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Nashville Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast and director of Nashville Rep’s ‘The Color Purple’ onstage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre April 5-14

April 5, 2024 by Jonathan

Last year when Nashville Repertory Theatre announced that The Color Purple would be part of their 2023-2024 Season, Alice Walker’s original source material being not only one of my absolute favorite books, but also completely being mesmerized and touched each time I’ve seen the original Steven Spielberg film adaptation and the incredibly moving Tony-winning stage musical, I knew I’d have to chat with members of their cast and crew for one of my Rapid Fire 20Q interview features. When I learned that their entire cast was comprised of some of my theatre crushes, plus a handful of new (to me) but equally gifted performers, I had a difficult time of narrowing down who I wanted to chat with. Then I got to thinking…what would Shug Avery do? Lemme tell you. She’d have them all, so that’s exactly what I did.

Instead of my usual posing of 20 questions amongst four company members, I decided to give Nashville Rep’s The Color Purple the royal treatment it deserves. To that end, as the cast and crew ready to open the show at TPAC’s Polk Theatre for performances Friday, April 5 thru Sunday, April 14, please enjoy the first of TWO Rapid Fire 20Qs!

First up, I’m chatting with The Color Purple’s director, Reggie Law as well as Carli Hardon (Celie), Tamica Nicole (Shug) and  Maya Riley (Nettie), then CLICK HERE to check out my interview with The Color Purple’s Shinnerrie Jackson (Sofia), Elliott Winston Robinson (Mister), Raven Buntyn (Squeak) and Gerold Oliver (Harpo).

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF NASHVILLE REP’S THE COLOR PURPLE (1 of 2)

RAPID FIRE WITH THE COLOR PURPLE’s DIRECTOR, REGGIE LAW

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While directing The Color Purple marks your Nashville Rep debut, you have a lengthy background in the performing arts, most notably as Executive Artistic Director at Oak Ridge Playhouse. I’m guessing East Tennessee is what connects you to Nashville Rep’s Artistic Director, Micah-Shane Brewer. How long have you known Micah Shane and how did directing The Color Purple come about?

REGGIE LAW: I have know Micah-Shane since about 2008 or 2009. We were both Artistic Directors for small East Tennessee theatre companies. We often attended each others productions but had not worked together until now. 

Micah-Shane approached me about directing the show and I said yes without even thinking.  Then had to see if my schedule would even allow it. Luckily the rehearsal period and opening fell at just the right time. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand you didn’t initially set out to have a career in the theatre, first studying architecture at UTKnoxville?

REGGIE LAW: Boy, you have done your research! How did you know that?  Yes, I came to the state of Tennessee because I had been accepted into the school of Architecture at UT-Knoxville. I had an advisor who had grown up in New York, going to Broadway shows. We used to sit in his office for hours talking about theatre. He made me realize I loved it more than architecture. I had to have the difficult conversation with my mother that was changing from a reliable major to one with little to no job security.  But she was, and still remains, very supportive. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How has your background and interest in architecture aided you as a director?

REGGIE LAW: When I left architecture I made the most common sense transition into set design and had planned to become a set and costume designer. But eventually that shifted to stage management and ultimately directing.  I guess the biggest benefit is that architecture trains you to think about systems and planning while exploring creativity.  I think it has allowed me to “speak the language” when collaborating with designers. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Anyone who reads my Rapid Fire interviews with any regularity knows I love to include a little six degrees of separation whenever I can. We have a mutual acquaintance in Dolly Parton’s Creative Director, Steve Sommers, you yourself having served as Assistant Creative Director for Dollywood Entertainment. What’s a favorite memory of your time at Dollywood?

REGGIE LAW: Steve is a great. I am so happy for his success. He was one of the most popular singer/dancers at the park while I was there. I started as a stage manager and ended up being an assistant and right hand to Michael Padgett who was creative director at the time, directing some of the productions and some writing of shows.

One of my favorite memories was when i was a stage manager. Dolly made a special appearance and was on a balcony taking to a crowd. It was so windy I had to hold on you her to help her keep her balance. But remain hidden the whole time. I was virtually lying face down while holding the hem of her skirt. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences remember most after seeing Nashville Rep’s The Color Purple?

REGGIE LAW: I want people to leave with the thought that with clarity and goodness, we can overcome anything.  

RAPID FIRE WITH THE COLOR PURPLE’s CELIE, CARLI HARDON

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re playing Celie. I can’t imagine anyone not being familiar with The Color Purple, but just in case…who is Celie to you?

CARLI HARDON: Celie is a who goes through so many trials and tribulations and is able to find her voice, strength and power through the women she meets in her life. But she is more than that. She is also deeply loving and able to find faith through the people she meets. She is a survivor. She is highly intelligent both mentally and emotionally. She is a talented seamstress, incredibly loyal, and I think she loves to laugh. Even if the forces in her life make it difficult to do so.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Nashville Rep audiences will no doubt recognize you having previous appeared in as Joanne in Rent and as Mercy in their production of School Girls; Or the African Mean Girls Play. Have you discovered any similarities between Celie, Joanne and Mercy or are they truly unique in their individuality?

CARLI HARDON: That’s a really cool question! I think there are similarities in all 3 characters. For each one there is a level of insecurity they face as they move through the world as black women. For Mercy, it is her skin tone and hair while for Joanne there is this need to be successful and striving. Celie’s is in her worth and beauty in this world. When I play roles, I try to find similarities in my life so as to bring as much honesty to the characters as possible. These attributes may not be inherent in each character but they were things I found that helped me ground myself in the characters. 

Another thing they all have in common is their capacity and desire to love and be loved. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What keeps you coming back to Nashville Rep?

CARLI HARDON: The people. Every show I have worked on has been full of supportive, kind hearted, creative people who will build you up and make you feel limitless. From the administration to the cast to the costume shop to Cece DeCorte and everywhere in between, these people are all-stars.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The role of Celie has been played by some of the most legendary actresses including my friend LaChanze, as well as Whoopi Goldberg, Fantasia Barrino and Cynthia Erivo. What’s it like to join this iconic group of women?

CARLI HARDON: Woof. Ya know? Honored doesn’t really capture how I feel. It crazy because each of those women shaped my early life in different ways. LaChanze has been one of my role models from a very early age and made me believe I could also blaze a trail in this field as a dark skinned black woman. Whoopi Goldberg is a woman who finds a way to be effortlessly hilarious and switch to being so authentically moving in drama. Fantasia Barrino is a vocal powerhouse who sings from the very depths of her soul and takes each and every one of us on a journey with her as she does so. And Cynthia Erivo? I saw her play this role on Broadway and it was the only time I have ever seen a show come to a full stop for a standing ovation. She is so phenomenal and a dazzling force this world will not easily forget. My goodness these women are goddesses and I am so incredibly grateful to have had them as my guides throughout my life. I’d love to say that I have joined their group but I feel like I have so much more to learn before I’m even close. My only wish is to take what I have learned from them and let it continue to guide me on my journey. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Celie, you get to perform some of the most gorgeous songs, not just in this show, but to my estimation, in all of modern musical theatre. Who are the musical director and choreographer for Nashville Rep’s The Color Purple and what have rehearsals been like?

CARLI HARDON: Our marvelous musical director is Dion Treece and our tremendous choreographer is Joi Ware. Rehearsals have truly been a collaborative process. 

Dion, truly feels the soul of the music and allows the freedom of your expression to help motivate how the music flows. He has this way of seeing the music and coloring it in such a creative and  beautiful way. Not only that, he is one of the BEST cheerleaders in the world. He encouraged me to feel what the moments call for and then takes those same moments to a whole new level based off of what he sees and feels from me.

Joi is truly a wonder to work with. She is able to see what is already being brought to the table and finesse it to being a stunning work of art. From the incredible dance numbers to small moments in scenes that make all the difference in further expanding the world that we are in. She has such a stunning eye for detail. She is such a skilled teacher. She will continue to find ways to help with getting concepts or movement until one sticks. 

Working with both of these titans (go football) has been such a pleasure.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE COLOR PURPLE’s SHUG AVERY, TAMICA NICOLE 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Shug Avery…Shug Avery! Dang, do I love that character! How much fun are you having playing her?

TAMICA NICOLE: I am having the most amazing time playing Shug Avery. She represents many aspects I see in myself, such as self-determination, self-love, and free spiritedness. She also represents things that one may not want to associate with, such as selfishness and arrogance. What I love about her character, be it positive or negative attributes, she allows the audience,

as well as the actress to embody what it means to be human; not perfect, but real, relatable, aiming towards being a better person.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In the 1985 film, when asked where her much younger male companion is, Shug slyly grins and says, “He went to college”. It’s been a while since I’ve seen the musical, but I can’t recall if that line made it into the stage adaptation. Nonetheless, the show is full of quick quips. Do you have a favorite line, yours or someone else’s, that makes you giggle every time you hear it?

TAMICA NICOLE: My favorite line/scene is when Shug is trying on a pair of Miss Celie’s pants, overhearing a phone conversation of which Celie is being told her Pa died and left her the store and house he owned. She finds out the man she thought was her Pa was actually her step-Pa, who had been raping her from the time she was 12 in that house. Because of this, Celie did not want the house. Shug cannot believe what she is hearing. She feels Celie should be happy her step-Pa is dead, and her real Pa left her everything. The sassy Shug snaps at Celie and says, “What you talkin’ bout you don’t want a house? Your real Daddy left it for you. That dog of a step-Pa just a bad odor passing through. Gimme that.” (Shug snatches the phone from Celie and says), “Celie want that house. And the store too! And she comin’ home tomorrow to sign the papers. (Shug hangs up the phone and says to Celie) Come on. Get Packed. You get there in time, you can make it to the funeral. Maybe you like him better dead!” This scene cracks me up, and the audience laughs every time they hear it. Shugs no-nonsense attitude towards Celie is so funny. She practically tells her what she is going to do. And the last line, about liking her step-Pa better dead, followed with my sinister laugh, makes for a great chuckle moment.    

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You, like myself, are a Nashville native…we’re rare unicorns, you and I. People love to grumble about ‘New Nashville’, but what I want to know is…what’s your favorite aspect of the changes you’ve seen in your hometown in recent years?

TAMICA NICOLE: I LOOOOOOOVE my city! Nashville is one of a kind. It has that good old home feel about it. I particularly love the growth in population. Now, I know some may think I’m strange for saying that, as I’ve heard many say the opposite. Let me explain. I believe growth indicates life, evolution, progression, and transformation. When things are stagnant they become lifeless, stale, dead. Growth is part of being a living, breathing organism in the world we live in. We must learn to embrace it, as we have been equipped as human beings with a natural, innate intelligence to adapt to new situations. So, I welcome growth in my life, in Nashville, in population, new experiences, love, opportunities, good health, in my bank account lol, etc.    

JHPENTERTAINMENT: It would seem you’ve fully embraced Nashville’s Music City moniker, considering you’re a singer/songwriter, an artist with Nashville Opera and a member of the W. Crimm Singers, TSU’s Big Blue Opera Initiatives’ ensemble in residence. How vital is it to you to showcase the fact that Nashville being referred to as Music City reaches far beyond country and Americana music?

TAMICA NICOLE: Well, I would have to say I go through life relying on a phrase I heard some time ago, “life takes care of life.” All things are life, including the music we create. For me, I feel things happen in perfect timing. Regardless of the style and genre of the creative works, I think music gets to the listeners in a naturally, perfected way. Through the many avenues of technology music is able to be received all over the world. Music City, in my opinion, is more and more being known for the diversity in music from its creators. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Shug, you no doubt get to wear some fabulous wardrobe pieces. Who’s the show’s costumer and do you have a favorite Shug look?

TAMICA NICOLE: The costume designer is Nia Safarr Banks. She is amazing! Her concepts and ideas for how to portray each character are so detailed and precise. My favorite Shug piece is the costume for Push the Button. It is the dress she wears at the juke joint. The colors are so vibrant and beautiful. The dress makes me feel sexy, yet it’s tasteful. Shug has style honey! Lol! And let’s not forget about the head piece Nia designed for this look. It is simply stunning.

I won’t give away too many details. The people will have to come to the show to see it. But I will say it truly is a statement look, and I am definitely going to give a Shug Avery kind of performance in it! Hope to see you there!

RAPID FIRE WITH THE COLOR PURPLE’s NETTIE, MAYA RILEY

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The last few years continue to be MAYA’S YEARS…how many show’s have you been involved in since returning to Nashville and how much are you loving this time in your life?

MAYA ANTOINETTE RILEY: Haha yes! Performing for my Nashville theatre family is my favorite thing, and I’ve had the privilege to work with all the professional theatre companies that I admired growing up. I’ve done around 10 shows (a mix of full productions and staged readings) with Nashville Repertory Theatre, Studio Tenn, Nashville Shakespeare Festival, Nashville Children’s Theatre, and I most recently did a cabaret with Street Theatre Company. I’m having a great time sharing amazing stories with the community that raised me, and I’m so excited for what’s to come!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How would you describe Nettie?

MAYA ANTOINETTE RILEY: Nettie is a vivacious and bright person. She’s deeply curious about the world, and has been afforded the opportunity to go to school and pursue education. Mostly due to Celie’s protection and sacrifices. I think Nettie serves as a pillar of faith for Celie throughout the show. When Nettie is gone, hope seems lost. When her letters are found, hope is renewed. She is sunlight on a stormy day. And a righteous, upstanding, educated woman. Which of course, in the world of The Color Purple, could be seen as very threatening. But she remains hopeful, optimistic and brave despite this.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Some of the show’s most beautiful moment typically involve the reading of Nettie’s letters. To that end, who’s the show’s set designer and is there a particular moment audiences should look forward to involving the set, whether one including Nettie or another moment you witness from the wings?

MAYA ANTOINETTE RILEY: Our fabulous set designer is Joonhee Park! She’s worked with the Rep before. Actually, I had the pleasure of working with her on The Cake in 2022. The set immediately immerses the audience in a rustic, grounded experience. I think the most unique aspect of the set for this production is the spareness. It forces the audience to really engage with the subject matter of the story. No frills, no distractions. Just the bones – reckoning with the full weight of the story. And what’s great about that for an actor is that it really gives you the opportunity to imagine these spaces/places and rely on your senses and emotional instincts to breathe the world to life.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of Nettie’s letters. You, yourself are a writer, having shared some of your poetry during your recent cabaret performance. Have you been working on any new material lately and when can we expect to see or hear more from you?

MAYA ANTOINETTE RILEY: Yes! I’m trying to practice writing at least 3 times a week. I have plans to publish some of my poems, so I’ll be submitting those to literary magazines and things in the next couple months. And I’ve been doing a lot of dramatic writing as well. I hope to have a reading later this summer for a project I’ve been working on. I want to hear it aloud to help me continue editing it. Hopefully, you’ll see some of my written work onstage or on screen somewhere soon!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What themes explored within The Color Purple do you think audiences will contemplate long after the final curtain call?

MAYA ANTOINETTE RILEY: Some of the biggest themes of The Color Purple are resilience, spirituality and love. Alice Walker has spoken in interviews and writings about Celie’s journey with faith. Not in the sense of religion, but the unnamable sense of a higher power, a higher meaning. I hope that people leave feeling empowered by Celie’s resilience and revelations. Empowered to have highs and lows, to live the full range of the human experience, to make mistakes, and love themselves throughout all that. Empowered to discover their own greatness and the sanctity of all people and things around them.

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Nashville Rep’s The Color Purple opens at TPAC’s Polk Theatre Friday, April 5. CLICK HERE for tickets. The beloved musical based on Alice Walker’s classic novel will run April 5-14.  In the meantime, check out Nashville Rep online and follow them on Facebook, X, YouTube and Instagram.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter. Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Interview, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, The Color Purple

Rapid Fire 20Q with Director and Cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘Indecent’; onstage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre February 2-11

February 2, 2024 by Jonathan

I love it when our local theatre companies take risks and present something other than the expected. With Nashville Repertory Theatre’s production of Paul Vogel’s Indecent, at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre February 2-11, they’re taking just such a risk. Vogel’s Indecent first debuted in winter of 2015 as a co-production between Yale Repertory Theatre and La Jolla Playhouse before opening Off-Broadway in 2016 and eventually playing Broadway in 2017. Examining the true story of the brief 1923 two-week Broadway run of playwright Sholem Asch’s The God of Vengeance, Indecent delves into the controversies surround The God of Vengeance, including the fact that the entire cast, the producer and the theatre owner all eventually faced prosecution for violating obscenity laws. I’ll save more on that for my review after I attend an opening weened performance.

For now, what follows are my conversations with Indecent’s current director and members of Nashville Rep’s cast for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q. First up is Nashville Rep Artistic Director, Micah-Shane Brewer who’s at the helm of this production, then it’s on to my chats with cast members Thomas DeMarcus, Sarah Aili and Eric Sorrels.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF NASHVILLE REP’S INDECENT

RAPID FIRE WITH INDECENT DIRECTOR, MICAH-SHANE BREWER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As I mention in my intro, one thing I love about Nashville Repertory Theatre is you guys aren’t afraid to mix it up and present shows your audiences may never have had the chance to see. Indecent, on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre February 2-11, is a perfect example. How did Indecent come to be selected as part of the current season? 

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: I saw the Broadway production of Indecent about 7 years ago. I went in not really knowing anything about the play. I left the theatre in awe of the experience I had received. It blended so many theatrical conventions into one – the style of storytelling and the passage of time, the music, the ensemble work, the stagecraft. It was compelling, moving and beyond anything I had witnessed in the theatre. I thought about the play for days. 

A couple of years ago, we were discussing plays and Indecent came up as an option. Last year, as we were finalizing decisions for this season, I picked it back up and read through it again. I was struck at how timely it is. Here we are today fighting the same battles as the characters are in this play: censorship, antisemitism, gay rights, women’s rights. We’re in the midst of so much strife in our country, and the voices of hate have been given a larger and louder platform over the last few years. We’re seeing history repeat itself in so many ways, and sometimes, it feels like we’re going backwards as a society. It felt right and it felt like it was time for us to tell this story. But it did (and does) scare me – in all the good ways a challenging piece of theatre should. It’s not easy, and there are so many moving parts to this production. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A bit of a follow-up…as Nashville Rep’s Artistic Director, do you automatically get first choice of the show’s you direct each season, or is there a process followed by eligible candidates interested in directing?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: I suppose the answer to this question is yes; however, I give a great deal of thought to the needs of each production, especially for directors. For example, it was important to me to have female directors for both 9 to 5 and POTUS. It was very important to have a black director for The Color Purple. The programming of the season ALWAYS comes first, and then directors are chosen after. I chose to direct Indecent because this story and subject matter mean a great deal to me.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I first heard Nashville Rep was presenting Indecent, I gotta be honest. I knew next to nothing about the show. Researching to chat with you and some of your cast, I’ve learned a bit, but for those unfamiliar, can you tell me what it’s about?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: Indecent is based on actual events. The play follows a troupe of Jewish artists who risked their lives to perform a work deemed “indecent.” It’s the story of Sholem Asch, a Jewish playwright, who, in 1906, wrote a play called The God of Vengeance. It was produced in Yiddish and had successful productions all over Europe. In 1922, there was a production on the Lower East Side in New York City and it was translated into English. The show then transferred to the Apollo Theatre on Broadway in 1923. It was promptly shut down and the cast and producer were arrested for obscenity and put on trial. Indecent is a love letter to the power of theatre, a cautionary tale of the consequences of censorship, and a reminder that love always triumphs over hate.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Representation matters. It’s a phrase…and practice… you hear more and more as people become increasingly aware of sensitivity towards others. To that end, as the director was there concern that certain stereotypes, whether in speech or mannerism be avoided? Did the cast work with a dialect coach or a Yiddish consultant in an effort to represent the Jewish characters as authentically as possible? 

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: Of course, representation does matter, and it’s important that all of us do the work to be authentic, truthful storytellers. The actors play a wide range of characters and use varying types of dialects and accents throughout the play. Although some of the characters are Yiddish, the majority of the time they are speaking in English. There are some Yiddish phrases and songs used throughout. Luckily, we’ve had a great team to give assistance to our actors. Nettie Craft is our Dialect and Voice coach and has been doing excellent work with each cast member crafting the correct sounds of each dialect. There’s a lot of technique when it comes to dialect and accents, and it takes a good ear, understanding of the vocal instrument and placement, and repetition for each actor to achieve the muscle memory of creating the exact sounds that are unique and authentic. We’ve also had the good fortune of having Howard Snyder as our dramaturg. Howard has been invaluable to this process by providing excellent research for so many areas of our production. Whenever you’re working with a story based on real people and events, it’s imperative to understand the historical context of the culture and the people you’re representing. Indecent spans almost 50 years, so there’s a lot to unpack: world events, Jewish culture, the political and social implications of the times, theatre history. Being a theatre artist means being an excavator; you have to dig for the details. You have to be a lover of learning. This cast has put in the time and attention to understanding and honoring every person, culture and moment in this story. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What about casting Jewish actors? Was there a consciences effort to include Jewish actors among the cast of Indecent? 

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: The goal was to have as many Jewish actors as possible. Part of the callback process is getting to know more about the actors and their background and connection to the material. Some of our actors are Jewish, and some descend from Jewish (and even Yiddish) cultures. On the first day of rehearsal, we had a lot of time to share about our history and backgrounds, and I was very moved at some of the personal stories shared. Some spoke of their grandparents and family members who immigrated to the United States. One of cast members shared that their grandmother was turned away at Ellis Island and had to return. Another cast member’s father grew up speaking Yiddish and provided assistance to the actor. 

As a director, I’ve always said that the biggest success of a show is its casting, and sometimes you just know when you see the actor who’s right for a certain role, and we struck a wonderful balance of actors for this production. This ensemble is one of the most thoughtful, caring, hard working, respectful, talented ensembles I’ve had the pleasure to work with. A lot of care has been given to the work throughout this process. Everyone holds this story close to their hearts. We honor the ones who are represented in this play who sacrificed their work, their reputations and even their lives. What’s great about the casting is that I feel everyone in this ensemble was MEANT to be in this cast; it was somewhat serendipitous how this casting came together so perfectly. I’m a lucky guy to be working with such a fantastic team.  

RAPID FIRE WITH INDECENT’s THOMAS DeMARCUS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Last time we chatted you were appearing as Mrs. Trunchbull in a local production of Matilda back in 2019. You’ve appeared in a number of productions since, and now you’re about to take the stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre as Lemml, The Stage Manager in Nashville Rep’s Indecent. What can you tell me about Lemml?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: Oh, sweet sweet Agatha Trunchbull…you are about as far away from Lemml as one can get! I’m so thrilled to make my Nashville Rep debut with Indecent! There are many real people referenced in the play but Lemml is a fictional creation of the genius of playwright Paula Vogel. This play begs for the intimacy that the Johnson Theatre can provide. Lemml is a tailor from a small village who happens to attend the first reading of The God of Vengeance with his cousin and it will change the entire course of his life. He believes in the play. He wants to see it thrive. He tackles the role of stage manager with the utmost respect and reverence. He comes through Ellis Island with a dream like so many others. Lemml personifies hope.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Indecent touches on so many themes of injustice, acceptance and equality that are as relevant today as they were when The God of Vengeance, the play within the play was first written in 1906, then later mounted on Broadway in 1923. Here we are 100 years later and this play is still frequently described as ‘controversial’. What’s so controversial about equality?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: It has long been confusing to me that when underserved groups ask for equal rights, that the message twists into a loss of rights for others. That the balance of freedom for all has to come at a cost of losing the freedoms for some. It is never about having more rights than you, but having the same as you. The controversy, to some extent, must be that people hate the idea of losing their foothold on power and control. If one group can use the water fountain while another group can’t, and then one day everyone can use the water fountain, what has the first group truly lost? It doesn’t feel controversial, and yet oppression and suppression still linger.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I noticed on Nashville Rep’s socials where they intro the cast, you cite that this performance is dedicated to your son, Leo. How important is it that audiences truly take in the messages presented in Indecent?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: I think it’s always noteworthy to self-evaluate how you might respond in a crisis or when your back is up against the wall, but perhaps it’s more important to evaluate your behavior when the thing fighting for its life is someone else, or some group, or some cause. How do you respond then? Indifference? Ignorance? Assistance? I want my son to grow up in a fair and loving household and I want that extended to a fair and loving world. To teach him right and wrong and to know how to use his voice but also his eyes and ears. I say this with no hyperbole, Leo is the greatest human who has ever lived, but I want the audience to fight for him just as hard as he will fight for them.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What aspect of Lemml and his circumstances has been most challenging/gratifying to play? 

THOMAS DeMARCUS: After nearly 30 years of acting, I finally get to play a narrator! This show spans multiple countries, languages, and time periods so the challenge with Lemml is that he’s the audience’s through-line for the entire show. He introduces the troupe and he’s with the show all over Europe and when it comes to New York. Lemml is solid in his beliefs. He’s certainly naive and innocent when we first meet Lemml, but as the world around him consistently disappoints, he’s tasked with finding these fleeting pockets of hope. The gratifying part is I only have to play Lemml, while the rest of the cast has to switch characters multiple times. Thank goodness they are talented!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This may seem an obvious question, but what is it about a 2015 play examining the circumstances surrounding a 1923 play that will pique audiences’ interest?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: There are two lines in the show where the audience can easily draw a connection to today: “it won’t happen here” and “these things happen”. In the play, they refer to anti-Semitism but isn’t this the same back and forth with gun-control debates? with hate-crimes? with domestic terror? with natural disasters? We have a tendency to assume that a nightmare cannot happen to us in our own community. Then it happens and we shrug our shoulders when the people in power fail to protect us. This play is telling you to not just fight for what you believe, but to defend those that cannot always fight back.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Indecent, not only examines the controversies of The God of Vengeance, but the closeness of community. I frequently ask actors I’m interviewing to speak of the community of actors as it relates to their current show. Do you feel a closeness to those you’re sharing the stage with?

THOMAS DeMARCUS: I have been extremely impressed by Nashville Rep‘s professionalism throughout this rehearsal process. Not just the immediate company, but this extends to our brilliant designers, our hard-working crew, and to our very thoughtful dialect coach and our very thorough dramaturg. Our director, Micah-Shane Brewer comes to each rehearsal with new ideas and new questions for us to ponder. I’ve known him for 12 years and it has been an honor to work with him on Indecent. It feels like everyone is taking this material with the seriousness that it deserves and we all want to make an important show. I’d like to believe that Nashville’s theatre community is loving and supportive, and this group has not changed that opinion. I have worked with only one member of this company before (Garris Wimmer; Spamalot; Studio Tenn; 2017) but I’d heard of so many others. And I would get texts from friends saying “oh you will LOVE Rona Carter” or “so many great people in this company!” and yes…they’re right. This show demands an ensemble that is on the same page, and thankfully that’s what this show has!

RAPID FIRE WITH INDECENT’s SARAH AILI

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A quick look at Indecent’s character list reveals you play Halina, among others. Can you speak a little about the process of creating differentiality between the roles you’re presenting in a single work?

SARAH AILI: Yes! Apart from portraying Halina in “The Middle,” I also take on roles like Manke, Immigrant, Freida, Dorothee Nelson/Dine, Dr. Hornig, and one of the Bagelman Sisters. Playing these characters consecutively provides a profound lesson in staying completely present. Once the initial challenge of getting my lines, blocking, choreo, quick change moments etc… right, immersing myself in the storyline becomes more seamless. In terms of character development, I prefer starting with physicality, tone, and melody. Exploring how my characters walk, move, shape vowels, hold themselves etc…leads to discovering the character’s essence. It’s akin to slipping in and out of a well-fitted coat. Making specific choices helps me swiftly embody these characters, crucial in a fast-paced show like this!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If memory serves, the last time I saw you onstage at Nashville Rep was their 2018 production of Avenue Q. There’s been a few chances in staff at Nashville Rep since your last involvement. Are you enjoying being back and working with the current staff and creatives?

SARAH AILI: Oh yes, VERY much! Every experience I’ve had with Nashville Rep has been stellar. I adore Micah-Shane Brewer, working with him has been a true delight! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Halina, the primary character you play in Indecent?

SARAH AILI: Halina, a woman in the prime of her life, a woman who has been through love and loss, pain and celebration, embraces the opportunity to portray compelling and juicy roles in Indecent. Immersed in playing a female character with tenacity in her soul, the experience of bringing her to life is genuinely fulfilling for me!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While Indecent isn’t a musical, it incorporates music, dance and song as part of the full experiences. What’s the typical rehearsal schedule like incorporating all those elements?

SARAH AILI: From the initial rehearsal day of Indecent, our musicians have been integral members of the troupe, seated at the table with us. The seamless intertwining of music and dialogue is paramount to the poignant essence of the show. Without this precise harmony between story and song, I couldn’t envision Indecent coming to life in such a profound way. Our synchronization with the music is in perfect rhythm, and the music effortlessly aligns with the scenes in every instance.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Without revealing too much, do you have a favorite moment in the show? 

SARAH AILI: The entire show captivates me – its fluid movement, effortless exploration of profound depths, and the inherent ease and beauty it carries. The ensemble, a vital part of the narrative, is what I cherish the most. Sharing the stage with this group of immensely passionate and talented performers is my favorite aspect.

RAPID FIRE WITH INDECENT‘s ERIC SORRELS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I spoke with your cast mate, Thomas DeMarcus earlier, he revealed that Indecent will be his first Nashville Rep show. I understand it also marks your debut with the company. What’s the experience been like thus far?

ERIC SORRELS: It continues to be a wonderful experience. I grew up outside of Nashville in Lebanon, so being here feels a little bit like a homecoming. It’s also been a reunion with Micah-Shane Brewer, with whom I shared the stage in Knoxville several times at the Clarence Brown Theatre. In my experience, the way a particular theatre company feels hinges on the leadership of the director. From day one with Indecent, Micah-Shane fostered a room that allowed us to bond as an ensemble, put us all on the same foot as equals, and motivated me to bring my very best self to rehearsal each day. The only issue with the rehearsal process was that insane arctic weather we had for about a week. But even then, that was just a chance for me to see how dedicated Nashville Rep is to its people; Micah-Shane and our stage manager Isaac Krispin would go out of their way to pick up actors on the way to rehearsal to ensure everybody could make it there safely. Needless to say, I’d come back to work with Nashville Rep anytime they’ll have me.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While it may be your Nashville Rep debut, you’ve got quite the career resume. Your credits reveal you were among the cast of North Carolina Theatre’s production of Beautiful: The Carole King Musical where you were not only part of the ensemble, but also appeared as Neil Sedaka, Lou Adler and half of the music duo, The Righteous Brothers. What was your favorite aspect of that production?

ERIC SORRELS: One of the reasons I love Beautiful is because even though Carole is obviously at the center, every cast member has a chance to shine. As the Righteous Brothers, we would get entrance applause before we even started singing — that’s how excited the audience was to hear You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling. But to bring the question back to this production: there’s a moment in Indecent when the characters talk about how they gather at the wings of the theatre to watch a very special scene take place night after night. In Beautiful, I was that actor gathering at the wings to watch our Carole (Elena Ricardo) perform Some Kind of Wonderful, It’s Too Late and You’ve Got a Friend. Watching her shine never got old.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Back to Indecent, you play Moriz Godowsky. What can you tell me about him?

ERIC SORRELS: The musicians don’t actually have any lines in the play, so I’m really free to bring a lot of myself to Moriz. To that end, he’s a pretty mild-mannered guy, self-taught on the accordion and ukulele, and he gets a lot of joy out of watching his actor companions tell this beautiful story and transform into so many different characters. One fun detail we discovered is that Otto the Elder (played by Garris Wimmer) and Moriz share the same last name in the script. We’re not really sure why, and it doesn’t affect the storytelling all that much, but we’ve agreed that Otto and Moriz must be family.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As you mentioned, Moriz plays the accordion during interwoven musical segments featuring Klezmer music. Here’s a two-parter for you…For the uninformed, what is Klezmer and is it true you just first picked up the accordion just over a year ago for a production of The Great Comet of 1812? 

ERIC SORRELS: Klezmer is a musical tradition originated by the Ashkenazi Jews of Central and Eastern Europe. It’s a really expressive and dramatic musical style, with melodies that evoke big human emotions. The instrumentation is key too — klezmer music typically includes violin, accordion, clarinet, and percussion, as is the case for Indecent. I first encountered klezmer music as a member of the professional choir at Temple Emanu-El in New York City (a synagogue which Indecent references at one point!). I think it speaks to the unique experience of the Jewish diaspora that klezmer has made its way across time and space from centuries ago in Europe to Music City, USA in 2024. 

Yes! I have a background as a piano player, but the first time I ever held an accordion was October 2022 for Theatre Raleigh’s production of The Great Comet. The versatility of this instrument continues to amaze me. It’s kind of like walking around with a pipe organ strapped to your chest. The score of Indecent has been an opportunity for me to take my accordion-playing to the next level, and learning some of the trickier passages of this score has been extremely rewarding.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Lately, I’ve ended my interviews by asking the last person I speak with a variation on this same question…What do you hope audiences take with them after having experienced Indecent at Nashville Rep?

ERIC SORRELS: I think for me, Indecent is a reminder of why we make theatre, why we attend the theatre, and why theatre will always be a vital part of human expression. The theatre is a sacred space where we can hold and examine our collective memory. I’m reminded of a classic Arthur Miller line from Death of a Salesman: “Attention must be paid.” We go to the theatre to pay attention; to remember parts of human history that would otherwise be forgotten; to find ourselves in a character who appears to have totally different experience from us. This play also reminds us that as long as there have been artists willing to show all the facets of humanity, from innocence to depravity, there have been those wishing to censor what they judge to be unsavory, immoral, or — yes, I’m going to say it — indecent. To that end, I hope audiences leave with a renewed appetite to see, support, and make more daring theatre.

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Nashville Repertory Theatre’s Indecent plays TPAC’s Johnson Theatre Thursday, February 2 thru Sunday, February 11. CLICK HERE for tickets to this powerful play. Following Indecent, Nashville Rep will host two nights of staged readings of playwright Lydia R. Diamond’s Stick Fly at Nashville Public Television’s Rains Avenue studio as part of their REPaloud series. Visit nashvillerep.org to secure your FREE spots for either night. Next up, The Rep will continue their regular season with The Color Purple on stage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre. The beloved musical based on Alice Walker’s classic novel will run April 5-14.  In the meantime, check out Nashville Rep online and follow them on Facebook, X, YouTube and Instagram.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter. Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Interview, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with director and cast of Circle Players’ The Lion in Winter; onstage at Looby Theater January 12-28

January 12, 2024 by Jonathan

If memory serves, it’s been since 2009-nearly 15 years-since Nashville audiences have had the chance to see a theatrical presentation of The Lion in Winter. All that changes Friday, January 12 as Circle Players presents the James Goldman-penned retelling of a certain drama-filled Christmas of 1183 hosted by England’s King Henry II, his long-imprisoned but still willful wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine and their children as the fate of this successor dominates the occasion. Directed by Clay Hillwig, Circle’s The Lion in Winter features among its cast, Jack E. Chambers as Henry II, Kay Ayers as Eleanor of Aquitaine and Elizabeth Burrow as Alais Capet. Recently, as the director and cast were readying the show for Friday’s opening, I had the opportunity to pose a few questions to Hillwig, Chambers, Ayers and Burrow for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.  

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF CIRCLE PLAYERS’ THE LION IN WINTER 

RAPID FIRE WITH THE LION IN WINTER DIRECTOR, CLAY HILLWIG

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How did you come to direct The Lion in Winter for Circle Players? 

CLAY HILLWIG: It appears to have been destiny. I had originally agreed to direct the play Clue in this same time slot, which would have been a lot of fun. But, due to a Broadway touring revival of the show, the rights became unavailable. The board then asked me to submit a list of shows that I would be interested in. After putting a list together, which included The Lion In Winter, I knew that this was the only show I really wanted to submit. So, I took a chance and only sent them this show. I then offered to meet with the board to share my vision and why I felt so strongly that this show should be a part of their season. Within the hour, I received a response that they were submitting for the rights. Like I said…destiny.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is is about this particular play that interests you as a director?

CLAY HILLWIG: I love plays that have a strong family dynamic. Even if the story is not necessarily directly centered around the family, I am generally moved with the relationship aspects of the story. A great example of this is The Godfather. While perceived to be a book and movie about organized crime, in reality the story was written about family. In this script, we see the power struggle within the royal monarchy, but the family relationships are the driving force within the story. Many of these same issues, can be found in the everyday lives of average families that we know or have experienced them first-hand within our own families. Parents struggling with their own marital issues. Children caught in between the two parents, all the while struggling to find their own identities in life. One of the most power scenes is the Father (Henry) and Son (Richard) conflict that many families know so well. One of the reasons that I felt strongly about the timing of putting this show up is the popularity of the HBO show Succession. The power struggle between the children within this media mogul family is very similar to what we see here in The Lion In Winter. Aside from the story line itself, it is the language is that I really love. Playwright, James Goldman has provided us with a script that is clever and very quick witted.  It lends to some wonderful interaction between characters and pacing that keeps an audience engaged. Besides, how can you not love Henry and Eleanor of Aquitaine?

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Many audience members, myself included may primarily be familiar with the piece thanks to the 1968 film adaptation starring Katharine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole or perhaps the more recent 2003 Showtime remake starring Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close. When were you first made familiar with the play itself?

CLAY HILLWIG: In regards to the 1968 film, I saw this in the early 70’s as a teenager. Even then, I was fascinated with the characters and story line. And of course, the performances by both Katharine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole are in my opinion some of their finest work. It was an ACT I production directed by Melissa Williams that first introduced me to the stage version. Brian Hill played Henry and the wonderful Maggie Bowden played Eleanor. It was a wonderful production. I left the theater knowing that I either wanted to play Henry, direct this show or hope for opportunities to do both. Not in the same show of course. Now I am blessed to direct the show and to be jealous of Jack Chambers for playing Henry all at the same time.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Playwright James Goldman based The Lion in Winter, at least in part, around Henry II and historical elements regarding his hopes of his successor. WIth that in mind, how important is it to you as a director to present the story as authentically as possible?

CLAY HILLWIG: It was important to me, to spend time in table reads and relationship building prior to putting the show on its feet. As part of our process, we spent a couple of weeks just working through the character dynamics of the script and how it relates to history. It was important for us to learn not only the events prior to our story, but also what was to come post-Christmas 1183. It was fascinating to learn where they had been and where the family ended up in history. Each actor was committed to taking  it upon themselves, to learn everything they could about their characters place in history. In relation to how this plays on stage, we put full trust in the playwright. Goldman did a wonderful job of representing the entire family. Each individual is well represented as far as their place within the struggle for succession to the throne. In my opinion, he puts a real emphasis on the struggle that Henry had in his relationship with his sons and the decision of who would succeed him in greater detail than the movies previously mentioned did.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you hope audiences come away from The Lion in Winter remembering about this production?

CLAY HILLWIG: One of the most important things that I hope with impact our audiences, is that there is still a place for classic pieces of theater. We seem to have moved to the newer shiny productions, often leaving creative gems such as The Lion In Winter, not given the attention they deserve.

RAPID FIRE WITH JACK E. CHAMBERS, HENRY II IN THE LION IN WINTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is your favorite aspect of Henry II as he’s written in the script of The Lion in Winter?

JACK E. CHAMBERS: I love that Henry is a warrior, but he’s a word-wielding warrior with intelligence, strategy, cunning, and deadly humor in addition to being an actual soldier. The language of the play, especially the interplay between Henry and Eleanor, is just outstanding — some combination of the banter of 1940s comedies and the razor-sharp merciless attacks of Succession. He’s described as a phenomenal warrior, but all of the joy in playing him is in the satisfaction of the language, especially offsetting the fact that he’s starting to fade physically.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: During your three decades+ career, you’ve appeared in a number of Circle Players productions. What is is about Nashville’s oldest continuing theatre company that keeps you coming back?

JACK E. CHAMBERS: Circle is a Community Theatre in the truest sense of the word. I know folks whose Circle time goes back decades further than my own, and mine goes back 30 years at this point. I love the “all are welcome” spirit of a true Community company, and really selfishly appreciate that over those years, Circle hasn’t just been doing Oklahoma or Arsenic and Old Lace over and over — half the shows I’ve done with them were Nashville premieres.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the subject of previous Circle shows, back in 2010, you appeared in a production of The Grapes of Wrath, directed by Clay Hillwig, who’s directing The Lion in Winter. Are you enjoying working with Clay again and how is he as a director?

JACK E. CHAMBERS: I haven’t gotten to work with Clay since then — you end up in different places and it happens sometimes, right? — but I loved getting to pick right back up with him. Something I love about Clay is that he has the vision to imagine beautiful things *and* the skills to make them happen at the same time. He’ll throw out high-concept stuff, big-picture stuff, and also “hey just try this one little tweak” ideas, which is great. And again selfishly, when we did Grapes, I was a musician in the show as well, and pitched a mini-concert to him; we got to play period songs all through pre-show and intermission, which was a blast.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As the central patriarch, you share the stage with Kay Ayers as Eleanor, Henry’s Queen, as well as Elizabeth Burrow, Henry’s rumored mistress. What’s been it been like sharing the stage with each of these actresses?

JACK E. CHAMBERS: I’ve known Kay for most of the years I’ve been in town — we did And Then There Were None together back in 1997 — and have loved playing off her. She’s a match for anybody physically or verbally, with wit and spirit and daring. She’s great. I just met Elizabeth this past year, and she’s been lovely; Alais is the single-most vulnerable character in the show, but shows crystal-clear understanding of the goings-on around her and true strength to persevere, and Elizabeth has nailed that balance. She’s a total charmer.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A quick peek at your professional bio would indicate that throughout your stage career you’ve played a variety of characters often utilizing your prowess with varying dialects. The Lion in Winter being set in Medieval England in the year 1183, did the cast work with a dialect coach or were you each left to your own devices in that regard?

JACK E. CHAMBERS: I’d say it was some combination of “own devices plus tweaking as we went,” with additional discussions as required. Because we’re technically in Middle English, setting-wise, there’s a fascinating, not-historically-accurate-but-entertaining mix of Middle English, 20th century patter, anachronistic traditions, French terms and names and places, Shakespearean rhythms, Broadway Golden Age character types — it’s such a great stew. Although we didn’t work with a dialect coach, we did work with a linguistic consultant — a collaborator and friend of mine from college who’s an Old- and Middle English specialist — on people and place names, sources, literary origins for some of the references… it was fascinating!

RAPID FIRE WITH KAY AYERS, ELEANOR IN THE LION IN WINTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In Circle Players’ The Lion in Winter, you play Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. Iconic actresses Rosemary Harris, Joan Fontaine and Stockard Channing all starred in stage productions while Katharine Hepburn and Glenn Close lit up the big and small screens respectively in the role you’re now taking on. So, not only are you playing an actual historical figure, but one with a luminous stage and screen history. How excited are you to put your own spin on Eleanor?

KAY AYERS: Excited would be an understatement. Thrilled with a touch of gobsmacked is close to my emotion! When I received the casting call, I don’t think I spoke for 30 seconds. This really is a once in a lifetime chance. I’m so lucky that I’ve been given this opportunity. And yes, I’m experiencing a lot of nervousness to get this character “right”.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The Lion in Winter marks a bit of a homecoming for you, having made your Nashville acting debut back in 1994 in a Circle Players production. What was the show and what’s it like to be back with the company where it all started?

KAY AYERS: The Three Musketeers in Circle’s 46th season was my introduction to Nashville theatre and to Circle in particular. My first audition and show were in TPAC’s Johnson Theatre, where I went on to perform in numerous productions. Coming back to perform at Circle was a goal of mine for some years now. The stars aligned perfectly! Walking into the rehearsal space I helped move into, set up, and clean brought back a flood of emotions. We’ve lost so many of those individuals who gave their heart and soul to Circle over the years. I’m just blessed to have known most of the “old guard” and to have gleaned knowledge over the years, making me into the actress I am today.

 JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparing to chat with you and your cast mates, I revisited the above mentioned 2003 telefilm. I love all the barbs and quick quips among the royals. Eleanor in particular has some great lines. My favorite, at least in the 2003 tv adaptation occurs in a scene involving Eleanor, John and Richard in which Richard threatens John with a knife. John says to their mother, “He has a knife”. Eleanor quickly replies, “We all have knives. It’s 1183. We are barbarians”. Do you have a favorite line in the show, whether it be yours or someone else’s?

KAY AYERS: Eleanor really does have the best lines! I relish several of those barbs she flings at her opponents! But one of the most deeply truthful lines, and weighty, is one that is delivered by Elizabeth Burrow, our enchanting Alais “I haven’t got a thing to lose: that makes me – dangerous.”  It’s so telling. All the other characters have a twisted and complicated series of moves they’re making. And here Alais stands, ready to take them all on. Because she really doesn’t have anything to lose and everything to gain. It’s just a powerful line.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While you’ve shared the stage with Clay Hillwig in the past, this marks the first time he’s directed you in a show. During the rehearsal process, what is it about Clay’s directorial style that you admire most?

KAY AYERS: It’s crucial for an actor to bring their own creativity and artistry to a character or a scene. To be able to play and discover with my fellow actors is my favorite part of the rehearsal process. Clay allows us to do that. He doesn’t dictate or demand we do something. It’s a very collaborative process, and vital for successful production. Clay and I often laugh because I will throw an idea out, and then he shows me a note in his script with the exact same idea! It’s happened more than a handful of times!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Something I love about period piece dramas is the costuming. Add to that a royal aspect and that’s a whole other level. What can you tell me about Costume Designer Grace Montgomery’s choices for The Lion in Winter and in particular your wardrobe as Eleanor?

KAY AYERS: The whole concept for the production isn’t to be ostentatious. Yes, they’re royalty, they’re rich, but it’s still 1183. The entire family has gathered for the first time in a long while. Grace has hit the mark with an even level of embellishments for each character. Eleanor is in a deep red throughout the show. While all the others are in a jeweled palate, hers definitely stands out a bit more than the rest. Grace was so determined to find the right color on one velvet dress, she dyed it 4 times to obtain what she wanted!  And I couldn’t be more pleased. It really adds to the regality of the character.

RAPID FIRE WITH ELIZABETH BURROW, AlAIS IN THE LION IN WINTER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re playing Alais Capet in Circle Players’ The Lion in Winter. How familiar were you with the real-life Alais prior to being cast? AND..have  you researched the true history of the events within the play as you’ve developed your take on the character?

ELIZABETH BURROW: I did not know anything about Henry II nor Eleanor of Aquitaine before this show, let alone Alais Capet. I read that her mother, Constance of Castile, was the second wife of Louis VII after Eleanor and died giving birth to Alais. Her older sister Margaret was married to Henry III who died in 1183, the same year the play takes place, so there was a lot of pressure from the French for her to marry and keep the French-English alliance strong. After Henry’s death, Richard was no longer willing to marry her, so her brother King Philip brought her back to France where she married William IV Talvas, a small ruler of a French province when she was 34 years old.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there an aspect of Alais that you’d like to incorporate into your own life or that you feel you truly share with the character as she’s presented in this piece?

ELIZABETH BURROW: Alais is a very sweet soul who doesn’t have the same manipulative tendencies as the rest of the characters in the show, and her intentions are always for the well being of Henry, even at her possible detriment. I think it’s something that I and anyone can strive to emulate more in our lives. Alais and I both tend to wear our hearts on our sleeves, and it’s a joy to share that in common with her as she goes through so much emotional turmoil throughout the play.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first Circle show. Were you familiar with the company and how has the experience been thus far?

ELIZABETH BURROW: I had previously seen Peter and the Starcatcher (where I saw the brilliant Ezra High for the first time!) and their most recent production of Urinetown, but this is the first time I will be on stage for Circle Players, and it has been a wonderful experience to work with the cast and creative team. Being a smaller show than most, it brings a real sense of intimacy to the relationship not only between the characters but my castmates as well. It’s our own version of a family, though it resembles a much happier one than what we portray on stage.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to your on-stage role, you’ve also been part of the technical crew for The Lion in Winter, as scenic painter. What can you tell me about the set?

ELIZABETH BURROW: Clay is also our wonderful set designer for the show and approached me about painting for the stone walls backdrop that is a majority of the set. We wanted to replicate all the moodiness a medieval French castle offers as the single setting for the show, so most of the work was geared toward pulling out natural shadows that would occur in such a big and intimidating chateau. Like Henry, most of the set pieces are of a simple and non ostentatious nature, which assist in bringing a sense of reality and familiarity to the space.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Alais, you have two leading men, Jack E. Chambers as Henry II, with whom Alais is having an affair, and Sawyer Latham as Richard the Lionheart, with whom Alais has been betrothed since she was eight. Heck, even Ezra High’s John is interested in Alais. Of the three, IF you could choose who Alais ended up with, who would it be and why?

ELIZABETH BURROW: This is a difficult one. Many times in history, English royals have chosen heart over duty and sorely regretted their mistakes, and vice versa as well. As for John, I think she would’ve made a better babysitter than wife, though she possibly could have prevented some of John’s failures during his reign as king if he’d had a better companion to consult with. I am tempted to choose Richard as her husband as they could’ve lived their own separate lives and produced heirs and brought more stability to the kingdoms of France and England. However, I wouldn’t want to force that upon her, as she desperately tries to prevent the marriage from happening in the play (the heart wants what it wants.) I think her staying under Henry’s protection until his death was the right path to take, as I don’t think she ever wanted to have the title and power of Queen.

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Circle Players’ The Lion In Winter opens Friday, January 12 and runs through Sunday, January 28 at Z.  Alexander Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa L. Parks Blvd) (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). Reserved seating tickets for The Lion in Winter are $27.  CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. Following The Lion in Winter, Circle Players will present another rarely seen theatrical experience, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, onstage March 15-31. For more information and to keep up with the latest from Circle Players follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

If you’ve enjoyed this latest Rapid Fire 20 Q, be sure and CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. 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, Twitter and Facebook. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: 2024, Circle Players, Clay Hillwig, Elizabeth Burrow, Interview, Jack Chambers, Kay Ayers, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, rapid fire 20q, The Lion In Winter, Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of Studio Tenn’s ‘It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play’; onstage at Turner Theatre December 7- December 24

December 6, 2023 by Jonathan

I can’t get enough of this time of year when even my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q gets into the holiday spirit. To that end, here’s another Christmas-themed Rapid Fire 20Q! This time I’m chatting with Geoff Davin, Caleb Shore, Mariah Parris and Gerold Oliver, cast members of Studio Tenn’s holiday offering It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play, opening this week at Studio Tenn’s recently renovated and renamed Turner Theatre located inside The Factory at Franklin (230 Franklin Road, Franklin, TN). Having first presented this unique adaptation of the familiar story of George Bailey and the folks from Bedford Falls in the winter of 2021, It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play will once again delight holiday audiences beginning Thursday, December 7 and continuing for an extended run through Christmas Eve, Sunday, December 24.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF STUDIO TENN’s IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE: A LIVE RADIO PLAY

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEOFF DAVIN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Among the characters you portray in Studio Tenn’s It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play, you play radio station announcer Freddie Filmore. What’s one trait of Freddie’s personality that you’re enjoying exploring?  Side Note: Did you know Freddie Filmore is an apparent wink to I Love Lucy in that there was a recurring character with that name who was an announcer and TV game show host in several episode of the classic sitcom?

GEOFF DAVIN: First of all…NO I did not know that reference to I Love Lucy! I love that!!!

And secondly…what’s fun about Freddie is that there is something just so satisfying about leaning into that 1940’s radio announcer. There’s a warmth and home-iness to him that just brings to mind a family gathered around their radio, in front of their fireplace, the snow gently falling, the lights on the Christmas tree twinkling. While he is probably the character that I spend the least amount of time inhabiting, we come back to him every so often throughout the show. So he’s a wonderful reset button. A warm place to come home to after we’ve been all over Bedford Falls.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Presents on Christmas Eve or Christmas Morning?

GEOFF DAVIN: Definitely Christmas morning.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Rudolph or Frosty?

GEOFF DAVIN: That’s such a hard one. I love them both. But I’m going to say Frosty. Because while Rudolph leads the sleigh every year, and Santa couldn’t do it without him, old Frosty is around for only a short while. The magic in that old silk hat is fleeting. So we need to be a little extra grateful for the time that we have with him. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: 1987’s A Muppet Family Christmas or 2002’s A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie?

GEOFF DAVIN: Without a doubt, 1987’s A Muppet Family Christmas.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

GEOFF DAVIN: I was very fortunate in that my parents did many things right. But one thing they truly knocked out of the park was their ability to create Christmas magic. There are simply years and years of beautiful Christmas memories to sift through. The smell of the box of ornaments after a year in the attic, going door to door throughout our neighborhood to sing Christmas carols, the annual visit to the town center tree lighting ceremony/nativity viewing, running outside Christmas morning to find the bits of carrot that we left for the reindeer scattered around the yard, and of course the cookie crumbs that Santa left on his plate of cookies. And then, on Christmas morning, we couldn’t just run to the tree. Oh no! There was an order of business. We had to wait in the hallway. Then our parents would take us around to the room where our stockings were hung by the chimney with care…literally. And only after we were done there, could we enter the room with the tree. Even during the years when the family belt had to be tightened, the magic never wavered.

Then we would pile into the car to visit both sets of grandparents. But it wasn’t just the grandparents. Everyone in the family…aunts, uncles, cousins, would gather at those two houses. So we got to share the day with all of our extended family. The food. The conversation. The music. I’m actually getting emotional just typing this. I’m so grateful for the beautiful traditions that my parents created and gave to us. Because of them, Christmas will always be a magical time of year. 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s MARIAH PARRIS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This year you and a couple of your cast mates are returning to the roles you portrayed when Studio Tenn debuted their production of It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play. You’re cast as radio personality Sally Applewhite who then voices Mary Bailey in the station’s presentation of It’s a Wonderful Life. What’s it like retuning to the role?

MARIAH PARRIS: It’s an absolute pleasure. Performing this show two years ago really surprised me in that this story has stuck with me and permanently altered my heart. It helped reframe my personal views on community and inspired me to live a more connected life all year long. I’m excited to return to the role to refresh this lesson and I hope the audience will have the same take away! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Shared names not swaying your answer, who’s the real Christmas Diva…Mariah Carey or Michael Bublé?

MARIAH PARRIS: I think we all know Christmas officially starts the first time we hear All I Want For Christmas is You….enough said 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Do you prefer Santa in a full-length Victorian Robe or the more modern two-piece fur-trimmed suit? 

MARIAH PARRIS: Modern Santa all the way- you can’t tell me that the Victorian robe is practical for getting in and out of that sleigh! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The Santa Clause movies or Home Alone franchise?

MARIAH PARRIS: I grew up watching Home Improvement so it’s gotta be Tim Allen for me 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

MARIAH PARRIS: One year when I was still in elementary school, my parents surprised me with a super cool bunk bed that had a futon couch on the bottom. We finished opening presents and they told me to put my gifts in my room. When I opened the door there it was: the most beautiful big kid bed I’d ever seen. I still have no idea how they set it up without me noticing. Total Christmas magic. Thanks mom and dad! 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s CALEB SHORE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re back again having performed the dual roles of radio personality Jake Laurentis and It’s A Wonderful Life’s George Bailey. Revisitng George, are there aspects of his personality you are more conscious of in your portrayal this go-round?

CALEB SHORE: Finding George a second time means I get to pick up where I left off two years ago. Having Mariah Parris back as Mary and Gerold Oliver as Harry and Clarence make the process totally seamless. 

This time around I’ve peered deeper into George’s passions. His dreams are grand. His love runs deep. His willingness to go the extra mile wins the day every time. He’s smart and poetic, even when he lets his goofy side take the wheel. 

A character only gets to live as long as the actor inhabits them. We’ve now doubled George’s lifespan with me, so once I reacquainted myself with his voice and movement I got to let him walk around and see the world again. He gets more time to spend with his friends and his family.  He gets to fall in love, encounter heartbreaking loss, and discover himself more and more. Mariah and Gerold play characters George holds very dear. That they are back showing his world just as he remembers it makes the whole experience so rewarding.

Now I don’t know if any of this long-winded answer will be visible to audiences. They may come away thinking everything looks the same, and that’s okay. But for us, for me, every look and movement and sound carries more weight, because we’ve been around longer to live them. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Fruit Cake or Pumpkin Roll?

CALEB SHORE: Pumpkin Roll

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A Charlie Brown Christmas or The Nightmare Before Christmas?

CALEB SHORE: A Charlie Brown Christmas, but if we’re talking true favorites I have to mention Home Alone, The Preacher’s Wife, and Elf.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Old fashioned Christmas Tree decorations like strings of popcorn and paper chains or blinged out store bought fabulousness?

CALEB SHORE: Our tree is usually decorated with personal ornaments that remind us of times gone by. Anything we can find while traveling, we’ll buy to remember that trip.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

CALEB SHORE: One favorite Christmas memory I have is from the first Christmas after I got married back in 2015. My wife and I brought home our kitten, Cashew. I’d kept the secret for weeks and it was a terrific surprise.

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH IT’s A WONDERFUL LIFE’s GEROLD OLIVER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Like Mariah and Caleb you’re back at Studio Tenn, having debuted the role of Harry ‘Stacks’ Heywood in their 2021 production of It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play. What’s your favorite aspect of Stacks’ personality?

GEROLD OLIVER: The thing I like most about Stacks is that he’s a lot like me. He’s fun, he’s silly, and he doesn’t take himself too seriously.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The classic stop-action animated Christmas special, The Year Without a Santa Claus features the Miser Brothers…Heat Miser and Snow Miser…which would you prefer to be?

GEROLD OLIVER: Snow Miser! Definitely!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What one Christmas song truly embodies your thoughts of the holiday season?

GEROLD OLIVER: Any time you hear the first word of Mariah Carey’s All I Want for Christmas you know the song, the singer, and most importantly, you know the season!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Baked Ham or Turkey and Dressing?

GEROLD OLIVER: Baked Ham. Especially with honey!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

GEROLD OLIVER: I’ll never forget when I got both Pokémon Gold Version and Pokémon Silver Version for Christmas. Best day ever.

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With that, my conversations with the cast of Studio Tenn’s It’s A Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play drew to a close, but George Bailey’s life-altering adventures in Bedford Falls…and beyond, are just beginning as the show opens Thursday, December 7 at Studio Tenn’s Turner Theatre inside The Factory at Franklin. Showtimes are Thursday-Sunday evenings at 7:00p.m. with additional matinee performances at 2:00 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. (On Christmas Eve, Sunday, December 24, the final performances will take place at the 2:00p.m. matinee…even George Bailey needs to be home for Christmas Eve night). Tickets range in price from $35 to $70. CLICK HERE for tickets.

Up next for Studio Tenn, the current season continues with Driving Miss Daisy starring Emmy and Golden Globe winning actress Sally Struthers as Miss Daisy on stage at Turner Theatre March 7-17, 2024! Struthers of course starred as Gloria Bunker-Stivic in TV’s All In The Family and counts among her may stage credits, starring alongside Brenda Vaccaro in Neil Simon’s gender-flipped version of his hit Broadway play, The Odd Couple. Taking on the role of Miss Daisy won’t be Struthers‘ first appearance at Studio Tenn as she was last seen on Studio Tenn‘s stage during the 2021/2022 season when she appeared alongside John Schuck in a limited engagement of  the two-person play, Love Letters. For tickets or more information on Driving Miss Daisy, CLICK HERE for tickets or more information, then be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: cast interview, Christmas, Interview, It's A Wonderful Life, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Studio Tenn

Rapid Fire 20Q with director and cast of Nashville Repertory Theatre’s ‘A Christmas Carol’; onstage at TPAC’s James K. Polk Theatre December 1 thru 17

December 1, 2023 by Jonathan

Few Christmas classic have endured the test of time like Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. First published in novella form1843, by the following year, stage adaptations and public readings (by Dickens and others) solidified the now-familiar story of Ebenezer Scrooge and his attitude-adjusting otherworldly Christmas Eve visitors as a holiday tradition. To that end, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s own Artistic Director Micah-Shane Brewer will helm this year’s holiday offering of A Christmas Carol adapted by the director himself.

A couple weeks ago, I reached out to The Rep’s Director of Marketing and Communications, Amos Glass with the idea of chatting with four members of the cast and crew of A Christmas Carol for a Christmasy edition of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q. When Amos asked who I’d like to chat with, I immediately requested Micah-Shane  and the three actors playing the Three Christmas Spirits. What follows are those conversations.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST AND CREW OF NASHVILLE REP’s A CHRISTMAS CAROL

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL DIRECTOR MICAH-SHANE BREWER

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As the show’s director, what is it about A Christmas Carol, and this version in particular that drew you to the project? 

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: A Christmas Carol has always held a special place in my heart.  For as long as I can remember, this story has been a part of my holiday tradition.  When I was a kid, I had a VHS tape (yes, I’m that old) of Mickey’s Christmas Carol and I would watch it over and over.  Along the way, I’ve seen numerous film and tv adaptations and grown to love certain versions. (My favorite is The Muppets Christmas Carol!) I’ve also been in and directed probably 9 or 10 different stage adaptations.  I’ve spent most of my life revisiting these characters each and every year. And every time I come back to it, it always connects in a deeper and more meaningful way. 

I think as we get older, we look back at the past and think about touchstone moments, things that we did or didn’t do, choices that may have changed the trajectory of our path, but also, looking at where we are in this moment in time and where we are heading. The power of A Christmas Carol is that it speaks to one and all, both young and old.  Its universal themes can touch us all.  There’s a reason it’s one of the most popular stories in the world, even 180 years after it was written.  

When we decided we wanted to produce A Christmas Carol, I knew I wanted to make a special production that would be a holiday event for the entire family. It’s a traditional version of A Christmas Carol. Audiences can expect a beautiful, large-scale production with something for everyone and all ages.  It’s a brand-new script, and the production designs are breathtaking.  The scenic design is spectacular – the costumes are splendid – there are over 500 different pieces used in the production.  There are some really fantastic projections designs and special effects.  Music plays an integral role in the production.  We use numerous Old English carols from the period, as well as a couple of new songs in the production.

A Christmas Carol is far more than just a classic holiday story; it is a poignant and transformative reflection of our shared human experience and an enduring reminder of the power of empathy and connection. It’s a journey of healing and a story of redemption.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Eggnog or Hot Cocoa?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: Hot Cocoa any day! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A White Christmas or Sunshine for Santa?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: I’m going to have to say a WHITE CHRISTMAS! There’s something very peaceful about a snowy day. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do you enjoy more, wrapping presents or decorating the tree?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: That’s a no brainer for me. Decorating the trees! Every year, we put up multiple trees in our house.  I love to decorate for the holidays.  (And I’m not very good at wrapping gifts…)

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s your favorite Christmas memory?

MICAH-SHANE BREWER: How do I pick just one? A lot of my memories and Christmas traditions run together. I have so many memories of  Christmases when I was a kid: being with family; the rush of waking my sister up early Christmas morning and opening gifts; my grandmother’s Christmas lunch.

When you get older, Christmas changes in many ways. For many years, we hosted a huge Christmas party for our friends, and every year, the evening would conclude with friends gathering around the piano, singing Christmas carols (and sometimes showtunes). I love Christmas music, and being able to share that moment every year with friends is a special memory. 

I’m usually doing a show around the holiday season. When I was in grad school, I remember doing MANY school performances of A Christmas Carol, and one performance, a young girl stood up from her seat in the front row during the finale, all gooey eyed and mouth wide opened, and yelled “It’s SNOWING!” She really believed it was happening, and it was just one of those moments that was so special to see the magic of Christmas and theatre combined!  So every year, I think about that little girl and hope to recapture that magic for others!

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PAST, KRIS SIDBERRY

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Among your roles in A Christmas Carol at Nashville Rep, you play The Ghost of Christmas Past. If you could live in a past time period, when would it be?

KRIS SIDBERRY: I was definitely not made for the modern time period. I love the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A Muppet Christmas Carol or Mickey’s Christmas Carol? 

KRIS SIDBERRY: Mickey’s. My Dad loved Mickey Mouse. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Gingerbread or Sugar Cookies?

KRIS SIDBERRY: I love both. Cookies are my fav, but I guess Gingerbread. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A Christmas Tree with clear lights or multicolor? 

KRIS SIDBERRY: Multicolor! White lights are so basic. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

KRIS SIDBERRY: Christmas was always very big deal in my house. My father was obsessed with Christmas. Sometimes he would decorate 3 different trees.  Like most young kids, every year I would set out homemade cookies and milk. I remember being about five years old, and I swear that I heard jingle bells and hooves on the roof when preparing for the visit from Santa. I’m pretty sure that my parents must’ve hooked up speakers somehow in the house and played a track, but I will never forget that memory. So magical. I believed in Santa until my pre-teens. I will always believe in magic.

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS FUTURE, BEN FRIESEN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re cast as The Ghost of Christmas Future, among other roles in The Rep’s A Christmas Carol. If you could make a wish for the future, and I guess now that I’m asking, you can, What would it be?

BEN FRIESEN: I would wish for more opportunities like this one, where I get to do so many things that I love to do with so many wonderful people! I already feel blessed to be acting professionally, but when I get to add singing, dancing, fiddling, dialect work, and flying? Shows like this are my dream!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Candy Canes or Peppermint Bark?

BEN FRIESEN: Nowadays I would probably go for peppermint bark, but the child in me still wants to lick one end of a candy cane until it becomes as sharp as a tack.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite traditional Christmas Carol?

BEN FRIESEN: I love Mary Did You Know—the original carol already went surprisingly hard, but Pentatonix turned it into a certified bop.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Which do you think would keep you more in line…Elf on the Shelf or Krampus?

BEN FRIESEN: Something about the Elf on a Shelf’s beady little eyes say, “I know what you did”, which sends me into a spiral of, “What did I do this time?”—since Krampus is a physical threat, I feel like I could probably Home Alone-style defend myself against him if that situation arose.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas Memory?

BEN FRIESEN: Throughout my childhood, my siblings and I were huge Lego fans (still are). Each year, we would often ask for one larger Lego set as our main gift, and our parents would save that for last—that way, when we tore open the wrapping paper, we would all immediately run downstairs and spend the next hour or two building our new sets together in our matching Christmas PJs.

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH A CHRISTMAS CAROL’s GHOST OF CHRISTMAS PRESENT, BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Among your roles in Nashville Rep’s A Christmas Carol, you play The Ghost of Christmas Present. What’s the most fun aspect of that character?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: I love the idea that he ages over the course of 24 hours! There is a lot of fun to be mined in creating that idea, subtly, via voice pitch and tone, as well as via my movement as the character. I also love working in the costume at the designers created for this character. It’s grand, it’s beautiful, and it’s actually fun to wear!  But I think my favorite aspect of this character is his determined commitment to optimism, hope, and love.  He really does root for Scrooge; and he delights in seeing Scrooge find some happiness.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A Charlie Brown Christmas or The Grinch Who Stole Christmas?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: Definitely The Grinch!!!  I’m partial to anything campy, but what I love about The Grinch is that despite the comedic aspects of the story, the tale is unapologetically woven around the idea that love conquers hate.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Which pop Christmas tune is superior? Mariah’s All I Want for Christmas is You or Wham’s Last Christmas?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: I think Mariah’s song is better written, but I will always love George Michael’s voice. Though, my friends and I play a game each year, that involves seeing which of us can avoid hearing Last Christmas before Christmas Eve. It only works if we all commit to the honor system of the game, but I almost won last year! They were only two of us left, but I heard it in Sprouts!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Crazy Christmas Sweater or Cozy Christmas pjs?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: Definitely the PJ’s!!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Favorite Christmas memory?

BRIAN CHARLES ROONEY: My favorite Christmas memory, at least, from when I was a child, was the year I received a letter from Santa, on parchment paper, wrapped in a red velvet bow. It was such a wonderful, exciting, heartwarming experience! “He” had left it for me near the plate of cookies we’d left out the night before. I don’t think I’ll ever forget that morning and receiving that letter!

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With that the director and ghosts of Nashville Repertory’s A Christmas Carol vanished as if Ole Scrooge’s clock had struck its morning bell, but you can find them and the rest of the cast of this seasonal favorite on stage at TPAC’s James K. Polk Theatre beginning Friday, December 1 and continuing through Sunday, December 17. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Following a brief break in the new year, Nashville Repertory Theatre will present Paula Vogel’s Indecent on stage at TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Theatre as The Rep’s 2023/2024 season continues. CLICK HERE for tickets to this powerful play. In the meantime, check out Nashville Rep online HERE and follow them on Facebook,  Twitter,  YouTube and Instagram.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter. Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: A Christmas Carol, Brian Charles Rooney, Christmas 2023, Holiday, live theatre, Micah-Shane Brewer, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Theatre

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘The Sugar Bean Sisters’; opening Friday, September 8 at Playhouse 615

September 8, 2023 by Jonathan

 

Alien encounters, a reptile woman, a bird-lady, a little romance and a lot of laughs, playwright Nathan Sanders’ Southern Gothic comedy, The Sugar Bean Sisters has it all, and it’s all coming to Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet) Friday, September 8 thru Sunday, September 24 under the direction of Diane Bearden-Enright. Earlier this week I had the chance to pose a few questions to four of the cast members of The Sugar Bean Sisters to delve a little deeper than the sensational headlines for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q.

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Rapid Fire 20Q with the cast of Playhouse 615’s The Sugar Bean Sisters

Rapid Fire Questions for Breonna Parker, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Videllia

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Videllia Sparks?

BREONNA PARKER: Videllia is quite the sneaky, manipulative type. She thinks she’s clever and smart but she’s really just goofy and not the sharpest tool in the shed. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This is your first show with Playhouse 615, right? What’s the experience been like so far?

BREONNA PARKER: Yes, this is my first show with Playhouse 615. This experience has been wonderful. It’s been a while since I’ve had the opportunity to be on stage, sometimes going into a community theatre is hard when you don’t know anyone. I was nervous going in wondering if I’d be accepted or if they may tend to stick with each other and not be welcoming. This group of people have been nothing but supportive, encouraging and loving. I really feel like I’ve found a home and look forward to future shows. I will for sure miss not being around my cast and crew everyday when the show ends. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Videllia’s wardrobe is, shall we say…interesting. What’s something in your own personal style that others might find questionable?

BREONNA PARKER: Videllia outfit has been fun, I love it. I’m pretty much a T-shirt and jeans kind of gal, and a cap so I don’t have to fix my hair…haha! I’m not very stylish or lavish. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Videllia has secrets. Are you good secret keeper or do you just need to tell somebody when you know some juicy tidbits?

BREONNA PARKER: I’m pretty good at being a person someone can confide in. I’m not going to spread anything that someone wants to be kept private. Now, I am terrible at keeping gifts a secret. Once I buy something for someone I want to immediately give it to them, it’s hard to keep that a secret. I guess a better word would be I’m not good at keeping surprises. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your director, Diane Bearden-Enright actually starred as Videllia at The Hippodrome Theatre in Gainesville, Florida back in 1995 in the Southeastern premiere of The Sugar Bean Sisters, working with the playwright, Nathan Sanders. During the rehearsal process for this production, has Diane shared any insights from her time in the role or having worked alongside the playwright?

BREONNA PARKER: Great question. Diane has been a fantastic director, she has been really good at letting me connect with Videllia in my own way, I just want to make her proud of how I’

m portraying Videllia. It’s a little intimidating knowing that I’m playing a character that I know she mastered! One thing I love about Diane is she asks questions, she’ll say things like ‘why do you think Videllia does this or that.’ I like that it gets you to thinking on a deeper level of the character and helps connect more to Videllia. I’ve heard a couple of story of her working with Nathan Sanders. 

Rapid Fire Questions for Ann Street-Kavanagh, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Faye Nettles

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Faye Clementine Nettles to you?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: Faye is a simple woman who had an extraordinary thing happen to her. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Though presented as completely absurd and hilarious, at its core, The Sugar Bean Sisters is about just that…sisters. Is there anything more important that the bond of friends or family?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: No, there isn’t. The bond you have with family and friends is your true legacy. Their thoughts of you and, hopefully, sharing stories of you is the best way to live forever, so to speak. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In spite of her wacky ways, is there an aspect of Faye’s character that you might try to incorporate into your own life?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: I love how Faye puts it all out there and she doesn’t really care what other people think.  I find myself getting to be more that way as I grow older and I’m pretty darned happy about it!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Faye’s alien encounters are some pretty tall tales. What’s something unbelievable that has happened to you or someone you know?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: First, Faye’s encounter isn’t a tall tale. It’s fact. I’ve had a lot of unbelievables, and, of course, I can’t think of anything good right now. When my daughter was about 2 years old, she would see people who’d passed on. They would speak with her and sometimes scare her a bit, though usually not. It was quite unnerving at first. Battery operated toys would sometimes start playing in the middle of the night, etc. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of you and your costars, who’s most likely to be abducted by aliens…and who would be sent right back down to earth?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: I don’t think any of us would be abducted. But if we were, Linda Speir would be the first to be sent back. She is an absolutely lovely person, but she will tell it like is. If she wanted to go back, they’d have no choice. She would tell them what was what and what was about to be!

Rapid Fire Questions for Abby Waddoups, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Willie Mae Nettles

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When I saw your name among those I’d be chatting with, it reminded me we’d chatted before…almost exactly a year ago when you appeared I the cast of Blithe Spirit at The Keeton. So, from ghosts to aliens, right?

ABBY WADDOUPS: There have been some things between the two- but yes. Doing shows close to Halloween is always fun. Ruth and Willie are very different characters, and I love a challenge.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Willie to you?

ABBY WADDOUPS: Willie is a bit selfish, but overall strives to be a good person. She’s desperate to find a good Mormon husband and to get into the highest level of kingdoms in their heaven. She relies very heavily on her sister, Faye, and they are all each other have, and have known for quite some time. They are grown women who still live together in their childhood home. She isn’t who I ever expected to play onstage, but thanks to Diane’s vision and belief in me, here we are.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s your favorite aspect of Willie Mae Nettles as a comedic character?

ABBY WADDOUPS: Willie Mae is very much a straight character in the comedic routine. Keeping a straight face sharing the stage with Ann and Bre will be a test for me. I’ve tried to find intricacies within her quarks to add more fun.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I love that in the first scene, Willie Mae warns her sister Faye not to lie to her, likening lying to other sinful acts like stealing, fornicating and…drinking Coca-Cola! Growing up, were there things relatives warned you against as wrong that you now just laugh about?

ABBY WADDOUPS: My parents were pretty down to earth and we weren’t raised in a specific church. I was born and raised in Memphis in a very urban environment, so the southernisms and certain religious beliefs are pretty foreign to me. I always had family in the Nashville area and I’ve been in and out of middle Tennessee for a long time so I’ve picked up a little over the years, but not like this. This is Deep South Florida swamp and the culture is so different. Their tales and strong beliefs have a place on the stage, a way to tell their stories in other regions.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The fact that Willie Mae wears an Eva Gabor wig is hilarious to me, having been a fan of the Gabor sisters since I was a tiny child. Were you familiar with the reference or did you have to google to get the joke?

ABBY WADDOUPS: I am older than I look, so I am familiar with the Gabor sisters and I love classic tv shows. It was definitely a reference that reminded me of my childhood. I also remember seeing the wig advertisement included in our faux Weekly World News cover. It’s a nice throwback to the 80’s. I am taken right back to seeing the tabloids on the magazine racks at the grocery stores as a kid.

Rapid Fire Questions for Linda Speir, The Sugar Bean Sisters’ Reptile Woman

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about The Reptile Woman, your role in The Sugar Bean Sisters?

LINDA SPEIR: It is bizarre to say the least. I’m only in two short scenes but I make the most of them. Reptile Woman in my mind is a swamp witch. She is also a seer and may speak in tongues!!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Alright, I’m just gonna say it…you are among my “theatre crushes” in that I absolutely adore everything I’ve ever seen you do onstage. I’ve seen you in simply heart-wrenching performances like Steel Magnolias and Driving Miss Daisy and sinisterly charming as Arsenic and Old Lace’s Aunt Abby. Now you’re playing The Reptile Woman…is she the strangest character you’ve ever encountered? 

LINDA SPEIR: Thank  you!! This is definitely the strangest character I’ve ever played discounting my brief stint as a werewolf YEARS ago at Opryland during the Halloween season. Reptile Woman is definitely a strange and mystifying character.  Her babies are her gators and her snakes!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Were you familiar with the script prior to auditioning for the show?

LINDA SPEIR: Yes I read it beforehand. I always read the script before I audition for a show. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While there’s mention of The Reptile Woman about midway through Act One, you don’t take to the stage until Act Two. So basically you’re the Special Guest Star, like you see as the last credit on tv shows. How fun is that?

LINDA SPEIR: This role has been a great deal of fun as our director gave me free rein to create this spooky character. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there a line or a scene, yours or someone else’s, that makes you giggle every time?

LINDA SPEIR: Many lines! This is a funny play with no socially redeeming qualities.  It’s a bit of deep South folklore. Faye (played to perfection by Ann Kavanaugh)  singing It’s a Small World always gets a laugh from me.   

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The Sugar Bean Sisters opens Friday, September 8 at (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet) Friday, September 8 thru Sunday, September 24. Performances are Fridays/Saturdays at 7:30p.m. and Sundays at 2:30p.m. Tickets are $18 and are available for purchase through Eventbrite, by calling the box-office at 615.319.7031, or at the door an hour before each performance. CLICK HERE for tickets.

Next up at Playhouse 615 is the Middle Tennessee premiere of The Woman in Black, a spin-chiller touted as the scariest stage experience ever, running October 20-November 5. For more on these shows and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Ann Street-Cavanagh, Diane Bearden-Engright, Interview, Linda Speir, Local Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playhouse 615, rapid fire 20q, The Sugar Bean Sisters

Rapid Fire 20Q with cast of ‘Move Over Mrs. Markham’; onstage at Playhouse 615 August 4 thru August 20

July 31, 2023 by Jonathan

Recently, during their final days of rehearsal, I had the opportunity to chat with cast members of Playhouse 615’s latest presentation, Move Over Mrs. Markham. A British farce written by Ray Cooney and John Chapman as directed by Playhouse 615’s Joel Meriwether, the show opens Friday, August 4 and running through August 20. Among the cast are Beth Henderson as Miss Olive Harriet Smythe, Craig Hartline as Henry Lodge, Eric Crawford as Phillip Markham and Lindsey Patrick-Wright as Joanna Markham. What follows are my conversations about their characters, the show, company and more.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST OF PLAYHOUSE 615’s MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM

RAPID FIRE WITH BETH HENDERSON, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S MISS OLIVE HARRIET SMYTHE 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Not being all that familiar with Move Over Mrs. Markham myself, I got my hands on the script. Move Over Mrs Markham seems like its somewhere between Billy Wilder’s The Apartment and the bed-hopping farce within the farce of Noises Off. Do you think that’s a fair assessment?

BETH HENDERSON: It definitely has elements of both. It has The Apartment’s plot line of the flat being used for multiple trysts. And it shares Noises Off’s farcical elements of slamming doors and ladies in nighties. But, what really makes this show funny is everyone pretending to be someone else in order to persuade a very prudish and clueless author that they are just the wholesome upright publishing company she wants to sign with.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of said author, what can you tell me about Miss Olive Harriet Smythe?

BETH HENDERSON: She’s a rather prudish and proper children’s book author who is outwardly appalled by sex (although I think she secretly relishes in it, at times). She’s also pretty flighty and constantly saying things that come across in a completely unintended way. Oh, and she’s completely obsessed with dogs.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Audiences will surely recognize you from you most recent role as Mrs.Wingfield in Playhouse 615’s The Glass Menagerie, or perhaps 2022’s Trip to Bountiful, two classic dramatic roles. Now, with Miss Smythe, you’re fully immersed in farcical comedy. Do you prepare differently for comedy as opposed to a more dramatic role?

BETH HENDERSON: I can’t really say that I prepare for them differently. For me, whether it’s a comedy or a drama, the first and most important thing to do is get to know the character beyond the covers of the script: their history, what makes them tick, how they feel about things, etc. However, I will say that in comedy, more often than in drama, finding my costume can really help create the character. That was 100% the case in this show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’ve not only been part of several productions at Playhouse 615, but you’re also on the company’s Board of Directors. How long have you been on the board and what does that entail?

BETH HENDERSON: I’ve only been on the board for about five months, so I’m pretty new. I’ve been fortunate enough to have been on the boards of several Nashville theaters over the past 15 years, so it’s nice to bring that experience to a newer theater that’s just starting to take off. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: If you weren’t playing Miss Smythe, what other role would you enjoy, whether you’re “right for the part” or not, and why?

BETH HENDERSON: They’re all such fun roles, so it’s hard to say. Maybe Alistair, because of his cheekiness. And Linda pretending to be Helga would be such over-the-top fun.

RAPID FIRE WITH CRAIG HARTLINE, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S HENRY LODGE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who is Henry Lodge to you?

CRAIG HARTLINE: Henry Lodge to me is a bit of a spoiled little boy, pretending to be a man. He has had some success in the children’s book business, but he spends his time and money, pursuing women for his own pleasures. He’s a bit of a cad, lovable, but a cad.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Henry is a children’s book publisher. If you were to write a children’s book, what  would it be about?

CRAIG HARTLINE: Wow, that is a tough question. It would probably be about a puppy who grows up with two smart parents who try to teach him about the world around him. However, he is more interested in chasing butterflies and playing in mud puddles to listen. It’s only when he moves into the real world, that he discovers, he should have listened more. In the end, he finally achieves the life his parents wanted for him after remembering what lessons they tried to teach him.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You were last seen onstage at Playhouse 615 in Sex Please, We’re Sixty, and now, just two months later, you’re back for your second production with the company. What is it about the company that brought you back so quickly?  

CRAIG HARTLINE: I have thoroughly enjoyed working with Playhouse 615. The Board Members are determined to achieve what actors in Nashville and the surrounding counties have been looking for, a place where actors can stretch their wings, so to speak and build on their craft. The actors I have had the privilege to work with are hard working and dedicated to their craft. I look forward to the chance to come back and work again with this production company.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Henry Lodge, you have two leading ladies. Anne Street-Kavanagh plays Henry’s wife, Linda, while Em Genovese plays…um…how shall I put this?..NOT his wife, Miss Wilkinson. How much fun are you having sharing the stage with these two?         

CRAIG HARTLINE: These two lovely ladies are a thrill to work with. Anne is a funny and talented lady who brings out the best in each and every role she is in. Her dedication to her craft inspires me to be better. Anne and I created a chemistry together in Sex Please, We’re Sixty, that brings a smile to my heart. I believe we bring the same chemistry on stage in Move Over, Mrs. Markham.

This is the first time I have worked with Em, but I surely hope it is not the last. She has been acting for many years, and despite her young age, she is a true professional. Her ability to understand the character, taking the words written on the page and bringing it to life, is a true testament to where I believe her career will go. If I were the audience, I would make a strong mental note of the name, Em Genovese, she well may be the next name you see on the “telly”.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about slamming doors and farcical comedy?

CRAIG HARTLINE: The action of slamming doors is a large part of the action in this comedy. The chaos of characters coming in and going out of each scene adds to the rapid fire action from the actors. The timing of those opening and slamming doors is crucial to the play. Without that action, the play would be rather tame and loose that rapid fire of lines between the actors.

RAPID FIRE WITH ERIC CRAWFORD, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S PHILLIP MARKHAM

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What do we need to know about Phillip Markham?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Philip is the antithesis of farce.  He would be totally appalled at the thought of being involved in any shenanigans. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Move Over Mrs. Markham marks your Playhouse 615 debut. Was it the role or the company that prompted your interest in auditioning for the role of Phillip?…Or a combination of the two?

ERIC CRAWFORD: A bit of both. I’m in an online theatre group and a couple of folks had been in different productions and all had a blast. I’m new to this theatre company but Nashville is a pretty small acting community so I already knew a couple of folks that were auditioning and had done multiple performances with 615. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: The show is set in a posh top floor London flat, so let’s talk about accents and dialect. One of my pet peeves as a theatre reviewer is when the accents don’t ring true. Was a dialect coach brought in to assist the cast with honing their accents?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Yes, we were very fortunate to have a wonderful dialogue coach. A first for me. We had some online group and private coaching sessions. I like performing with accents, so a coach was a real treat. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about a farce that keeps audiences interested?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Two things. Never a dull moment and the unpredictability of where the wrong turns will lead you. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Has there ever been an occurrence in your own life that you think might make for a good farcical comedy?

ERIC CRAWFORD: Well it started at birth…. I grew up thinking Lucy Ricardo had the right idea attitude towards life so I think all of the ironies of growing up in the Missouri boot-heel, getting a doctorate in genetics, and  having a deep seated need to perform is somewhat farcical in itself. 

RAPID FIRE WITH LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT, MOVE OVER MRS. MARKHAM’S JOANNA MARKHAM

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is your favorite aspect of Joanna as a character?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: Joanna has been so much fun to play because she has truly been thrown into the madness of this evening through no fault of her own and she continues to just roll with the punches. I think Joanna is a genuinely caring person and wants the best for the people around her even when their behavior is less than admirable. Also, Joanna’s willingness to lie for her friends while being really lousy at it, has been a particularly juicy part of the role!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Move Over Mrs. Markham is set in the late sixties/early seventies, which usually indicates some groovy fashions. Who’s the costumer for the show and do you have a favorite look, whether it be your own or that of a fellow cast mate?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: I think we were all so excited about costuming, we all just dove into finding costumes for our characters. Denese Evans helped us fill in any gaps for hard-to-find items. Since I spend most of the show in various stages of undress, I would have to say that Alistair’s (Jonathan Wilbur) suit is “really with it” as Joanna says in the show, so it is probably my favorite!  I personally LOVE this time period and would say that at least half the set is made up of furniture and decor from my own home – including the Big Eye Girl painting in Joanna’s bedroom.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I have a confession…I had never heard of this play before Joel told me it was coming to Playhouse 615, but I had heard of Ray Cooney, who, along with John Chapman wrote the script. Cooney having written nearly twenty plays including Run for Your Wife, which ran for many years on The West End. Were you familiar with the show before auditioning?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: No! Not at all! I was able to get my hands on a script before auditioning and I believe this is exactly what I said to Joel after reading it “This show is absolutely ridiculous. I love it!” 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Typical for farces, the laughs usually run the gamut from subtle to outlandish. I’d imagine rehearsals have been quite fun. Who’s the biggest cut-up among the cast?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: While we all have our moments of cutting up, I think that Eric Crawford and Craig Hartline, playing best buds Phillip and Henry respectively, cut up the most. They have been known to continue on, in character, after the scenes end doing their own two-man improv show for us. I think even Ray Cooney himself would admit their behind-the-scenes, in-character antics are hilarious. Everyone in this cast has such great comedic chops that we have had a blast during rehearsals.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about farces, and Move Over Mrs. Markham in particular that you think will appeal most to Playhouse 615 audiences?

LINDSEY PATRICK-WRIGHT: Having just come from acting in Playhouse 615’s last show The Shadow Box (a moving play about death, dying, and the stages of grief) this play is a very different kind of catharsis. Move Over Mrs. Markham, like other farces, is fast-paced, energetic and just pure FUN. I told my family and friends to BYOT (bring your own tissues) to this show, too, because if they are anything like me in rehearsals, they will be crying from laughing.

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Move Over Mrs. Markham opens Friday, August 4 at Playhouse 615 (11920 Lebanon Road, Mt. Juliet, TN 37122). The show runs through Sunday, August 20 with 7:30pm performances Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday matinees at 2:30pm. Tickets are $18. Call the Box Office at 615.319.7031 to reverse tickets or CLICK HERE to purchase them via the company’s Eventbrite page. Tickets may also be purchased in person at the theatre just prior to showtime.

Next up at Playhouse 615 is The Sugar Bean Sisters, running September 8-24. For more on these shows and to keep up with Playhouse 615, check out their website or find them on Facebook.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter.

Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: British Comedy, British Farce, Comedy, Farce, Interview, Joel Meriwether, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playhouse 615, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre

Theatre Review: ‘Here You Come Again’ new musical featuring Dolly Parton tunes, concludes Tennessee debut Memorial Day Weekend at The Franklin Theatre

May 28, 2023 by Jonathan

Written by Bruce Vilanch, Gabriel Barre and Tricia Paoluccio, Here You Come Again is a jukebox musical featuring songs written and made popular by National Treasure and Tennessee Goddess, Dolly Parton. Following a successful premiere in October of 2022 at the Deleware Theatre Company, and a popular December run in West Palm Beach, the musical comedy has come to Dolly’s home state for its Tennessee debut in collaboration with Studio Tenn at The Franklin Theatre with shows Wednesday, May 17 through Sunday, May 28.

As for the premise, it’s a clever, but simple plot. At the beginning of the pandemic, Kevin (played in this production by Zach Sutton), a well-meaning, but down-on-his-luck waiter/aspiring comic is forced to move into his parent’s upstate New York home to set quarantine when the world shuts down. Further complicating things, Kevin’s Mom, a bit of a germaphobe before there was such a thing, has  relegated her son to living in the attic, rather than in the main level of the house with his parents. She’s even devised a sort of makeshift dumbwaiter to deliver his food without contact by setting a tray on the drop-down attic stairs, which he retrieves by hooking to the end of a garden tool of some sort.

Further isolating Kevin, his parents are never seen in the play, and only his Mom’s voice is heard from off-stage from time to time. As the play begins, the audience gets their first glimpse at the show’s only set, the attic. Brilliantly created by Scenic Designer Anna Louizos with assistance from D. Craig M Napoliello, with lighting by Alessandra Docherty and assistant Isabella Gill-Gomez, the attic is easily recognized as both the family’s preferred storage area for seasonal decoration and Kevin’s former childhood playroom/teenage hangout. With pop culture relics from the far-distance 1980s, the attic set design is cleverly littered with things like a discarded GameBoy, an old Chineses Checkers boardgames and what appeared to be a single right Nike Air. But it’s the shrine to everyone’s favorite Country Music Songbird, Dolly Parton that’s most impressive…and I must admit relatable. I mean, switch all the Dolly posters, magazine pictures and photographs covering the walls for, say The Bionic Woman’s Lindsay Wagner, and you’d have my childhood bedroom.

As Sutton’s Kevin paces around the attic, he offers the audience a bit of exposition by breaking the fourth wall and explaining the above-mentioned romantic breakup and current living situation to kick things off. In an obvious state of depression, Kevin then walks over the a small tabletop record player, carefully takes out his vintage copy of Dolly Parton’s 1977 hit record, Here You Come Again, puts the needle on, then walks over to the twin bed across the room picks up a Costco-sized tub of Cheesy Puffs, lovingly caresses the tub and covers himself with the bed sheet.

As the light dims, the tune playing on the record swells and as if by divine intervention…or make that DIVA-ne intervention, the life-size image from the poster on the back of the attic door comes to life as Dolly herself steps forward into the room belting out a familiar tune. Here’s the thing, though. The song isn’t really playing on the record player. The familiar instrumentation is actually coming from backstage courtesy the show’s houseband featuring Miles Aubrey on Guitar, Jeff Cox on Bass, Jon Epcar on Drums and Eugene Gwozdz on Piano. As for the vocals, no Dolly didn’t drive across town from her nearby Brentwood home, instead is actress/singer and aforementioned co-writer of the show, Tricia Paoluccio as an apparition/vision/guardian angel in the form of the Double-D Diva herself.

Before seeing the show, I kept hearing from friends at Studio Tenn, including the company’s Artistic Director, Patrick Cassidy, that if you “close your eyes, you’d swear it was Dolly herself”. Now, here’s the thing, I’m a huge Dolly fan, and over the years I’ve had the absolute thrill and honor to meet her, chat with her a time or two and get to know her and a few of her siblings. Shoot, the night I saw Here You Come Again, Dolly’s youngest sister, Rachel was sitting at the table next to me and we chatted a bit. NO, that’s not a name-drop, ‘cause like I always say, “I never drop a name I can’t pick up”. It’s just a fact, a fact of living and working in Music City. You just never know who you’re gonna see or get to know.

Cassidy was right, she does indeed sound like Dolly when she sings. She’s got Dolly’s vocal infections down-pat, although with Paoluccio’s own musical theatre background (she’s appeared on Broadway in productions of Fiddler on the Roof, A View from the Bridge and The Green Bird) there are times when she makes the tunes her own by adding a bit more of a theatrical flourish, extending a note here, or revealing her talent with a run there. What’s more, thanks to Makeup Designer, Brian Strumwasser, Costume Designer, Bobby Pierce and other assets, whether God-given or man-enhanced, Paoluccio looks like Dolly…well, 70s/80s era Dolly at any rate. Yes, if you close your eyes, you can almost hear the Appalachian songstress, but in certain scenes, when Paoluccio turns just so in profile, that she looks the spitting image of Dolly, herself. But that’s not where Paoluccio’s Dolly transformation ends. She’s even got Dolly’s unique joy-filled speaking voice down! And I mean down…down to what I call Dolly’s “giggle squeak”. If a rhinestone could talk and sing, it’d sound just like Dolly, and so does Paoluccio!

A bit more about the wardrobe. When Paoluccio’s Dolly first steps forward from the door poster, she’s wearing a cocktail-length bedazzled number with billowing bell sleeves. I noticed almost immediately that the fabric of the dress was reminiscent of a butterfly’s markings and yes, when Paoluccio raised both arms at the crescendo of the opening song, the bell sleeves did mimic the silhouette of a butterfly in flight, a wonderful wink to Bob Mackie-designed dress Dolly wore. In fact, it was created for the 1979 tv special Dolly and Carol in Nashville, co-starring Carol Burnett. Considering that special was filmed right here in Nashville, the butterfly dress, while gorgeous, provided a fun little If You Know You Know moment for true Dolly nerds like myself.

Other costume choices, while not as obviously based on Dolly’s own wardrobe, all have that sparkle, that spirit, that gussied-up bigger-than-life 80s Dollyesque vibe. Which works perfectly considering the tunes featured in the show were all originally released between 1969 (the Jack Clement-penned Dolly and Porter Waggoner hit, Just Someone That I Used to Know) and 1989 (Why’d You Come in Here Lookin’ Like That from Dolly’s 1989 offering, White Limozeen).

While the full title of the show is Here You Come Again: How Dolly Parton Saved My Life in 12 Easy Songs, there’s actually a total of 15 toe-tappin’, finger-snappin’ Dolly favorites featured within the show. On the subject of tunes included in the show, like most jukebox musicals, the music helps move the story along or support the narrative. In the case of Here You Come Again, Music Director Gwozdz and the show’s writers have done a fantastic job of peppering Dolly hits throughout the show at just the right moments to accentuate or propel the storyline. Hush-A-Bye Hard Times, a sweet, but lesser-known tune originally included on Dolly’s 1980 crossover hit album 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs near the top of the show, perfectly expresses what I think we all felt during the early days of the pandemic. Same for Two Doors Down, another hit from Dolly’s Here You Come Again release. Included herein to parallel the FOMO we all experienced during isolation.

And Yes, megahits like Jolene, 9 to 5, as well as the bizarro Me and Little Andy and showstopper, I Will Always Love You also find there way into the show and each one is performed with enthusiasm and a touch of Dolly-worthy fun and excitement.

While most of the songs featured were written by Dolly, even the prolific singer/songwriter occasionally records tunes penned by others. Why’d You Come in Here Lookin Like That, Sing For the Common Man and the Dolly Parton/Kenny Rogers megahit, Islands in the Stream are all prefect placed and wonderfully sung. Interestingly, Islands, written by the Bee Gees, is followed by a funny, but very un-Dolly bit of snark courtesy Vilanch’s script.

Speaking of duets, Paoluccio’s Dolly gets a bit of help from time to time as Sutton’s Kevin joins her for a handful of songs throughout the show, showcasing his own talents as a singer.

As I mentioned above, Bruce Vilanch created the show alongside Paoluccio and Barre. Specifically, Vilanch is credited in the playbill as Book Writer, in layman’s terms, the spoken dialogue of the show, alongside director, Barre and star, Paoluccio. Whether you know Vilanch by name, or by sight, you’ve likely heard his work, as he’s a six-time Emmy-winning writer, having won two for writing special material for the Academy Awards and four for work on various television variety show specials. Over the years he’s written for the Academy Awards numerous times, as well as the Tonys, the People’s Choice Awards and many other awards shows. Bringing it all full-circle, Vilanch also wrote a handful of episodes of Dolly Parton’s late-80s variety series, Dolly, so who better to sprinkle a little Dolly dust into the lines of Here You Come Again?

With Paoluccio’s absolute near-perfect Dolly helping Sutton’s Kevin rediscover his own worth, refocus on his own life and reignite his passions through the comfortable familiarity of Dolly’s music, Here You Come Again is a joy from start to finish.

Studio Tenn’s special presentation of Here You Come Again wraps with a final show Sunday, May 28 at 2 p.m. Tickets range in price from $90 for cocktail table seating and the first few rows of theatre seats to $70 for the majority of theatre seats on to $55 for balcony. CLICK HERE for tickets. Didn’t make it to the Tennessee performances? Follow Here You Come Again on Instagram to see where Paoluccio and company are headed next.

Following Here You Come Again, Studio Tenn wraps their current season with a production of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, The Sound of Music co-presented by CPA Arts on stage at CPA’s Soli Deontaes Center from June 22- July 16. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: 2023, Broadway, Dolly Parton, FRANKLIN THEATRE, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Studio Tenn, Theatre, Tricia Paoluccio

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Nashville Rep’s ‘The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time’ on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru April 2

March 31, 2023 by Jonathan

Directed by Micah-Shane Brewer, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s inspired and inspiring production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time moves into its second and final week with performances Friday, March 31 at 7:30p.m., Saturday, April 1 at 2p.m. and 7:30p.m. and Sunday, April 2 at 2:00p.m. at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre, I recently had the opportunity to chat with four the company’s incredible cast members for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q. Kindly taking time out of their performance schedules for these conversations are Lauren Berst, Nat McIntyre, Eric D. Pasto-Crosby and JR Robles. Berst and McIntyre play Judy and Ed Boone, parents of 15 year-old Christopher Boone, a young autistic math wiz who finds himself at the center of the titular mystery. Pasto-Crosby and JR Robles play a multitude of townsfolk who meet young Christopher along his journey. What follows are my conversations with the cast.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST MEMBERS OF THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s NAT MCINTYRE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You’re no stranger to Nashville Rep, having appeared in Good Monsters and Shakespeare in Love and having directed their production of A Streetcar Named Desire. What keeps brining your back to the company?

NAT McINTYRE: Since moving to Nashville, starting a family, and taking a full time professorship at Lipscomb I have had to be more intentional with the work I choose.  It’s very important to me that the work challenges and excites me and audiences.  The Rep has been doing that work.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Ed Boone?

NAT McINTYRE: He’s trying really hard

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand you had read Mark Haddon’s novel upon which the play is based. What’s most surprising about the way the story has been brought to the stage?

NAT McINTYRE: I read the book so long ago.  I mostly was surprised they would try to make it into a play because I thought it would be REALLY hard.  But, it turns out Simon Stephens and bunch of curious artists that don’t take themselves too seriously make it possible.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In preparation of our chat, I discovered among your many credits, you appeared in a season 2 episode of Devious Maids, playing a police officer. Just gonna say it. I loved that series. Bringing the question back to Curious Incident…What’s an advantage of performing in theatre as opposed to film or television?

NAT McINTYRE: Film and TV is fun.  It also pays a lot of money.  But nothing can replace the pulse and breath of a live audience.  The best actors let them be an extra character in the play I think.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How has your experience been working with Curious Incident director, Micah-Shane Brewer?

NAT McINTYRE: This play is hard. I had never worked with Micah-Shane.  I was nervous ;).  But, that dude has stepped up big time. He is a prepared artist who makes room for his actors, doesn’t need to have all the answers, and does not take himself too seriously.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s LAUREN BERST

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Last time I saw you onstage, you had invited me to attend a performance of Nashville Story Garden’s thought-provoking production of The Welkin. Now you’re playing Judy Boone in Nashville Rep’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Two vastly different shows, but with the common thread of drama. Do you find yourself typically drawn towards more dramatic roles?

LAUREN BERST: Thank you for supporting and promoting Nashville theater, Jonathan! I love comedy and drama equally and am jazzed by the challenges they each present. I am primarily lured to the story being told rather than the genre so if that’s in a comedy or drama, I want to go on the journey. For the The Welkin, we were compelled to tell that story, and getting to tell it with 12 amazing women on stage with me was a huge draw. For Curious Incident, I loved the book and the play and was excited about the idea of exploring the story as an ensemble. The opportunity to return to Nashville Rep was an added bonus so I jumped at the chance. I am grateful to get to do this show with this wonderful group of people.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is it about Judy Boone that attracted you to the role?

LAUREN BERST: I love Judy. And what’s interesting about this play is that most of what we learn about the characters comes from Christopher’s vantage point so finding a through line or heart of a character is a fun challenge. I enjoy finding the sweet, strong, rule-breaking parts of her and expanding or contracting from there. She is an ill-equipped force to be reckoned with.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You mention the character of Christopher, which leads to my next question…How has it been sharing scenes with Ben Friesen, who’s at the center of the action playing young Christopher Boone?

LAUREN BERST: It’s wonderful to work with Ben. Ben is a champ! His exploration of Christopher is open, honest, and spot on. He’s a great collaborator. This show is a lot of responsibility and he handles it with confidence and excitement which is a testament to his ability. And his eagerness is infectious. Ben has created a well-rounded, and heart-wrenching character. Audiences will be rooting for Christopher.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Also at the center of the story is the titular dog. You yourself are a pet-owner, so I gotta ask…how’s Ms. Roxie? AND…I’ve seen a few rehearsal posts giving a first look at the puppy involved in the show. Has that pup become everyone’s emotional support dog, considering the seriousness of the piece?

LAUREN BERST: Oh thank you for asking about THE MOST important parts of my life and this play! First of all, Roxie is the spoiled rotten dachshund I adopted six years ago and she’s amazing. In fact, she is curled next to me as I type this so any spelling or grammar errors can be blamed on her.

Scottie, the sweet puppy in the play, (the *actual* star of the play – don’t worry Ben thinks so too) is precious, smart and adorable. When she comes into the room everyone melts a little bit, our shoulders relax, our dopamine and serotonin levels skyrocket. I have to sit on my hands sometimes because it’s all I can do not to put her in my bag and take her home with me. And I’m not exaggerating. You’ll see. She’s too cute. It is impossible that something so cute exists in real life.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’ve seen a few behind-the-scenes images of the set, designed by Cody Stockstill with lighting by Darren Levin and sound by Gregg Perry. What has impressed you most about the way the creative team has brought this production to Nashville Rep’s intimate stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theater?

LAUREN BERST: What HASN’T impressed me?! The creative team has pulled out all of the stops to make this show an intimate spectacle in the Johnson Theater. Cody, Darren, and Gregg tell this story in ways that go beyond the script. They have designed, composed, and programmed each moment of this play to enhance the story telling, conjure a little magic, and help us get a peek into Christopher’s mind. And they’re so dang good at what they do. It would be a very different play without their designs. I’m excited for audiences to experience the world they’ve created.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As a member of the ensemble of Curious Incident, you take on a multitude of roles. What’s the most fun aspect of this as opposed to portraying a singular character?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I thoroughly enjoy coming up with fully realized characters, and I get to do that for about six different people in the show. Both how they move how they talk how they interact with people. And also structuring just how they interact with the plot, do they influence the main characters for good things or bad things that’s always just a fun fantastic journey that we get to go on. If I’m being really honest, it’s the multiple different accents that I get to do for the show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: On the flip side, what’s most challenging about playing more than one character in a piece?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I would say the most challenging aspect of playing multiple characters is figuring out how they are different, but not distracting. It’s very easy to come up with different characters but sometimes those characters don’t work with the world of the play or help tell the story as well as other choices would. So making sure that you make the choices that helped tell this version of curious incident is the most important.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who all do you play in Curious Incident?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: I play Roger Shears, the Duty Sergeant, Mr. Wise, man behind counter and Voice two.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Of your Curious Incident roles, do you have a particular favorite?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: It’s kind of a tie between Roger Shears and the Duty sSergeant. Roger Shears is pretty despicable and gross, which is kind of fun to play. I know that probably sounds wrong. But the Duty Sergeant is probably one of my favorite accents and characterizations, since he’s honestly stolen from a Guy Ritchie movie.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to your onstage duties, you’re also the show’s fight choreographer. You’re a member of the Society of American Fight Directors. What can you tell me about that organization and how you became involved in the art of fight choreography?

ERIC D. PASTO-CROSBY: yYou can join the SAFD by paying membership. It is a training organization that brings everyone up to speed on how to safely perform fights on stage. I thoroughly enjoy multiple aspects of this organization. I love what they have done to bring safety and realism to violent moments on stage. If you are looking for training there are  workshops, I will be teaching at the A Town Throwdown in Atlanta. The society has a workshop every other month all over the US for you to train in multiple weapon disciplines for three or two days.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE CURIOUS INCIDENT’s JR ROBLE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your first time working with Nashville Rep. How’s the experience been thus far?

JR ROBLES: I’ve had a blast! I’ve always wanted to do a show with Nashville Rep. This experience has been so gratifying and revelatory for me. I’ve had a chance to make some great new friends and work on an important piece of theatre with some of the most talented people around. In that process, I think I’ve grown a lot in my own artistic practices, and I’m so grateful for that. It’s been really challenging too—there’s a lot of movement and physicality in the show, and I’ve had to reactivate some of my choreography and dance training to remember how to do that. Mostly, I’ve felt so happy coming to work every day because I get to be part of this wonderful story with some amazing artists. It’s been wonderful.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Prior to our chat, I spoke with Eric Pasto-Crosby. Like Eric, you’re also playing numerous roles within the show. What roles are you playing?

JR ROBLES: So, I’m playing Voice Three, which includes a couple of policemen, a salty train passenger, a drunk train passenger (different guy), and Mr. Thompson, who is an oddball neighbor of Christopher’s (the play’s main character). Aside from that, I get to be a part of constructing the world of Christopher’s memory and mind where the play takes place. I really have fun with these kinds of roles because I can step into different people in different scenes, which is such a fun challenge. Much of that work, by the way, has been aided by Katie Cunningham, our dialects and accents coach. She’s worked very closely with us as we’ve made choices about these characters and giving them very specific voices that help color the world of Swindon and London that Christopher explores.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Is there a particular scene you’re involved in that you find most challenging?

JR ROBLES: Overall what has affected me most, and maybe what I love most about the play, is the very true-to-life depiction of how complicated family dynamics can be when there are flawed human beings trying to do their very best for themselves and each other in their lives. In general, the scenes I’m featured in are fun and help move the story along to get to the places where the challenging stuff in the play really is. The very dynamic relationships between Christopher, Ed, and Judy, and Christopher and Siobhan are the ones I think about the most. And most of those scenes I just get to sit and watch Ben, Nat, Lauren, and Sejal work magic on stage.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s the most fun role you’re portraying and why?

JR ROBLES: I have the most fun with Mr. Thompson, the goofy neighbor Cristopher interacts with in Act 1. I’ve gone through about 7 different iterations of this guy, trying to figure out where he came from, what accents he has, what he is up to when he’s not in the play, and even what kind of glasses he wears. Honorable mention goes to a character called “Drunk 2” (Eric Pasto-Crosby is Drunk 1) who literally has two drunken lines of dialogue. Each rehearsal so far, Eric and I have tried to out-drunk each other, and it gets crazier every time.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: So much of the show seems to encourage audiences to step out of their comfort zone and take time to consider what life must be like for the central character. Do you think that’s a fair assessment? AND…what other themes of the show have you found yourself contemplating during this process?

JR ROBLES: Yes, I think that’s an appropriate way to frame the experience of the play and also the vision that Micah-Shane has for the show. From the beginning, Micah-Shane has shared with us the idea that when we are performing the show, we are welcoming the audience into the mind of Christopher and, as much as possible, creating for the audience a unique world of what Christopher’s experience is like. I hope that people who come to the show will appreciate the efforts we’ve made to celebrate Christopher’s curiosity, bravery, and desire to lead the life he wants. I think the theme that resonates with me even more is the importance of personal growth. I love how the play presents that not just with Christopher, but also with Ed and Judy. Each of these characters has their own journey that is really powerful and complicated. And where they end up is so poignant and true to life.

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Nashville Repertory Theatre’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time continues with performances at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru Sunday, April 2. CLICK HERE for tickets. Next up for The Rep as they close out their 2022/2023 Season it’s Violet with Book and Lyrics by Brian Crawley and Music by Jeanine Tesori, on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre May 12-21. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

In the meantime, check out Nashville Rep online HERE and follow them on Facebook,  Twitter,  YouTube and Instagram.

As always, if you wanna follow JHPEntertainment to find out who I’m chatting with for my next Rapid Fire Q&A, or for my take on the latest local and national theatre, music and movie offerings, find us at JHPEntertainment on Facebook, JHPEntertainment on Instagram  and JHPEntertainment on Twitter. Got an event or show we should know about, drop us a line at the Contact tab. Till then, #GoSeeTheShow!

Filed Under: Entertainment, Interview, Live Performance, Live Theatre, nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Performance, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: Interview, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Theatre

Theatre Review: Circle Players’ Agatha Christie’s ‘Murder on the Orient Express’

January 28, 2023 by Jonathan

When I learned that Circle Players was mounting a production of playwright Ken Ludwig’s stage adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express, on stage through January 29 at The Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd), I was thrilled. In audience on opening weekend of Agatha Christie’s beloved mystery, I may have had higher expectation than some of the other theatre patrons in attendance. As I alluded when I chatted with the cast for one of my latest Rapid Fire 20Q interview, those higher expectations stem from the fact that I’m a bit of an Agatha Christie purist and nerd, having read my first of her works when I was probably no more than ten or eleven. My obsession didn’t stop there. I began to read her books thematically, in that when I’d travel with family on summer break vacations, I’d read such titles as Death in the Clouds (my first plane ride), The Floating Admiral (while on a boat) and The Blue Train (you get the idea). In October I’d read and reread Hallowe’en Party and darn it if December doesn’t still sees me revisit Hercule Porot’s Christmas. Heck, I’ve seen every film adaptation from Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple in the 1960s to Kenneth Branagh’s portrayal of Hercule Poirot in last year’s Death on the Nile, so yes, you could say I’m a superfan.

I love that Christie’s Estate contacted Ken Ludwig to ask if he’d be interested in adapting one of her books for the stage. Ludwig, known for writing such plays as Lend Me A Tenor, Moon Over Buffalo and the musical Crazy for You. He has also adapted a number of works for the stage based on characters created by others. Among Ludwig’s adaptations there’s Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery, Tiny Tim’s Christmas Carol and Sherwood: The Adventures of Robin Hood. Of course adapting Christie’s 250+ page tale for the stage required a bit of editing for Ludwig’s stage version. Most notably missing are about a third of the suspects. While Christie’s novel includes a very purposeful 12 suspects, Ludwig had narrowed that down to eight. Purist that I am I’m still wrestling with that, mostly because the reason behind Christie having 12 suspects in this particular story was sheer genius, just a very clever A Ha! moment during the final reveal. I get it through, twelve suspects plus Poirot, plus the victim and one other character who is seemingly above suspicion…that’s a lot of people on stage, especially since the entire play takes place aboard a train, therefore limited the physical staging of the show itself. Again, this is just my weird obsessive brain working overtime. Back to my review…

Elliott Robinson as Hercule Poirot

Elliott Robinson, who’s graced the stage of multiple shows, not only at Circle but all over Nashville, might not seem the obvious choice to play the seemingly uptight, no-nonsense Hercule Poirot, but Hillwig knew what he was doing when he cast him. Robinson might not have waxed his stache, but beyond that he perfectly personifies the quirky Belgian master sleuth. Aided by Ludwig’s cheekily written retorts…the script teeters very closely to full-on farce without completely crossing that line…Robinson’s Poirot becomes even more endearing and fun to watch. There’s even a scene or two in which Robinson delivers a bit of dialogue or a witty reply to a fellow actor, then with knowing look, a smile or pause, gives the audience time to process the snark.

Antonio Nappo as Monsieur Bouc is the perfect choice to share the stage with Robinson’s Poirot. In Christie’s novel, Monsieur Bouc is written as almost a younger, less perceptive Poirot, eager to assist the detective in his investigation, but coming up short when connecting the dots, or seeing the many clues to the identity of the guilty. Nappo plays the part with a joyful vigor. Give him a few years and time to train his facial follicles, and I could totally see Nappo taking on the role of Poirot himself one day in the near future.

Tim Bush as Ratchett, a gruff, assertive businessman, is just fantastic. Playing the part to the hilt, it’s easy to see why he ends up (Spoiler Alert!!!) dead in his bed. It’s funny, my companion for the Sunday matinee I attended, leaned over at one point and said she didn’t care for Bush as Ratchett. Knowing what was coming, I thought to myself,”then he’s playing it perfectly”. Shoot, even after the murder, Bush further shows his skills by lying there motionless while the rest of the cast buzz around his character’s berth looking for clues and discussing motive.

As for the suspects, Catherine McTamaney as Princess Dragomiroff is my new favorite. My friend and I both noticed that she was a fully committed to her role in that when she enters the stage, she does so in character. How can I explain it? Some actors walk ’to’ their scene, McTamaney walks ‘through’ hers if that makes sense. She is Princess Dragomiroff. Staunch, unimpressed and mostly unbothered.

Bailey Borders makes some interesting choices as Helen Hubbard. As I mentioned when I chatted with her for my Rapid Fire 20Q interview, the character of Mrs. Hubbard was brought to the screen first by Lauren Bacall, then by Michelle Pfeiffer. Both women played her with an air of refinement and class, coupled with a bit of sass. While Borders’ Hubbard provided plenty of laughs by her boldness, the choice to have her speak with a southern accent, rather than a dialect more fitting the character, put me in mind of Dixie Carter’s Julia Sugarbaker, rather than the aforementioned Mrs. Bogart.

Rounding out the cast are Claire Landers as Greta Ohlsson, Gary Miller as Hector McQueen, Kaleigh Ruiz as Countess Andrenyi, Nick Spencer as Colonel Arbuthnot, Emily Summers as Mary Debenham and Barrett Thomas in the dual role of Michel the Conductor and Marcel, the waiter, oh, and Michael Hutson as the voice of the announcer. Each member of the company plays well off each other and easily convince the audience not only are their on-stage relationships plausible, but so are their accents…for the most part. I mention this because this show is comprised of characters from all over the globe, from the US to Germany, with Russian, Hungary and other places of origin thrown in for good measure. That said, the cast pulls off a multitude of accents…almost as well as the culprit pulls of the murder.

On the technical side of things, not only is Hillwig directing Murder on the Orient Express, he also designed the set. While the majority of the action does indeed take place aboard a moving train, there are actually a few sets. First here’s a cafe at the train station, then the exterior of a smaller train, the exterior of the Orient Express, the sleeping berths and the dining car. There’s also scenes that take place in the rail’s communications room and the back rail of the caboose. I don’t know if my eyes were playing tricks on me or not, but I swear, by clever usage of lighting cues courtesy Daniel Default, the exterior or the trains took on a different look between being the Taurus Express (at least that’s the name of the connecting train in the novel) and the more exclusive Orient Express. While watching the cast of characters board the Orient Express, the thought did cross my mind that I wished the exterior of the Orient Express look a little more grand and stately. Those ideals were put to rest once later when the set rotated to reveal the interior dining car. Hillwig, his master carpenter, Tony Nappo and props courtesy Suzanne Spooner-Folk together, created a perfectly lush look for the dining car, complete with what appeared to be lacquered woodgrain panels, hanging sconces, a bar cart and the like.

Hillwig’s staging is also to be commended, even in the final scenes in which Poirot reveals the truth, and the entire cast (save the victim) are on stage, it never seems crowded or forced and Hillwig’s staging and direction allow the audience to witness even the most subtle of movements and reactions of the guilty as the beloved detective unravels the mystery once and for all.

Before wrapping up the cast of the theatre review, I should mention that during the intermission I overheard a group of friends in the row behind me discussing who they through the murderer might be. I can’t tell you how much it thrilled my Agatha-loving heart that of the four who weren’t familiar with the outcome of the play…a story that’s based on a book that’s nearly 90 years old, mind you…each had a different suspect in mind.

As a lover of all things Christie, I can say without hesitation that director Clay Hillwig and his cast, lead by Elliott Robinson bring Christie’s beloved story of mystery, deceit and murder to the stage with such finesse—and thanks to Ludwig having peppered the script with some punchy dialogue—a great deal of unexpected humor than even the most ardent fan will be happy they were along for the ride.

Circle Players’ Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express pulls out of the station for two more mystery-filled rides Saturday, January 28 at 7:30pm and Sunday, January 29 at 3pm. All tickets are $27 (including fees). CLICK HERE for tickets.

Next up for Circle Players is Peter and the Starcatcher, directed by Jim Manning with musical direction by Teal Davis, on stage at the Looby Theatre March 10-26. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with the latest from Circle Players follow them on Facebook,  Instagram and Twitter.

If you’ve enjoyed this latest Rapid Fire 20 Q, be sure and CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. 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,  Twitter and Facebook.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Nashville Theatre, Theare, Theatre Review Tagged With: Agatha Christie, Circle Players, Hercule Poirot, Live Performance, live theatre, Murder on the Orient Express, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Theatre, Theatre Review

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