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Theatre Review: Keeton Theatre’s ‘Driving Miss Daisy’; beautiful story of unexpected friendship and shared life journeys

August 30, 2019 by Jonathan

I’ve loved the story of Driving Miss Daisy since the film adaptation hit movie screens in the late 80s. I’ll be perfectly honest. At the time, I wasn’t aware it was a stage play some ten years prior to its leap to the big screen. I have, of course seen my share of theatrical production of the story in the years since, but I’m here to tell you, the Larry Keeton Theatre’s current iteration starring Linda Speir, Elliott Robinson and Jonathan Wilburn, as directed by Melissa Williams, is, hands down, my favorite version yet. Second only to the Jessica Tandy, Morgan Freeman, Dan Aykroyd film adaptation. 

No stranger to Keeton audiences, nor to playing memorable affluent southern women of substance, determination and wit, Speir was seen last year at the beloved dinner theatre in the company’s presentation of Steel Magnolias. 

Having enjoyed Speir in a couple of productions of that other favorite southern tale, I once wrote that she should simply make a career of playing Clairee Belcher. Thankfully, director Williams ignored my suggestion and cast Speir as Daisy Worthan. 

While there are similarities between these two iconic southern characters, and a lesser actor might be satisfied to play them with virtually the same delivery, Speir manages to find her unique voice for this turn as the elderly matriarch who is being forced, partly by her son, but mostly by the realities of aging, to accept assistance and change—both in her everyday life, and the world around her. 

When the curtain rises, it’s Atlanta, 1948 as the audience meets Miss Daisy content in her home quietly singing to herself. In what could easily be interpreted as a bit of foreshadowing, she’s singing “After the Ball is Over”, a tune made popular at the turn of the century telling of lost love. Kudos to director, Williams for this and other period-perfect musical interludes that beautifully frame scenes throughout the play. 

From the beginning, Speir presents Miss Daisy as a fiercely independent woman. That independence is seemingly threatened when it becomes necessary for her son, Boolie, (Jonathan Wilburn) to hire his aging mother a driver. 

Wilburn is perfectly as Boolie, even sounding quite like Aykroyd. Unlike the film star, though, Wilburn’s Boolie is likable. Yes, he’s often stern with his defiant and proud mother, but there’s a gentleness to his performance that reaffirms everything he does…he does out of love. 

As for the above-mentioned hired driver, Elliott Robinson, another actor familiar to Keeton audiences, is simply joyous as Hoke Colburn. Considering the play takes place during mid-century Atlanta, and deals directly either social, economic and racial differences of the past, still occurring in the present, Robinson’s role as Hoke and his evolving relationship with Miss Daisy is perhaps the most challenging of all three characters in the work. While the role of Hoke, might seem to some initially a bit of a racial stereotype as it presents a black man working for an wealthy white family in the south, it’s quickly evident there’s more to the role, and the actor. Robinson finds a gorgeous balance somewhere squarely between the man, his job and his great affect on those around him. 

The playwright, Alfred Uhry does a magnificent job with the script, exploring and highlighting parallels between Daisy and Hoke, Hoke and Boolie and Boolie and Daisy, and as a director, Williams blissfully builds on these parallels with the interactions of her cast.

The play is never more poignant, nor brilliant than when the audience watches the relationship between Miss Daisy and Hoke morph from employer and employee to genuine friends. 

When Boolie first hires Hoke to drive Miss Daisy, Speir’s Daisy is seen initially resisting any help, then she becomes very determined to hide the fact that she has a hired driver, concerned about potential gossip surrounding her financial status. She settles into allowing Hoke to open her door and drive her, but as soon as she actually learns to trust and rely on Hoke, she drops all expected behaviors, ultimately opening her own door and letting Hoke take on the role of friend and confidant. These actions might even go unnoticed to some audience members, but Williams is to be commended for subtle, yet effective direction that gives visual clues to the metamorphosis.

Similarly, when Hoke reveals to Daisy that he can’t read, she sees an opportunity to return to her beloved vocation as a teacher and helps him learn to read.

Among the many highlights of the play, no moments are more perfectly presented than the work’s final scenes when Miss Daisy and Hoke are both reaching the twilight of their lives. With slight tremors in the voices and movement, Speir and Robinson both alter their physical presence to reflect the ravages of age and they do so effectively, never over-exaggerating or simplifying to the point of parody, instead playing it perfectly convincingly real. By play’s end the audience genuinely feels as if we are watching two longtime friends sharing one final holiday visit. And what could be more beautiful than that?

Driving Miss Daisy wraps its three-week run at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre (108 Donelson Pike) with evening performances thru Saturday, August 31 with dinner service at 6 p.m. and show  beginning at 7 p.m. Dinner and Show tickets are $30 for Adults, $20 for Children 12 and under. As always, the dinner is perfectly themed to match the show, with a delicious decidedly southern menu of meatloaf, green beans, mashed potatoes, fried green tomatoes and peach cobbler served piping hot. Of course you could opt for Show Only tickets for $25 for Adults or $15 for Children 12 and Under, but why on earth would you miss that meal? Limited tickets are available for Friday and Saturday night performances. Call 615.883.8375 for tickets and availability.

Next up at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre from October 10-26 is Little Shop of Horrors. 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.

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Theatre Review: Chaffin’s ‘Southern Fried Nuptials’ serves up main course of unexpected marital complications with a healthy side of laughter

August 14, 2019 by Jonathan

Southern Fried Nuptials, currently on stage at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre centers ‘round members of the Frye family, a typical—if not at times, stereotypical—southern family first introduced to audiences in Southern Fried Funeral. Both works cowritten by Nashville’s answer to Rodgers and Hammerstein, Nate Eppler and Dietz Osborne (credited collectively, simply as Osborne and Eppler), Southern Fried Funeral first played Chaffin’s back in 2011 and was last seen at the venerable theatre just two years ago.

While it’s been two years in real time since Chaffin’s presented Funeral, according to the timeline of the fictional tale, Southern Fried Nuptials takes place a year after the events of our first visit to New Edinburgh, Mississippi as we once again look in on the Frye family facing yet another of life’s monumental happenings. This time, as the title suggests, it’s the marriage of  Dorothy Frye’s eldest daughter, Harlene. 

One of the best aspects of a sequel to a popular play being produced by the same theatre company that previously mounted the original, comes in the fact that the audience not only gets to revisit some of the same characters, but also some of the same actors who are reprising their roles, both from previous Chaffin’s Barn productions as well as original mountings of the works elsewhere. To that end, Chaffin’s Southern Fried Nuptials reunites cast members on stage and behind the scenes, with John Mauldin, who appeared on stage in the previous presentation Chaffin’s production of Funeral, now directing and cast members Jenny Norris, Jenna Pryor, Layne Sasser and Joy Tilley Perryman all reprising their 2017 roles. On the night I saw Nuptials during opening weekend, Perryman was unable to appear, due to illness, so Debbie Kraski filled in, having been a part of the 2011 Barn cast. Cast member Tammie Whited is also familiar with the Southern Fried family, having appeared in prior mountings of both Funeral and Nuptials.

Having last appeared on stage at The Barn in God’s Favorite, Jenny Wallace stars as Dorothy Frye, the widowed matriarch of the family. Wallace seems to have found her Dorothy somewhere squarely between Steel Magnolia’s caring mamma bear, M’Lynn Eatenton and always prim and proper Clairee Belcher. 

Members of the cast of “Southern Fried Nuptials” (all photos by Michael Scott Evans)

Jenny Norris, fresh off her wickedly fun turn as Miss Hannigan in Chaffin’s Annie, once again takes on the role of Harlene Frye, the family’s eldest daughter, whose pending nuptials are the focus of the piece. In the original, Norris’ Harlene is seen as the prodigal daughter, returning home for the funeral of her father. In Nuptials, Norris plays Harlene a bit harried, but always stunning. Even when she’s playing a scene in which she’s put on her wedding dress backwards, a scene strictly written for laughs, Norris beauty shows through, revealing her to be a beautiful bride regardless. Norris possesses a magnetism no matter whether she’s sparring with her character’s sister, sharing a tender moment with her on-stage brother or in a heated argument with either of her leading men. 

Of her leading men, Harlene seems to have settled back into life in her hometown with all eyes on her as she prepares for her wedding to childhood sweetheart and successful young lawyer, Atticus “Atty” Van Leer. Played to the seersucker-clad hilt with all the southern charm he can muster, J. Robert Lindsey exudes a star quality that shines brighter each show he’s in. Note to all area theatre companies….after seeing Lindsey as Atty, I now long for the day he’s cast as that other famous southern lawyer named Atticus….Atticus Finch. Maybe it’s the suit, maybe it’s his stage presence and comfortability…whatever the case, with each role, Lindsey continues to be one to watch amongst Nashville theatre community.

Of course you can’t have a southern family wedding without unforeseen complications. Enter Chaffin’s newcomer, Gabe Achley as Carter Canfield, who…shall we say…knew Harlene during the time she was the aforementioned away from the Fryes. With good look, a swarthy manner and a voice to match, Archley’s Carter Canfield gives Norris’ Harlene reason to temporarily reconsider her marital plans. A perfect indication of Archley’s on-stage appeal, following last weekend’s performance I attended, as the actors stood in a receiving line to chat with patrons, my own sweet little southern mama grinned at Archly and said, “she should have chosen you”.

Returning to the role of the Frye family’s middle child is Jenna Pryor as Sammy Jo Frye-LeFette. Of course she comes with her own news for the family and alongside hubby Beecham LeFette, played by frequent Chaffin’s actor, Austin Olive, the two nicely navigate the ins and outs of young marrieds as they wrestle with the right time to share some news that could potentially take the focus from her sister’s wedding. 

Norris, Wallace and Bissell in a scene from “Southern Fried Funeral”

Rounding out the Frye family is Daniel Bissell as Dewey Frye, Jr., affectionately called Dew Drop by his family. Judging from the way Dewey acts…let’s just say…he might be a few fries short of a happy meal…he might have gotten that nickname because he was dropped on his head as a baby. A bit simple, as we southerns might say, Dewey is nonetheless endearing, especially where his duties as official present-cataloger for his big sister’s wedding haul is concerned. A plot point involving Dewey from the original work also nicely figures into the resolution of big sister, Harlene’s nuptial thorn.

As is typical of a southern family, oftentimes family isn’t limited to blood-relations. Southern Fried Nuptials pays sweet homage to this within the relationships between Dorothy Frye and the remaining characters. First there’s family friend Vester Pickens, a successful local pickle magnate with an eye for Dorothy. Benny Jones plays Pickens with a gentle kindness as he initially evades the romance at hand.

As mentioned above, during opening weekend, Joy Tilley Perryman was unable to appear, necessitating other actresses stepping into the role of Ozella Meeks, New Edinburgh’s resident busy body and know-it-all neighbor and friend of the Frye family. With a hilarious beehive ‘do that brings to mind the adage, “the bigger the hair, the closer to Jesus”, the night I attended the show, Debbie Kraski stepped into the role of Ozella, and she did so with perfect comedic timing. Prior to the show’s start, the house manager made mention of the late-hour substitution and explained that Kraski would be performing on-book, meaning she’d have her script on stage with her. As luck would have it, within the story, Ozella becomes the wedding planner, so it seemed perfectly natural that she’d always have a notebook in her had and Kraski played it off seamlessly.

Also among the friends of the Frye family is Tammie Whited as Martha Ann Fox, Dorothy’s best friend and business associate. Having originated the role of Martha Ann in both premiere productions of Funeral and Nuptials, Whited eases back into the role as the often unsolicited, but necessary voice of reason to bestie Dorothy, but it’s her role as straight man to some of the show’s truly thigh-slapping, hee-haw laughter inducing moments that allow her to shine. With brilliant deadpan looks she sets them up and her scene partner knocks them down…with laughter.

Chaffin’s newcomer, Gabe Atchley and comeic genius, Layne Sasser in an uproarious scene from “Southern Fried Nuptials”

That scene partner being Layne Sasser, a true Nashville theatrical treasure once again reprising her role as Fairy June Cooper. With hints of The Golden Girls’ Rose Nylund mixed with Designing Women’s Bernice Clifton, Sasser’s Fairy June is a delightfully daffy joy to behold. You know how some performers simply steal the limelight every time the walk on stage? Well, I’m here to tell you Sasser doesn’t steal the spotlight, she OWNS it. She plays the daft but delightful kooky friend and neighbor we all know and love to the hilt. During a particularly funny scene when she’s relaying a particularly winding story about an over-indulgent dog that may or may not have anything to do with the Frye family’s current predicaments, I found myself laughing so hard tears were welling up. 

While the plot might seem as thin as watered down gravy on the second Sunday after a big family dinner, manage to elevate the story with a few unexpected twists and turns, while simultaneously staying the course to provide a down home comedy with more than a few thoughtful family moments. Coupled with director Maudlin’s inherent appreciation of the genre and his gathering of retiring favorites and newcomers to the roles, Southern Fried Nuptials is one wedding that’s blissful with laughs.

Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Southern Fried Nuptials runs through August 24 with performances Thursday-Sunday. Thursday matinees begin at 12 noon (doors at 11a.m.), while Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening performances begin at 7:30p.m. (doors at 5:30). There will be a 2 p.m. (doors at noon) Sunday matinee on August 18. The Thursday, August 22 noon matinee will is SOLD OUT. 

Thursday matinee tickets are $19 for show only or $27.50 for show and a Box Lunch. (Wednesday matinee will also offer the Box Lunch option). Evening show tickets are $13 for children 12 and under, $20 for youth/students and $35 for adults. As always, Chaffin’s also offers a full buffet option or a la carte menu items for their evening and Sunday lunch matinee performances. Chaffin’s delicious buffet, featuring a choice of entrees (including a veggie option), and a number of side items is available for an additional $15.95, while the a la carte menu items range in price from $6.95 to $10.95, plus there’s a wide array of desert options to choose from $2.50 to $5.00. CLICK HERE to check out the menu.  CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or call 615.646.9977 to make reservations with the box office. Following Southern Fried Nuptials, Chaffin’s will present Sherlock Holmes The Final Adventure from August 29-September 14. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. 

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Rapid Fire Q&A with Act Too Players’ ‘Matilda’ co-stars, Megan Murphy Chambers and Thomas DeMarcus

August 3, 2019 by Jonathan

Act Two Players and AT PRO’s “Matilda”, onstage at The Franklin Theatre through Sunday, August 11.

On Friday, August 2, Act Too Players’ professional theatre company, AT PRO will open their production of Matilda: The Musical at the historic Franklin Theatre nestled just off the town square in Franklin, TN. Based on Roald Dahl’s beloved children’s book, the 4-time Tony Award-winning musical features music and lyrics by Tim Minchin and book by Tony-winning playwright, Dennis Kelly. Directed by Act To Players’ theatre arts director, Sondra Morton, with musical direction from Jamey Green, the title role of Matilda will be shared (at alternating performances) by two young actors, Reese Benton and Reagan Schmicker and will feature a number of other youth performers and Act Too Players students. As for the adult cast, Tennessee native, Thomas DeMarcus, who now resides in New York, will take on the role of Ms. Trunchbull, with local theatrical mega-star, Megan Murphy Chambers playing Matilda’s less-than-caring mother, Mrs. Wormwood. Among the other adult cast members are Jeremy Maxwell as Mr. Wormwood, Erica Haines as Ms Honey and Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva as Ms. Phelps. 

Just yesterday, while the cast was in the final hours of tech week, before Friday’s opening night, I had the chance to chat with DeMarcus and Chambers about their roles, working together, collaborating with Morton and the youth cast of Matilda for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q. As always, the conversations were enlightening and entertaining, perfectly fitting considering the subject is Matilda.

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RAPID FIRE WITH MATILDA’s MRS. WORMWOOD, MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS

Megan Murphy Chambers

JHP: Who is Mrs. Wormwood to you?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Mrs. Wormwood is the delicious personification of rotten, upside-down Megan. She is shallow, blunt, arrogant and narcissistic. I am loving every single minute of wearing her leopard print skin. 

JHP: Exactly how many shows have you been involved in in collaboration with Sondra Morton?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Roughly 9,000, I think. 9,001 if you count the show that was being in the delivery room when her son was born.

JHP: Sometimes I feel like Sondra, Act Too Players and other youth theatre programs around town don’t get the praise they deserve. What’s something you would like to say to Sondra about her work with Act Too?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: I agree that anyone who works with kids in this capacity is an unsung hero. The performance opportunities these kids get are extraordinary, and the miracles Sondra works to get these shows put together blow my mind.  Above all, though, the community that gets built during the process is unlike anything I’ve seen before.  I’ve heard so many of our students say that they feel like a most authentic version of themselves when they’re at Act Too, and I’m really proud to be part of that.  Sondra (and Erica, and Jamey!) are absolutely amazing. 

Megan Murphy Chambers as Mrs. Wormwood

JHP: One aspect of Mrs. Wormwood’s personality is her lack of concern where her children are concerned. Knowing what little I do about you as a person, I can say with certainty that couldn’t be further from the truth, especially considering when not on stage at Act Too Players, you are among the staff of Act Too Players. How vital is it to encourage the creativity of youth in the performing arts?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Being part of high school theater and choir changed the trajectory of my life forever, so you won’t find a bigger advocate for youth arts programming than me. Regardless of what path a kid decides to follow, there are so many essential life skills that the kids pick up when working on a show. They become better communicators, collaborators, and empathizers. Watching these programs get pillaged breaks my heart, and does such a disservice to society in general.  Art makes us complete, makes us better versions of ourselves!

JHP: As a staff member of Act Too Players, your official job title is Experience Manager. What exactly does that title involve?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: More than anything, I maintain lines of communication with our parents and families. I love that part of my job, and I love when show time rolls around, and that communication turns into actual face time with both the kids and their families. 

JHP: While your character isn’t exactly maternal, Matilda does find a friend and mentor in Miss Honey. Who encouraged your creativity and free-spiritedness as a child?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: My childhood home was always filled with music, and my parents stocked us up with paper to draw on and Legos to build with; they’re both really interesting and creative people themselves, and my sister’s and my imaginations were encouraged to thrive. My 2nd grade teacher, Mrs. Brown, also threw a lot of gasoline onto my fire. She created a beautiful bound version of a book I wrote when I was 8 called Confetti about, no surprise, a dog. 

JHP: As Matilda’s on-stage mother, you are working with not one, but two young actors who are alternating in the lead role. What can you tell me about your two young co-stars, Reese Benton and Reagan Schmicker?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Reese and Reagan are delightful, capable, professional young ladies, and we are truly lucky to have both of them in this show. They have a huge role to tackle and are doing it with real grace and enthusiasm, not to mention talent. It’s also been lovely to watch them work together as a team. I’ve seen zero competitiveness whatsoever – just authentic support and enjoyment of each other. I love being awful to both of them!

JHP: Do you find being the uncaring Mrs. Wormwood on-stage has caused you to be extra nice to the youth cast off-stage, or do you avoid them in an effort to stay in character?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: First of all – any of my friends reading this right now are laughing out loud at the idea of me ever being extra nice to kids 🙂  Coddling anyone other than my pit bull goes against my very nature. My character doesn’t impact the way I treat the kids at all.  My favorite thing about doing an Act Too Pro show with them is getting to just be a fellow actor (rather than a stage manager or child-wrangler or person in a leadership position).  In this environment, I treat them all the same as I do any other colleague. We have a great time, and I expect the same level of professionalism (and fun!) from them as I do any of the rest of my cast mates.   

JHP: What’s the best part of having Jeremy Maxwell as your on-stage husband, Mr. Wormwood?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: I love watching Jeremy work, and he is always 100% game to experiment on stage with. Jeremy is super alive in a scene, and up for anything. It’s also lovely to watch someone who is so naturally patient and good with kids be so horrible to our Matildas.

JHP: I’m about chat with another of you co-stars, Thomas DeMarcus. If memory serves me you were both among the cast of Boiler Room Theatre’s Gypsy in 2004. When did the two of you first meet?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Thomas and I were friends looooong before Gypsy. We went to high school together, and he is one of literally two people that I’m still in touch with from those days. It has been so fun to be in a show with him again, so I’m overjoyed that we were able to lure him away from NYC for a little while. Getting to work with someone I’ve been friends with since 1993 is a gift, and I hope we’re still playing 25 years from now. There is no one I’d rather see play Trunchbull than him. 

RAPID FIRE WITH MATILDA’s MS. TRUNCHBULL, THOMAS DeMARCUS

Thomas DeMarcus

JHP:  Tell me about your portrayal of Ms. Trunchbull.

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  I have loved Ms. Trunchbull since I helped the original Broadway production on their special events team. She’s so deliciously cruel and righteous that you can’t help but stare and be intimidated by. She has this wonderful pattern to her speech with so many different ways to insult you and has zero regards for your feelings. Everyone always wonders what it’s like to play the villain but the villain never knows they’re the villain. They’re behaving and reacting honestly to their own ideals. Agatha is a joy to play. Her costume and her makeup and hair do so much of the work, I just need to remember when Matilda is being a maggot and when Matilda is being a disgusting little toad. Ms. Trunchbull chooses her words carefully.

JHP: Appearing in Act Too Players’ Matilda is a bit of a homecoming on a couple of levels in that you grew up near Franklin n nearby Brentwood and you have a bit of a history with Act Too Players’ founder and Theatre Arts Director, Sondra Morton, having appeared in a few shows at Morton’s beloved and much-missed Boiler Room Theatre. What’s it been like to come back home, be a part of this show and work with Sondra again?

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  Coming back home feels truly wonderful. I miss Brentwood. A fun yearly game is figuring out which new restaurant has popped up at the place where that old restaurant used to be.  My parents are still here in the same house I grew up so they are thrilled to have me join them for a little bit. Sondra is one of those people that I will always have fond memories of. She was in my first show at the Boiler Room Theatre (The 1940’s Radio Hour) and the Boiler Room is where I met some of my greatest friends (some of them can be found in this production of Matilda!). To know that Sondra has built this company and sustained it for so long in an ever-growing and always-changing landscape of middle-Tennessee is nothing short of remarkable. She always has fifty irons in the fire and yet can answer a specific question without missing a beat. She’s immensely creative and a champion of trying something to see if it fails. She truly supports these kids and beams at their successes. I’m beyond grateful that she called me me in!

JHP: You attended the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. While there, you switched your focus from math to theatre. What prompted the change in your course of study? 

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  I know I never considered theatre a profession coming out of high school. I believe I told my guidance counselor that I wanted to teach math and help coach the basketball team at some middle or high school that would hire me. But once I devoted 100% of my time and energy into the theatre department and kept meeting great artists brought in from all over the world, I began to see theatre as a career. I still LOVE MATH. Ask anyone. There’s an aspect to problem solving that I find so relaxing. I can make the (broad) connection between math and theatre through problem solving. Instead of solving for x, I’m trying to figure out why this character would do or say that. Look, it’s a loose connection but I’m sticking with it…just let me solve my sudoku in peace.

JHP: Anytime I chat with anyone who has a connection to UT, I have to ask….did you have the opportunity to study under my friend Carol Mayo-Jenkins, who I of course remember first for her portrayal of Miss Sherwood in TV’s Fame?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: Carol returned to Knoxville just as I was leaving so I never had her for a teacher, however, I was extremely fortunate to work with her onstage in The Glass Menagerie. She played Amanda and I was the gentleman caller brought over to dinner to try and make a love connection with her daughter, Laura. My character doesn’t come onstage until Act 2 so I got to watch the masterclass Carol would put on every night from the wings. She is truly an angel and could not have been warmer or more lovely to this young college student. We also had one of those lovely only-in-live-theatre moments where a candle would not stay in the candle holder and her commitment to staying in character was nothing short of brilliant. She is every bit a professional and she could read the salads off of a menu and receive a standing ovation. You know you’re doing something magical when the city of Knoxville dedicates a day in your name.

JHP: What do you recall most about your time at UT?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: I had always been an excellent student but when I got to UT, my discipline turned wholly to the theatre department. I flung myself at every audition, took every theatre class, and treated my education as if I was at a BFA program versus a BA program. I couldn’t wrap my head around the need for an astronomy class or two semesters of French when all I really hungered for was more sonnets and more scenes. To say I regret my years at UT is misleading because the time I wasted there is through no one’s fault but my own. I learned a significant amount while I was there, but I could have been more upfront with what I was truly looking for. There’s a line from one of my favorite musicals, Passing Strange that says “Do you ever think it’s weird that your entire adult life is based off the decision of an 18-year old?” Sometimes I think college is wasted on the young and yet I don’t want this to come off as anti-college and certainly not anti-UT. I love Knoxville, I miss Knoxville and UT gave me so many opportunities. And storming the field after a victory over Florida ranks very high up on my greatest days list.

JHP: During your time at UT, you were involved in All Campus Theatre (ACT), a student-run troupe. What stands out in your mind about your time with ACT and what have you noticed about your time in this production at Act Too?

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  All Campus Theatre was a vital part of my undergraduate training. Because The University of Tennessee has a professional, resident theatre on campus (the magnificent Clarence Brown Theatre), there weren’t many opportunities for the undergraduates to be in mainstage productions. Outside of classwork, the well was fairly dry when it came to performance, design, or direction. ACT was completely student operated and became the secondary theatrical energy I was looking for. I remember we were all wide-eyed and ambitious as we would have Barefoot in the Park followed by One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. We were one of the first, if not the first production of Steve Martin‘s Picasso at the Lapin Agile after its New York run because we simply wrote him a letter asking for his permission (He agreed, and we had a gold chair reserved for him at every performance). What’s great about Act Too Players is I can see Sondra giving these kids such great opportunities they may not be getting elsewhere. It’s beautiful to see them dive into the work.

Thomas DeMarcus as Ms. Trunchbull

JHP: Ms. Trunchbull isn’t your first time to play a campy drag character onstage, having appeared in the National Tour of Spamalot, playing, among others, Dennis’ Mother. What are the best and worst aspects of tongue-in-cheek gender switched roles?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: The best part, other than perhaps an easy laugh, is the instant recalculation for the audience. There tends to be a double-take even if they know the drag is happening. They become more attentive as they try to figure out just what’s happening and what’s appropriate to laugh at or with. I’d say the worst part is there is always a tendency to over do the character. I have to remember that Agatha Trunchbull is a woman and nothing is particularly cartoonish about Agatha’s behavior in her mind. She may be brash and bold but it needs to come from a real place or the audience will know it’s all for show. The audience is always smarter than the actors.

JHP: Among your other theatre credits, you were also among the cast of the touring company of Peter and the Starcatcher. What was your favorite aspect of touring with that particular show? 

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  I LOVED That Company. Our time together was all too short as we only toured for three months. That show was the definition of ensemble and we only had about eight days to learn the Broadway version. If you assigned a color to everyone’s walking path onstage and put it on a chart it would make a fine Rorshach experiment.  Everyone is essentially onstage for the entire play and you cannot lose focus. You are constantly moving. One hour of every rehearsal was dedicated to cardio and circuit training. You might be part of a ship or part of a mirror or part of the crocodile or lifting this actor or catching this actor okay now put this coconut bra on because now you’re a mermaid!  You couldn’t have asked for a more committed group. That show is about trust and focus and sweat! We were lucky to have a few days with the late (and a true class act) Roger Rees, who directed the Broadway version.

JHP: You now call New York home. I imagine the young cast of Matilda have been full of questions about living in THE theatrical center of the world. What advice might you offer your young cast mates who are thinking of pursuing their theatrical dreams?

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  One of the first things I was asked was whether or not I had seen Hamilton and then I got to watch their jaw drop when I said I’d seen it three times. Being in NYC and being able to watch (and occasionally work with) some of the biggest names in theatre is a complete joy. I’m not always sure how to be an advisor for younger actors, but I suppose what I wanted to hear at their age was to always enjoy art.  Whether performing, volunteering, or just watching. Enjoy it. Theatre is so beneficial to a young mind. Not  becoming a dancer who can recite Shakespeare while belting Dear Evan Hansen. Those are all great, but theatre should inspire you, and cultivate your imagination and help you grow as an individual. Follow that dream. FOLLOW IT. Also, it really will help you with math. 

JHP: What do you see as the moral of Matilda?

THOMAS DeMARCUS:  Matilda might say it best herself: “Sometimes you have to be a little bit naughty.”   

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To catch Act Too Players & AT PRO getting a little bit naughty, be sure and get tickets to Matilda at Franklin Theatre from Friday, August 2 until Sunday, August 11. Opening weekend showtimes are Friday, August 2 at 7 p.m., Saturday, August 3 at 12 noon and 6 p.m. and Sunday, August 4 at 2 p.m. The show then continues the following week with shows Tuesday, August 6 thru Friday, August 9 at 7 pm., Saturday, August 10 at 12noon and 6 p.m. and Sunday, August 11 at 2 p.m. Tickets range in price from $15 to $49 CLICK HERE to purchase tickets and to view special ticket prices for the August 6 & 7 performances.

If you’ve enjoyed this Rapid Fire 20 Q, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. For more about Act Too Players, CLICK HERE and be sure and follow them on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.

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.

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Rapid Fire 20 Q with Nashville Theatre Legend, Martha Wilkinson

July 29, 2019 by Jonathan

On Monday, July 29th, members of Nashville’s theatre community will gather at Street Theatre Company (1120 Elm Hill Pike) at 6 p.m. to celebrate one of Music City’s true theatrical treasures, Martha Wilkinson as she and husband, Donnie Hall bid Middle Tennessee farewell. After three decades as an integral part of the performing arts landscape of Nashville and the surrounding area, including an astounding thirty year history with Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre—twenty of which she served  as the company’s Artistic Director—Martha will be moving on to Harriman, Tennessee where she and Donnie will be working at the newly formed Three Rivers Theatre Company.

Over the weekend, I had the chance to chat with Martha for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q. During our conversation, we touched on Martha’s earliest theatrical memories, some of her favorite roles, what brought her to Music City in the first place. We also spoke about her amazing theatrical career—thus far—and what the future holds for her.

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JHP: For those who may not know, you come by your love of performing naturally, you father having been an actor himself. Were you the type of kid who did ‘performance’ for family members any chance she got or were you more of an introvert? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: OH YES! I would put on the 45 record of Debbie Boone singing You Light Up My Life and perform it for my parents and their dinner party friends in front of the console stereo. I did that with  Hopelessly Devoted to You and There Are Worst Things I Could Do from the Grease movie soundtrack as well. Introvert is not part of my DNA lol.

JHP: When did you first step foot on stage? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Besides elementary school pageants, Pippin when I was a freshman in high school. My pal, Nikki Hajosy encouraged me because she said ” you can sing so good!” So, I auditioned and I was cast in the chorus ( as we called it then) and the rest as they say is history!

JHP: Did you know from that moment that was the life for you? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Immediately! the stage was, and of course still is, my favorite place to be. I absolutely love the palpable energy of it

JHP: From what I know, you grew up in Rome, Georgia. Were you involved in theatre there?

MARTHA WILKINSON: I was involved in my high school theatre program and then college program. I did not work for the community theatre there. I was also a lead singer for a cover band in high school, The Allies we called ourselves. So, when not in school plays I was with them doing gigs around town.

JHP: After college in Georgia, you attending North Carolina School of the Arts…I gotta know…was it like the movie and TV series FAME? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: YES! it was like a whole lil world in and of itself! I felt like Irene Cara! 😉 It was groovy! A day consisted of dance ( jazz and modern), voice class, stage combat and then the afternoon was a 3 hour intensive acting class. In the evenings we’d all hang out in the theatres and watch dance students rehearse. It was all art all the time!!

JHP: Following your education, it was on to Nashville to pursue a career in country music. What was your first impression of Music City? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: I grew up in Rome GA which was/is a small town…Nashville seemed HUGE to me, but I LOVED it! I had spent a lotta time in Atlanta growing up, so it wasn’t scary, I was thrilled to be there! When I moved, I knew two people in Nashville besides the producers on my demo.

JHP: OK, just between us…are there any bootleg recordings of Martha Wilkinson, aspiring country diva? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Haha! yes, there are…

MARTHA WILKINSON: That is correct, Pam Atha as the choreographer and also a murderess

JHP: What do you remember about your first show at Chaffin’s? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Well of course the magic stage!  And I just loved the people and thought it was an awesome place to work…it was comfortable.

JHP: Since that fateful night, you’ve been in more than 100 shows at Chaffin’s. Did you ever fathom being there thirty years, let alone becoming one of Nashville most well-known and beloved members of the theatre community? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: I did NOT ever fathom that! Haha! Best laid plans huh? I never had the dream to move to NYC but, I figured I probably would at some point. But the opportunity to work all the time was intoxicating! And a couple marriages kept me close to home too. 🙂

JHP: Do you have any favorite Chaffin’s roles that you remember especially fondly? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Adelaide in Guys and Dolls, Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun and Roxie in Chicago. 

JHP: Of course Chaffin’s wasn’t the only place you’d perform. What are among your favorite non-Chaffin’s roles? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Mrs Lovett in Sweeney Todd, Ursula in The Little Mermaid, Mrs Potts in Beauty and the Beast, Joann in Company, Audrey in Little Shop…

JHP: OK, so when you and I chatted for a Rapid Fire Q&A about your recent star turn in Chaffin’s Kiss Me, Kate, we touched on the fact that you and Matthew Carlton had both done the show years ago. Are there any other shows from your past that you’d like the chance to revisit? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Well, I’ve already revisited some… Steel Mags (3 x), Sweeney (2x) Pump Boys and Dinettes ( 3 x), Noises Off ( 3 x), Barefoot in the Park ( 2x), Rumors (2x)…blah blah blah 🙂 I’d love to do Ursula and Joann again.

JHP: While the bulk of your theatrical career has focused your attention here in Nashville, you’ve also ventured outside Music City from time to time, including critically acclaimed performances in Beauty and the Beast as Mrs. Potts and Ursula in The Little Mermaid. Is the energy of an audience who may not be as familiar with you as your longtime home audience at Chaffin’s any different? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: It is different but in a very good and gratifying way. When they enjoy my performance, I know they’re enjoying my talent for my ability, not just because they know me as “Martha and she’s always good.” It’s reassuring from time to time to be reminded “I still got it!” lol

JHP: What are some of the craziest things that’s happened to you during a performance? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: Oh my… well, a drunk patron threw a doubles glass at me and Brian Russell back in 1990, my skirt fell off during Newsies one night and my strapless dress came down one night in a Christmas show and well, the audience got “two” special presents, an audience member walked across the Barn stage in the middle of a scene to go to the bathroom… :b

JHP: While those may be the craziest, in my humble opinion, your brilliant turn as Mrs. Lovett in Nashville Repertory Theatre’s Sweeney Todd has to rank among your best. To what do you attribute the magnificence of that performance in that particular show? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: I just connect with that character- not that I wanna make pies outta people lol, but the theatricality of her, the humor, the communicating mostly thru song… it’s just everything to me. I’m always happy to be on stage but I’ve  never been happier on stage than in that show.

JHP: That role also garnered you accolades as Best Actor in both The Tennessean and Nashville Scene’s readers poll. Adding to your many First Night awards. Where do you keep them? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: I’m not much of a “show off” of things… but, the mrs Lovett one is on my shelf in my office as is my first night honors medal which is in a shadow box frame

JHP: It was recently revealed that you’ve decided to leave your post as Chaffin’s Artistic Director. How difficult was it to make that decision?

MARTHA WILKINSON: EXTREMELY difficult! I’ve cried A LOT! lol  I literally grew up there. I mean, 31 years is a long damn time! I attribute so much of who I am as a performer to the support and opportunities the Chaffin’s gave me. But, like all good things, it was time for a change. I really feel I had achieved what I hoped to achieve there as an Artistic Director and it was time to pass on the baton. 

JHP: Looking forward, you’ve taken on a new position as Managing Artistic Director of the newly formed Three Rivers Theatre Company in East Tennessee. Your husband, Donnie Hall joining the theatre team as Producer. How excited are you for this new chapter in your theatrical career? MARTHA WILKINSON: SOOOOOO EXCITED! Oh my goodness! Its a dream come true actually. Something Ive thought about for a long time; moving to a small town and starting a community theatre and sharing what Ive learned with others eager to explore the arts. AND, I get to do it with this handsome smart funny hubs of mine! Lucky much? God is good! The community is VERY excited too and the venue, Princess Theatre, is GORGEOUS!

JHP: Dang…twenty questions seems like a lot, unless I’m chatting with someone I’ve gotten to know and admire over the years, so I’m gonna cheat a little and make this last one a two-parter… 1) What are your hopes for your new theatrical home at Three Rivers Theatre Company? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: That the events and arts education we provide, for children and adults, will contribute to the growth of commerce and appreciation of the arts in Roane County- to be a strong member of this community.  I cannot wait to see it grow and flourish. 

JHP: AND….2) What are your hopes for your beloved 30-year theatre family in Nashville? 

MARTHA WILKINSON: I want them to SOAR and work all the time, be happy, grow and come visit me.

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Martha’s Middle Tennessee friends and fans won’t have to travel to East Tennessee just yet. As luck would have it, before she announced her upcoming move, she was cast in Studio Tenn’s upcoming 2019/2020 season opener, Mamma Mia, on stage at Jameson Theatre at the Factory in Franklin August 16-September 5. Martha will be playing Rosie, the free-spirited longtime friend and fellow Dynamo, joining Melodie Madden Adams as Tonya and Erica Aubrey as Donna. CLICK HERE for tickets. Then it’s on to Harriman, TN’s historic Princess Theatre for what Martha promises to be a great upcoming theatre season. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets for Three Rivers Theatre Company’s August 10 screening of the classic film, The Wizard of Oz or for tickets to their three day runs of the stage musical, Smoke On the Mountain.

To keep up with Martha and all things Three Rivers Theatre Company, like them on Facebook or CLICK HERE to join their email list.

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.

The many faces of Martha Wilkinson

  • Martha in a production of “Little Shop of Horrors” (images provided by Martha Wilkinson except where noted)
  • “Little Shop”
  • Martha as Donna in
    “Mamma Mia”
  • Martha in “Newsies”
  • Martha in “Noises Off”
  • Martha and Matthew Carlson in “Sweeney Todd”
  • Martha as Ursula in “The Little Mermaid”
  • Martha in
    “Company”
  • Martha as Mrs. Potts in “Beauty and the Beast”
  • (l to r) Martha, Erica
    Aubrey and Melodie Madden Adams in Studio Tenn’s forthcoming “Mamma Mia” (photo courtesy Studio Tenn/MA2LA Photography)

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Theatre Review: Leapin’ Lizards! Chaffin’s Barn’s ‘Annie’ a pure theatrical delight; on stage thru August 3

July 24, 2019 by Jonathan

Galen Fott, Ava Rivera and Rankin in Chaffin’s Barn’s “Annie” (all photos courtesy Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre/phhotos by Michael Scott Evans

As I mentioned in my recent Rapid Fire 20 Q with the cast and director of Annie—currently on stage at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre now through Saturday, August 3—for nearly 100 years, we’ve had a soft spot for the precocious yet lovable ginger-haired orphan. From Harold Gray’s 1924 comic strip to the mid-70s stage musical, to film an TV adaptations in the 80s, 90s and 2000’s, Annie is engrained in our pop culture conscious. With director Joy Tilley Perryman taking charge of bringing Annie back on stage at The Barn (the show last played the legendary dinner theatre back in 2011), I had no doubt this production would be an enjoyable one. After all, who doesn’t love a rags-to-riches story set to a few toe-tappin’ tunes? Even as the show’s musical director, Rollie Mains and musicians Daniel Kozlowski, Luke Easterling and Raymond Ridley begin the Overture, I was reminded of just how many memorable songs are amongst the Annie soundtrack…each and every one of them as hummable and memorable as the next.

The combination of Perryman’s knack for directing comedy, paired with some stellar adult casting choices and a cavalcade of undeniably charming youth come together to surpass all expectations, resulting in not only what is easily the best production of Annie I’ve seen since the aforementioned 80s film, but…and I can’t believe I’m saying this…one of the best productions of a show I’ve ever seen at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre. That’s a statement not to be taken lightly, because The Barn has a 50-plus year reputation for putting on some of the most enjoyable and talent-filled dinner theatre experiences around.

Ava Rivera as Annie, with Rufus as Sandy

As is customary when a show involves a number of younger cast members, Chaffin’s Annie actually has two separate youth casts. When I attended opening weekend, Ava Rivera was playing Annie, alongside Lilah Benjamin, Daisy Urbanowicz, Olivia Harper, Adriana Rivera, Annalaura Lyon and Abigail Levy as her fellow orphans. Rivera, making her Chaffin’s debut, plays Annie with impish spunk. Visually, Rivera is reminiscent of Ashley Johnson, the young actress who played Annie opposite Joan Collins’ baddie in the 1995 direct-to-video iteration (what can I say? I’m a fan of both the American orphan and the British legend). For a Barn first-timer, Rivera certainly embodies her precocious character, establishing her character’s plucky optimism from the beginning with the show opening Maybe and continuing to present a believable performance of a young girl longing for a better Tomorrow going toe-to-toe with her adult co-stars as well as holding her own with scene stealers like the aforementioned Benjamin, who plays youngest orphan, Molly. (I’m just going to make a prediction right now…Annie 2025 at Chaffin’s starring Lilah Benjamin).

Can’t mention the orphans without praising the show’s choreographer, Lauri Dismuke. While watching the kids perform what I”ll dub Dismuke’s Orphanography—the succinct and precisely performed choreography during It’s a Hard Knock Life—I had a revelation. THIS number just might be my all-time favorite musical theatre number in all of musical theatre. I mean…down-trodden kids forcibly performing domestic chores for a haggard, drunken marm…come on!

Elle Wesley as Annie

Speaking of the other orphans, each of the young girls playing Annie’s fellow orphans posses a stage presence that, at one point or another during the show, draws you eye to them, Perryman’s direction, coupled with the young girls’ own inimitable charm working perfectly in tandem to achieve this. As indicated above, there are two youth casts for this production of Annie. Rivera leading one, which plays certain performances, while Elle Wesley, also making her Chaffin’s debut, leads the other at alternativing performances, with Aubrey Rogers, Samantha McWright, Demetrius Knowles II, Hailey Ridgeway, Grayson Caughey and Adison Rodgers rounding out Wesley’s fellow orphans. Word has it both sets of orphans and both Annie’s turn in equally enjoyable performances, so I’m just gonna go ahead and suggest seeing the show twice.

Ava Rivera and Galen Fott in “Annie”

 On the subject of enjoyable performances, the adult cast isn’t too shabby either. Galen Fott, whose recently shaved head shines like the top of the Chrysler Building (sorry, couldn’t resist) is absolutely perfect as the initially gruff but eventually loving Daddy Warbucks. A longtime member of the Nashville theatre community, Fott’s Daddy Warbucks marks a long-overdue return to The Barn, having last appeared at the dinner theater in the late 80s. From appearances in Nashville Opera’s The Cradle Will Rock and Nashville Repertory Theatre’s A Doll’s House, Part 2, to Nashville Children’s Theatre’s The Little Mermaid—and just last week, during Annie’s run, an invite-only table read for a new work presented as an immersive theatre pop-up courtesy Studio Tenn—recently, it seems I can’t see a show without Fott being amongst the cast…and that’s a great thing. With every role, Fott brings a powerful presences and unmistakable talent, and his Warbucks is no different. He’s ultimately charming as Annie’s future father, their shared stage time perfectly believable as the loving father/daughter dynamic unfolds.

While Annie is indeed the lead, Molly,the scene-stealer and Daddy Warbucks, the most-changed among the characters, Miss Hannigan, Rooster and Lily easily provide the most laughs as the scheming, yet ultimately unsuccessful villains. To that end, and to her advantage as a director, Perryman has enlisted the aide of three familiar faces to Chaffin’s audiences.

Jenny Norris as Miss Hannigan

Jenny Norris is a dream—or is it devilishly delicious nightmare—as the drunken and deceitful orphanage caretaker, Miss Hannigan. Whether seductively sidling up to Daddy Warbucks or drunkenly devising a plan to scheme, Norris’ Hannigan is comedy gold. Her Act 1 highpoint, Little Girls, which she performs while simultaneously sipping from a flask and casually ripping the head off a doll, is equal parts frighting and delighting. Plus, you gotta love that ever-present flask throughout the show resulting in Hannigan appearing more and more inebriated, thus allowing her true colors to show through as the show goes on. A not-so-subtle, but absolutely brilliant bit of direction and characterization.

Aiding and abetting Norris’ Miss Hannigan in her schemes are Curtis LeMoine and Christina Candilora as Rooster Haningan and Lily St. Regis. LeMoine, fresh off a show-stooping turn in Studio Tenn’s Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, returns to The Barn having turned up the heat with his Too Darn Hot number during Chaffin’s recent Kiss Me, Kate. Candilora, who will forever be my favorite Gypsy Rose Lee, returns to The Barn having stolen hearts as Jovie in their holiday production of Elf. Together, and alongside Norris, these three dastardly villains make a life of crime seems a viable alternative. Just as the kids wow during the previously noted Hard Knock Life sequence, Norris, LeMoine and Candilora bring the audience to rousing applause during Easy Street, making Dismuke’s villainography look…well…easy.

It’s not just the orphans and the main adults who make Chaffin’s Annie look easy though. The supporting cast is also simply spectacular. Natalie Rankin’s Grace is everything sweet and wonderful a potential new mom for Annie and new love interest for Daddy Warbucks should be. Daron Bruce turns in a truly presidential (well, what the term use to mean) performance as FDR. Hannah Clark, Delaney Jackson and Katie Yeomans are pitch-perfect as the melodious Boylan Sisters. J. Robert Lindsey is sure to make you smile as charming radio announcer, Bert Healey. Vicki White and the rest of the ensemble, including Gerold Oliver, Kelsey Brodeur, David Benjamin Perry, Seth Brown, Emma Puerta, Morgan Riggs, Austin Jeffrey Smith and Scott Stewart are all a joy to behold, most notably, during the all-in—and surprisingly eerily timely—We’d Like to Thank You, Herbert Hoover. Not only does this particular number sadly resonate with current political and social events of the day, but thanks to the sheer magnitude of the talented cast, with everyone singing, it’s hauntingly beautiful. Gotta love a musical in Music City. I’m from here and I’m still constantly blown away by the talent in this town.

Members of the ensemble during the ‘Hooverville’ number

Then there’s Annie’s faithful pup Sandy. Played by breakout star, Rufus. While his diva tendencies tend to show through, some scenes you just wanna lay on the stage and ignore the cute little curly-top who’s belting out Tomorrow, you gotta love a dog in a show and Rufus’ Sandy gets two paws up from this reviewer.

When I noted earlier that this production of Annie may well be my favorite Chaffin’s show ever, I really meant it. From the implausible, yet ultimately yearned-for story of an orphan girl seemingly randomly chosen to spend the holidays with a less-than-warm billionaire, that involves literally cartoonish villains and an audience with President FDR, to a soundtrack peppered with memorable tune after memorable tune, to Perryman’s skill at directing a laugh-filled show in the square (God, I love Chaffin’s still-functioning descending stage!), and a cast with not a misstep in the bunch, to paraphrase yet another Annie song, I Think YOU’RE Gonna Like It Here!

Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Annie runs through August 3 with performances Thursday-Sunday. Thursday matinees begin at 12 noon (doors at 11a.m.), while Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening performances begin at 7:30p.m. (doors at 5:30). There will be a 2 p.m. (doors at noon) Sunday matinee on July 21. The Thursday, July 25 noon matinee will featuring signing for the hearing impaired, and there will be a Wednesday matinee on July 31 at noon (doors at 11a.m.). 

Thursday matinee tickets are $19 for show only or $27.50 for show and a Box Lunch. (Wednesday matinee will also offer the Box Lunch option). Evening show tickets are $13 for children 12 and under, $20 for youth/students and $35 for adults. Living up to their Barn Dinner Theatre name, Chaffin’s also offers a full buffet option or a la carte menu items for their evening and Sunday lunch matinee performances. Chaffin’s delicious buffet, featuring a choice of entrees (including a veggie option), and a number of side items is available for an additional (but completely worth it) $15.95, while the a la carte menu items (also quite tastily) range in price from $6.95 to $10.95, plus there’s a wide array of desert options to choose from $2.50 to $5.00. CLICK HERE to check out the menu.  CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or call 615.646.9977 to make reservations with the box office. To keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

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

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Rapid Fire 20 Q with the director and cast of ‘Annie’; at Chaffin’s Barn July 11-August 3

July 11, 2019 by Jonathan

For nearly 100 years, popular culture has had a soft spot for the precocious yet lovable curly-headed orphan girl known simply as Annie. From her 1924 debut as cartoonist Harold Gray’s main character and the star of her own Broadway show, which premiered in 1977, on to 1982’s beloved film adaptation featuring Aileen Quinn, Albert Finney, Carol Burnette, Ann Reinking, Tim Curry and Bernadette Peters and even popular, abeit less successful redos in 1995, 1999 and 2011, Annie and her wide-eyed optimism remains a positive and uplifting reminder that the sun will in fact come out tomorrow. Well, lucky for Nashville theatre audiences, they don’t have to wait for tomorrow as Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Annie opens today, July 11 and runs through August 3.

Earlier this week, with the show’s opening only a day away, I had the opportunity to chat with the show’s director, a few of the adult co-stars and both you actresses who’re playing Annie for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q interview. That’s right, because of the rigors of this tune and dance-filled show, Chaffin’s is working with two youth casts. What follows are my conversations with Ava Rivera and Elle Wesley—the two Annies; Joy Tilley Perryman, the shows director; Galen Fott, who plays Daddy Warbucks; Jenny Norris, who’s appearing as Miss Hannigan and Curtis LeMoine, cast as Rooster.

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RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH CAST AND CREW OF CHAFFIN’S ANNIE

RAPID FIRE WITH CHAFFIN’S ANNIE STAR, AVA RIVERA

JHP: How excited are you to be playing Annie at Chaffins?

AVA RIVERA: I am so thankful to God and Chaffin’s for the opportunity to play my dream role of Annie! This theatre is well known so this is a very big deal for me. I love working with everyone there especially my new friend Elle Wesley. I hope I can someday perform at Chaffin’s in the future! 

JHP: What’s it been like working with Rufus, the dog who’s playing Annie’s canine pal, Sandy?

AVA RIVERA: Rufus is one of the sweetest and cutest dogs in the world. We worked real hard together to be a great team. I’ll let you in on a secret, He is the real star of this show! 

RAPID FIRE WITH CHAFFIN’S ANNIE STAR, ELLE WESLEY

JHP: What’s the best part of being Annie at Chaffin’s?

ELLE WESLEY:  That’s difficult because there are so many fun things!  If I had to choose it would be all the friends I have made and the new people I have met.  I will always remember the connections I have made with the orphans, Sandy the dog, all the servants, Grace, Warbucks, EVERYONE! That’s the best thing about being Annie – you get to connect with EVERYONE in the cast at some point in the show.  We really have fun together and it shows on stage. The smiles and laughter are all very real.  It’s a great cast and I feel really blessed to be a part of it!

JHP: Hard Knock Life is one of my favorite Annie moments. Are you enjoying working with the show’s choreographer, Miss Lauri Dismuke and the other orphans during this sequence?

ELLE WESLEY:  Oh yes!  It’s one of my favorite moments too!  I have made such good friends with the orphans especially the ones I have to hate like Pepper, July, and Duffy.  And I LOVE Miss Lauri!  She is so helpful and encouraging to all of us.  She worked really hard with us to make sure that song was really fun for the audience to watch.  There are a lot of twist and turns and tricks that are really cool.  It’s one of the best parts of the show.

RAPID FIRE WITH CHAFFIN’S ANNIE DIRECTOR, JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN

JHP: With two young actresses playing Annie and two separate youth cast as the orphans, what has the rehearsal process been like?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: We started with the orphans and the Annies a week before the adult cast came on board. We called that week Annie Camp and we had a blast. It really helped make the process so streamlined. On the day of the table read, the orphans were ready to blow away the adult cast with Hard Knock Life!

JHP: If memory serves me, I believe Annie was last mounted at Chaffin’s in 2011. What is it about the show that makes it a classic crowd-pleaser time and time again?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: It is such an optimistic show. It is a feel good story and a rags to riches tale. See also, cute kids! And adorable dogs!

JHP: Which leads perfectly to my next question…They say to never work with kids or animals in show business, yet here you are directing a show about a girl and her dog. How’s that working out for you?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: It is actually going great. I get along well with both those groups, kids and dogs, so here we are.

JHP: As the director, is there a particular scene that you’ve put your particular spin on that you’re especially proud of, or think ‘THIS is MY Annie’ while watching from the sidelines?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: I think I do have a distinctive style when it comes to comedy, so there are a couple of scenes, that definitely have my fingerprints all over them, but I am going to let you watch and pick them out!

RAPID FIRE WITH ANNIE’S DADDY WARLOCKS, GALEN FOTT

JHP: A few days ago, on your social media, you posted your transformation to the clean-shaven, bald-headed Daddy Warbucks. I commented on your post that I had just been talking about you and the role. Kudos to you for going all in on the physical look. Nothing I hate more than someone playing Warbucks with a head full of hair. Is this physical transformation the most extreme you’ve gone through for a character?

GALEN FOTT: The only thing that comes close was going to the opposite extreme. About 30 years ago, right after doing my only other show at the Barn (The 1940’s Radio Hour), I played the Hairy Man in Wiley and the Hairy Man at Nashville Children’s Theatre. Scot Copeland helped me design my wonderful makeup, which included fake full beard, fake bushy mustache, fake long straggly hair, fake eyebrows, and fake nose. I was a shaggy sight! Yet underneath it all — for the show’s final moment when the Hairy Man loses his hair — I had to wear a bald cap, making for an extremely hot performance. Actually shaving for Daddy Warbucks is a much cooler option!

JHP: Because of the dual casts, you are working with two Annies. Let’s play a little word association. In a single word, how would you describe each of your pint-sized leading ladies?

GALEN FOTT: Now, that’s tough. Both these girls are so wonderful, it’s going to be necessary for everyone to attend the show twice so they can see them both. But they do have their unique qualities, and while both girls embody both of these words, if you’re going to pin me down I’ll go with:

Ava — spunky

Elle — determined

JHP: Of course Annie isn’t your only on-stage love in the show. There’s also Grace, Daddy Warbucks’ faithful assistant. Natalie Rankin is playing Grace. What’s she like as a scene partner?

GALEN FOTT: Natalie is spunky, yet determined. No wait, sorry, that’s Annie…ah, Natalie! She is completely amazing. I just saw her in Street Theatre Company‘s Hedwig and the Angry Inch, playing a character as far from Grace Farrell in Annie as you could possibly get. She’s totally believable and compelling in both roles. Natalie wasn’t as familiar with Annie as I was, from having listened to the cast album since I was 13 (and desperately wishing it was called Andy instead). So it’s been illuminating for me to work with Natalie in reexamining the slightly sketchy Warbucks/Grace relationship from a more contemporary viewpoint.

JHP: What’s Daddy Warbucks’ most redeeming quality?

GALEN FOTT: I’d say “open-mindedness”. He’s initially reluctant to have Annie spend the Christmas holidays — he was anticipating a boy orphan — but he quickly grows to love her. A Republican himself, Warbucks is at first resistant to F.D.R. and his policies, but he’s willing to reconsider and work together for the betterment of the country. Single-mindedly committed for decades to making money, he’s still able to reexamine his life and find a place for loving relationships with Annie and Grace. Who knows…maybe one day he’ll reconsider that hairstyle!

RAPID FIRE WITH ANNIE’S MISS HANNIGAN, JENNY NORRIS

JHP: Last time I attended a show at Chaffin’s, you shared with me your slight apprehension of playing the baddie, Miss Hannigan in Annie. Have you since embraced the villainy?

JENNY NORRIS: Well my nervousness was more based upon the typical portrayal of Miss Hannigan being outside much of what I’ve had the opportunity to play thus far in my career. I wanted to create my own version of Miss Hannigan that served the story but also stayed true to the parts of her I discovered within my own understanding to how this woman ended up cynical, desperate, and unkind, without doing an impersonation of the great portrayals that came before me. I hoped to create a real person, not a caricature and I hope I have done that, villainy and all.   

JHP: Do you find yourself going out of your way to be sweet to the young cast members when not on stage camping it up as Miss Hannigan?

JENNY NORRIS: They are easy to be sweet to as they work really hard and are great kids. I think to some extent, I’ve stayed a little more distant bc I want their characters to feel some nervousness onstage in our scenes.  I want them to see Miss Hannigan when they see me, not Jenny, even though I would like to give em a big hug when we leave the stage and I have just screamed at them. 

JHP: Is Miss Hannigan simply misunderstood? Is there a heart in there somewhere?

JENNY NORRIS: I feel she was raised to believe the way you get ahead in life is to lie, steal, and cheat. She is a romantic that hopes to find love but has been used and tossed away her whole life and that has further solidified her belief that she has to be out for number 1, always. At some point she winds up in charge of all these orphans and its a constant power struggle. In her mind, them versus her. She IS the villain: cruel, selfish, cynical. But there are reasons why she ended up there. 

JHP: Of course the optimistic anthemic Tomorrow is the show’s most recognizable number, but the show has several memorable musical moments. Miss Hannigan’s Act 1 number, Little Girls is my personal favorite from the entire show. What can you tell me about working with the show’s musical director, Rollie Mains?

JENNY NORRIS: I love working with Rollie! He is so talented and always attacks everything from the perspective of telling the story first and foremost. He gives you the freedom to develop your character and sing your songs in a manner that fits that character you have created. He gives you important things to consider and guidance when needed, but the lead-way to feel uninhibited in your creativity. But trust me, he will reel you back on in if you get too far out there! 

RAPID FIRE WITH ANNIE’S ROOSTER, CURTIS LEMON

JHP: Rooster is a scamp and a con-artist. Basically the polar opposite of you. What’s it like to play such a rascal?

CURTIS LEMOINE: I love playing the bad guy, especially if there is a comedic aspect to the character! Believe it or not, I have played several notable villains, or villains-by-proxy: Lord Farquaad, LeFou, Joey and now Rooster. Rooster is particularly ruthless though. While Miss Hannigan is looked upon as the main villain, Rooster is the one who decides to do away with Annie while Miss Hannigan shows a moment of remorse. 

JHP: As Rooster, your paired on-stage with Christina Candelora, who plays Lily St. Regis. You’re both among my theatre crushes. What’s among the perks of sharing stage time with her?

CURTIS LEMOINE: Christina is a joy to work with! She is not afraid to make bold choices and is a great scene partner to try gags with and physical comedy with. Not to mention, she is an absolute bombshell so I’m quite flattered to be her onstage squeeze!

JHP: Rooster and Lily’s big number is Easy Street. You two share it with Miss Hannigan. How would you categorize this epic musical moment, as presented by you three?

CURTIS LEMOINE: As a kid, watching all the animated Disney films, I was always enamored by the songs that all the villains got to sing. You can argue if you’d like but quite honestly, I think the villains always got some of the best songs in those movies. This is no different. I look at it as a chance for the three of us to have our big show-stopping Disney villain number. And we aim to please! The staging, the choreography, and the added harmonies we have worked out with Rollie Mains are spot on and we cannot wait to share it with a live audience. 

JHP: Anyone who knows you, or has had the pleasure of seeing you spark the stage dancing as if your life depended on it in recent shows like Chaffin’s Kiss Me, Kate and Studio Tenn’s Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, likely knows you’re a skilled dancer and choreographer. On the subject of choreography, Lauri Dismuke is helming that aspect of the show. Can you sneak peek any choreo moments to watch out for in Annie?

CURTIS LEMOINE: I am so impressed with both casts of Orphans that we have! Both Hard Knock Life and Never Fully Dressed Without A Smile are definite numbers to watch out for because those kids are working it! The ensemble in this show is fairly new to The Barn but we have some fabulous movers in this cast and Hooverville is definitely a number that is quirky, filled with character, and is super fun to watch. And of course, we have a lot of my favorite style of dance in this show….. TAP!

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Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Annie runs through August 3 with performances Thursday-Sunday. Thursday matinees begin at 12 noon (doors at 11a.m.), while Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening performances begin at 7:30p.m. (doors at 5:30). There will be a 2 p.m. (doors at noon) Sunday matinee on July 21. The Thursday, July 25 noon matinee will featuring signing for the hearing impaired, and there will be a Wednesday matinee on July 31 at noon (doors at 11a.m.). 

Thursday matinee tickets are $19 for show only or $27.50 for show and a Box Lunch. (Wednesday matinee will also offer the Box Lunch option). Evening show tickets are $13 for children 12 and under, $20 for youth/students and $35 for adults. Living up to their Barn Dinner Theatre name, Chaffin’s also offers a full buffet option or a la carte menu items for their evening and Sunday lunch matinee performances. Chaffin’s delicious buffet, featuring a choice of entrees (including a veggie option), and a number of side items is available for an additional (but completely worth it) $15.95, while the a la carte menu items (also quite tastily) range in price from $6.95 to $10.95, plus there’s a wide array of desert options to choose from $2.50 to $5.00. CLICK HERE to check out the menu.  CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or call 615.646.9977 to make reservations with the box office. To keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: CHAFFIN'S BARN, Dinner Theatre, Interview, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre

Theatre Review: Thirty years after its debut, ‘Miss Saigon’ themes ring true today

June 9, 2019 by Jonathan

Since Broadway producer Cameron Mackintosh (Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera, Cats) first presented Miss Saigon in the late 80s,  the show has been met with equal parts praise and criticism. Remembering little more than that the Vietnam War-era drama—with music by Claude Michel Schoenberg and original lyrics by Alain Boublil and Richard Maltby—is loosely based on Giancomo Puccini’s famed opera, Madame Butterfly, plus the fact that I hadn’t seen the show since its first National Tour in the early 90s, I was anxious to revisit it during its current engagement on stage in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall thru Sunday, June 9.

For those not familiar, a bit of Miss Saigon’s plot: As sweeping Broadway musicals often do, Miss Saigon tells an often heart-tugging story. American GI Chris meets and falls in love with a young Vietnamese woman named Kim while deployed in Saigon during the Vietnam Conflict. Sadly separated on the day Kim is to join Chris as he leaves to return stateside, the story continues as Kim struggles to make a life for herself while always thinking of the life she could have had with Chris in the US. Meanwhile, Chris attempts to put the war and all that came with it behind him as he meets and marries Ellen, a young American woman. A few years later, Chris and Kim’s paths cross again and more drama, love and tragedy play out.

But here’s the thing, even if you’ve seen Miss Saigon in the past and are familiar with the story, this tour features a few differences from previous incarnations, making it worth a second look for sure.

Just last week, when I chatted with two members of the tour for my latest Rapid Fire Q&A, I asked Anthony Festa, who plays Chris, about some of those differences in the current production. Festa revealed, “Our director, Laurence Connor has re-imagined this production completely. From minor script changes to a new helicopter design that really blows the audience away ever single night. Working directly with the entire creative team and Cameron Mackintosh (the show’s original creator) himself has been an amazing experience. The entire team has brought nuance to the piece and really allowed our cast to breath a whole new life into it.” Festa was spot on in his assessment, as Connor’s fresh take has indeed helped to reinvigorate the show.

The show begins with the up-tempo, and deceptively party-atmospheric The Heat is On. Gotta love the telling lyric “Is there a war going on? Don’t ask, I ain’t gonna tell”. It’s during this number that  the audience is introduced to naive Kim (Emily Bautista, who understudied the role during its recent Broadway revival run), a beautiful orphaned girl who’s lost her parents during the Vietnam War, who, with no other viable choice, begins working at the ironically named Dreamland, a nightclub/brothel run by a shifty local known simply as The Engineer (Red Concepcion fresh from the UK touring company).  Meanwhile, Festa’s Chris and several of his fellow soldiers, including Chris’ friend, John (J. Daughtry) descend upon Dreamland.

Both longing to escape the torment of war and their current situations, what might have been a single night of unlikely romance and passion develops into much more as Kim sees meeting Chris as a life-changing opportunity, while Chris feels empathy and a shared solace in their circumstances.

Festa plays Chris with a kindness that I don’t remember the character necessarily having in previous productions I’ve seen. That, coupled with Festa’s handsome features and comforting tenor vocals, make it easy to see why Kim would fall for him.

As for Bautista’s Kim, yes, she’s gorgeous, yes she plays the role with a nuanced hurt/strength seesaw of emotions, but it’s her subtle movements, a look, a gesture and her powerful, yet sweet vocals that make her portrayal her own. It should be noted that Myra Molloy plays Kim at certain performances.

Perfectly illustrating the different ways of perceiving one’s situation and one’s relationships with others, enter Christine Bunuan as Gigi, a…shall we say…more experienced co-worker at Dreamland. Hardened by the hand life has dealt her, but sympathetic to Kim as she adjusts to her current situation, Gigi’s performance of The Movie in My Mind, a telling tune with equal parts regret and surprisingly unwavering hope, is one of the show’s early highlights. This is Bunuan’s shining moment, as Gigi all but disappears from the story afterward, but it’s her powerful, heartfelt performance that is among the most memorable of the entire show. Adding to the poignancy of the lyrics, Bautista joins Bunaun during the number, offering the audience a loot into Kim’s future through Gigi’s present, while reinforcing the dream/nightmare of their reality.

While The Movie in My Mind is indeed gorgeous and telling, it’s not exactly melodically memorable. To be honest, not much of Miss Saigon’s tunes are. That said, Kim and Chris’ Sun and Moon is still THE show’s most romantic number, as is its Act 2 reprise. Don’t get me wrong though, while it’s not a soundtrack you’re likely to be humming after you leave the theatre, it is indeed sweeping, powerful and magnificent, and much like myself, who hadn’t heard it in more than a decade or two, as each number was performed, the emotion and brilliance returned like a long-dormant sense-memory. To that end, I have to think the show honors its inspiration, Madame Butterfly. Rather than being full of show tunes in the traditional sense, Miss Saigon’s soundtrack serves as a melodic narrative. Instead of simply speaking the words that propel the story, the plot is revealed in narrative melody.

In previous mountings of Miss Saigon, there seemed to be more anger. Anger from Kim once she discovers Chris has made a new life for himself. Anger from Ellen, when she learns the deep bond between Chris and Kim. And finally, anger from Chris for Kim, who kept a huge secret, and for Ellen who isn’t as forgiving as he had hoped. But with this current production, thanks to a few rewrites, as well as the entire company’s ability to play hurt, disappointment, vulnerability and yes, anger with jus the right balance, there’s a new understanding, a new depth to the story. When I spoke with Bono about this during my recent Rapid Fire Q&A, she perfectly illustrated the point by offering, “I hope my portrayal of Ellen has helped show that she is not a villain at all, but another victim of this story.”

Speaking of Bono’s Ellen, her Act 2 scene with Bautista’s Kim, Room 317 and the subsequent Maybe, are among the second act’s memorable moments.

Another great example of the victim-theme found throughout the piece comes in the unlikely form of the aforementioned Concepcion as The Engineer. Played largely for laughs with humorous lyrics, outrageous antics and a bit of stereotyping, The Engineer, in 2019 comes across a victim of the conflict of war as well, or at the very least, a victim of the opportunities of war. Most of his numbers, The Transaction, The Deal, The Morning of the Dragon, If You Want to Die In Bed, What a Waste and The American Dream are key to the evolution of not only his character, but the story itself.

Even the set design mirrors the overall theme of the desire to better one’s life. Early on, Dreamland, the club owned by The Engineer is little more than a lean-to with a thatched roof. When John and Chris return to Vietnam in search of Kim after the war, they encounter The Engineer is what can only be described as a Vegas-inspired conglomeration of cheekily named strip joints. Then, later, as The Engineer sings the praises of The American Dream, it’s an all-out show-stopping spectacle.

Without giving away too much of the plot for those who may not be familiar, Act 2’s opening number, Bui Doi, featuring Daughtry’s John has a renewed significance thanks to recent events at the hand of our current administration. During this number, a very nice, but increasingly chatty lady sitting next to me leaned over and asked if I remembered this particular time in US history, I quietly said I was a bit too young to remember it. Let me tell you this, it was everything I could do to keep from standing and applauding loudly when this particular number was over, because Bui Doi contains a lesson we have apparently forgotten, a lesson we need to remember now, as much as ever.

So, lessons we still need to learn, gorgeous sets…mostly actual, physical three-dimensional sets, not dependent on LED screens, I might add, a romance that crosses time and place, oh, and did I mention….Festa was right…the legendary helicopter sequence that is just as magnificent and impactful as ever? Whether seeing Miss Saigon for the first time or returning to an old favorite, this show is a must see, can’t miss entertainment extravaganza of the most unexpected kind.

Miss Saigon wraps its Nashville tour dates with show thru Sunday, June 9. Showtimes are Tuesday-Thursday at 7:30p.m., Friday and Saturday at 8p.m. with matinees Saturday at 2p.m. and Sunday at 1p.m. with a final performances Sunday evening at 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $40 to $100. TPAC is also still offering limited $30 tickets to remaining performances. Simply arrive at the Box Office 90 minutes before showtime and enter the lottery drawing for your chance to purchase up to two tickets at the special price. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or for more information.

Next up at TPAC, the National Tour of Fidler on the Roof returns to Jackson Hall with performances Tuesday, June 25-Sunday, June 30. CLICK HERE for tickets or for more details.

Following their Nashville dates, the National Tour of Miss Saigon continues on to Boston, San Diego, LA, Tempe, Salt Lake City, San Jose, Fort Worth, Tulsa, Louisville, West Palm Beach, Atlanta, Miami, Syracuse and Baltimore through June of 2020, with more dates to be announced. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets.

For more from the National Tour of Miss Saigon, follow the company of Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. To keep up with what’s happening at TPAC, follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram as well.

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: Uncategorized

Rapid Fire Q&A with ‘Book Of Mormon’ stars Liam Tobin and Ron Bohmer; plus ticket lottery details for Nashville tour dates March 12-17

March 12, 2019 by Jonathan

It’s been five years since the uproarious The Book of Mormon National Tour first played Nashville’s TPAC, but with every subsequent tour of the 9-time Tony-winning show, the laughter gets louder and the enthusiasm of the audiences continues.

As the current stars of the tour prepared for their week in Music City, I recent had the opportunity to pose a few questions to Liam Tobin and Ron Bohmer, who play young missionary, Elder Price and Church of Latter Day Saints founder Joseph Smith, respectively, for the latest round of Rapid Fire Q&A.


RAPID FIRE WITH BOOK OF MORMON’S RON BOHMER

JHP: You play Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Latter Day Saints. How familiar were you with his history prior to taking on the role?

RON BOHMER: Saw the South Park version (hysterical), read some pro-Mormon stuff about him , read a more critical book about him. Since ours is a musical world, I took it all and gave him a little bit of Harold Hill, a little bit of Lancelot and a dash of Jean Valjean.

JHP: Do you feel any added responsibility considering you’re playing a character based on a real person?

RON BOHMER: If he were a living person maybe, but since he died in 1844 I’ve yet to have anyone come up and say, “I knew Joseph Smith – and you, sir, are no Joseph Smith!” We try to give him a heroic leading-man quality that honors a Prophet of the Mormon church.

JHP: Bringing such a hilariously irreverent show to audiences across the US who’d otherwise not get the chance to see it must be quite interesting. What do you like most about being on tour?

RON BOHMER: Being in a long-running show can be like Groundhog Day. Touring shakes that up. New environments, new faces, new local crew almost every week. It keeps it fresh. Plus local cuisine and culture constantly changing, it’s great. It’s also a little like being on the moon. I value my vacation time, aka home time.

JHP: On the subject of touring, in researching to chat with you, I discovered you played Joe Gillis in the first National Tour of Sunset Boulevard. Just two weeks ago, I read that Glenn Close starring in the film adaptation of the musical is finally absolutely a go, with Tony-winning choreographer Rob Ashford set to direct. Have you started making calls to audition yet?

RON BOHMER: Ha! Thanks for that. It’s been 22 years since I played Joe Gillis, I’m afraid I’ve aged out of it. But he remains one of my very favorite roles and I’m excited they are doing the film so that more people can see it – of all the Andrew Lloyd Weber shows, it has the best book. Compelling like a car wreck, you can’t look away.

JHP: Book of Mormon is the brainchild of Trey Parker, Robert Lopez and Matt Stone. Parker and Stone, best known as the duo behind South Park, while Lopez co-created the equally bawdy and hilarious Avenue Q. How much fun are you having bringing their brilliance to the stage night after night?

RON BOHMER: The most fun! I get to read a lot of scripts and often I’m thinking about what I can contribute, how I can add something to the show. But Book of Mormon was uproariously funny on the page. I was laughing out loud throughout my read and thinking, “this is perfect. I just want to stay out of the way of how great it is. Just deliver it.”

JHP: Because of it’s no-holds-barred humor, BOM maintains a bit of controversy wherever it plays. What’s your favorite “I can’t believe we get away with this” moment?

RON BOHMER: All of it. I had friends who did the early workshops of the show in NYC and they said, “oh it’s brilliant, but too bad it’ll never get produced. People will never sit still for THAT.” But they do. All of it. I think it’s because our audience gets to caring so much about the characters and because it is always truthful. the most outrages things in the show are based in fact.

JHP: In 2008, you toured with Disney’s High School Musical, playing Coach Bolton. Will this be your first time back to Nashville since that tour?

RON BOHMER: I was back in 2017 with BOM (It’s been 5 years on this show for me, my longest. Les Miz on Broadway was my longest before that, 2 1/2 years). I hope to catch more of the music scene on this visit.

JHP: Of course 2008 wasn’t your first time in Nashville. Back in the 80s, you worked at Opryland, our beloved and much-missed musical theme park. What was your gig at the park? Please tell me you were part of I Hear American Singing?

RON BOHMER: Oh my God, you’re good. Can’t believe you dug that up. Some of the best memories of my life. I was a tap dancer in For Me and My Gal my first summer there, and I was in I Hear America Singing the second. I had a really fun track, doing a lot of the comedy bits and singing Proud Mary a la Credence Clearwater Revival and I was also The Village People lead. It was probably my first pop music training. It really was the greatest, hanging with so many of those incredible singers and dancers who went on to Broadway and Country careers.

JHP: A quick stalk of your social media accounts and I see we have a few mutual friends. Any plans to reconnect with Nashville folks while in town?

RON BOHMER: I hope so, I haven’t seen the Opryland crew in ages. In my mind, we’re all still 20. My main memories of Nashville in the 80’s was everyone, everyone – treated you like you were their long lost friend who just showed back up. It was incredibly comforting. The world could use a little more of that feeling today.

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RAPID FIRE WITH THE BOOK OF MORMON’S LIAM TOBIN

JHP: You’re starring as Elder Price, a young Mormon missionary in the current National Tour of The Book of Mormon. What can you tell me about Elder Price?

LIAM TOBIN: Elder Price is an extremely ambitious young man. He has excelled in pretty much everything in his life so far and is super excited to get out into the world and excel in his mission as well. Of course, we see in the show that through all the chaos and hilarity, instead of changing the world like he planned, the world changes him.

 JHP: What’s life been like for you having been on the road with the show this past year?

LIAM TOBIN: It is such a joy to bring this show around the country. Seeing patrons from all over leaving the show with smiles on their faces and laughing throughout the performance is really special. It’s also a treat to get to explore amazing cities like Nashville!

JHP: How familiar were you with Book of Mormon prior to being cast in the lead for the tour?

LIAM TOBIN: I’ve been a fan of Trey Parker and Matt Stone for years, and The Book of Mormon did not disappoint. I saw the show when it first opened in New York back in 2011, and I’ve been dreaming of playing Elder Price ever since!

JHP: The last time BOM tour came to Nashville’s TPAC, I remember seeing actual members of the Church of Latter Day Saints passing out the real Book of Mormon to theatre-goers as they exited the show. Does that still happen from city to city?

LIAM TOBIN: It sure does! It’s almost rarer when they’re not there!

JHP: Speaking of TPAC, your March 14-17 tour stop isn’t your first time to play Jackson Hall, as you were part of the 2017 National Tour of Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. Did you get much of a chance to see Music City when here last?

LIAM TOBIN: Absolutely, Nashville is definitely one of the highlight cities for us on the tour. Last time I came through we managed to see a TON of live music and even got into the Bluebird Cafe! We can’t wait to come back for more!

JHP: Any particular things you plan to check out in Nashville this time around?

LIAM TOBIN: My favourite thing to do is to “get lost” in a city and see where it takes me. For Nashville, I’m hoping to get lost in all of the live music the city has to offer – it’s really spectacular!

JHP: Having been with the show for a while now, are there still lines, or scenes that make you genuinely laugh?

LIAM TOBIN: Oh absolutely, so many of my cast mates are incredibly talented and are a real joy to watch. When Conner Pierson and Kayla Pecchioni sing Baptize Me, it never fails to make me laugh.

 JHP: What’s your favorite aspect of Elder Price’s personality that you wish you could adopt more in your own?

LIAM TOBIN: I think towards the end of the show, he is able to self reflect and make some changes to his behaviour and treatment of others, which is something I think we could all do better with.

 JHP: What do you think is the message behind Book of Mormon?

LIAM TOBIN: I think the show has a lovely message of friendship, love, and that whatever you believe – if it’s helping people or making the world a better place – then that’s valid.


The Book of Mormon opens its Nashville tour dates at TPAC’s Jackson Hall on Tuesday, March 12 and continues through Sunday, March 17. Tuesday-Thursday curtain is 7:30p.m. with Friday and Saturday evening performances at 8 p.m., matinee performances on Saturday at 2p.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. with a final evening performance Sunday at 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $45 to $115. Just last week, TPAC announced a special ticket lottery for all Nashville performances. For each performance, a limited number of tickets will be available for only $25. To enter the ticket lottery, patrons must arrive at the box office (just inside TPAC street level entrance under the marquee at Deaderick and 6th Ave) two and a half hours before showtime of the performance they hope to attend. Upon arrival at the box office, patrons will write their name and the number of tickets (one or two tickets per entrant). Two hours before curtain, a limited number of names will be drawn for tickets in the first two rows of the Orchestra, thus allowing the winning lottery participants to purchase those tickets at the special $25 price!

Following the Nashville dates, The Book of Mormon continues across the country with stops from Grand Rapids to Salt Lake City through August. For tickets or more information about the tour, CLICK HERE. You can also follow the tour on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Next up at TPAC, as their Broadway series continues is the national tour of Anastasia, on stage at Jackson Hall, March 19-24 CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. You can also 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: Uncategorized

Rapid Fire Q & A with cast of Chaffin’s Barn’s ‘Kiss Me, Kate’: final performances this weekend

March 8, 2019 by Jonathan

Martha Wilkinson and Matthew Carlton in Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s “Kiss Me, Kate”

Directed by Everett Tarlton, this weekend marks the final two chances for audiences to see Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s wonderfully riotous romp that is Kiss Me, Kate. Full to the brim with Cole Porter tunes, Kiss Me, Kate tells the tale of a diva film actress returning to the stage in a musical stage adaptation of William Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew that just so happens to co-star and be directed by the actress’s ex. Chaffin’s own grande dame of the theatre, Martha Wilkinson stars as the diva with Matthew Carlton playing opposite her as her estranged ex husband.

Since I posted my review of the show opening weekend, it seems appropriate that I mark the end of the play’s run by sharing my latest Rapid Fire Q&A.

Busily juggling starring in their current production and seamlessly moving into directing the debut of their next production, Dan Zimmerle’s biblical musical, Esther, Wilkinson kicked things off with bit of interesting insights concerning returning to a role she debuted on the very same stage some years ago. The conversations continue as I chat with her then and now co-star, Matthew Carlton, as well as Mallory Mundy, Caleb Pless and Timothy Fudge.

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RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH CAST OF CHAFFIN’S BARN DINNER THEATRE’S KISS ME, KATE

RAPID FIRE WITH KISS ME, KATE’S MARTHA WILKINSON

JHP: I understand this production of Kiss Me, Kate might conjure a bit of a déjà vu for you and your co-star Matthew Carlton?

MARTHA WILKINSON: Yes, Matt and I played Lilli/Kate and Fred/Petruchio in 1993 at Chaffin’s under Rene Copeland’s direction. We were too young then but, it’s magical to return to  this show with him again.

RAPID FIRE WITH KISS ME, KATE’S MATTHEW CARLTON

JHP: What’s it like revisiting Fred Graham and Petruchio all these years later?

MATTHEW CARLTON: When we did it before, I don’t think I was old enough to relate to the complicated past the characters shared both personally and professionally in the storyline.  Now, I understand more fully what a life on the stage can bring and I feel very cozy in Fred’s skin.

JHP: What are you enjoying most about playing opposite Martha in Kiss Me, Kate?

MATTHEW CARLTON: Martha is a true one of a kind performer. Having a close friendship on and off stage for so long, makes working together a joy. We have a pure trust and ease together and hopefully the audience will catch that vibe and be a partner in the fun that we share playing together.

JHP: As Fred, you are not only directing the show within the show, but also starring in it as Petruchio. What’s the best aspect of playing what is essentially dual roles?

MATHEW CARLTON: The writers of this classic show have done all the work and the parallel character traits of Fred & Petruchio are drawn beautifully in the script.  It’s a challenging role for sure, with a broad range to cover, but great writing always makes an actor’s job easier.

JHP: Of course you’ve got plenty of actual Shakespearean experience having been seen in a number of Nashville Shakespeare Festival productions over the years. Why does Shakespeare still seem to intimidate some audiences and what about Kiss Me, Kate helps to bridge that gap?

MATTHEW CARLTON: Some folks may have the impression that Shakespeare is too “highfalootin”  for the average person but he wrote plays that all the audience members, no matter their status or station, could appreciate and relate to. KMK‘s parallel backstage storyline echoes the relationship and personalities of the  main characters in Shrew and illustrates the timelessness of the Bard’s understanding of human nature.

Mallory Munday as Lois

RAPID FIRE WITH KISS ME, KATE’S MALLORY MUNDY

JHP: You’re playing Lois Lane. What’s up with that character name? Do you think Cole Porter was a comic book nerd? After all, the OTHER Lois Lane made her debut in comic book form a full decade before Kiss Me, Kate premiered.

MALLORY MUNDY: Gosh, that’s such a tough call to make. If I wanted to overthink it (which I have a nature for doing), I could guess that maybe it was Porter’s humorous way of nodding at the comic book character.  It is my limited understanding that in the comic book, Lois Lane is a more conservative career woman, whereas in this show, she’s far from conservative.  One might say she is a career woman, but the type of career and means of establishing that career are contrary to the comic’s Lane.

JHP: Some have said the play and especially its source material are misogynistic. What do you think?

MALLORY MUNDY:  Hahaha.  Sure, there’s definitely some misogynistic substance in there, but it is most specifically in the source material.  I’m probably the worst person to comment on this because, while I do not agree with misogynistic ideals, I am a big proponent of understanding the time and place of a story.  There are some cringe-worthy lines within the play,  HOWEVER, I think we have done a really tasteful job of presenting the material in a way that absolutely does not celebrate those prejudices toward women.  As far as Cole Porter’s script, some might argue that Lois is a celebration of a woman’s sexual freedom.  And, if paying attention, one will see that the end of the play is fighting against the ideals seen in The Taming of the Shrew.

JHP: Like your co-stars, you play dual roles, first as the actress Lois Lane and also as Bianca, the character she plays in Shrew. What are the best traits of Lois/Bianca?

MALLORY MUNDY:  Lois is such a fun role because she is the ‘ditzy,’ sexy role that is so typical is classic musicals (especially Cole Porter’s).  The thing about Lois, though, is that she isn’t the idiot that she could easily be perceived to be.  She’s actually very clever, very determined, but uneducated and inexperienced in common experiences.

The best thing about Bianca, for me, is the fact that she’s played by a nightclub performer who has no idea what she is doing as an actress.

JHP: What’s most fun about playing opposite Martha?

MALLORY MUNDY:  Jonathan, how am I supposed to choose one??  Martha is the essence of delightful.  She’s playful, witty, smart, strong, talented, dynamic, one of the funniest people I have ever known.  The weekend I moved to Nashville as a Belmont student, my (now) brother-in-law was playing bass in the band for Johnny Guitar at The Barn.  Martha was the first leading lady I saw in a professional show in Nashville.  Her strong, quick-witted, brilliantly talented performance wooed me, especially as an aspiring theatre actress myself.  I have looked up to her ever since.  Watching Martha in rehearsals is like getting paid to take a master class in acting.  This isn’t the first show I’ve gotten to do with Martha, but it is the first time I’ve gotten to play the other leading lady with her, and it’s much like a dream come true!

 

RAPID FIRE WITH KISS ME, KATE’S CALEB PLESS

JHP: Tell me about Bill Calhoun?

CALEB PLESS: Bill is the suave, take chances kind of guy. A heavy gambler always getting involved in things he shouldn’t. He’s paired with Lois and Mr. Fred Graham has given them this new opportunity to preform with him in his big Shakespeare show. However, Bill May cause more trouble than Fred was expecting!

JHP: While Everett Tarlton and Curtis Lemoine are the show’s dance captain and assistant choreographer, your character is a dancer and you, yourself have a background in dance. What’s your favorite choreo moment in the show?

CALEB PLESS: Both Everett and Curtis are such great dancers and choreographers and I’ve had a blast getting to perform everything that they have created. It’s hard to pick a favorite moment but I think I would have to say the end of Another Opening. This song starts the whole show and comes out with such high energy that really sets the whole tone of the performance. There’s something so magical and powerful about seeing the whole cast dancing in sync!

JHP: Bill has an affinity for gambling. In a game of five cars stud with your co-stars, who’d win and why?

CALEB PLESS: While my character is a gambler we definitely don’t have that in common. I have a very telling face! However, I feel that I could probably use that to my advantage and no one would expect that from me. I’d be the underdog that could possibly come out on top!

JHP: Is this your first Chaffin’s show? AND….Bill is dating Lois, meaning you get to share the stage with one of my theatre crushes, Mallory. Are you enjoying playing her love interest?

CALEB PLESS: Yes, this is my first show at Chaffin’s barn and also my first show in my home city of Nashville! I’m very grateful for this opportunity. Mallory is the best! Such a talented performer and wonderful person on stage and off. She is always open to discussing and working through acting moments and is not afraid to try new things on stage. So happy to be sharing the stage with her!

RAPID FIRE WITH KISS ME, KATE’S TIMOTHY FUDGE

JHP: As Harry Trevor, you have mostly Shakespearean dialogue as your character plays Baptista in Shrew, the play within the play . What about the Shakespearean dialogue do you enjoy most?

TIM FUDGE: I’m having fun with the Shakespearean text. In my career as a musical theatre actor I have taken workshops in Shakespearean acting and have auditioned for many Shakespearean productions, but this is the first time I’ve had the chance to perform it. I love researching the meaning of words and phrases to make sure I am clear in what I’m wanting the audience to understand.

JHP: As Baptista, you’re Kate and Bianca’s father. Of course Martha plays Kate and Mallory plays Bianca. Tell me about sharing scenes with these two.

TIM FUDGE: They are both such amazing performers! I have music directed Mallory before, but this is my first time sharing the stage with her and she is a joy to work with. Martha and I have worked together for 30 years (of course, she was just a child actress at the time!), so we have a long history from which to pull. I always love sharing the stage with her!! It is wonderful to feel so safe and secure onstage with these two consummate actresses.

JHP: With a character like Harry, there’s not much exposition. What backstory might you you concoct to get into character?

TIM FUDGE: Yes, we are given very little background on Harry, but I love thinking of him as an actor very much like myself. He’s worked in the theatre his whole adult life with no great financial success, but he is doing what he loves and that’s all that matters to him.

JHP: What about this production, with this company, appealed to you as an actor?

TIM FUDGE: Well, I’ve worked at the Barn off and on for 30 years – as an actor, a waiter, and mostly as a music director – and now under the new ownership, they can offer Equity contracts. I haven’t been able to be onstage here in many years due to my union status, so it’s wonderful to have the opportunity to perform here again. As far as Kiss Me, Kate goes, I’ve never even seen it before so it’s a new show to me! That’s always fun!!

———————————————

Whether, like Tim, Kiss Me, Kate is a new show for you, or an old favorite, you have two final chances to see this great production at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre with closing performances Friday and Saturday, March 8 and 9 at 7:30 p.m. each evening. Show tickets are $13 for Children 12 and Under, $20 for Youth and Students and $35 for Adults. As the venue’s name indicates, Chaffin’s also offers a full a la carte menu with items ranging from starters and an all-you-can eat soup and salad bar to meat and side entrees and small plate and sandwich options.  CLICK HERE for tickets or call 615.646.9977.

As mentioned above, following Kiss Me, Kate, Chaffin’s will debut Esther,an all-new musical based on the Bible’s beautiful Queen Esther by Dan Zimmerle. Directed by Wilkinson, with choreography by Tarlton, this limited run premiere will take to Chaffin’s main stage March 21, 23, 24 & 28. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. To keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q, Uncategorized Tagged With: Caleb Pless, CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Cole Porter, Interview, Kiss Me Kate, Mallory Mundy, MARTHA WILKINSON, Matthew Carlson, Musical, Musical Theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew, Timothy Fudge, William Shakespeare

Theatre Review: ‘Kiss Me, Kate’ onstage at Chaffin’s Barn through March 9, plus Valentine’s special

February 12, 2019 by Jonathan

Martha Wilkinson and Matthew Carlton star in Chaffin’s Barn’s “Kiss Me, Kate” (photos by Michael Scott Evans/courtesy Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre)

In an era when the absurdity of misogyny is finally being examined and hopefully eliminated, Kiss Me, Kate, Cole Porter’s mid-century musical comedy play within a play take on William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew could be seen as an interesting choice for Nashville’s favorite dinner theatre, but under the carefully creative eye of director/choreographer Everett Tarlton, and with a talented cast helmed by the Nashville theatrical presence that is Martha Wilkinson, any misgivings are quickly put to rest, for neither director, Tarlton’s nor star, Wilkinson’s talents can—or should—be tamed.

Katie Bruno as Hattie

The scene is set with the show’s literal and figurative opening number Another Op’nin’, Another Show in which members of a theatrical troupe ready themselves for exactly that, all to the playful and oddly rhyming lyrics. Only Cole Porter could convince an audience that Baltimore is pronounced (at least in song) as Baltimo, because that obviously rhymes with show. From the start, Tarlton showcases his energetic cast with Katie Bruno front and center as Hattie on this virtual all-in number. It should be noted that in spite of Chaffin’s relatively small center stage, surrounded on all four sides by tables and tables of patrons, Tarlton’s direction and choreography fill every available square inch of that stage with remarkably succinct and carefully choreographed movement. Never once does it seem like the actors are crowed or that they’re moving to avoid collision. It’s all done purposely and perfectly.

Mallory Mundy as Lois

The next number, Why Can’t You Behave serves to introduce the show’s secondary plot as ingenue Lois Lane, played by the simply stunning and ridiculously effervescent Mallory Mundy, chastises and teases her ne’er do-well gambling beau, Bill Calhoun, played by Chaffin’s newcomer, Caleb Pless. Mundy is one of those Nashville theatre actors I’ve oft referred to as one of my theatre crushes, and crush it she does. She plays Lois with the perfect combination of ditz and wits. Not being familiar with Pless’ stage work prior to this role, He definitely holds his own in scenes with Mundy and when given the opportunity to showcase his talents (read on, it’s coming) he does do with skills and ease that are sure to make him a familiar face at Chaffin’s going forward.

Caleb Pless as Bill

It’s not until the show’s third number, Wunderbar that we meet the aforementioned Wilkinson as Lilli Vanessi as she makes a divalicious entrance to join her sparing partner, Matthew Carlton as her ex-husband, Fred Graham. The chemistry between Wilkinson and Carlton is no accident. When I spoke with the two as part of an upcoming Rapid Fire 20 Q, they both revealed that this isn’t the first time they’ve played these roles, having starred in a production of Kiss Me, Kate on the same Chaffin’s stage twenty-six years ago. Over the years, the two have shared many stages together, and developed a friendship. All that history, even unspoken, is evident in the playfulness in which they address these two roles.

Martha Wilkinson and Matthew Carlton

Interspersed between the now-familiar Porter soundtrack, dialogue reveals the show’s full plot. Based on the real-life on-and-off-stage tumultuous relationship between director/actor Alfred Lunt and his actress wife, Lynn Fontanne, Kiss Me, Kate tells the story of Lilli Vanessi, a famous movie star who has returned to the stage to star in a musical production of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew, which her ex, Fred (Carlton) is not only producing and directing, but also co-starring alongside her as Petrucio to her Katherine. Further complicating things, a couple of heavies arrive to collect on Bill’s gambling debt, but think Fred is the one they’re looking for. As if that weren’t enough, Lilli reveals she’s intent on marrying Harrison Howell, a wealthy war hero. Oh, and did I mention Lilli accidentally receives opening night flowers from Fred? Flowers intended for Lois.

Wilkinson as Lilli Vanessi

Back to the musical numbers…When Wilkinson belts out So In Love, one of my favorite Cole Porter tunes, she does so with a near-operatic style that’s a subtle reminder of the originals of the Broadway musicals, for Broadway was originally indeed a more accessible, popular music-infused modernization of opera. On the subject of subtle elements within Chaffin’s Kate. Whether by happy accident, or clever purpose-filled design, Wilkinson seems to be paying homage to two Hollywood icons connected to Kate and The Shrew, as she sports two distinctive looks with her character, Lilli and the character of Katherine in the show wishing the show. When Wilkinson—who in real life wears her hair in a blonde pixie hairstyle—appears as mega-movie star Lilli Vanessi, she sports a raven-hued pageboy wig with wavy side-swept bangs reminiscent of Elizabeth Taylor, who starred in 1967’s film adaptation of The Taming of the Shrew. Meanwhile, when on stage as Katherine the titular character of the play within a play, she’s seen in a long curly red wig, a la 1953’s Kiss Me, Kate’s Kathryn Grayson.

Wilkinson as Lilli as Katherine

While We Open In Venice doesn’t exactly have the same oomph as some of the show’s more familiar tunes, it does serve to illustrate the tedium of going on the road with a touring company. The audience is next treated once again to the fireball that is Mundy, this time as her Shrew character, Bianca, Katherine’s younger, less shrewish sister, as she weighs her marital options with Lucentio (Pless), Gremio (Christian Redden) and Hortensio (Curtis Reed) with the fun and decidedly mid-century Tom, Dick or Harry.

Carlton’s rich vocals shine in I’ve Come to Wive it Wealthily in Padua, a perfectly Shakespearean sing-songy number with the male ensemble. Every time I hear this song, I can’t help but think Monty Python must have been inspired by it as it is so in the Spamalot wheelhouse. With Carlton at the helm, it’s an example of talent over content as his performance gives the silly song an unexpected air of sophistication with a knowing wink.

Mallory Mundy and Timothy Fudge as Bianca and Baptista

On the subject of the show’s Shakespearean tones, Timothy Orr Fudge plays Henry who, in turn plays Baptista, Katherine and Bianca’s father. Aside from Carlton’s Petrucio, Fudge’s Baptista performs the bulk of the Shakespearean dialogue and though his stage-time is somewhat limited, he manages to steal the spotlight from Carlton, Wilkinson and the rest with his enjoyably animated reactions and expressions. A thirty year veteran of the Nashville stage, Fudge is the joy of acting personified.

Back to Wilkinson for I Hate Men, another highpoint of the show, the soundtrack and Wilkinson’s performance, for you know the words she’s singing just aren’t true. To quote Shakespeare, “The lady doth protest too much, methinks.” For as much as she alleges her distain for the supposed stronger sex in this Porter classic, she does so with a wink and bravado that tells another tale. It was at this point in the show that I realized I could just sit and listen to Wilkinson belt out show tune after show tune and be perfectly content.

Matthew Carlton as Petrucio

Soon enough, Carlton’s Petrucio attempts to court Katherine during Were Thine That Special Face…until he discovers Lilli’s has read the note attached to the flowers she intercepted that were intended for Lois. What ensues is likely the most famous scene in the entire show, especially the 1953 film adaptation, as Fred/Petrucio attempts to stay in character and in the moment of wooing/taming Lilli/Katherine while she breaks her on-stage character, becoming more defiant that ever. Since its debut performance and through the years, this scene traditionally ends with Petrucio taking Katherine over his knee and smacking her backside as if to punish her for her defiance. It helps to keep in mind the time in which Porter’s work is set and first appeared on stage, Kiss Me, Kate having debuted on Broadway in 1948. The film adaptation premiering in 1953, by which time, millions of TV viewers were tuning in week after week to see Ricky Ricardo attempt to tame his scheming wife, Lucy, often resorting to turning her over his knee and giving her a spanking. To Tarlton’s credit, the infamous Kiss Me, Kate spanking scene between strong-willed Katherine and Petrucio is played off-stage, adding doubt as to exactly who is on the receiving end of the taming.

The first act draws to a close with the title tune, another all-in as Katherine resists both the urge to continue fighting, as well as the urge to sit, thanks to the off-stage reprimand she just received. Never intended to be taken too seriously, an certainly not to promote or glorify domestic discourse, the couple eventually, albeit still unwillingly embrace at Act’s end.

Members of the ensemble heat up the stage with “Too Darn Hot”

Tarlton’s choreo skills, and the dance talents of his ensemble start off Act 2 with the appropriately titled Too Darn Hot, another of my favorite Porter tunes, it’s also another prime example of Tarlton knowing exactly how to utilize and maximize the space and those who inhabit it. Reed, Mundy, Christen Hellman and other members of the company definitely bring the heat to this seductively sassy number.

Back to the Shrew musical, Petrucio laments the coming loss of his bachelor life with Where is the Life That Late I Led? This scene seems to also indicate that Fred is mourning the loss of his life with Lilli as offstage, Lilli’s much talked about, but heretofore unseen finance, Harrison Howell (James Rudolph) shows up looking for Lilli and ready to take her to be his wife.

Mallory Munday as Lois

Mundy’s Lois goes from the heat of Too Darn Hot to the flirtatious cool-down of Always True to You in My Fashion as she attempts to explain away her burgeoning friendship with Fred to a rightly jealous Bill.

The Porter hits keep coming as Wilkinson and Rudolph duet on the torchy testament From This Moment On. Then Pless gets his moment leading the ensemble in Bianca, a lovelorn ballad extolling his love for her, in spite of his reservations…and yes, it includes the lyrics “I’d gladly give up coffee for Sanka, even Sanka, Bianca for you”. Again, in Cole Porter’s world, anything can rhyme if you try hard enough. The number features more fabulous Tarlton choreography, fabulously performed by Pless and company.

Of course lyrics aren’t the only element of these tunes that make them decidedly Cole Porter….just as proficient in composition as he was in word-play, the melodies of Porter’s songs are a force unto themselves. In the masterfully capable hands of music director Rollie Mains, who is also on-hand playing keys, alongside Randy Craft, with Dan Kozlowski on drums, Michael Meadows on bass and Raymond Ridley on woodwinds, the music accompaniment in Kiss Me, Kate is heavenly.

As Gangsters, Sawyer Wallace and Austin Olive attempt to rough up Matthew Carlton’s Fred

Speaking of company members, Austin Olive and Sawyer Wallace, who play the aforementioned heavies who’ve come to collect Bill’s gambling debt, prove their comedic acumen through the play. Whether doing their toothpick-chewing, pistol waving stereotypical best as mobsters, or when forced to become part of the Shrew cast in order to keep an eye on their target, they’re hilarious. Never more so that near the end of the show as they perform the seemingly never-ending Brush Up Your Shakespeare. Of course all’s well that ends well…well, in a Cole Porter adaptation of Shakespeare, at any rate, and by show’s end Fred does indeed get that kiss.

Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s presentation of Kiss Me, Kate continues with performances through March 9. Thursday matinees are at 12 noon (seating and box lunch service begins at 11a.m. Thursday-Saturday evening performances are at 7:30 p.m. (doors open at 5:30 with optional dinner service until 7 p.m.) During the run of the show, there are also special performances at 2 p.m. on Sunday, February 24 (doors at 12 noon, meal until 1:30), Tuesday night, February 26 (following the regular nightly schedule) and at noon on Wednesday, February 27 (same times as Thursday matinees). Tickets for Thursday matinee performances are $19 for show only, or $27.50 for show and a box lunch option. Evening performances are $13 for Children 12 and under, $20 for Students and $35 for Adults. For an additional, but minimal fee, during evening performances, Chaffin’s now offers a select a la carte menu of small plate items as well as entrée, sides, dessert and drink options. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets, or for more information.

On Thursday, February 14, Chaffin’s is offering a Valentine’s Special that will include the show, dinner for two, a bottle of champaign, a rose for the ladies and chances to win prizes all for $150 per couple ($185 if you’d like to be seated at a private table for two). CLICK HERE to purchase Valentine’s Day tickets.

On March 7, the noon matinee will be presented accompanied by signing for the deaf and hearing impaired. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets to this special performance.

As mentioned above, be sure and check back for my upcoming Rapid Fire 20 Q with members of the cast of Chaffin’s Kiss Me, Kate. In the meantime, keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Theatre Review, Uncategorized Tagged With: Bellevue, Chaffin's, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Cole Porter, Dinner Theatre, Kiss Me Kate, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, The Taming of the Shrew, William Shakespeare

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