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Theatre Review: Don’t be a Cotton-Headed Ninny Muggins! Go see Sparklejollytwinklejingley Chase Miller’s performance as Buddy in ‘Elf: The Musical’ at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre thru December 22.

November 23, 2018 by Jonathan

 

Chase Miller lights up the holidays at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre as Buddy in “Elf: The Musical” (photos by Michael Scott Evans/courtesy Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre)

Dear Santa, I have a confession to make. I’ve never seen Will Farrell’s 2003 holiday hit, Elf in its entirety. Confession Number 2: After seeing Chase Miller in Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s current production of Elf: The Musical, based up on the film, with music by Matthew Sklar, lyrics by Chad Beguelin with book by Bob Martin and Thomas Meehan, I fully realize that just might make me a Cotton-Headed Ninny Muggins.

One final confession. I’ve never been a huge fan of Farrell. After seeing Chase Miller starring in Chaffin’s Elf, I am fully convinced there’s no way in the world Farrell’s performance could hold a candle to Chase Miller’s. As I mentioned when I interviewed Miller and his fellow cast mates for a recent installment in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q, with his perfect comedic timing, unabashed joy and contagious optimism, Miller was obviously born to play this part.

From the moment Miller literally and figuratively leaps upon the stage, his portrayal of Buddy warms the heart with laughter, as he sets out on his journey from the North Pole to Manhattan in search of his father. As Santa himself—fabulously, slightly caustically played by Brian Russell—reveals in clever, albeit thinly-plotted exposition…when Buddy was an infant, he crawled in to Santa’s sack, but went unnoticed until Santa returned to the North Pole where Buddy was adopted as one of Santa’s elves. After 30 years of thinking he was just a very tall elf, Buddy overhears the truth…that he’s human. He then sets out on his journey to find his real father.

As mentioned previously, I’ve not seen the entire movie, but I’ve seen enough clips and random scenes over the years as the film enjoys annual holiday airings to know that Miller’s Buddy isn’t simply a mimic of Farrell. To me, Farrell’s films frequently suffer the same fate of most Saturday Night Live skits….they just don’t know when to stop. Fortunately, Miller doesn’t have that problem. Miller’s wide-eyed childlike approach to the character is entertaining from first bounding onstage to his last hug. An actor of lesser skill could easily get lost in the role, reducing it to foolishness, but Miller’s Buddy is infectiously enthusiastic in his dream of forging a relationship with his father, so much so that he not only elicits uproarious laughter along his journey, but a genuinely sweet moment or two.

You just gotta love this show from the get. Costumer Miriam Creighton has done a splendid job of designing and constructing jolly holiday attire. Adding a bit of humor to the elven magic, ensemble members portraying elves walk on their knees—which are fitted with elf shoes, of course. Add to that Everett Tarlton’s clever choreography, Martha Wilkinson’s direction and Rollie Mains’ as music director, and you’ve got the makings of a Christmas musical guaranteed to deliver the holiday goodies.

Speaking of Tarlton’s choreography, show opener, Christmastown’s uplifting positivity perfectly mirror’s Buddy’s persona. The elf-ography in that number indeed made my belly jiggle like a bowl full of jelly. Sparklejollytwinklejingley’s frenetic fun as Buddy tries to convince some jaded department store elves to take pride in their work, continues the Christmas mood perfectly. On that note, Katie Gant’s lighting design indeed shines the light on the festive fun as the set glistens like any given Main Street across the country during the holiday season.

Act 2’s Fosse-esque Nobody Cares About Santa featuring a few less-than enthusiastic Santas including Austin Olive, David Ridley, Christian Redden and Tarlton, becomes a jazz-hot surprisingly sultry Santa sequence. That leads into an equally seductive Never Fall in Love featuring Christina Candelora lamenting love in the saddest/sexiest Christmas number since Rosemary Clooney’s White Christmas torch song, Love You Didn’t Do Right By Me—and that’s quite a feat, considering she’s singing about falling in love with an elf.

Gotta also mention Tarlton’s set design. Spoiler Alert: When the Christmas tree lowered from Chaffin’s loft (YES, the fabulous mechanical stage that lowers from above is BACK), my Mom leaned over and whispered, “that the kind of tree everybody needs”. It always amazes me with relatively limited performance space, Chaffin’s somehow manages to utilize every inch of stage, packing fully, gorgeously choreographed numbers from large casts who frequently, seamlessly, move set pieces to and fro in equally choreographed moves, so much so that the audience is barely aware. Just another example of the well-oiled machine that is Chaffin’s.

As per usual for Chaffin’s productions, the cast is top-notch. Grey Frey, a favorite at Chaffin’s, plays Walter Hobbs, Buddy’s Dad, and he does so with a perfect balance of businessman agitation and overwhelmed family man. The aforementioned Candelora is Jovie, a less-than-jovial department store elf, who soon becomes the object of Buddy’s affection. A fan pf Candelora’s for a few years, any chance to see her on stage is a joy indeed. Jessica Holtan, making her Chaffin’s debut, plays Emily, Buddy’s human step-mom. She’s perfect as the put-upon wife, who still sees a bit of practical magic in believing in the spirit of the holiday. Seth Barrett, who recently appeared as Les in Chaffin’s Newsies, plays Michael, Buddy’s younger brother who, thanks to his workaholic dad, doesn’t exactly believe in Santa. His scenes with Miller as his older brother ring true to those of us who look up to our older siblings no matter how different we may be from them.

Another notable cast member is Vicki White as Deb, Mr. Hobb’s busy-body secretary, who initially finds Buddy In The Way, but soon warms to him like a cup of hot coco on a frosty morn.

The aforementioned Russell not only plays Santa, but also Mr. Greenway—Buddy’s father’s Scrooge-like boss. Russell’s Santa is played with a decidedly curmudgeonly wink to dry-witted Bob Newhart, who played Papa Elf in the film, also gets the chance to totally turn up the crankiness in the dual role of Mr. Greenway. When I spoke with Russell for my recent all-Elf Rapid Fire 20 Q, we chatted about the fact that Russell’s involvement in Elf marks a bit of a homecoming for the actor, who got his professional theatrical start at The Barn Dinner Theatre nearly forty years back. While Chaffin’s patrons may also recognize Russell for frequently working as one of the waitstaff during the dinner portion of the shows, and Nashville theatre patrons certainly recognize him from productions all across Nashville, it’s been nearly 20 years since Russell has been seen on stage in a Chaffin’s production.

Heck, the entire ensemble, including Christen Heilman, Cassie Donegan, Matthew Hayes Hunter, Melissa Silengo, Jenny Norris, Colin Bevis, Myka Pacheco and Gabe Pacheco, is fabulous. Whether playing elves, harried shoppers or over-worked office drones, each member of the cast approaches their various roles with enough minute attention to detail, movement and expression to garner their own attention from the audience from time to time.

Predictable? Sure. Adorable? Undeniably. Infectiously fun and certain to get you in the mood for the holidays? Absolutely. Elf: The Musical continues through Saturday, December 22. As the venue’s name would imply, in addition to the show itself, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre also offers a delicious buffet-style dinner along with the show. Throughout the run, Elf will be presented Thursdays at 12noon and 7:30p.m., Fridays & Saturdays at 7p.m. Additional showtimes include matinee performances on Wednesday, November 28, December 5 & 12 at 12noon, and Sunday, December 9 & 16 at 2p.m. Tickets for Evening performances and Sunday matinees include the full buffet dinner option with Dinner and Show tickets priced at $60 for Adults & $30 for Youth and Students or Show Only tickets available for $35 for adults & $16 for Children 12 and Under. Matinee tickets are available with the option of a Box Lunch for $27.50, or show only for $19.00. For Wednesday and Thursday matinee performances, Doors Open at 11a.m. for Box Lunch patrons, with the show beginning at 12noon. For Sunday matinees, Doors Open at 12noon with buffet service until 1:30p.m. and showtime at 2p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings, Doors Open at 5p.m. with dinner service from 5:30p.m.-7p.m and Curtain at 7:30p.m.

Fair Warning: Chaffin’s Christmas shows inevitably ALWAYS SELL OUT, so get your tickets today. Tickets may be purchased by calling the Box Office at 615.646.9977 (ext. 2) or 1.800.282.2276. You can also CLICK HERE to purchase tickets online.

The holiday fun keeps coming at Chaffins with The Game Show Show: Holiday Edition in their Backstage Theatre space, with weekend performances November 23-December 22. CLICK HERE for 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: Theatre Review Tagged With: CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Chase Miller, Christina Candilora, Christmas, Dinner Theatre, Elf, Elf: The Musical, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s ‘Elf: The Musical’; on stage thru December 22

November 17, 2018 by Jonathan

Earlier this weekend, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre opened their production of Elf: The Musical, thus christening the unofficial start of Nashville theatre community’s Christmas Season. In anticipation of opening weekend, I recently had a chance to chat with several members of Chaffin’s cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q. Seeing as how the holidays are upon us, I’ve taken the liberty to not only include fun information about the show, the actors’ performances and such, but to also ask them about their own holiday traditions, memories and hopes.

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RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH THE CAST OF CHAFFIN’S BARN’S ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

RAPID FIRE WITH CHASE MILLER, BUDDY HOBBS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: Alright, I just have to tell you, when I heard you had been cast as Buddy, I immediately thought…’genius casting’. Has playing Buddy become an unexpected dream role?

CHASE MILLER: Well first of all, thank you so much! That’s incredibly kind. I remember when the show opened on Broadway back in 2010 thinking what amazing fun it would be, and now it’s real life! Playing Buddy is most definitely a dream, not to mention a whole lot of fun. The antics…the unadulterated joy…He really is a gift.

JHP: What’s one aspect of Buddy that you’d like to incorporate more into your own personality?

CHASE MILLER: One of my favorite things about Buddy is his fresh set of eyes on the “real world.” Sure, that leads to some comic cases of misunderstanding now and then, but it also allows Buddy to approach every bit of the world with an open heart and an open mind, because he doesn’t know any better. With the world being what it is these days, it’s hard not to lose a little faith in humanity, but Buddy would never dream of it. He has an innate ability to hone in on the good in people, and that’s a great reminder for me to make sure I’m putting enough love and kindness out into the world, whether I expect to get it back or not.

JHP: What’s your favorite childhood Christmas memory?

CHASE MILLER: Christmas is always a source of amazing memories for me, but if I had to choose I think “Decorating Day” would be my favorite as a kid. Usually the Saturday after Thanksgiving, we’d stay in our pajamas the whole day, blast Christmas tunes through the entire house, and we wouldn’t stop until everything was finished. Tree, lights, decor, the whole bit. Decorating for Christmas in my PJs is still one of my all-time favorite things.

JHP: The show is full of memorable scenes. What’s your favorite?

CHASE MILLER: Gosh, that’s a toughie… There are so many good ones! One that thoroughly tickles me though is when Buddy apologizes for shoving 11 cookies into the DVD player. I love playing through that scenario in my head. The thought of Buddy seeing the DVD player and 1. Assuming it was built for cookies, 2.Trying ten other times with ten other cookies, and 3. Even though the previous ten were a total bust, going in with that eleventh cookie. THAT’S  the one to determine that maybe… just maybe… it wasn’t built for that. It makes me laugh every time I think about it.

RAPID FIRE WITH CHRISTINA CANDILORA, JOVIE in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: You play Jovie. What can you tell me about her?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: She’s a tough broad. A little depressed when it comes to Christmas. She’s hard on herself because she’s a bit jaded by men. Having been on her fair share of bad dates she’s  weary about going on a date with a guy she might actually like. I think she’s got some

walls built up, thankfully buddy breaks those down.

JHP: How much fun are you having sharing the stage with Chase as Buddy?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: I don’t think I can properly put into words how much fun I’m having with him! I have so much love and respect for him. He makes me laugh…all the time. He’s so perfect in this role. It’s an utter delight getting to bring these characters to life with him.

JHP: What’s one Christmas tradition you have with your own family that you love?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: Christmas Eve dinner. I come from a big Italian Catholic family, so we do a thing called “The Feast of 12 Fishes”..all day long. We eat and drink and eat and drink some more! It’s a continuous amount of food with lots of laughs and love.

JHP: Chaffin’s Artistic Director, and the show’s director, Martha Wilkinson recently posted to social media that Everett Tarlton, the show’s choreographer, was quoted as saying the choreography is “very Fosse meets Sesame Street” why is that an accurate description?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: Hah! I actually wasn’t there when that was said. However, I can see what he means by that. We are using a lot of imagination with this show. Everett’s choreo is always fierce, but it has fun child like feel added to it this time round. For example, Melissa Silengo and Everett become a puffin and a walrus at one point if that gives you an idea of the Sesame Street fun.

RAPID FIRE WITH SETH BENNETT, MICHAEL HOBBS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: Since holiday games are fun…Here’s a word game for you…How would you describe Michael in five words?

SETH BENNETT: If I was to describe Michael in five words they would be insightful, deprived, passionate, warmhearted, and honest.

JHP: Michael doesn’t believe in Santa. Tell me one reason why we should all believe in Santa.

SETH BENNETT: I think we should all believe in Santa because he inspires us to try and be kinder and more compassionate to others around us, which I think we could all use a little more of.

JHP: What makes Elf such a great holiday musical?

SETH BENNETT: Elf is such a great musical for the holidays because it is so lighthearted and warm. It is extremely humorous and even watching Buddy the Elf just makes people smile.

JHP: Do you prefer snow on Christmas or a bit of warmth and sunshine?

SETH BENNETT: Personally, I much prefer snow on Christmas rather than sunshine. Although I love being outdoors and in the sun, I feel like the snow just adds something special on Christmas. Also one of my favorite family memories involves playing in the snow, so it will always have a special place in my heart.

RAPID FIRE WITH GREG FREY, WALTER in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: How would you describe Walter?

GREG FREY: I think, like so many men, Walter is just misunderstood. He’s the George Bailey, Bob Wallace, Luther Krank and other infamous Scrooge like characters that remind us that without hope and the child like ability to ‘believe’ humanity is lost. At his core he is a good guy and loves his family, but allowed himself to get trapped in the American dream and things that truly are not important!

JHP: Aside from Elf, of course, what’s your favorite Christmas movie?

GREG FREY: That’s a tough one with so many good one out there! Much depends on my mood and need for either nostalgia or a laugh. Let’s just say a Christmas season does not go by without me watching White Christmas or Christmas with the Kranks!

JHP: Peppermint bark or candy canes?

GREG FREY: For taste alone, probably Peppermint bark…. but Christmas memories usually win out with me, and candy canes are tried and true. Whether topping a tree, crushed and sprinkled on candy cane cookies, inserted in some coffee or a cup of  hot chocolate (or just your mouth), candy canes are a winner!

JHP: As a kid, was there one Christmas toy you cherished above all the others?

GREG FREY: Fortunately, I don’t remember getting too many ‘duds’ as a kid. One gift that brought hours, days, years of enjoyment for me were roller skates. These were not the type you get when you rent some at the local roller rink (do those still exist?) but were metal frames that clamped around your toes and strapped around your ankle to what ever shoe you chose to wear. Primitive, yes, but oh so fun! We had a huge finished basement with tons of room for circling forever with our 45’s blasting away on my sister’s little portable record player! Memories like that,  along with my own family treasures,  keep the Christmas Spirit alive for me year round!

RAPID FIRE WITH BRIAN RUSSELL, SANTA CLAUS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: You’re playing Santa Claus as well as Fulton Greenway. How much fun is that?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Santa’s a hoot in this script.  Yes, he’s sentimental; and yes, he’s jolly.  but he’s also a college football fan with a taste for single malt cocoa, if ya know what I mean.  Knowing this was the Bob Newhart Elf role adapted from the movie also makes playing the droll lines a whole lot easier.  Besides, with my very tall and very mean Greenway, I get my daily karmic balance in spades.

JHP: In a recent Facebook post, you shared that you got your start as a professional actor at Chaffin’s nearly 38 years ago and that it’s been nearly two decades since you last appeared on stage at The Barn. What’s it like being back?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Now that we’re open, I’m guessing I’ll have a little more time to ponder this question for real.  Since waiting tables there is also my one of my “Burger King” jobs,  driving there and being in the building has not been all that much different (rehearsals tend to keep one hopping and not musing).  I guess when the memories actually begin to hit me is when I’m viewing from an old actor’s eye the photos on the wall from our past shows, remembering the amazing times with great productions and great friends that I’ve had when I could work there, and feeling the loss of the beautiful friends and colleagues that have since passed.  I started this vagabond life out there with a load of energy and a full head of hair, so the chance to come back is truly indescribable.  And I am GRATEFUL!

JHP: A follow-up question in reference and reverence to your lengthy career on stage. Any advice for the new kids in the show?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Advice, eh….if this nutty, crazy business is your passion, if you can’t really see yourself doing anything BUT this as a career, follow that dream and do everything you can to accommodate that passion. Above all, don’t fear unemployment….heck, nothing in Nashville lasts more than 10 weeks, so being out of work is a given. Find your way to comfort and career fulfillment despite that pesky notion no work and make yourself as marketable as you can…..triple threats work A LOT!!!

JHP: Just between you and me…who among the cast is likely to wind up on the Naughty list?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Well, Martha natch.  Thinking the band is probably on that list permanently as well….

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Elf: The Musical opened Thursday, November 15 and continues through Saturday, December 22. As Nashville’s longest-running Dinner Theatre, in addition to the show itself, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre also offers a delicious buffet-style dinner along with the show. Throughout the run, Elf will be presented Thursdays at 12noon and 7:30p.m., Fridays & Saturdays at 7p.m. Additional showtimes include matinee performances on Wednesday, November 28, December 5 & 12 at 12noon, and Sunday, December 9 & 16 at 2p.m. Tickets for Evening performances and Sunday matinees include the full buffet dinner option with Dinner and Show tickets priced at $60 for Adults & $30 for Youth and Students or Show Only tickets available for $35 for adults & $16 for Children 12 and Under. Matinee tickets are available with the option of a Box Lunch for $27.50, or show only for $19.00. For Wednesday and Thursday matinee performances, Doors Open at 11a.m. for Box Lunch patrons, with the show beginning at 12noon. For Sunday matinees, Doors Open at 12noon with buffet service until 1:30p.m. and showtime at 2p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings, Doors Open at 5p.m. with dinner service from 5:30p.m.-7p.m and Curtain at 7:30p.m.

Fair Warning: Chaffin’s Christmas shows inevitably ALWAYS SELL OUT, so get your tickets today. Tickets may be purchased by calling the Box Office at 615.646.9977 (ext. 2) or 1.800.282.2276. You can also CLICK HERE to purchase tickets online.

In addition to Elf, Chaffin’s will also present a special children’s show, All I Want For Christmas is My Two Front Teeth, with morning matinees at 11a.m. Fridays & Saturdays from December 7-22. CLICK HERE for tickets.

The holiday fun keeps coming at Chaffins with The Game Show Show: Holiday Edition in their Backstage Theatre space, with weekend performances November 23-December 22. CLICK HERE for more information, or check back next week when I feature members of the cast in my next Rapid Fire 20 Q.

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 Tagged With: Brian Russell, CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Chase Miller, Christina Candilora, Christmas, Elf, Elf: The Musical, Grey Frey, Holiday, Interview, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Seth Bennett

Theatre Review: Dreaming of a White Christmas? Look no further than the high-energy stage version of Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’ tapping its way across the country and into audiences’ hearts this holiday season

November 16, 2018 by Jonathan

Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’ stars Kelly Sheehan, Jeremy Benton, Sean Montgomery and Kerry Conte, onstage in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall as holiday tour continues

With it’s lavish sets, gorgeous costumes and top-drawer cast, the 1954 film Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, which starred Danny Kaye, Bing Crosby, Vera-Ellen and Rosemary Clooney, has been a holiday tradition for…well…64 years. Moving the magic from screen to stage more than a decade ago, playwrights David Ives and Paul Blake adapted the story into an equally resplendent stage musical. The show is currently in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall through Sunday, November 18 as the national tour makes its way across the country guaranteeing audiences everywhere a glistening, gleaming, smiling, singing, happy, tapping, merry-making White Christmas.

While I wasn’t around in 1954 for the initial release of the film, an annual viewing has become somewhat of a holiday tradition since first discovering it by way of a late-night TV broadcast some forty years ago on Christmas Eve while staying up late to help my mom wrap those last few gifts. Fast forward to a few years back when the national tour of the stage musical played TPAC. I was in heaven, after all, what could be better than a glorious new musical featuring a soundtrack jam-packed with Irving Berlin tunes, lovingly based on a classic movie? Mind Blown.

So, how do you replicate the on-screen chemistry of Crosby and Kaye playing ‘odd couple’ best pals, let alone Clooney and Ellen as squabbling sisters? The simple answer, you cast Sean Montgomery, Nashville’s own Jeremy Benton (back for his fifth time with the tour), Kerry Conte and Kelly Sheehan. Montgomery smoothy fills the Crosby bill while Benton eases into the goofiness of Kaye while elevating the role with some of the most impressive dance moves I’ve ever seen onstage. As for the ladies, Sheehan’s Judy might look more like Clooney than Vera-Ellen, but her dance moves rival those of her character’s creator. At times Conte’s singing voice is blissfully similar to that of Rosemary Clooney, but there’s also times, especially in her line delivery, that she possesses a more regal intonation reminiscent the equally talented chanteuse, Peggy Lee. Just another interesting fun fact…when the film was released, Clooney was under contract with Columbia Records and was therefore prohibited from appearing on the film’s official soundtrack record album release. Instead, Decca Records brought in Lee to record vocals for the vinyl. (I warned you it’s my favorite).

Just as the film, White Christmas begins in 1944 near the action of a WWII battlefront at a drab army camp as besties Phil Davis (Benton) and Bob Wallace (Montgomery) attempt to bring holiday cheer to their fellow soldiers. Amidst the wartime setting, Benton and Montgomery perform heartwarming versions of composer Berlin’s classics, Happy Holiday and the title tune, White Christmas.

Conrad John Schuck and Karen Ziembra as General Waverly and Martha Watson in Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’

As the boys wrap their battlefront performance, their gruff commanding officer, General Henry Waverly (Conrad John Schuck) emerges initially seeming to break up the fun, when in truth, he thanks them for their little Christmas show and wishes his men well with a speech about his hopes for them ten years in the future. Shuck, who now calls nearby Franklin, TN home, has enjoyed a prolific career in TV, film and on stage. Among his many memorable roles, he appeared in several Robert Altman films including M*A*S*H, played Sergeant Enright on TV’s McMillan & Wife, brought Herman Munster back to life in the 90s starring as the bolt-necked patriarch in the updated series Musters Today, played a comedic robot cop in one of my cherished childhood favorites, Holmes and Yoyo. Oh, and did I mention he costarred as Col. Wm F. Cody alongside Reba in her Broadway debut as Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun? But I digress.

Ten years in the future it is, as action then fast-forwards to Christmastime1954. This finds Wallace and Davis, now a hugely successful performing duo, about to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show. The stark contrast from the show’s more somber setting to the vivid set and costumes of the reprise of Happy Holiday and the toe-tapping, mood-lifting Let Yourself Go put me in mind of Dorothy’s arrival in Oz as she emerges from the black and white emotionless Kansas to the vibrant wide-eyed extravaganza that is Munchkinland. This also reminded me of a bit of useless trivia. White Christmas, the film, wasn’t just shot in spectacular Technicolor. It was also the first Paramount Pictures movie to be released in VistaVision, a then-new wide-screen format that enhanced the projection area of standard 35-mm film. Think of it as mid-50s version of 4K.

Benton and Montgomery bring 50s technicolor to life onstage in ‘White Christmas’

That said, the musical’s scenic designer, Anna Louizos and costumer, Carrie Robbins brilliantly pay homage to the beautifully dreamlike, overly saturated full spectrum of colors presented in the original as they dip their respective pallets into nearly every color in the rainbow helping to create a living technicolor spectacular.

Colors aren’t the only thing saturating White Christmas. It’s also full of Berlin tunes, so much so that even the incidental musical will have Berlin-philes beaming as they hear bits and bars from several of the legendary composer other notable tunes. While the show is indeed tune-full, it’s also satiated with patented boy-meet-girl (with complications) saccharine plots. As mentioned above, this time we’ve got army buddies Bob Wallace (Montgomery) and Davis (Benton) and their chance/fateful meeting with Betty and Judy Haynes (Conte and Sheehan, respectively).

From the beginning there’s not just sparks, there’s fireworks as Montgomery’s Wallace and Conte’s Betty lock horns while Benton’s Davis and Sheehan’s Judy see through the resistance and set their sights on matchmaking. This leads to a clever duet between Montgomery and Conte. Clever because they’re each in their own dressing rooms, he, backstage at The Ed Sullivan Show and she, in her dressing room at a local nightspot while both contemplate the shared unpredictability of  Love and the Weather (one of many Irving Berlin tunes not originally featured in the film, but added for the stage musical adaptation).

Conte and Sheehan recreate the iconic ‘Sisters’

Next up is a spot-on recreation of one of the film’s most iconic scenes, Sisters in which Sheehan and Conte, twinning in gorgeous heaven-blue dresses with matching feather fans wax lovingly on the bond of sisterhood, a bond so strong that only one thing can come between the two…when one sister attempts to even think of going after the other sister’s man. Bravo to Randy Skinner, the show’s director and choreographer, for finding the perfect balance between honoring the iconic moments like this, while breathing revived life into other segments of the show. Not gonna lie. I may or may not have teared-up during this number…and a few others throughout the show.

The Best Things Happen While You’re Dancing offers Benton and Sheehan a chance to sway lovingly across the floor. The staging of this number is beautiful as the set and ensemble disappear while Benton and Sheehan’s Phil and Judy escape their surrounding in a dreamlike stage induced by the peacefulness of dancing cheek to cheek.

Any time I talk about White Christmas—you’d be surprised how often that is—I inevitably mention my hands-down favorite moment in the film in which Phil has hoodwinked Bob into a train trip to Vermont to unknowingly join the Haynes Sisters as they perform a Christmas Eve show at an inn (which just so happens to be owned by their former General). In the film, clever cinematography transforms a table napkin, an advert and pine needles into a snow-scene all atop a table in a boxcar as the quartet ride the rails. The scene is sweet as they sing of Snow, but the whole sequence only lasts about two minutes. For the stage musical, it’s an all-in as the ensemble packs the boxcar for an expanded version of the song. It’s as if Skinner is giving me my own special holiday gift every time I see this show.

On the subject of gifts to the audience, enter Tony-winner Karen Ziembra as Martha Watson. Played by Mary Wickes in the film, Martha is The General’s right-hand-woman as she oversees the day to day running of the lodge and, at least for the holidays, helps him care for his visiting granddaughter, Susan (a role shared during the tour by Emma Grace Berardelli and Kayla Carter). Ziembra, like her film-version predecessor, lights up the stage and steals the spotlight with every snide remark, every double-take and every movement, but when she belts out the opening note of her sole solo Let Me Sing and I’m Happy…DAMN! That’s how you do it, folks. Not to be too outdone by a Tony-winner, later in the show, young Susan gets her chance at the tune, to audience-cheering results.

Act 1 ends with what is easily the moral of the show, Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep and the optimistic and gorgeous Blue Skies.

While Act 1 contains enough punch to be a show all its own, Act 2 somehow amps up the thrill of it all as it opens with a no-holds-barred I Love a Piano. A mind-boggling number than clocks in somewhere around a full nine minutes of tap triumph featuring Benton, Sheehan and a dozen ensemble members in perfect step. And YES, on opening night of the Nashville leg of the tour, several audience members leapt to their feet for a spontaneous mid-show ovation in appreciation.

Other Act 2 highlights include a hilarious gender-bending Sisters reprise courtesy Montgomery and Benton, Sheehan’s breathy, bluesy ballad, Love You Didn’t do Right By Me that morphs into a duet with Montgomery on How Deep is the Ocean, and of course the magnificent film-tactic finale. Spoiler Alert…YES, it snows on stage!

Irving Berlin’s White Christmas continues in Music City at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with five more performances thru Sunday, November 18, with a Friday evening performance at 8p.m., Saturday matinee at 2p.m. and a Saturday evening performance at 8p.m., a Sunday matinee at 1p.m. and a final Sunday evening performance at 6:30p.m.. For more information, CLICK HERE. TPAC is offering two ticketing specials for the remainder of the run. Rush Tickets are available for $30. Simply visit the box office 90 minutes prior to curtain and inquire about availability. There’s also a special on groups of four tickets, just give the promo code JOLLY.

Following the Nashville leg of the tour, White Christmas heads to Tulsa, OK from November 20-25, Atlanta, GA from November 27-December 2, Denver, CO from December 5-15, Orlando, FL from December 18-23 and finishes out the holiday season in Miami, FL, December 20-30. CLICK HERE for ticket links to all remaining cities. To keep up with all things White Christmas, CLICK HERE or follow the tour on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

In addition to White Christmas, TPAC’s holidays are in full swing as they host a wide variety of Christmas-themed shows including: Broadway Princess Party, Nashville Rep’s 10th and final year of A Christmas Story, The Hip Hop Nutcracker, A Drag Queen Christmas, Nashville Ballet’s annual presentation of Nashville’s Nutcracker and Peter Pan and Tinkerbell: A Pirate Christmas. CLICK HERE for the full calendar, dates and ticketing information. Follow TPAC 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: Theatre Review Tagged With: Christmas, Holiday Movies, Irving Berlin, Irving Berlin's White Christmas, Jeremy Benton, John Schuck, Karen Ziembra, Kelly Sheehan, Kerry Conte, live theatre, Movies, Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Review, Sean Montgomery, Theatre, Theatre Review, White Christmas

Rapid Fire 20 Q with new music duo SunKat’s Katie Cook and Adam Shoenfeld; new single ‘Hey Jo Jo’ out today

November 9, 2018 by Jonathan

SunKat’s Adam Shoenfeld and Katie Cook

When CMT’s favorite on-air personality Katie Cook and Music City in-demand guitarist Adam Shoenfeld got married last December, the union was much more than the beginning of a new life together, it was also the start of an inevitable magical musical collaboration known as SunKat. After months of writing together and beginning to play a few gigs around town, SunKat is releasing their latest single, Hey Jo Jo. The song, a tribute to Cook’s sister, Joanne, who passed away earlier this year following a lifetime of heath issues, is also a way for SunKat to give back, as they’ve designated all first-year sales from digital downloads of the single to benefit The Arc, to help fund their programs to aide individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDDs).

Having known Cook, as well as her joy-filled sister, Joanne, when I heard about the project, I knew I had to chat with SunKat for the latest installment in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q, but before I share that conversation, a bit about Cook and Shoenfeld.

Cook isn’t simply a TV host for Country Music Television, she’s got music in her blood as she’s also the daughter of prolific singer/songwriter Roger Cook. Among her father’s many successful songs, he co-wrote the iconic I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing that quickly not only became a peace anthem for a generation, but also one of the world’s most recognizable songs when it appeared in the now-famous Hilltop commercial spot for Coca Cola. Parental pedigree aside, before Cook landed her gig at CMT, she fronted 90s pop trio, Reno. In the years since, when not chatting it up with legends ranging from Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson to George Clooney, Cook has always dabbled in singing and songwriting.

As for Shoenfeld, while Katie was establishing herself as Music City’s go-to Red Carpet interviewer, he was busy making a name for himself as a much sought-after guitarist connecting early on with Kenny Alphin and John Rich, better known as Big and Rich, becoming a longtime member of the duo’s iconic music collaborative MuzikMafia. Over the years, Shoenfeld has played on more than 30 Billboard #1 hits. As a songwriter, he’s also had his share of successes, including SESAC’s Song of the Year as co-writer on Faith Hill’s Mississippi Girl alongside Rich. A quick look as a list of his credits reveals a who’s who of music’s most popular artists, including Luke Bryan, Dan + Shay, The cast of TV’s Nashville, Kid Rock, Martina McBride, Florida Georgia Line, Amy Grant and Tim McGraw, with whom he has toured the last several years.

Not long after their storybook December wedding last year—appropriately taking place in the heart of Downtown Nashville’s Honky Tonk district—Cook and Shoenfeld debuted their duo project, SunKat and their first single, That Was the Night. Now, as their one-year wedding anniversary approaches, their second single, Hey Jo Jo drops. What follows is my conversation with Cook and Shoenfeld about their collaboration, the single and what’s next for SunKat.

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RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH SUNKAT’s KATIE COOK and ADAM SHOENFELD

JONATHAN H PINKERTON: How did you guys come up with the name SunKat?

KATIE COOK: It was Adam’s idea, it is a mash up of our nicknames. I have always called him Sunny and Kat is short for Katie of course!

ADAM SHOENFELD: I really just came to me out of nowhere.

JHP: When you played me an early edit of your new single, Hey Jo Jo, I picked up on a bit of a Beatles vibe. Was that intentional or simply organic?

KATIE: We used to call Joanne, “Jo Jo,” and when we sat down to write the song, the title Hey Jo Jo just popped out immediately. The title itself sounded very Beatles-y. It just kind of led us down that road automatically and we didn’t fight it. Joanne was very jolly and in her own world at times, and the whimsical St.Peppers vibe just seem to fit the lyric.

ADAM: The way I remember it was Katie actually said to me (in our morning slumber), we need to write a Beatles-esque song for Jo Jo!

JHP: What are some of your other musical influences?

KATIE: It’s all over the place really. Collectively we both love Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin and Fleetwood Mac. I grew up on 70’s country and it influences everything I do. I am also an unabashed Olivia Newton John fan; I don’t care who knows it! In the 80’s I was obsessed with Blondie, X and The Clash, but would also listen to Dolly Parton and Don Williams at the same time.

ADAM: Sooo many. My main influences are Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, Fleetwood Mac, U2, and the Foo Fighters.

Cover art for the ‘Hey Jo Jo’ single

JHP: The single Hey Jo Jo is a tribute to Katie’s sister Joanne who passed away earlier this year. For those who weren’t lucky enough to know her, what do you hope to convey about Joanne by way of the song?

KATIE: The message we want to get across is that just because someone is different doesn’t mean they aren’t living the way they should. We have a habit of trying to force people with IDDs to be like us, but we can learn a lot from them and the way they see the world. Everyone is unique, and “special” isn’t bad. I was often envious of my sister’s ability to stay positive and always be in the moment. It’s like she had the real secret to life, and we need to spread that secret around the world.

ADAM: How she loved, loved everybody, without thinking there could ever be a reason not to love them.

JHP: What’s your favorite lyric in the song?

KATIE: “Don’t believe what you’ve heard, special ain’t a bad word, you see the world through magic eyes.”

ADAM: Definitely the “you see the world through magic eyes” line.

JHP: There’s also a special music video for the single, right?

KATIE: Yes, the video was directed by Sam Boyette, and we used pictures of Joanne throughout. We wanted to make it really fun and capture her spirit; it turned out great. You can find the Hey Jo Jo video on YouTube at the SunKat channel or watch below.

JHP: With Katie’s CMT gig and Adam in constant demand in the studio and on the road, how are you two finding time to form the musical duo SunKat?

KATIE: Well it isn’t easy with our schedules, but it makes us so happy that we just find the time. Sometimes the house is a mess and we haven’t seen our friends in weeks, but we have a new batch of songs to show for it. Date nights are often us in the studio working.

ADAM: We work it in when we can…..FYI, the house is always a mess.

JHP: What brought about the idea to record and perform as SunKat?

KATIE: It just naturally evolved. When two writers start dating, the writing is almost unavoidable. Initially we assumed we were just writing songs to pitch to other artists, but as when started to demo the songs, we realized that we really loved the way they sounded with us on them. Singing together felt so good, and we just decided to go for it.

ADAM: When we started dating, I was pumped to have someone I could share my music with and support her’s, it was always in the back of my mind that maybe one day we’d do it together, or that we’d at least help each other with our respective projects. That being said, the SunKat songs were not planned, they were delivered to us from some unknown entity.

JHP: What’s the most challenging aspect of creating music with your spouse?

KATIE: Maybe the fact that we hardly ever talk about anything else!

ADAM: I typically don’t worry about offending people with my opinions about music I’m working on…..I don’t ever want to upset Katie, so that’s different for me.

JHP: What’s the most rewarding facet?

KATIE: The feeling of satisfaction I get when we finish a song and I know it’s ten times better than it would have been if we wrote it solo. We bring something to each other’s ideas that we can’t get on our own. Looking into Adam’s eyes when we are singing is pretty magical…if I can stop giggling. It’s a real bonding experience, and every song is like one of our babies. I was worried that mixing love and work would strain our relationship, but it has been a strengthening.

ADAM: Getting lucky right after writing a song is pretty cool.

JHP: Where can folks purchase Hey Jo Jo?

KATIE: It can be purchased through iTunes, Amazon Music and also through our website at www.SunKatMusic.com.

Images from SunKat’s just-released ‘Hey Jo Jo’ music video

JHP: What do you think Joanne’s reaction to the song would be?

KATIE: It’s funny, but I often picture her listening to it and smiling. I can see her tapping her finger on the side of the chair and grinning from ear to ear. I think she would say “Awwww, thank you, I love it!!” Joanne was so sweet, she would probably say that even if she didn’t like it, but i truly think she would love it. I also think the fact that my father sang background vocals on it and my brother played drums, would make her very happy. She brought us together that day.

ADAM: She’d smile bigger than you’ve ever seen anyone smile.

JHP: I understand you’ve decided to release Hey Jo Jo as a benefit single?

KATIE: Yes, all sales from downloads will go directly to The Arc for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. They have so many wonderful programs that support people with IDDs from birth to the end of their life. We want to help people like Joanne reach their full potential.

JHP: For those not familiar, tell me more about The Arc?

KATIE: The Arc has around 700 state and local chapters and their services range from advocacy, protection, and criminal justice (people with IDDs are more likely to be sexually assaulted) to life skills training, behavioral support and inclusion. The Arc also offers support to family members and siblings caring for an individual with an IDD.

JHP: How excited as you guys to make the official announcement about the charity aspect of the single at The Arc Conference this weekend?

KATIE: We can’t wait to tell everyone how we are using this song to help others. I think it’s what Joanne would have wanted and we want to make her proud and honor her memory. Everything about this project has felt good, and now we hope to inspire others with it.

ADAM: I’ve made a lot of music that has never seen the light of day. To put something out and know that it could possibly help a lot of people is  an amazing feeling.

JHP: For those not attending the conference, when and where will SunKat be performing next?

KATIE: We have a couple upcoming shows in Nashville! On December 8th we’ll be at The High Watt opening for Gracie’s Walk of Shame. It is a free show but we are taking donations for Agape Animal Rescue. Doors open at 7 pm and music starts at 7:30pm.

Then, on January 12th at The Basement, we’re doing a show with Lost Hollow, who are absolutely incredible! Music starting at 7pm.

JHP: Are you guys currently writing more material or recording?

KATIE: We are always writing and recording. We actually have a studio in our house, so there is no escaping it!

ADAM: We are “all in”

JHP: When can we expect a full album from SunKat?

KATIE: We have a full album’s worth of material now, but we are trying to decide if we should release one song at a time. Maybe we should take a poll and see what people would want!

ADAM: What’s an album? LOL It’s like we’re back in the 50’s. It’s a singles world. Target and Walmart don’t even pay labels upfront for CD’s anymore. Seriously though, I think we both hope to bundle a bunch of our releases together real soon and make one of those ancient things.

JHP: If SunKat could achieve everything you hope for as a collaboration between the two of you, what would be just one of those goals?

KATIE: To be able to support ourselves just being creative is probably what every artists wants. That is the dream. Of course, we both happen to LOVE our day jobs, so honestly, life is pretty perfect already.

ADAM: When we did our first show, the club was packed. If we can do that here and there, at the very least, that would be awesome, but we’ll take arenas if anyone will have us.

JHP: How can folks keep up with what’s next for SunKat?

ADAM:They can go to our website or our Facebook page and sign up for our mailing list!

KATIE: We’re also on Twitter and Instagram.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Adam Shoenfeld, Charity, CMT, Duo, Fundraiser, guitarist, Hey Jo Jo, Katie Cook, Music, music video, Nashville, New Music, Single, songwriter, SunKat, The Arc

Interview: Rapid Fire Q&A with ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ stars Quentin Oliver Lee and Eva Tavares as National Tour celebrates 2000th performance Saturday night in Nashville at TPAC

November 3, 2018 by Jonathan

Quentin Oliver Lee and Eva Tavares as The Phantom and Christine in “The Phantom of the Opera” (photo by Matthew Murphy)

With more than thirty years history on Broadway alone, Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera has racked up some pretty impressive accolades, so it would stand to reason that the current US Tour, having began November 27, 2013, and presently playing Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall, would also hit a few celebratory marks along the way. One such milestone, the touring company’s 2000th performance will take place Saturday night, November 3rd.

While the current leads, Quentin Oliver Lee and Eva Tavares may not have been there when the current tour produced by Cameron Mackintosh began in 2013—both having joined the tour in 2017, they do indeed have something to celebrate as they’ve taken two of musical theatre’s most iconic role, The Phantom and Christine, the object of his obsession, and made them their own. Earlier this week, as they were in midst of their two-week Music City engagement, I had the opportunity to chat with each of the two stars for the latest in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire Q&A.

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RAPID FIRE WITH QUENTIN OLIVER LEE, THE PHANTOM IN THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA

JHP: The Phantom is easily one of the most recognizable characters in musical theatre history. What’s it like getting to perform the role in the current national tour?

QUENTIN OLIVER LEE: It’s like being shot out of a cannon! Seriously though, it’s very humbling, very gratifying and I’m constantly taken aback and the love and support from the Phans, creatives and my fellow cast mates.

JHP: Do you remember when you first became aware of the musical itself?

QUENTIN OLIVER LEE: I saw the movie in my high school choir class a week before we performed Masquerade for our 2004 fall concert.

JHP: So many elements of The Phantom are iconic…the wardrobe, the mask, the music, even the briefly seen make-up beneath the mask. Each night as you transform into The Phantom, is there a certain point you ‘feel’ you become him?

QUENTIN OLIVER LEE: It’s important for the health and sanity of myself and everyone in the cast to be able to switch between being Quentin and being the Phantom. So generally I’m Quentin all the way until just a few minutes before going on stage. At that point I go through a number of brief questions and exercises to help get me in the mind of the Phantom.

JHP: You’ve already mentioned the Phans, which leads perfectly to my next question…from what I know Phans (the name by which legions of Phantom’s adoring fans are referred) can be pretty intense. What’s one of the more memorable things you’ve witnessed from Phan’s so far?

QUENTIN OLIVER LEE: I get a chance to meet a lot of little Phantoms and Christines which is always very enjoyable, but the most memorable is probably when I meet miss Sharon West and her book of 100 Phantoms – signing her book with Michael Crawford, Colm Wilkinson, Hal Prince and so many others was tremendous. . It was just really cool to meet a super Phan and hear her story and what had brought her to the show 100+ times.

JHP: Your Christine is played by Eva Tavares. What’s it like working with her as a leading lady?

QUENTIN OLIVER LEE: Eva Tavares is wonderful, she portrays Christine with a fire and passion that really helps bring energy to everyone else on stage.

Quentin Oliver Lee and Eva Tavares as The Phantom and Christine (photo by Matthew Murphy)

RAPID FIRE WITH EVA TAVARES, CHRISTINE IN THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA

JHP: Your bio indicates that playing Christine is a lifelong dream. What do you remember about the first time you saw Phantom?

EVA TAVARES: I was ten years old and I was watching the tour at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre in Vancouver, BC. I was blown away. I walked out of that theatre and turned to my mom and said, “Mom, I want to do that.” Full circle moment: my first city on this tour was Vancouver, BC and I performed in the same theatre I originally saw it in when I was ten!

JHP: What’s your favorite aspect of playing Christine?

EVA TAVARES: I like being able to play someone who goes through such a journey of growth. She really becomes a woman through the course of the show. She finds her strength and her independence and confronts many challenges, both physical and emotional. That is such an amazing kind of character to jump into every night. Truly a gift.

JHP: Nearly as iconic as The Phantom’s mask are Christine’s gorgeous costumes designed by the late Maria Björnson, who won two Tony Awards for her work on Phantom. What’s it like representing her legacy by donning these gowns night after night?

EVA TAVARES: Oh my GOODNESS. Seriously a girl’s dream. My favorite is most definitely the blue dress in act II. I mean, being in corsets every day isn’t a walk in the park, but WOW they are stunning!

JHP: In addition to Quintin as The Phantom, your Christine is also paired with Jordan Craig as Raoul. What are these two like as leading men?

EVA TAVARES: They are truly amazing humans. Being stage partners means creating a bond and relationship that requires work and communication. These guys show up for it in a big way. We have really gotten to a point where I trust these guys implicitly. We also are really good friends and they are two of the people I know I can go to when I am having a rough day. I am very grateful for their humor, their talents and their support.

JHP: Near play’s end, Christine makes her choice between The Phantom and Raoul. Does she make the right choice?

EVA TAVARES: My interpretation of the end is that she doesn’t exactly make a choice. She cares about the Phantom and she wants to help him, but she realizes that he has to discover the change he needs within himself, BY himself. Not to mention the fact that he is a danger to himself and others. She leaves the lair with Raoul because she was in physical danger and he was her way out. Raoul hasn’t been the most supportive overall, if we really look at the facts; her trust in him has definitely been betrayed over the course of the show. If I had my way, she wouldn’t make a choice for team Raoul or for team Phantom. She would make the choice for team Christine.

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Whether you’re a Phan, a member of #TeamChristine, or just enjoy a night of magnificent music, opulent sets, breathtakingly beautiful costumes and stunning performances by talented lead actors and their equally impressive cast and orchestra, The Phantom of the Opera is for you.

The Phantom of the Opera continues at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with performances Saturday, November 3 at 2p.m. and 8p.m.* and Sunday, November 4 at 1p.m. and 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $55 to $105. Earlier this week, TPAC announced the limited availability of special $40 rush tickets to each remaining performance. To take advantage of that, show up 90 minutes prior to showtime and inquire at the box office. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. *In honor of the company celebrating their landmark 2000th performance, TPAC has announced a special one-night-only ticket special. CLICK HERE and use the promo code “PHANTOM2000” to receive $20 off your ticket price for the Saturday, November 3 8p.m. performance.

Not in Nashville, but hoping to see Phantom on tour? Following its Music City engagement, Phantom continues through Fall of 2019 with performances in Houston, November 7-18, Omaha, November 21-December 2, San Antonio, December 7-17, Dallas, December 18-January 6, Oklahoma City, January 9-20, Detroit, January 24-February 3, Kalamazoo, February 6-17, Pittsburgh, February 20-March 3, Milwaukee, March 6-17, Providence, March 21-31, Cleveland, April 3-20, Schenectady, April 24-May 5, Los Angeles, June 6-July 7, Costa Mesa, July 10-21 and Honolulu, August 7-September 1. CLICK HERE for tickets. Follow Phantom on Tour at the show’s official site HERE, on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Next up at TPAC, the national tour of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas returns to the stage. 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

Review: Three decades later, ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ still mesmerizing audiences as latest national tour plays TPAC thru November 4

November 2, 2018 by Jonathan

Quentin Oliver Lee and Eva Tavares starring in “The Phantom of The Opera” (photo by Matthew Murphy)

When I attended opening weekend of the Nashville leg of the current national tour of The Phantom of the Opera at TPAC’s Jackson Hall, it marked the half-dozen mark for me, having originally seen the show nearly thirty years ago during its original Broadway run, as well as a handful of touring productions over the years, including at least two previous tours in the very theatre in which I sat last week. In spite of my familiarity with the story, and dare I say it, my own phandom, even before the drapery fell to reveal THAT chandelier, something was different—special even—about this show. Perhaps it was because my companion for the evening, in spite of growing up with a father who worked in New York’s theatre district, had never seen the show. That’s right, a Phantom virgin.

As we settled into our seats and the all-too-familiar prelude began to swell from the orchestra pit, I found myself surprisingly being overcome with chills. At first waving it off to me admittedly being a bit neurotic and simply loving the art of live theatre, I soon realized it was much more than that. Here I was, sitting in a near-sold-out theatre about to watch a show I’d seen time and time again, a show I knew was somewhat weak on book and character development, but a show that is simply gorgeous. Gorgeous in fantasy-inducing score, gorgeous in breathtakingly iconic costume, gorgeous in opulent set design, and thanks to Quentin Oliver Lee, Eva Tavares, Jordan Craig et al, gorgeous in breathing new life into characters as recognizable and beloved as any to have ever grace the theatrical stage.

While the beginning of the musical sets up the story, we still have to wait three scenes in before the action truly starts when the Phantom first appears…and yes, even after seeing it as many times as I have, I sill gasp a little when he first shows up.From his first appearance, Lee’s Phantom is menacing, commanding and powerful, his voice in fine condition to assume the titular role. From a physical standpoint, he’s also perfect for the role, towering above most of the cast. When he solos on Music of the Night, it is indeed enchanting.

While Richard Stilgoe and Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber have endured three decades of critics lamenting the lack of a believable story, character development and reasoning behind the tale of a masked man who lurks in the shadows of a Parisian Opera House in the early 20th century, Webber certainly knew what he was doing when he composed the accompanying score with lyrical help from Charles Hart, for it’s the show’s soundtrack that outshines even the regal opera house setting.

To that end, more gooseflesh moments occur when Lee’s Phantom is joined onstage by his Christine, Eva Tavares. Diminutive in stature, raven-haired, porcelain-skinned, Tavares is the polar opposite to her Phantom. While this could easily detract from their shared scenes, instead, it enhances the idea of why she would fall under his spell, for you have to admit, as un-PC as it is to say, a woman of her slight physical presence would have no choice but to succumb to the Phantom’s domineering ways. Here’s the thing though, what Tavares’ Christine lacks in assertive physicality, she more than makes up for in voice. Whether duetting with Emily Ramirez’s Meg near the top of the show with Angel of Music, with Lee on the show’s majestic title tune, or solo in Act 2’s hauntingly beautiful Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again, Tavares IS Christine, as beautiful as she is talented. No wonder the Phantom would be obsessed.

With a cast and orchestra totaling more than 50 company members, there’s plenty of stand-out performers. Among them, the aforementioned Craig as Raoul. Possessing perhaps the most skilled voice in the company, the night I saw him, he was perfection. It should be noted that the playbill indicates that Herb Porter and Constantine Pappas also step into the role during certain performances.

Having recently seen the national tour of Love Never Dies, at TPAC just a few months ago, I had forgotten that Madame Giry is actually likable in the original story, considering the character is a bit of a baddie in the redo. Kristie Dale Sanders is delightful as Madame Giry in this production of Phantom, especially in one of the show’s rare comedic moments in which she and several members of the Opera House’s staff have been receiving notes from the Phantom.

Also turning in fine comedic performances are David Benoit and Rob Lindley as Monsieurs Firmin and Andre, the opera house’s business associates and Trista Moldovan as Carlotta Giudicelli, the opera diva Christine is about to replace if the Phantom has any say in the matter.

Speaking of, perhaps realizing the story is less-than-believable, this current incarnation seems to have added a bit more humor. A welcomed change indeed.

Billed as producer Cameron Mackintosh’s New Production, there are other differences between this and previous incarnations. The slowly revolving tower that ascends to the Phantom’s underground lair is spell-binding. When the stairs seemingly magically appear from the flat surface of the tower as the Phantom descends them, accompanied by lighting designer Paule Constable’s perfectly-timed lighting effects illuminating each emerging step, I couldn’t help but feel anxious at the thought of a technical glitch. On the subject of the lighting, throughout the show, I found my eye wandering from the actors to their shadows cast along the walls of the set, adding yet another spooky layer to the story.

Perhaps my favorite change from the original version is the top of Act 2 with Masquerade. While the grand staircase from the original was indeed a powerful visual, the newly added mirrored ceiling piece that allows the audience a true bird’s eye view of the ballroom choreography is quite enjoyable.

Thirty years after its Broadway debut, The Phantom of the Opera— story missteps aside–is still as majestic and hypnotic a spectacle as ever.

The Phantom of the Opera continues at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with performances Friday, November 2 at 8p.m., Saturday, November 3 at 2p.m. and 8p.m. and Sunday, November 4 at 1p.m. and 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $55 to $105. Earlier this week, TPAC announced the limited availability of special $40 rush tickets to each remaining performance. To take advantage of that, show up 90 minutes prior to showtime and inquire at the box office. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

Not in Nashville, but hoping to see Phantom on tour? Following its Music City engagement, Phantom continues through Fall of 2019 with performances in Houston, November 7-18, Omaha, November 21-December 2, San Antonio, December 7-17, Dallas, December 18-January 6, Oklahoma City, January 9-20, Detroit, January 24-February 3, Kalamazoo, February 6-17, Pittsburgh, February 20-March 3, Milwaukee, March 6-17, Providence, March 21-31, Cleveland, April 3-20, Schenectady, April 24-May 5, Los Angeles, June 6-July 7, Costa Mesa, July 10-21 and Honolulu, August 7-September 1. CLICK HERE for tickets. Follow Phantom on Tour at the show’s official site HERE, on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Next up at TPAC, the national tour of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas returns to the stage. 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: Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Phantom, Phantom of the Opera, Review, Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber, Theatre Review, TPAC

Rapid Fire 20 Q with director and cast of Nashville Repertory Theatre’s ‘A Doll’s House, Part 2’; at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru November 3

October 26, 2018 by Jonathan

Directed by René Copeland and starring Cheryl White, Galen Fott, Corrie Green and Rona Carter, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s presentation of A Doll’s House, Part 2 is currently on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru November 3. While Nashville Rep’s production marks the play’s regional premiere, playwright Lucas Hnath’s sequel to Henrik Ibsen’s classic debuted on Broadway starring Laurie Metcalf just last year.

Making Nashville Rep’s regional premiere run even more special, the women of the cast will stick around following this Saturday’s October 27 7:30p.m. performance as they are joined by Nashville businesswomen Bonnie Dow, Lucia Folk, Jill McMillan and Joelle Phillips for a special post-show talkback, Women Talk Back, during which the audience will have an opportunity to pose questions as the cast and special guests discuss feminism as it relates to Ibsen and Hnath’s characters from the 1800s and today.

In anticipation of the special Women Talk Back event and the show’s ongoing run, I recently had an opportunity to chat with the entire cast of A Doll’s House, Part 2…including the show’s lone male star…as well as Copeland, who’s not only directing the show, but who is also Nashville Rep’s longtime Producing Artistic Director, for the latest installment in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.

The cast and director of “A Doll’s House, Part 2”. From left: Rona Carter, Cheryl White, René Copeland, Galen Fott and Corrie Green

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RAPID FIRE WITH RENÉ COPELAND, DIRECTOR OF ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: From a director’s standpoint, what attracted you to A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RENÉ COPELAND: This play fires on several cylinders for me.  I love good dialogue, and in this play the dialogue is smart and funny, and has a unique tone to it—it is a sequel to a play set in the late 1800’s, yet it uses contemporary vernacular so it sounds incredibly modern.  On the page the dialogue is sort of mapped out like free verse poetry, so working with the actors to unlock the code, like a musician unlocks the code of a music score, is great fun.  It’s hard and also fun. I also appreciate the particular sense of humor in the play, and I always love a play that will use humor to explore provocative ideas.  I like plays that make you laugh AND think, so that when you leave the theatre you feel really energized. And this play is very demanding of both me and the actors, which I like.  I think theatre artists working on this play really have to work at the top of their game—each character is textured and complicated and each scene is crafted to work a certain way that you have to shape very carefully.  And then, as a woman I am of course interested in the question of how we balance our lives between the things we do for those we love and the things we do for ourselves—what is expected of us culturally and what we expect of ourselves. The questions posed by this play are completely about now.

JHP: Let’s play a little word association. Using only a single word, how would you describe each of your cast members in regard to their character portrayal in A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RENÉ COPELAND:

Cheryl as Nora—stunning; Galen as Torvald—compelling; Rona as Anne Marie—irresistible; Corrie as Emmy—intriguing

JHP: From rehearsals to now, is there a theme, scene or ideal in the play that’s come to more prominence that you’d originally thought when you took on the project?

RENÉ COPELAND: Nora tells a story near the end of the play about how difficult it is to hear your own voice, after a lifetime of not making a decision without wondering what “he” would think. Cheryl’s way of telling this story has moved it way beyond words on a page and it has come to have special meaning to me.

JHP: What can you tell me about the talkbacks scheduled to follow certain performances during the run?

RENÉ COPELAND: I love Talkbacks for any show, but this show is particularly conversation-inducing. If you come on a talkback night and stick around for a few minutes to chat with us, I know you’ll be glad you did.  You are going to have a lively conversation about this play in the car on the way home anyway, so why not stick around and have that conversation with us, the director and the actors?  Plus it’s really great for us to get a chance to hear real time feedback—it makes us all better at our jobs.  So talkbacks actually contribute to the artistic process. It’s very informal and it usually ends up being a fun sharing session, with plenty of behind-the-scenes insight and gossip along with serious exploration of ideas.

RAPID FIRE WITH CHERYL WHITE, NORA IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: In the fifteen years that has passed between the story depicted in Henrik Ibsen’s original and Lucas Hnath’s A Doll’s House, Part 2, has A) Nora changed, or B) simply cultivated characteristics that were already present?

CHERYL WHITE: I’m going to pick C) All of the Above!  Nora is now worldly, no longer naive about the workings of society.  She is self-reliant and passionate.  She found her voice at the end of Ibsen’s play and has nurtured it and it now sustains her.  She perhaps has more work to do to understand the ramifications of her newfound freedom on those she left behind.  And when thrust into an old environment with old relationships, she definitely stumbles into some old pitfalls!

JHP: Taking place in the late 1800’s requires period-costumes. What can you tell me about Nora’s  wardrobe, designed by Trish Clark?

CHERYL WHITE: One of the truly exciting aspects of this play is that the costumes and set reflect the period, but the dialogue and physicality (especially for Nora) are contemporary.  So even though I wear a corset and numerous heavy layers (petticoats and over-skirts and such), I strive to speak and move as a contemporary woman.  Not only does the wardrobe inform how I move, it also functions as a tangible obstacle for Nora and as a metaphor for the societal constraints she rails against.

JHP: Much of the play revolves around confrontation between Nora and those she left behind fifteen years prior. How do you prepare yourself for those heated scenes?

CHERYL WHITE: Each of the four characters in this play has a lot to lose.  Their personal stakes are high.    So it’s imperative that I really listen to what’s being said to Nora, that I never lose sight of what I, as Nora, need to win, and finally, that I breathe deeply.  Because when Nora let’s go, she really let’s go!!

JHP: What has surprised you most about this play?

CHERYL WHITE: That I agree with all four characters in the play.  Their viewpoints are wildly divergent, and yet I find everything they say to be true and valuable.

RAPID FIRE WITH GALEN FOTT, TORVALD IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: What can you tell me about Torvald?

GALEN FOTT: Judging only from Ibsen’s play (or “Part 1”, as we call it!), I think you might say that Torvald is a stifling, controlling, chauvinistic coward. But it’s also true that he is simply playing out the role that is expected of him by the paternalistic society of 1870s Norway. Then Nora walks out, and suddenly he’s a single father of three (albeit with a nanny-in-residence). But Nora’s leaving shook Torvald to the core. Now let’s flash forward to “Part 2”, where we meet him again 15 years later. I think it’s clear that Torvald has been “working on himself” in the intervening years, trying to figure out what happened, trying to work out what’s right and wrong, what’s fair and unfair. There are moments in “Part 2” when “old Torvald” reemerges, but he’s at least trying to evolve.

JHP: While Torvald is perceived as a successful businessman in Ibsen’s work. Nora having left him in the original piece definitely had its affect on him. As an actor, how have you found a balance in playing an outwardly strong man dealing with that inner brokenness?

GALEN FOTT: In this play, we see almost exclusively the private, “broken” side of Torvald. However, I do relish my first 30 seconds onstage, before Torvald realizes Nora has returned. For that half-minute, it feels like Torvald is in a completely different play from everyone else, a mundane tale of a banker who has dashed back home to retrieve some papers he forgot. Little does he know…

JHP: To some purist, the entire notion of a Part 2 to Ibsen’s classic might, at first, seem audacious at best. What is it about playwright Luca Hnath’s continuation that completely lives up to the iconic original?

GALEN FOTT: While Hnath’s play is written completely in the modern vernacular, there’s nothing anachronistic or “cheeky” whatsoever about the story and ideas. Hnath addresses all the same issues that Ibsen raised, and does so with complete fairness and seriousness. (Not that the play isn’t very funny at times!) And much of Hnath’s writing, particularly Nora’s gorgeous final monologue, I wouldn’t hesitate to call “worthy of Ibsen”.

JHP: In the conclusion of the original, Nora walks out on Torvald and their three children. In Part 2, the cast is made up of yourself, Cheryl White as Nora, Rona Carter as Anne Marie, the family Nanny and Corrie Green as Torvald and Nora’s daughter, Emmy. I gotta know…Do we find out what happened to the other two children?

GALEN FOTT: Well…not so much. Ivar and Bob would be around 22 and 20, respectively. From what Emmy says about them, it sounds like Bob is a bit emotionally unstable, but Ivar is “the opposite of Bob in every way”. And that’s all we learn! I think “Part 3” needs to focus entirely on poor Bob, don’t you?

RAPID FIRE WITH CORRIE GREEN, EMMY IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: You play Emmy, one of Nora and Torvald’s three children she abandoned as depicted in the final scene of Henrik Ibsen’s original. Part 2 picks up fifteen years later. In finding your voice for Emmy, did you imagine certain mother/daughter circumstances that she missed that might have molded her current fiber?

CORRIE GREEN: I think in my approach of the character the whole concept of becoming a woman without your mother was something I was drawn to. Certainly there are thousands of moments daughters spend with their mothers that shape who they are emotionally. That being said the idea that Nora was absent for Emmy’s first crush, first boyfriend, first fight with a close friend, becoming a woman, etc. were moments that I knew going into my preparation that had to have shaped Emmy. I didn’t think that they were moments that would fuel a dislike for Nora, however it made me think of who those moments were left to and all of those things were left to Torvald. We know from the text, both A Doll’s House, and A Doll’s House Pt.2 , that Torvald is not someone who is going to be extremely emotionally nurturing when it comes to his children. Thus approaching Emmy became a balance of figuring out what emotional support, and representation did she have growing up and how does that effect her. Certainly you will find that Emmy is simple in her emotions towards people and that she has no “animosity” towards Nora, but in order to understand that I had to imagine growing up without the emotional support of a mother.

JHP: In a scene from the play, Emmy confronts her mother, Nora, about having been left with her father and siblings. She says something like, “I think in a lot of ways things turned out better because you weren’t around.” Why do you think Emmy feels that growing up without her mother was to her advantage?

CORRIE GREEN: So on the positive side of growing up without a lot of emotional support is this idea that Emmy grows up intellectually much faster than the average kid. I think this is because of the fact that she had to learn everything sort of on her own. So she develops this strength in doing things herself, and finding things out for herself that wouldn’t have happened had she not found out about what happened to her mother. I think Emmy feels she has conquered the dark truths of the world because of the fact that she copes with problems intellectually and not emotionally. She doesn’t allow things to defeat her like her peers, and I think this is something Emmy prides herself on.

JHP: On the flip side, what negative affect, if any, did being raised by Torvald alone have on Emmy?

CORRIE GREEN: I think that one of the downsides is the idea that Emmy has on how to communicate with people, and primarily the sort of emotional numbness she has towards various things. I think a lot of this has to do with the fact that Emmy was raise viewing the post-Nora Torvald. That Torvald didn’t tell her anything about her mother, didn’t keep any of her mothers things, is known via Ibsen’s play to believe that the raising of children should be left to the mother, the depression that overcomes him post-Nora that numbs him to the idea of ever loving again. All of these characteristics result in a child who is brought up to become emotional but only on the surface, and to sort of have some wiring issues when it comes to her ideas on the world. Not having a mother around and only being raised by a father who believed in the norms of the time means that in a way Emmy wasn’t nurtured. Which I think comes across on the stage in various ways during her interaction with her mother. One of which being in the way she chooses to address her father as “Torvald”, which isn’t a very friendly, family driven address for ones dad.

JHP: Often, you hear about actors avoiding each other backstage or during off-time to aide in the believability of their onstage tension. With so much of A Doll’s House, Part 2’s interaction being confrontational, has that been the case for you and your cast mates, or is there a sense of family among you, in spite of the intense action on stage?

CORRIE GREEN: Oh no, I think the cast has formed a family of sorts. I don’t know what I would do if they weren’t so kind and willing to help me transition into Nashville and into the life as a working Actor. As someone, who just graduated and is from a different state, the fact that everyone was willing to take me under their wing including Rene and our tech crew was extremely comforting! Although, we don’t get to see Galen much before the show because all of us ladies are getting ready for the show in our dressing room, and he has to spend pre-show in his own dressing room by himself because he is the only guy. What a problem to have. But other than that we are all kind to each other, we talk with each other, and I love them all dearly. Its a great cast with all around good vibes!

RAPID FIRE WITH RONA CARTER, ANNE MARIE IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: What does the audience need to know about Anne Marie?

RONA CARTER: That she’s loyal. Loving. And has had to deal with a lot in her lifetime. And, if there were a phone in those days you could pick it up call her and she’d be there in a heartbeat to help.

JHP: Early on in the play, upon Nora’s unexpected return, as Anne Marie, your greeting to her isn’t exactly what you’d call warm. That gives the audience an immediate sense of Anne Marie’s take-no-guff character. How much fun is that to play?

RONA CARTER: Rona is personally not like Anne-Marie at all. So it’s a lot of fun to play a character like that and, to some audiences it’s hilarious and others it seems a bit disconcerting because of our sentimentality. One of my first lines is you got a little fatter and you got a little older. Just telling it like it is.

JHP: Nashville Rep has a reputation for presenting some of the most gorgeous sets around town, courtesy of set designer, Gary Hoff. What can you tell me about the set of A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RONA CARTER: Gary always creates the  most wonderful environments to play on as an actor. This one is beautiful and has an element I’ve not seen in any others that he’s created. It has a raked stage which means it starts at stage level at the front and works up to 2 feet in the back, so it’s tilted. It’s very presentational and it’s a struggle for the characters to work in that environment. Just as we struggle in life with all her questions in relationships. And, just like the Kleenex box from the 2000s on the stage it gives one the element of something very unique at play here.

JHP: With so much of the play focusing on Nora’s actions in the first and their subsequent affects on her and the family, what do you think audiences will take away from the show?

RONA CARTER: Every audience members going to have a different view on all four characters I think. This is one of the few plays I know of that I’ve been in where you’re going to see a clear cut view from each of the four characters in this play. Each having a strong reason for doing and being who they are. And it could be any of these audience members in part or in whole. And I think people have long discussions about their relationships with others. Marriages. Dating. Loving.

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Galen Fott and Cheryl White in a scene from Nashville Rep’s “A Doll’s House, Part 2”

Audiences will indeed have their chance to peek inside A Doll’s House, Part 2 as the show continues through Saturday, November 3 with performances Friday, October 26 at 7:30p.m., Saturday, October 27 at 2:30p.m. & 7:30p.m., Wednesday & Thursday, October 31 & November 1 at 6:30p.m., Friday, November 2 at 7:30p.m. and Saturday, November 3 at 2:30p.m. & 7:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $25 to $52.50. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. For further details about Saturday, October 27’s special Talkback, Women Talk Back following the 7:30p.m. performance, CLICK HERE. For more about Nashville Rep, CLICK HERE to check out their site, or follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: A Doll's House Part 2, Henrik Ibsen, Ibsen, Interview, Lucas Hnath, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre

Studio Tenn annual gala, ‘One Night Only’ at Nashville’s War Memorial Auditorium Friday, October 19

October 19, 2018 by Jonathan

On Friday, October 19, Studio Tenn will present their annual fundraising gala, One Night Only, this year dubbed—A Red Carpet Affair. An incredible night of entertainment, food and fun, including an always impressive silent auction, it’s truly one of my personal favorite social events of the season. This year’s party promises to continue the high-energy, stellar talent, Broadway-quality event for which the relatively young theatre company is known. Changing things up a bit, for the first time in the event’s brief but impressive history, Studio Tenn’s One Night Only will take place at War Memorial Auditorium in Downtown Nashville.

Co-charing the event this year are Bob Deal and Jason Bradshaw, who I like to call Nashville’s bon vivant dynamic duo. When asked how they came to co-chair Studio Tenn’s One Night Only, Deal and Bradshaw revealed something very interesting, “Two friends asked if we would be interested in helping out Studio Tenn with their annual Gala, One Night Only as Co-Chairs for the 2018/2019 Season. We both quickly responded with, What’s Studio Tenn?”, they recalled with a grin. That said, apparently all it took was seeing one of Studio Tenn’s gorgeously produced shows earlier this year and they were in. “After seeing a fabulous production of the recent hit, Grease; meeting the talents of the brilliant crew whom make up Studio Tenn; and seeing and hearing those whom are fans of this incredible organization rave about this professional theatre troupe, it all made sense to say YES as Chairmen.”

Bradshaw and Deal also raved about DKates Catering, who’ll be providing the dinner for attendees who opt in for the full sit-down-dinner experience at the gala saying, “Danielle Kates of DKates Catering is doing the delicious food. We had a tasting of fourteen at our home alfresco on September 26. It was lovely. The evening was perfect.”

As for this year’s silent auction, attendees—and this who just like to take advantage of the opportunity to snag a fun and unique action item—have been given a sneak preview via the live online auction co-chaired by Lynne McAlister and Milton White. Having been friends with White for more years than either of us will admit, I reached out to him for his take on working with Bradshaw, Deal and McAlister in preparation of One Night Only. “I loved working with Bob, Jason and Lynne!”, he exclaimed. When asked for details about what the auction has to offer, White eagerly revealed, “This auction has a something for everyone—fabulous food and fashion as well as signed guitars and the chance to dine on the set of Beauty and the Beast!” (the company’s upcoming holiday offering). For a chance to bid on this and all the other items offered at the gala, CLICK HERE.

Speaking of Beauty and The Beast, Laura Matula, a member of the Studio Tenn family known to theatre-goers for her gorgeous vocal skills, having wowed audiences playing everyone from Grease’s Rizzo to The Wizard of Oz’s Wicked Witch, confessed, “I absolutely cannot wait to sing the title song of Beauty and the Beast with my absolute favorite singer, John-Mark McGaha. I will for sure be living out all my Celine Dion childhood dreams and I couldn’t feel any luckier.”

Matula is just one of the many well-known performers who’ll be on stage during this year’s One Night Only. What’s more, she’s also the event’s Music Director/Supervisor. In the weeks leading up to it, she’s organized performers schedules, charted tunes, run rehearsals and coordinated musical equipment staging—a true musical Jill-of-all-trades.

When asked about the mind-blowing musical talent assembled for this year’s even, Matula gushed, “I am astounded by the amount of talent that can fit on one stage whenever I am involved with a Studio Tenn gala. This year’s One Night Only is no exception. We have Broadway performers, American Idols, songwriters and recording artists, Nashville based superstars, and more—phenomenal vocal talents all around plus the most stellar assortment of Nashville musicians: Matt Giraud, Diana DeGarmo, Ace Young, Piper Jones, Melodie Madden Adams, John-Mark McGaha, Libby Black, Megan Murphy Chambers, Eden Espinosa, Bradley Gale, Marissa Rosen…and me, plus an extra special number from Jake Speck and Matt Logan!”

When asked about the change in venue for this year’s gala, Matula revealed, “This year will mark the largest assortment of talent onstage with 12 singers and 13 band members plus some special guests I canąt tell you about! Thank goodness we are at War Memorial Auditorium in downtown Nashville so we can fit everyone on stage! I canąt wait for you to hear the sound of this group!”

I couldn’t chat with Matula without begging for a hint of what to expect. To that end, she teased, “The theme of the music this year is Songs from the Movies. This gave us such a wealth of incredible music to pull from and boy this set list is on fire! We have everything from James Bond to Barbra Streisand to songs from The Greatest Showman, The Bodyguard, Jungle Book, Beauty and the Beast, Cabaret, Moulin Rouge, and more! It’s bigger and better than ever but with the same intimate feeling the singers on stage bring as members of the incredible Studio Tenn family of artists and entertainers.”

Something many fans, patrons and company members are thinking about is the recent news that Matt Logan, one of Studio Tenn’s co-founders will be leaving his position as Artistic Director, with One Night Only marking his final official event with the troupe. Matula addressed this by adding, “It will also be incredibly emotional as we share our endless love and gracious hearts with Matt Logan as he departs the Studio Tenn family. He is a storyteller and art maker and I am so grateful to be able to be a part of celebrating him for an incredible night.”

With that, I reached out to Logan for his take on the evening. “I’m so excited to hear our powerhouse vocalists. I think it is no secret that I am a huge fan of these Broadway and Tennessee stars. They are not only great friends but the best singers in the world”. He continued, “I know that many of our patrons love their talent but I do think that the patrons love seeing how much we love each other. We have a great community and we don’t take it for granted.”

Of his pending departure, Logan added, “The bittersweet element of my last night is in saying goodbye to a community that has blessed me so richly. do believe that every great chapter must come to an end. The timing is right for me to move on but Im gonna miss it terribly.”

Speaking of bittersweet, as alluded by Matula, Friday’s One Night Only will also feature an on-stage reunion between Logan and Studio Tenn’s other founding member, Jake Speck. Earlier this year, Speck left his position at the company when he accepted a job with a theatre company in Texas. Of the pair’s upcoming One Night Only re-teaming, Logan divulged, “Jake and I will do some talk and song. It’s nothing major, but it will be a final goodbye to the thing we created. We know Studio Tenn will carry on but this chapter will be at an end for us.” Thinking back on the journey that brought him to this point, Logan shared, “The funny thing is that we both were high school buddies growing up in Tennessee and then we were given the chance to bring back what we learned and effect the artistic landscape of Middle Tennessee. Even now, it is hard for me to wrap my brain around the enormous gift we were given. This evening will be a great moment to thank everyone who made Studio Tenn what it is.”

While the evening does mark the end of an era for Studio Tenn, rest assured the company is ready for what the future holds. Of their hopes for the evening, Bradshaw and Deal enthused, “We are honored and delighted to be a part of this event and hope they take back with them, like we did, that special moment that uniquely makes Studio Tenn…a 10!”

One Night Only will not only be chocked-full of jaw-dropping entertainment, festive music and great food, it will also remind attendees just how fabulous the company is as they continue their ninth season and look forward to their history-making tenth year. Select tickets for One Night Only are still available. Table Seating on the Main Floor includes drinks, a delicious dinner, silent auction access and an up-close and personal view of the evening’s entertainment. Tickets are $325.00. Mezzanine/Late Party tickets, which include  pre-show libations, hors d’oeuvres, access to the silent auction and an amazing second story view of the evening’s entertainment are available for $95. CLICK HERE for tickets.

Up next for Studio Tenn, just in time for an enchanted holiday, they’re presenting Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, with performances December 7-30. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Following Beauty and the Beast, Studio Tenn’s 2018/2019 Season continues with Tennessee William’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof from Friday, February 8 thru Sunday, February 17. That will be followed by this year’s Legacy Series entry, The Sinatra Legacy: A Tribute to Ol’ Blue Eyes, onstage at The Franklin Theatre, Thursday, March 14-Sunday, March 17. Studio Tenn will wrap their current season with Damn Yankees from Friday, May 17 until Sunday, June 2. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

Be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

 

Filed Under: Theare Tagged With: A Red Carpet Affair, Black Tie, Bob Deal, Event, Fundraiser, Gala, Jake Speck, Jason Bradford, Laura Matula, Live Performance, Matt Logan, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, One Night Only, Silent Auction, Studio Tenn, Theatre, War Memorial

Rapid Fire 5 Q with Jason Lewis, directing Circle Players’ ‘Hair’ on stage at Looby Theatre thru Sunday, October 21

October 19, 2018 by Jonathan

The cast of Circle Players’ ‘Hair’ (photo courtesy Circle Players)

Circle Players’ current production, Hair wraps its three-week run with performances Friday, October 19-Sunday, October 21 at the Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). First presented on stage 50 years ago, and therefore typically thought of as late-1960s anti-war, musical love-in, the current mounting of the show becomes interestingly relatable to what’s going on in the world around us thanks to director Jason Lewis’ creative eye. Peppering his cast with a few familiar faces, Lewis also reinforces the show’s familial Tribe vibe. With just a few shows left in the run, I recently got the chance to speak with Lewis about the show, his take on it and his cast for an abbreviated version of my recurring Rapid Fire interview feature.

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RAPID FIRE 5 Q WITH HAIR DIRECTOR, JASON LEWIS

JONATHAN H. PINKERTON: Having directed for Circle before, what keeps you coming back?  

JASON LEWIS: Circle Players, through my many returns to Nashville, has always provided me a creative home, even more so now in a directorial capacity. While I was away in New York, old school Circle alums Maggie Bowden and Sue Stinemetz would try to coax me to return and direct for Circle. In the years between their subsequent passings, I faced my own personal setbacks.  I now work for Circle to honor their memories.  People always ask why I don’t just do ‘paid stuff’ since the quality of work is of such caliber and my response is always the same… “Somebody has to be the Mr. Schuester (of Glee fame).”  My background being in education, I love discovering new talent and thrive in the community theatre setting, wowing audiences by exceeding expected results.

JHP: What is it about Hair that drew you to the project?

JASON LEWIS: Well since being back I had helmed one epic show, one funny show and one of spectacle, so to me Hair was a nice middle ground. I wasn’t 100% sure until the Parkland shooting and it’s aftermath. Watching a government do nothing as our youth are (preventatively) being killed off? Watching kids march out of school in protest as we’ve not seen SINCE Vietnam? Instantly, I knew what show I HAD to do. People are on edge politically but they still need hope…and love.

JHP: Among you cast, I spotted a name or two you’ve worked with in the past. what is it about these actors that makes you want to team with them again on this project?

JASON LEWIS: Of my cast I’ve probably worked with Maggie Wood and Scotty Phillips the most.  Both were in Reefer Madness and Bring it On.  Maggie has such a versatile wide range in her abilities, thus a perfect person for each of the roles I’ve given her so far. Scotty works hard and isn’t afraid to step outside his comfort zone.  He stands out in a lead and as an ensemble member. Few local artists can claim that.

JHP: They’re not the only ones you’ve worked with amongst your cast, right?

JASON LEWIS: Besides the aforementioned,  I’ve worked with Amanda Creech, Barrett Thomas and Erica Patterson on Jesus Christ Superstar and Sara Shumway in Reefer/Bring It On and Gillion Welsh and Jarvis Bynum in Reefer, as a director. I also recently shared the stage with Seth Austin Brown, Blake Holliday & Stephanie Twomey in The Full Monty.  Besides being hard workers, the one thing they all have in common is fearlessness when it comes to getting weird, something vital in a Hair tribe member. 

JHP: As a director, what do you hope to get from your actors?

JASON LEWIS: Authenticity and vulnerability as well as completing homework character research assignments in creating their tribe member.  Hair isn’t just about singing, dancing and acting.  My tribe is honoring those actors who workshopped Hair and brought it to life by immersing themselves in 60s counter-culture. Also, I ask that they give themselves over to the uncomfortable moments freely, it is the only way to truly create the organic work of art Hair must be. Never be disingenuous to the material!

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Circle Players’ Hair continues for a final weekend with performances Friday and Saturday, October 19 & 20 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, October 21 at 3 p.m. All tickets are $20. Click Here to purchase tickets. For a little more about the cast, Click Here. It should be noted that Circle Players’ website does indeed offer an Audience Advisory of the  show for “nudity, strong language, simulated drug use, adult content and situations that may not be appropriate for all ages”. That said, what better reasons to join the tribe?

Be sure to follow Circle Players on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter for the latest news, tickets and details about the rest of their 69th Season.

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

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Circle Players, Director, Hair, Interview, Jason Lewis, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire 5 Q

Theatre Review: Directed by Suzanne Spooner-Faulk, Keeton Theatre’s ’Spelling Bee’ charmingly entertaining…C-H-A-R-M-I-N-G-L-Y; on stage thru October 27

October 17, 2018 by Jonathan

The cast of The Keeton Theatre’s “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” (all photos by Jenny Petit Steiner/courtesy The Larry Keeton Theatre)

Technically, The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee, currently onstage at The Larry Keeton Theatre through October 27, isn’t Suzanne Spooner-Faulk’s debut as a director, I say technically because she co-directed the company’s production of Big River last year. It is, however, her first time to fully helm a show and to no surprise to anyone who knows her, she does so to a joyful end, presenting a show brimming with charm, humor, heart and just enough silliness to make watching a show in which adults play school-age children competing in a Spelling Bee worth watching. Doesn’t hurt matters that The Keeton itself use to be a local school, so the auditorium vibe that still exists in the theatre space perfectly adds to the play’s gymnasium setting.

For her cast, Spooner-Faulk has assembled a fun mix of actors, some of whom are returning to Keeton having previously been seen on stage, and a couple making their Keeton debut…always a welcomed choice to mix it up a bit. While it can be nice to have a company that’s completely familiar, that can sometimes result in a few miscast roles. Luckily for Spelling Bee audiences, that is not the case here, as each and every actor involved manages to find their individual character’s quirks and run with them.

Cast as the quirky spellers are Chelsea Pearce, Jason Scott, Miranda Vaqué, Toby Turner, Sydney Rogers, and Jonathan Hunter. Playing the equally quirky adult roles are David Shaw, Drew Dunlop and Jena Salb.

Once the show begins, Salb’s Rona Lisa Peretti takes to the Putnam County gymnasium to moderate the Bee. My Favorite Moment of the Bee features Salb’s Rona Lisa as she reminisces her own championship win some years back. As Rona Lisa, Salb is as perky and excited to be par too the Bee legacy as she is sweet when, during various circumstances in the show, the kids need a little bit of adult support and understanding. Having never seen Salb on stage myself, I am happy to proclaim she’s now among my ever-growing list of theatre crushes.

Joining Salb’s Rona Lisa as the Bee’s sole judge/word pronouncer is Drew Dunlop as Vice Principal Douglas Panch. Dunlop is at his best when he’s interacting with additional Bee contestants pulled from the show’s actual audience. (More about that later)

The third and final adult role comes in the form of David Shaw as Mitch Mahoney, the Bee’s comfort counselor. That’s right, it’s Mahoney’s job to send the losers off with a hug and a juice box. Shaw’s Mitch is delightful. Like several of his castmates, Shaw also appears in an additional role, playing one of two gay dads to one of the kids. You gotta love the stereotypical flamboyance of his gay dad portrayal as well as the equally expected thug look of his portrayal of Mitch, both as wrong and un-PC, funny is funny and Shaw is funny.

Chelsea Pearce, as Logainne (center) flanked by her two dads, Jonathan Hunter and David Shaw (far left and far right) in a scene from Keeton’s Theatre’s “Spelling Bee”.

Then there’s the kids. Pearce, as Logainne Schwartzandgrubenierre, the youngest contestant in the Bee, who just so happens to have two gay dads, is hilarious. Her affected way of speaking—as if she were wearing braces—and her spot-on comedic timing are the perfect combination. Proving just how quick on her feet she is on and off-book, during last weekend’s Sunday matinee when a plane seemed to be about to land on the rooftop of The Keeton Theatre, without missing a beat—and totally in character as Logainne, Pearce cracked wise that her current spelling word “made as much sense as building a community center so close to an airport”.

Scott, as returning Bee champ, Charlito “Chip” Tolentino gets his own chance to steal the spotlight in one of the show’s more surprising musical numbers, My Unfortunate Erection. Yes, you read that right, Chip, like most teenage boys experiences a sudden urge right there in the middle of the Bee. As one of the elderly ladies seated near me said at the close of his number “Oh, my! It’s like that Justin Timberlake SNL song-skit”.

Sydney Rogers, a newcomer to Keeton, plays Spelling Bee newcomer, Olive Ostrovsky. Of all the characterizations of the spellers, Rogers’ Olive truly tugs at the heartstrings as she’s just as concerned with spelling as she is her father’s absence from the audience. Early in the show, she leads the company in My Friend, the Dictionary, a telling tune that touches home with the outcast in all of us.

To be completely honest, upon first glance, Toby Turner seemed a bit miscast as William Barfeé (it’s pronounced Bar-fay), but once he gets his magic foot in motion, he proves why he was cast, as he turns what could easily be the most annoying character in the show into one of the most endearing.

Vaqué’s Marcy Park is a little Wednesday Addams, a little Buffy Summers (sans the penchant for taking out vampires). The character’s quirkiness comes from a mix of being new to the area, speaking a multitude of languages and being an over-achiever. Vaqué’s lead on I Speak Six Languages is one of the show’s more thoughtful tunes and she delivers it with just the right punch of emotion.

Rounding out the Spelling Bee contestants is Jonathan Hunter as Leaf Coneybear. Described in the playbill as being homeschooled, Hunter’s Leaf is simply my favorite. Wearing a safety helmet, a shimmering gold lame cape and clothes his character bravely admits to designing himself, Hunter’s Leaf reminded me so much of this goofy kid I went to elementary school with, it’s scary. Of course I can’t name names, he’s probably some multimillionaire inventor by now anyway. But back to Hunter, he manages to steal every scene he’s in and his solo on I’m Not That Smart will make you wanna go hug him.

A typically chaotic, yet humorous moment in “Spelling Bee”.

While these nine actors make up the cast, as indicated earlier, several of the characters also play additional minor roles as various members of the Bee contestants’ families. Also mentioned above, during each performance, four members of the audience are called up to the stage and treated as late entries to the Spelling Bee. That’s part of the charm of the show. No two shows are ever the same, in part because you just never know how the audience pulls are going to interact with the actual cast. Luckily for me and the audience during the show I attended, a couple of the audience pulls were more than ready for their fifteen minutes of fame. Don’t worry though, unlike some productions I’ve seen, the audience pulls do so willingly as they’re asked just prior to curtain if they’d be wiling to participate.

The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee continues its run at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre (108 Donelson Pike) with evening performances Thursday, October 18 thru Saturday, October 27 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 OR Show Only tickets for $25 for Adults or $15 for Children 12 and Under. Call 615.883.8375 for tickets and availability.

Next up at The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre is A Christmas Carol: The Musical with shows from November 29-December 16. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

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

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Dinner Theatre, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Spelling Bee, Suzanne Spooner-Faulk, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, The Larry Keeton Dinner Theatre, Theatre

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