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

JHP Entertainment

Entertainment News, Reviews and Interviews

  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Contact

JENNY NORRIS

Rapid Fire 20 Q with director and cast of ‘Breaking Up Is Hard To Do’; at Chaffin’s Barn February 6-29 with a special Valentine’s Day performance February 14.

February 5, 2020 by Jonathan

Jukebox musicals—a theatrical piece that features songs from one particular artist, era or genre—are hugely popular. Such shows as Mamma Mia, Jersey Boys and Smokey Joe’s Cafe frequently find their way among the favorites of local and regional theatre companies’ go-to offerings, but leave it to Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre to reach a little deeper into the jukebox musical genre as they present Breaking Up Is Hard To Do, onstage at Chaffin’s from Thursday, February 6-29. If you’re like me, you may never have heard of this particular show which features the music of Neil Sedaka, as it tells a 1960s tale of Marge Gelman (played by Melissa Silengo) a young woman who, after being left at the alter, decides to take her best girlfriend Lois Warner (Jenny Norris) along on what would have been her honeymoon trip to the Catskills at the end of summer, where they encounter locals Del Delmonico, (Liam Searcy) a good looking up-and-coming crooner, his friend, Gabe Green (Curtis Reed) who just so happens to be the force behind his music, Harvey Feldman (Scott Stewart) a stand-up comedian and Esther Simowitz (Vicki White) the owner of a popular nightspot.The fact that Chaffin’s is presenting a show that’s completely new to me, coupled with the fact that once I began researching the music included, I realized I knew virtually all of the tunes (I just didn’t necessarily know they were penned by Sedaka) and I knew I had to chat with director Joy Tilley-Perryman and members of her cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q.

——————————

Rapid Fire 20 Q with Breaking Up Is Hard To Do director and cast members

Rapid Fire with Breaking Up is Hard to Do director, Joy Tilley-Perryman

JHP: I understand the show takes place in The Catskills during the 60s, a little Dirty Dancing romance with a dose of Cyrano de Bergerac and even a tad Bye Bye Birdie…is that a fair assessment?

JOY TILLEY-PERRYMAN: That is a fair assessment, with a great deal of zippy zingers, some awesome dance lifts and juggling thrown in for good measure.

JHP: The Catskills, in their prime, seem like a dream vacation. What’s your favorite vacation spot?

JOY TILLEY-PERRYMAN: My favorite vacation spot is Kauai, Hawaii. It is paradise and it has been far too long since I have been to the Waimea Falls. It is the island that Elvis made famous in Blue Hawaii and the island that Hurricane Iniki almost wiped out in 1992. I love the rhythm of  island time and the blissful energy of the Hawaiian islands. If you have never been, do yourself a favor and go!

JHP: I haven’t but it’s definitely on my To Do List. So, what is it about this show that makes it the perfect addition to Chaffin’s current season?

JOY TILLEY-PERRYMAN: This show is truly a love story for everyone. We have couples of all ages included here. And for people of a certain age (ie me), this music is so familiar and comfortable and just plain fun. Fun fact, I had a baton routine to Love Will Keep Us Together when I was 10 or 11 and if pressed, I can still remember parts of it. Just don’t ask me to do any double elbow rolls or two hand spins into an aerial release. I would fall and quite possibly break a hip these days. 

JHP: What can you tell me about your cast?  

JOY TILLEY-PERRYMAN: This cast is full of my loves and and also a fresh face making his Barn debut. I love working with Scott, Vicki, Jenny, Curtis and Melissa and have found working with Liam to be an absolute delight. You would be hard pressed to find 6 more beautiful voices. They just make me smile! Also, this show has tons of audience participation, so come on out and see if you are in Mrs. Futternick’s chair or Mr. Weinblatt’s seat or are you the lucky lady who gets to come on stage and be serenaded by Del.

Rapid Fire with Breaking Up Is Hard To Do choreographer and co-star, Curtis Reed

JHP: When I chatted with Joy, I noted a bit of a comparison in one of the show’s plots to Cyrano, in that your character Gabe Greene, is basically the guy behind the success of popular Catskills performer Del Delmonico, making you Cyrano to Liam’s Christian.  Does that sound about right?

CURTIS REED: I believe so. Liam plays Del who is oozing with charm but in all actuality is not that nice. And he is also only pretending to like Marge to get to Marge’s father, who Del thinks is a big Music Manager. My character is the nerdy, behind-the-scenes type who pines for the girl who goes unnoticed by most, but who is number one in his eyes. Gabe has the passion and the heart for music, while Del only has the looks and the voice.

JHP: Speaking of Searcy, while this is his first Chaffin’s show, you two shared the stage during Studio Tenn’s recent mounting of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, right?

CURTIS REED: This is Liam’s first Barn show and we are so excited to have him as part of this cast. I loved working with Liam on Joseph at Studio Tenn. He is a great performer and always willing to learn and better himself. I challenged him on a few dance moves both solo and with Jenny and he is a total team player. 

JHP: As I mentioned in my intro, you’re not only playing Gabe Greene, but you’re also the show’s choreographer. The 60s were such a fun time for iconic dance moves, have you had fun incorporating some of them into the show?

CURTIS REED: You will definitely see some nods from Dirty Dancing and from a lot of the background singers/dancers of the DoWop groups that were popular in that time period. Super cute, nothing too crazy (except for Liam and Jenny’s fast-paced Stupid Cupid duet so be on the lookout for that one!)

JHP: What’s your favorite musical number in the show and why?

CURTIS REED: For me it’s a toss up. I love Laughter in the Rain because it’s the duet I share with Melissa’s Marge, where Gabe, in his own way, professes his affection for her. It’s super touching and still has that nerdy 16 Candles vibe that is so heartwarming. My other favorite is the only number in the entire show where you hear all six actors at once and that is the finale, Love Will Keep Us Together. I mean how can you not love that feel-good song made popular by The Captain and Tennille?! I’m almost certain we will have audience members singing along with us throughout the show with so many memorable songs by Neil Sedaka!

Rapid Fire with Breaking Up Is Hard To Do’s Harvey, Scott Stewart

JHP: How would you describe Harvey Feldman?

SCOTT STEWART: Harvey is a veteran comic and long time performer at a Catskills resort in The Borscht Belt. His roots are in Vaudeville. Harvey still loves what he does but is lonely- and ready to open up about it.

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

SCOTT STEWART: 

My father had a lot of comedy albums and I grew up listening to the likes of Stiller & Meara, Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Fanny Brice, etc… many whom started in the Catskills. To get to pretend to be among those in a blast! And I’ve always been intrigued by the whole Catskills era of America. Getting to spend an entire summer in the mountains playing?! Wow!

JHP: The show features an all-Neil Sedaka songbook. Would you say you were a fan of his music prior to being cast in this show?

SCOTT STEWART: I am a fan of Neil Sedaka!  I really didn’t learn who he was til, as a preteen, I heard The Captain & Tennille sing Love Will Keep Us Together and in the fade out of that song they sing “Sedaka is back”. I think it was Casey Kasem that explained who that was one week, and then I started to learn more about him. But this show has some songs with which I was not familiar.

JHP: As Harvey, you share scenes with Vicki White’s Esther. You’ve done several shows together. How much fun is she as a co-star?

SCOTT STEWART: Oh man, she is the best!  Vicki has a unique way of rehearsing her characters and she puts so much thought into them, but it’s often not til late in the process when I see what she’s doing, and understand how to interact and play with her character. I love it! Keeps me from getting lazy.

Rapid Fire with Breaking Up Is Hard To Do’s Esther, Vicki White 

JHP: What is your favorite aspect of playing Esther?

VICKI WHITE: Nothing keeps Esther down. She is fun, feisty, and a survivor. 

JHP: When I chatted with Scott, I mentioned that you two share scenes. You’ve done a few shows together, right? Isn’t he just fantastic?

VICKI WHITE: Yes! I am lucky enough to have done many shows with the talented Scott Stewart.  He is funny, down to earth, and has a beautiful voice. This has been my first opportunity to play opposite of Scott as a romantic interest and it has been a blast!

JHP: The 60s, the Catskills…if you could go back in time and experience that in real life, what do you think you’d enjoy most?

VICKI WHITE: Fancy clothes and cocktails. Everything was such an event, from the different activities to dinner and shows. They made a vacation last an entire summer. I am a huge fan of Mrs. Maisel and Dirty Dancing. I would LOVE to time travel with my family for a vacation in the Catskills!

JHP: Looking at the songs included in the show, I gotta admit, even though I have always loved The Captain and Tennille’s Love Will Keep Us Together, I didn’t realize it was a Neil Sedaka song. (In case you’re keeping up, yes, that makes four for four with mention of this particular tune, but I digress) Are there any songs in the show you were surprised to learn he had written?

VICKI WHITE: I was so surprised to find out that he had written Where the Boys Are. I knew it as this iconic song from the sixties that I had always associated with Connie Francis.

Rapid Fire with Breaking Up Is Hard To Do’s Lois, Jenny Norris

JHP: You play Lois Warner. How is the character most like yourself?

JENNY NORRIS: She is loyal and would do anything for those she loves. I would say those are two big parts of who I am. 

JHP: As Lois, you’re best pals with Marge Gelman played by Melissa Silengo. Marge has been left at the altar and decided to bring her bestie Lois on the honeymoon instead. What’s the advantage of taking a girlfriend on your honeymoon?

JENNY NORRIS: Having a shopping buddy! 

JHP: Chaffin’s resident costumer, Miariam Creighton is providing the wardrobe for the show. What’s your favorite 60s aesthetic as seen in the show, whether it be part of Lois’ wardrobe or that of one of your co-stars?

JENNY NORRIS: I have enjoyed the high waisted look in shorts and pants for ladies. It has inspired several of my recent Poshmark purchases. Plus big volume hair is always a favorite of mine! 

JHP: Sedaka’s titular lyrics suggest that reconciliation is the solution. What do you think?

JENNY NORRIS: Well although he says breaking up is hard to do, I say sometimes being with the wrong one is harder. You’ll have to come see if Marge realizes it or not! 

——————————

Melissa Selingo, Liam Searcy and Jenny Norris in a scene from “Breaking Up Is Hard To Do”

As Norris suggests, audience members will have their chance to see how Marge deals with her breakup as Breaking Up Is Hard To Do plays Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre Thursday, February 6 thru Saturday, February 29. CLICK HERE or call 615.646.9977 for reservations. Thursday matinees begin at 12 noon (doors at 11a.m.), while Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening performances begin at 7:30p.m. (doors at 5:30). Sunday matinees begin at 2 p.m. (with doors at noon for lunch service.

Thursday matinee tickets are $20 for show only or $28.50 for show and a Box Lunch. Evening show tickets are $18 for children 12 and under, $25 for youth/students and $47 for adults. 

Of course, being Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, they also offer a full buffet option or a la carte menu items for their evening and Sunday lunch matinee performances. Chaffin’s delicious buffet, featuring a choice of entrees (including a veggie option), and a number of side items is available for an additional $15.95, while the ‘a la carte menu items (also quite tastily) range in price from $6.95 to $10.95. Plus there’s a wide array of dessert options to choose from $2.50 to $5.00. CLICK HERE to check out the menu. 

On Friday, February 14, Chaffin’s will host a special Valentine’s Day performance of Breaking Up Is Hard To Do which will feature a special Valentine’s Day menu and three ticket level options. First, for $150 per couple, patrons can enjoy the show, buffet dinner, a bottle of champaign or sparkling cider, a special dessert plate with chocolate strawberries and cheesecake, a rose for that special someone and a chance to win some fabulous prizes. For $220, you can secure a private four-top table for two, plus all of the above-listed amenities. For $330, two couples can enjoy a private six-top table for four with all the above amenities. CLICK HERE to view the special Valentine’s Day Menu. Please call the box office to book these special reservations. 

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.

If you’ve enjoyed this edition of Rapid Fire, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. 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: Breaking Up Is Hard To Do, Chaffin's, CURTIS REED, Dinner Theatre, Interview, JENNY NORRIS, Joy Tilley Perryman, jukebox musical, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Neil Sedaka, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Scott Stewart, Vicki White

Rapid Fire Q&A with 2019 Clash of the Playwrights winner Jenny Wallace and cast members Jenny Norris and Curtis Reed; Wallace’s original farce, ‘Schooled’ debuts at Chaffin’s Thursday and Friday, January 23 & 24

January 23, 2020 by Jonathan

As the venerable theatre has done since 2017, Chaffin’s Barn held their annual Clash of the Playwrights competition midway through last year and announced Jenny Wallace’s Schooled as the 2019 winner. Part of the prize being a full-scale production on-stage at The Barn. Directed by Joy Tilley-Perryman, Wallace’s winning play, Schooled, a comedy farce, centers ‘round high school Principal Ramonda Clark as she juggles a typical day overseeing  summer school with the nonstop visitors to her office. Cast in the lead Jenny Norris, a favorite amongst Chaffin’s patrons. Alongside Norris is Curtis Reed—another fan favorite at Chaffin’s—cast as not one, but two fellow faculty members, Yanis, the vaguely foreign science teacher and Crawford Broderick, the eclectic drama teacher. 

Not only is the aforementioned Perryman directing, she also appears as three separate characters within the show. Adam Burnett also plays a myriad of characters and Daniel Devault appears as the Dean of Students. Rounding out the cast are Mileah Milstead, Daniel Keith Bissell, Annie Magan, Reyna Troi, and Mike Scott cast as several students, janitors, Parents, delivery guys and more. Aside from his role as the dean,  Daniel DeVault is also the show’s lighting director. Other behind-the-scenes assists are courtesy stage manager, Addison Oelze and technical director, Robin Lawshe. 

Having grown up with a Mom who was the assistant librarian at my high school, Schooled seems like it might hit a bit too close to home for me not to enlist playwright Wallace and co-stars Norris and Reed for yet another addition of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire Q&A.

——————————

RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED PLAYWRIGHT, JENNY WALLACE

Playwright Jenny Wallace

JHP: How did you come to enter Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Clash of the Playwrights?

JENNY WALLACE: I had wanted to submit a play to Clash of the Playwrights in previous years, but I wasn’t paying close enough attention and missed the deadline two years in a row. This year I had my act together (as much as it can be) and submitted my script, although Schooled is not the script I was going to submit previously.

JHP: How did you find out you had won this year’s competition?

JENNY WALLACE: I think I was on vacation in Florida late in the summer when I got a text from Joy Tilley Perryman telling me I had won.

JHP: Where did the idea for Schooled come from?

JENNY WALLACE: When I teach playwriting to my students, I have them write short plays (5-7 pages) and insist that their plays be set in a school. Every time I teach the unit I vary my instructions just a bit. Each time they write a play I write my own play alongside them, following my own instructions. (To see if they make sense lol.) Some of the vignettes in Schooledwere born from this process, others have some roots in my own personal experience as an educator, and some of them are brand new. At the same time that I was putting the script together, I had the phrase “strong woman” rolling around in my head and it bothered me. That phrase implies that all women aren’t strong. All of the women I know are strong, their strengths just manifest themselves in different ways. So, I decided to make the story about a capable, confident woman just trying to do her job. But Ramonda, the high school principal and protagonist of the play, isn’t perfect. She tries to be all things to all people in her work life, but her relationships with her family sometimes suffer for it. I hope that the audience—especially women—will see some of themselves in her.

JHP: Having appeared in shows at Chaffin’s yourself, how does it feel to know your show is in such capable hands with director Joy Tilley Perryman and her cast?

JENNY WALLACE: I did my first show at Chaffin’s in 1994, and Joy came to the barn shortly thereafter. So, I have known her for a really long time! I am so excited that she is directing the play. She knows both the Barn “style” and my sense of humor, and I think she will marry the two well. The cast also contains quite a few of my friends, actors whom I have worked with, and who’s work I admire. As an actor myself, I tried to write characters that actors would be excited about playing. Joy has put together a fantastic cast and I can’t wait to see the show!

RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED STAR, JENNY NORRIS

“Schooled” star Jenny Norris as Ramonda Clark

JHP: You’re cast in the lead role of Ramonda Clark in Schooled. What can you tell me about her?

JENNY NORRIS: She is like a lot of working moms. Dedicated to her work and the lives of the students she interacts with but sometimes has difficulty juggling it with her family  life. She is fair and caring, hardworking and kind. Deep down she is a little jealous of the drama teacher though.   

JHP: Many of your co-stars appear in multiple roles within the show. How chaotic does it get remembering who’s playing whom?

JENNY NORRIS: It was at first for sure! And so many people come in and out of my office there were plenty of times when I had no idea what scene was about to happen and just stared blankly at them. But I work with the best of the best and they were always good at saving me when they would see the terror in my eyes! 

JHP: What’s your favorite part of bringing a character to the stage from a new work, as opposed to playing a more well-known role with which the audience is already familiar?

JENNY NORRIS: Supporting new works is very important to me so I was thrilled to have the opportunity to be a part of it. And while I love bringing any character to life with my own version, starting from scratch really gives a unique freedom that I don’t get too often. It’s been fun to take hints from the text and my interactions with the characters my co actors have created to make a real person I feel people will relate to and sympathize with.

RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED CO-STAR, CURTIS REED

“Schooled” co-star Curtis Reed

JHP: Is there a certain added sense of pride in being part of Schooled, considering you know the playwright?

CURTIS REED: The first show I ever did at Chaffin’s Barn was with Jenny Wallace. I have done several shows with her since. I have a special place in my heart for her and I love the fact that I get to be a part of the inaugural performance of her original play. It’s quite funny, and as someone who has taught in some capacity since the age of 17, I FULLY relate to what happens to the main character in this piece.

JHP: You’ve touched on this a little, but, how exciting is it to be part of a new play as it makes its Chaffin’s Barn debut?

CURTIS REED: VERY! No one has interpreted these characters yet so you get to be the pioneer in a way and trailblaze with how people will see these characters for the first time. You even get the chance to create something so iconic, that the writer might go back and add ad-libbed lines or nuances you created for the character into the script, so it is forever there. 

JHP: What can you tell me about the characters you play in Schooled?

CURIS REED: I am definitely a large part of the funny in this show, thanks to how my characters are written by Jenny Wallace. I play Yanis, the indeterminately foreign science teacher who thinks it’s in his best interest to warn the principal that the videos he is watching are of an educational nature….. I don’t want to give too much away. Then I play the very eccentric and out there drama teacher (Typecasting?) where I get to sing at the top of my lungs and be wild and crazy. It’s very freeing and what we have created on stage is sure to please. Of course, having Jenny Norris as your scene partner just makes everything that much easier to experiment and play around. 

——————————

Chaffin’s is presenting the World Premiere of Schooled with a matinee performance Thursday, January 23 and an evening performance on Friday, January 24. The Thursday Matinee is a free performance to all industry people. CLICK HERE or Call 615.664.9977 for reservations, ticket prices and more information.

Next up at Chaffin’s is The Barn Dating Game, a live, local twist on the classic TV gameshow on stage for one night only on Saturday, February 1. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Then, from February 6-29 Chaffin’s will present Breaking Up Is Hard to Do, a musical featuring the songs of Neil Sedaka. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

To keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

If you’ve enjoyed this edition of Rapid Fire, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. 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, Rapid Fire Q&A Tagged With: CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Clash of the Playwrights, Comedy, CURTIS REED, Interview, JENNY NORRIS, JENNY WALLACE, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playwright, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 10Q, World Premiere

Theatre Review: With ‘Singin’ in the Rain’ on stage at Chaffin’s Barn thru November 30, forecast for the magic stage is all-singin’, all-dancin’ with a deluge of talent

November 15, 2019 by Jonathan

If you read my column with any regularity, you know in addition to my love of musical theatre, I also have a penchant for classic Hollywood musical movies, so you can imagine my excitement when I learned Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre was presenting their take on the stage adaptation of Singin’ in the Rain. That’s right…two of my obsessions…1950s musical movies and and all-out tune-filled stage extravaganza rolled into one.

Having seen a simply lovely production of the show in nearby Cannon County at the beginning of this year, and even though Singin’ in the Rain is one of my all-time favorite musicals, second only to the stage adaptation of the seasonal favorite, White Christmas, I honestly wasn’t sure what to expect of Chaffin’s take, but from the first notes of the show’s familar Arthur Freed/Nocio Herb Brown-penned overture, as skillfully executed by Chaffin’s musical director and keyboardist, Rollie Mains, woodwinds by Raymond Ridley, Neal Johnson on bass and drummer Dan Kozlowski, any slight trepidations were quickly laid to rest.

The stage version, like the original 1952 feature film, with screenplay by Betty Comden and Adolph Green tells the story of late-1920s silent film superstars Don Lockwood and Lina Lamont, who have been built up in the press, and by their studio, as romantic leads on…and off…the screen. Truth be told, they ‘caaaaan’t stan’ each other. There’s also Lockwood’s best bud, and frequent piano accompanist who plays the silent films musical soundtracks for the studio recordings, Cosmo Brown. He’s less than enchanted by Lamont and her diva-like ways and seems to always be looking out for his buddy’s romantic future. Further complications ensue with the advent of talking pictures. Not so much a problem for smooth and swarthy Lockwood, but for Betty Boop-voiced Lamont, that’s another story altogether. Enter young, inexperienced chorine, Kathy Selden, having just arrived in Hollywood from the legitimate stage, Selden is biding her time in the chorus until her big break. After a dismal preview of Lockwood and Lamont’s first talkie, The Dueling Cavalier, during which the audience laughs at Lamont’s fingernails on a chalkboard voice, Selden’s big break comes when Lockwood and Brown cook up a scheme to have Selden record her voice and dub it over Lina’s screech.

Fans of the film know it featured an all-star cast of Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor, Jean Hagen and Debbie Reynolds, so you can image those being some pretty big dancing shoes to fill. To her credit, director Jenny Norris has packed Chaffin’s Singin’ with quite the who’s who of actors, most of whom are familiar to Chaffin’s patrons.

Matt Moran as Don Lockwood in Chaffin’s “Singin’ in the Rain”
(all photos by Michael Scott Evans/Courtesy Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre)

Starring as Don Lockwood, the Gene Kelly role, for those familiar, is Matt Moran, most recently seen on Chaffin’s stage as the less-than-charming Glenn Gulia in The Wedding Singer. While I absolutely love Gene Kelly, especially in Singin’ in the Rain, I have to tell you, from Moran’s first entrance as Don Lockwood, I couldn’t help but notice, his matinee-idol looks and his overall command of the stage. Sorry, Gene, but Matt just might be my new favorite Don Lockwood. With a show full of wonderful tunes and numerous Lockwood-centric moments, Moran constantly shines like the star he’s play. While Moran’s bio indicates he made his stage debut at age eight, I’ve only recently come to know his work, so I knew holding his own against Curtis Reed as Cosmo Brown, Don’s best friend and former performing partner…the Donald O’Connor role in the film…would be a challenge. Spoiler Alert: Moran keeps up the pace and is the perfect compliment to his talented second-banana.

Speaking of Reed, not only is he a great comedic sidekick, and a uber-talented hoofer, he’s also the show’s choreographer. When I first saw the stage adaptation not long after its Broadway debut in the mid-80s, iconic choreographer Twyla Tharp had lovingly crafted dance sequences that paid homage to the original film moves by Kelly himself. Reed, as talented a choreographer as he is a dancer has done what might otherwise seem impossible, finding his own moves nestled smartly between the two, and I applaud that. 

Jenna Pryor as Lina Lamont With Kelsey Brodeur as Kathy Selden) in Chaffin’s “Singin’ in the Rain”

Cast as Lina Lamont is Jenna Pryor, one of my theatre crushes, having starred in a variety of local theatre productions ranging from Disney princess, Belle in Beauty and The Beast, to Leslie in American Idiot. Heck, on Chaffin’s stage alone, she’s been seen in a couple of Southern Fried productions, as well as Freaky Friday and Mamma Mia. Sporting a platinum blonde Harlow-eque wig and some form-fitting dangerous curves ahead costumes, courtesy the show’s costumer, Tammie Whited, Pryor perfectly transforms herself into the quintessential not-so-dumb-blonde and I’m here for it. I’m just gonna be honest, I couldn’t stop grinning from ear to ear from her first line on.

Rounding out the major players is Kelsey Brodeur as Kathy Selden. The native Atlantan, former New Yorker and recent Music City resident might be a relative newcomer to Chaffin’s, having appropriately made her Barn Dinner Theatre debut as Star to Be in their recent spectacular production of Annie, but Brodeur has appeared in a number of regional productions in and around the Syracuse area where she studied musical theatre and I’m here to tell you, she’s definitely one to watch. As Kathy, Brodeur finds the sweetness of Reynold’s girl-next-door, coupled with just enough sass and smarts to find what she wants and go for it.

From the show’s opening sequence, Fit as a Fiddle, which establishes the longterm friendship of Lockwood and Brown by way of ‘home movies’ projected on screens the roll down from the two corners of the stage to the mid-show literal show-stopping title tune and on to its all-in reprise at the final, Singin’ in the Rain is jam-packed with marvelous musical moments. 

Among my personal favorites in Chaffin’s production, first there’s You Stepped Out of a Dream, performed by Moran’s Don Lockwood, complete with beautiful harmonies courtesy an ‘only in a musical’ seemingly impromptu street chorus of passers by. Let’s be honest. Who wouldn’t swoon to a croon from this guy?

Kelsey Brodeur, Matt Moran (and Jenna Pryor) in Chaffin’s “Singin’ in the Rain”

Then there’s my absolute favorite number in the entire show…no, not THAT one…I’m talking about Kathy’s infectious musical entrance, All I Do is Dream of You. It’s sweet, it’s cute, it’s ironic, since she and Don aren’t exactly chummy at this point and with Brodeur’s lovely voice, a kick line of gorgeous ensemble members and Reed’s dynamic choreography, it’s perfect. 

Next on the highlight reel is Reed’s guffaw-inducing comic song and dance, Make ‘Em Laugh. Due to the confines of the space, Reed accepts the challenges and reigns victorious in a number filled with slapstick pratfalls, a great tune and some fancy footwork.

With a first act that’s nearly 90-minutes in length (as my sweet mother can attest, it flies by thanks to the fabulousness of the music, the saccharine storyline and the dedication and talent of the cast) there’s one great sequence after another. Beautiful Girls, features Daniel Bissell surrounded by…well…beautiful girls, including ensemble members, and three of my theatre crushes, Christina Candilora, Jenny Norris and Christen Heilman, in an homage to Busby Berkeley and Florenz Ziegfeld.

You Are My Lucky Star, another fan favorite, which ironically wasn’t written for the film, but rather first appeared in Broadway Melody of 1936, is among Brodeur’s most glorious vocal moments. I love that the stage musical restores the intro to the song and Brodeur’s sweet intonations fit it perfectly.

Speaking of perfect, You Were Meant For Me, in which Moran’s Don takes Brodeur’s Kathy behind-the-scenes of the movie studio, is just that…prefect. During this number, our romantic leads trip the light fantastic to more of choreographer Reed’s fancy footwork. With the aide of a large fan, fog machine, some mood-enhancing lighting, a ladder and some movie magic imagination, the relatively empty lot transforms into a balcony scene of love to rival that or Romeo and Juliet…at their happiest. Of course this scene, nor any other could come off as perfectly were it not for the real behind-the-scenes work of properties manager, Joy Tilley Perryman, technical director, Robin Lawshe, lighting designer, Daniel DeVault, audio engineer, Kaitlin Barnett and video courtesy Russ Sturgeon Productions/RSVP. On that subject, in addition to the aforementioned ‘home movies’ seen at the top of the show, RSVP’s handiwork is also seen throughout the production as the audience is treated to several Lockwood and Lamont moving pictures of both the silent and talking varieties, to much delight.

Back to the musical highlights…Reed and Moran team up for Moses Supposes, with Bissell as their straight man during a tongue-twisting, toe-tapping, tap-tastic musical delight, then Reed and Moran are joined by Brodeur for yet another of my favorite musical moments from the piece as they do a little spectacular couchography whilst singing Good Morning. Yes, it’s still my go-to wake-up alarm song.

Matt Moran, Kelsey Brodeur and Curtis Reed in Chaffin’s “Singin’ in the Rain’

This brings us to THE legendary, iconic, stupendous moment of the show…That’s right…Act 1 concludes with the title tune, Singin in the Rain. When I posted on social media that I was attending the show last weekend, a friend, who had seen the original touring production with me back in the late-80s/early 90s, who also just so happens to be a theatre professor/actor and talented director in his own right, commented asking “Does it Rain?” to which I responded, “Does it EVER”. 

As if Chaffin’s magic stage weren’t awe-inspiring enough, during the pinnacle moment of this number, thanks to some creative handiwork from Chaffn’s beloved former owner, John Chaffin himself, it not only rains it pours! As Moran’s Lockwood sings the show’s most familiar tune, it rains along all four sides of the square stage. Shoot, director Norris, during her welcoming remarks gave a little warning to audience members seated along the four sides of the magic stage that they might get a little damp, giving a whole new meaning to immersive theatre. Moran amps up the vibe even more by playfully kicking and dancing in the rain, causing it to splash towards those seated nearby, but just like a kid stomping in puddles, no one minded getting a little damp, especially considering the shower of talents they were witnessing. As the song’s lyrics say, “Come on with the rain, I’ve a smile on my face!” True Confession: I was so moved by the spectacle of it all that my eyes might have rained a little too. When the lights came up, my Mom looked at me and asked if my allergies were bothering me. A little embarrassed at just how much I love a great live musical that moves me to tears, I simply nodded yes. 

Following intermission, the music continues, but it’s plot that takes center stage as Lina finally clues in to Don, Cosmo and Kathy’s plan to dub her voice. While the second half of the show has it’s share of pleasing musical moments, Kathy’s Would You, Don’s Would You response and Don, Cosmo and company’s Broadway Melody (including the aforementioned mod dance sequence), it’s Pryor as Lina for What’s Wrong with Me that pretty much steals the second act. While Lina is predominately played strictly for laughs with her helium voice, couple with a decidedly east coast, street-wise vernacular, What’s Wrong With Me actually makes the audience feel just a little compassion for the show’s blonde baddie. Just when you’re feeling sorry for Lina, it’s back to laughing at her, thanks to the inclusion of a bit of what I’m naming skip-ography. Again….when Pryor’s Lina is on stage, I can’t stop laughing.

As is the case with any Hollywood musical worth its salt, by play’s end, everything’s tied up in a nice package just in time for the boy to get the girl as they reprise You Are My Lucky Star and the entire ensemble descends upon the stage for one final encore of the title tune.

Kudos to director Norris, choreographer Reed and everyone at Chaffin’s. Time after time, show after show I marvel at how the company seamlessly navigates what is a relatively small, albeit magic stage—yes, it still descends from the ceiling and I’ll never get over the awe of that feat alone.

The fantastic leads, with noteworthy assists from the entire cast—including Greg Frey as movie mogul RF Simpson, Nick Spencer as Rosco Dexter, Daniel Bissell as Production Tenor, Gabe Atchley as Rod, the always brilliant Katie Bruno doing double-duty as both Dora Baileyand Miss Dinsmore, Gabe Atchley as Rod and ensemble members: Seth Brown, Christina Candilora, Christen Heilman, Josh Innocalla, Benny Jones, Bethanie Lyon, Brooke Mihalek and Emmy Peurta—coupled with Reed’s double-duty as choreographer and co-star, all helmed by Norris, who not only director, but also appears on-stage as Zelda Zanders, it’s all a marvel.

Just before curtain on the night I attended, Norris, a veteran of the stage and a favorite at Chaffin’s, informed me that this show marked her directorial debut. With her winks to the gorgeousness of the original film and Reed’s choreo that includes everything from nods to the lush hyper-produced spectacles of the aforementioned Berkley and Ziegfeld, to the inevitable modern dance sequence that’s included in just about every mid-century musical, Chaffin’s Barn’s Singin’ in the Rain is just about as perfect a stage musical extravaganza as you’re likely to see outside of Broadway itself. 

Oh, and don’t forget…while I mostly refer to the venue as Chaffin’s Barn, their full name is Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre! Ever since the change in ownership, the dinner aspect has vastly improved, offering patrons who choose the dinner and show tix the choice of either a huge variety of buffet items, or the option to order from their equally delicious ‘a la carte menu.

Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s Singin’ in the Rain continues on the mainstage with shows through November 30. CLICK HERE or call 615.646.9977 for reservations. 

Thursday matinees begin at 12 noon (doors at 11a.m.), while Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening performances begin at 7:30p.m. (doors at 5:30). Sunday matinees begin at 2 p.m. (with doors at noon for lunch service.

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

While Singin’ in the Rain continues through November 30, A Tuna Christmas begins at Chaffin’s Backstage with shows November 29-December 21, CLICK HERE for tickets or more info. Following Singin’ in the Rain, Chaffin’s will present Sanders Family Christmas on the Mainstage from December 5-21. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. As they always do during the holidays, Chaffin’s will also present a show specifically aimed towards the younger audience as they present Jingle All The Way with Friday and Saturday shows from December 6-21. This special holiday treat is only $10 a person with kiddies two and under admitted FREE. Call the box office at the number above for details or to purchase tickets.

To keep up with the latest from Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, find them online at ChaffinsBarnTheatre.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and follow them on Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: CHAFFIN'S BARN, CURTIS REED, Dinner Theatre, Jenna Pryor, JENNY NORRIS, Kelsey Brodeu, Matt Moran, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Review

Opera Review: Nashville Opera’s ’The Cradle Will Rock’; limited engagement onstage at the Noah Liff Opera Center thru Sunday, May 12

May 11, 2019 by Jonathan

“The Cradle Will Rock” (All photos by Anthony Popolo/Courtesy Nashville Opera)

Just before the cast took to the stage for the Friday, May 10 opening performance of Nashville Opera’s The Cradle Will Rock, director John Hoomes welcomed the packed house with a bit of backstory to the piece. Having done a bit more research that usual prior to attending opening night—mostly because it’s been a while since I reviewed something at the opera, I was privy to much of what Hoomes relayed, so I thought I’d preface my review with a combination of details Hoomes shared, mixed with information I learned during prep for writing my review.

Back in 1937 during the worst days of the Great Depression, composer and lyricist, Marc Blitzstein teamed with director, Orson Welles and producer, John Houseman to create an American opera (alternately known as a play in music) overflowing with allegorical references to corporate greed, political corruption and filled to the brim with a cast of characters whose names frequently reflect that social and political status.

During its 1937 Broadway debut, The Cradle Will Rock’s story of a wealthy and powerful man silencing the efforts of the common man to unionize by shutting them down by whatever means necessary received an eerily similar real-life reception when, just days before the play’s scheduled opening, news came that President Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration was temporarily closing down all new theatrical performances, going so far as to padlock the doors of the Maxine Elliott Theatre were The Cradle Will Rock was to debut. Legend has it, Welles and company felt certain this mandate had more to do with their piece’s radical pro-union themes and shuttering the theatre was a way to censor their voices.

Never one to shy away from controversy, Welles was determined to present his show, so he found a nearby theatre willing to rent him the space for a private event. On the scheduled opening night, Welles and 600 of his closest friends and patrons who had gathered outside the Elliott Theatre, walked some 20+ blocks to the Venice Theatre. Once inside, Blitzstein made his way to the stage where the piano had been brought from its original venue, while the actors sat among the audience. This was done because, in addition to the WPA ban, Actors’ Equity had stated that the cast could not perform onstage without express permission from the show’s producer, in this case, the government. Of course there was no mention as to whether or not ‘audience members’ could sing along should they by some chance know the words, so as Blitzstein began playing the opening notes of The Cradle Will Rock, the female lead stood from her seat in the audience and sang her part, with the other cast members following suit.

As Hoomes concluded his introduction to the piece, he also encouraged the audience to raise a glass as this performance not only celebrates the presentation of this legendary melding of opera and theatre, but also, on a more personal note, it marks the 10 year anniversary of Nashville Opera being housed in the gorgeous Noah Liff Opera Center.

With the piece’s backstory told—its uncanny relevance to hot-button issues still prevalent in government and society today, no doubt at the forefront of every audience member’s mind—the lights go up to reveal scenic designer Cara Schneider’s seemingly simplistic, but intricately thought-out set. As is typically tradition, given the show’s bare-bones history, it’s a mostly sparse stage, consisting only of a row of simple wooden chairs set against a painted backdrop resplendent with iconography of the day including the depiction of steel girders, American success flyers, a beautiful reproduction of Z. P. Nikolaki’s war bond advert featuring Lady Liberty using a candlestick telephone with the copy “Hello, this is Liberty speaking—billions of dollars are needed and needed NOW”, and even a hilariously tongue-in-cheek modern take on “Loose Lips Sink Ships” (I’ll leave it to you to approach the stage during intermission when you attend to catch that detail for yourself).

Megan Murphy Chambers as Moll

Megan Murphy Chambers, a darling of the Nashville theatre scene, is cast as Moll, a down on her luck young women who has turned to soliciting her body on the streets of Steeltown,USA in order to provide for herself. Equal parts vamp and vulnerable, with a spellbinding voice to match, Chambers gets things off on a high note as Moll laments I’m Checkin’ Home Now. Next up, Moll encounters a young man, Gent (Patrick Thomas in his first of two roles in the piece) looking for company…at a discount. Then the duo are interrupted by Dick (Jairus Maples), a less than honorable cop, who ends up arresting Moll after she refuses his advances.

This moves the action to the clink where Moll meets Harry Druggist (Shawn Knight) a formerly successful businessman who’s now the town drunk after a sad series of events, including the death of his son. Later in the show, Knight’s performance during the Drugstore Scene alongside Maples as his son, Steve and Charles Edward Charlton as Bug, a local heavy, is among the show’s more riveting moments.

They are soon joined by the majority of the remainder of the cast, Clerk (Brian Best), Cop (Mark Filosa) and The Liberty Committee, comprised of Yes Men and sellouts including: Reverend Salvation (Brent Hetherington), Editor Daily (Patrick Thomas in his primary role), Yasha, the violinist (Scott Rice), Dauber, the artist (Darius Thomas), Dr. Specialist (Brian Russell),  and President Prexy (Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva). Eventually we are also introduced to Larry Foreman (Eric Pasto-Crosby), chief union organizer.

As you might have surmised by the aptronymic characters, Blitzstein wasn’t much for subtlety in that regard, or in the play’s over-all anti-capitalist slant. What you get is exactly what you see.

Members of The Liberty Committee

During the bulk of the piece, the audience is treated to exposition through song revealing who each character is, their relationship to the mysterious Mr. Mister and how they ended up where they are and how they came to be bribed, bullied and coerced into joining the committee to further his capitalist cause as they work to bust up the burgeoning unionization of the common man.

Galen Fott as Mr. Mister

Speaking of, the previously alluded-to community leader comes in the form of Galen Fott as Mr. Mister, a Trumpian figure if ever there was one complete with haughtier than thou wife Mrs. Mister (Martha Wilkinson) and dim-witted, superficial offspring Sister Mister (Jenny Norris) and Junior Mister (Chris Simonsen).

Steeped in a decidedly period-authentic jazz vibe, much of the music leans more towards early musical theatre than what is thought of as traditional opera. Chambers the obvious stand out in the more theatrical quartet of tunes that open the show.

Martha Wilkinson and Brent Hetherington as Mrs. Mister and Reverend Salvation

Other noteworthy musical moment come by way of Hetherington and Wilkinson’s hilarious duet Mrs. Mister and Reverend Salvation, during which we witness the ever-present relationship between church AND state, as the Missus leads the preacher to sermonize both sides of war, depending on her (and her husband’s) current financial opportunities where the subject is concerned).

The Freedom of the Press is another relatable, yet touchy tune as Mr. Mister and Editor Daily on what could easily been seen today as the origin of “fake news”. “News made to order” among the lyrics of a tune from 1937 is indeed still newsworthy today.

In numbers that are presented in the spirit somewhere between Nelson Eddy/Jeanette McDonald and Mickey Rooney/Judy Garland, Croon Spoon and Let’s Do Something are my personal favorites, mostly because they embody typical late-30s movie musical numbers with Norris’ giving us a breathy Mae Questel (Betty Boop) lightness matched by Simonsen’s devil-may-care swarthiness.

Chris Simonsen and Jenny Norris as Junior and Sister Mister

Keeping the mood seemingly comedic, but with tones of things to come, Honolulu shoves the unmotivated Trump Junior…er…um…uh…I mean Junior Mister off to the tropics to be a newspaper correspondent, in spite of the fact that he has no journalistic training.

The earlier-referenced Drugstore Scene plays next and is followed by Luke Harnish and Jessie Neilson in the sweet but eventually sad Gus and Sadie Love Song, during which the playwright manages to touch on bigotry and prejudices.

Matching her husband’s sense of entitlement in controlling other’s destinies, Mrs. Mister picks the arts as her playground, controlling sell-outs the Dauber (brilliantly played by Darius Thomas) and the equally scene-stealing Scott Rice as Yasha. While watching these three tease and taunt each other with the promise of prominence in their respective worlds, I couldn’t help but laugh along with the other patrons of the arts in attendance. Well-played, Blitzstein…equally well-played Hoomes! For who are we if we cannot laugh at ourselves?

Chambers takes centerstage again for the show’s most poetic tune, Nickel Under the Foot, in which she beautifully laments the haves and the have nots.

Thankfully, all is not lost in this battle of capitalism vs humanism with the late-hour introduction of Eric Pasto-Crosby as Larry Foreman, a pro-union common man arrested for “carrying cocieled deadly leaflets” Still another mirror to our current administration’s disdain for anyone speaking out against the establishment.

Eric Pasto-Crosby as Larry Foreman

Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva as President Prexy is—no surprise—a delight. While it’s only a small role, compared to some others in the piece, Whitcomb-Oliva makes the most of what she’s given as the sole female member of the all-boys Liberty Committee. (in the original mounting, the entire Committee was played by men). During the limited time Whitcomb-Oliva is featured as the head of a local university, she shines, never once giving any indication that she wasn’t born to play this role, just as the talented actress and singer does with every role she lands. The Faculty Room Scene, in  which she is summoned by Mr. Mister to offer up one of her college’s professors who is to address young men and dissuade them from joining the union, is the perfect example of the power of persuasion and influence over young minds. Luke Harnish as Professor Trixie, who also just so happens to be the school’s football coach, hams it up to audible delight from the audience in yet another still-true stereotype that athleticism, machismo and boisterousness equals right and common sense.

Just as Mr. Mister has everything worked out to pursued the end of the union organizing, he visits Russell’s Dr. Specialist about the matter of the death of a steel worker who ‘fell to this death’…or was he pushed? Mr. hopes to convince the Dr. to release a statement saying Joe Worker was drunk.

Brooke Leigh Davis as Ella Hammer

Enter Brooke Leigh Davis as Ella Hammer, sister of the murdered steelworker, come to defend the memory of her brother when she questions Dr. about his intentions to defame her brother by indicating he was drunk. Davis, who, like many in this show, I’ve had the pleasure of seeing in a handful of productions around town, sets up the show’s crescendo ending with her powerful operatic performance during the show-stopping Joe Worker.

By the time the cast, led by resistance leader, Pasto-Crosby’s Larry Foreman, raise their defiant fists in the titular reprise, the audience can’t help but feel energized and motivated. Bravo to Hoomes, his entire cast and crew for sharing this historically significant and ever-timely piece with Nashville audiences.

Nashville Opera’s The Cradle Will Rock continues it’s limited run at Noah Liff Opera Center with an 8p.m. evening performance Saturday, May 11 and a final matinee Sunday, May 12 at 4p.m. The Cradle Will Rock is presented with cabaret seating. At the time of this review, limited seats remain with cabaret seating priced at $85 and side seating available for $26. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

The Cradle Will Rock stars Megan Murphy Chambers, Galen Fott, Martha Wilkinson, Eric Pasto-Crosby, Shawn Knight, Jenny Norris, Brent Heitherington, Patrick Thomas, Scott Rice, Darius Thomas, Brian Russell, Brooke Leigh Davis, Jessie Neilson, Luke Harnish, Charles Edward Charlton, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva Jarius Maples, Brian Best and Mark Filosa.

The Cradle Will Rock creative team is comprised of director and supertitles creator, John Hoomes, music director/pianist Amy Tate Williams, lighting director, Barry Steele, costume designer, June Kingsbury, scenic designer, Cara Schneider, wigs and makeup designer, Sondra Nottingham, prop master, Lucious Rhoads, production stage manager, Taylor Wood, technical director, Randy Williams, costume coordinator, Pam Lisenby, costume crew: Jayme Locke and Eleanna Flautt, wigs and makeup crew: Jennifer Ortiz, Alysia Faith and Tammy Potts-Merritt, supertitles operator, Anna Young.

Up next for Nashville Opera will be Madame Butterfly at TPAC’s Jackson Hall October 10-12 with tickets ranging in price from $26-$124. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. You can also find Nashville Opera on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Opera, Opera Review, Review Tagged With: 2019, Amy Tate Williams, Brent Hetherington, Brian Best, Brian Russell, Brooke Leigh Davis, Charles Edward Charlton, Chris Simonsen, Darius Thomas, Eric Pasto-Crosby, Galen Fott, Jarius Maples, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva, JENNY NORRIS, Jessie Neilson, John Hoomes, Luke Harnish, Mark Filorsa, MARTHA WILKINSON, Megan Murphy Chambers, Nashville, Nashville Opera, Noah Liff Opera Center, Patrick Thomas, Scott Rice, Shawn Knight, The Cradle Will Rock

RAPID FIRE 20 Q with playwright and cast of ‘Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One’; limited engagement Backstage at Chaffin’s Barn beginning Thursday, March 28

March 28, 2019 by Jonathan

Having garnered second place in Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s second annual Clash of the Playwrights competition, Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One will make its stage debut with a limited three-day engagement Backstage at The Barn beginning with a Thursday matinee March 28 at noon and two evening performances Friday and Saturday, March 29 and 30.

Written by Vanderbilt English Professor, Judy Klass, Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One tells the story of what happens when a nice Jewish man gets an emergency call from his retired parents in Florida urging him to come visit. Under the impression his trip is because of his father’s medical emergency, he soon discovers the family is plotting to fix him up with his niece’s nanny.

Earlier this week, as the playwright and cast prepared for their opening performance, I had the opportunity to chat with them about the play, family, dating and all things Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q.

—————————

RAPID FIRE WITH STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE PLAYWRIGHT, JUDY KLASS

JHP: What’s your play about?

JUDY KLASS: It’s about a family. It’s about how people you love drive you crazy, and it’s still worth putting up with it, and working through problems, because your time with them is precious. And it’s about how jokes, no matter how long and shaggy they are, can be a means of communication between people.

JHP: Your play is being presented this weekend Backstage at The Barn after having come in second at Chaffin’s playwright competition. How excited were you to learn your play had taken that prize?

JUDY KLASS: I was very excited. The play won the Dorothy Silver Award some years back, but it was never fully staged. Other plays of mine have gone up elsewhere, but I’ve never had a full-length play produced in Nashville before, though I’ve lived here thirteen years. So, to have this play produced at last, and to have that kind of recognition in the place where I live, is a wonderful thing. I’m happy that people I know here are coming to see it.

JHP: It’s often said that playwrights and fiction writers in general, draw inspiration from what they know…are these characters based on your own family, friends or acquaintances? If so…do they know?

JUDY KLASS: Yes, this play draws on aspects of my own family. My father, close to twenty years ago, told me a joke over the phone. I said: “That actually would work as the first scene of a play.” I got off the phone and imagined dramatizing the joke as a scene. It’s an old Jewish joke, and I imagined writing a comedy where characters would tell each other jokes, many of them old Jewish jokes, and that dramatized-joke-scene would kick things off. I figured I’d ask my father to write the play with me, or at least contribute the jokes I’d need along the way. Then, my father, Morton Klass, suddenly died in the spring of 2001. And I figured: that’s it, I can’t write that play. Forget the whole thing. Some months or a year later, I reconsidered. I felt that I should write the play, and quickly, while I still had so many jokes my father had told me in my head, and I could still hear his inflections — his way of telling them. So, that’s what I did, and in a sense, it’s still the kind of collaboration I hoped to have with him. And I tried to capture things that I liked about my family when I was growing up. It’s got a bit of the flavor of our household when people gathered for a holiday — a bit of us in our element, as a family. Some family members attended a reading of it in NYC.

JHP: I understand you visited Backstage at The Barn during rehearsal. Can you describe the feeling of seeing your characters in the flesh?

JUDY KLASS: It was wonderful to sit in on a rehearsal. Joy Tilley Perryman is doing a terrific job as director, and the whole cast is top-notch — it’s a professional production. The play has had five more or less staged readings — one at the Cleveland Playhouse when it won the Dorothy Silver Award, the reading in NYC, two in Florida and one in San Diego. But it was exciting to see actors really learning their parts, off book, with blocking, and to see this play receiving the care that goes into a full production, with actors playing moments again and again to get the humor and the serious aspects right. I feel very good about it going up at Chaffin’s Barn.

RAPID FIRE WITH STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE’s  AUSTIN OLIVE

JHP: You play Alan. How would you describe him?

AUSTIN OLIVE: Alan is definitely high strung. I think deep down he has a good heart. He just spends most of his time wrapped up in his own life and pursuits. He spends a lot of his time worrying about other people’s perception of him. He has found success in New York as a writer, but there is still a void in his life that leaves him deeply unhappy. He does love his family, but those feelings often manifest as sarcasm and combativeness.

JHP: A subplot of the show revolves around Alan being set up with a girl he doesn’t know. Have you ever been set up on a date?

AUSTIN OLIVE: Fortunately, I have managed to avoid being set up on a blind date with anyone so far. I tend to not like the feeling of not knowing or having control of my circumstances. I would like to keep my dating experience confined to people I have had the chance to meet and decide for myself whether or not I like them.

JHP: Speaking of your unexpected date…Cassie Donnegan is cast as Lisa, the aforementioned set up, who also happens to be your character’s nieces’ au pair. What’s Cassie like as a scene partner?

AUSTIN OLIVE: Cassie is a wonderful scene partner. We have done several shows together in the past couple of years. I always enjoy working with Cassie. It always helps to work with someone who you know well. There is a certain level of comfort that allows us to joke around and have fun while we’re working.

JHP: I understand Daniel Bissell and LaDarra Jackel are playing Alan’s somewhat stereotypical Jewish parents. What would be the best thing about having those two as parents in real life?

AUSTIN OLIVE: LaDarra and Daniel are two of the funniest people I know. I absolutely love working with them. They are certainly not old enough to be my parents in real life, but if they were, the best thing about having them as parents would be the warmth and support they both give to everyone. They are two of the most genuinely delightful people I have had the opportunity to work with.

RAPID FIRE WITH STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE’s LaDARRA JACKEL

JHP: Tell me about Ida.

LaDARRA JACKEL: She is loving, opinionated, and has a passion for life. Family is the most important thing to her and she is at her happiest when everyone is together.

JHP: One of the early plot points has Alan basically being tricked by his father to travel from New York to Florida. What’s the craziest thing family has ever convinced you to do?

LaDARRA JACKEL: I have some family that lives in Texas. When they moved into their house my Uncle asked us to come visit for our vacation. When we got there he put us to work and had us laying the sod in his yard. It was so hot that summer and we all still complain about it to this day.

JHP: Joy Tilley-Perryman is directing this show. What’s it like working with her as a director?

LaDARRA JACKEL: Joy is wonderful! She really has an eye for comedy and encouraged us to become a family unit organically.  I also appreciate that she is always respectful of our time and keeps us laughing daily.

JHP: Young Kylan Ritchie plays Ida’s granddaughter, Sandra. Knowing most of the cast myself, I’m just gonna ask…Have you guys warped her young innocent mind yet?

LaDARRA JACKEL: I hope not! Let’s be real though. She’s a teenager in a social media world. She has probably seen or heard worse.

RAPID FIRE WITH STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE’s, JENNY NORRIS

JHP: Who is Abbie?

JENNY NORRIS: Abbie is the daughter of Ida and Murray. She is opinionated and intelligent, but also kind hearted and family oriented. 

JHP: With this being the first full staging of the show. How much fun are you having creating this character?

JENNY NORRIS: Creating a character so the audience will say “ I know that person” is my favorite part of doing any show. So having the opportunity to do that with a brand new character is the most fulfilling creating process.   

JHP: When I chatted with Judy, the playwright, I asked her about dropping in on a rehearsal. What was it like having the person who wrote the lines you’re performing there during that stage of the production?

JENNY NORRIS: Ha! Well I could lie and say its no sweat but… 

JHP: What is it that keeps you coming back to The Barn show after show?

JENNY NORRIS: Well it helps that they keep offering. But, seriously, they believe in me and trust me and that means everything to me as an actor. Plus they are truly my family. Whether I’m in the show, waiting tables, or doing sales for the barn, coming to work is a joy bc I’m surrounded by people I love to be around and inspire me daily. Norma, Martha, Joy, Everett, Curtis, Miriam, Donnie*, the entire cast of this show, and so many others I’ve had the honor of being in- they are the smartest, funniest, most talented, kindest people I know, so surrounding myself with them is my privilege. 

*to expand upon Jenny’s response, Norma Luther is Chaffin’s current owner; Martha Wilkinson, the company’s Artistic Director; Joy Tilley Perryman, production manager, props mistress and this show’s director; Everett Tarlton, Chaffin’s social media coordinator, as well as frequent actor/director/choreographer; Curtis LeMoine, frequent Chaffin’s actors/choreographer; Miriam Creighton, the company’s costumer and Donnie Hall, Chaffin’s Director of Operations.

RAPID FIRE WITH STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE’s J. ROBERT LINDSEY

JHP: You’re cast as Howard. What’s the best way to describe him?

J. ROBERT LINDSEY: Howard is the son-in-law of this very close-knit family.  He is a bit dorky, but also very warm.  I’ve based my portrayal of him on my experiences of meeting past boyfriends’ families.  While Howard has had several years to get to know his wife’s parents and brother, there is still that bit of awkwardness and disconnectedness that comes along with not being on the “inside” of the family.

JHP: While this show has had a couple of staged readings, this marks its first full staging. What’s it like bringing a show to the stage for the first time?

J. ROBERT LINDSEY: I always enjoy originating a character and being part of the development of a piece.  It gives you freedom to create the character without a previous portrayal from which to draw.  While I enjoy playing iconic characters as well, there is often pressure to pay homage to prior performances.  With an original show, you get to be much freer during the whole process.

JHP: Within the show, you’re married to Jenny’s character, Abbie. Jenny is one of my ‘theatre crushes’. What’s something about Jenny as an actor that your admire?

J. ROBERT LINDSEY: Jenny has become one of my “theatre crushes” as well!  I have thoroughly enjoyed playing her stage husband.  One of the things I admire about Jenny is her ability to completely transform into the character she is portraying.  Not only does that make her performance authentic, she is also able to build extremely believable on-stage relationships with the other characters.  I also love that we try to make each other laugh with our husband and wife ad libs.

JHP: If there’s a lesson to be learned from Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One, what would it be?

J. ROBERT LINDSEY: The lesson in this show is that you’ve got to be yourself – no matter what.  There is also a message of accepting and loving others for who they are – no matter what.  At the heart of this play is a family that really loves each other, and that has been something really fun to portray.

——————————

Austin Olive (foreground) receives a phone call from parents LaDarra Jackel and J. Robert Lindsey (background left to right) in playwright Judy Klass’ ‘Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One’, Backstage at The Barn Thursday, March 28-Saturday, March 30.

As I prepared to post this Rapid Fire 20 Q, I learned that both Friday and Saturday evening’s performances have SOLD OUT! There are a selection of tickets available for Thursday’s matinee. Backstage at the Barn offers two ticket options. Show Only tickets are $19 while their Show and Box Lunch option is $27.50. If you are looking for some midday laughs, get your weekend started early and CLICK HERE or call 615.646.9977 to purchase tickets.

Following this premiere production of Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One, Chaffin’s will be bringing back last year’s Clash of the Playwrights winner, Ollie’s Diner by Ron Osbourne. Having initially had its limited debut run Backstage at the Barn, when the show returns for a full run this season from October 17 to November 2, it will be presented on Chaffin’s Main Stage. Call 615.646.9977 for tickets or more information.

To learn more about Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One playwright, Judy Klass, CLICK HERE. For more about Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre, CLICK HERE 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: Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Austin Olive, Backstage at The Barn, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Comedy, Interview, J. Robert Lindsey, JENNY NORRIS, Judy Klass, LaDarra Jackel, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Premiere, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Stop Me If You've Heard This One, Theatre

With a newly remodeled facility and a remounting of last year’s heavenly production of ‘Sister Act: The Musical’, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre is a hard habit to break

August 9, 2018 by Jonathan

(l to r) Martha Wilkinson, Vicki White and Meggan Utech are back in the habit in a reworked production of “Sister Act: The Musical” onstage at a renovated Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre now thru August 25 (photo courtesy Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre)

———-

UPDATE: Last week, when this preview was first published, Chaffin’s had announced a Back to School BOGO special, unfortunately a power outage in the area prevented that from taking place. Just this morning—via email blast to patrons and supporters—another Buy One Get One Special was announced for their 7:30 p.m. Thursday, August 16 performance. The first 30 patrons to call Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s reservation line (listed above) and mention the PROMO CODE: THIRTY can take advantage of this one-night-only BOGO Special for dinner and the show.

———-

Back in February, following a successful run of Disney’s Freaky Friday, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre temporarily closed up shop of some much-needed renovations to the half-century old facility. Just last weekend, the wait was over as Chaffin’s reopened to continue their 52nd Season with a re-staging of last year’s hugely popular production of Sister Act: The Musical. “We wanted to revive the show because people loved it so last year, and because we were sold out, some missed it,” said Chaffin’s Artistic Director, Martha Wilkinson. “It’s a great show to reopen with after renovations because the show is all about redevelopment, change, growth and love,” she continued.

Back in the habit for Chaffin’s rechristening is Meggan Utech as Deloris Van Cartier, the night club singer, who, after ratting out her gangster boyfriend for popping a cap in a street thug, is forced to go into witness protection as a nun.

Wilkinson also returns to her role as the no-nonsense Mother Superior who’s constantly butting heads with her new undercover charge. Longtime patrons of Chaffin’s no doubt recognize Wilkinson, who’s been a venerable part of The Barn family for three decades. In addition to being Chaffin’s Artistic Director, and co-starring as Mother Superior, Wilkinson is also at the helm of this production of Sister Act as the show’s director. Everett Tarlton is the show’s choreographer and returning once again as musical director for Sister Act is Kelsi Fulton.

Among those returning to the flock on-stage are: Devin Bowles as Curtis, Deloris’ aforementioned murderous beau, Gerold Oliver & Curtis Reed as Curtis’ bumbling henchmen, TJ and Joey, Vicki White as Sister Mary Lazarus, Jenny Norris as Michelle, David Arnold as the Monsignor and Braden Wahl as Ernie.

Of this iteration of Sister Act, Wilkinson exclaimed, “We’re having a blast!.” As for additions to the fold, Wilkinson continued, “There are some new cast members who are rocking it. Maggie Richardson as Sister Mary Robert is off the chain. Fantastic voice and energy, and she’s adorable.”

Other additions to the cast include: Megan Roberts as Sister Mary Patrick, Hallie Long as Sister Mary Bernice, Ang Madaline-Johnson as Sister Mary Martin of Tours, Jenny Wallace as Sister Mary Teresa, Everett Tarlton as Pablo, David Ridley as Sweaty Eddie, Christina Candilora as Tina and ensemble member, Andrew Neal.

A true testament to Chaffin’s storied history with Nashville Theatre, during opening weekend of Sister Act, there were Sold Out performances, with several upcoming performances already selling out as well. Of the reinvigorated interest in Chaffin’s and their newly remodeled facility, Wilkinson said, “We’re so very excited to continue the legacy!”

With that enthusiasm, there’s no doubt Sister Act is divine proof that Chaffin’s is back in the habit. Sister Act continues its run with performances through Saturday, August 25. Each week features Thursday matinee performances at noon (doors open at 11 a.m. with a Box Lunch option), Thursday-Saturday evening performances are at 7:30 p.m. (doors open at 5:30 for dinner service until 7 p.m.). There are also select Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. (doors at noon, with lunch service until 1:30 p.m. Thursday matinee tickets are $28.50 with Box Lunch ($20 Show Only). Evening and Sunday tickets are $62 ($37 Show Only and $18 for Children 12 and under ). Chaffin’s also offers a Small Plate a la carte menu option with separate pricing per item. Group Rates are also available. CLICK HERE or call the box office at 1-800-282-2276 for tickets or more details.

Following Sister Act’s run through August 25, Chaffin’s will present Disney’s Newsies onstage September 20-October 27. CLICK HERE for tickets, as this one’s sure to be another popular show for Chaffin’s. 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: Entertainment, Theare Tagged With: Alan Menken, CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, CURTIS REED, DAVID ARNOLD, EVERETT TARLETON, GLENN SLATER, JENNY NORRIS, JOSEPH HOWARD, MAGGIE SMITH, MARTHA WILKINSON, MEGGAN UTECH, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Theatre, WHOOPI GOLDBERG

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