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David Wilkerson

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘Shakespeare in Love’ onstage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru April 13

March 28, 2019 by Jonathan

Directed by René Copeland, Shakespeare in Love is making its Nashville stage debut as Nashville Repertory Theatre’s current offering. Adapted for the stage by Lee Hall and based on the screenplay by Tom Stoppard and Marc Norman, it’s been 20 years since the Gwyneth Paltrow/Joseph Fiennes/Geoffrey Rush film premiere. I remember enjoying the movie, but considering the time that has passed since I’ve seen it and the fact that I’ve never seen the stage version…full confession: I had no idea it even existed…I had to get the low-down on. When I found out one of my absolute “theatre crushes”, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva was cast as Queen Elizabeth 1 for The Rep’s mounting, alongside Rep newcomers Joe Leitess as Will Shakespeare, Cailen Fu as Viola and Sewanee professor, James Crawford as Henslowe, as well as local theatre favorite, David Wilkerson, who’s not only cast as Tilney, but also serving as the show’s fight choreographer, I knew this group would result in a fun-filled Rapid Fire 20 Q, and by Bard, I was right.

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RAPID FIRE WITH SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE’S JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA

JHP: You’re playing Queen Elizabeth 1, so tell me…is it really true what they say? IS it good to be the Queen?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: It’s soooo good! Big dresses, royal treatment, bowing, parties! Queen Elizabeth was quite the woman. She’s a total rockstar! I’m really enjoying portraying her.

JHP: From what I know, this is your sixth time to appear onstage at Nashville Rep. What keeps you coming back?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: Nashville Rep continues to bring in theatrical gems. The plays are always so engaging, and full of wonderful surprises. I am so challenged each time from production to production. I am grateful for each opportunity I get, to play something meaningful and outside of the box. I strive to play roles and characters that are beyond the norm.

JHP: Alright, you’ve already mentioned the big dresses…I LOVE the publicity photo of you all done up in QE1 drag. What can you tell me about the gorgeous wigs and the costumes designed by Lori Gann-Smith for Shakespeare in Love?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I can tell you to brace yourself! Queen Elizabeth was not one to do casual. These costumes are absolutely gorgeous! They are big, colorful, decadent and exquisitely made. If you don’t ooo and aah, I don’t know how to help you. Also…being a redhead is fun!

JHP: With themes of love, marriage, equality, gender and even the creative life, Shakespeare in Love and Shakespeare’s own writings are just as vital now as when audiences were first exposed to them. Among the themes, which do you think rings most true, in relation to this work?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: The creative life for sure. This play is truly about the life of the man. It’s about the actors and the world they live in. It’s such a lovely view into the fantastical world of theatre, and why we all fall in love with it over and over again.

RAPID FIRE WITH SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE’S CAILEN FU

JHP: In Shakespeare’s time, it wasn’t unusual for male actors to portray female roles. In a bit of a gender flip, as Viola de Lesseps, you spend part of your time on stage in disguise in male drag. While there’s a large element of comedy, in that the audience is in on the gag, how did you prepare for the duality of the role(s)?

CAILEN FU: My approach to Viola’s disguise is completely based on her idea of what it means to “be an actor.” In Shakespeare’s time, like you said, only men could be actors, so I tried to draw from the men who she would have been influenced or surrounded by for most of her life. This meant looking to her father, the men she met at court and mostly, the actors she saw on stage. While technically she IS going into male drag, I’m making the effort to go more in the direction that she is completely the same person, but she’s just seeing the world and it’s circumstances through a different pair of eyes.

JHP: Speaking of research, have you ever been to Play Dance Bar on a Thursday night for their Drag Kings show? If not, do you think that might be the perfect cast outing?

CAILEN FU: I have not but I think we’d all have a bunch of fun!

JHP: I understand this marks your Nashville Rep debut. What’s the experience been like so far?

CAILEN FU: Yes, this is my Nashville debut! I am having a blast. The entire company of Shakespeare in Love has been so welcoming and lovely. I am loving my time here!

JHP: Shakespeare in Love is of course filled with nods to Romeo and Juliet, as well as many of The Bard’s other works. Do you have a favorite reference included in the play?

CAILEN FU: Oh my, there are so many references! I don’t think I have favorite but I really love how each reference is cleverly woven into the script.

RAPID FIRE WITH SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE’S JOE LEITESS

JHP: You’re playing Shakespeare opposite Cailen’s Viola. What’s the best aspect of having her as your leading lady?

JOE LEITESS: It’s hard to pick just one thing! I admire her ability to jump right into the work. In an abbreviated rehearsal process it can be daunting to tackle these huge scenes about love, loss, and grief- especially with someone you just met. Cailen’s bravery makes that work much easier and more rewarding.

JHP: When I spoke with Cailen, I mentioned her gender flip. Not to give too much away, but you also have a brief moment playing the opposite sex in Shakespeare in Love. What’s something about playing a woman, albeit, mostly for laughs, that you didn’t anticipate?

JOE LEITESS: I was surprised by the physical effect that clothing has- especially with Elizabethan costumes. Dresses, headwear, and footwear change the way you stand, breathe, speak, and relate to other people in space. Doubly so if you’re wearing a corset or something that restricts range of movement. My cast mates sing, play instruments, and dance their way through this play so gracefully while being cinched in- it’s very impressive. I was relieved to learn my brief gender-flip scene doesn’t include a corset.

JHP: Like Cailen, this show marks your Nashville Rep debut. Are you enjoying it so far?

JOE LEITESS: I love it. Our director René Copeland, the cast, crew, and design team are delightful people who do beautiful work.

JHP: I also asked Cailen about the many references and winks to multiple Shakespeare plays within the dialogue and subplots of Shakespeare In Love, so I’ll ask you as well. What’s one nod to The Bard within this work that makes you smile every time it’s uttered?

JOE LEITESS:

Will: This is a dream.

Viola: Dreams are the children of an idle brain, begotten of vain fantasy which is as thin of substance as the air.

Will: …Did you really just say that?

 Of all the references and winks in the show, this one really feels like Will is stealing quotes from the people around him-a good trick for an aspiring writer. I imagine him going home and feverishly rewriting conversations from memory, trying to capture on the page what people say off the cuff.

RAPID FIRE WITH SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE’S JAMES CRAWFORD

JHP: I understand you teach in the department of theatre and dance at Sewanee. How did being part of Nashville Rep’s Shakespeare in Love come about?

JAMES CRAWFORD: I just showed up at the Nashville Rep auditions last year, and I’m so happy that I’m getting to make my Nashville debut in Shakespeare in Love. I feel really lucky. Continuing to act makes me a better teacher, and teaching has made me a better actor.

JHP: Aside from the written word, I understand music plays a part in conveying the spirit of this play. What can you tell me about the inclusion of music in Shakespeare in Love?

JAMES CRAWFORD: Considering this play is not technically a musical, there’s a tremendous amount of live music in it, and it’s beautiful. The cast has over twenty people in it, and it turns out that a few of the actors are also amazingly talented musicians, each of whom plays several instruments. They create a really magical world that the rest of us get to play in.

JHP: You’re playing Philip Henslowe, the owner of The Rose Theatre, a character based in reality, as Henslowe’s The Rose was indeed the first public theatre to stage Shakespeare’s plays. Does portraying a historical figure affect the way you approach the character?

JAMES CRAWFORD: Because Henslowe’s a real person, I did do some research about him. He left a diary that’s very important to people who study theatre history.  It’s full of facts about how much money he spent and how much money he earned, and all kinds of details about what it was like producing plays four hundred years ago. But there’s not a lot of personal information in the diary. Some historians think he was a very generous man, lending his actors money when they needed it, and others think he was more of a ruthless landlord. My job is to honor the version of Henslowe that the writers of Shakespeare in Love imagined.  And, lucky for me, he’s a very funny, delightful character.

JHP: You’re part of a fantastically talented cast, among them, Joel Diggs as Kit Marlowe, fresh off his incredible turn in Nashville Rep’s Topdog/Underdog. What can you tell me about sharing the stage with Joel and this company?

JAMES CRAWFORD: I got to see Joel in Topdog/Underdog the week before we started rehearsing together. It’s always thrilling to see someone make a wonderful leap like that, jumping from playing a bitter three card monte hustler to a wise Elizabethan playwright. As a newcomer to the Nashville theatre scene, I had a memorable experience on the first day of rehearsal. We read the play aloud, and I got to listen to all of these actors, most of whom I’d barely met. It was wonderful, discovering how many exceptionally talented actors are in this cast.

RAPID FIRE WITH SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE’S DAVID WILKERSON

JHP: You’re playing Edmund Tilney, Master of the Revels. Am I dumbing it down to much to say he was the OG party planner?

DAVID WILKERSON: I guess you could say that. Although in the play, he’s a party planner who hates parties then, he’s the person in control of theatre in London and he HATES theatre and actors.

JHP: IF there’s a villain to this piece, you could say TIlney is it, for….SPOILER ALERT…he’s the one who finds out Viola is performing on stage in male drag. What’s the best part of playing Tilney?

DAVID WILKERSON: I always love playing characters who ask for big choices. Tilney is so stuffy and condescending and fun to play!

JHP: In addition to portraying Tilney, you’re also working behind the scenes as the show’s fight choreographer. How much rehearsal goes into fight choreography for a show like this?

DAVID WILKERSON: There is a LOT of fighting in this show. Not counting the slaps and face burnings and wrestling and all that, there are three sword fights. And they are completely different. One is a rehearsal fight, one is a bunch of actors playing, and one is a real life-and-death fight. And they all need to feel different. So we started day one. When you only have two and a half weeks before tech, you have to make the most of every moment.

JHP: Having the unique opportunity of working with the show’s director, René Copeland both on stage as an actor and behind the scenes as fight choreographer, what do you hope audiences take away with them after seeing The Rep’s Shakespeare in Love?

DAVID WILKERSON: Shakespeare in Love is joyous. I hope people come to laugh and cry and along the way realize that art and artists hold an important role in society.

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If you want to experience the joy that is Shakespeare in Love, you have several more chances remaining as performances continue thru Saturday, April 13. Wednesday and Thursday performances at 6:30p.m., Friday evenings at 7:30p.m. and Saturday matinee and evening performances at 2:30p.m. and 7:30p.m. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or CLICK HERE for more information. Next week, on Thursday, April 4, Nashville Repertory Theatre will announce the coming 2019-2020 season at their 35th Season Reveal Party. Following Shakespeare in Love’s run, The Rep will host the company’s 4th Annual Broadway Brunch fundraising gala at City Winery on May 5. CLICK HERE for tickets.

To keep up with the latest from Nashville Rep, CLICK HERE, or follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

If you’ve enjoyed this Rapid Fire, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations with the who’s who of Nashville’s theatre scene.

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: Cailen Fu, Comedy, David Wilkerson, Drama, Interview, James Crawford, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva, Joe Leitess, Musical, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rene Copeland, Shakespeare, Shakespeare In Love, Theatre

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

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