom Patrick, as Dysart, directly addresses the audience. He worries and frets over his own safe and meticulously planned out life, void of adventure and void of any type of passion that even approximates Alan’s impassioned worship of Equus. As a passionless doctor, Patrick was a perfect casting choice. His appearance was geeky and reserved, his voice never raised in anger except once when Alan’s taunting hit too close to home, and his monologues had the reason of the educated elite behind them. In the end, when the final breakthrough in Alan’s case is made, it is sheer anxiety and anguish that dominate Dysart’s character, rather than relief at being able to cure yet another troubled child.
The breakthrough in Alan’s case happens when we finally see the moment of his crime reenacted. The reenactment, like Alan’s other therapy sessions, blends seamlessly with the current action in Dysart’s hospital, as lines within the flashback and the therapy session clamor one on top of the other. We watch breathlessly as Alan mercilessly blinds his god with a hoof pick; the torment of god’s ever watchful eyes too much to bear.  The tension in this scene, like so many others in this production is built to an uncomfortable breaking point through sound, movement and lighting. Through constant movement, dim but focused lighting, ambient chanting and effective use of the ensemble, the tension escalates as Alan blinds the five horses in the stable, repeatedly shouting “Nothing!...Find me!...Kill me!”
Zachary Hallet’s commitment to his character and the agony of this scene was inspiring. Not only does the actor playing Alan have to portray the true fear, distress and rage of his character at this point in the play, but he has to do it completely naked--a challenge for an actor of any caliber. As Alan’s tormented soul is bared for the whole audience, his vulnerability and exposure is complete in every sense of the word. And the proximity of audience to actor only makes this exposure more brutal.
But Alan is not the only character in crisis in this play. Dysart’s outlook on the world and his role in it has become suddenly very clear as he holds the crumpled and defeated Alan in his arms. Dysart has become Equus, with the chain in his mouth, commanded by society to be the ultimate judge of the youth who come through his hospital, the ultimate judge of who gets saved, questioning if the price of salvation, the price of Normal, of a world without pain, is too high. He stands in the dark with a pick in his hands, striking at heads.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Footlighters Cast Shows Off Comedic Stylings in 'Dearly Beloved'

By Darcie Flansburg
Real Critics Editor/Publisher

What do you do when the bride and groom don't show up for the wedding? Well, in Jones, Hope and Wooten's "Dearly Beloved" the family puts on one heck of a show, on and off stage.
As the guests arrive the Futrelle-Dubberly family is catching up in the dining hall. When the family realizes the bride and groom are nowhere to be found, the wedding planner quickly puts on a show of all the local talent that is present at the wedding in hopes that the bride and groom will soon show up.
Redlands Footlighters' production of "Dearly Beloved" was jam packed with seasoned actors that made the most of the comedic small town characters.
Mary Carruthers had impeccable timing as Miss Geneva Musgrave. The florist and wedding planner had her hands in more than just the flower arrangements, and every time she bustled on stage in her tennis shoes and shouted "okay people, listen up," the audience knew something hilarious was about to happen.
Janet McCellan made another priceless appearance on the Footlighters stage as the hot and hot-flashing Honey Rae Futrelle. Honey Rae is the estranged family member whose appearance causes drama, and McCellan delivered Honey Rae's quippy one-liners flawlessly. From her continual hot flashes to stories of her 5 ex-husbands, McCellan had the audience guffawing every time she opened her mouth.
And Lauren Deards was adorable as twins Tina Jo and Gina Jo Dubberly. Deards' innocent portrayal of the bride's sister Gina Jo made cow insemination seem almost charming.
But every character had their moments. Sue Bray had everyone laughing as she tried to make the wedding work while her boyfriend Wiley Hicks (Kadn Fox) hallucinated on too much cold medication. Mia Mercado was a very sultry yet vicious mother of the groom Patsy Price. And Catherine Soto was a strong mother of the bride as the ever questioning Frankie Futrelle.
The strength of the ensemble was further exemplified by the return of the Sermonettes. The performance by the trio gave Bray, McCellen and Soto a chance to show off their singing chops. It was a lovely and harmonious way to round out the show and resolve the conflict between the sisters.
Tom Hurst also designed an amazing and multi-purposed set for the show. The set had to act as a bathroom, the outside of the building, the dining hall, the florist shop, Frankie's boudoir, a car and more. Credit should also go to the stage crew who moved each set seamlessly.
Director Jeff Richards produced yet another hilarious show. The Jeff Foxworthy redneck track was a nice touch as well.

Redlands Footlighters features "The Unexpected Guest" May 13 through 30. Visit www.redlandsfootlighters.org for details.

Friday, April 2, 2010

'Love List' is Modern Romance at Its Best

By Darcie Flansburg
Real Critics Editor/Publisher

"The Love List" proves, once again, that no one is perfect. No matter how many qualities a person may have, it's all about chemistry.
Play With Your Food's production of the show was right on point.
Director Michael Eastman described "The Love List" best as "'The Odd Couple' meets 'Weird Science.'" The play portrays two oddball friends, Bill (Jared Moore) the statistician (need I say more?) and Leon (Peter Reilly) the adulterous novelist who "wallows in shallow."
The play begins on Bill's 45th birthday. Leon gives Bill a Love List to fill out and return to a gypsy who will match him up with his perfect woman. The two then compile the top 10 qualities that Bill desires in a date. The list includes sense of humor, ambition, speaks her mind, enjoys kissing Bill and oral sex without having to ask for it.
What the two friends don't realize is that the list is powerful. Two hours after Leon leaves with the finished list, Justine (Jeannette A. Gardea) arrives as if she had been in Bill's life all along. And she has all of the qualities that Bill desires.
But, as I was saying, no one is perfect.
Eventually Leon and Reilly realize that they have created Justine with the list and the two continue to change the items to make her perfect.
But what "The Love List" brings to light is the need for both the good and the bad in a companion.
"There's good and bad in everyone. That's what makes us human," Leon says, as Bill desperately tries to fix Justine's problems.
Unlike "Weird Science," Bill and Leon do not gain any self respect from their experience, but they do learn a lesson about love and what it means to have that perfect someone.
Moore and Reilly were the perfect foils for one another. Reilly was realistic and crass while Moore was uptight and slightly awkward. And what made the presentation that much more impressive was that Moore and Reilly were originally cast in opposite roles and only switched roles at the end of the rehearsal process. Gardea played an easily moldable woman. Her movements from one quality to the next were classic and really well timed. She played each "item" extremely well, making the character easily relatable.
It's too bad the show isn't still playing. I know several people that would have benefited from seeing such a topical and comedic play. Well done!

Visit www.playwithyourfoodproductions.com for details on the next show - "The Clean House," June 11-13.

There's Life in "Mockingbird"

By Gabriel Morales
For the Real Critics Blog
 
Temecula Valley Players do justice to the stage adaptation of Harper Lee's classic novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" in the best straight play of their '09-10 season.
Lodi Zubko brings stoic power to Atticus, lending believability to the sage-laic dynamic between Finch, the esteemed town lawyer, and the simple townsfolk. Zubko's quiet charm and soothing timbre are especially evident during the vitriolic and often raucous courtroom scenes of Act II.
Chloe Horner is the other shining element of this production. A well-trained 14 year old arts student from Orange County, Horner's confident presence and fluid expression readily outmatch that of castmates several times her age.
Hanna Jost rounds out the earnest neophyte cast with an effortful turn as Mayelle Ewell, the murderous liar fearful of societal backlash and the left cross of her abusive father, played with erratic vociferousness by Joe Matic.
 
"To Kill A Mockingbird" runs through April 3. Visit www.temeculavalleyplayers.com for more details.