• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Contact

JHP Entertainment

Entertainment News, Reviews and Interviews

  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Contact

Comedy

Theatre Review: There’s something so right about ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’; National Tour onstage at TPAC’s Jackson Hall thru Sunday

October 12, 2018 by Jonathan

Members of the cast of ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’ (All Photos: Jeremy Daniel)

Described as “Monty Python meets Sherlock Holmes”, The Play That Goes Wrong is a guffaw-inducing, laugh-a-minute, play-within-a-play joy-ride of a farce that centers ‘round a fictional polytechnic school’s drama society as they present the whodunnit mystery, The Murder at Haversham Manor. Having taken London’s West End by storm, The Play That Goes Wrong is currently enjoying its Broadway debut run in New York while the touring company bumbles and stumbles across America on the show’s first US National Tour, Nashville and TPAC’s Jackson Hall being the tour’s current stop with shows thru Sunday, October 14.

From the moment patrons are handed their playbill as they enter the theatre to see a performance of The Play That Goes Wrong, it’s evident they aren’t in for an average run-of-the-mill night of theatre, for you see, even the program book seems to have had a bit of a printing mishap resulting in the cover graphic being printed slightly off-register. Then, as the audience settles into their seats, there’s a bit of a kerfuffle onstage as what appears to be tech crew members appear to be making last-minute adjustments to set pieces. Meanwhile, one of the stars of the show walks out into the audience introducing himself as the director and star while still others bustle about in search of a Duran Duran cd box set…and a dog named Winston. All this before the show technically starts.

From there, it’s two and a half-hours of pratfalls, missed cues, forgotten lines and face-hurting laughter. It’s like those clips of old Carol Burnett Show sketches in which one slight snicker amongst the actors results in an all-out uncontrollable laugh-riot for both the actors and the audience.

Reinforcing the show-within-a-show idea, a quick look at the playbill reveals two sets of information, one for The Murder at Haversham Manor, and one for The Play That Goes Wrong. The fictional bios for the drama society members, all in their touring debut, coincidentally, are hilarious and worth a read in their own right. Meanwhile, the actual cast bios reveal some very impressive credits, including at least two cast members making their return to Nashville, having previously starred in touring productions of other shows, as well as one cast member who previously appeared in the Broadway production of The Play That Goes Wrong.

Leading the cast as the aforementioned director and star of the the whodunnit is Evan Alexander Smith, who plays Chris Bean. In additional to Smith’s Bean being listed in the Murder program as director, he’s also credited as the show-within-a-show’s producer, prop maker, box office manager and about ten other behind-the-scenes crew titles. Oh, and Bean also plays Inspector Carter, who is called to Haversham to investigate a murder. As is the case when a director casts himself in a show (yes, it’s one of my actual theatrical pet peeves), wearing too many hats usually results in disaster. Smith seriousness as Bean is evident from the beginning, when Bean addresses the audience and in doing so, reveals some rather humorous facts about the company, including the budget-necessitating previous presentation of Cat (the obvious joke being they didn’t have the funds to present the better-known Cats). It them follows that Bean’s seriousness as Inspector Carter and the show’s director as the show goes wrong time and time again from the get, sets the hilarious pace for the inevitable unraveling of the show…and the cast.

Evan Alexander Smith

With initial misplaced props and missed cues, Smith’s Bean barely flinches as the powers through, but when a later scene calls for him to find ledger tucked in the cushions of a chaise lounge…or should I say…chaise longue…but I digress….anyway, the ledger isn’t where it’s supposed to be and Bean’s boiling-point is reached, to hilarious result. As if they knew exactly what to do, an audience member shouts out, “It’s under the chaise lounge”. Smith’s Bean breaks the fourth wall, chastises the audience for laughing and suggests perhaps they’d be better suited to be at a Honky Tonk, or perhaps, The Grand Ole Opry– – -two Nashville-centric entertainment options – – -which, of course, only results in more laughter and thunderous applause from the audience for the clever inclusion of a bit of local flavor from the touring company. One joke, about Hamilton, however, might not play as well in Nashville as it does across the country, seeing as how Nashville audiences will have to wait another season for tickets to that hot item.

Smith as Bean is just the tip of the iceberg…YES, I use that reference purposely, because the show, with it’s cleverly choreographed and write mishaps appears to sink quicker than the Titanic, but to blissfully, purposeful results.

Scott Cote, last seen by TPAC audiences as Brother Jeremiah in last year’s national tour of Something Rotten, is hilarious as Dennis Tyde. His fictitious Murder cast bio indicates he’s new to acting, having only joined the Drama Society after failing tryouts in a number of sports. In Murder, Cote’s Dennis is cast as Perkins, the butler. I know what you’re thinking…and while I did indeed as Cote is the butler did it when I interviewed him for my most recent Rapid Fire 20 Q, I cannot include his response as a Spoiler Alert here. What I can tell you is Cote’s Dennis is the epitome of the newbie thespian. He garners his biggest laughs from the audience when he no-so-casually glances at his hands where he’s evidently scribbled certain words of dialogue he has trouble pronouncing, then proceeds to mispronounce them anyway.

Ned Noyes and Scott Cote in ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’

Ned Noyes , who was part of Broadway’s The Play That Goes Wrong prior to being cast in the touring company, is scene-stealing as Max Bennett who plays Cecil Haversham, owner of the manor house in which the murder occurs. Early on, when Cecil goofs a line and gets a bigger response from the audience that had he executed the line perfectly, Noyes’ Bennett begins to over exaggerate his delivery as Cecil, thus receiving even bigger laughs. Being a huge fan of Lucille Ball (no secret to anyone who knows me), this reminded me of the classic comedy legend whenever her Lucy Ricardo character would goof onstage at Ricky’s nightclub. The bigger the audience response, the bigger the delivery of each subsequent line. My face truly began to hurt from laughing so much whoever Noyes was onstage opening night.

Peyton Crim portrays Robert Grove. His fictional bio references such roles as Lame Horse in Black Beauty and Dopey in Show White and The Tall Broad Gentleman. Crim’s Grove sees himself as one of the show’s more serious actors. in Murder, Grove is cast as Thomas Colleymoore, prime suspect in the murder of his sister’s intended, who’s got a bit of a secret himself. In spite of Grove’s serious nature, or perhaps because of it, the physical comedy his character endures as the set literally begins to fall apart, is all the more enjoyable for the audience. My companion for opening night in Nashville commented during one of Crim’s more physically demanding scenes that insurance for The Play That Goes Wrong must be astronomical. I suspect she’s right.

Brandon J. Ellis is subtly wonderful as sound tech, Trevor Watson. His fictional bio reveals he’s only part of The Murder at Haversham Manor to fulfill a requirement for an engineering course. During the entire show, Ellis’ Watson is seen to the left of the stage at his light and sound board. Frequently nodding off or otherwise distracted by his cellphone, Watson misses light and sound cues, only adding to the hilarity onstage, but nothing’s funnier than when Ellis’ Watson is forced on-stage to step into the role of Murder’s female lead when both she and the stage manager-unplanned understudy are knocked out cold.

Jamie Ann Romero being hoisted out the window by members of the cast of ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’

Speaking of the female lead and the stage manger, Jamie Ann Romero and Angela Grovey portray those roles respectively. Romero plays Sandra Wilkinson. Wilkinson’s Murder bio indicates she’s the company’s most experienced member, having been with the company eleven seasons. Romero, as Wilkinson, plays Florence Colleymoore, the above-mentioned fiancee to the murder victim. Romero’s Wilkinson is played with diva-like disdain for her fellow cast mates, but when things go awry, Romero shines as she exhibits simply astonishing physicality.

Part of that physicality comes courtesy a bit of rivalry between Murder’s leading lady and the only other female in the company, Angela Grovey as Annie Twilloil, the company’s stage manager. Grovey, like her co-star, Cote, is also making a return to TPAC’s stage, having previously played Medda in the first national tour of Disney’s Newsies. As stage manger Annie, Grovey seems to be the glue that holds the company together. Annie’s fictional Murder bio backs this up, siting that after Murder, she’ll leave the company to intern with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Throughout the show Annie can be seen—much to her horror—racing onstage to grab a falling piece of the set or place a forgotten prop, but when the show’s leading lady gets knocked out, Annie gets a taste of the spotlight and even though she’s reading her lines from a binder, it’s obvious she’s enjoying her time in the spotlight, for when the leading lady reemerges its a battle of the Florences with both actresses reciting their lines in unison until they literally push each other out the set’s window. While these two have limited stage time, compared to some of the show’s other cast members, when they’re on…THEY ARE ON. When I chatted with Grovey for my recent Rapid Fire 20 Q, I asked her about her on-stage rivalry with Romero, and their backstage friendship. For her response, check out the interview via the hyperlink above.

Rounding out the cast is Yaegel T. Welch, as Jonathan Harris as murder victim, Charles Haversham. His fictitious bio reveals a recent career switch from model to actor, perfect for a character who’s dead to begin with. As the curtain rises on the show, Welch’s Harris isn’t quite on his mark, making it even funnier that the corpse is moving. When cast members step on his hand, he moves, eliciting uproarious laughter form the audience. Offering a bit of unintentional foreshadowing to Charles’ undead state, he frequently shows up throughout the play uttering a line whose time has not yet come and whenever he realizes his mistake, he quickly folds his arms across his chest a la Lily Munster and backs his way off the stage. Simply hilarious. Besides, he’s playing a character named Jonathan Harris, so you KNOW I gotta love that (what else did you think the JH in JHPEntertainment stood for?)

To say that’s the entire cast is a bit inaccurate, for you see, Nigel Hook’s set, which won the Tony Award for the show’s current Broadway run, is as much a character and integral part of the show as any of the actors.  The ridiculously clever and technically intricate set mishaps—what with it’s falling wall sconces, crashing portraits, broken mantlepieces, combusting elevator and a collapsing second story study—enhance the slapstick, pratfalls and goofs throughout. While the dialogue and mishaps themselves would indeed be humorous to witness, thanks to a more-than clever story written by Henry Lewis, Jonathan Sayer and Henry Shields, as directed by Matt DiCarlo, the added visual of the deterioration of the set as the cast themselves descend into disaster is amplified a thousand times by Hook’s brilliant set design and this company of actors who are secure enough in their comedic craft to make playing a troupe of inept thespians seem effortless.

While this review can only attempt to convey the unbridled hilarity, you truly must see it to fully appreciate the true brilliance of the show, its physical humor and the impeccably timed delivery. For a real testament to the show’s creative genius, just go up to anyone who’s seen The Show That Goes Wrong, and repeat lines like “I’m taking the stairs”, “She’s having an episode” or the simple words “ledger” and ‘cyanide”. The resulting grins, snickers and spontaneous laughter are proof positive The Show That Goes Wrong is indeed the show that goes oh so right as far as a great time enjoying a night out at the theatre is concerned.

The National Touring company of The Play That Goes Wrong continues at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with shows thru Sunday, October 14. Friday and Saturday evening performances at 8 p.m. There’s also a Saturday matinee at 2 p.m. and Sunday performances at 1 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tickets to The Play That Goes Wrong range in price from $30 to $90. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

Not in Nashville, but interested in seeing The Play That Goes Wrong? Follow the show on social media at the official The Play That Goes Wrong site HERE, or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Following The Play That Goes Wrong, TPAC’s current Broadway Season continues with a return engagement of The Phantom of The Opera, playing Jackson Hall October 24-November 4. CLICK HERE for tickets or for more information.

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, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Angela Grovey, Broadway, Broadway Tour, Comedy, Farce, Interview, Mystery, Nashville, National Tour, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Scott Cote, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre, Theatre Review, Tony Winner, Touring Company, TPAC, Whodunnit

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast members from ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’; National Tour at TPAC October 9-14

October 8, 2018 by Jonathan

The cast of ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’; National Tour at TPAC’s Jackson Hall beginning Tuesday (photo: Jeremy Daniel)

Typically, in order to see a Broadway show during its debut run, audiences must make the trek to New York City, but that’s not exactly the case with Broadway’s current farcical hit, The Play That Goes Wrong. While the Broadway production continues its premiere run through January of next year, a concurrent production of the show recently set out on a National Tour. As the touring company prepared to head to TPAC’s Jackson Hall for the Nashville leg of the tour, I recently had an opportunity to chat with two members of the cast for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q. While researching to chat with stars Scott Cote and Angela Grovey, I discovered they each had ties to Music City, both having played Nashville while part of previous national touring companies, and one having even co-starred with country music’s favorite daughter. So, while the Play might go wrong, I knew the interviews would go just right.

———————————————

Angela Grovey and Scott Cote during one of many side-splitting scenes in ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’ (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG STARS SCOTT COTE AND ANGELA GROVEY

RAPID FIRE WITH ANGELA GROVEY, ANNIE IN THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG

Angela Grovey

JONATHAN H. PINKERTON: Alright, I just have to start by asking about your recent Broadway stint in Jimmy Buffett’s Escape to Margaritaville since you shared the stage with Eric Petersen in that show. I met Eric when he toured with Shrek. What’s your favorite memory of being on Broadway in that show?

 ANGELA GROVEY: I had a blast doing Escape to Margaritaville and singing some of Jimmy’s music. Occasionally Jimmy would join us during bows and we’d watch the crowd go NUTS. On our closing night Jimmy joined us for bows and sang to the crowd and then did Lovely Cruise for the company of Escape to Margaritaville. It was very special because that moment reflected the love and respect we each shared for each other and the show. It’s something I will cherish always.

JHP: You know, we have a Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville restaurant in Nashville, located on our Broadway (instead of theatres, we have honky-tonks, go figure!)…if time permits, do you plan to sight-see while in Music City?

ANGELA GROVEY: I am a HUGE fan of the music scene in Nashville and I’m a southern girl so I will, without question, be visiting some places down Broadway and Music Row. One of the gifts that comes with touring is we get to be a working tourist for a week. I’m looking forward to my week in Nashville.

JHP: Speaking of Broadway, The Play That Goes Wrong is simultaneously playing the other Broadway and on tour. How exciting to be offering folks across the country the chance to see a show that’s still enjoying its initial Broadway run?

ANGELA GROVEY: I’m thrilled that a PLAY is touring and we get to be the “first” play for people.
This play is HILARIOUS and to be able to be spreading laughter around this country warms my heart. 

Angela Grovey as Annie in ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’ (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

JHP: What can you tell me about Annie?

ANGELA GROVEY: Annie is the American stage manager of the Drama Society. It’s her 3rd year working with the company and looks forward to her time with this particular company. Annie is in charge of all things that happen on the stage and takes great joy is being the best at any job she does.

JHP: I understand there’s a little All About Eve element between Annie and Sandra, the female lead. How much fun is that rivalry to play?

ANGELA GROVEY: It’s great fun!!! We as actors are always looking for the “conflict” and Annie’s “conflict” switches mid show to Sandra.

JHP: Jamie Ann Romero plays Sandra. While you’ve only just started the tour, how have you ladies bonded offstage thus far?

ANGELA GROVEY: Jamie and I happen to have the same agents in New York City so we have had many opportunities to get to know each other professionally and on a personal level. We recently got manicures and pedicures together in Greenville and decided that we MUST make this a tradition. I know we just started the tour but it was very apparent while rehearsing that we have an AMAZING group of humans on this tour.

JHP: Has playing a stage manager given you a deeper appreciation for The Play That Goes Wrong’s actual crew?

ANGELA GROVEY: My first tour with Disney’s Newsies reminded me that the actors are only one part of the puzzle that must come together to put on a show. Fun fact- my production stage manager from Newsies is my production stage manager for The Play That Goes Wrong. I have carried that respect with me into my life practices. The Play That Goes Wrong Tour is top notch. And—especially with this show—we as actors could not do what we do without our crew.

JHP: Seeing as how The Play That Goes Wrong is a farce, and a theatrical show within a show farce at that, you and the rest of the cast are tasked with intentionally over-acting and basically playing bad actors. How fun/challenging is that?

ANGELA GROVEY: I have a very fun challenge with Annie because i am an actor playing a stage manager, forced into a stage managers WORST nightmare.

JHP: The set for The Play That Goes Wrong, designed by Nigel Hook, is Tony-winning. What’s your favorite aspect of the set?

ANGELA GROVEY: I can’t say I have just one favorite. The design is well deserving of  the Tony Award. When I first saw the show in NYC I was shocked at the set, now I get to see how it all works and I’m still amazed.

JHP: Because I’m a total dork, when I saw the cast list for The Play That Goes Wrong, I recognized you from your appearance in the 2012 film, Joyful Noise, which starred Queen Latifah and Dolly…so beloved here in Music City, she needs no last name. Gonna see Dolly while you’re in Nashville?

ANGELA GROVEY: I will definitely reach out and say ‘Hello’ while I’m in Nashville, but Dolly is one of the hardest working women, so I don’t know if I’ll see her. But if I do see her I’ll try not to gasp as loudly as I did when I first met her.

RAPID FIRE WITH SCOTT COTE, DENNIS IN THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG

Scott Cote

JONATHAN H. PINKERTON: If memory serves me, weren’t you just in Nashville about a year ago while touring with Something Rotten?
SCOTT COTE: Yes, that is correct. I played Brother Jeremiah in that production.

JHP: Since you’ve been in Nashville before, anything you plan to revisit and share about Music City with your fellow The Play That Goes Wrong cast mates?
SCOTT COTE: I plan to visit the Country Music Hall of Fame again. I also loved strolling down Broadway and hearing the music from all the different honky tonks.

JHP: From what I know about The Play That Goes Wrong, it’s a bit of a mashup between Monty Python-esque outrageous humor, with a good dose of Sherlock Holmes mystery thrown in. How else would you describe the show?
SCOTT COTE: That is exactly how I describe the show to people so you hit the nail right on the head. People should just plan on laughing for 2 hours from start to finish.

JHP: I’ve also heard comparisons (at least the intended mystery aspect of the play within the play, to a good ole Agatha Christie. Just so happens, I just returned from being on holiday in Portugal. While away, I re-read Christie’s Hercule Poirot mystery, Death in The Clouds as I was composing questions for this interview. Were you ever a fan of books or film adaptations by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle or Christie?
SCOTT COTE: Oh yes. In high school we read Sherlock Holmes and And Then There Were None. I enjoy a good mystery novel from time to time.

Ned Noyes and Scott Cote in ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’ (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

JHP: Seeming to draw inspiration from, or—pay homage to—Noises Off, The Play That Goes Wrong is a play within a play. Given that, you’re cast not only as Dennis, a bit of an amateur thespian, but, in the murder mystery, the butler. What are your favorite characteristics of Dennis…and his portrayal of the butler?
SCOTT COTE: I love his earnestness and his wanting to do a good job so the rest of the cast will like him. When he does fail at something, it really bothers him and he thinks he’s ruined the play. It’s fun to try and play that on stage every night.

JHP: Simultaneously on Broadway and on tour, among the show’s producers is JJ Abrams…so, how are you plotting to parlay that into future acting roles for the popular producer?
SCOTT COTE: I’m just going to keep doing my job and hopefully JJ will have one of his many friends in the business come to see the show and want to use me in one of their future productions. I’ll gladly play a Storm Trooper in the next installment of Star Wars!!

JHP: The National Tour only just launched in September. What’s the energy like being part of a brand new touring company?
SCOTT COTE: The energy level is pretty high right now. We are all having a great time. For a few people in the cast this is their first time touring so it’s been fun teaching them the ropes of touring. Where to eat, what to do, what hotel to stay in. etc.

JHP: Based in what you remember from having played Nashville’s TPAC last year, do you think Music City audiences will embrace The Play That Goes Wrong?
SCOTT COTE: I sure hope they do. If they loved Something Rotten last year, I think they will equally love this play. Its 2 hours of non stop laughter!! Who wouldn’t like that?

JHP: Matt DiCarlo is directing the touring production. What he like as a director?
SCOTT COTE: He’s a great collaborator! He knows this show like that back of his hand, but he is so willing and open to our ideas for our characters. He would let us play and find things and then would just tighten moments that needed tightening. He trusts us all.

JHP: Dang…One last question…OK, so you play the butler in a murder mystery…just between us…did the butler do it?
SCOTT COTE: Well you’ll just have to come see the show to found that out. 🙂

———————————————

‘The Play That Goes Wrong’; at TPAC October 9-14 (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

While Scott remained mum about whodunnit, Nashville audiences will have eight chances to figure  it out—and have a hilarious time doing so—when The Play That Goes Wrong sets up shop at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with shows from Tuesday, October 9-Sunday, October 14. Evening performances Tuesday-Thursday begin at 7:30 p.m. with Friday and Saturday evening performances at 8 p.m. There’s also a Saturday matinee at 2 p.m. and Sunday performances at 1 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tickets to The Play That Goes Wrong range in price from $30 to $90. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

Not in Nashville, but interested in seeing The Play That Goes Wrong? Follow the show on social media at the official The Play That Goes Wrong site HERE, or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Following The Play That Goes Wrong, TPAC’s current Broadway Season continues with a return engagement of The Phantom of The Opera, playing Jackson Hall October 24-November 4. CLICK HERE for tickets or for more information.

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, Theare Tagged With: Angela Grovey, Broadway, Broadway Tour, Comedy, Farce, Interview, Mystery, Nashville, National Tour, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Scott Cote, The Play That Goes Wrong, Tony Winner, Touring Company, Whodunnit

Review: Renaissance Players’ ‘Church Basement Ladies’ serves up a heavenly smorgasbord of laughter and music

August 25, 2018 by Jonathan

The cast of Renaissance Players’ “Church Basement Ladies”

Let me start this review by saying, I almost didn’t post it at all. Not because the show isn’t hilarious…it is. Not because the accompanying dinner isn’t church-social-worthy…it is. I almost didn’t review the show because, quite frankly, after seeing it last weekend, the remaining performances through tonight SOLD OUT earlier this week. That said, I feel Renaissance Players Gaslight Dinner Theatre production of Church Basement Ladies is indeed due any and all praise.

I’ll also admit I had never heard of Church Basement Ladies, perhaps because I didn’t grow up in the midwest and wasn’t raised Lutheran. After doing a little research, I discovered Church Basement Ladies is the musical adaptation of of Janet Letnes Martin‘s and Suzann Nelson’s 1997 book, Growing Up Lutheran. Oh, wait…I do remember that title from my years of working at Tower Books. In case you’re still not familiar…Think Nunsense, but replace Catholicism with Lutheranism and swap out the sassy nuns for a group of ladies who, as the primary cooks in the church kitchen, are the backbone of the community. Being raised Church of Christ and knowing a few church ladies myself, I can totally relate.

For Renaissance Players’ Church Basement Ladies, Brett Myers, fresh off his starring role as Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors, steps behind the scenes to direct. For his cast, he’s enlisted the help of two of his former Little Shop co-stars, Tory Gunn and Leslie Kopischke, as well as first time Ren Players Abigail Nichol and Lindsay Terrizzi Hess. Rounding out the cast is Brian Best, having most recently appeared in Audience of One’s West Side Story.

Set in 1965, Church Basement Ladies takes place in the titular church basement, which houses the aforementioned kitchen, as well as the Pastor’s office and an unseen–but key to a few subplots–boiler room. Designed and constructed by Jon Kopischke, Marc Pearson and Scott Mollenhour, the set is perfectly charming. If you’ve ever stepped foot in a church basement, or fellowship hall, you’re feel right at home as it’s complete with a refrigerator (the light actually turns on when the door opens), a stove and a freezer big enough to hide a bride or cool a menopausal church lady, but I digress.

With Closer to Heaven (in the church basement) as the show’s opening number, it’s quickly evident this isn’t some thought-provoking theatrical piece. Other clever titles range from The Pale Food Polka, My Own Personal Island (the above referenced menopausal number) and Dead Spread, a little ditty about funeral food. These are just a few of my favorites. There’s also For Good (NO, not the Wicked one) but like Elphaba’s change of heart tune, this one also encompasses on of the show’s ah-ha moments.

Gunn as Vivian, Kopischke as Mavis and Terrizzi Hess as Karin portray the main three church ladies. Gunn is the epitome of the know-it-all, self-appointed ruler of the roost as Vivian. She plays her as a doddering old lady who’s equal parts sweet and bitter. While the entire cast does an affable job with the musical numbers, it’s Gunn’s voice that shines in many of the show’s group numbers.

Kopischke’s Mavis is strictly played for laughs, think Mama’s Family’s Mother Harper mixed with the often outrageousness of any given Betty White role. An achievement in itself, considering Kopischke’s youth.

Terrizzi Hess, whom I first became aware of when she starred in The Keeton Theatre’s South Pacific, is enjoyable as Karin, the youngest of the church ladies, who’s poised to take the helm when and if a changing of the guard ever occurs within the ranks of the church basement. Cast as the mother to Nichol’s character, Terrizzi Hess plays the role with a kindness, while not allowing herself to be taken advantage of. Taking the lead on several of the musical numbers, Terrizzi Hess proves she’s got the talent to do so.

As Karin’s daughter, Signe, Nichol’s frequent visits home provide many of the show’s set-ups, as they coordinate with holidays and special occasions in which the church ladies would be in the basement preparing meals. Nichol’s Signe represents the changes, not just among the church ladies, but in the world around them as she have ventured out beyond their small town and the sanctuary of…well, their sanctuary. But just when you think the show might tackle some more serious issues, there’s a will-they or won’t-they wedding instead. While the entire show is kitschy and cute, one near-finale scene gets a little too outrageous for my taste, reminding me of some of many of the farcical shows local dinner theatre’s tend to have a penchant for.

On the subject of outrageous, Best’s Pastor Gunderson is uncharacteristically played down from the usual scene-stealing I associate with Best. Yes, he gets to guffaw it up in a bunny suit (Hey, the remains shows are SOLD OUT, so it’s not really a SPOILER, right) but it’s when he deals with the show’s more tender moments, like the death of a dedicated church employee that Best is, well…best (I”ll never stop using that when reviewing show’s he’s in…I mean, it’s right there in the name). Best serves up the laughs and the more serious emotions with equal finesse.

Speaking of serving…the dinner portion of Renaissance Players’ at the Gaslight Dinner Theatre serves up a delicious meal, catered by The Front Porch, located in nearby downtown Dickson, is the stuff of which Sunday dinner’s on the ground are made. I truly love that the area dinner theatres have all stepped up their food-game in recent years, and I credit it to The Gaslight Dinner Theatre, who’ve consistently served delicious fare from the beginning.

If you missed out on Renaissance Players’ Church Basement Ladies, considering virtually the entire run was SOLD OUT, I’m convinced saying a little prayer might bring Vivian, Mavis, Karin, Signe and The Pastor back to The Gaslight Dinner Theatre. After all, like the above-referenced Nunsense, there are–to date–five sequels to the original, including Church Basement Ladies 2: A Second Helping. If Renaissance Players is smart, they’ll be securing the rights to that one for next season.

Up next for The Renaissance Players, upstairs at the Renaissance Center in the auditorium, is Disney’s Alice In Wonderland Jr. with shows September 21-September 30. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with the latest from Renaissance Players, 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: Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Abigail Nichol, Brett Myers, Brian Best, Church Basement Ladies, Comedy, Dickson, Dickson TN, Dinner Theatre, Gaslight Dinner Theatre, Jon Kopischke, Leslie Kopischke, Lindsay Terrizzi Hess, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Renaissance Center, Renaissance Players, TN, Tory Gunn

Actors Bridge Ensemble and Wild Card Productions team for ‘Marian, or the True Tale of Robin Hood’; final two performances Saturday, July 7 at Belmont Black Box Theatre

July 7, 2018 by Jonathan

 

Actors Bridge Ensemble and Wild Card Productions have teamed to present the gender-bending, patriarchy-smashing, Marian, or the True Tale of Robin Hood, at Belmont’s Black Box Theatre, with two final performances Saturday, July 7 at 2 p.m and 7:30 p.m. And what more perfect patriarchal stomping tale to tell, after all, anyone who thinks the idea of smashing the patriarchy is a new concept, might want to carefully consider the medieval tale of Robin Hood and his Merry Men. Their ‘steal from the rich and give to the poor’ ideology has been smashing Prince John and The Sherif of Noddingham since the 15th century, perhaps even earlier.

That said, Adam Szymkowicz’s  Marian, or the True Tale of Robin Hood continues to smash said patriarchy, while simultaneously smashing not only the tale of Robin Hood as we know it, but the money shifting swashbuckler’s identity itself. For you see, ’tis not the hooded hood who’s righting the societal wrongs, but the fair Maid Marian. That’s right, in this new tale, the fabled Robin Hood isn’t a mystery man at all, SHE’s Maid Marian in disguise. What’s more, HER Merry Men, are mostly like-minded women who’ve decreed, let playing damsel be damned.

For Actors Bridge Ensemble and Wild Card Productions’ merry mounting, they’ve enlisted Britt Byrd as director. Those who know Byrd know that when she’s not on-stage or, in this case, behind the scenes, she has a penchant for cosplaying some kick-ass women like The Joker’s minx, Harley Quinn, and Star Wars’ cunning and brave Rey, so what better piece for her to helm than a comedic costume play (with more than a few surprisingly though-provoking subplots) featuring several strong-willed women and more than a few impressively choreographed sword fight scenes?

Cast as Marian/Robin Hood is Melinda Paul. Whether in literature, on the stage, screen or even in one of my personal favorite depictions, Walt Disney’s 1973 animated feature, Robin Hood has always been portrayed with a self-assured cleverness. Paul takes that characteristic and builds on it, playing both Robin and his fairer alter-ego, Marian with equal parts confidence and concern. While she indeed swashbuckles with the best of them, her gentler scenes with Mackenzie Smith’s Little John provide the oft-outlandish comedic tone of the play with some much-appreciated sweetness. Side Note: Who wouldn’t fall for Smith? That kindness. That accent…that kilt.

True to playwright Szymkowicz’s much-touted gender-bending theme, Ashley Wolfe is spectacular as Alanna Dale, who joins Marian/Robin as one the Merry Men using the only slightly modified moniker, Alan. Wolfe, as Alanna/Alan exudes excitability in her quest to join Robin Hood as one of his Merry Men, even though, unbeknownst to her, Robin is Marian. In addition to her role within the plot, Alanna also serves as the play’s narrator, often breaking the fourth wall to address the audience directly and keep them abreast of the seemingly complicated, but quite frankly, simplistic who’s who and what’s what of the plot. Alanna’s keenness to be one ‘one of the guys’ takes an interesting turn when, as Merry Man, Alan, he falls for fellow Merry Man, Will Scarlet (Lakota Jernigan). Again, relying on the gender-bending premise, Will is, in actuality Scarlet, yet another non-distressing damsel. Scenes between Wolfe’s Alanna/Alan and Jernigan’s Will/Scarlet run the gamut from adorably awkward to an interestingly ah-ha-inducing realization that even in medieval times, love is love and always has been.

Just when you think the playwright can’t pierce the heart any more, there’s even a hilarious ‘will they or won’t they’ running subplot between JR Knowles and Gavin Jernigan as two of the Prince’s Guards. Spoiler Alert: You KNOW they will!

Speaking of his Highness, Fred Brown, as Prince John is regal indeed. That is, if inciting royally rambunctious laughter scene after scene is majestic. Playing his grandiose status to the hilt, Brown’s Prince John lands brilliantly somewhere between Hanna Barbera’s Snagglepuss and a libidinous caricature of pretty much any Richard Burton role. His dalliances with Melissa Silengo as Lucy, his favored concubine are quite hilarious.

Other stand-outs include Kate Adams as Lady Shirley and Diego Gomez as Friar Tuck. The first, with a penchant for baubles and sex, the second given to drink and…well…sex. While she’s supposed to beholden to David Wilkerson as the Sheriff of Noddingham, Lady Shirley gets more than her flirt on with the frisky Friar. Licentious doesn’t even being to describe Adams’ and Gomez’s on-stage chemistry as the randy duo.

While Gomez isn’t portraying dual roles on-stage, he is in fact wearing two hats during this production. Not only is his snagging laughs from the audience as Lady Shirley’s boytoy, he also serves behind the scenes as the show’s fight choreographer. Meanwhile the aforementioned Wilkerson plays the villainous Sheriff convincingly, but he too has a hand in the fight scenes as the show’s fight captain/consultant. I mention these two backstage credits because the fight scenes are that good. Whether wrestling, pulling punches or sword fighting, the precision and care executed by each and every cast member deserves accolades.

Making the most of their limited time on stage, the remainder of the cast consists of Alexandra Chopson as the non-gender-conforming Much the Miller’s Son; Blake Hollliday as the playfully androgynous Tommy of No Consequence and Dominique Howse and Matthew Benenson as Sir Lenny and Sir Theo.

Also of note is set design by Paul Gatrell. Belmont’s Black Box Theatre provides the perfect venue for Marian and Gatrell’s set utilizes the space marvelously. I especially appreciated the larger than life arrows plunged into the ground around the corners of the stage, offering an impressionistic interpretation perhaps of the mighty pines of Sherwood Forest.

While I’ve delved into the gender-flip prevalent throughout the show, it should be noted that the playwright, and this production’s director don’t get preachy. It’s a comedy after all and what better way to broaden thought than through humor?

Marian, or the True Tale of Robin Hood wraps its two-week run with a 2 p.m matinee Saturday, July 7 and a final evening performance Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Wild Card Productions announced a special half-price discount for the matinee. Simply use the promo code “Hot-BOGO” when ordering tickets. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with what’s next for Wild Card Productions, follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Follow Actor Bridge Ensemble on Facebook and 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, Twitter and Facebook.

Filed Under: Theatre Review Tagged With: Actors Bridge Ensemble, Adam Szymkowicz, Alexandra Chopson, Ashley Wolfe, Belmont, Black Box Theatre, Blake Holliday, Britt Byrd, Comedy, David Wilkerson, Diego Gomez, Dominique Howse, Fred Brown, Gavin Jernigan, Gender, JR Knowles, Kate Adams, Lakota Jernigan, Legend, Mackenzie Smith, Marian or the True Tale of Robin Hood, Matthew Benenson, Medieval, Melinda Paul, Melissa Silengo, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Theatre, Theatre Review, Wild Card Productions

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in