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Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘A Tuna Christmas’; Opening at Playhosue 615 December 1

December 1, 2023 by Jonathan

Each holiday season there’s a handful of theatrical offerings from classics like A Christmas Carol to more modern fare such as Elf. Nestled hilariously somewhere in the middle of these wide-ranging shows is A Tuna Christmas, the brainchild of Joe Sears and Jaston Williams. With only two actors playing every character in the fictitious town of Tuna, Texas, A Tuna Christmas is truly a knee-slappin’, belly-laughin’ good time that will warm your spirits quicker than a shot of brandy in eggnog. Playhouse 615 (located at 11920 Lebanon Road in Mt. Juliet, TN) will be presenting their production of the holiday favorite beginning this weekend as the show opens Friday, December 1 and runs through Sunday, December 17. Directed by Memory Strong-Smith, with set design by Eric Crawford, Matthew N. Smith and Daniel Vincent star as the citizens of Tuna, Texas as they ready for the holiday season.

Earlier this week as the director, set designer and two-man cast prepared for the show’s opening, I had a chance to pose a few questions to each of them for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q. As I have done the last few years, you’ll notice the questions, like everything else around us this time of year, have a decidedly holiday theme.


RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST & CREW OF PLAYHOUSE 615’s A TUNA CHRISTMAS

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS DIRECTOR, MEMORY STRONG-SMITH

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What has been the most rewarding aspect of directing Playhouse 615’s holiday offering, A Tune Christmas?

MEMORY STRONG-SMITH: Seeing the whole project cone together. This show has lived in my head for about a year, and it’s really lovely to see everything- lights, costumes, set, characters, trees, and sound come to insane life. It took a village to get us to this point and I am so grateful to Matt and Daniel, Eric who designed and almost singlehandedly built the set, our dresser and ASM Tony Barrow for keeping the chaos as contained as possible back stage, and Nikki Nelson-Hicks who took ownership of running the lights and sound like she was born to it. It’s a LOT and I’m so grateful to each of them for partnering with me on this journey. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Are you more likely to return a gift or regift it?

MEMORY STRONG-SMITH: Depends on the gift. If it’s something I think someone else could use or want, I’ll pass it along. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Snowball fight or building a snowman?

MEMORY STRONG SMITH: Snowman. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Die Hard or Love Actually?

MEMORY STRONG-SMITH: Oh man! I love them both!! Die Hard, tho edges out Love Actually, but a nose hair! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas memory?

MEMORY STRONG-SMITH: There are many, but I have to say the last Christmas I got to spend with my mom before she died. We put on Mariah’s 1st Christmas album (this was 1995), drank adult beverages, got a bit tipsy, and decorated the tree. It was just a lovely time spent together and I so cherish that memory. 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAGE MANAGER/SET DESIGNER/GRUMPY ELF, ERIC CRAWFORD

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Stage Manager/Set Designer/Grumpy Elf for Playhouse 615’s A Tuna Christmas, is there a detail in the set that you’re most proud of?

ERIC CRAWFORD: The Christmas trees. This show features 7 Christmas trees which determine the setting for each scene. I put a lot of thought into capturing Matt and Daniel’s interpretations of the characters and what each character’s Christmas tree would look like. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Christmas Breakfast, Christmas Lunch or Christmas Dinner?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Dinner

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Sleep late or up early for presents?

Sleep late is always the appropriate answer. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Gift Bag or meticulously wrapped presents? 

I tend to be involved with holiday productions, so I usually wind up paying my son, Ace, to wrap for me. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas memory?

How about one theme? Family.  So many memories of my relatives revolve around Christmas, especially those who have passed.  

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAR, MATTHEW N. SMITH

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of the myriad of characters you play in A Tuna Christmas, do you have a favorite? 

MATTHEW N. SMITH: Every character is special to me for one reason or another and I can’t say I have a favorite but I’m going to go with Arles Struvie because he has a really touching relationship that develops through the show (leaving out details to avoid giving away the plot). 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A walk in the wintery woods or a stroll through a decorated neighborhood?

MATTHEW N. SMITH: I’m going to go with the decorated neighborhood. It sounds slightly less freezing. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who was the better Scrooge…Bill Murray in Scrooged, Jim Carrey in 2009’s A Christmas Carol or Uncle Eider as Scrooge McDuck? 

MATTHEW N. SMITH: The answer will never not be Bill Murray.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Would you prefer a ride on the Polar Express or a Horse-drawn Sleigh? 

MATTHEW N. SMITH: Since I have an affinity for the traditional and picturesque, I’ll take the sleigh. Under a warm blanket with a hot toddy and my Mine.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas memory? 

MATTHEW N. SMITH: When I was 17, my mother gave me a Fender acoustic guitar. It’s been through everything with me ever since and though we’re both a little the worse for wear, we can still strum a pretty nice tune. 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A TUNA CHRISTMAS STAR, DANIEL VINCENT

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Like your costar, you also play a ton of characters in A Tuna Christmas. Who’s your favorite?

DANIEL VINCENT: Though Inita Goodwin, the sassy waitress, is a lot of fun, I’d have to say that Bertha Bumiller is my favorite. She’s the heart of the show and delivers some of the most country and hilarious one-liners.

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas or John Denver and The Muppets: A Christmas Together?

DANIEL VINCENT: Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas is a classic, but I’m going to pretty much always go with The Muppets any time there is a choice.

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Handcrafted presents or store-bought with thought?

DANIEL VINCENT: I don’t really have a preference here as long as it’s something practical or that I can enjoy throughout the year. I’m not a fan of tchotchkes.  

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Ice Skating or Caroling?

DANIEL VINCENT: I’ve only tried ice skating once and it was a tremendous and painful failure. I’m a singer, so I’m going with caroling. Fewer bruises and broken bones.

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas memory?

DANIEL VINCENT: We didn’t have money growing up, so my mother made sure Christmas was more about service to others than getting things on your wish list. My favorite Christmas memory is probably the first time I volunteered with my rugby team to deliver meals on Christmas Day with Nashville Cares. It was humbling as well as heart-warming and brought home what the season is really about. I’ve done it every year since. It’s become a part of my holiday traditions.

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With that my conversations with the cast of Playhouse 615’s A Tuna Christmas came to a close, but it’s just the beginning of the riotous laughter they’ll be providing during the holiday season as the show opens Friday, December 1 and continues weekend through Sunday, December 17. CLICK HERE for tickets or call the box-office at 615.319.7031. When available, tickets can also be purchsed at the door an hour before each performance.

Following a brief holiday break, up next at Playhouse 615 is The 39 Steps., directed by Diane Bearden-Enright, onstage February 16- March 3. For more on these shows and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook,  JHPEntertainment on Instagram and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: A Tuna Christmas, Christmas, Christmas 2023, Comedy, Daniel Vincent, Eric Crawford, Holiday, Interview, Matthew N. Smith, Memory Strong, Playhouse 615, Rapid Fire, rapid fire 20q, Tennessee, Tennessee Theatre, Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘9 to 5: the Musical’; onstage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre September 8-17

September 8, 2023 by Jonathan

Alright, Y’all KNOW I’m obsessed with any and all things Dolly Parton, so when I heard that Nashville Repertory Theatre was presenting 9 to 5: the Musical, based on Dolly’s 1980 film and featuring songs written by Dolly, I knew I’d have to chat with some of the show’s stars for one of my Rapid Fire 20Q interview features. What follows are my conversations with Megan Murphy Chambers, Allyson A. Robinson, Mariah Parris and Geoffrey Davin.

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Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of Nashville Repertory Theatre’s 9 to 5: the Musical

Rapid Fire with Megan Murphy Chambers, Doralee in 9 to 5

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You‘ve played Dolly’s Steel Magnolias role of Truvy on stage and now you’re appearing in Nashville Rep’s 9 to 5 as Doralee, another Dolly film role. Are there similarities between the two characters?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Definitely!  Dolly herself radiates such tremendous sparkle, humor, and humanity, it’s nearly impossible to separate her from her more iconic characters.  So not only was she beautifully suited for the roles and their accompanying words on the page, but she imbued them with such a unique style and appeal, you can’t help but find similarities.  Being cast in these two parts has been such a joy and honor, particularly if it means that anyone draws even the smallest similarity between me and Ms Parton herself.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Not only are you two-for-two with Dolly’s iconic roles, you’re also two-for-two with Beki Baker, who directed you in Steel Magnolias for Studio Tenn and is now directing Nashville Rep’s 9 to 5. What’s an aspect of Beki’s directorial style that you appreciate?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: How many words am I allowed?  🙂  Beki is such a gift in the room – so enthusiastic, so prepared, so supportive, such an easy leader to follow.  I love the way she comes in with a clear plan and lots of problems solved before we even encounter them, which leaves her designers and performers so much room to play and take big swings.  Beki values the product AND the process, and every minute of it has been a delight and an inspiration!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you were to exact revenge on a chauvinistic boss, which of the tactics from 9 to 5 would you likely choose? Or have you thought up your own revenge scheme?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: This is my favorite question ever, and I’d like to dedicate it to a former supervisor who shall remain nameless.  It would be delightful to brand his ass, Doralee style, and that thought alone will keep me boosted up as we slog through the last of tech.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I often use the phrase “Only in Nashville”. Earlier this week Nashville Rep posted an “Only in Nashville” type post when Dolly herself sent a video message to the cast and crew of 9 to 5. In the message she not only drops the possibility that she might attend a performance, but also mentions that Gregg Perry, who arranged and associate produced (an apparently provided the iconic opening typewriter sounds) for the original recording of 9 to 5 is part of this production’s orchestra, music directed by Randy Craft. How’s it been working with Randy on this show, and do you have a favorite musical moment?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: I LOVE Randy, and the show is sounding absolutely incredible.  I look forward to singing the end of Change It every night, and look forward to hearing Heart to Hart even more.  But nothing gets my blood moving more than the end of the opening number, 9 to 5, when everyone is finally onstage and singing together. Iconic!!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As mentioned earlier…Truvy…CHECK! Doralee…CHECK! So, any plans or hopes of playing Miss Mona in Best Little Whorehouse in Texas? Until then, what’s next for you following 9 to 5?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: I was literally just talking to someone about my Miss Mona dreams just the other day, so SIGN ME UP.  In the meantime, I have a season lined up that I’m so eager to tackle – I’m heading to Nashville Children’s Theater next to play Mrs. Gloop in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Foofinella in The Gingerbread Kid, after which I’m heading south to play Sally Bowles in Cabaret at Studio Tenn!

Rapid Fire with Allyson A. Robinson, Violet in 9 to 5

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If my research in preparing to chat with you proves correct, having a lifelong history of performing from an early age, you’re a Detroit native whose passion for the arts really took wing during recent years in Atlanta, is that right?

ALLYSON A. ROBINSON: It is! I was born and raised in church, which meant that I was doing all the plays and cantatas. My family is also full of musicians so it wasn’t hard to get into the same flow and onto the same path they’d been carving for years. But the full transition into performing didn’t come until high school, when it was brought to my attention that I could sing classical music and opera. So I stepped into that and it took off from there! Went to Kentucky State University for music and then attended the University of Kentucky for a few years. During my first year there, I discovered I had nodules and a month after that my dad passed away. So I was dealing with a lot of identity issues because singing was who I was, but my relationship with it was more for the benefits of being well known and praised, not for the passion of performing. So I stepped away from music for a decade. I became a teacher and taught here in the states and then in Abu Dhabi, and then once we returned back to the states, I became a set teacher for kids in TV/Movies. Watching all the actors and actresses perform on camera awakened something inside of me and I wanted to take advantage of that feeling. I started taking acting classes and book a few short films, got an agent, and then booked a role on a feature film as well! It felt so good to be back!

Then after moving to Nashville in July 2022, I started working at a tech company here in town, who happened to be putting on a Black History Month program. Randomly during lunch, a short clip of a voice recording of my singing started to play because I hit the wrong button. Erika, who was in charge of the program, happened to be sitting next to me. She looked at me and said “I didn’t know you could sing! You’ll sing for our program!” So I was volun-told. I called my friend Ron, who’s an amazing voice teacher and performer from graduate school and told him what happened. So we decided to start up some lessons to prepare for the program, and I discovered that my voice was in pretty good shape! After the program, I told him that I wanted to continue singing and finding opportunities in the area if I could. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand 9 to 5 marks your Nashville Rep debut. How did landing the role of Violet Newstead come about?

ALLYSON A. ROBINSON: So after doing the program with my job, I realized that I wanted to keep this momentum going. I was loving where my voice was, I had fallen back in love with performing, and I didn’t want to lose it. So my friend and I started to research things happening in the area and came across Nashville Rep’s audition season. I was terrified because I hadn’t done this in over 10 years, but I was willing to just go in and get an audition under my belt, and have fun doing it. So we prepped my music and I already have some monologues from doing auditions. I went into the audition room with no expectations of booking anything. I just wanted to go in and say I did it after so long. Prove to myself that I could still do it after all this time. 

A few weeks later, I received three emails for callbacks, one of them being Violet. My mind was BLOWN. 

I took some time, looked through the music and the scenes and just had fun building this character. I was in this to have fun, not prove anything to anyone but myself. We had a dance call first, which I was freaking out about because I’m 34, a mom of twins, and had just started to build a workout routine. I didn’t feel as if I was in ANY shape to get up and dance. And add onto that of course, that I hadn’t done this in 10 years. BUT I made it through!

When we got to the scenes, I was excited to simply work with the others in the room. Nashville is full of so many talented artists and being new the scene, I was interested in meeting and experiencing their talents… and I was blown away. There are so many talented artists here in Nashville, and they’re triple threats! Dancers, singers, and actors, and some of them have even more in their toolbox than that!

When I made it through cuts, I was in complete shock. They had chosen only three people to move forward for my role, and my name was the last one they called. 

When I left the auditions, I smiled. I cried. I had so much fun and in reality, I wasn’t expecting much…and then I was at work and my phone rang. Ms. Yolanda Treece from Nashville Rep asked if I was sitting down. When she let me know that they wanted to offer me the role of Violet, I jumped out of my seat and just cried. I’m crying typing this story out all over again! It was hands down, one of the best days of my life. It was such a beautiful surprise and I am forever grateful to Beki Baker for this opportunity, 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Violet, you share a few scenes with one of Nashville theatre community’s rising young stars, Jalen Walker, who plays Violet’s son, Josh. A mother of twins in real life, has your maternal instinct benefitted your working relationship with Jalen?

ALLYSON A. ROBINSON: Oh absolutely! My maternal instincts kick in whenever there is someone under the age of 18 around. Honestly, it never really shuts off! But when I first met Jalen, he and I were excited because of how much we actually look alike! (Shoutout to Beki for her phenomenal casting). There have been times on set that he’s practiced skateboarding and my eyes are immediately latched onto him to make sure he doesn’t fall. When he comes to rehearsal from school, one of my first three questions is “How was school?”. 

Being a former set teacher, it adds another layer of a protection and a care for any minor whose a performer. They are some of the most courageous artists because they have to balance school and being a performer, while also trying to have a social life and deal with raging hormones all at the same time. I admire him for the amazing work he’s doing with the show and outside of here. He’s definitely one to watch.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you hadn’t been cast as Violet, what other 9 to 5 role might you enjoy playing?

ALLYSON A. ROBINSON: Roz, hands down. Roz is a complex, but incredible character built to weave such an amazing element of joy and entertainment throughout the show and it’s such a breath of fresh air. But there’s no way I could replace the incomparable Evelyn O’Neal in our show as Roz. She is one of the most talented artists I’ve had the pleasure of meeting and working with. Her songs and scenes are consistently getting funnier and funnier. I can’t wait for the Nashville and beyond to experience her on stage in this show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’m just gonna be honest, when I first saw the film version of 9 to 5 back in 1980 (yes, I’m that old) the themes of workplace inequality were lost on my teenage mind. Is there a scene in the stage musical or even a passing line of dialogue that addresses that theme that you hope audience pay particular attention to?

ALLYSON A. ROBINSON: The last scene of 9 to 5 is such a powerful scene. My character Violet takes the time to call out the inequalities in the workplace between those at the top who take all the credit and the “little guy” who does all the work that those at the top take the credit for. This scene reveals the realities of the workplace that we are still dealing with today in 2023. I believe it’s a moment that the audience can take in at the end as a revelation that things in our current world still need to change and adjust because the “little guy” is still being stepped on for other to make their way to the top. I hope that during this scene, audience members feel seen and affirmed in their own “9-5” journey and experience in the workplace and will empower them to speak up be out against injustices they and their co-workers experience on a day to day basis. 

Rapid Fire with Mariah Parris, Judy in 9 to 5

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Before we get started, I just have to say how much I enjoyed you as Jen in Nashville Rep’s The Cake. How excited are you to get back at The Rep for 9 to 5?

MARIAH PARRIS: Thank you so much! That show was such a special experience. In fact, every time I’ve get the opportunity to work at The Rep I have an amazing time. It is not lost on me what a privilege it is to work here and I feel so lucky every time I get the call saying that I get to!

I was specifically excited to get the call for 9 to 5 because I have admired Beki Baker for years (over a decade at least?) and this is my first time getting to work with her as a director. She is an awesome human and an excellent leader.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is your favorite aspect of playing Judy Bernly?

MARIAH PARRIS: My favorite aspect of Judy Bernly is her courage. She really starts the show from such a broken place and surprises herself at so many points along the way that she is stronger and more capable than she ever realized. I think we can all relate to feeling scared and doing the scary thing anyway, and I really enjoy stepping into that energy.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Judy, you’re teamed with Megan Murphy Chambers and Allyson A Robinson. Describe your 9 to 5 cohorts using a single word each.

MARIAH PARRIS: Ooof this is hard. How to sum up such kaleidoscopic women? Allyson: Wisdom. Megan: Excellence. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’m totally an attention to details kind of guy, so…The show takes place in an office setting during the late 70s/early 80s. With a set designed by Gary Hoff and props from Lauren Yawn-Kell, is there something about the set or a particularly period-authentic prop that you’re just really into?

MARIAH PARRIS: Gary Hoff is a genius and every set he touches is magical. This is my first time working with Lauren and she has absolutely crushed it.

For me it’s the set color scheme: avocado, harvest gold, and….more avocado. My favorite props are probably all the made up accolades adorning Franklin Hart’s office bookshelf… they are hilarious.   

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Long after the tap tap tap of the typewriter from the show’s title tune is just a distant memory, what do you hope audiences will remember about this production of 9 to 5?

MARIAH PARRIS: I hope this show inspires the audience to consider the dynamics in their own lives- be it home, workplace, or otherwise- and consider where people are perhaps being held back from their fullest potential because of outside forces keeping them down. I hope people consider how they can be less of a hindrance or more of a help to others finding their own ways to shine.

Rapid Fire with Geoff Davin, Mr. Hart in 9 to 5

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Mr. Hart, as far as your perception of the character?

GEOFF DAVIN: Well, Mr. Hart has been a challenge. Of course you never want to villainize a villain when you’re playing the antagonist. Your goal is always to empathize with them and try to see how they’re right. But gosh, Mr. Hart makes it awfully hard. He’s just such a deliciously sleazy fellow. He always says the most terrible things with absolutely no concept of how terrible his comments are. And he’s his own greatest fan. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Mr. Hart is the show’s villain. How much fun are you having playing the baddie opposite your three leading ladies?

GEOFF DAVIN: I’m having an absolute blast. I couldn’t have asked for a more gracious, talented, fun, and giving trio of power houses to play opposite of on stage. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Even the chauvinistic Mr. Hart has his admirers. What is one aspect of Mr. Hart’s character that you see as possibly redeemable?

GEOFF DAVIN: Well Violet says that she’s never seen someone leap frog to the top as quickly as he has. So he’s certainly tenacious and wildly driven. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: With 9 to 5 being set in the late 70s/early 80s, I’m guessing Mr. Hart’s wardrobe, as envisioned by costumer Lori Gann-Smith, might consist primarily of leisure suits. They say all fashion is cyclical. Is it time for the return of the leisure suit, and do you think you could rock it off stage?

GEOFF DAVIN: I would 100% wear my opening suit it in real life. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: There’s long been talk of a 9 to 5 sequel, at least for the original film adaptation. If there were a sequel, where do you see Mr. Hart in the future?

GEOFF DAVIN: I think Mr. Hart stayed on the island. He now works for the Amazonians, harvesting coffee beans. They’ve even given him a little nickname. I’m not sure how to write it in their language. But it roughly translates to “skinny and sweet”. 

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Nashville Repertory Theatre’s 9 to 5: the Musical plays TPAC’s Polk Theatre September 8 through 17 with Friday and Saturday evening performances at 7:30p.m. and Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2p.m. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Following 9 to 5, Nashville Repertory Theatre rings in the holidays with A Christmas Carol onstage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre from December 1-17. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

In the meantime, check out Nashville Rep online HERE and follow them on Facebook,  Twitter,  YouTube and Instagram.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter. Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: 9 to 5, 9 to 5 the musical, Dolly Parton, Interview, Local Theatre, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Rapid Fire 20 Q, regional theatre, Theatre

Rapid Fire Q&A with Theatre of Gadsden’s ‘Sordid Lives’ cast members; onstage at The Ritz in Gadsden, Alabama September 8 thru 17

September 8, 2023 by Jonathan

When I heard my friend Joy Tilley Perryman was once again portraying Sordid Lives’ Noleta Nethercott—this time in Theatre of Gadsden’s production at The Ritz (310 North 27th Street, Gadsden, Alabama)—I knew I had to chat with her, having seen (and loved) her previous turn as Noleta in Nashville back in 2013. It was a nice added surprise when I learned that one of her costars this go-round is Billy Jenkins as Brother Boy, having gotten the chance to chat with him recently for a previous Rapid Fire 20Q. Add to that the chance to get to speak to Kathleen Jensen, who’s playing Juanita Bartlett, one of my all-time favorite characters, and I was fully in!

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Rapid Fire with Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives’ stars Billy Jenkins, Kathleen Jensen and Joy Tilley Perryman

Rapid Fire with Billy Jenkins, Brother Boy in Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Earl “Brother Boy” Ingram?

BILLY JENKINS: Brother Boy Ingram is a gay, cross dressing, Tammy Wynette female impersonator, who was wrongly put into a mental institution by his mother because he was beaten up for being gay. Brother Boy represents what all gay men have experienced: bullying, defamation, a search for identity, and a search for belongingness in a world where being bullied for being gay isn’t a crime, where defamation of a gay person is not considered taboo, where our search for identity seems like a never-ending process, and where our search for belongingness, if we are lucky, ends in a place of happiness.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Billy, I gotta admit, when Joy and I first talked about me doing a Rapid Fire 20Q with you Sordid Lives folks, I was excited to get to chat with you again, having previously featured you in conversation about your participation in Joy’s Jubilations presentation of Listen to Your Mother. In that interview you talked about your late mother a bit. Gotta ask. What would your Mom make of Brother Boy?

BILLY JENKINS: Well, first of all, my mom never saw me in any production (unless you count my first grade play where I was a funny valentine), because she passed away when I was 21 and it wasn’t until after her passing that I got involved in theater. As far as what she would think about Brother Boy….. first of all, she’d be impressed that her baseball playing, high school football playing son could walk and run in stiletto heels. Secondly, I think she’d be proud of my character because Brother Boy’s character is NOT how I act in real life. I had to study his mannerisms very hard and dig a little to find this character. And lastly, I think she’d be like Latrelle in the show, where she always knew that I was gay since I was a little boy. You see, I was my mom’s favorite of her six children, and like Ty and Latrelle in the show, I think her knowing that I was different was what bonded us.

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of course I can’t take about Brother Boy without thinking of Leslie Jordan, who created the role on stage, the big screen and in the Sordid Lives tv series. I was fortunate to have gotten to know Leslie over the years. Knowing that role is such an iconic role, particularly to the LGBTQIA+ community, is there an extra sense of getting the balance of humor and heart just right?

BILLY JENKINS: OMG!!! So much pressure! When I first watched the movie, I fell in love with Leslie Jordan and his talent.  I have always wanted to do this role. Many guys in theater dream of being Jan Val Jean or The Phantom, but I remember seeing Leslie Jordan’s genius and setting my goal of playing this role at least once in my life. I am PROUD to play this role as a member of the LGBTQIA+ community. This role not only personifies what gay people had to endure 25 years ago, it solidifies the idea that being gay doesn’t mean we need to be locked up in a looney bin. This role is significant because it represents a “stereotype” of what people think being gay means, but in reality, we come in all shapes, sizes, attitudes, and mannerisms and accepting those differences (even within the gay community) leads to a more unified and coherent community. Getting the balance between what needs to be funny and what audiences need to take seriously is tricky, but doable.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Brother Boy is a legend (in his own mind at least) for this portrayals of his Country Queens, Tammy, Loretta and Dolly. If you were to do a music tribute yourself, who would you honor and why?

BILLY JENKINS: I am finding out very quickly that I was NEVER meant to do drag. My feet hurt in heels, makeup takes too long, and my undergarments are extremely uncomfortable. With that being said, I don’t think I could ever do a female musical tribute (I might make an exception for Dolly, though) but if I had to pick, I’d say Johnny Cash. He was a musical genius, down to earth, and his music is still going strong. I do have to mention that I’m like a fifth cousin to Conway Twitty (Harold Jenkins), so I hope he doesn’t roll over in his grave because I picked Johnny Cash.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Aside from a smile on their faces and side-splitting laughter, what theme, idea or thought do you hope audiences take away after seeing Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives?

BILLY JENKINS: I hope all mommas who have gay sons walk away from the show as a proud momma of a gay son. I hope all gay men who are ashamed of who they are walk away from the show being proud of who they are. I hope all bullies who have ever bullied someone because they are gay walk away from the show with regret of having ever done so. I hope all fathers who have told their sons that real men don’t cry walk away from the show knowing that crying doesn’t make you less of a man. And, I hope all people walk away from the show realizing that family is family and no matter what our differences are, families need to love each other.

Rapid Fire with Kathleen Jensen, Juanita Bartlett in Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first time doing a show with Theatre of Gadsden. How much fun are you having so far?

KATHLEEN JENSEN: I am having a blast! It’s been since 2020 that I’ve been on stage. Wow, have I missed it!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While this is your first time playing Juanita and your first show with Theatre of Gadsden, this isn’t your first foray into the world of Del Shores. Having met Del a time or two, was there anything he’s said that you’ve now put into practice as you approach the role of Juanita?

KATHLEEN JENSEN: I have worked with Del on a few occasions at TNT with his one man show. He also saw a production of “Daddy’s Dyin’ Who’s Got The Will”. The one thing that he has always stressed is that these are real people, not just characters. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: One of my favorite of Juanita’s scenes involves a story about a particular childhood craft project, “Ol Cock-a-doodle”. Were you a crafty kid and is there any evidence anywhere around or did your crafts go the way of Juanita’s beloved rooster art?

KATHLEEN JENSEN: I was a very crafty kid! Some of it went the way of ol cockadoodle, but when I cleaned out my mom’s house I was surprised to find more than a few pieces still in existence. One was a framed paint by number of a horse. I have it in my home now. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The tagline for Sordid Lives is: “A black comedy about white trash”. There’s something a little white trash in all of us. What about you? What’s the most unashamed white trash thing about yourself?

KATHLEEN JENSEN: Just because I like PBR draft don’t mean I’m white trash! LOL

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Another great Juanita scene involves the art of reapplying her lipstick while never removing the cigarette from her lips. Have you mastered this unique ability as well?

KATHLEEN JENSEN: I’ve spent time working on it. I guess you’ll have to come to the show to find out! 

Rapid Fire with Joy Tilley Perryman, Noleta Nethercott in Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You have a bit of history with Sordid Lives, having played Noleta in a production in Nashville that I was thrilled to have seen. Between that production and this iteration, are there aspects of Noleta’s character that you’ve discovered, or things that you’ve expanded upon in your portrayal of her?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: That is a loaded one JHP. Between my last Noleta and this one I have lost the love of my life and I suppose that makes me even more aware of marriages. What makes good ones and what makes bad ones and why some people should never even try! G.W. and Noleta don’t have a good marriage but there was something there once upon a time. I think Noleta is grieving the demise of her marriage and I understand that grief all too well. This Noleta is sad in a way that I had not thought of in 2013.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to playing Noleta, you’ve also worked behind the scenes on costumes and wigs, right?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: And props and set dressing. I made all the faux food that is on Sissy’s table and gathered all the 1 million lighters, compacts, and hankies that are in this show. I cannot however, take credit for Sissy’s fabulous wig. That would be the creation of my immensely talent friend, Molly Page.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You likely know that I’ve known Sordid Lives’ creator, Del Shores for a couple decades now. You’ve also had the chance to meet him. What is it about Del and his writing that is so perfect?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: I did know! And I have met him while taking one of his comedy masterclasses in Nashville. First, he, himself is so hysterically funny and just a Texas boy at heart. For me, his writing is so perfect because it so relatable. Now, you may not have left your two wooden legs in the middle of a hotel room floor and caused your lover’s demise, but we all have done things we deeply regret and wish we could take back. Or like Latrelle we are all living in a bit of denial. These are real people that we all know.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Del fully admits many of his characters are based on his actual family and friends from his days as a boy growing up in Winters, TX. If you were to write a play about your relatives, what would it be called and who would be the main character?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: You know that I have already started this very thing. It’s working title is Granny’s Girls and a character very loosely based on my maternal Grandmother, Mildred Smith, is at the heart of it. In this her name is Granny Griggs.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is Theatre of Gadsden ready for Sordid Lives?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: They better question is, is Sordid Lives ready for Theatre of Gadsden? LOL! No, seriously, maybe so? I hope so? Or as Billy Ditty’s Grandmother used to say, “this is going to happen, whether they want it to or not”!

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Theatre of Gadsden’s Sordid Lives opens Friday, September 8 at The Ritz Theatre (310 North 27th Street, Gadsden, Alabama, 35904), and running through Sunday, September 17. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 7p.m. and Sundays at 2p.m. Door open 45 minutes before curtain. Tickets are $20/Adults, $18/Seniors/Students/Military. Groups of 10 or more $15/each. Groups of 20 or more $13/each. CLCK HERE to purchase tickets. For more info call 256.547.7469.

Up next at Theatre of Gadsden is Anne of Green Gables with shows October 7 at 2p.m. and 7p.m. and October 8 at 2p.m. Follow Theatre of Gadsden on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter for more details.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare, Uncategorized Tagged With: Alabama Theatre, Billy Jenkins, Del Shores, Gadsden Alabama, Interview, Joy Tilley Perryman, Kathleen Jensen, live theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Sordid Lives

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘The Sugar Bean Sisters’; opening Friday, September 8 at Playhouse 615

September 8, 2023 by Jonathan

 

Alien encounters, a reptile woman, a bird-lady, a little romance and a lot of laughs, playwright Nathan Sanders’ Southern Gothic comedy, The Sugar Bean Sisters has it all, and it’s all coming to Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet) Friday, September 8 thru Sunday, September 24 under the direction of Diane Bearden-Enright. Earlier this week I had the chance to pose a few questions to four of the cast members of The Sugar Bean Sisters to delve a little deeper than the sensational headlines for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q.

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Rapid Fire 20Q with the cast of Playhouse 615’s The Sugar Bean Sisters

Rapid Fire Questions for Breonna Parker, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Videllia

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Videllia Sparks?

BREONNA PARKER: Videllia is quite the sneaky, manipulative type. She thinks she’s clever and smart but she’s really just goofy and not the sharpest tool in the shed. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This is your first show with Playhouse 615, right? What’s the experience been like so far?

BREONNA PARKER: Yes, this is my first show with Playhouse 615. This experience has been wonderful. It’s been a while since I’ve had the opportunity to be on stage, sometimes going into a community theatre is hard when you don’t know anyone. I was nervous going in wondering if I’d be accepted or if they may tend to stick with each other and not be welcoming. This group of people have been nothing but supportive, encouraging and loving. I really feel like I’ve found a home and look forward to future shows. I will for sure miss not being around my cast and crew everyday when the show ends. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Videllia’s wardrobe is, shall we say…interesting. What’s something in your own personal style that others might find questionable?

BREONNA PARKER: Videllia outfit has been fun, I love it. I’m pretty much a T-shirt and jeans kind of gal, and a cap so I don’t have to fix my hair…haha! I’m not very stylish or lavish. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Videllia has secrets. Are you good secret keeper or do you just need to tell somebody when you know some juicy tidbits?

BREONNA PARKER: I’m pretty good at being a person someone can confide in. I’m not going to spread anything that someone wants to be kept private. Now, I am terrible at keeping gifts a secret. Once I buy something for someone I want to immediately give it to them, it’s hard to keep that a secret. I guess a better word would be I’m not good at keeping surprises. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your director, Diane Bearden-Enright actually starred as Videllia at The Hippodrome Theatre in Gainesville, Florida back in 1995 in the Southeastern premiere of The Sugar Bean Sisters, working with the playwright, Nathan Sanders. During the rehearsal process for this production, has Diane shared any insights from her time in the role or having worked alongside the playwright?

BREONNA PARKER: Great question. Diane has been a fantastic director, she has been really good at letting me connect with Videllia in my own way, I just want to make her proud of how I’

m portraying Videllia. It’s a little intimidating knowing that I’m playing a character that I know she mastered! One thing I love about Diane is she asks questions, she’ll say things like ‘why do you think Videllia does this or that.’ I like that it gets you to thinking on a deeper level of the character and helps connect more to Videllia. I’ve heard a couple of story of her working with Nathan Sanders. 

Rapid Fire Questions for Ann Street-Kavanagh, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Faye Nettles

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Faye Clementine Nettles to you?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: Faye is a simple woman who had an extraordinary thing happen to her. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Though presented as completely absurd and hilarious, at its core, The Sugar Bean Sisters is about just that…sisters. Is there anything more important that the bond of friends or family?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: No, there isn’t. The bond you have with family and friends is your true legacy. Their thoughts of you and, hopefully, sharing stories of you is the best way to live forever, so to speak. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In spite of her wacky ways, is there an aspect of Faye’s character that you might try to incorporate into your own life?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: I love how Faye puts it all out there and she doesn’t really care what other people think.  I find myself getting to be more that way as I grow older and I’m pretty darned happy about it!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Faye’s alien encounters are some pretty tall tales. What’s something unbelievable that has happened to you or someone you know?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: First, Faye’s encounter isn’t a tall tale. It’s fact. I’ve had a lot of unbelievables, and, of course, I can’t think of anything good right now. When my daughter was about 2 years old, she would see people who’d passed on. They would speak with her and sometimes scare her a bit, though usually not. It was quite unnerving at first. Battery operated toys would sometimes start playing in the middle of the night, etc. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of you and your costars, who’s most likely to be abducted by aliens…and who would be sent right back down to earth?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: I don’t think any of us would be abducted. But if we were, Linda Speir would be the first to be sent back. She is an absolutely lovely person, but she will tell it like is. If she wanted to go back, they’d have no choice. She would tell them what was what and what was about to be!

Rapid Fire Questions for Abby Waddoups, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Willie Mae Nettles

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I saw your name among those I’d be chatting with, it reminded me we’d chatted before…almost exactly a year ago when you appeared I the cast of Blithe Spirit at The Keeton. So, from ghosts to aliens, right?

ABBY WADDOUPS: There have been some things between the two- but yes. Doing shows close to Halloween is always fun. Ruth and Willie are very different characters, and I love a challenge.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Willie to you?

ABBY WADDOUPS: Willie is a bit selfish, but overall strives to be a good person. She’s desperate to find a good Mormon husband and to get into the highest level of kingdoms in their heaven. She relies very heavily on her sister, Faye, and they are all each other have, and have known for quite some time. They are grown women who still live together in their childhood home. She isn’t who I ever expected to play onstage, but thanks to Diane’s vision and belief in me, here we are.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s your favorite aspect of Willie Mae Nettles as a comedic character?

ABBY WADDOUPS: Willie Mae is very much a straight character in the comedic routine. Keeping a straight face sharing the stage with Ann and Bre will be a test for me. I’ve tried to find intricacies within her quarks to add more fun.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I love that in the first scene, Willie Mae warns her sister Faye not to lie to her, likening lying to other sinful acts like stealing, fornicating and…drinking Coca-Cola! Growing up, were there things relatives warned you against as wrong that you now just laugh about?

ABBY WADDOUPS: My parents were pretty down to earth and we weren’t raised in a specific church. I was born and raised in Memphis in a very urban environment, so the southernisms and certain religious beliefs are pretty foreign to me. I always had family in the Nashville area and I’ve been in and out of middle Tennessee for a long time so I’ve picked up a little over the years, but not like this. This is Deep South Florida swamp and the culture is so different. Their tales and strong beliefs have a place on the stage, a way to tell their stories in other regions.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The fact that Willie Mae wears an Eva Gabor wig is hilarious to me, having been a fan of the Gabor sisters since I was a tiny child. Were you familiar with the reference or did you have to google to get the joke?

ABBY WADDOUPS: I am older than I look, so I am familiar with the Gabor sisters and I love classic tv shows. It was definitely a reference that reminded me of my childhood. I also remember seeing the wig advertisement included in our faux Weekly World News cover. It’s a nice throwback to the 80’s. I am taken right back to seeing the tabloids on the magazine racks at the grocery stores as a kid.

Rapid Fire Questions for Linda Speir, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Reptile Woman

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about The Reptile Woman, your role in The Sugar Bean Sisters?

LINDA SPEIR: It is bizarre to say the least. I’m only in two short scenes but I make the most of them. Reptile Woman in my mind is a swamp witch. She is also a seer and may speak in tongues!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Alright, I’m just gonna say it…you are among my “theatre crushes” in that I absolutely adore everything I’ve ever seen you do onstage. I’ve seen you in simply heart-wrenching performances like Steel Magnolias and Driving Miss Daisy and sinisterly charming as Arsenic and Old Lace’s Aunt Abby. Now you’re playing The Reptile Woman…is she the strangest character you’ve ever encountered? 

LINDA SPEIR: Thank  you!! This is definitely the strangest character I’ve ever played discounting my brief stint as a werewolf YEARS ago at Opryland during the Halloween season. Reptile Woman is definitely a strange and mystifying character.  Her babies are her gators and her snakes!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Were you familiar with the script prior to auditioning for the show?

LINDA SPEIR: Yes I read it beforehand. I always read the script before I audition for a show. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While there’s mention of The Reptile Woman about midway through Act One, you don’t take to the stage until Act Two. So basically you’re the Special Guest Star, like you see as the last credit on tv shows. How fun is that?

LINDA SPEIR: This role has been a great deal of fun as our director gave me free rein to create this spooky character. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there a line or a scene, yours or someone else’s, that makes you giggle every time?

LINDA SPEIR: Many lines! This is a funny play with no socially redeeming qualities.  It’s a bit of deep South folklore. Faye (played to perfection by Ann Kavanaugh)  singing It’s a Small World always gets a laugh from me.   

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The Sugar Bean Sisters opens Friday, September 8 at (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet) Friday, September 8 thru Sunday, September 24. Performances are Fridays/Saturdays at 7:30p.m. and Sundays at 2:30p.m. Tickets are $18 and are available for purchase through Eventbrite, by calling the box-office at 615.319.7031, or at the door an hour before each performance. CLICK HERE for tickets.

Next up at Playhouse 615 is the Middle Tennessee premiere of The Woman in Black, a spin-chiller touted as the scariest stage experience ever, running October 20-November 5. For more on these shows and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Ann Street-Cavanagh, Diane Bearden-Engright, Interview, Linda Speir, Local Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playhouse 615, rapid fire 20q, The Sugar Bean Sisters

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘Move Over Mrs. Markham’; onstage at Playhouse 615 August 4 thru August 20

July 31, 2023 by Jonathan

Recently, during their final days of rehearsal, I had the opportunity to chat with cast members of Playhouse 615’s latest presentation, Move Over Mrs. Markham. A British farce written by Ray Cooney and John Chapman as directed by Playhouse 615’s Joel Meriwether, the show opens Friday, August 4 and running through August 20. Among the cast are Beth Henderson as Miss Olive Harriet Smythe, Craig Hartline as Henry Lodge, Eric Crawford as Phillip Markham and Lindsey Patrick-Wright as Joanna Markham. What follows are my conversations about their characters, the show, company and more.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF PLAYHOUSE 615’s MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM

RAPID FIRE WITH BETH HENDERSON, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S MISS OLIVE HARRIET SMYTHE 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Not being all that familiar with Move Over Mrs. Markham myself, I got my hands on the script. Move Over Mrs Markham seems like its somewhere between Billy Wilder’s The Apartment and the bed-hopping farce within the farce of Noises Off. Do you think that’s a fair assessment?

BETH HENDERSON: It definitely has elements of both. It has The Apartment’s plot line of the flat being used for multiple trysts. And it shares Noises Off’s farcical elements of slamming doors and ladies in nighties. But, what really makes this show funny is everyone pretending to be someone else in order to persuade a very prudish and clueless author that they are just the wholesome upright publishing company she wants to sign with.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of said author, what can you tell me about Miss Olive Harriet Smythe?

BETH HENDERSON: She’s a rather prudish and proper children’s book author who is outwardly appalled by sex (although I think she secretly relishes in it, at times). She’s also pretty flighty and constantly saying things that come across in a completely unintended way. Oh, and she’s completely obsessed with dogs.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Audiences will surely recognize you from you most recent role as Mrs.Wingfield in Playhouse 615’s The Glass Menagerie, or perhaps 2022’s Trip to Bountiful, two classic dramatic roles. Now, with Miss Smythe, you’re fully immersed in farcical comedy. Do you prepare differently for comedy as opposed to a more dramatic role?

BETH HENDERSON: I can’t really say that I prepare for them differently. For me, whether it’s a comedy or a drama, the first and most important thing to do is get to know the character beyond the covers of the script: their history, what makes them tick, how they feel about things, etc. However, I will say that in comedy, more often than in drama, finding my costume can really help create the character. That was 100% the case in this show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’ve not only been part of several productions at Playhouse 615, but you’re also on the company’s Board of Directors. How long have you been on the board and what does that entail?

BETH HENDERSON: I’ve only been on the board for about five months, so I’m pretty new. I’ve been fortunate enough to have been on the boards of several Nashville theaters over the past 15 years, so it’s nice to bring that experience to a newer theater that’s just starting to take off. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you weren’t playing Miss Smythe, what other role would you enjoy, whether you’re “right for the part” or not, and why?

BETH HENDERSON: They’re all such fun roles, so it’s hard to say. Maybe Alistair, because of his cheekiness. And Linda pretending to be Helga would be such over-the-top fun.

RAPID FIRE WITH CRAIG HARTLINE, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S HENRY LODGE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Henry Lodge to you?

CRAIG HARTLINE: Henry Lodge to me is a bit of a spoiled little boy, pretending to be a man. He has had some success in the children’s book business, but he spends his time and money, pursuing women for his own pleasures. He’s a bit of a cad, lovable, but a cad.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Henry is a children’s book publisher. If you were to write a children’s book, what  would it be about?

CRAIG HARTLINE: Wow, that is a tough question. It would probably be about a puppy who grows up with two smart parents who try to teach him about the world around him. However, he is more interested in chasing butterflies and playing in mud puddles to listen. It’s only when he moves into the real world, that he discovers, he should have listened more. In the end, he finally achieves the life his parents wanted for him after remembering what lessons they tried to teach him.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You were last seen onstage at Playhouse 615 in Sex Please, We’re Sixty, and now, just two months later, you’re back for your second production with the company. What is it about the company that brought you back so quickly?  

CRAIG HARTLINE: I have thoroughly enjoyed working with Playhouse 615. The Board Members are determined to achieve what actors in Nashville and the surrounding counties have been looking for, a place where actors can stretch their wings, so to speak and build on their craft. The actors I have had the privilege to work with are hard working and dedicated to their craft. I look forward to the chance to come back and work again with this production company.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Henry Lodge, you have two leading ladies. Anne Street-Kavanagh plays Henry’s wife, Linda, while Em Genovese plays…um…how shall I put this?..NOT his wife, Miss Wilkinson. How much fun are you having sharing the stage with these two?         

CRAIG HARTLINE: These two lovely ladies are a thrill to work with. Anne is a funny and talented lady who brings out the best in each and every role she is in. Her dedication to her craft inspires me to be better. Anne and I created a chemistry together in Sex Please, We’re Sixty, that brings a smile to my heart. I believe we bring the same chemistry on stage in Move Over, Mrs. Markham.

This is the first time I have worked with Em, but I surely hope it is not the last. She has been acting for many years, and despite her young age, she is a true professional. Her ability to understand the character, taking the words written on the page and bringing it to life, is a true testament to where I believe her career will go. If I were the audience, I would make a strong mental note of the name, Em Genovese, she well may be the next name you see on the “telly”.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about slamming doors and farcical comedy?

CRAIG HARTLINE: The action of slamming doors is a large part of the action in this comedy. The chaos of characters coming in and going out of each scene adds to the rapid fire action from the actors. The timing of those opening and slamming doors is crucial to the play. Without that action, the play would be rather tame and loose that rapid fire of lines between the actors.

RAPID FIRE WITH ERIC CRAWFORD, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S PHILLIP MARKHAM

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do we need to know about Phillip Markham?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Philip is the antithesis of farce.  He would be totally appalled at the thought of being involved in any shenanigans. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Move Over Mrs. Markham marks your Playhouse 615 debut. Was it the role or the company that prompted your interest in auditioning for the role of Phillip?…Or a combination of the two?

ERIC CRAWFORD: A bit of both. I’m in an online theatre group and a couple of folks had been in different productions and all had a blast. I’m new to this theatre company but Nashville is a pretty small acting community so I already knew a couple of folks that were auditioning and had done multiple performances with 615. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The show is set in a posh top floor London flat, so let’s talk about accents and dialect. One of my pet peeves as a theatre reviewer is when the accents don’t ring true. Was a dialect coach brought in to assist the cast with honing their accents?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Yes, we were very fortunate to have a wonderful dialogue coach. A first for me. We had some online group and private coaching sessions. I like performing with accents, so a coach was a real treat. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about a farce that keeps audiences interested?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Two things. Never a dull moment and the unpredictability of where the wrong turns will lead you. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Has there ever been an occurrence in your own life that you think might make for a good farcical comedy?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Well it started at birth…. I grew up thinking Lucy Ricardo had the right idea attitude towards life so I think all of the ironies of growing up in the Missouri boot-heel, getting a doctorate in genetics, and  having a deep seated need to perform is somewhat farcical in itself. 

RAPID FIRE WITH LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S JOANNA MARKHAM

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is your favorite aspect of Joanna as a character?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: Joanna has been so much fun to play because she has truly been thrown into the madness of this evening through no fault of her own and she continues to just roll with the punches. I think Joanna is a genuinely caring person and wants the best for the people around her even when their behavior is less than admirable. Also, Joanna’s willingness to lie for her friends while being really lousy at it, has been a particularly juicy part of the role!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Move Over Mrs. Markham is set in the late sixties/early seventies, which usually indicates some groovy fashions. Who’s the costumer for the show and do you have a favorite look, whether it be your own or that of a fellow cast mate?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: I think we were all so excited about costuming, we all just dove into finding costumes for our characters. Denese Evans helped us fill in any gaps for hard-to-find items. Since I spend most of the show in various stages of undress, I would have to say that Alistair’s (Jonathan Wilbur) suit is “really with it” as Joanna says in the show, so it is probably my favorite!  I personally LOVE this time period and would say that at least half the set is made up of furniture and decor from my own home – including the Big Eye Girl painting in Joanna’s bedroom.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I have a confession…I had never heard of this play before Joel told me it was coming to Playhouse 615, but I had heard of Ray Cooney, who, along with John Chapman wrote the script. Cooney having written nearly twenty plays including Run for Your Wife, which ran for many years on The West End. Were you familiar with the show before auditioning?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: No! Not at all! I was able to get my hands on a script before auditioning and I believe this is exactly what I said to Joel after reading it “This show is absolutely ridiculous. I love it!” 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Typical for farces, the laughs usually run the gamut from subtle to outlandish. I’d imagine rehearsals have been quite fun. Who’s the biggest cut-up among the cast?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: While we all have our moments of cutting up, I think that Eric Crawford and Craig Hartline, playing best buds Phillip and Henry respectively, cut up the most. They have been known to continue on, in character, after the scenes end doing their own two-man improv show for us. I think even Ray Cooney himself would admit their behind-the-scenes, in-character antics are hilarious. Everyone in this cast has such great comedic chops that we have had a blast during rehearsals.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about farces, and Move Over Mrs. Markham in particular that you think will appeal most to Playhouse 615 audiences?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: Having just come from acting in Playhouse 615’s last show The Shadow Box (a moving play about death, dying, and the stages of grief) this play is a very different kind of catharsis. Move Over Mrs. Markham, like other farces, is fast-paced, energetic and just pure FUN. I told my family and friends to BYOT (bring your own tissues) to this show, too, because if they are anything like me in rehearsals, they will be crying from laughing.

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Move Over Mrs. Markham opens Friday, August 4 at Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet, TN 37122). The show runs through Sunday, August 20 with 7:30pm performances Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday matinees at 2:30pm. Tickets are $18. Call the Box Office at 615.319.7031 to reverse tickets or CLICK HERE to purchase them via the company’s Eventbrite page. Tickets may also be purchased in person at the theatre just prior to showtime.

Next up at Playhouse 615 is The Sugar Bean Sisters, running September 8-24. For more on these shows and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: British Comedy, British Farce, Comedy, Farce, Interview, Joel Meriwether, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playhouse 615, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast members of Piedmont Players’ ‘Bye Bye Birdie’, onstage at The Meroney July 14-30

July 14, 2023 by Jonathan

When my friend Bradley Moore told me he’d be directing the July 14-30 run of Bye Bye Birdie for Piedmont Players Theatre at the Meroney Theatre (213 S. Main St, Salisbury, NC Salisbury), I knew I’d want to chat with members of his cast. Partly because I just love the show, but mostly because, aside from a kindergarten production of Chicken Little (I played Turkey Lurkey), Bye Bye Birdie was the first full-fledge stage musical I was a part of, having been cast in a high school production back in the last century. What follows are my conversations with Bye Bye Birdie’s Caroline Monroe, who plays high-school Birdie superfan, Kim McAfee, Bailey Daugherty, the show’s title character, pop idol, Conrad Birdie, Daniel Keith, overwrought music agent, Albert Peterson and Leslie Roberts as Rosie Alvarez, Albert’s beautiful secretary, the true brains behind the publicity stunt that brings them all together.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF PIEDMONT PLAYERS’ BYE BYE BIRDIE

RAPID FIRE WITH CAROLINE MONROE, KIM McAFEE IN BYE BYE BIRDIE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Bye Bye Birdie was my first time to appear onstage, having played Kim’s brother when I was in seventh grade. What was your first theatrical experience?

CAROLINE MONROE: I actually got a little bit of a late start to theatre! My junior year of high school, the theatre teacher asked me to be in the ensemble of The Wiz. I will forever be grateful to her for helping me get my start on stage!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Tell me about Kim McAfee, the character you play in Bye Bye Birdie.

CAROLINE MONROE: Kim McAfee, is a typical 15 year old girl who was just “pinned” by her boyfriend Hugo. She, like all of the other girls in their town of Sweet Apple, is infatuated with Conrad Birdie. When chosen to be Conrad’s final kiss before being deployed, Kim explores what it truly means to be a woman and tries to act more mature in order to be desirable to Conrad, who is much older than she. When things don’t go the way she had planned with Conrad, she decides to finally settle down with Hugo. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Kim, you’re chosen to share One Last Kiss with her rock star crush, Conrad Birdie before he joins the army. When you were younger, who was your first celebrity crush?

CAROLINE MONROE: Justin Bieber was 100% my first celebrity crush! I can remember decorating my room with posters that I got out of magazines and listening to his, My World 2.0 CD on repeat. Would I really have been a true fan if I didn’t regularly wear my Justin Bieber t-shirt? If Justin Bieber were to have been in Conrad Birdie’s shoes, I would have definitely hoped to be his last kiss! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The plot of Bye Bye Birdie, at least in part, drew inspiration from Elvis Presley being drafted into the Army in 1957. Just for fun…among current pop singers, who do you think would join up and who would dodge the draft?

CAROLINE MONROE: I can’t imagine the press if this were to happen today, so this is a really intriguing question. Currently, I think that Shawn Mendes would join up, but Drake would absolutely dodge the draft. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How’s it been sharing the stage with Bailey Daugherty as Conrad?

CAROLINE MONROE: It is such an honor to share the stage with Bailey. He has such undeniable talent that he is so humble about and puts his all into his role. I think it’s even more special to share the stage with Bailey because he is one of my best friends offstage. It is such a joy to watch him truly embody Conrad Birdie and to have seen him learn the ins and outs of this character. I cannot think of anyone else I would rather play Kim opposite of. You are in for a treat when he takes the stage! 

RAPID FIRE WITH BAILEY DAUGHERTY, CONRAD BIRDIE IN BYE BYE BIRDIE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I just chatted with Caroline. I ended our conversation by asking her about sharing the stage with you, so I’ll start my chat with you by asking the same…How is Caroline as a scene partner?

BAILEY DAUGHERTY: I feel so blessed to work with Caroline. She is incredibly talented and truly lives in every moment on-stage. Working with her is always a gift, because she gives so much to work off of. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How familiar were you with Bye Bye Birdie prior to auditioning?

BAILEY DAUGHERTY: I actually didn’t know about the show until a few years ago, when I saw the 1995 movie with Jason Alexander and Vanessa Williams. I remember thinking that my favorite number was One Last Kiss, and that I wanted to sing it one day.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You play the title character of Conrad Birdie, a pop star who finds himself in the middle of a publicity stunt in the days before he’s drafted into the army. Has there been anything surprising that you’ve discovered while developing your take on the character?

BAILEY DAUGHERTY: Yes! I believe Conrad’s most interesting facet is his love for the music, but disdain for the social expectations of fame. In the show, he deals with a lot of feelings on how he should act and how he just wants to live; which has been really interesting to explore during this creative process.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Since Bye Bye Birdie premiered on Broadway in 1960, Conrad Birdie’s look has traditionally been pure Elvis…pompadour hair, sideburns and showy gold lamé stage costumes…your director, Bradley Moore has opted to forego the traditional portrayal and present a more modern feel and look for Conrad. What’s your favorite aspect of Bradley’s vision?

BAILEY DAUGHERTY: Bradley is such a wonderful director and always brings a fresh take to each of his shows. My favorite aspect of both this show and all of his other shows is his want for depth. It doesn’t matter what the show is, he always strives to dig deeper into the music and acting to extract those human truths that hold us together. I think that is really shown in the Overture of this show, which is so simple and small, yet communicates a moving message.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Tod Kubo is choreographing the show. Is there a favorite dance sequence, whether you’re involved in it or not, that you are particularly fond of in Bye Bye Birdie?

BAILEY DAUGHERTY: Tod has done amazing work on this show, and I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I love all of his numbers. I think that the number of his that I am most fond of is the last number in the show, Rosie. It is so sweet and simple.

RAPID FIRE WITH DANIEL KEITH, ALBERT PETERSON IN BYE BYE BIRDIE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Albert to you?

DANIEL KEITH: Albert always looks for the best in someone, which is where I think we relate. He is a self-proclaimed “mama’s-boy” and very oblivious to the people and relationships around him. I like to think of him as a pretty neurotic character, but he’s always loyal to those around him and I think that’s most important. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Albert, you get to perform one of the show’s most well-known numbers, Put on a Happy Face. I have to be honest, until doing a little research to chat with you and your co-stars, I didn’t realize this iconic song was indeed written for and introduced in this musical. Taking a cue from the lyrics, what do you do in your personal life to “put on a happy face”?

DANIEL KEITH: What personal life? Haha. Theatre always puts a smile on my face. This will be my third full-production musical this year, so I stay pretty busy in the Theatre scene. I’m sharing the stage with my beautiful fiancée (She plays Ursula Merkle). She always keeps me smiling. We have a dog, two cats, and a bunny and they keep a smile on my face a majority of the time. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The role of Albert is among the show’s most iconic, in part thanks to Dick Van Dyke having originated the role on Broadway, then again in the 1963 film adaptation. How much fun are you having in the role?

DANIEL KEITH: I am having a blast! This cast is super talented and Bradley is a creative genius. I’m super excited to open and while I know I’m no Dick Van Dyke, I hope I can bring a smile to the audience, much as he did.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first PPT show. How has your experience with the company been so far?

DANIEL KEITH: This is indeed my first PPT show. I’ve had friends that have done shows here and actually my first show I saw at the Meroney was Kinky Boots earlier this year, which a close friend of mine (Michael Fargas) played Lola. After seeing the production quality, I instantly knew I needed to meet Bradley and make sure he knew who I was. Since then, the experience has been amazing. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I spoke with Bailey, I noted that director Bradley Moore has opted to offer a more modern take on Conrad Birdie’s aesthetic. I understand the set and props are also more minimal than what audiences might be expecting. Do you think these creative decisions will enhance the audience experience? 

DANIEL KEITH: Absolutely. It’s funny because I was just discussing this with Bradley last night but having a minimalist approach to the set leaves so much more freedom for characterization. The audience doesn’t have to find something to focus on, because the focus is always towards the character. The set, while minimal, is still quite large and the amount of levels and stairs that Bradley chose to incorporate really make the visualization that much more interesting. 

RAPID FIRE WITH LESLIE ROBERTS, ROSIE ALVAREZ IN BYE BYE BIRDIE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You play Rosie. What can you tell me about Rosie as you see her?

LESLIE ROBERTS: I see Rose as a strong, intelligent, and independent woman for her time. She knows what she wants and she isn’t afraid to go for it even when there are obstacles in her path. She perseveres and she knows her worth. So many women of the late 1950’s-early 1960’s were trying to find their voice in a male dominated world and it was even more difficult for women of color in those days. I feel honored to get to portray her and hopefully bring dignity and resolve to her character.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: PPT audiences will surely recognize you from previous productions including Ragtime, Legally Blonde and A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder. What is it about Piedmont Players that keeps you coming back?

LESLIE ROBERTS: I think it is the welcoming atmosphere. I like that I can come into the theater and know that I get to work and play with other people who just really want to be there. I feel like our director, musical directors, and choreographers encourage us in a very motivating way to be the best we can be and I like that they aren’t afraid to try new things or cast someone that others may overlook.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I chatted with Daniel, I mentioned Dick Van Dyke, who originated his role. As for Rosie, you’re following in the perfectly choreographed footsteps of legendary performers Chita Rivera, who originated Rosie on Broadway and in the 1963 film, Ann Reinking, who did a 90s National Tour and Vanessa Williams who starred as Rosie in the 1995 telefilm. How exciting to bring your own interpretation to this storied role?

LESLIE ROBERTS: Yes, I am excited. Like many people, I first fell in love with the story when I saw the original movie as a kid. I remember falling in love with the music and of course the love stories involving Rosie and Albert, and Kim and Hugo. Years later, I was in the ensemble of a highschool community theater production of Bye Bye Birdie. My character didn’t have a name so we jokingly created a character (Harvey Johnson’s mom). It was a lot of fun! I am excited to get to play Rosie this time around. I look up to the women you mentioned. I could never live up to those performances, but what I do hope is that our audiences will be able to feel what I put into the story with my interpretation and that they can relate to her on some level. I hope that they can see how important it is to be yourself, and love yourself as Rosie does.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of the 1995 telefilm, Bradley tells me he’s including a few musical moments from the various productions of Bye Bye Birdie, including Rosie’s number Let’s Settle Down, which the original songwriting team of Charles Stouse and Lee Adams penned specifically for the 1995 TV broadcast. How cool that you’ll to be performing a song that even some Birdie fans might not be that familiar with?

LESLIE ROBERTS: Yes! I like how the ’95 film added to the original. The new song is not only beautifully written, but it gives the audience some more insight to Rosie’s point of view. Bye Bye Birdie is one of those shows that is a time capsule and unfortunately, sometimes there are things about it that just don’t age well in our modern era. What our production seeks to do is to bring the story so many know and love to a modern audience. I think Bradley liked the direction the 1995 film was going in and so we are continuing with that with a fresh take on a classic. Including the song Let’s Settle Down.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Like many of your co-stars, you’ve appeared in previous shows with PPT and at the historic Meroney Theatre. Do you feel the 100-plus years of history of the venue whenever you return to the stage for each new show?

LESLIE ROBERTS: It’s cool to be a part of something that has such a long history! I think that’s part of the appeal to being in that theater. Perhaps100 years ago, there weren’t any actresses that looked like me on that stage, but it’s cool how there is a growing diversity in the arts in our area. People love hearing stories and that includes many different voices. I am proud to be one voice in that history and am excited to see what kinds of stories get told on the Meroney stage in the years to come!

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Piedmont Players Theatre’s Bye Bye Birdie opens Friday, July 14 and runs through Sunday, July 30 at the Meroney Theatre with 7:30p.m. shows Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday Matinees at 2:30p.m. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Check out Piedmont Players Theatre online and follow them on Facebook and Instagram. 

Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.  Then #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Bradley Moore, Bye Bye Birdie, Interview, mont Players Theatre, Musical, Musical Theatre, Pied, Piedmont Players, PPT, Rapid Fire, rapid fire 20q, Salisbury NC, The Moroney Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of Studio Tenn & CPA Arts’ ‘The Sound of Music: on stage at Soli Deo Center June 22-July 16

June 21, 2023 by Jonathan

Since opening on Broadway in 1959, Rodgers and Hammerstein‘s The Sound of Music has been an audience favorite. 1965’s film adaptation simply solidified the musical’s universal appeal, so it makes perfect sense that Studio Tenn, one of the Mid-South’s favorite regional theatre companies, would round out their current season by presenting their take on the classic. Produced in conjunction with CPA Arts and presented on stage at Christ Presbyterian Academy‘s gorgeous Soli Deo Center, The Sound of Music opens Thursday, June 22 and continues through July 16. With just days before show’s open, I recently had the chance to chat with The Sound of Music‘s Laurie Veldheer, John-Mark McGaha, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva and Brian Charles Rooney for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q interview feature.


RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF STUDIO TENN AND CPA ARTS THE SOUND OF MUSIC 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH LAURIE VELDHEER, MARIA IN THE SOUND OF MUSIC

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While you might be a new name to Studio Tenn audiences, you’ve a connection with Studio Tenn’s Artistic Director, Patrick Cassidy, having shared the stage with him a few years back in a production of A Little Night Music at San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theatre. Did Patrick reach out to you about auditioning for the role of Maria and what’s it been like to work with him again with this production?

LAURIE VELDHEER: Yes, Patrick reached out to me several months ago asking if I’d be interested in auditioning for Maria in his production of The Sound Of Music at Studio Tenn. I told him I’d love to audition! Over the last few years I’ve really been yearning to play this role! It’s been so wonderful getting to work with Patrick again but this time seeing him as the artistic director of a theater – he is so kind, caring, generous, enthusiastic, just such a great guy and good friend, I’m really proud of him. And so happy to be playing Maria in his production at Studio Tenn and CPA Arts!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your theatre credits include Broadway (Mamma Mia, Newsies, Plaza Suite), National Tours (Fiasco Theatre’s Into the Woods, Hairspray) and several regional productions, but I want to talk about a certain 1998 production of The Sound of Music at Grand Rapids Civic Center in which you played Brigitta von Trapp. Another two-part question…What do you remember most about that time and how cool is it to now be starring as Maria?

LAURIE VELDHEER: I would love to talk about this, because I truly have the fondest memories! YES! I did play Brigitta and my sister was Louisa at a theater in our hometown of Grand Rapids, MI. I REALLY wanted to be Brigitta, I loved the movie so much, loved that role, I was the right age, I kind of looked like the young girl from the movie too as I had super long dark hair. So I was THRILLED when I was cast. And the children were also double casts in our production! I just loved everything about being in the show – I loved the role, all Brigitta’s special moments like entering reading the book, her little solo in Do Re Mi, and her moments with Maria in the party scene, plus all the kid’s songs, I just had a blast! I think some of my favorite memories were some of my costumes actually – I loved our uniforms, wedding dresses, and my favorite was my curtain/play clothes outfit – I also remember loving the party scene because of all the little moments I had with the actors playing the Captain, Max, and Maria. Very very special memories. 

And now, I love playing MARIA! It’s a little crazy for me at times because I actually remember auditioning for Brigitta, I remember rehearsals, all my lines, pretty much everything, so now to be the adult and looking down at these little faces, especially the little Brigitta’s, and seeing them learn the show and having them watch Maria teach them, only now I’m Maria, is pretty wild! And now I’ve fallen in love with the character of Maria! I think she’s amazing – wonderful, complex, filled with so much spirit, and dealing with complicated feelings and emotions like the arc of going from being a Postulant to a wife and mother of seven children – has been a wonderful challenge and I’m truly loving every moment getting to play this amazing role.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: One of the show’s most-loved tunes is My Favorite Things. In your real life, what makes that list?

LAURIE VELDHEER: Oh my gosh what a great question! I’m not sure I’ve ever thought of this for myself. Let’s see, my favorite things … well, first thing that comes to mind is cake, my favorite food! But other things I love would have to include – spending time with my family and friends, singing, being in a show, seeing theatre, New York City, listening to live symphonies, going to church on Sunday mornings, walking on the beach looking for shells, sunsets, walking through parks in the Fall and seeing all the leaves changing, watching the snow fall, baking, a yummy meal, all the desserts, napping, comfy clothes, my first cup of coffee in the morning. I mean this list could literally go on forever because I have so many favorite things!!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: They say never to work with animals or children. In this production there’s a song about a Lonely Goatherd, but as far as I know, no actual goats. You and your cast are working with kids of the other kind, and lots of them, as there’s dual casts of the six von Trapp children. What’s the rehearsal process like with dual casts?

LAURIE VELDHEER: Haha yes! Well I was one of those little theater kids growing up, so I think that has really helped me connect with them. It’s been so fun getting to know each of the kids and what they bring to their role. I think they bring so much life and joy and spontaneity to the show, I love it! The biggest aspect of the dual casts is that we have to make sure we’re going through everything twice because each cast of kids really needs to go through each scene and song, but everyone else in the scenes with the kids needs to go through everything with both casts because it’s slightly different with different kids!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Can’t think of the von Trapp kids without recalling that moment made famous by Julie Andrews and company in the film version when the whole lot show up in matching outfits courtesy of Maria and some cleverness with the bedroom drapery. All that silliness to ask about this production’s costume designers Devon Renee Spencer and Lauren Terry-McCall’s handywork. Do you have a “favorite thing” among the wardrobe, yours or someone else’s?

LAURIE VELDHEER: Oh my gosh I LOVE my costumes! Devon and Lauren have done such an amazing job!! This is a cast of almost 40 people and most people have at least two costumes or more, I myself have eight different costumes in the show, and the kids have at least six costumes each and there are seven kids and two casts! I think my favorites are my green dress, which is the one Maria makes once given new material, and my honeymoon/festival outfit, especially the green jacket! Every time they give me something to wear I love it – I really do love all my costumes in this show so much – they work so hard and have put so much time and thought and effort into each costume – I know the show is going to look amazing!

 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH JOHN-MARK McGAHA, CAPTAIN von TRAPP IN THE SOUND OF MUSIC

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Fans of Studio Tenn will no doubt recognize you from having wowed audiences with your voice as part of The Ray Legacy, The Cash Legacy & The Sinatra Legacy, their former tribute concert series  highlighting the music of Ray Charles, Johnny Cash and Frank Sinatra. You also headlined Studio Tenn’s NewYear’s Eve Celebration. What is it about Studio Tenn and their level of artistry that keeps you coming back?

JOHN-MARK McGAHA: Studio Tenn was not only the place where I fell in love with theatre again, it’s the place where I got to know and fell in love with Nashville. This beautiful city appropriately named the Music City has a uniquely concentrated amount of talent, professionalism, and passion. Studio Tenn has capitalized on the amazing culture of this city and in addition to that pulled on the strengths and talents from all stars talents from other places to produce a level of work that has been unlike anything I’ve ever seen. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In The Sound of Music, as Captain von Trapp, your big musical moment happens with Act 2’s Edelweiss, a fan favorite interestingly added for the film adaptation, then worked into the stage version thereafter. What’s it like performing such a beloved classic?

JOHN-MARK McGAHA: It’s an amazing experience. Truly. The Sound of Music was the first musical that I ever saw, and has been my favorite show for all of my life. Playing this role, and singing this song is truly a dream come true.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The role of Captain von Trapp has minimal musical moments, instead depending more on dialogue. Other than the obvious musical accompaniment, is there a difference in memorizing dialogue vs lyrics?

JOHN-MARK McGAHA: Absolutely! It’s a huge difference for me. He is such a complicated man. One that I have had to truly get to know in order to assume this role. He’s grieving in the wake of his beloved wife, and now preparing for the loss of his beloved country as the rise of the Nazi regime has literally come to his front door. All this while trying to raise children he has to prepare to live in a world that is one he himself isn’t sure of, and that’s just the beginning. All of his words are coming from a very deep place. Memorizing his words, and more than that, communicating his intentions through those words has been very challenging. The songs on the other hand are so well written that the marriage of notes and lyrics do so much of that work for you. The songs bring a beautiful simple clarity to this beautifully complicated man. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Expanding on that, what’s your favorite aspect of Captain von Trapp?

JOHN-MARK McGAHA: He’s not confused about good and evil and where he stands. As confusing as his world was during that time, and as many things as he was attempting to sort through, he was yet relentless and unyielding to what was right and true even in the face of danger. He was a true hero. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand two of your children are also in the show. Have you shared the stage with them before? And what does this experience mean to you as a father?

JOHN-MARK McGAHA: No, I have never shared the stage with them, and this experience is something above and beyond anything I could have ever even prayed for. 

 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA, SISTER BERTHE IN THE SOUND OF MUSIC

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Sister Berthe, the role you’re playing in Studio Tenn’s The Sound of Music?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: Sister Berthe is one of the nuns in the Nonnberg Abbey. She is the right hand of Mother Abbess. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When researching to chat with you, I love that the character descriptions of Sister Berthe frequently included “quick of tongue”. Knowing you as a friend for quite a few years, I’d say that aspect of the character might come easy to you as you and I both often have plenty to say, and aren’t afraid to do so. What other aspects of the sister do you look forward to bringing to the stage?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I remember watching this film as a child. It always came across that she was kind of mean. She’s not really. She’s just very stern. I think she takes her job very seriously, and loves God deeply. So she’s very matter of fact, and only wants what’s best for the the Sisters. Which does not equal, Maria. She has a dry sense of humor. Which I have been enjoying immensely. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I was trying to remember how many shows you’ve done with Studio Tenn. You were in their debut production of The Battle of Franklin, as well as their Cinderella, A Christmas Carol & Steel Magnolias. Have I missed any?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I was also in Big River and The Miracle Worker.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I spoke to Laurie, I asked her about the shows costumers, but I gotta ask…what’s the best and not-so-great  aspects of wearing a wimple and habit while singing and dancing?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: The Habit is roomy and free flowing. It’s been quite a while since I have been in one. I keep forgetting there aren’t any pockets! I love a good pocket. I’m not sure if nuns are allowed to wear makeup in real life or not. But let me tell you.. those white bands across the forehead are not make up friendly. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Among your musical moments with the Sisters of Nonnberg Abbey is the song Maria, with its tuneful query “How do you solve a problem like Maria?” so, I gotta ask…How DO you solve a problem like Maria?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I feel like Sister Berthe would say..remove the problem. Everyone knows Sister Berthe is not a Maria fan, because she’s “Not an asset to the Abbey.” So.. I don’t know. Great question. Put her in arts and crafts? 

 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY, MAX DETWEILER IN THE SOUND OF MUSIC

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Alright, I just gotta start by asking…you received such high praise for your role as Lucy Brown in the 2006 Broadway revival of Threepenny Opera. How did that ‘hot outta the gate’ reception affect you as a performer?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: I think it was a wonderful opportunity, for a number of reasons, not the least of which was having the chance to work with several extraordinarily talented people like Alan Cumming, Ana Gasteyer, Jim Dale, and Cyndi Lauper. It was also a chance for me to show my versatility as a singing actor. I particularly loved the designs for that show and working with the designers; Isaac Mizrahi created the costumes, and he was very interested in collaborating with each actor to convey character through clothing. He cared about how comfortable we were, or weren’t, and he wanted to know as much as he could about what we were developing for our characters. It was wonderful!  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From the reviews I read in preparation of our chat, I understand you’ve got quite the vocal range, having performed as a male soprano as well as a tenor in previous roles. So, a bit of a technical question…what is your vocal range and what to you find is an advantage of such a range?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: My voice has, perhaps, best been described by a critic who once described it as having “multiple personality disorder” (it was a positive review)! My vocal range is unusual, and technically, I am a Tenor-based Sopranista, with a consistent span of four octaves. The difference between what I do, and what a countertenor does is that my soprano, (a first soprano tone vs the mezzo soprano tone of a countertenor) is produced with a full hit of the vocal folds. Countertenors sing in falsetto. Falsetto is a term that has come to mean something different, colloquially, than what it actually indicates. When a person sings in falsetto, it means the vocal folds are fluttering against each other, rather than completing a full contact hit. The term has less to do with the tone/sound, and more to do with how the sound is produced. Regardless, I am capable of singing in various styles, in various ranges, while sounding like different people. For example, I was part of a hit off-Broadway show, in which I had to sing in the range and style of Celine Dion. However, when I performed on the national tour of The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber, I sang the Phantom’s songs from The Phantom of the Opera, in a more classical tenor, and Jesus’s songs from Jesus Christ Superstar in a rock tenor. On Broadway, in The Threepenny Opera, I sang first soprano as Lucy Brown. So, I am grateful for the versatility I have, because I’ve been able to play so many different and interesting roles, and to help create a lot of new characters in new shows, that I might not otherwise have been able to create.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Directing you in The Sound of Music is Emily Tello Speck, whose husband Jake co-founded Studio Tenn. How is Emily as a director?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: I’ve enjoyed working with Emily so much! This show is not easy to direct, especially because the story is emotionally impactful, and there are so many people in the cast! Its Director needs to be able to move people through the story swiftly, and gracefully, in order to clearly communicate the story of the main characters. However, the director also needs to be able to create the correct mood and tone, in coordination with the set & lighting designers; and to reinforce any subtext the supporting characters help to reveal. She has been able to accomplish all of this, while being generous with the cast, providing each of us the room to explore and take chances.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Max and what aspect of his character would you like to carry on into your daily life long after the show ends?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: Max is an intelligent critical thinker, who cares deeply about the people who matter to him. He also knows how to survive. He understands the power of art, and the value of supporting those with talent and potential. He also understands the power of humor, and he often uses humor to deal with the incredible stress of impending danger.  I feel akin to him because of all of this, which is one of the reasons I am glad I’m playing the role.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Most of your professional career has taken place in New York, but as of late, Nashville audiences have gotten the chance to experience your gifts, having previously starred as Buddy in Nashville Repertory Theatre’s Elf this past holiday season. Are you a full-fledged Nashvillian now and what drew you to Music City?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: My family and I have been able to spend a lot more quality time with extended family members who are based here, since setting up a home base in Nashville. One of the great things about being here has been the opportunity to work in the theater, and with multiple companies in the area. I’ve met so many talented, kind, and creative people! I still have strong ties to New York City, and I grew up right outside of it. I am also still called to work there regularly, so I get the best of both worlds!  I would love to see even more collaboration between the various theater companies in Nashville, and their supporters. There is so much substantive, beautiful work going on in Nashville because of companies like Studio Tenn, Nashville Rep, CPA Arts, Street Theatre Co, Verge, TM Productions, The Nashville Shakespeare Festival, Nashville Theater School, Nashville Children’s Theatre, The Theater Bug, etc.  I hope anyone coming to see The Sound of Music will be encouraged to support all of these companies and their efforts over the coming season!  If you do, you’ll run into me again; it’s going to be an exciting season across the board!

 


 

Studio Tenn and CPA Arts‘ The Sound of Music opens at Soli Deo Center Thursday, June 22 and continues through July 16. Tickets range in price from $35-$70. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets.

Up next for Studio Tenn, not only does their 23/24 Season, dubbed A Season of Icons, open October 19-29 with Million Dollar Quartet, that production also marks the inaugural presentation in Studio Tenn‘s new state-of-the-art home at the newly constructed The Turner Theatre at The Factory at Franklin. CLICK HERE for tickets to Million Dollar Quartet as well as the rest of the coming season, including: It’s a Wonderful Life, Driving Miss Daisy and Cabaret. In the meantime, be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook. Then #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Interview, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva, John-Mark McGaha, Laurie, Rapid Fire, rapid fire 20q, Studio Tenn, the sound of music

Theatre Review: ‘Here You Come Again’ new musical featuring Dolly Parton tunes, concludes Tennessee debut Memorial Day Weekend at The Franklin Theatre

May 28, 2023 by Jonathan

Written by Bruce Vilanch, Gabriel Barre and Tricia Paoluccio, Here You Come Again is a jukebox musical featuring songs written and made popular by National Treasure and Tennessee Goddess, Dolly Parton. Following a successful premiere in October of 2022 at the Deleware Theatre Company, and a popular December run in West Palm Beach, the musical comedy has come to Dolly’s home state for its Tennessee debut in collaboration with Studio Tenn at The Franklin Theatre with shows Wednesday, May 17 through Sunday, May 28.

As for the premise, it’s a clever, but simple plot. At the beginning of the pandemic, Kevin (played in this production by Zach Sutton), a well-meaning, but down-on-his-luck waiter/aspiring comic is forced to move into his parent’s upstate New York home to set quarantine when the world shuts down. Further complicating things, Kevin’s Mom, a bit of a germaphobe before there was such a thing, has  relegated her son to living in the attic, rather than in the main level of the house with his parents. She’s even devised a sort of makeshift dumbwaiter to deliver his food without contact by setting a tray on the drop-down attic stairs, which he retrieves by hooking to the end of a garden tool of some sort.

Further isolating Kevin, his parents are never seen in the play, and only his Mom’s voice is heard from off-stage from time to time. As the play begins, the audience gets their first glimpse at the show’s only set, the attic. Brilliantly created by Scenic Designer Anna Louizos with assistance from D. Craig M Napoliello, with lighting by Alessandra Docherty and assistant Isabella Gill-Gomez, the attic is easily recognized as both the family’s preferred storage area for seasonal decoration and Kevin’s former childhood playroom/teenage hangout. With pop culture relics from the far-distance 1980s, the attic set design is cleverly littered with things like a discarded GameBoy, an old Chineses Checkers boardgames and what appeared to be a single right Nike Air. But it’s the shrine to everyone’s favorite Country Music Songbird, Dolly Parton that’s most impressive…and I must admit relatable. I mean, switch all the Dolly posters, magazine pictures and photographs covering the walls for, say The Bionic Woman’s Lindsay Wagner, and you’d have my childhood bedroom.

As Sutton’s Kevin paces around the attic, he offers the audience a bit of exposition by breaking the fourth wall and explaining the above-mentioned romantic breakup and current living situation to kick things off. In an obvious state of depression, Kevin then walks over the a small tabletop record player, carefully takes out his vintage copy of Dolly Parton’s 1977 hit record, Here You Come Again, puts the needle on, then walks over to the twin bed across the room picks up a Costco-sized tub of Cheesy Puffs, lovingly caresses the tub and covers himself with the bed sheet.

As the light dims, the tune playing on the record swells and as if by divine intervention…or make that DIVA-ne intervention, the life-size image from the poster on the back of the attic door comes to life as Dolly herself steps forward into the room belting out a familiar tune. Here’s the thing, though. The song isn’t really playing on the record player. The familiar instrumentation is actually coming from backstage courtesy the show’s houseband featuring Miles Aubrey on Guitar, Jeff Cox on Bass, Jon Epcar on Drums and Eugene Gwozdz on Piano. As for the vocals, no Dolly didn’t drive across town from her nearby Brentwood home, instead is actress/singer and aforementioned co-writer of the show, Tricia Paoluccio as an apparition/vision/guardian angel in the form of the Double-D Diva herself.

Before seeing the show, I kept hearing from friends at Studio Tenn, including the company’s Artistic Director, Patrick Cassidy, that if you “close your eyes, you’d swear it was Dolly herself”. Now, here’s the thing, I’m a huge Dolly fan, and over the years I’ve had the absolute thrill and honor to meet her, chat with her a time or two and get to know her and a few of her siblings. Shoot, the night I saw Here You Come Again, Dolly’s youngest sister, Rachel was sitting at the table next to me and we chatted a bit. NO, that’s not a name-drop, ‘cause like I always say, “I never drop a name I can’t pick up”. It’s just a fact, a fact of living and working in Music City. You just never know who you’re gonna see or get to know.

Cassidy was right, she does indeed sound like Dolly when she sings. She’s got Dolly’s vocal infections down-pat, although with Paoluccio’s own musical theatre background (she’s appeared on Broadway in productions of Fiddler on the Roof, A View from the Bridge and The Green Bird) there are times when she makes the tunes her own by adding a bit more of a theatrical flourish, extending a note here, or revealing her talent with a run there. What’s more, thanks to Makeup Designer, Brian Strumwasser, Costume Designer, Bobby Pierce and other assets, whether God-given or man-enhanced, Paoluccio looks like Dolly…well, 70s/80s era Dolly at any rate. Yes, if you close your eyes, you can almost hear the Appalachian songstress, but in certain scenes, when Paoluccio turns just so in profile, that she looks the spitting image of Dolly, herself. But that’s not where Paoluccio’s Dolly transformation ends. She’s even got Dolly’s unique joy-filled speaking voice down! And I mean down…down to what I call Dolly’s “giggle squeak”. If a rhinestone could talk and sing, it’d sound just like Dolly, and so does Paoluccio!

A bit more about the wardrobe. When Paoluccio’s Dolly first steps forward from the door poster, she’s wearing a cocktail-length bedazzled number with billowing bell sleeves. I noticed almost immediately that the fabric of the dress was reminiscent of a butterfly’s markings and yes, when Paoluccio raised both arms at the crescendo of the opening song, the bell sleeves did mimic the silhouette of a butterfly in flight, a wonderful wink to Bob Mackie-designed dress Dolly wore. In fact, it was created for the 1979 tv special Dolly and Carol in Nashville, co-starring Carol Burnett. Considering that special was filmed right here in Nashville, the butterfly dress, while gorgeous, provided a fun little If You Know You Know moment for true Dolly nerds like myself.

Other costume choices, while not as obviously based on Dolly’s own wardrobe, all have that sparkle, that spirit, that gussied-up bigger-than-life 80s Dollyesque vibe. Which works perfectly considering the tunes featured in the show were all originally released between 1969 (the Jack Clement-penned Dolly and Porter Waggoner hit, Just Someone That I Used to Know) and 1989 (Why’d You Come in Here Lookin’ Like That from Dolly’s 1989 offering, White Limozeen).

While the full title of the show is Here You Come Again: How Dolly Parton Saved My Life in 12 Easy Songs, there’s actually a total of 15 toe-tappin’, finger-snappin’ Dolly favorites featured within the show. On the subject of tunes included in the show, like most jukebox musicals, the music helps move the story along or support the narrative. In the case of Here You Come Again, Music Director Gwozdz and the show’s writers have done a fantastic job of peppering Dolly hits throughout the show at just the right moments to accentuate or propel the storyline. Hush-A-Bye Hard Times, a sweet, but lesser-known tune originally included on Dolly’s 1980 crossover hit album 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs near the top of the show, perfectly expresses what I think we all felt during the early days of the pandemic. Same for Two Doors Down, another hit from Dolly’s Here You Come Again release. Included herein to parallel the FOMO we all experienced during isolation.

And Yes, megahits like Jolene, 9 to 5, as well as the bizarro Me and Little Andy and showstopper, I Will Always Love You also find there way into the show and each one is performed with enthusiasm and a touch of Dolly-worthy fun and excitement.

While most of the songs featured were written by Dolly, even the prolific singer/songwriter occasionally records tunes penned by others. Why’d You Come in Here Lookin Like That, Sing For the Common Man and the Dolly Parton/Kenny Rogers megahit, Islands in the Stream are all prefect placed and wonderfully sung. Interestingly, Islands, written by the Bee Gees, is followed by a funny, but very un-Dolly bit of snark courtesy Vilanch’s script.

Speaking of duets, Paoluccio’s Dolly gets a bit of help from time to time as Sutton’s Kevin joins her for a handful of songs throughout the show, showcasing his own talents as a singer.

As I mentioned above, Bruce Vilanch created the show alongside Paoluccio and Barre. Specifically, Vilanch is credited in the playbill as Book Writer, in layman’s terms, the spoken dialogue of the show, alongside director, Barre and star, Paoluccio. Whether you know Vilanch by name, or by sight, you’ve likely heard his work, as he’s a six-time Emmy-winning writer, having won two for writing special material for the Academy Awards and four for work on various television variety show specials. Over the years he’s written for the Academy Awards numerous times, as well as the Tonys, the People’s Choice Awards and many other awards shows. Bringing it all full-circle, Vilanch also wrote a handful of episodes of Dolly Parton’s late-80s variety series, Dolly, so who better to sprinkle a little Dolly dust into the lines of Here You Come Again?

With Paoluccio’s absolute near-perfect Dolly helping Sutton’s Kevin rediscover his own worth, refocus on his own life and reignite his passions through the comfortable familiarity of Dolly’s music, Here You Come Again is a joy from start to finish.

Studio Tenn’s special presentation of Here You Come Again wraps with a final show Sunday, May 28 at 2 p.m. Tickets range in price from $90 for cocktail table seating and the first few rows of theatre seats to $70 for the majority of theatre seats on to $55 for balcony. CLICK HERE for tickets. Didn’t make it to the Tennessee performances? Follow Here You Come Again on Instagram to see where Paoluccio and company are headed next.

Following Here You Come Again, Studio Tenn wraps their current season with a production of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, The Sound of Music co-presented by CPA Arts on stage at CPA’s Soli Deontaes Center from June 22- July 16. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook. Until then, #GoSeeTheShow!

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: 2023, Broadway, Dolly Parton, FRANKLIN THEATRE, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Studio Tenn, Theatre, Tricia Paoluccio

Rapid Fire Q&A with Ballet Hispánico dancers Amanda del Valle and Chris Bloom; the company’s ‘Doña Perón’ on stage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre April 28-29

April 24, 2023 by Jonathan

On Friday, April 28 and Saturday, April 29, Tennessee Performing Arts Center will host Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón as part of TPAC’s inaugural International Dance Series. Based out of New York and founded in 1970, Ballet Hispánico is the largest Latinx/Latine/Hispanic culture organization in the US and widely recognized as a leader in bringing the message of cultural history and inclusivity through dance.

As the company prepares to bring Doña Perón, the story of iconic Argentine First Lady, Eva Perón to Nashville for the Music City debut at TPAC’s Polk Theatre, I’ve had the incredible opportunity to chat with two of the company’s lead dancers, Miami Native, Amanda del Valle, who’s dancing the titular role of Eva Perón and Virginia-born Chris Bloom, the ballet’s Juan Perón for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire Q&A.

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RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH DOÑA PERÓN’s AMANDA del VALLE AND CHRIS BLOOM

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH AMANDA DEL VALLE, EVITA in BALLET HISPÁNICO’s DOÑA PERÓN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I just have to begin by saying I’ve been a wee bit obsessed with all things Eva Perón since I was a kid and my favorite aunt took me to see the Broadway musical based on her life. Prior to taking one the role of Evita, how familiar were you with her story?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I actually had not heard of Evita Perón until a few weeks before the choreographic process. I remember when we found out we would be performing a new work based on Eva’s life; I called my family to tell them and they informed me a little bit about who she was and what she was so famous for. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From what I know, you first became interested in ballet at a very young age. What memories do you have of your time training with Marielena Mencia and Yanis Pikieris at Miami Youth Ballet?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I was about 10 years old when I took my first ballet class, and it’s where all my dreams began.  My favorite memories are the ones where we would be in the studio rehearsing until 10 o’clock at night, sometimes later, because we were so focused and driven that we would lose track of time. Our moms would have to come upstairs to get us out of the studio. It was home and we never wanted to leave. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your second season with Ballet Hispánico. How did you come to join the company?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I was introduced to Ballet Hispánico through my mentor and role model Melissa Verdecía. I watched her dance with Ballet Hispánico and knew I wanted to be a part of an organization that allowed me to not only grow in my artistry but also allowed me to grow closer to my roots and culture with dance.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about working with Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, the show’s choreographer?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: Working with Annabelle Lopez Ochoa was very exciting. I love how she caters to each dancer and what they are capable of, and pushes you to go further than what you think you are capable of. I have always admired her work and individuality as a choreographer and person. Also working with a female choreographer on a piece about a female icon is a very empowering experience.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of the creative team behind Doña Perón, costumer Mark Eric has created dozens of costumes for the show. Exactly how many costume changes do you have, and what are your favorite costumes among them?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: The role of Evita Perón consists of exactly seven costume changes that happen on and off stage, with a total of 6 costumes. It’s hard to pick a favorite costume because they are all so beautiful and show the many different parts of Evita but I would have to pick the last dress that she changes into on stage for her final duet before her death. I love how it combines the classy, business, and strong regal essence of Evita. 

 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH CHRIS BLOOM, JUAN PERÓN in BALLET HISPÁNICO’s DOÑA PERÓN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As I mentioned when I chatted with Amanda earlier, I’ve been interested in Evia Perón story since I was a kid. In Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón you play Juan Perón. What can you tell me about the character and how you prepared to portray him in movement?

CHRIS BLOOM: This character is interesting because he is a mix of things. Annabelle wasn’t interested in telling fairy tales but the stories of actual people. Real people are flawed and complex and that makes rich ground for storytelling. Juan Perón was many things and not nearly all of them were good but I do believe he loved Eva genuinely. I try my best to play him like a real person. The real man had many political ideas in common with the fascist governments/leaders of the day but he cared about helping Argentina’s disadvantaged people. He came from wealth and was driven in his pursuit of power to the point of ordering the hostile takeover of his country’s newspapers and is known to have ordered the imprisonment of journalists and other people that opposed his agenda. Was Evita a conduit for gaining power? She was. Did he love that about her? I imagine he did. But I also imagine he loved her as a person as well. I try to play all of this each time I perform in Doña Perón. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This year marks your tenth season Ballet Hispánico. What is it about this dance company that keeps you excited to perform?

CHRIS BLOOM: It is the stories we tell and how we tell them on stage that keeps me coming back year after year. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I asked Amanda about her early ballet interest. How old were you when you discovered ballet and began considering it as a career path?

CHRIS BLOOM: I was 15 years old when I took my first ballet class. I had always known it was a possible career as there was a great deal of art in my home growing up. I fell in love with the aspirational rigor of the art form and honestly never looked back. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Near the end of 2022, Doña Perón was presented at The Kennedy Center and just earlier this month, on Friday, April 14, PBS aired one of those performances as part of their series Next at the Kennedy Center. So a two-part question for you: What’s it like to dance at the famed performing arts venue and how do you feel about being part of a broadcast that will allow people who might not otherwise get the chance, to see such a spectacular piece?

CHRIS BLOOM: Performing at the Kennedy Center is always an incredible experience! I grew up about 60 miles due west of DC in Frederick Co, VA so I can remember seeing many dance companies there as a kid. Performing there is evidence of a dream fulfilled. The chance to reach a larger audience through the broadcast of our work on PBS is as exciting as it gets. There is nothing better than getting a text from a friend saying “Hey! I saw you on TV!”

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those who do get the chance to see Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón, whether via the PBS special, or live as the tour continues, what do you hope audiences take from the experience?

CHRIS BLOOM: I hope that audiences take culture away from the experience of seeing the company in action. Latinx cultures are a multiplicity not a monolith and through our performances audiences get to see complexity and authenticity rather than stereotypes. My greatest hope as a performer is to leave audiences with a sense of curiosity and an appreciation of beauty. 

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Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón can be see live onstage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre Friday and Saturday, April 28 and 29 at 8p.m. each evening. Tickets rang in price from $45 to $95. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. To learn more about Doña Perón, Ballet Hispánico, del Valle, Bloom and the rest of the company’s dancers and creatives, CLICK HERE or follow them on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and Vimeo.  Not in Nashville? CLICK HERE to see where Ballet Hispánico will be performing next.

Doña Perón marks the second in three productions visiting TPAC as part of their first-ever International Dance Series, MOMIX Alice being the first. In case you missed my chat with members of MOMIX dance company, CLICK HERE to check out those conversations.

Next up for TPAC’s International Dance Series is Scottish Ballet’s The Crucible, onstage at TPAC’s Jackson Hall May 19 and 20. CLICK HERE for more info. Be sure to check out TPAC online and on socials by clicking any of the following:  TPAC.org,  TPAC on Instagram,  TPAC on Facebook, TPAC on Twitter and TPAC on YouTube.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Live Performance, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A Tagged With: Amanda del Valle, Ballet, Ballet Hispanico, Celebrity Interview, Chris Bloom, dance, Dance Company, dancers, Dona Peron, Eva Peron, Evita, Interview, Juan Peron, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Touring Company, TPAC

Rapid Fire 20Q With Cast of ‘Arsenic and Old Lace’; Opening April 14 at Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre

April 11, 2023 by Jonathan

Since its Broadway debut back in 1941, and thanks largely to the 1944 film adaptation starring Cary Grant as directed by Frank Capra, playwright Joseph Kesselring’s Arsenic and Old Lace has been a fan favorite. While the Cary Grant film is indeed a classic, I gotta admit, I prefer the 1969 tv adaptation starring Bob Crane, but mostly because Helen Hayes and Lillian Gish co-starred as the hilariously murderous Brewster sisters in that one. When I heard The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre was mounting a production of the show, I knew what I’d feature in the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, RAPID FIRE 20Q. To that end, what follows are chats with Matt Smith, Linda Speir, Adele Akin and Brad Morgan as the prepare for opening night of Arsenic and Old Lace, on stage at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre (108 Donelson Pike, Nashville, TN 37214) Friday, April 14 through Sunday, April 30.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF KEETON THEATRE’s ARSENIC AND OLD LACE

RAPID FIRE WITH MATT SMITH, ARSENIC AND OLD LACE’s MORTIMER BREWSTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Mortimer, the character you play in The Keeton Theatre’s Arsenic and Old Lace?

MATT SMITH:  Mortimer was raised in Brooklyn by two elderly aunts who adore him and who he adores. But given his family’s checkered past and his view of Brooklyn as old-fashioned and stifling, he leaves for the excitement and possibility of New York City and eventually becomes a prominent theater critic. This is ironic, as he “loathes” the theater and considers it to be on its last legs. Still, it pays the bills much more handily than his passion for Henry David Thoreau ever could and lends him a bit of big-city arrogance when he returns to visit his humble hometown. When he falls for the local minister’s daughter, who lives next door to his Aunts, his visits become more frequent. He ultimately discovers that the Brewster family has more dark secrets than he could have possibly imagined, which sets him on a frantic but entirely earnest course of action to protect the ones he loves…and all manner of hilarity ensues!

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: Written by playwright Joseph Kesselring, the work became more widely known thanks to the 1944 film adaptation starring Cary Grant as Mortimer as directed by Frank Capra. In preparing for the role, did you revisit previous incarnations?

MATT SMITH:  Although I have seen the film, I try not to let any previous incarnation of any role inform my approach to creating a character. I find that especially important if the role is as iconic as this one. Meisner said, “Acting is behaving truthfully under imaginary circumstances,” and I believe that may be the best bit of acting advice I’ve ever heard. I think it’s impossible for any person to behave truthfully on stage while letting the choices another actor has made inform their own. It creates too many layers between you and the character if that makes sense. And besides, I don’t walk talk or look like Cary Grant, so there’s certainly no reason to try to!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As mentioned above, the ’44 film adaptation was directed by Capra. Michael Welch is directing this production. How has it been working with him on this project?

MATT SMITH: Michael is a dear friend, but one of the things I admire about him is that once he arrives at the theater he’s there to work. Period. No wasted time, no messing around, no favoritism. We’re here to put on the best show we can for everyone who’s gracious enough to part with their hard-earned money to see it. This is my first time working with him as a director and I’ve been impressed with his commitment and clear vision for the project, his work ethic and his attention to quality and detail. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For a play that’s been produced around the world for some eighty years, what do you think keeps audiences dying to see it? (See what I did there?)

MATT SMITH: The simplest answer is, it’s really freakin’ funny. It’s well-written and plays like a freight-train on fire as it races to its hilarious climax. And while I’m no deep thinker or psychiatrist, I think it’s pretty clear that there’s a long-standing precedent in the history of human art-making that death and darkness make for the best and most popular comedy. Murder kills! (See what I did there?)

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Alright, since I won’t be chatting with Tim Bush, Let’s give a little shout out to him. After all, he plays Jonathan Brewster, and since the character shares my first name, and has been played by some pretty iconic actors including Boris Karloff, Raymond Massey and Fred Gwynne, and you yourself recently played Jonathan just last year in Playhouse 615’s production of Arsenic and Old Lace, I gotta ask…how does Tim’s take on the creepy character measure up?

MATT SMITH: I’ve had the opportunity to play different roles in the same play a few times before and it’s a fascinating experience to have “your” lines given to you, as I’m hearing Tim do in the current production. Jonathan Brewster is a role he is physically perfect for, as he towers over everyone else on the stage (and no Tim, I’m not implying that you look like Boris Karloff). I’m a pretty big Tim Bush fan. We were in “I Hate Hamlet” together several years ago and I’m sure it’s not hard to imagine how great he was as Barrymore. Beyond that, he’s a damn fine actor and a wonderful human being. As to his take on the role, I find his approach to Jonathan to be refreshingly non-one-dimensional, by which I mean that he’s not just menacing. He is that and I’m really enjoying the psychological warfare we’re engaging in during the show. But he’s also done a wonderful job of discovering the comic opportunities “hidden” in the role. I’m very much looking forward to our game of cat and mouse as well as the opportunity to finally face Mortimer’s fears in our standoff. I think his Jonathan is going to be a lot of fun for audiences to experience.

RAPID FIRE WITH LINDA SPEIR, ARSENIC AND OLD LACE’s ABBY BREWSTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When you and I chatted about me interviewing some of the cast, you noted that Abby is described a “plump little darling” in the character description in the script. You’re darling, but hardly plump…Was there ever any discussion of making your more dowdy in the role?

LINDA SPEIR: There was no discussion of how I would play the role.  I just looked to the script  for my character and played my version of Aunt Abby.  I may have played her a little stronger in spots than the script intended but I always play a bit of myself in all of my roles.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I chatted with Matt, I mentioned the fact that Arsenic and Old Lace has been around for 80-plus years. In that time, some of Broadway and Hollywood’s greatest leading ladies have played the Brewster sisters, among them: Josephine Hull, who originated the role of Abby on Broadway and revisited the role for the Cary Grant 1944 film; Dorothy Stickney and Helen Hayes, who each played Abby in mid-century TV adaptations. Heck, even All in the Family’s Jean Stapleton stepped into the role in a late-80s national tour. How much fun are you having making her your own? 

LINDA SPEIR: I’m having a great deal of fun playing Aunt Abby.  We do have to remember she is  somewhat crazy!  She (in my interpretation) is just a wee bit flirtatious with her “gentlemen”.. Think the spider and the fly.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s your favorite aspect of playing Abby?

LINDA SPEIR: She is a lovely, gracious lady but underneath there’s a layer of insanity.  After all Arsenic is a dark comedy. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT:  I understand the show is being costumed by Donna Driver. What can you tell me about the wardrobe choices in the show?

LINDA SPEIR:  There were some difficulties in finding clothing that looked period; however, Donna did a good job. The Aunts are not very up to date or showy.   Of course I have my own “old lady shoes”  that I ordered sometime back as I have done other period shows.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As one half of the Brewster sisters, you share much of your stage time alongside Adele Akin as Martha Brewster. I understand this isn’t your first time to appear onstage with her. How is she as a scene partner?

LINDA SPEIR: I’ve known Adele for perhaps 25 years.  We’ve been on stage together several times at several theatres including ACT 1, Boiler Room and more recently at Pull Tight Theatre.  We were in Waiting in the Wings at Pull Tight in January-February 2020 before the world shut down due to Covid.  We interact well with each other both on and off stage.  She is a delight as the slightly addled Aunt Martha. 

RAPID FIRE WITH ADELE AKIN, ARSENIC AND OLD LACE’s MARTHA BREWSTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Martha Brewster to you?

ADELE AKIN: Martha is a sweet caring woman. She lives to do good for others.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Longtime Keeton patrons might recognize you from previous roles, including appearances in productions of The Spitfire Grill and A Scattered, Smothered & Covered Christmas and more. How much fun are you having being back on the Keeton stage?

ADELE AKIN: It’s like coming home! I was in the inaugural season which began with Nuncrackers in 2004. I know there are ticket holders who have seen every play in the last almost 20 years. It will be a great reunion!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I chatted with your fellow Brewster sister, Linda, I asked her about sharing scenes with you, so it’s only fair to get your response to sharing the stage with her. How is Linda as a scene partner?

ADELE AKIN: The best! We have known each other for probably 30 years and have been in several productions together but never opposite each other as we are in this show. I’ve been hoping for this for a long time. I respect Linda’s work immensely and I’m so happy to be working with her! The entire cast is terrific but Linda holds a special place in my acting heart. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For a show that features multiple murders, it’s dang funny. What’s your favorite line or scene whether it’s yours or someone else’s?

ADELE AKIN: Actually, my favorite line is spoken by Officer O’Hara played by Jenna Salb. She says “Where else would you eat?”  I will not explain that.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In the spirit of the play, IF you were to do it, how would you get away with it?

ADELE AKIN: What a great question! I guess I’d have to live in a small cabin somewhere in the woods where the only witnesses would be the deer and the foxes with a couple of skunks thrown in there.

RAPID FIRE WITH BRAD MORGAN, ARSENIC AND OLD LACE’s TEDDY BREWSTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand you’re a recent Nashville transplant. What drew you to the area and how has your experience in Nashville and with the Keeton been thus far?

BRAD MORGAN: Yes, I just moved here in November. I had visited Nashville several times over the last two years to help a friend move to the area and found that I really liked Nashville. I am a musician and what better place to relocate to than Music City. Also, being involved in Theatre for the past 45 years, I thought auditioning for a local  theater group would help me acclimate to the area and make some new friends. The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre is close to my house so I decided to audition and was lucky enough to get cast. I had never done Arsenic and Old Lace and so far it’s been a great deal of fun.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You play Teddy Brewster, who thinks he’s Teddy Roosevelt. You’ve actually played Roosevelt before, having appeared in Cider Mills Playhouse’s Tintypes back in 2012. Did having played Roosevelt in the past influenced your character in Arsenic and Old Lace?

BRAD MORGAN: Not at all. Two very different characters. First of all Tintypes is a musical and an Ensemble cast that play multiple roles. Teddy Roosevelt was one of multiple characters I played, and was only in two or three scenes. Also, that character was more of a historical depiction of Teddy Roosevelt. Whereas, Teddy Brewster is more of an impersonation of Teddy Roosevelt. Teddy Brewster’s interpretation of Teddy Roosevelt, but still very much Teddy Brewster.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the subject of your previous acting experience, your credits include quite a few well-known shows, including The Rainmaker, Death of a Salesman, Man of La Mancha and more, but what caught my eye…you appeared in One Life to Live and Another World. I can’t lie, I still watch Days of Our Lives…so, its the soap credits for me…what do you recall from your appearances on those two classic soaps?

BRAD MORGAN: Well, at first, it was very exciting but ultimately it just turns into another job. I really don’t like camera and film work. It’s very tedious and boring. A great deal of waiting around for the technical aspects like lighting, camera angles, sound and reshooting of scenes. I much prefer acting on stage and the process of creating a character for a live audience.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Kevin Driver has designed the set. What can you tell me about the Brewster home as envisioned by Driver?

BRAD MORGAN: I am not a designer, so I have a great deal of admiration and respect for designers, scenic, lighting, costumes, etc.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences will recalling after having seen Arsenic and Old Lace?

BRAD MORGAN: That they had a good laugh at the crazy world of the Brewsters.

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Arsenic and Old Lace opens at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre Friday, April 14 with performances Friday-Sunday, April 14-16, Thursday, April 20-Sunday, April 23 and Thursday, April 27-Sunday, April 30. Thursdays are Show Only. Friday and Saturday evenings and Sunday matinees offer Dinner/Lunch and Show tickets, OR Show Only Tickets. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or for more information.

Following Arsenic and Old Lace, The Keeton Theatre closes out their 2022/2023 Season with Memphis: An Original Story of Love, Soul & Rock ’N’ Roll onstage June 9-25, 2023. CLICK HERE for tickets or more info. Season Subscribers may purchase tickets to Memphis beginning April 13. General Public tickets available beginning April 20.

In the meantime, to keep up with the latest from The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre, follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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Filed Under: Entertainment, Live Performance, nashville, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Adele Akin, Brad Morgan, Dinner Theatre, Interview, Linda Speir, Matt Smith, The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre

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