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Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time’ on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru April 2

March 31, 2023 by Jonathan

Directed by Micah-Shane Brewer, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s inspired and inspiring production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time moves into its second and final week with performances Friday, March 31 at 7:30p.m., Saturday, April 1 at 2p.m. and 7:30p.m. and Sunday, April 2 at 2:00p.m. at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre, I recently had the opportunity to chat with four the company’s incredible cast members for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q. Kindly taking time out of their performance schedules for these conversations are Lauren Berst, Nat McIntyre, Eric D. Pasto-Crosby and JR Robles. Berst and McIntyre play Judy and Ed Boone, parents of 15 year-old Christopher Boone, a young autistic math wiz who finds himself at the center of the titular mystery. Pasto-Crosby and JR Robles play a multitude of townsfolk who meet young Christopher along his journey. What follows are my conversations with the cast.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST MEMBERS OF THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s NAT MCINTYRE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re no stranger to Nashville Rep, having appeared in Good Monsters and Shakespeare in Love and having directed their production of A Streetcar Named Desire. What keeps brining your back to the company?

NAT McINTYRE: Since moving to Nashville, starting a family, and taking a full time professorship at Lipscomb I have had to be more intentional with the work I choose.  It’s very important to me that the work challenges and excites me and audiences.  The Rep has been doing that work.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Ed Boone?

NAT McINTYRE: He’s trying really hard

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand you had read Mark Haddon’s novel upon which the play is based. What’s most surprising about the way the story has been brought to the stage?

NAT McINTYRE: I read the book so long ago.  I mostly was surprised they would try to make it into a play because I thought it would be REALLY hard.  But, it turns out Simon Stephens and bunch of curious artists that don’t take themselves too seriously make it possible.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparation of our chat, I discovered among your many credits, you appeared in a season 2 episode of Devious Maids, playing a police officer. Just gonna say it. I loved that series. Bringing the question back to Curious Incident…What’s an advantage of performing in theatre as opposed to film or television?

NAT McINTYRE: Film and TV is fun.  It also pays a lot of money.  But nothing can replace the pulse and breath of a live audience.  The best actors let them be an extra character in the play I think.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How has your experience been working with Curious Incident director, Micah-Shane Brewer?

NAT McINTYRE: This play is hard. I had never worked with Micah-Shane.  I was nervous ;).  But, that dude has stepped up big time. He is a prepared artist who makes room for his actors, doesn’t need to have all the answers, and does not take himself too seriously.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s LAUREN BERST

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Last time I saw you onstage, you had invited me to attend a performance of Nashville Story Garden’s thought-provoking production of The Welkin. Now you’re playing Judy Boone in Nashville Rep’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Two vastly different shows, but with the common thread of drama. Do you find yourself typically drawn towards more dramatic roles?

LAUREN BERST: Thank you for supporting and promoting Nashville theater, Jonathan! I love comedy and drama equally and am jazzed by the challenges they each present. I am primarily lured to the story being told rather than the genre so if that’s in a comedy or drama, I want to go on the journey. For the The Welkin, we were compelled to tell that story, and getting to tell it with 12 amazing women on stage with me was a huge draw. For Curious Incident, I loved the book and the play and was excited about the idea of exploring the story as an ensemble. The opportunity to return to Nashville Rep was an added bonus so I jumped at the chance. I am grateful to get to do this show with this wonderful group of people.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about Judy Boone that attracted you to the role?

LAUREN BERST: I love Judy. And what’s interesting about this play is that most of what we learn about the characters comes from Christopher’s vantage point so finding a through line or heart of a character is a fun challenge. I enjoy finding the sweet, strong, rule-breaking parts of her and expanding or contracting from there. She is an ill-equipped force to be reckoned with.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You mention the character of Christopher, which leads to my next question…How has it been sharing scenes with Ben Friesen, who’s at the center of the action playing young Christopher Boone?

LAUREN BERST: It’s wonderful to work with Ben. Ben is a champ! His exploration of Christopher is open, honest, and spot on. He’s a great collaborator. This show is a lot of responsibility and he handles it with confidence and excitement which is a testament to his ability. And his eagerness is infectious. Ben has created a well-rounded, and heart-wrenching character. Audiences will be rooting for Christopher.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Also at the center of the story is the titular dog. You yourself are a pet-owner, so I gotta ask…how’s Ms. Roxie? AND…I’ve seen a few rehearsal posts giving a first look at the puppy involved in the show. Has that pup become everyone’s emotional support dog, considering the seriousness of the piece?

LAUREN BERST: Oh thank you for asking about THE MOST important parts of my life and this play! First of all, Roxie is the spoiled rotten dachshund I adopted six years ago and she’s amazing. In fact, she is curled next to me as I type this so any spelling or grammar errors can be blamed on her.

Scottie, the sweet puppy in the play, (the *actual* star of the play – don’t worry Ben thinks so too) is precious, smart and adorable. When she comes into the room everyone melts a little bit, our shoulders relax, our dopamine and serotonin levels skyrocket. I have to sit on my hands sometimes because it’s all I can do not to put her in my bag and take her home with me. And I’m not exaggerating. You’ll see. She’s too cute. It is impossible that something so cute exists in real life.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’ve seen a few behind-the-scenes images of the set, designed by Cody Stockstill with lighting by Darren Levin and sound by Gregg Perry. What has impressed you most about the way the creative team has brought this production to Nashville Rep’s intimate stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theater?

LAUREN BERST: What HASN’T impressed me?! The creative team has pulled out all of the stops to make this show an intimate spectacle in the Johnson Theater. Cody, Darren, and Gregg tell this story in ways that go beyond the script. They have designed, composed, and programmed each moment of this play to enhance the story telling, conjure a little magic, and help us get a peek into Christopher’s mind. And they’re so dang good at what they do. It would be a very different play without their designs. I’m excited for audiences to experience the world they’ve created.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As a member of the ensemble of Curious Incident, you take on a multitude of roles. What’s the most fun aspect of this as opposed to portraying a singular character?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I thoroughly enjoy coming up with fully realized characters, and I get to do that for about six different people in the show. Both how they move how they talk how they interact with people. And also structuring just how they interact with the plot, do they influence the main characters for good things or bad things that’s always just a fun fantastic journey that we get to go on. If I’m being really honest, it’s the multiple different accents that I get to do for the show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the flip side, what’s most challenging about playing more than one character in a piece?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I would say the most challenging aspect of playing multiple characters is figuring out how they are different, but not distracting. It’s very easy to come up with different characters but sometimes those characters don’t work with the world of the play or help tell the story as well as other choices would. So making sure that you make the choices that helped tell this version of curious incident is the most important.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who all do you play in Curious Incident?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I play Roger Shears, the Duty Sergeant, Mr. Wise, man behind counter and Voice two.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of your Curious Incident roles, do you have a particular favorite?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: It’s kind of a tie between Roger Shears and the Duty sSergeant. Roger Shears is pretty despicable and gross, which is kind of fun to play. I know that probably sounds wrong. But the Duty Sergeant is probably one of my favorite accents and characterizations, since he’s honestly stolen from a Guy Ritchie movie.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to your onstage duties, you’re also the show’s fight choreographer. You’re a member of the Society of American Fight Directors. What can you tell me about that organization and how you became involved in the art of fight choreography?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: yYou can join the SAFD by paying membership. It is a training organization that brings everyone up to speed on how to safely perform fights on stage. I thoroughly enjoy multiple aspects of this organization. I love what they have done to bring safety and realism to violent moments on stage. If you are looking for training there are  workshops, I will be teaching at the A Town Throwdown in Atlanta. The society has a workshop every other month all over the US for you to train in multiple weapon disciplines for three or two days.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s JR ROBLE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first time working with Nashville Rep. How’s the experience been thus far?

JR ROBLES: I’ve had a blast! I’ve always wanted to do a show with Nashville Rep. This experience has been so gratifying and revelatory for me. I’ve had a chance to make some great new friends and work on an important piece of theatre with some of the most talented people around. In that process, I think I’ve grown a lot in my own artistic practices, and I’m so grateful for that. It’s been really challenging too—there’s a lot of movement and physicality in the show, and I’ve had to reactivate some of my choreography and dance training to remember how to do that. Mostly, I’ve felt so happy coming to work every day because I get to be part of this wonderful story with some amazing artists. It’s been wonderful.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Prior to our chat, I spoke with Eric Pasto-Crosby. Like Eric, you’re also playing numerous roles within the show. What roles are you playing?

JR ROBLES: So, I’m playing Voice Three, which includes a couple of policemen, a salty train passenger, a drunk train passenger (different guy), and Mr. Thompson, who is an oddball neighbor of Christopher’s (the play’s main character). Aside from that, I get to be a part of constructing the world of Christopher’s memory and mind where the play takes place. I really have fun with these kinds of roles because I can step into different people in different scenes, which is such a fun challenge. Much of that work, by the way, has been aided by Katie Cunningham, our dialects and accents coach. She’s worked very closely with us as we’ve made choices about these characters and giving them very specific voices that help color the world of Swindon and London that Christopher explores.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there a particular scene you’re involved in that you find most challenging?

JR ROBLES: Overall what has affected me most, and maybe what I love most about the play, is the very true-to-life depiction of how complicated family dynamics can be when there are flawed human beings trying to do their very best for themselves and each other in their lives. In general, the scenes I’m featured in are fun and help move the story along to get to the places where the challenging stuff in the play really is. The very dynamic relationships between Christopher, Ed, and Judy, and Christopher and Siobhan are the ones I think about the most. And most of those scenes I just get to sit and watch Ben, Nat, Lauren, and Sejal work magic on stage.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s the most fun role you’re portraying and why?

JR ROBLES: I have the most fun with Mr. Thompson, the goofy neighbor Cristopher interacts with in Act 1. I’ve gone through about 7 different iterations of this guy, trying to figure out where he came from, what accents he has, what he is up to when he’s not in the play, and even what kind of glasses he wears. Honorable mention goes to a character called “Drunk 2” (Eric Pasto-Crosby is Drunk 1) who literally has two drunken lines of dialogue. Each rehearsal so far, Eric and I have tried to out-drunk each other, and it gets crazier every time.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: So much of the show seems to encourage audiences to step out of their comfort zone and take time to consider what life must be like for the central character. Do you think that’s a fair assessment? AND…what other themes of the show have you found yourself contemplating during this process?

JR ROBLES: Yes, I think that’s an appropriate way to frame the experience of the play and also the vision that Micah-Shane has for the show. From the beginning, Micah-Shane has shared with us the idea that when we are performing the show, we are welcoming the audience into the mind of Christopher and, as much as possible, creating for the audience a unique world of what Christopher’s experience is like. I hope that people who come to the show will appreciate the efforts we’ve made to celebrate Christopher’s curiosity, bravery, and desire to lead the life he wants. I think the theme that resonates with me even more is the importance of personal growth. I love how the play presents that not just with Christopher, but also with Ed and Judy. Each of these characters has their own journey that is really powerful and complicated. And where they end up is so poignant and true to life.

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Nashville Repertory Theatre’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time continues with performances at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru Sunday, April 2. CLICK HERE for tickets. Next up for The Rep as they close out their 2022/2023 Season it’s Violet with Book and Lyrics by Brian Crawley and Music by Jeanine Tesori, on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre May 12-21. 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, Interview, Live Performance, Live Theatre, nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Performance, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Interview, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Theatre

Theatre Review: Circle Players’ Agatha Christie’s ‘Murder on the Orient Express’

January 28, 2023 by Jonathan

When I learned that Circle Players was mounting a production of playwright Ken Ludwig’s stage adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express, on stage through January 29 at The Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd), I was thrilled. In audience on opening weekend of Agatha Christie’s beloved mystery, I may have had higher expectation than some of the other theatre patrons in attendance. As I alluded when I chatted with the cast for one of my latest Rapid Fire 20Q interview, those higher expectations stem from the fact that I’m a bit of an Agatha Christie purist and nerd, having read my first of her works when I was probably no more than ten or eleven. My obsession didn’t stop there. I began to read her books thematically, in that when I’d travel with family on summer break vacations, I’d read such titles as Death in the Clouds (my first plane ride), The Floating Admiral (while on a boat) and The Blue Train (you get the idea). In October I’d read and reread Hallowe’en Party and darn it if December doesn’t still sees me revisit Hercule Porot’s Christmas. Heck, I’ve seen every film adaptation from Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple in the 1960s to Kenneth Branagh’s portrayal of Hercule Poirot in last year’s Death on the Nile, so yes, you could say I’m a superfan.

I love that Christie’s Estate contacted Ken Ludwig to ask if he’d be interested in adapting one of her books for the stage. Ludwig, known for writing such plays as Lend Me A Tenor, Moon Over Buffalo and the musical Crazy for You. He has also adapted a number of works for the stage based on characters created by others. Among Ludwig’s adaptations there’s Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery, Tiny Tim’s Christmas Carol and Sherwood: The Adventures of Robin Hood. Of course adapting Christie’s 250+ page tale for the stage required a bit of editing for Ludwig’s stage version. Most notably missing are about a third of the suspects. While Christie’s novel includes a very purposeful 12 suspects, Ludwig had narrowed that down to eight. Purist that I am I’m still wrestling with that, mostly because the reason behind Christie having 12 suspects in this particular story was sheer genius, just a very clever A Ha! moment during the final reveal. I get it through, twelve suspects plus Poirot, plus the victim and one other character who is seemingly above suspicion…that’s a lot of people on stage, especially since the entire play takes place aboard a train, therefore limited the physical staging of the show itself. Again, this is just my weird obsessive brain working overtime. Back to my review…

Elliott Robinson as Hercule Poirot

Elliott Robinson, who’s graced the stage of multiple shows, not only at Circle but all over Nashville, might not seem the obvious choice to play the seemingly uptight, no-nonsense Hercule Poirot, but Hillwig knew what he was doing when he cast him. Robinson might not have waxed his stache, but beyond that he perfectly personifies the quirky Belgian master sleuth. Aided by Ludwig’s cheekily written retorts…the script teeters very closely to full-on farce without completely crossing that line…Robinson’s Poirot becomes even more endearing and fun to watch. There’s even a scene or two in which Robinson delivers a bit of dialogue or a witty reply to a fellow actor, then with knowing look, a smile or pause, gives the audience time to process the snark.

Antonio Nappo as Monsieur Bouc is the perfect choice to share the stage with Robinson’s Poirot. In Christie’s novel, Monsieur Bouc is written as almost a younger, less perceptive Poirot, eager to assist the detective in his investigation, but coming up short when connecting the dots, or seeing the many clues to the identity of the guilty. Nappo plays the part with a joyful vigor. Give him a few years and time to train his facial follicles, and I could totally see Nappo taking on the role of Poirot himself one day in the near future.

Tim Bush as Ratchett, a gruff, assertive businessman, is just fantastic. Playing the part to the hilt, it’s easy to see why he ends up (Spoiler Alert!!!) dead in his bed. It’s funny, my companion for the Sunday matinee I attended, leaned over at one point and said she didn’t care for Bush as Ratchett. Knowing what was coming, I thought to myself,”then he’s playing it perfectly”. Shoot, even after the murder, Bush further shows his skills by lying there motionless while the rest of the cast buzz around his character’s berth looking for clues and discussing motive.

As for the suspects, Catherine McTamaney as Princess Dragomiroff is my new favorite. My friend and I both noticed that she was a fully committed to her role in that when she enters the stage, she does so in character. How can I explain it? Some actors walk ’to’ their scene, McTamaney walks ‘through’ hers if that makes sense. She is Princess Dragomiroff. Staunch, unimpressed and mostly unbothered.

Bailey Borders makes some interesting choices as Helen Hubbard. As I mentioned when I chatted with her for my Rapid Fire 20Q interview, the character of Mrs. Hubbard was brought to the screen first by Lauren Bacall, then by Michelle Pfeiffer. Both women played her with an air of refinement and class, coupled with a bit of sass. While Borders’ Hubbard provided plenty of laughs by her boldness, the choice to have her speak with a southern accent, rather than a dialect more fitting the character, put me in mind of Dixie Carter’s Julia Sugarbaker, rather than the aforementioned Mrs. Bogart.

Rounding out the cast are Claire Landers as Greta Ohlsson, Gary Miller as Hector McQueen, Kaleigh Ruiz as Countess Andrenyi, Nick Spencer as Colonel Arbuthnot, Emily Summers as Mary Debenham and Barrett Thomas in the dual role of Michel the Conductor and Marcel, the waiter, oh, and Michael Hutson as the voice of the announcer. Each member of the company plays well off each other and easily convince the audience not only are their on-stage relationships plausible, but so are their accents…for the most part. I mention this because this show is comprised of characters from all over the globe, from the US to Germany, with Russian, Hungary and other places of origin thrown in for good measure. That said, the cast pulls off a multitude of accents…almost as well as the culprit pulls of the murder.

On the technical side of things, not only is Hillwig directing Murder on the Orient Express, he also designed the set. While the majority of the action does indeed take place aboard a moving train, there are actually a few sets. First here’s a cafe at the train station, then the exterior of a smaller train, the exterior of the Orient Express, the sleeping berths and the dining car. There’s also scenes that take place in the rail’s communications room and the back rail of the caboose. I don’t know if my eyes were playing tricks on me or not, but I swear, by clever usage of lighting cues courtesy Daniel Default, the exterior or the trains took on a different look between being the Taurus Express (at least that’s the name of the connecting train in the novel) and the more exclusive Orient Express. While watching the cast of characters board the Orient Express, the thought did cross my mind that I wished the exterior of the Orient Express look a little more grand and stately. Those ideals were put to rest once later when the set rotated to reveal the interior dining car. Hillwig, his master carpenter, Tony Nappo and props courtesy Suzanne Spooner-Folk together, created a perfectly lush look for the dining car, complete with what appeared to be lacquered woodgrain panels, hanging sconces, a bar cart and the like.

Hillwig’s staging is also to be commended, even in the final scenes in which Poirot reveals the truth, and the entire cast (save the victim) are on stage, it never seems crowded or forced and Hillwig’s staging and direction allow the audience to witness even the most subtle of movements and reactions of the guilty as the beloved detective unravels the mystery once and for all.

Before wrapping up the cast of the theatre review, I should mention that during the intermission I overheard a group of friends in the row behind me discussing who they through the murderer might be. I can’t tell you how much it thrilled my Agatha-loving heart that of the four who weren’t familiar with the outcome of the play…a story that’s based on a book that’s nearly 90 years old, mind you…each had a different suspect in mind.

As a lover of all things Christie, I can say without hesitation that director Clay Hillwig and his cast, lead by Elliott Robinson bring Christie’s beloved story of mystery, deceit and murder to the stage with such finesse—and thanks to Ludwig having peppered the script with some punchy dialogue—a great deal of unexpected humor than even the most ardent fan will be happy they were along for the ride.

Circle Players’ Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express pulls out of the station for two more mystery-filled rides Saturday, January 28 at 7:30pm and Sunday, January 29 at 3pm. All tickets are $27 (including fees). CLICK HERE for tickets.

Next up for Circle Players is Peter and the Starcatcher, directed by Jim Manning with musical direction by Teal Davis, on stage at the Looby Theatre March 10-26. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with the latest from Circle Players follow them on Facebook,  Instagram and Twitter.

If you’ve enjoyed this latest Rapid Fire 20 Q, be sure and CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. if you are interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor, simply click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram,  Twitter and Facebook.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Nashville Theatre, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Agatha Christie, Circle Players, Hercule Poirot, Live Performance, live theatre, Murder on the Orient Express, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Theatre, Theatre Review

RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF LARRY KEETON THEATRE’s ‘WHITE CHRISTMAS’

December 1, 2022 by Jonathan

 

If you know me at all, or you’ve read any of my holiday reviews over the last decade or so, you likely know Irving Berlin’s White Christmas is my hands-down favorite movie musical, in any incarnation.  Doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about the classic 1954 film, or the subsequent stage musical. I love all things White Christmas. Given that bit of insider info about myself, of course I had to chat with Kevin Raymond, Micheal Walley, Casey Cuba and Dani Haines for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q. The quartet of talented performers are starring in White Christmas directed by Keith Hardy at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre (108 Donelson Pike) beginning tonight, Thursday, December 1and continuing through Sunday, December 18.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH THE CAST OF THE LARRY KEETON THEATRE’S WHITE CHRISTMAS

Kevin Raymond as Bob Wallace

RAPID FIRE WITH KEVIN RAYMOND, BOB WALLACE IN WHITE CHRISTMAS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Tell me a little about Bob Wallace.

KEVIN RAYMOND: Bob Wallace is a lovable character but sometimes he appears to be a bit sarcastic because he’s missing something in his life. There’s no romance going on he doesn’t have anybody to love. Even his partner Phil points out that he should “add a little romance to his life“ and maybe he’d be happier. He spends most of his time working on business deals and the Wallace and Davis act on his entire life since the army. The transition of his character in White Christmas is truly a beautiful one through his rocky relationship with Betty Haynes. Hopefully, you’ll have a chance to see the love in his heart, his joy in his business and performing as well as his general love for his fellow mankind.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Taking on the role made famous by Bing Crosby…daunting,  a dream, or a combination of both?

KEVIN RAYMOND: I have to say, it is a daunting task! Bob sings a majority of the music in the show and appears in every scene except for two in the entire musical. One of the biggest things that I’ve enjoyed about this is the challenge set before me. But to be perfectly honest, this has been a dream role for my entire life. I feel as if I’m in an age right now to be the perfect Bob Wallace because 10 years ago I may have been too young and 10 years from now I’ll definitely be too old to play this character. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your creative credits go beyond on-stage performing, you’ve also been involved in a number of productions at The Keeton and other theatre companies behind the scenes. Do you think that gives you an advantage when cast in a show?

KEVIN RAYMOND: I’m delighted to also be the choreographer for this production and one of the things that I generally always tell the cast is to think like a director or to think like a choreographer. I feel as if it’s a life learning lesson to have someone nurture you to the fact that if there’s an even number of people on stage, someone will split the center line when it comes to blocking a dance. If there’s an odd number of people on stage someone will always be on that center line. If you have thoughts like this in your head going in to a learning experience then it makes life so much more easy for you. Also, when you’re moving set pieces think about what might need to go off before some thing else comes on and vice versa. The knowledge that it takes to be able to pull things off like that is a vital life lesson for the arts. I think that my interaction with people and all of the previous artistic elements I’ve been involved in at the Keeton certainly help me to develop this and others as well. On top of that, because I generally think like a Director and Choreographer, blocking, staging and other elements come really easy for me and I can pour that natural instinct into a character. 

Kevin Raymond

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of other gigs, a couple years ago you released a Christmas cd. What can you tell me about that project?

KEVIN RAYMOND: Christmas music is and always will be my favorite! I love being in the studio and creating art on a recorded medium. It’s very different than live performing because you can do quite a few takes and pick the best one or splice things together very easily. The CD was basically a labor of love and a really fun project that one of my best friends, Gabe Wateski, recorded and produced for me. The title of the CD is called Christmas Is… and can be found on my website at kevinfraymond.com. It has 18 truly wonderful tracks, some old and familiar and some new material. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’m about to chat with you costars, so I gotta ask…what’s it been like to share the stage with Micheal Walley’s Phil Davis to your Bob Wallace?

KEVIN RAYMOND: Micheal is an absolute joy! I’m so thankful that the director, Keith Hardy, cast him because if I was directing, he would’ve gotten my first vote as well! Filling the shoes of Phil Davis (not to mention having everyone always comparing you to Danny Kaye)  is not an easy one because he hast to be an absolute funny man. Every successful vaudeville act has to have two comedians where one is acting in the funny man capacity and the other as the straight man. Micheal is the perfect funny man for the show. He brings Phil to a light that I could’ve never even imagined. It is so easy to work off of him that I’m truly blessed to be on stage with Micheal. In real life, Micheal is a tremendously likable young man with a great personality and though I only met him when we started rehearsals for the show I feel as if I’ve known him forever already. I think at the Wallace and Davis combo along with the Haynes Sisters will leave you very pleased with White Christmas!

Micheal Walley as Phil Davis

RAPID FIRE WITH MICHEAL WALLEY, PHIL DAVIS IN WHITE CHRISTMAS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I just interviewed your co-star, Kevin and asked about working with you, so turn about is fair play…how is Kevin as a scene partner?

MICHEAL WALLEY: Oh, Kevin! When I auditioned for the show and read a scene with Kevin, I thought to myself, “I really would love to play opposite that guy!” It’s been a dream. Kevin truly is the ideal song-and-dance man, and getting to feed off of his energy and stage presence is so much fun. He and I also accidentally showed up wearing matching shirts at rehearsal one day, so he has great style.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I last saw you at the Darkhorse Theatre in Bucket List Productions’ Assassins earlier this year, but first saw you in Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Minnie Pearl: All the News from Grinder’s Switch. All very diverse roles. What draws you to a role?

MICHEAL WALLEY: It’s been so fun getting to bring to life all sorts of different characters. Honestly, I’m grateful to do any role that is offered- whatever the type of role! I went a long time without doing any sort of theatre, and am in awe that people have trusted me with some really wonderful roles. The incredible team at Chaffin’s Barn (gosh – I miss it!), the cast mates that became family in Assassins, and the new friends in White Christmas have made Nashville feel like home. Each role has pushed me to be a better performer, and I’m so grateful for the community here. I’d jump at any chance to work with the wonderful people that make up the Nashville theatre community! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you could apply an aspect of Phil’s character into your real life, what would it be?

MICHEAL WALLEY: I love Phil’s optimism and glass-half-full nature. I’m usually an optimistic person, but man, the pandemic and the past few years have affected us all, and it’s a little harder to look on the bright side of things. I’m challenged to refocus and reconnect with my own optimism to ensure Phil’s joy is authentic onstage. 

Micheal Walley

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Snow is my favorite moment in the show…what’s yours?

MICHEAL WALLEY: I absolutely adore the Act 2 opener, I Love a Piano. While I’m sad that Choreography from the movie isn’t in the live stage show, this song is a pretty good substitute and a blast to perform. It’s such a big production number, and I’m really proud of what the cast has accomplished with it over the past few weeks. Plus – the costumes are fantastic! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Singing, dancing, comedy and a little bit of drama…White Christmas has it all. I understand you co-star, Kevin is also the show’s choreographer. What has rehearsal been like?

MICHEAL WALLEY: Yes, the choreographer is none other than our Bob Wallace, Kevin Raymond. Kevin has pushed us beyond what we thought was possible. At our first rehearsal, I said, “I hope people watch my face and not my feet” because I don’t consider myself a great dancer. But Kevin has been a fantastic, patient teacher and I’ve learned so much from him. He’s helped create something really impressive on the Keeton stage, and we can’t wait for the audience to see our tapping feet! In the words of Clark Griswold, “This will be the hap, hap, happpiest Christmas since Bing Crosby tap-danced with Danny…Kaye!”

Casey Cuba as Betty Haynes

RAPID FIRE WITH CASEY CUBA, BETTY HAYNES IN WHITE CHRISTMAS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While preparing for the role of Betty Haynes, what or who have you drawn from to channel certain attributes?

CASEY CUBA: Looking the part of Betty during this time period, I focused on the elegance and poise of my grandmothers. I always loved looking at their old photographs from the 1940s and envied how glamorous life seemed. As for the character of Betty, I have drawn on my own raw emotions, vulnerability, and life experiences. Betty is very independent and strong willed, traits that sometimes cause her to sabotage her own happiness. I often recognize these traits in myself.   

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of course there are parallels between the two featured couples…Betty and Bob share more serious traits while Phil and Judy are a bit more carefree. In real life are you more a Betty or a Judy?

CASEY CUBA: I am definitely more of a Judy in real life! I am the one finding humor in almost ANY situation. Who doesn’t enjoy laughing?  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’ve said it a hundred times…White Christmas isn’t just my favorite Christmas movie. Heck, it’s my favorite stage musical…of all-time. Aside from White Christmas, naturally…what’s your favorite holiday viewing?

CASEY CUBA: I can only choose one?!? Planes, Trains, and Automobiles is my favorite movie for Thanksgiving, but for Christmas…there are so many good ones! My top 2 favorites are probably It’s a Wonderful Life and Christmas Vacation.  

Casey Cuba

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The wardrobe…can we talk about the wardrobe? The show’s director, Keith Hardy is doing double duty as the costumer as well. Do you have a favorite look?

CASEY CUBA: Yes, Keith is also the costumer. How amazing is that? He has knocked it out of the park…per usual. The dresses for Sisters, the iconic blue dresses and fans, are UNREAL! They are just gorgeous. But my absolute favorite look in the show is the black velvet gown that Betty wears for her solo of Love, You Didn’t Do Right By Me. It was made to look just like the gown Rosemary Clooney wore in the film and it is just stunning. I feel so connected to Betty in that scene with the glamour and the raw emotion. It’s just beautiful.  

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you hadn’t been cast as Betty, regardless of whether you’re the ‘type’, what other White Christmas role would you love to play?

CASEY CUBA: I would love to play Rita or Rhoda!  Haha I mean c’mon!  I think it would be so fun to play a ditzy, blonde bimbo!   Their lines are so ridiculously funny and their costumes are hysterical!  

Dani Haines as Judy Haynes

RAPID FIRE WITH DANI HAINES, JUDY HAYNES IN WHITE CHRISTMAS JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’ve heard playing Judy a dream role for you. What is is about Judy Haynes that drew you to the part?

DANI HAINES: I’ve always had a connection with Judy since I first saw the movie when I was younger. She was a charismatic and dynamic performer and I think that really influenced how I’ve approached all the roles I’ve gotten the chance to do throughout my stage career.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand you’re a relative newcomer to Nashville and this is your first show at The Keeton. How’s your time in Music City been thus far and are you enjoying being part of the Keeton family?

DANI HAINES: I’ve lived in a lot of different places in my life, and Nashville has been one of my favorites! I’m excited to put down roots in a diverse, entertaining city. Joining a new theatre family will always come with unique challenges and barriers, but I’ve learned so much about myself and the community through the experience; and I’m extremely grateful for the love and support from my new friends.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The role of Judy is dance-heavy, having first been portrayed on screen by the iconic Vera-Lynn. Do you have a dance background?

DANI HAINES: I’ve actually been a dancer most of my life! I started lessons at a young age in various genres of dance, and that was what created the gateway to my love for musical theatre. I’m so fortunate to have had the experiences I’ve been given and use them in this show.

Dani Haines

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A little online sleuthing revealed when you’re not on stage, you work at an escape room. If you could create a White Christmas-themed escape room, what would it consist of?

DANI HAINES: Hmmm… Without a doubt, there would have to be a lot of music! I’d probably create a puzzle involving the iconic songs of the movie and the show. The theme would be “backstage and get ready so the show can go on”!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences take with them after seeing White Christmas at The Keeton?

DANI HAINES: One of the biggest lessons this show teaches its viewers is that a kind heart and goodwill towards others never goes out of style. I hope that this show serves as a reminder to us all that compassion and generosity should be celebrated year round, not just during the holiday seasons. I also hope they take home fun memories and some tapping toes!

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Irving Berlin’s White Christmas celebrates the holidays at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre with performances December 1-18. At the time of this posting, it would appear the entire run has sold out, but you just never know…some Scrooge might have to cancel at the last minute. You might want to call 615.231.1231 and check on last-minute availability. Dinner and Show tickets are $35/Adult and $25/children. Show Only tickets are $30/$20. CLICK HERE for more information.

Up next at The Keeton Dinner Theatre is Newsies. February 10-26. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with the latest from The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre, follow them on Facebook, Twitter 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.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Interview, Live Music, Live Performance, Live Theatre, nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Christmas, Dinner Theatre, Irving Berlin, Irving Berlin's White Christmas, Larry Keeton Theatre, The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre, White Christmas

Rapid Fire Q&A with actor/playwright/director David Alford; ‘A Holiday To Remember’ recitations of Truman Capote’s ‘The Thanksgiving Visitor’ and ‘A Christmas Memory’ at Belmont Mansion this holiday season

November 22, 2022 by Jonathan

You may know David Alford by way of his six-season role as Bucky Dawes, manager to Connie Britton’s Rayna Jaymes on the hugely popular CMT/ABC drama series Nashville, multiple tv and film roles including The Good Fight, The Blacklist and The Last Castle, his recent appearance alongside Laura Linney, Cynthia Nixon, Richard Thomas and Michael McKean in the 2017 revival of Lillian Hellman’s The Little Foxes on Broadway, or for having created Spirit: The Authentic Story of the Bell Witch, which recently celebrated its twentieth year in nearby Adams, TN. Either way, or even if you don’t know David, you’ll definitely want to check out A Holiday to Remember, Alford’s presentation of two of Truman Capote’s most-cherished stories, The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory, being presented in the Grand Salon of Nashville’s beautiful and historic Belmont Mansion with select performances November 23-December 17.

Having known David for years, not only by his aforementioned accolades, but through a mutual friend, as well as his tenure as Executive Artistic Director of Nashville Repertory Theatre a few years ago, when it was known as Tennessee Repertory Theatre, as soon as I learned he was returning to the Nashville theatre scene to perform this latest iteration of not one, but two Capote treasures, I knew I had to chat with him for my latest RAPID FIRE Q&A.

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RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH ‘A HOLIDAY TO REMEMBER’ STAR, DAVID ALFORD

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparing to chat with you, I rewatched the mid-60s television presentations of both The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory starring Geraldine Page as Sook. I remember seeing them on TV about a decade later when I was a kid. These stories were my introduction to Truman Capote. What was yours?

DAVID ALFORD: My first introduction to Capote, like many other people, was seeing him on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. I was young. He struck me as a strange fellow with a funny voice that the adults seemed to find terribly amusing. I knew he had a reputation as being a bit of a provocateur, someone who liked pushing boundaries. It was many years later, shortly after graduating drama school and being cast in a stage adaptation of his holiday stories, that I learned that he was much more than his public persona. He was a true literary genius, with extraordinary range. The stories from his childhood featuring his eccentric cousin Miss Sook Faulk are beautifully written and deeply moving.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of introductions, ABC’s recent drama series, Nashville may have served as an introduction to you for millions of TV viewers, but those of us in the actual town of Nashville have known you through your theatrical works for years. In fact, just last month you celebrated the 20th anniversary of your play, Spirit: The Authentic Story of the Bell Witch of Tennessee. Before we get into A Holiday to Remember, What was it like to revisit Spirit as director again this year?

DAVID ALFORD: Rewarding and humbling. I wrote and directed the first production in 2002, and then directed a revision I did in 2008. Other than that, I have been involved only as an unofficial advisor from time to time until this year. The group behind the production, CSI (Community Spirit, Inc.) has not only kept the show going every year, but they’ve grown the play into a month-long festival. The show’s success is really a testament to their commitment and hard work.  Every performance this year was sold out. I’d look into the audience and see men in John Deere caps seated next to women in business attire with a few occultists thrown into the mix. It’s hard to describe the sense of gratitude I feel looking at an audience of people from wildly different backgrounds seated next to each other and experiencing the same story. It’s become its own unique phenomenon.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Now on to A Holiday to Remember. Over the years you’ve presented a variation of this show from time to time. If memory serves, I believe it’s been 30-some years since you performed A Southern Christmas Sampler and about a decade since the former iteration, Christmas Down Home was presented here in Music City. What prompted you to revisit and revise it this year at Belmont and to include not only A Christmas Memory, but also Capote’s other holiday offering, The Thanksgiving Visitor?

DAVID ALFORD: I stopped doing A Christmas Memory mainly because of my commitments to the TV show. Then I moved away for a while. I’m back home now and it felt like the time was right. I’m a little older and can bring a little more life-experience to it. Plus, I’ve missed doing the piece. I still feel very connected to it. As far as pairing it with The Thanksgiving Visitor, we actually did it before in 2004 when I was Artistic Director at Tennessee Rep (now Nashville Rep) in the Polk Theatre at TPAC. It went well, though I thought the show might have worked better in a more intimate space. This is a chance to try that. Plus, it’s an opportunity to work my memorization muscles a bit. With both pieces, it’s me doing Capote’s words for about an hour-and-a-half. I like the challenge.

Composer/Guitarist Paul Carroll Binkley’s music accompanies David Alford’s storytelling in “A Christmas Memory”

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As you have done in previous incarnations, you’ve once again enlisted the talents of your friend, Paul Carrol Binkley whose original music is featured. How did you and Paul first connect? 

DAVID ALFORD: I met Paul in 1985 at Austin Peay Statue University in Clarksville, where we were both students. He became the guitarist and band leader for a group I’d earlier formed with some high school friends called The Red River Boys. We gigged a lot together, and of course Paul was already composing and playing his own music at the time. Right before I went to Juilliard, he was the music director for a production of The Robber Bridegroom I was in at APSU, and he really knocked it out of the park. So I knew he had theatre chops. When I came back to Nashville in 1994 to start Mockingbird Theatre, Paul was one of the first people I called. He did the music for our second production, Tennessee Williams‘ The Glass Menagerie, and that started a long and successful working relationship. When I had the idea to do A Christmas Memory as the centerpiece for a potential Mockingbird holiday show (which became our Southern Christmas Sampler) I asked Paul to create some underscoring for it. He did, and it was perfect. Those original musical ideas have become an irreplaceable part of the performance for me. I can’t imagine doing the piece without Paul. I still get choked up every time I hear him play the opening phrase. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This isn’t the first time you’ve performed at Belmont Mansion in the Grand Salon. What makes it such an ideal venue for these stories?

DAVID ALFORD: Well, it’s an incredibly evocative space, and the acoustics are excellent. Both pieces are about Truman’s childhood and set in the early 1930s, and though Belmont Mansion was around long before that, there are still echoes of the past that help underscore the context. And while I love working in traditional theaters, sometimes matching content with an appropriate nontraditional performance space can really resonate with an audience. I think this show in the mansion does that pretty well.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those who may not have seen your previous presentations, what can the audience expect?

DAVID ALFORD: The show is me doing Capote’s text uncut from memory with Paul’s original underscoring. The Thanksgiving Visitor is first. It has a four-piece combo and is a little more energetic in feel with me mostly on my feet. For A Christmas Memory, we’re performing it the same way we have since the beginning: I’m seated on a stool, with Paul in a chair just behind. It’s me, Capote’s words, and Paul’s guitar.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Aside from Buddy, the young boy at the center of both The Thanksgiving Visitor and A Christmas Memory, both stories feature his Cousin, Sook, an eccentric relative, and Buddy’s best friend. Research also revealed that you once cited your grandmother as your voice inspiration for your Sook. What can you tell me about finding the voice for each of the characters? 

DAVID ALFORD: Good question! Thankfully the stories are mostly Capote’s narrative prose, so I don’t have to do a huge amount of vocal characterization. It’s mostly Sook and Buddy (her nickname for young Truman) with a handful of other characters sprinkled in. The challenge is to honor the text and what Capote’s trying to accomplish from a narrative perspective, while finding voices that stay true to the setting (a small town in the depression-era Deep South). And then within that framework, to find enough variation so the audience doesn’t get confused. Mostly it’s a lot of experimentation and trying to use as much of my vocal range as I can!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the subject of voices and characters, Capote, himself was quite a character and he possessed a very distinctive voice. I mentioned earlier the mid-60s teleplays. Capote served as narrator for those, so I gotta know…do you narrate in a Capote-esque voice?

DAVID ALFORD: I do not, for a couple of reasons. First, I think trying to replicate Truman’s voice calls too much attention to the performer and not enough to the words on the page. Instead, what I try to do in the narration is present Truman’s literary voice, his written voice, which is substantially more expressive and has greater range than his speaking voice ever did. His writing in these stories is masterful: funny, lyrical, and at times breathtakingly beautiful. I wouldn’t want any impression I did to get in the way of that. There’s definitely a specific southern flavor of course: accent, playfulness, and wit, but less affectation. But also, from a practical perspective, I think the more important voice is Sook’s and the other characters, and it’s hard to imagine someone with Truman’s voice being able to alter their tonality enough to make those voices convincing. So you’re either doing Truman all the way through (including the other character’s voices) or you’re finding the voices of the other characters and making the narration more neutral. I don’t think you can do both. So I do the latter.

Belmont Mansion’s Grand Salon 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Oh, I knew we should have gone ahead and done a full Rapid Fire 20Q, but I didn’t want to take up too much of your time…so….Can you share a little about cherished holiday memories of your own?

DAVID ALFORD: Well, of course, I have many, most of them from my childhood and from people that are gone now. My dad rarely provided the things on our Christmas lists, but he always made it special. He was a pastor, and this was his favorite time of year. One of the things that brings people back to A Christmas Memory is that Capote acknowledges the full range of memories of the people we love who are no longer with us. Those memories can be funny, touching, sweet, warm, awkward, joyful: but they can also make us feel a keen sense of loss. Leave it to his genius to be able to encapsulate all that in a short story. But to answer your question directly, and at the risk of sounding schmaltzy, the truth is that many of my most treasured holiday experiences have been sharing this story with a roomful of fellow human beings.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I usually end these chats with basically the same question…What do you hope audiences take away from seeing A Holiday to Remember?

DAVID ALFORD: That Truman Capote is an under-appreciated genius and one of the greatest writers of the 20th century. That all people, no matter how odd, eccentric, or marginalized, have value and can teach us something. That love always makes a difference.

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David Alford’s A Holiday to Remember begins Wednesday, November 23 with subsequent performances November 25 & 26 and December 1,3,15 and 16. All Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. and will take place in the Grand Salon on Belmont Mansion (On the campus of Belmont University at the corner of Acklen Avenue and Belmont Blvd- behind Freeman Hall, 1901 15th Ave S., Nashville, TN 37212) Tickets to each performance are $45 and include lite refreshments and a peek at the holiday decorations of the Mansion’s first floor. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. For more about David Alford, CLICK HERE. If you’re interested in learning more about Belmont Mansion or perhaps scheduling a full tour during the holiday, CLICK HERE.

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 Facebook, Instagram  and 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 Music, Live Performance, Live Theatre, nashville, Performance, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: A Christmas Memory, Belmont Mansion, Christmas, David Alford, Holiday, Holidays, Thanksgiving, The Thanksgiving Visitor, Truman Capote

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘The Cake’; regional premiere at Nashville Rep October 21-30

October 21, 2022 by Jonathan

Directed by Lauren Shouse, 0pening Friday, October 21 and running through Sunday, October 30, Nashville Repertory Theatre presents the regional premiere of Bekah Brunstetter’s The Cake at TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Theatre (505 Deadrick Street). While perhaps best known for her writing and producing duties on the popular NBC drama, This Is Us, which garnered her and her fellow producers three consecutive Emmys from 2017-2019, Brunstetter’s also enjoyed success as a playwright. Her previous stage plays include: F*cking Art, Miss Lilly Gets Boned and Be a Good Little Widow. From the titles alone, you might surmise that the playwright pulls no punches. The Cake, which premiered in Los Angeles in 2015 and featured That 70s Show’s Debra Jo Rupp, with is simple sweet title and all, just might follow suit, considering the play was inspired, in part by her own father’s opposition to same-sex marriage and the headline-making Supreme Court case of Masterpiece Cakeshop vs Colorado Civil Rights Commission. The Cake centers ‘round Della, a kind, but conservative North Carolina baker who finds herself at an unexpected conscience crossroads when her goddaughter returns to her small town to ask Della to bake her wedding cake…for the wedding to her fiancée.

When I learned that one of my theatre crushes, Megan Murphy Chambers was heading the cast, I knew I had to chat with her and her co-stars for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.

RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF NASHVILLE REPERTORY THEATRE’s THE CAKE

RAPID FIRE WITH MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS, DELLA IN THE REP’S THE CAKE

JHPEntertainment:  Tell me everything we need to know about Della, the character you play in The Cake, The Rep’s latest production…

Megan Murphy Chambers: Della is a beautiful challenge.  There are elements of her personality that are so easy for me to access – she’s friendly, enthusiastic, authentically interested in people, and loving. The acting starts when her deeply ingrained but rarely examined belief system stops her from showing an adored friend the respect and love they deserve when they need it most.  There’s not an intentionally mean bone in Della’s body, but she’s short on backbone (mean or otherwise). I like to think about what might transpire in the 6 months after the play is over for her.  I have high hopes for her, and her capability to open her heart and mind.

JHPEntertainment: While researching the show to prepare these questions for you and your fellow cast mates, I found the opening monologue script on line. During which, Della explains that you must follow the recipe exactly to ensure the perfect cake. This seems to pretty much lay out the thought process behind her character’s way of life and decision-making. A a general rule, are you yourself a recipe follower, a recipe adapter or a recipe creator? Feel free to answer this as it relates to the kitchen, or life as a whole.

Megan Murphy Chambers: Oh I am a recipe adaptor for sure.  I’ll follow the directions enough to make sure whoever I’m feeding doesn’t end up with a plate of undercooked chicken, but in terms of the rest?  All bets are off!  I like cooking more than baking precisely because of the greater degree of freedom you have. And the greater degree of garlic.  In life, I tend to be a rule-follower and people-pleaser, but that tendency lessens every single day. Which feels wonderful, to be honest.

JHPEntertainment: Now, I know you graduated from the University of Missouri, which, depending on who you ask, is either the midwest, or the south, and you’ve been in Nashville for some time now. Have you met any real life Dellas and might we see hints of them in your performance?

Megan Murphy Chambers: First of all, MIDWEST. I will not be taking questions at this time 🙂   I’ve lived all over the country, and have met Della-ish people everywhere.  People with huge hearts that are coupled with years of a certain kind of shame and pressure.  I carry pieces of some of them on stage every night, all of which help make her colorful. This one’s unfailing politeness, that one’s hypervigilance about “outsiders”, another one’s casual affection.

JHPEntertainment: From what I know, Della, though she is staunchly faithful to her convictions, isn’t made to appear the villain in this piece, but rather a sympathetic product of her environment. Is that a fair assessment? Why or why not?

Megan Murphy Chambers: Definitely a fair assessment.  The brilliance of this writing means that throughout the play, we’re given reasons to root for every character, and reasons to feel disappointed in every character.  Della maybe most of all.  In my heart, I’m certain she’s making the wrong decision.  But the generations of voices that echo in her head all day every day make it challenging to blame her in any simple way.  We want to like her. We want her to do better.

JHPEntertainment: The show is titled The Cake, so I gotta know…do you have a sweet tooth? If so, what’s your favorite kind of cake? If not, what do you snack on instead?

Megan Murphy Chambers: I do indeed have a sweet tooth, but it’s not as powerful as my salt tooth. Cake is scrumptious, and it’s all I’ve thought about for the last month. I either want a spice cake with vanilla buttercream, or a classic Duncan Hines yellow cake from a box (don’t tell Della it’s not from scratch).

RAPID FIRE WITH CHRIS STRAND, TIM IN THE REP’S THE CAKE

JHPEntertainment: Alright, I tried not to gush while chatting with Megan, but just between us, how lucky are you to share the stage with one of my theatre crushes?

Christopher Strand: Very lucky! Megan is the heart and soul of this show and takes the audience on a hysterical and heartbreaking journey all at the same time- she can make you laugh out loud one minute and cry crocodile tears with her innate vulnerability the next- honored to share the stage with her!

JHPEntertainment: How would you describe Tim?

Christopher Strand: Tim is an amiable good ol boy who just happens to be a product of his upbringing and social environment- his beliefs have most likely been formed by his religious upbringing and casually soaking up Fox News and Incendiary right wing radio over the years- still he loves Della deeply and is a good hard working man who just happens to use food and humor as a substitute for the lack of  Intimacy in his marriage.

JHPEntertainment: In researching to chat with you and your cast mates, it seems to me The Cake playwright, Bekah Brunstetter’s approach of using humor to spotlight a rather serious topic might have roots going back to classic sitcoms like All in the Family and The Jeffersons. Am I anywhere near close in that comparison? And why do you think that works?

Christopher Strand: Yes I think you’re close! Because even though Della and Tim are rather rigid in their beliefs , they are lovable characters , which persuades the audience to go on a sometimes  difficult emotional journey with them- much like Archie Bunker , the audience is able to laugh at or with their imperfections and narrowminded-ness without necessarily agreeing with them!

JHPEntertainment: Are you a cake or pie guy in real life?

Christopher Strand: both unfortunately ! love most kinds although it may be somewhat unAmerican but I can’t do pumpkin pie sorry! banana cream, pecan pie, any kind of fruit pie- shoot I guess I am a pie guy!

JHPEntertainment: What’s one of your favorite lines in the show…yours or that of one of your fellow cast mates?

Christopher Strand: Jen says ” I don’t need you to make me a cake , I need you to LOVE me!”  to me that sums up the show as much as one line could if possible

RAPID FIRE WITH MARIAH PARRIS, JEN IN THE REP’S THE CAKE

JHPEntertainment: What was it about the role of Jen that moved you to audition?

Mariah Parris: I had seen Lauren’s work before and knew working with her would be awesome, if given the chance. I was also excited to potentially work on a script with such a contemporary voice. I’ve never had the pleasure of working on a character so close to myself and feeling like I could bring so much of my own “isms” to the performance.

JHPEntertainment: As Jen, you share scenes, and an on-stage relationship with Maya Riley. You both appeared in The Rep’s Ragtime earlier this year. What is she like as a scene partner?

Mariah Parris: Maya and I used to do theatre together when we were little kids at Metro Parks with Carolyn German, and reconnected as adults when we both worked on Ragtime. We discovered that we still get on like a house on fire, so the biggest challenge with working with Maya has been to not interrupt rehearsal by laughing too much. She is an awesome scene partner and friend.

JHPEntertainment: While the show touts a cast of only four characters, there’s really a fifth, isn’t there? Care to give me an exclusive…who’s providing the voice of George, the reality show judge who’s only heard in voice-over?

Mariah Parris: Jonah Jackson is brilliant as the voice of George. He is a very accomplished and talented stage performer (last seen in The Rep’s Mary Poppins) and I’m so glad he’s getting a chance to show off his voice acting chops!

JHPEntertainment: As a kid, my birthday cakes were always a thing to behold as Mom would get the craftiest cake decorator around to recreate thematic delights featuring whatever my current obsession was, including, but not limited to: Star Wars, a Grease (the movie, not the frying additive) logo cake, a sheet-cake featuring the likeness of Miss Piggy and in my later years, as I began collecting Lucille Ball memorabilia, more than one cake decorated with classic images of I Love Lucy…Did you have theme-decorated cakes? If so, what was your favorite?

Mariah Parris: My lovely mom and dad went all out when I was a little girl- one year Barbie, one year Barney, and I’m sure there were many others though the memory escapes me now.

JHPEntertainment: Is there a moment in the show you think audiences will remember after leaving the theatre?

Mariah Parris: there are several beautifully emotional moments in the show that will resonate with different people, and it is my hope that each person leaves feeling like there was a moment that resonated with them specifically that they’ll never forget. Personally, I’ll never forget MMC hand feeding me carrot cake on stage—what a treat.

RAPID FIRE WITH MAYA RILEY, MACY IN THE REP’S THE CAKE

JHPEntertainment: This has been quite a year for you. You’ve just wrapped your fabulous starring role as AIDA, a performance everyone was raving about. Of course you started the year in Nashville Rep’s Ragtime and now you’re back at The Rep in The Cake. How excited are you for this momentum in your career as a performer and how are you keeping it going while keeping yourself grounded?

Maya Riley: Thank you so much! It’s been quite an unexpected journey, because I had planned to stay in New York City after graduating from NYU. I was just starting my career there when COVID hit, and after the theatre world basically stopped I moved back down here. I’ve really just started to get back into performing, and I’m so grateful that things are opening up again. Being back in Nashville feels right. I’m surrounded by family and friends that I love. It blows my mind that I get to do this work. The little kid in me is squealing every day. Just in the past few months, I’ve gotten to work alongside people in this theatre community that have taught me most of what I know: how to act, how to sing, how to dance, how to be gracious, how to be hard working, how to be professional. Performing beside some of them as a colleague, as well as sharing the stage with Broadway stars in AIDA, is a great gift. And performing at TPAC twice in a row? That’s almost as good as Broadway. I’m learning so much about myself, the craft of performing, and the industry. I’m just trying to soak in everything and take it one day at a time.

JHPEntertainment: What was your reaction to first reading the script for The Cake?

Maya Riley: I read the script the night before my callback. I wasn’t familiar with the play, but I’d heard of the playwright because of her work on the TV series This Is Us. When I read it, I got excited immediately. It’s so smartly written. The words jumped right off the page and grabbed me. These are people you know, this is the way people talk, these are issues we’re dealing with right now. That is a beautiful challenge as an actor. Lauren’s visionary and supportive direction is making me a more focused and engaging performer. My castmates are such a joy. I’ve known Mariah since we were kids performing in community theatre productions. Chris is a superb actor and wonderful to work with. And Megan is Nashville theatre royalty and so much fun! Having the opportunity to present this play with this lovely group of people is an honor.

JHPEntertainment: You play Macy the fiancée of Parris’ Jen. Jen’s White, Macy’s Black, they’re lesbians. She’s from the south, Macy’s a northerner. How important is it for you as an actress to take the occasional role with a message, even if, as in the case of The Cake, those messages might be sugar-coated (see what I did there?) in humor?

Maya Riley: For me, it’s incredibly important to tell stories that deal with current events, things that are happening today. I think people need stories that are simply entertaining, and also stories that are somewhat difficult to process. You need both, I think. There are a lot of projects that are one or the other. Not many plays can do both. This is what I love about The Cake. It will entertain you and have you rolling on the floor laughing one minute, then questioning that one interaction with your odd relative the next. It allows for you to be entertained while also sitting in some discomfort. I relish the opportunity to tackle a play that splits this difference so effortlessly. I’m so excited to see how audiences respond.

JHPEntertainment: While you grew up here in Nashville, after high school, you relocated to to New York, more than a few parallels with Macy. Have those similarities helped you develop her as a character?

Maya Riley: I think they have. When I lived in New York, I definitely had to develop that thick-skin, no-nonsense, demeanor. I also know what it’s like to come back down south and have to, let’s say, “readjust” to how things are down here. Which is something I can immediately connect with Macy. Honestly, Macy wasn’t a stretch for me to understand because our experiences are so similar. We belong to the same demographic, in more ways than one. I definitely think that being a southerner who has lived in New York helped me understand her. But I think I would have understood her anyway just because of our similarities. I know what it’s like to be a Black, queer woman in America. In that way, I know her pains, her hesitations, her joys, her comforts. Playing this role, in a way, is like communing with my mirror image. We got each other’s back, as we go through this play every night. At least, that’s how I like to think of it.

JHPEntertainment: What do you hope audiences take away from The Cake?

Maya Riley: I hope audiences take away a slice of cake and have a layered experience (wink)! The foundation of this play is love, which is what makes the stakes so high and the conflict so tense. The Cake is really a conversation in the shape of a play. My wish is that audiences truly take a bite, ride the waves of anger, laughter, and sorrow with us, and leave the theater with love and a deeper understanding of themselves or someone they care about.

For tickets to The Cake, CLICK HERE. Following their presentation of The Cake October 21-30, Nashville Rep continues their season with Elf: The Musical December 21-January 1, August Wilson’s Fences March 3-5, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time March 24-April 2 and Violet May 12-21. Season Tickets just went on sale earlier this week. CLICK HERE to purchase Season Tickets or for more info. 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, nashville, Rapid Fire 20 Q, The Cake, Theare, This is Us

Theatre Review: ‘Blithe Spirit’ attempts to conjure laughter; Noel Coward farce continues at Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre thru October 30

October 21, 2022 by Jonathan

‘Blithe Spirit’ (all photos by Thomas Gentry/courtesy The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre)

Just before chatting with members of the cast of the Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre’s current presentation of Blithe Spirit for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q, I rewatched the classic mid-40s film adaptation which I hadn’t seen in a decade or longer. Remembering it fondly, I again reveled in the quaintly nostalgic portrayal of an British novelist who finds himself in unlikely comedic trouble when he and his wife host a couple of friends and a kooky medium for a seance meant to inspire his next novel. What happens instead is the medium somehow summons the ghost of his first wife. Things get further complicated when an accident befalls his second wife and he finds himself doubly haunted by the ghosts of both wives past.

During my conversations with the cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q, I learned that the show’s director Donna Driver had opted to update the time and place of what is considered by many to be the playwright’s best work. I get it. The original having been set in the English countryside in the early 1940s, might seem a bit stale for a modern audience, and I’ll be honest. There’s little I despise more than a local theatre company attempting accents that end up being all over the place and inauthentic.

That said, you gotta wonder why then did the director opt to set the action in 1980s Texas, but only one cast member speaks with a decidedly Texan drawl? The set, however, designed and constructed by Kevin Driver, does indeed invoke visions of 80s abundant living, with ornate brocade furniture (I swear my Mom still has that sofa in her living room), bookcases filled with Reader’s Digest Book Club volumes and Encyclopedias and the occasional ginger jar. Heck, even the walls are painted in what can only be described as hints of Dark Rose and Forest Green. Donna Driver also serves as the show’s costumer, dressing her cast in some decidedly 80s trends with nods to the wrap-dress, the country club look and more. All in all, a nice representation of the 80s.

Seeing as how the show is about ghosts, I was curious how the special effects would be presented. What few there are are fun, but it seems a shame that they’re mostly left to near the end of the show, rather than being peppered throughout.

Abby Waddoups, Aaron Gray and Erin Grace Bailey in ‘Blithe Spirit’

Aaron Gray is cast as Charles Condomine, the aforementioned author. He does a fine job in the role, and as he revealed during our Rapid Fire 20 Q, he’s created the perfect backstory for his as he calls it ‘rock star’ look, but I feel compelled to mention, the constant, likely unconscious action of brushing his long tresses away from his face became quite distracting. Gray does present a perfectly flustered husband and his on-stage chemistry with both his leading ladies is enjoyable.

Abby Waddoups plays Charles’ current wife, Ruth. While she doesn’t speak with a traditional Texas accent—as mentioned earlier, only one character does, and we’ll get to her soon enough—Abby does approach Ruth with an air of sophistication. Again, a perfect reflection of that 80s-era new-money vibe. As Ruth, she brings a bit of caustic fire to her every line.

Then there’s Charles’ late wife, Elvira played by Erin Grace Bailey. OK, I know this is being super picky, but in every other stage production, film adaptation and televised presentation, Elvira isn’t pronounced like the Cassandra Peterson Mistress of the Dark character, it’s pronounced Elveeera, so this new pronunciation took me a minute to adjust. Newcomer to the Larry Keeton Theatre, Erin Grace Bailey is quite the scene-stealer as Elvira. While her name may now be pronounced like an 80s vampire, she’s just your above-average vampy ghost. She takes the tongue-in-cheek storyline and makes the most of it.

Drew Ann Borsos as Madame Arcati

Speaking of making the most of things, Drew Ann Borsos is simply perfect as Madame Arcati, the medium who helms the seance. Borsos peppers her Madame Arcati with equal parts  bumbling Aunt Clara from Bewitched and every blissfully quirky character Shirley MacLaine has played since the 80s. Every line, every movement seems both organic and spontaneous while you just know its all carefully crafted and executed brilliantly. Coward knew what he was doing when he created this character with his words and Borsos more than does it justice.

Rounding out the cast are Shelby Anderson as Edith, the maid, Michael Welch as Charles’ friend and doctor, Dr. George Bradman and Suzette Williamson as Mrs. Bradman. Anderson is quite fun as the scatterbrained, nervous maid and we even get to hear her sing a bit, which is a fun bonus. Welch and Willamson, who basically only appear in two scenes, one during the first act and one in Act 2, are amusing as marrieds, but seem to be a little overzealous in their portrayals and should perhaps reign in their reactions and facial-pulling just a bit. Then again, there’s no pulling attention from Borsos and Bailey, so why even try.

Blithe Spirit continues its three-week run onstage at The Larry Keeton Theatre (108 Donelson Pike, Nashville, TN 37214) now thru October 30. To Purchase Tickets, CLICK HERE or call the box office at 615.231.1231. Adult Dinner and Show tickets are $35. Child Dinner and Show tickets are $25. Show Only tickets are $30 and $20 respectively. During the run, the schedule is as follows: Thursdays-Doors at 6:30p.m./Show at 7p.m. (Thursdays are Show Only days). Fridays and Saturdays-Doors at 5:45p.m./Dinner at 6p.m. and Show at 7p.m. Sundays-Doors at 12:45p.m./Lunch at 1p.m. and show at 2p.m.

Following Blithe Spirit, the Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre ushers in the holidays with Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, onstage December 1-18. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

To keep up with the latest from The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre, follow them on Facebook, Twitter 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.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Nashville Theatre, The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre

Theatre Review: Nashville Story Garden’s US Premiere production of The Welkin wraps two week run Friday, September 30

September 30, 2022 by Jonathan

British playwright Lucy Kirkwood, whose previous works include NSFW, Bloody Wimmin, Chimerica and Mosquitos, can always be counted on to present through-provoking, female-centered, universally themed theatrical experiences. Her latest, The Welkin, is no exception. Having premiered across the pond in 2020, the US premiere, courtesy Nashville Story Garden, wraps its all-too-brief six performance this weekend with a final performance at 7p.m. Friday, September 30 at Riverside Revival (1600 Riverside Drive, East Nashville).

The Welkin seems somewhere between an all female 12 Angry Men, The Crucible and The Scarlet Letter, with maybe a little Handmaid’s Tale thrown in for good measure. While 12 Angry Men focuses on a group of men determining the guilt or innocence of a man accused of murder, Kirkwood’s The Welkin, set in 1759, presents 12 rural Suffolk UK women tasked to not determine a woman’s guilt or innocence, but rather to ascertain whether or not the already accused and convicted woman is with child or not. Their decision then establishing whether or not she be hanged in the public square or allowed to live…at least long enough to bring her child into the world. All this while the otherwise seemingly sleepy burg awaits the spectacle of Halley’s comet.

I was thrilled when Nashville Story Garden’s Lauren Berst reached out to me to ask me to attend opening night. A new play, in a new (for me) venue. That was enough, but add to that, the cast, many of whom I’ve seen in many of my favorite plays over the years, and a few I wasn’t familiar with…always a potential added bonus.

As the play begins, a title card is illuminated on stage reading simply ‘Housework’, while silhouetted images of the players performing various household chores are seen as shadows backlit on crisp white linens hanging across the stage like laundry on the line. The cast then, removes the draping fabric as the title card is changed to read ‘The Night In Question’ as we meet Ayla Williams as Sally Poppy as we witness a bit of what leads her to her eventual sentence. Williams is spectacular as the convicted murderess. She plays the role with spirit and a no-nonsense bite that also eventually reveals innocence lost, or rather, buried away inside her long before the night of the crime.

A later title card reading ‘The Empaneling’ is where we are first fully introduced to the rest of the cast. During the show’s opening week, assistant director Joe Mobley stepped in for Matthew Rose as Mr. Coombs, the jury-appointed liaison between the court and the women. He is at times humorous and a tad bullish as he wavers between being in the minority, but never forgetting he, as a man, is always in the majority.

As for the jury of matrons, director Halena Kays has assembled a who’s who and a who will be stellar cast including Destinee Monet, Melodie Madden Adams, Tamara Todress, Diego Gomez, Candace-Omnira Lafayette, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva, Rachel Agee, Jessica Anderson, Lauren Berst, Megan Murphy Chambers, Matthew Rose, Inez, Rona Carter, Melinda Sewak and the aforementioned Ayla Williams.  With Milly Mason and Jordan Bentley sharing the role of young Katy during the run and Brooke Ferguson understudy for all the women.

Nashville Story Garden’s co-artistic directors, Lauren Berst and Tamara Todress play Lizzy and Emma respectively. Lizzy is the neighborhood midwife, with ties to seemingly everyone, even the aforementioned Mr. Coombs. Berst’s Lizzy takes no guff from anyone and, in spite of her own demons and disappointments, seems to see the good in others. Meanwhile, Emma seems to reserve the majority of her interactions simply holding for disdain anyone she deems below her station. That said, Todress’ Emma is delightful in her disdain.

Of the women, many of them get their moment to shine thanks to the playwright’s clever unraveling of the story, and each and every woman’s background, character and involvement, therein. Perhaps none more than the aforementioned, Ayla Williams, who’s portrayal is at times subtle and at times so explosive she seems on the verge of madness, and who wouldn’t be, given the circumstances of her character’s predicament.

Rachel Agee is marvelous as Judith. She’s played as a bit boisterous and cheeky, perfectly aligning with Agee’s generous talents at both. Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva is splendid as well. Her Helen seems meek and sweet, but there’s some fierceness fueled by sadness revealed as the play unfolds. Other standouts include Rona Carter as Sarah Smith, portraying the eldest member of the group and Melinda Sewak’s Sarah Hollis, who without uttering one word, provides insight to her character’s pain.

Once the verdict is in, and the action nears its end, there’s a post-show scene in which the women reappear in modern wardrobe performing those same household tasks seen in the opener. A jarring reminder that what the audience has witnessed, and what these character’s portray of a world three centuries ago, seems just as much at the forefront of society today. As the adage states, “a woman’s work is never done” and I’ll add, neither is her fight for herself, her body and her rights.

Off-stage, the team responsible for technical aspects of the play should also be celebrated. Jonathan Nicholson’s stark but effective set, Tony Nappo’s mood-enhancing lighting and Matt Logan, listed as costume consultant. Of the costumes, maybe I read more into it than I should…or should I say ‘red’ more into it, but I love that each women, save one, has a bit of red fabric accented somewhere on her wardrobe. To me this symbolized life’s blood, and with the subject matter revolving around whether or not a new life exists in the belly of the accused, that just made sense. Again, perhaps reading more into it than I should, as more and more was revealed about each woman, I wove my own story in my head as to the placement of the red fabric on each woman, and even the amount of it used in her costume. Without giving too much away, a few examples: Lizzy’s arms are both bound with red fabric wrapped ‘round them, perhaps symbolic of her ties to most of the women. Helen is wrapped in a shawl of red, a visual manifestation of the sadness and burden that envelopes her. Even Sarah Smith, who only has a tiny string of red around one finger…by chance suggesting something she need recall. As I said, maybe I read too much into the fabric and the placement, maybe it was just a nice wardrobe accent that created a constant of the otherwise mostly nondescript clothing of the time period.

The Welkin concludes its run with a final performance Friday, September 30. CLICK HERE for tickets.  For more from Nashville Story Garden, CLICK HERE to sign up for their newsletter or follow them on FACEBOOK, INSTAGRAM and TWITTER.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review

Theatre Review: With talent paid in full, nothing left overdue in Nashville Rep’s ‘RENT’; Final performance Sunday, September 25 at 2pm at TPAC’s Jackson Hall

September 25, 2022 by Jonathan

The cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘RENT’

I’m just gonna be honest. Since seeing RENT during it’s original Broadway run, then on tour…twice and a handful of local and regional productions, it’s just not my favorite musical. I KNOW! I KNOW! Apparently I’m not alone though as it seems you either love it or you don’t. Heck, even before it hit the stage last week as the season opening for Nashville Repertory Theatre, I may or may not have joked with a friend or two that the brightly colored wardrobe choices seen in the company’s promotional images, looked, to me like Disney+’s version of Jonathan Larson’s look at late 80s/early 90s life in the time of AIDS in the Lower East Side.

That said, under the direction of Micah-Shane Brewer, with musical direction courtesy Randy Craft and choreography by Tosha Marie, coupled with a cast peppered with a mix of fresh young talent and some remarkable vocals, I’ll admit, The Rep’s RENT (on stage at TPAC‘s Polk Theatre thru Sunday, September 25) just might live in my head rent-free for quite some time.

Still a little skeptical as the show began on opening night, I’ll also admit that when there were some initial issues with the mics of some of the primary cast members, I did lean over to my friend who was my plus1 for the evening and whispered, “I don’t care if they don’t pay the rent, but they could at least pay the electric bill so the mics work.” But I’m here to tell you, once they got into the grove of the music, it was indeed an enjoyable evening of live theatre, something I think we’re all still getting use to after the two-year shutdown without it.

It’s well-known that RENT is based, in part, on Puccini’s opera, La Boheme, which, coincidentally or not, is also currently on stage at TPAC’s larger theatre, the Andrew Jackson Theatre as presented by Nashville Opera. In Puccini’s opera, the action begins in the cold dark apartment of two artists, one a painter, the other a writer, both struggling to make a living and pay their rent.  Larson’s RENT opens in a similar apartment, only this time the artists are an aspiring filmmaker and wannabe songwriter. Wood Van Meter plays Mark, the videographer, while Mike Sallee, Jr. appears as singer/songwriter, Roger.

Van Meter’s Mark is vibrant and full of hope, something not always seen in portrayals of this central character. A definite welcomed interpretation. Van Meter supports the soundtrack throughout, but it’s when he’s featured in numbers like ‘Tango Maureen’ (also featuring powerhouse vocals by Carli Hardon as Maureen’s current love interest, Joanne). Van Meter’s Act 2 solo, ‘Goodbye, Love’ also gives opportunity for his voice to be truly appreciated.

On the flip, Sallee’s Roger is played more introspective and thoughtful. His work on ‘Light My Candle’, ‘Will I’ and ‘Without You’, so rich with feeling.

Both Van Meter and Sallee possess strong vocals skills and a certain comfortability in their respective roles. They definitely play to their strength with this work.

Cast as their on-again-off-again love interests are Natalie Rankin as Maureen, who dumped Mark for a female lover and Marena Lucerno as Mimi, a drug-addicted lost soul who wonders into Mark and Roger’s apartment literally and figuratively looking for light. Rankin’s Maureen is ballsy and unafraid. Even my absolute least favorite musical number, ‘Over the Moon’ is hilariously enjoyable in the capable hands and voice of Rankin. As for Lucerno’s Mimi, she hides her insecurities behind a brash exterior. Both sides of her character are showcased in a couple of the show’s numbers. Her softer side shines bright alongside Sallee’s Roger in ‘Light My Candle’, while her more flamboyant exterior revs up the vibe in ‘Out Tonight’.

Then there’s Deonté Warren as Angel. Again, confession time. Whenever speaking about RENT, I typically recall a local theatrical production I attended about a decade ago, when, not even halfway through the show I leaned over and whispered to my companion, “I can’t wait till Angel dies”. Yes, I know….how dare I, right? Well, the reason for that comment at the time was that more often than not local productions tend to play Angel as a full-on stereotypical drag queen, whereas I’ve always felt the character was likely intended to represents a pre-transitioned trans woman. Yes, I realize Angel’s first scene shows him as a man, playing drums on the street, but the rest of the show, she’s seen in full hair and makeup and her friends refer to her as she/her. Well, in the fabulously capable hands of Warren, Angel is the absolute star of the show. Fierce, Fragile, Funny, Fabulous and Fucking Amazing…all the dang F Words!

Speaking of Fabulous, call it stunt casting, call it whatever you like, but including Lando Hawkins as Angel’s suitor, Tom Collins and Piper Jones as a frequently featured member of the ensemble, who, when together late in Act 2, duet on the reprise of ‘I’ll Cover You’’…simply the show’s best moment. Even my old cynical eyes began to sweat. Simply perfection. And yes…I’m once again a fan of RENT.

You didn’t think I was gonna review RENT without mentioning ‘Seasons of Love’, now did you? As expected, it’s glorious. Nashville Repertory Theatre’s RENT concludes its brief run at TPAC’s Polk Theatre with one final performance Sunday, September 25 at 2pm. CLICK HERE for tickets.

As The Rep’s season continues they’re presenting The Cake October 21-30, Elf: The Musical December 21-January 1, August Wilson’s Fences March 3-5, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time March 24-April 2 and Violet May 12-21. Season Tickets just went on sale earlier this week. CLICK HERE to purchase Season Tickets or for more info. 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, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Nashville Rep

Theatre Review: Blue Man Group’s North American Tour at TPAC thru Sunday, February 16

February 13, 2020 by Jonathan

Blue Man Group, North American Tour on stage at TPAC’s Jackson Hall February 11-16/photo by Lindsey Best

Having seen Blue Man Group right here in Nashville at TPAC twice before, and once in Las Vegas, I wasn’t sure if I’d enjoy them as much a fourth time during their current North American Tour, at TPAC’s Jackson Hall now thru Sunday, February 16. Then again, each of the previous times I’ve seen them, the show’s been slightly different and the laughter and entertainment as ensured I left the theatre in anything but a blue mood, so I was game to check them out once again and Spoiler Alert: they’re just as fun the fourth time around.

Much like the three primary colors present throughout any Blue Man Group performance, their shows also contain three primary elements, sight, sound and happiness. As always, save a few pre-recorded audible proclamations that put the audience in mind of Big Brother, or perhaps an alien life form visiting we mere earthlings, Blue Man Group members never utter a single word. 

From the moment the audience enters the venue and gets a look at the futuristic set, featuring a wall of led screens, lights and a matrix of electronics, speakers and various other goodies, it’s evident they’re in for an evening of high-energy, high-decibel entertainment. 

Having celebrated their thirtieth anniversary back in 2017, Blue Man Group continues to blend fresh ideas and concepts with tried and true…or should I say tried-and-blue audience favorites that captivates audiences ranging in age from tikes to, well, blue hairs. OK, OK, I’ll stop with the blue puns…maybe.

For the current national tour (there’s also concurrent permanent shows in New York, Boston, Chicago, Vegas, Orlando and Berlin), the Boys in Blue (Meridian, Mike Brown, Steven Wendt and Adam Zuick—thought I’m not sure who’s who) began Music City’s Opening Night Tuesday, February 11 with a shower of confetti raining down on the stage from what looked like one of those air-propelled plexiglass drums used in picking lotto numbers. In true blue ‘did they mean to do that?’ fashion, the second drum full of confetti didn’t seem to work, as the spotlight shined on it revealing it was still full and hadn’t released it confetti contents, causing the Blue Man Group to examine it with perplexed looks, eventually giving up and addressing the plethora of confetti that littered the stage.

Taking full advantage of the current Standing Broomstick Challenge that’s been all the rage on social media the last few days, Blue Man Group goes for the obvious and uber-timely laugh by bringing on a bright yellow broom that, yes, stand on its own. Some clever pass-the-broom hijinks later and the odd man out sweeps up the mess.

If you’ve ever attended a Blue Man Group show before, you know that a good portion of the show involves audience reaction and interaction. 

To that end, when the audience erupts in laughter or thunderous applause, the members of Blue Man Group blankly stares out towards the audience with a dumbfounded expression…you know, like a puppy who can’t quite figure out if he should stay, sit or roll over. 

As far as audience interaction, the current Blue Man Group touring show is full of fun, and unpredictable moments. The night I attended, the first of which began with Blue Man Group venturing out into the audience to retrieve a volunteer who ends up being involved in a surprisingly rhythmic musical sequence of squeaks courtesy a rubber chicken.

As mentioned above, some tried-and-blue aspects of the show remain, including the whimsical, yet oddly melodic PVC woodwinds, paintball art and the always crowd-pleasing marshmallow sculpture. Seriously! How does he catch that many marshmallows in his mouth after having them tossed to him from across the stage?

Blue Man Group audience members get in on the act
Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

Another audience moment came when two mostly unsuspecting volunteers were selected. Once the two were seated on stage with Blue Man Group between them, they were each handed a telephone. When their respective phones rang, they, and the audience soon discovered that they were on each other’s line—and conveniently piping through the speaker system of the theatre. With silent, but understood encouragement from Blue Man Group, the two strangers were then encouraged to carry on a conversation. On Opening Night, one audience member seemed a little more excited to be on stage and part of the show than the other, leading to some hilarious interaction. As a reward for his enthusiasm, Blue Man Group posed for a group pic, and, perhaps as punishment for the other’s lack of enthusiasm, she was relegated to taking the photo. I’m sure this bit plays out similarly each night, but Blue Man Group has been at it so long, you’d think each night plays out in a completely different manner.

Paint Drumming
photo by Lindsey Best

Next, three members of Blue Man Group took center stage and proceeded to play what will remind audience members of a certain age of an old aerial tv antenna. Think a multi-tiered, larger than life menorah, which they preceded to strike in various places, playing it like a xylophone condominium. 

Always keeping up with the times, current events and our obsession with the latest technology, there’s a humorous bit involving the fickleness of social media likes/dislikes, as well as another audience participation gag centered ‘round electronic devices and facial recognition.

A little over halfway through the 90ish minute show, there was an all-in audience dance break when Blue Man Group motioned for everyone to get up on their feet and follow along with their dance moves. 

Another seemingly unplanned ‘mishap’ involved hundreds of ping pong balls. Sorry, not sorry. Dozens and dozens of ping pong balls bouncing all around the stage, much to the dismay of Blue Man Group will always be funny.

This was followed by yet another instrumental performance, this time, picture a box fan, with blades made from long PVC pipe. Anyone who’s ever talked into the whirling wings of an oscillating fan as a kid can relate, and enjoy this particular segment. As a matter of fact, I leaned over and whispered to my friend who was accompanying me Opening Night and commented on how the resulting tones would be a soothing ambient sleep noise option.

photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

Near the end of the show Blue Man Group held up bight neon pieces of paper and again, without murmuring a single word, instructed the audience to open their programs and take out the neon paper insert, tear it up and at the appropriate time, throw them into the air. The result, a rave-tactic celebration. 

Blue Man Group closed the show with what is surely now their trademark, a colorific percussion extravaganza pounding three large drums center-stage as primary color lights stream down from above and coordinating primary color paint splashes with each beat of the drums. Oh, and if you go, don’t arrive late…or do…because you’ll be called out, spotlight, humorous proclamation and all.

Blue Man Group continues the Nashville leg of their current North American Tour with shows thru Sunday, February 16. CLICK HERE for tickets or for more information. Following the Music City dates, Blue Man Group continues on tour with shows in Chattanooga, Paducah, Evansville, Knoxville, Richmond, Atlanta, Muncie, West Lafayette, Springfield(s) (IL and OH)…and that’s just through March. So, if you’re not in Nashville but want to catch them on the road, CLICK HERE for dates and specifics in your area. You can always keep up with Blue Man Group by liking them on Facebook and following them on Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.

One of Blue Man Group’s most iconic moments
Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

Up next at TPAC’s Jackson Hall as their Broadway at TPAC season continues, is Jesus Christ Superstar, on stage March 3-8. Discover all the latest from TPAC by checking them out online or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

As always, if you are interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor, simply click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theatre Review Tagged With: Blue Man Group, Blue Man Group National Tour, Blue Man Group Speechless, Broadway, Broadway at TPAC, Broadway in Nashville, Las Vegas, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, National Tour, Speechless Tour, Theatre Review, TPAC

Theatre Review: There’s no such thing as too much hype to describe the theatrical experience that is ‘HAMILTON’; on stage in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall thru January 19

January 3, 2020 by Jonathan

Joseph Morales and members of the cast of ‘Hamilton’/all photos by Joan Marcus, courtesy Hamilton National Tour

Nashville theatre audiences have anxiously awaiting the arrival of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway blockbuster, Hamilton, right here in Music City since Tennessee Performing Arts Center first announced its eventual 2020 arrival during the season announcement party back in April of 2018. Well, the wait is over! Hamilton has ascended upon TPAC’s Jackson Theatre.

Before attending the show Tuesday night, I had honestly never listened to the soundtrack, other than catching occasional televised performances on the Tonys, the Grammys, the Olivier Awards and the like. Partly because I initially hoped to see it on Broadway or Chicago, where I had friends in both companies, but mostly because I kept hearing Hamilton described as a hip-hop musical. While I consider myself musically well-rounded, I’m not exactly a hip-hop aficionado, or a history buff, for that matter. I just didn’t know if I wanted to sit through a two and a half hour musical that tells the tale of Alexander Hamilton through rap and hip-hop. Damn. I’m here to tell you, after experiencing it live, on stage, in a packed house. I was foolish to deny myself this long.

When I say there was a packed house, I’m not exaggerating. My best friend and I arrived to the theatre Tuesday night an hour and a half before curtain (normally, I breeze in as the house opens half and hour before the show begins). When we arrived, valet was surprisingly quick, which reassured me we were simply early. Nope. Once inside TPAC’s lobby, we walked into the biggest crowd of folks I’ve ever seen at the venue and you could feel the buzz of excitement. Hamilton had arrived and Nashville was ready.

As time ticked away, the hour wait flew by. Some passed the time waiting in line for a photo op at the Hamilton selfie wall, while many visited the merch booth for the usual t-shirts and mugs, or Hamilton-centric items like golden quill pens. I myself managed to thankfully find a spot on a bench near the theatre entrance and struck up a conversation with a lady and her daughter who were excited to be there. What’s more, they were there because they had entered TPAC’s ticket lottery and had won the chance to purchase two prime seating tickets for $10 each! CLICK HERE for more about the Hamilton/TPAC ticket lottery.

Once inside the theatre, more selfies were taken as patrons flooded the room. There it was. The set. The first glimpse of what some have described as the most important theatrical experience of our generation. Set Designer, David Korins–whose work includes everything from Pee Wee Herman’s playhouse for its recent stage run to Beetlejuice’s frighteningly fanciful Broadway set–created the Hamilton set. Upon first glance, it appears nautical in nature, with ropes, pulleys and wooden platforms invoking ideas of a ship. Perfect, as we soon discover through the lyrics of the show’s first tune, Alexander Hamilton that the founding father was not only an immigrant orphan, but that he also worked on a trade charter as a young teen.

To the casual viewer, the set seem to remain the same throughout the show. But with the added technical craft of lighting designer Howell Binkley, the set, at times represents everything from a courtroom to the physical representation of the growing age of enlightenment that was New York in the early 18th century. Such a seemingly simplistic set, but so cleverly utilized and smart. While many current shows seem to be following the trend to feature completely realistic projections, Korin’s wooden scaffolding set, complete with a surprise dual…or should I say duel (see the show, you’ll get the reference)…turntable floor feature, enhances the action of the show and the music, but doesn’t distract from it.

On the subject of the music of Hamilton, as mentioned above, yes, hip-hop is predominant, and not just in style, but in reverence to the genre itself. It can’t be coincidence that the show’s second musical number, My Shot, begins with Hamilton spelling out his name in a rhythmic patter, “A-L-E-X/A-N/D/ER”. That’s surely a nod to legendary rapper Notorious B.I.G., who rapped, “N-O/T-O/R-I/O/U-S” within the lyrics of his iconic 1997 cross-over hit, Going Back to Cali. That’s not the only Biggie nod, as midway through act one’s Ten Dueling Commandments commands memories of B.I.G.’s The Ten Crack Commandments, a track from the performer’s final studio recording. Notorious B.I.G. isn’t the only hip-hop artist Miranda pays homage to. The opening of Cabinet Battle #1 has a Jay-Z Izzo intro vibe. Heck, the cabinet battles themselves are even staged like classic rap battles, mic-drop and all., There’s also a similarity between Hamilton’s Meet Me Inside to DMX’s Party Up in Here. 

It’s not just hip-hop that’s references in Miranda’s brilliant soundtrack. There’s also more than a few winks to the art of showtunes themselves. The most obvious, nods to Gilbert and Sullivan, Jason Robert Brown and Rodgers and Hammerstein. For Gilbert and Sullivan, it’s the hilarious inclusion of a direct lyrical lift from Pirates of Penzance, featured during Hamilton’s Right Hand Man when General George Washington refers to himself as “the very model of a modern major general”. Jason Robert Brown’s The Last Five Years’ Nobody Needs to Know, pops into Hamilton during Say No To This. My favorite of these three…during My Shot, Hamilton references South Pacific’s Carefully Taught.

Other lyrical nods may or may not be intentional, but rather, perhaps only coincidental, but I doubt it. Miranda has proven himself a true lover of musical theatre by including lyrical taps to things like 1776: The Musical’s Sit Down, John. While it covers the same subject matter as Hamilton’s The Adams Administration, it’s given a decidedly edgier and hilarious feel when accompanied by an unexpected expletive. There are literally a couple dozen theatre references, intentional or not, throughout the show, but I digress.

Rap and Showtunes are just two of the musical genres Miranda includes within Hamilton. Perfectly setting the scene with acknowledgement to the factual time during which the action is set, Hamilton also includes period-authentic instrumentation. During King George’s Act 1 jewel, You’ll Be Back, a harpsichord is featured. What’s the significance? A harpsichord perfectly repersents the time period as many composers of the day included parts for the now oft-forgotten instrument in their arrangements. Then there’s an actual piece originally composed by composer Wilhelm Richard Wagner included in Hamilton during Helpless, when Alexander proposes to Eliza. The classic piece in question…commonly known as Here Comes the Bride, is actually titled Bridal Chorus and was first presented by Wagner during his 1850 opera, Lohengrin.

OK, enough…probably too much…about the trivial musical winks, but I had to mention, as listening for them and recognizing them became one of my favorite aspect of seeing the show for the first time.

Because of its continued success and popularity, Hamilton is still on Broadway, while simultaneously embarking on their National Tour…there are two current US tours in fact,—The Philip Tour and the Angelica Tour. Nashville’s TPAC is playing host to The Philip Tour.

Starring as Alexander Hamilton is Joseph Morales, who was previously part of Hamilton’s Chicago company. As Hamilton, Morales plays the founding father , whom we first meet at age 19 when he arrives in New York in 1776. For those droves of Hamilton fans, Morales, and anyone who ever plays Hamilton, has the unenviable task of stepping into the role orignated by Miranda himself, daunting, indeed. To his absolute credit, Morales approaches young Hamilton during Act 1 with a convincing naïveté paired perfectly with an excitement to make his mark on the new world. I’m not gonna lie. From his first notes of the eponymous Alexander Hamilton to the finale, Morales evoked chills as I learned more about Hamilton than I ever realized I needed to know. Morales portrays Hamilton from enthusiastic young man with a vision through the pain of losing his son, jeopardizing his marriage and his ultimate untimely death, running the gamut of emotion in a believable, but unforced way

Cast as Hamilton’s counterpoint and eventual assassin–Come on…that’s no Spoiler..even I knew that–is Jared Dixon as Aaron Burr. Alright, I have to admit it, the only reason I know Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton is thanks to an early 90s Got Milk? commercial (directed by Michael Bay, btw) in which a Hamilton historian misses out on a radio trivia contest while eating peanut butter sandwich with not enough milk to wash it down…again….I digress. 

Dixon as Burr, the OG frienemy, is not only the perfect foil for Morales’ Hamilton, but also the perfect scene partner, their lyrical sparring make for some of the show’s most enjoyable moments. Plus there’s the running gag of the way everyone lingers on then pronunciation of Burr’s surname, which begins with the tune Aaron Burr, Sir and continues throughout the show.

The Schuyler Sisters

As well-known to Hamilfans as Hamilton and Burr there’s also The Schuyler Sisters, Angelica, Eliza…and Peggy (see the show, you’ll get the reference). Cast as Hamilton’s love interest and eventual wife, Eliza is Erin Clemons. Her physical beauty, and that of the actresses playing her sisters, only accentuated by the glorious costumes courtesy costume designer Paul Tazewell, Clemons is the perfect scene partner for Morales’ Hamilton, not only vocally holding her own, but wowing the audience during numbers like the gorgeous Helpless, an r&b ballad with a healthy dose of the romanticism of a Cole Porter standard. 

As Angelica, Ta’Rea Campell is mesmerizing. Presented not only as Eliza’s selfless sister, but also as Hamilton’s unrequited love, Campbell’s performance presents a subtle depth to the character, especially during her featured turn alongside Clemons and Morales during the gorgeous Satisfied.

Nyla Sostra’s Peggy is memorable, mostly because the character herself is played as forgettable. That said, Sostra snags the spotlight in the dual role of Maria Reynolds, with whom Hamilton had an ill-fated illicit affair that would prove a potential thorn in his political side. In a wardrobe move straight out of Bette Davis’ Jezebel, when Sostra takes to the stage in a red dress as Reynolds, the heat is on.

As expected, other historical figures present in Miranda’s Hamilton include the aforementioned King George III, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

Joseph Morales and Marcus Choi in ‘Hamilton’

As George Washington, Marcus Choi plays our first president with a bit of wit and wisdom, making me personally long for a leader with those same qualities. Songs like Right Hand Man, Stay Alive and One Last Time showcase Choi’s talents perfectly.

Neil Haskell as King George III is everything you’d hope a self-centered royal would be…and then some. With equal parts Sir Elton John at his campiest mixed with your anything-but-average spoiled monarch, Haskell steals every scene he’s in…and interestingly, he interjects himself throughout the action of the play, even though it all takes place stateside.Haskell’s King George puts the ham in Hamilton in the best way possible during You’ll Be Back, What Comes Next and I Know Him…all containing a happy sing-song 60s Brit-pop melody. A nice contrast the the soundtrack predominately heavier rap aesthetic.

King George III

Warren Egypt Franklin’s Thomas Jefferson—clad in a purple topcoat that rivals anything rock royalty Prince ever wore and strutting like a banty rooster with a cockiness that’s reminiscent of another Jefferson…TV’s George Jefferson as played in the 70s by Sherman Hemsley—he too holds his own and steals the limelight whenever he’s on stage. What’d I Miss, Cabinet Battle #1 and Election of 1800, among his musical highlights. Franklin also does double duty appearing as Marquis de Lafayette, changing it up a bit donning a humorously heavy accent and a less flashy topcoat for the role.

Also doing double duty in two supporting roles Desmond Sean Ellington as Hercules Mulligan and James Madison, Elijah Malcomb as John Laurens and Philip Hamilton, the aforementioned Nyla Sostre and Nick Sanchez who plays three roles: Philip Schuyler, James Reynolds and Doctor. 

These actors, along with the rest of the ensemble and the leads, bring the story of Hamilton to glorious life. 

In addition to Lin-Manuel Miranda’s inventive book, music and lyrics, Hamilton also boasts an electrifying array of movement as choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler. To that end, the visual presentation of the ensemble dancers, whether dressed in full military garb, or stripped down to petticoats and form-fitting pants and sleeveless undershirts, as dressed by Tazewell, perfectly accentuates the movement. At times, while the leads perform vocally, the ensemble beautifully accentuates their words with movement. Much like the genre-crossing inclusion of music, many dance forms are presented in Hamilton, from ballet, to jazz, hip-hop and even touches of traditional tribal dance. Proving once again, Miranda and company deserve every bit of hype, but more importantly, praise for THE musical of our time.

Hamilton continues its extended run at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with performance through January 19. To follow Hamilton, check them out on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

You can discover all the latest from TPAC by checking them out online or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

As always, if you are interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor, simply click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theatre Review Tagged With: Broadway, Broadway to Nashville, Broadway Tour, HAMILTON, Hamilton Musical, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Review, TPAC

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