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Rapid Fire

Rapid Fire 20Q with ‘Listen to Your Mother cast’; on stage at Gadsden State Community College’s Wallace Hall Saturday, May 13

May 8, 2023 by Jonathan

On Saturday, May 13, Gadsden, Alabama’s own Joy Tilley Perryman and a cast of locals will take to the stage of Wallace Hall Fine Arts Center on the campus of Gadsden State Community College (1001 George Wallace Dr, Gadsden, AL 35903) to present Listen to Your Mother, an evening of storytelling celebrating motherhood. Back in 2010, Ann Imig debuted Listen to Your Mother. In the years since, Listen to Your Mother has become a nationwide favorite with more than 60 local theatre companies not only performing the original stories shared, but often times presenting new and unique monologues on the subject of mothers and motherhood. As Perryman and her fellow Gadsden-area storytellers fine-tuned their monologues and readied themselves for the May 13 one-night-only event, I had the opportunity to chat with members of the cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH CAST MEMBERS OF GADSDEN’s PREMIERE PRESENTATION OF LISTEN TO YOUR MOTHER

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH LISTEN TO YOUR MOTHER’s JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those not familiar with the show, what do audiences need to know about Listen to Your Mother?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN:  That this event is so so very real and true. We have real people from all walks of life telling their true stories. It relates to and resonates with everyone. You do not have to be a Mother to enjoy this event and it is most certainly not just for women. It is a great night of entertainment for everybody!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While this is a Gadsden premiere, it not your first time being part of a production of Listen to Your Mother. What keeps you revisiting this show and how excited are you to be bringing it to your hometown?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: So, I was part of the original Nashville, TN cast and that show worked the same way this show is working. In other words, these are true stories being read by the people who wrote them. Then, when I did the show at Chaffin’s Barn Theatre, I used the actual licensed scripted show and had actors performing stories that were written by other people. It is a delicate balance finding the rhythm of the stories and the order in which they need to go. That is what brings me back, it is always changing and becoming something different. I am over the moon to bring this show to Alabama and to my hometown. I think people are going to be blown away by it.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of Gadsden being your hometown, I understand you won your first acting award on the very stage where Listen to Your Mother is being performed. What was the award and what was the performance that garnered you the accolade?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: The stage at Wallace Hall Fine Arts Center located on the campus of Gadsden State Community College is like home to me. I saw my first play there and when it was over I did not want to leave. My Daddy had to pry my fingers off the armrest and carry me to the car. But to answer your question, it was Best Actress for my portrayal of Elena in Checkov‘s The Boor, for the Etowah County Schools annual skit competition.  The next year we did Moliére.  Did I mention I had some great theatre teachers in high school?

JHPENTERTAINMENT: They say you can’t go home again, but you have. What’s been the most rewarding aspect of returning to Gadsden and what’s next for your new performing arts organization, Joy’s Jubilations after you close Listen to Your Mother?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: As most people may know, I lost my beloved Dean very unexpectedly last July, so the most rewarding thing has been being here with my family. I could not have gotten through this time of life without them. Next up, is going to be a murder mystery dinner theatre event, some summer kids programming and then late summer/early fall, a recounting of the Minnie Pearl story, All the News from Grinder’s Switch.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Listen to Your Mother is a one-night-only event. Is it too early to ask if you’re planning to make it an annual event?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: Never too early, and yes. You can’t get rid of me that easily! We will be back!

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH LISTEN TO YOUR MOTHER’s ROBIN WALLACE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Were you familiar with this show prior to Joy revealing she was bringing it to Gadsden?

ROBIN WALLACE: I was not familiar with the show, but once I learned of it, I knew I wanted to be a part of it.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your bio mentions that Listen to Your Mother is something you felt compelled to be part of. What drew you to the project.

ROBIN WALLACE: My story is one that I’ve not shared in the 45 years since it occurred and I hoped it would be cathartic for me, and it most definitely was.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this performance is also special to you because you’ll be taking to the stage for this one-night-only event on the anniversary of your own mother’s birth. Whether part of what you’ll share onstage or not, what’s a piece of advice, or a saying you remember from your mother?

ROBIN WALLACE: She always stressed that my brother and I were to protect and take care of each other. We listened. We have always been each other’s protectors and still are best friends today.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A portion of all Listen to Your Mother ticket sales for this performance will benefit New Centurions, a rehab facility for women located in Gadsden. How rewarding is it to not only be part of a show that will entertain audience members, but also benefit women in need?

ROBIN WALLACE: This will be a very emotional night for me because of my story. I’m glad to share it if it helps just one woman.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Like Joy, you’re also an Alabama native, though you hail a bit further south, from Montgomery. Just between us, is there a difference between Northern Alabama folks and Montgomery Alabamians?

ROBIN WALLACE: I absolutely love this area and wouldn’t want to live anywhere else! The Montgomery I knew as a teenager is no more, so I’m extremely happy I wound up in North Alabama after my Army career.

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH LISTEN TO YOUR MOTHER’s TABITHA BOZEMAN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Were you familiar with Listen to Your Mother prior to joining this production?

TABITHA BOZEMAN: I was not.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: A little social media peek as I was researching to chat with you revealed both you and your husband are educators. Is there any advice that’s helped you in your interactions with students?

TABITHA BOZEMAN: We are! I think the most important part of being an effective educator is having empathy. You can have all the knowledge of your field, but if you can’t empathize with how students learn, and the challenges they face, you will not be an effective teacher.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Further stalking of your social media revealed you’re involved in Gadsden State Community College’s Cardinal Arts Journal, so shameless plug time…What can you tell me about that?

TABITHA BOZEMAN: Yay! I love chatting about this! Yes, I am the editor in Chief for the Cardinal Arts Journal, which is an arts journal that Gadsden State produces, and that is open to the community, students and employees at GSCC, and to the public in general. That means we accept submissions from pretty much anyone, anywhere, and those submissions are considered for publication by our board of editors. Our editors are community writers and artists, GSCC employees and students, and writers and artists from all over the United States. There are 3 issues a year, published at the end of each semester, and we are always looking for new writing and art to publish! We accept creative writing, art, photography, music, performance, and digital art and music, as well. The Cardinal Arts Journal is an online publication. That is also the address to visit if you are interested in submitting your work. We accept submissions from all ages, as well, and there is usually a theme posted on our Facebook page and Instagram for each issue. This Spring’s issue has the theme Telling Our Stories: Fairytales, Myths, Legends, and Folklore, and will be out soon!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand Listen to Your Mother will mark your return to the stage after a lengthy absence. What was the last show you were in and how are you feeling about returning to the stage?

TABITHA BOZEMAN: Wow. It has been so long since I’ve been onstage for anything other than academics, I honestly am not sure what my last performance was—I believe it was either Arsenic and Old Lace or The Man Who Came to Dinner, with Theatre of Gadsden, and probably 25 years ago. I have, however, stayed somewhat involved as a theatre parent . My girls have grown up backstage because my husband, Jason teaches theatre.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Quite often productions of Listen to Your Mother use monologues written for the show’s original mounting. For Gadsden’s premiere presentation, and given the fact that you’re a writer, yourself, I’m guessing you will be performing an original monologue?

TABITHA BOZEMAN: Yes, I have written a brief piece about how motherhood helped teach me to listen to myself.

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH LISTEN TO YOUR MOTHER’s BILLY JENKINS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’ll start with an obvious question. It would appear you’re the sole male storyteller in this presentation of Listen to Your Mother. How’s that going for you?

BILLY JENKINS: LOL… it’s going well.  Although I don’t share the same sex as the other performers, we all have something in common: we all have a mother. I’m used to being the lone male because I was an elementary school teacher and male elementary teachers are few and far between, so being the only male is not a big thing.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While doing a little digging to chat with you and a few of your cast mates, I couldn’t help but be moved by a mention of your late mother in the bio Joy provided to me. Being a proud and self-professed Mama’s Boy myself…she’s 81 and going strong…I totally get it. What do you think your Mom would tell you about taking to the stage and sharing your memories of her for Listen to Your Mother?

BILLY JENKINS: First of all, my mom would be so proud of my life accomplishments. She passed when I was just 21 years old and a lot has happened since then.  As far as sharing memories of her, she’d probably tell me not to make her sound bad and to not tell any stories of her whipping me when I was a child. She’d also be excited that I’m participating in this because she always said that behind every great man is an even greater woman.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: You teach both Psychology and Philosophy at Gadsden, so a two-parter…what’s the craziest excuse you’ve heard from a student on why they missed class or an assignment deadline? AND…just because I’m curious…What’s one thing Psychology and Philosophy have in common?

BILLY JENKINS: The craziest excuse that I’ve encountered about missing class or missed assignments would have to be the dead grandmother excuse. Often times, she’s died twice during the semester and the students forgot they already used that excuse.

Psychology and philosophy share the same roots: both of them study human conditions and behaviors. Philosophy revolves around WHAT the human condition is, while Psychology revolves around the WHY the human condition is. Psychology arose from the discipline of Philosophy. The word ‘psychology’ refers to the study of souls and the word ‘philosophy’ refers to the study of wisdom.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From your bio, I understand your first show was a 1990 production of A Chorus Line, and you readily admit you still have trouble remembering your lines. What’s a bit of dialogue from A Chorus Line that you still remember?

BILLY JENKINS: Really? Ok here goes:  “I was in the back seat with Sally Ketchum and I was feeling her boobs and feeling her boobs. She said, “Don’t you want to feel anything else?” and I suddenly thought to myself, “No, I don’t.”

JHPENTERTAINMENT: It’s sort of become my sign-off while doing these Rapid Fire Q&As to close with some version of the following…What do you hope the audience remembers about the Alabama premiere performance of Listen to Your Mother?

BILLY JENKINS: I hope the audience will listen to the different stories that are onstage and realize that although our stories are totally different, we all share the good and the bad about our mothers and those have shaped us into the people that we are today.

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This Mother’s Day weekend, the Alabama debut of Joy’s Jubilations’ presentation of Listen to Your Mother takes to the stage of Wallace Hall Fine Arts Center at Gadsden State Community College for a one-night-only performance on Saturday, May 13. The show begins at 7:30p.m. Tickets are $23. All tickets are general admission. CLICK HERE or HERE to purchase your tickets. To keep up with Joy’s Jubilations and find out what’s next, follow 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: Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theare Tagged With: 2023, Alabama, Gadsden, Gadsden Alabama, Interview, Joy Tilley Perryman, Listen to Your Mother, Mother's Day, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A

Rapid Fire Q&A with Ballet Hispánico dancers Amanda del Valle and Chris Bloom; the company’s ‘Doña Perón’ on stage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre April 28-29

April 24, 2023 by Jonathan

On Friday, April 28 and Saturday, April 29, Tennessee Performing Arts Center will host Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón as part of TPAC’s inaugural International Dance Series. Based out of New York and founded in 1970, Ballet Hispánico is the largest Latinx/Latine/Hispanic culture organization in the US and widely recognized as a leader in bringing the message of cultural history and inclusivity through dance.

As the company prepares to bring Doña Perón, the story of iconic Argentine First Lady, Eva Perón to Nashville for the Music City debut at TPAC’s Polk Theatre, I’ve had the incredible opportunity to chat with two of the company’s lead dancers, Miami Native, Amanda del Valle, who’s dancing the titular role of Eva Perón and Virginia-born Chris Bloom, the ballet’s Juan Perón for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire Q&A.

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RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH DOÑA PERÓN’s AMANDA del VALLE AND CHRIS BLOOM

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH AMANDA DEL VALLE, EVITA in BALLET HISPÁNICO’s DOÑA PERÓN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I just have to begin by saying I’ve been a wee bit obsessed with all things Eva Perón since I was a kid and my favorite aunt took me to see the Broadway musical based on her life. Prior to taking one the role of Evita, how familiar were you with her story?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I actually had not heard of Evita Perón until a few weeks before the choreographic process. I remember when we found out we would be performing a new work based on Eva’s life; I called my family to tell them and they informed me a little bit about who she was and what she was so famous for. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From what I know, you first became interested in ballet at a very young age. What memories do you have of your time training with Marielena Mencia and Yanis Pikieris at Miami Youth Ballet?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I was about 10 years old when I took my first ballet class, and it’s where all my dreams began.  My favorite memories are the ones where we would be in the studio rehearsing until 10 o’clock at night, sometimes later, because we were so focused and driven that we would lose track of time. Our moms would have to come upstairs to get us out of the studio. It was home and we never wanted to leave. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand this is your second season with Ballet Hispánico. How did you come to join the company?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: I was introduced to Ballet Hispánico through my mentor and role model Melissa Verdecía. I watched her dance with Ballet Hispánico and knew I wanted to be a part of an organization that allowed me to not only grow in my artistry but also allowed me to grow closer to my roots and culture with dance.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about working with Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, the show’s choreographer?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: Working with Annabelle Lopez Ochoa was very exciting. I love how she caters to each dancer and what they are capable of, and pushes you to go further than what you think you are capable of. I have always admired her work and individuality as a choreographer and person. Also working with a female choreographer on a piece about a female icon is a very empowering experience.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Speaking of the creative team behind Doña Perón, costumer Mark Eric has created dozens of costumes for the show. Exactly how many costume changes do you have, and what are your favorite costumes among them?

AMANDA DEL VALLE: The role of Evita Perón consists of exactly seven costume changes that happen on and off stage, with a total of 6 costumes. It’s hard to pick a favorite costume because they are all so beautiful and show the many different parts of Evita but I would have to pick the last dress that she changes into on stage for her final duet before her death. I love how it combines the classy, business, and strong regal essence of Evita. 

 

RAPID FIRE Q&A WITH CHRIS BLOOM, JUAN PERÓN in BALLET HISPÁNICO’s DOÑA PERÓN

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As I mentioned when I chatted with Amanda earlier, I’ve been interested in Evia Perón story since I was a kid. In Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón you play Juan Perón. What can you tell me about the character and how you prepared to portray him in movement?

CHRIS BLOOM: This character is interesting because he is a mix of things. Annabelle wasn’t interested in telling fairy tales but the stories of actual people. Real people are flawed and complex and that makes rich ground for storytelling. Juan Perón was many things and not nearly all of them were good but I do believe he loved Eva genuinely. I try my best to play him like a real person. The real man had many political ideas in common with the fascist governments/leaders of the day but he cared about helping Argentina’s disadvantaged people. He came from wealth and was driven in his pursuit of power to the point of ordering the hostile takeover of his country’s newspapers and is known to have ordered the imprisonment of journalists and other people that opposed his agenda. Was Evita a conduit for gaining power? She was. Did he love that about her? I imagine he did. But I also imagine he loved her as a person as well. I try to play all of this each time I perform in Doña Perón. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This year marks your tenth season Ballet Hispánico. What is it about this dance company that keeps you excited to perform?

CHRIS BLOOM: It is the stories we tell and how we tell them on stage that keeps me coming back year after year. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I asked Amanda about her early ballet interest. How old were you when you discovered ballet and began considering it as a career path?

CHRIS BLOOM: I was 15 years old when I took my first ballet class. I had always known it was a possible career as there was a great deal of art in my home growing up. I fell in love with the aspirational rigor of the art form and honestly never looked back. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Near the end of 2022, Doña Perón was presented at The Kennedy Center and just earlier this month, on Friday, April 14, PBS aired one of those performances as part of their series Next at the Kennedy Center. So a two-part question for you: What’s it like to dance at the famed performing arts venue and how do you feel about being part of a broadcast that will allow people who might not otherwise get the chance, to see such a spectacular piece?

CHRIS BLOOM: Performing at the Kennedy Center is always an incredible experience! I grew up about 60 miles due west of DC in Frederick Co, VA so I can remember seeing many dance companies there as a kid. Performing there is evidence of a dream fulfilled. The chance to reach a larger audience through the broadcast of our work on PBS is as exciting as it gets. There is nothing better than getting a text from a friend saying “Hey! I saw you on TV!”

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those who do get the chance to see Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón, whether via the PBS special, or live as the tour continues, what do you hope audiences take from the experience?

CHRIS BLOOM: I hope that audiences take culture away from the experience of seeing the company in action. Latinx cultures are a multiplicity not a monolith and through our performances audiences get to see complexity and authenticity rather than stereotypes. My greatest hope as a performer is to leave audiences with a sense of curiosity and an appreciation of beauty. 

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Ballet Hispánico’s Doña Perón can be see live onstage at TPAC’s Polk Theatre Friday and Saturday, April 28 and 29 at 8p.m. each evening. Tickets rang in price from $45 to $95. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. To learn more about Doña Perón, Ballet Hispánico, del Valle, Bloom and the rest of the company’s dancers and creatives, CLICK HERE or follow them on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and Vimeo.  Not in Nashville? CLICK HERE to see where Ballet Hispánico will be performing next.

Doña Perón marks the second in three productions visiting TPAC as part of their first-ever International Dance Series, MOMIX Alice being the first. In case you missed my chat with members of MOMIX dance company, CLICK HERE to check out those conversations.

Next up for TPAC’s International Dance Series is Scottish Ballet’s The Crucible, onstage at TPAC’s Jackson Hall May 19 and 20. CLICK HERE for more info. Be sure to check out TPAC online and on socials by clicking any of the following:  TPAC.org,  TPAC on Instagram,  TPAC on Facebook, TPAC on Twitter and TPAC on YouTube.

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, Live Performance, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A Tagged With: Amanda del Valle, Ballet, Ballet Hispanico, Celebrity Interview, Chris Bloom, dance, Dance Company, dancers, Dona Peron, Eva Peron, Evita, Interview, Juan Peron, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Touring Company, TPAC

RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF PIEDMONT PLAYERS THEATRE’S ‘KINKY BOOTS’; on stage at Meroney Theatre in Salisbury, North Carolina April 21-May 7

April 19, 2023 by Jonathan

While I typically feature productions originating from-or National Tours visiting-the area near JHPEntertainment’s home base of Nashville, Tennessee, for the latest installment of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20Q, I’m thrilled to venture a little further out to feature the Salisbury, North Carolina-based theatre company, Piedmont Players Theatre as they prepare for their April 21 Opening Night of the regional theatrical premier of Kinky Boots at the Meroney Theatre (213 S. Main St, Salisbury, NC). There’s a couple reasons I wanted to feature this particular company and this show. One, I absolutely love Kinky Boots, and Two, it’s being directed by PPT’s Executive Director, Bradley Moore, who just so happens to be one of my favorite humans! What follows are my conversations with Bradley, as well as Kinky Boots’ cast members Nick Culp, Michael Fargas and Taylor Kroop, who play Charlie, Lola and Lauren, respectively.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF PIEDMONT PLAYERS THEATRE’s KINKY BOOTS

RAPID FIRE WITH KINKY BOOTS DIRECTOR BRADLEY MOORE

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As I’m sure you know, Kinky Boots is based on a true story. In fact, years before it was a Broadway sensation, it was a non-musical film. I myself saw the movie back in 2006. When were you first aware of the Kinky Boots story? AND…What was it about the show that piqued your interest as a director?

BRADLEY MOORE: Man, you were on top of it! I actually never saw the film when it was first released, but was very aware of the musical from its inception. I mean, Harvey Fierstein, Cyndi Lauper, and Jerry Mitchell?!? That combination is going to make any Broadway baby’s ears perk up. I was also very aware of Stark Sands (Charlie in the Broadway debut) because of his previous involvement with the Broadway production of American Idiot. I was living in Nashville when the first Broadway tour came through in 2015, which is when I saw Kinky Boots for the very first time. It was an instant love affair. Between the killer music, the positive messaging, and the choreography – it was all just incredible. It immediately went on my “MUST DIRECT ONE DAY” list. I am very happy that we have reached that day. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In the time since the show was chosen to be included in your current season, the subject of drag has become quite controversial, especially in your former home state of Tennessee. I’d imagine that’s been on your mind from time to time as you’ve rehearsed your cast?

BRADLEY MOORE: Absolutely. At one of our first rehearsals, we all sat around and dissected the show – discussing characters and connections and themes. The collective “us” already believed that this show was more important than ever, but even more so because of the current political and hate-fueled climate. In fact, that rehearsal was just days after Tennessee Governor Bill Lee signed the bill that would restrict drag performances all over the state. I even remember saying – “I am not sure this show could be performed in Nashville right now.” Of course now, a month or so later, we know a little differently and thankfully Judge Thomas Parker has put a delay on the bill going into effect. However, artistic expression is under fire, in many ways. Kinky Boots IS more important than ever. It’s a show that boasts the message – JUST BE; that can be hard to do when some people feel they need to get in the way of the First Amendment. Artists need to unite now, more than ever, to secure their freedoms. And we are much stronger together.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Since the 2013 Broadway debut of the musical adaptation, Lola’s boots have becoming an instantly recognizable bit of musical theatre iconography. Who’s your costumer and what can you tell me about Lola’s looks and the infamous thigh-high footwear that’ll be seen in production?

BRADLEY MOORE: Our costumer Colleen Smiley is just fantastic. She and I have worked in conjunction to secure all the boots for the show from a large variety of sources. From purchasing a few to utilizing our theatre friends whose theatres have performed the show recently, we have used our resources very wisely. A big shout-out to Heather Levinson and Theatre Alliance in Winston-Salem, who have allowed us to borrow an array of footwear from their production from last summer. Several cast members have also contributed by purchasing their own boots. I never thought I would say “it takes a village” about boots, but it did take a whole big village to make it happen. And honestly, they are all pretty fabulous. It is definitely Bootapalooza.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What’s been the most challenging aspect of bringing Kinky Boots to life on stage with Piedmont Players?

BRADLEY MOORE: I think there is always a level of pressure when you get to do something first. As far as the Charlotte area goes, this is the first fully-staged production of Kinky Boots that the local community will have the opportunity to see. I actually don’t mind that pressure. I love being the first to do things. It is also a show filled with a million logistics, which has been interesting to navigate. Thankfully, I have an incredible crew around me that are helping to make all the magic happen. To me, as with any show, we have to make sure that we are all honest storytellers who embrace the heart of the story. As long as we are doing that, I believe audiences will really love what we are putting on that stage. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I’m about to chat with members of your cast. What’s been the biggest/best surprise about working with this particular cast and crew?

BRADLEY MOORE: This cast has not only wildly embraced the material, but also each other. With so many elements of drag and acceptance within the show, it has been wonderful to see how much love and support is present at every rehearsal. We are an honest-to-goodness Kinky family. It is a smaller cast than would usually be needed to bring Kinky Boots alive. We have 16 cast members, whereas the show usually requires anywhere from 22 to 28. Therefore, everyone has had to work a little harder to bring it all together, and they are WERKING.

Nick Culp, who plays Charlie, is a freak of nature. One of the most talented humans I have ever worked with. This is our 6th show together and I hope we have many more in our future. Michael Fargas, who plays Lola, is making his Piedmont Players debut. When he walked through the door at auditions, I knew he had many special gifts that only in a role such as Lola could be fully appreciated. Taylor Kroop and Caroline Forrester, as Lauren and Nicola, respectively, are powerhouse vocalists with an attack and energy that is unmatched by most. The rest of the cast – Kristina Blake, Dakotah Chelgren, Austin Dantzler, Jonathan Lodgek, Keilen McNeil, Aidan Melton, Johnathon Stribling, Kristin Swilley, Dale Waters, and Wendy Weant have all settled into their roles beautifully. There are truly 16 superb performances in this production And if you come for nothing else, Thierry Agnant, as Young Lola, and Asher Pethel, as Young Charlie, are pure theatrical excellence. And I would be nothing without the brilliance of our choreographer, David T. Loudermilk, and our Music Director, John Stafford. They have been my rocks throughout this entire journey. I am just beyond grateful for all the humans involved with this production, including Colleen Welday and Tara Melton who make some surprise appearances throughout the show. 

RAPID FIRE WITH KINKY BOOTS’ CHARLIE, NICK CULP

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Area theater patrons will no doubt recognize you from multiple shows with PPT. What can you tell me about Kinky Boots’ Charlie and what drew you to this role?

NICK CULP: The script’s character breakdown describes Charlie better than I ever could: he’s “a bit confused, a bit unfocused, a hero hiding under a victim’s mantle.” When we first meet Charlie, he’s pretty aimless and doesn’t know what he wants out of life – the only thing he knows for certain is that he doesn’t want to run a shoe factory the rest of his life, like his father. But after some plot twists and turns, Charlie finally finds his purpose in the last place he ever thought he’d find it – that factory, his home, the very place from which he’d been trying to escape. Not only that, he finds his passion thanks to the help of a very unlikely source: a drag queen in need of some heels that won’t break! It’s that classic Odd Couple relationship that just works so well in any comedy. 

I was drawn to the role because I see a lot of myself in Charlie. His father dies in the first ten minutes of the play; my dad passed away unexpectedly about 4 months ago. So art is quite literally imitating life at the moment. I used to think that the show’s central themes were love and acceptance. And while that’s still true, I’ve found that what resonates with me the most after losing my dad are the themes of grief and finding joy, healing and purpose through loss. Both of the central characters have lost their fathers in different ways, yet they both deal with this balancing act of honoring the life their fathers built for them while forging their own path. That common ground is really the foundation of their friendship, as well as the catalyst for Charlie’s journey to a more purposeful life. To put a finer point on it, I was drawn to the role because when Charlie heals, I get to heal a little bit too. This experience has been very cathartic.      

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Earlier, I spoke with the show’s Director, Bradley Moore. I’ve known Bradley for years, from his time in Nashville. How is Bradley as a director and in particular, what’s been the best aspect of having Bradley direct you in Kinky Boots?

NICK CULP: Bradley has been with PPT for a little over a year now and in that time, I think I’ve been involved in all but two productions that he has directed. So I like to think I’ve got a pretty good understanding of how he works and vice versa. As an actor himself, he knows how to give his actors the space and freedom to make their own choices without micromanaging, which I’ve always appreciated. He also cares about how you’re doing in regards to the show. I can recall moments in every production we’ve worked on together where he pulls me aside to ask how I’m feeling about everything and to check if there’s anything I need. He wants everyone to succeed and do their best. The best aspect of having him direct me in Kinky Boots, aside from everything I’ve already mentioned, is that this show feels personal for him. He’s put a lot of heart into this particular production and treated it with the care it deserves. This story is more important now than ever and so I think that’s a responsibility he takes seriously.    

JHPENTERTAINMENT: With words and music by legendary 80s Pop Goddess, Cyndi Lauper, Kinky Boots’ soundtrack is filled with such great music. Among my favorites…and not just because I’m talking to you…is Charlie’s Step One. Are there certain musical moments in the show, whether yours or someone else’s that just ‘get you’ every time?

NICK CULP: There really is some fantastic music in this show and I agree – Step One is definitely a bop! So two songs come to mind that “get me” every time. The first is singing Soul of a Man. It’s the lowest point for Charlie: that overwhelming feeling of not being enough; the culmination of all of this frustration, stress and unexpressed grief. I’ve been there. Like, recently. So it feels good to release those feelings every night when I sing it. If I look emotionally drained afterward, it’s because I am! The second song that comes to mind is Not My Father’s Son. It’s impossible to listen to Michael Fargas (our Lola) sing that song and not feel something. So the fact that I get to have a front row seat to it every night has been very special and my tears are real every night. I’m so proud of what he’s done with that song and getting to join him for a little duet at the end of it is the cherry on the top. Bring tissues.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: For those unfamiliar with the show, it takes place in Northampton in the East Midlands region of England. To that end, the majority, if not all the characters speak with an English accent. Did the cast have a dialect coach working with you all to fine-tune your accents?

NICK CULP: Yes, Bradley had a contact that he made available to us for dialect coaching and I believe some cast members worked with them. I have actually been using an English accent off and on for the better part of a year with other shows I’ve worked on so it wasn’t much different than what I’ve already been doing. But this dialect is definitely less proper than the received pronunciation I’ve been using. More Beatles and less Royal Family. I think the most challenging part for me was finding my own voice within the accent, finding the cadence and inflection that worked for my Charlie. What helped me the most was memorizing my lines as soon as possible, so I spent the first couple of weeks doing that, speaking the lines slowly out-loud and figuring out the placement of my mouth to shape those words. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Another vital aspect of this show is the choreography. I understand David Loudermilk is choreographing Kinky Boots. For those unfamiliar with the behind-the-scenes of theatre, what’s an average rehearsal like, compared to choreo rehearsal?

NICK CULP: Well, at an average rehearsal, I don’t sweat. At a David Loudermilk choreo rehearsal, I do sweat. In all seriousness, a choreo rehearsal is focused on learning the dance for any given song. In an average rehearsal, we learn the blocking of a scene – where we stand onstage, where we cross and when, etc. We also learn the music – the correct notes, rhythms, etc. So when we get to choreography rehearsals, we are using the things we’ve learned from blocking/music and adding dance into the mix. We learn it in pieces and/or there are some songs that feature smaller groups of the cast, so we each learn our own part and then combine it all together to get the final look of the dance. In a nutshell, choreography rehearsal is really a matter of becoming a moving puzzle piece. We have numbers that run along the edge of the stage so we can glance down and know where we’re standing. It’s important to be standing on the correct number so you aren’t out of place with the overall formation that David has created. David’s choreography is high energy and all about telling a story. 

RAPID FIRE WITH KINKY BOOTS’ SIMON/LOLA, MICHAEL FARGAS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I understand Kinky Boots marks your PPT debut. I guess if you’re gonna make an entrance into the Salisbury Theatre community, THIS is THE role to do it, right?

MICHAEL FARGAS: Absolutely! I feel like this role, it’s such a powerhouse role and it’s the best way to make an entrance back into the world of theater. Especially given our current climate and the issues that have arisen. It’s a statement being made for sure.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While this marks your PPT debut, you’re definitely no stranger to performing arts having done community theatre, worked at theme parks and as a performer with Carnival Cruises. What’s your favorite part of doing community theatre?

MICHAEL FARGAS: Yes, I’m no stranger in the performing arts world, but community theater brings a new element that is sometimes forgotten and that is EDUCATION. My favorite part has been the educational standpoint;. Being able to meet other people that are new to the arts, and come together and deliver a message of acceptance, authenticity and love has been amazing. That’s including providing some sort of education to the audience and the actors themselves. Compared to a lot of traditional other source of entertainment, community theater allows you to push the boundaries of perception and ideas in a local level.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I admit it, I did a little social media stalk in preparation of chatting with you. To that end, what can you tell me about Summer Camp with the Peanuts Gang during your time at Valleyfair Amusement Park? (I can’t help it, I’m a Snoopy nerd from way back)

MICHAEL FARGAS: It always tickles me because I get asked about this frequently. There is definitely a childlike excitement when it comes to being able to stand on stage with Some of your friends that you have watched since you were a kid. From watching Charlie Brown’s Thanksgiving as a kid, to spending the summer with the Peanuts and bringing the same happiness to other children is an irreplaceable feeling. Memories that I will carry forever.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Your promo photo as Lola is just flawless. So much so, I suspected this might not be your first time in drag. Further Insta stalking/research proved my suspicions correct. Who is Sassi and how much of her can we see in Lola?

MICHAEL FARGAS: You’ve done some really great research. This is not my first time in drag but it is my first time combining something that I love such as theater and drag in one setting, which was hard to do based on being a queer Afro Latino male in the world of performing arts. Sassi is an Afro Latina Theatre queen who loves attention but also authentically lives her life unapologetically and she encourages others to do so. Lola and Sassi have so much in common. They both find happiness in bringing joy to other people laugh and bravery. Lola is as much Sassi as I am to Simon (Lola’s male presenting persona). Many of the experiences that Lola/Simon face, I relate to in my own life. Obviously not the same exact storyline but similar lessons, such as parent expectation and living authentically and in peace.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: RuPaul famously says, “We’re all born naked and the rest is drag”. Do you agree? AND what’s a quote you, yourself reflect on from time to time?

MICHAEL FARGAS: I agree and disagree. In this world we are raised to fit into the societal norms. Though some people conform, others venture outside that realm. Drag is an art form that allows you to express certain areas of yourself that you normally wouldn’t get to in an everyday routine, and can teach you so much about who you are. It allows you to step in someone else’s shoes and understand and admire what it is to be a queen or king in our world. But the goal is to apply what you learn in drag and implement it outside of your drag persona to live authentically. Sassi will always be part of me and I’m grateful for her, but she allowed me to learn to love who Michael is, no matter his past. And I don’t want to be anyone else but me, without “the glitter, the feathers and the hot glue gun…” (a line from the show). I think my favorite quote that I go back to is what my mom said to me one time and that was, “Be the best you that you can be and do it to your full capacity”.

RAPID FIRE WITH KINNKY BOOTS’ LAUREN, TAYLOR KROOP

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This is your second show with PPT, having been a member of the ensemble of their production of A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder in the fall. In that production you played a myriad of supporting characters throughout the show, now you’re playing Lauren, a factory worker who develops a close relationship with Nick Culp’s Charlie. How is Nick as a scene partner? 

TAYLOR KROOP: Nick is an awesome scene partner. We actually go way back to when we performed Little Women together back in 2018. He was Laurie and I was Jo so we already had some established chemistry. It’s so fun to be back on the stage with him and getting to just play!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Who walks better in heels, you or Michael?

TAYLOR KROOP: As much as I would love to say me, it’s probably Michael! Haha 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Much of the action of Kinky Boots takes place at the factory. I understand your director, Bradley and Jennifer O’Kelly designed the set for PPT’s production. What’s your favorite aspect of it?

TAYLOR KROOP: Yes, Bradley Moore and Jennifer O’Kelly designed the set! My favorite aspect of the set is all the visible staircases and the exposed brick at the back of the stage. I think it really adds to the factory aesthetic. 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As Lauren, your big musical number is The History of Wrong Guys. So spill it…Do you have a history of wrong dates, too?

TAYLOR KROOP: To be honest, my history of wrong guys is a pretty short story because I’m getting married in 2 months…to my college sweetheart! 

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I often like to end my chats with the same basic question, and since you’re the last of your costars I’m chatting with, this time, it falls to you…What do you hope audiences come away remembering after having seen Kinky Boots?

TAYLOR KROOP: I hope the audience walks away seeing that people who do drag or people who are involved in the arts are just people trying to make it like the rest of us. It’s a form expression that gives them joy. I hope everyone can see the humanity in what we do and through our acting, especially in todays political climate. To quote our finale song, “Just be who you wanna be

Never let ’em tell you who you ought to be. Just be with dignity. Celebrate yourself triumphantly. You’ll see…Just be.” 

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Piedmont Players Theatre’s Kinky Boots opens Friday, April 21 and runs through Sunday, May 7 at the Meroney Theatre with a 7:30p.m. showtime Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday Matinees at 2:30p.m. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. Check out Piedmont Players Theatre online and follow them on Facebook and Instagram. 

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Bradley Moore, Celebrity Interview, Interview, Kinky Boots, Live Performance, live theatre, Michael Fargas, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nick Culp, Piedmont Players Theatre, PPT, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A, Salisbury NC

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

Rapid Fire 20Q with director and cast of Circle Players’ “Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express”; onstage at Looby theatre January 13-29

January 13, 2023 by Jonathan

Agatha Christie has long been my favorite mystery writer, having first discovered her by way of film adaptations when I was younger. With an introduction to her work via film versions of The Mirror Crack’d, Death on The Nile and Murder on the Orient Express, I was quickly obsessed. Heck, I even began reading Christie’s novels in a thematic manner…the first time I flew in an airplane, I read Death in the Air, at Halloween and Christmas I read stories featuring her most famous detective, Hercule Poirot that took place during those holidays. When I heard Circle Players was mounting Ken Ludwig’s stage adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express I hoped I’d kick off the new year by featuring some of the cast and crew for my latest Rapid Fire 20Q. In spite of the fact that they were in the throes of tech week, I was thrilled when director Clay Hillwig and cast members Elliott Robinson, Antonio Nappo and Bailey Borders graciously agreed to chat with me in the days just prior the show opening at Looby Theatre Friday, January 13. What follows are those conversations.

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RAPID FIRE 20Q WITH DIRECTOR AND CAST OF CIRCLE PLAYERS’ AGATHA CHRISTIE’s MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS

RAPID FIRE WITH MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS DIRECTOR CLAY HILLWIG

JHPENTERTAINMENT: How did directing Murder on the Orient Express for Circle come about?

CLAY HILLWIG: A little over a year ago, Circle Players reached out to me and asked if I would be interested in directing this show.  I could not type “Y-E-S” out quick enough in my response.  To be honest, it had not been on my list.  I am still questioning how it wasn’t.  I guess fortune placed it in front of me and I am very thankful to Circle Players that it did.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: This may seem a simple, obvious question, but having appeared both in shows, as well as being part of various productions’ crews, do you think that gives you an advantage as a director guiding actors?

CLAY HILLWIG: That is a good question.  I do not know if it necessarily gives me and advantage, but it definitely gives me a full understanding of the moving parts of a production.  In regards to guiding actors.  I have always approached directing style and my relationship with my cast, based my own desires as an actor.  How do I what to be directed?  How do I want to be treated during the process?  Am I being challenged to grow in my craft as an actor?  Do I trust my director to provide both positive and negative feedback in a constructive manner,  Is my director available, to guide me in defining the character I am playing and my relationships with the other characters within the story?  Most importantly, is my director providing a safe environment to work in?   I have been labeled as “an actors director”, which tells me that my approach is making a positive impression. Communication with my actors is crucial to me.  Making sure that I am listening to them and their ideas with the same patience and respect that I require from them.  That being said, I believe that it is also very important to strike a balance of directing through the process and knowing when to get out of the actors way.  My goal is always to provide a drama free, safe environment, for my actors to work and grow in their art.  If the production is flawless and receives rave reviews, but I have failed in this important part of the process, I cannot walk away with the satisfaction that is was a successful production.  I would like to take this opportunity to say that this cast had been a pure joy to work with.  They have showed up prepared from the very beginning of the process and have made my role as their leader as smooth as it could have possibly been.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: I myself am a lifelong Christie fan, heck I recently finished my annual holiday re-read of her seasonal mystery, Hercule Poirot’s Christmas, so suffice it to say I’m perhaps a tad more familiar with Christie than some of your audience might be. That said, Christie’s novel includes 12 suspects, but playwright Ken Ludwig opted to par down the suspect list to eight. How does this enhance the telling of the story of the stage play

CLAY HILLWIG: It is an interesting choice by Ludwig to reduce our suspects from 12 to 8. He took some license in the melding of characters from the original 12 to the 8 that we have here, without taking away from the original writing of Ms. Christie . The result is a very tight, fast paced, well written script.   Though Christie purist may not agree, I believe that the choice in this adaptation works very well for the stage. The strongest endorsement is from the Agatha Christie Limited, who personally requested he take on this adaptation.  Ludwig refers to this project as one of the highlights of his career. I think we can all understand why.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In addition to directing, you’re doing double duty as the show’s set designer. As the title might suggest, the action takes place primarily aboard the infamous train. What’s the biggest advantage—aside from the assumed less number of sets—to directing a show that takes place in a relatively confined solitary space?

CLAY HILLWIG: Not easy!!! Yes, there are limited sets, but the size of the set and the limited space for our scenes to play out has been challenging.  When you research the original Orient Express, space is very tight throughout. It is important that we are telling our story from within the tight confines of the train and not the expanse of the theater stage.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While the story is set in the confines of the legendary train, the cast of characters provide an international flare with travelers from England, France, Belgium, Russia, the US and more, so I gotta know…who’s the show’s dialect coach?

CLAY HILLWIG: Early in the production process I had reached out to candidates to join us as dialect coaches, Of course schedules and conflicts tend to alter our best laid plans as you get closer to the target date..  But, there is always a solution.  In this case I was very fortunate to cast two actors, Barrett Thomas and Kaleigh Ruiz, who have both a minor and major in French and Belgium.. They have worked closely with our  players in perfecting these accents.  As for our other dialects, the actors came prepared, some with accents already in place, others working very hard using various tools that are available.  YouTube is a wonderful thing!!

RAPID FIRE WITH MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS’s HERCULE POIROT, ELLIOTT ROBINSON

JHPENTERTAINMENT: As you reveal in your cast bio, Murder on the Orient Express marks your tenth time to appear onstage with Circle Players. I think I’ve seen you in each of the previous nine. Whenever an actor has such a longstanding relationship with a theatre company, I always like to ask…What is it that keeps you coming back?

ELLIOTT ROBINSON: Bottom line is, Circle Players always mounts quality productions. The rehearsal processes are drama-free, I always get to work with amazingly talented casts and crews, and the end result is something that all of us, and all of Nashville can be proud of: professional-quality live theatre productions, and a great variety of them, whether they be musicals or not.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple, another of Christie’s best-known detectives, are among the most beloved literary detectives of all time. What’s it like portraying such an iconic character?

ELLIOTT ROBINSON: It’s a huge challenge because so many people know the character. When I mention the role, so many people have shared their recollections of Poirot, and sometimes ask me whether I am going to try to recreate this scene, or this mannerism, or whatever; simply, the answer is no. I am going to make the character my own. I wouldn’t dare watch a movie or anything like that involving a character I’m working on, for fear that – even subconsciously – I might imitate something that someone else did. So, I take all my cues from the words in the script, plus my director’s notes and my own research about the character.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Having just chatted with your show’s director, I brought up the subject of the variety of character dialects. As Poirot, your character is infamously from Belgium. If you were to teach a quick course in the Belgian dialect, what would your top two helpful hints?

ELLIOTT ROBINSON: I would NOT be able to teach a course! It is clear that, with all of the French phrases peppered into the script, that Poirot is from a part of Belgium that is French-influenced, as opposed to some Belgians that have more of a Dutch flavor to their speech (I learned that searching youtube clips!). I will say that a couple of fluent French-speakers in the cast have been tremendously helpful, guiding me through the French phrases, as well as helping me with the accent. Ultimately, I am more worried about the audience understanding what I’m saying than I am about being the “most French,” if that makes sense.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Do you think you’d be a good detective in real life?

ELLIOTT ROBINSON: I think I have some good detective-ish qualities, like attention to detail, and I feel that I’m a pretty observant person. What I don’t know is how much pleasure I could derive from it. Could I truly enjoy running headlong into brick wall after brick wall, figuring out new clues or ideas because the previous ones have not panned out? Also, I’m one that does not much go for the thrill of danger; I prefer a much calmer existence.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What is your favorite aspect of Poirot’s personality?

ELLIOTT ROBINSON: His intelligence. He is very well-read, and very well-rounded. He speaks multiple languages, has a grasp of world history, he knows his Shakespeare, and he is somewhat of a psychologist (as well as a bit of a flirt). He is not swayed by false evidence, and his calculating manner gets to the exact way things went down. Brilliant man!

RAPID FIRE WITH MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS’s MONSIEUR BOUC, ANTONIO NAPPO

JHPENTERTAINMENT: What can you tell me about Monsieur Bouc?

ANTONIO NAPPO: He is larger than life.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Circle shared cast portraits on socials recently and the first thing I notice was that you’ve apparently cut your hair and trimmed your beard. The story takes place in the early 1930s. Was it a no-brainer to alter your appearance to better fit the aesthetic of the show?

ANTONIO NAPPO: Absolutely, Clay’s question to me at auditions was if I was married to the long hair/beard look. I said I’m not, but my wife is. She’s the one who took some convincing.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In Christie’s original novel, Monsieur Constantine Bouc is a military man from Belgium. The 1974 film adaptation and playwright Ken Ludwig’s all but drop the character’s military background, instead focusing on his current position as a high-level employee of the rail company.As you’ve developed your portrayal of Bouc, have you created any backstory in your mind that you’d care to share?

ANTONIO NAPPO: His deep friendship with Poirot is paramount to me. It’s at the core of who Bouc is.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: When Christie’s novel was released, it was immediately apparent that the events that open the story were directly lifted from the now-historic 1932 kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh, Jr. Was that bit of trivial ever discussed during rehearsals or is that something you knew prior?

ANTONIO NAPPO: We did discuss it, at length. But I did know about it prior to going into this show.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In keeping with the subject of the show…If you could get away with a crime…would you?

ANTONIO NAPPO: How do you know I haven’t already?

RAPID FIRE WITH MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS’s HELEN HUBBARD, BAILEY BORDERS

JHPENTERTAINMENT: Alright, as this show’s Circle Players newbie, I gotta ask…what’s the experience been like so far, working with Nashville’s oldest continuing theatre company?

BAILEY BORDERS: This has been the smoothest experience I’ve ever had in community theater and I’d like to thank our whole team for that! The cast has been so supportive and Clay is such a wonderful director to collaborate with. We’re leaving the drama for the stage for this one!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: While it’s your first show with Circle, you’re a Nashville native, having studied at Nashville School of the Arts. After school you relocated to Los Angeles to continue your pursuit of acting and recently relocated back to Music City. What’s your impression of the changes and growth of Nashville since you were last here?

BAILEY BORDERS: I’m loving the growth of the city, but I have to say I miss some of our local hangs that couldn’t withstand the rent increase. While there’s so much more to do and explore, I hope we’re able to keep the charm Nashville has always had!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: In Agatha Christie’s source material, as well as subsequent film adaptations and now this stage version, Helen Hubbard has always been portrayed with a certain air of elegance and a bit of initial arrogance. How much fun are you having playing her?

BAILEY BORDERS: Helen Hubbard has been an absolute blast to play! I love a strong, outspoken character. She has so many levels to explore. My favorite part of Mrs. Hubbard is her brashness. She’s somehow able to maintain an elegance while being the life of the party.

JHPENTERTAINMENT: From the legendary Lauren Bacall’s portrayal of Mrs. Hubbard in the 1974 film to the equally glamorous Michelle Pfeiffer in Kenneth Branagh’s 2017 remake, a huge part of the character’s mystique manifests itself in her fabulous wardrobe. For Circle’s production, Denese Evans is the show’s costumer. What can you tell me about your Mrs. Hubbard’s style?

BAILEY BORDERS: Denese has been outstanding at creating Mrs. Hubbard’s aesthetic. Collaborating together on her hair, makeup, and classic pieces has been one of the most fun elements of seeing Helen brought to life. Mrs. Hubbard is glamorous and does not shy away from a show stopping garment. She uses her wardrobe as her space to shine!

JHPENTERTAINMENT: So, whodunnit? Just kidding. What is it about Murder on the Orient Express that you think audiences will enjoy most?

BAILEY BORDERS: I think audiences will be pleasantly surprised at the amount of comic relief in our show! The tension is always there, as the mystery unfolds, but there are some wonderful moments in between that provide a certain lightness.

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To take a ride on the Orient Express, CLICK HERE to purchase tickets to Circle Players’ presentation of Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express. The show runs Friday, January 13 through Sunday, January 29 at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). Tickets are $20 for Thursday performances and $25 Fridays-Sundays. 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: Uncategorized Tagged With: Agatha Christie, Antonio Nappo, Bailey Borders, Circle Players, Clay Hillwig, Elliott Robinson, Hercule Poirot, Interview, live theatre, Looby Theatre, Murder on the Orient Express, Mystery, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre Interview, Tony Nappo

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

February 5, 2020 by Jonathan

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JHP: What can you tell me about your cast?  

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JHP: How would you describe Harvey Feldman?

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

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

SCOTT STEWART: 

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

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

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

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

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

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

JHP: What is your favorite aspect of playing Esther?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JENNY NORRIS: Having a shopping buddy! 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

If you’ve enjoyed this edition of Rapid Fire, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.


Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Breaking Up Is Hard To Do, Chaffin's, CURTIS REED, Dinner Theatre, Interview, JENNY NORRIS, Joy Tilley Perryman, jukebox musical, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Neil Sedaka, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Scott Stewart, Vicki White

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

January 23, 2020 by Jonathan

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

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

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

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RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED PLAYWRIGHT, JENNY WALLACE

Playwright Jenny Wallace

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

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

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

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

JHP: Where did the idea for Schooled come from?

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

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

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

RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED STAR, JENNY NORRIS

“Schooled” star Jenny Norris as Ramonda Clark

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

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

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

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

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

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

RAPID FIRE WITH SCHOOLED CO-STAR, CURTIS REED

“Schooled” co-star Curtis Reed

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

If you’ve enjoyed this edition of Rapid Fire, CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire Q&A Tagged With: CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Clash of the Playwrights, Comedy, CURTIS REED, Interview, JENNY NORRIS, JENNY WALLACE, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Playwright, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 10Q, World Premiere

Rapid Fire 20 Q with director, Jef Ellis and cast of Circle Players’ ‘La Cage aux Folles’; at Looby Theatre January 17-February 2

January 16, 2020 by Jonathan

Michael Baird (center) as Zaza, surrounded by Les Cagelles in Circle Players’ “La Cage aux Folles’ (production photos by Ashley Eve Newnes)

Being a lifelong fan of Broadway composer, Jerry Herman, I have been looking forward to Circle Players’ upcoming production of Herman’s and Harvey Fierstein’s legendary La Cage aux Folles , the mid-80s musical centered ’round a mostly happy-go-lucky gay couple who own and work at a drag club in Saint- Tropez, whose lives take a tailspin when their son, Jean-Michel arrives with news of his pending nuptials to a sweet young girl from an ultra conservative family. When Herman passed away the day after Christmas, the fact that I’d not only be seeing the show, but that Nashville theatre luminary, Jef Ellis is directing, seemed a comfort, because if there’s anyone in this town who understands and honors the reverence of classic American musical theatre, it’s Ellis. Given those thoughts, you know I just had to chat with Jef and some of his La Cage cast members, including: Macon Kimbrough, Michael Baird, Kristian Dambrino and Ann Street Kavanagh for the latest edition of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.

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RAPID FIRE WITH LA CAGE DIRECTOR, JEF ELLIS

JHP: Having first directed La Cage aux Folles for  Circle Players in 1999 for the company’s 50th anniversary season, how did the idea to have you direct it again all these years later come about?

JEF ELLIS: You know, it’s funny: I’ve never had the desire to return to a show that I have already directed until now. I submitted a proposal to direct a different show for Circle Players, but since this is their 70th Anniversary Season, they wanted to do a season of the company’s “greatest hits,” as it were, and when I saw La Cage on the list of possibilities, there was no way I was going to let the opportunity pass me by. I submitted a proposal for the show and I was selected to helm another production of the very first show I ever directed. And in so doing, I’ve discovered how much La Cage aux Folles, the Tony Award-winning musical from Jerry Herman and Harvey Fierstein means to me and how closely I identify with it. It’s been a complete joy to have another go at it.

JHP: Kevin Amburgey-Walton, who starred as Zaza in your ‘99 production, is working behind the scenes on this one as the show’s choreographer, making this a La Cage reunion of sorts for the two of you. What’s it been like creating a new look at an old classic with your longtime friend and fellow creative?

JEF ELLIS: Kelvin and I have worked together on other shows (he also choreographed Damn Yankees for me some years back) and I so wanted to include him in this revival because he was my first Zaza. He’s been so lovely to work with again and has offered so much insight into the character of Zaza/Albin and has helped my new Zaza, Michael Baird move seamlessly into the role. The great thing about Kelvin is I know he always has my back — and I hope he feels the same about me — and I can turn to him and ask for anything and he responds quickly, with complete good humor and confidence. That’s what comes from trusting each other.

JHP: This past week, you posted a funny little happening regarding one of your younger cast members who, when you remarked that he resembled Wynonna Judd, didn’t know who you were talking about. This got me to thinking…what is it about Harvey Fierstein’s book and Jerry Herman’s music that still engages audiences? And are there lessons in LGBT history to be learned by watching this show? 

JEF ELLIS: The stories told in La Cage aux Folles are timeless and universal and they are just as important and vital today as they were when the show opened on Broadway in the 1983-84 season. The music is wonderful — lyrical, optimistic and memorable — and you can’t help but leave the theater singing it. It’s a quintessential Jerry Herman score and it so very clearly comes direct from his heart. Harvey Fierstein’s script is terrifically funny, yet poignant — which is exactly what we have all come to expect from him. La Cage aux Folles is a musical set in a gay nightclub in St. Tropez in 1984, to be certain, but more importantly it’s about family, loyalty and love — however you may define it on your own terms. Jeez. I’m puddling up just thinking about it (which happens more often than not as I get older and more sentimental and nostalgic).

JHP: I Am What I Am,—which closes Act 1 on an emotional high—is, without a doubt, the show’s most beloved tune. Taking a bit of artistic liberty with the lyrics, how would you finish this line…”I am what I am and what I am is _____”?

JEF ELLIS: “…an illusion.” I won’t touch Jerry Herman’s lyrics: they’re perfect and touching and heartwarming. That number is such a powerful moment in the show and an example of the fine line walked by Herman and Fierstein in transferring this story to the musical theater stage. At one moment, La Cage aux Folles is ridiculously funny and flamboyant, and at the next it’s heartbreaking and emotionally draining. In other words, it’s everything musical theater should be.

RAPID FIRE WITH MACON KIMBROUGH, GEORGES IN LA CAGE

JHP: At the top of the show Georges welcomes the audience to La Cage aux Folles saying ‘Open your eyes’ rather than something like ‘Feast your eyes’. It would appear that Fierstein and Herman purposely worded it the way they did, don’t you think? 

MACON KIMBROUGH: I think Fierstein was very deliberate with the book. Perhaps in using “open your eyes” rather than “feast your eyes”, he’s encouraging the audience to go deeper in their usual involvement in a show; to open your mind and, perhaps, take any blinders off and drop any preconceived notions. Not only at the Cagelles – who’s a man?/who’s a woman? – but also to realize that this is a love story even though the main couple is two men, not the traditional male/female. 

JHP: Last year you were part of the cast as Jef directed The Boys in the Band, another vital part of LGBT theatre history. What keeps you coming back to work under Jef’s direction in such shows?

MACON KIMBROUGH: The first show I saw Jef direct was The Little Foxes. Jef knows his material and really has a knack for assembling a cast that works well together. And I noticed that he seems to have control of my biggest pet peeve watching theater: pacing.

JHP: The show takes place during the early 80s, when it first debuted on Broadway. Heck, I remember watching the ‘84 Tony Awards and sobbing during their musical performance. When were you first aware of La Cage and has your perception of the work changed since then?

MACON KIMBROUGH: Yes. We didn’t have the web then so we had to catch glimpses on talk/variety shows or the Tonys. I have always been a Jerry Herman fan. His music goes through me like a knife, but in a good way. He gives his characters a vulnerability like no other lyricist. I remember seeing bits of the show on the Tonys. I Am What I Am was, of course, the show stopper and became the gay anthem. However, when I saw Gene Barry sing Song On The Sand, I knew then that I wanted to play that role and sing that song. I’ve always seemed to take the other route than most people.

JHP:  Speaking of I Am What I Am, when I chatted with Jef, I asked him to take a bit of artistic liberty with the lyrics. So I’ll ask you…how would you finish this line…”I am what I am and what I am is…..”?

MACON KIMBROUGH: I know this may seem strange or even rude, but I might finish “I am what I am, and what I am” with “is nobody’s business”. Hear me out – We judge and are judged, it seems, not just on first impressions but at first glance. If you want to know who I am or who anyone is, take the time. And if you don’t, don’t judge.

RAPID FIRE WITH MICHAEL BAIRD, ALBIN/ZAZA IN LA CAGE

JHP: While you’ve appeared on stage in and around the St Louis area, your performance in La Cage marks your Circle Players debut and also your Nashville area debut as well. How does it feel working not only with Nashville’s oldest continuing theatre company, but also with Jef, one of our community’s most respected and revered directors and critics?

MICHAEL BAIRD: The highlight of being in this show has been working with Jef. I moved to Nashville six months ago, and this was the first show that I auditioned for. Admittedly, I did not know who Jef was when auditioning, but I am thankful that he is my first director in Nashville. He has such a great way of pulling the best attributes out of a person when developing a character. He and I have very similar senses of humor–which has made the process that much easier.  He seems to know what I’m thinking, as I tend to know what he is thinking. It’s great!  I am also very thankful to Circle Players for giving me this opportunity.  

JHP: Zaza might be your Circle debut, but it’s not your first time to appear on stage, or in drag for that matter, having appeared as Frank N. Furter in The Rocky Horror Picture Show at Family Musical Theatre and having starred as Hedwig at Stray Dog Theatre—two St. Louis theatre companies. When, during the process of becoming Zaza, do you feel her presence—the wig, the lashes, the makeup, the body pads, costume…or something else?

MICHAEL BAIRD: In A Little More Mascara, Albin expresses how all of these external attributes contribute to his transformation–the lashes, more mascara, the heels, etc. My transformation into the character is more internal. I feel her ferocity as the key to the big “switch.” She is a performer, and when Zaza is present, there is nothing or no-one who can stand in her way. It is great fun to be a part of that and own the stage.   

JHP: Since you play Albin, and his stage persona, Zaza, I’m wondering, which aspects of each character do you admire most?

MICHAEL BAIRD: I admire Albin’s big heart. It is clear that he has great love for his family, and he will stop at nothing to make sure they are taken care of. Pertaining to Zaza, I will have to stick with the aforementioned ferocity. There is something about being fierce/ferocious and knowing that all eyes are on you. Additionally, her self-assuredness is something to commend. She is so confident in every aspect of her life, and I think that is something that all human beings desire.

JHP: When I chatted with Jef and Macon, I posed the following question to both of them. I think it has potential to be very telling, so I’m asking you and the others as well…”I am what I am and what I am is _____”?

MICHAEL BAIRD:  Persistent. I won’t/don’t stop. Just ask those close to me.  

RAPID FIRE WITH KRISTIAN DAMBRINO, JACQUELINE IN LA CAGE

JHP: While Jacqueline doesn’t appear until about 40 minutes in, the role is a patented scene stealer. Was that potential to ham it up and steal the scene part of what attracted you to the role?

KRISTIAN DAMBRINO: Oh absolutely. When Jef told me she was a manipulative, charismatic and flirtatious club owner AND that the musical is set in France in the 1980’s – that sounded like a sequined dream for this ex-Miss Mississippi. But what sold me on Jacqueline was the opportunity to throw in the French flair and accent. I’ve been studying the language for a year now, extending my own jazz repertoire to include songs from some of my favorite French composers and vocalists. I love the phonetics of the French language, and find there is a lot of built-in comedy in speaking and singing (and flirting) in « Franglais » in this musical. So Jacqueline is for sure my alter ego.

JHP: Why do you think Jacqueline feels such a closeness to Georges and Albin?

KRISTIAN DAMBRINO: Jacqueline’s brilliance lies in her ability to project this superfluous vibe, when in reality there are many layers to who she is and how she relates to all kinds of people. She deflects with humor and dramatic flair, but connects with George’s and Albin’s complexity as individuals, as well as their collective bravery and capacity for love. This perhaps sounds like a world peace kind of answer, and trust me – she LOVES Zaza’s panache. But Jacqueline cannot be put in a box and, to quote the script, « won’t take no for an answer. » This is perhaps how I relate to her the most. And you’ll have to come to the musical to get the rest of the story on this question (insert « ooh la la »). Jacqueline is full of surprises.

JHP: Much like composer Jerry Herman did in Mame with It’s Today, in Act 2 of La Cage, Jacqueline joins Zaza and the entire company for the equally uplifting and optimistic The Best of Times is Now. He was kind of right, wasn’t he?

KRISTIAN DAMBRINO: Yes, he was. I believe in the power of staying present in each moment to really get the most out of life. Whatever that means. If it’s singing, if it’s experiencing pain, if it’s laughing. If we drift too far from this moment, from now, we miss the transformational gift of immersion. Or we forget our lines lol.

JHP: I’ve concluded my interviews with Jef and your other cast mates with this one, so here’s your chance to answer it as well…how would you finish this line…”I am what I am and what I am is _____”?

KRISTIAN DAMBRINO: a Franglish chameleon.

RAPID FIRE WITH ANN STREET-KAVANAGH, MARIE IN LA CAGE

JHP: From the moment Marie enters, her physicality and broad reactions—to everything from Georges’ man-servant, Jacob (Russell Forbes) to Michael Baird’s Albin in disguise as Sybil—establish her as one to watch. Are there Maries in your past upon whom you drew your characterization ?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH:  Not really. There are a few bits and pieces, but no one in particular. When I first saw myself in costume, I thought of Barbara Bush…just from the neck down! We know she was conservative and that she had a great sense of humor. Marie is both of those things, though she doesn’t let the humor out until she lets her hair down, so to speak.

JHP: Mentioning her costume is the perfect segue to my next question…Mirroring her rather conservative nature, Marie’s wardrobe is among the show’s more conservative, while Zaza and Les Cagelles are dressed to the nines in sparkling gowns courtesy the shows three costume designers Lisa McLaurin, Dan Hayes and Blake Danford. Any specific costume envy?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: I am EXTREMELY envious of The Cagelles! All those sequins and spangles! Zaza wears a wig that is reminiscent of Marilyn Monroe when she appears as Sybil. It looks gorgeous! I’m jealous of that, as well!!

JHP: During Cocktail Crosspoint, the chaos of the  imbroglio can be quite confusing if not performed with precision and skill from all involved. What’s it been like rehearing this particular number?

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: We’ve had a lot of fun with Cocktail Counterpoint!  Leila Jones choreographed it. She used simple steps and blocking that lends itself  to be driven by characterization. Because of this, each of us has been able to put our own stamp on it, adding to the fun!

JHP: Alright. I’ve asked your director and co-stars this next one, so I might as well make it five for five…How would you complete the lyric as it pertains to you…”I am what I am and what I am is _____”? 

ANN STREET-KAVANAGH: This is hard to answer in one word! I’m a mom and a wife. I was lucky enough to have been a full time actor/singer for almost 20 years before having my kids, but I haven’t performed very much in the last 16 years, choosing to stay close to my children. They’re pretty self sufficient now and I’m ready to trod the boards with everything I’ve got! I don’t regret a minute spent with my family, but my inner artistic being has been so neglected that sometimes I’ll cry just hearing an overture. So, to answer…I am what I am and what I am is…energized! I’ve missed it SO much!

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Callum Ammons (center) as Jean-Michel) surrounded by Les Cagelles in Circle Players’ “La Cage aux Folles”

To be a part of the energized, eclectic vibe that is Circle Players’ La Cage aux Folles, CLICK HERE to purchase tickets as the show runs Friday, January 17 through Sunday, February 2 at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). Tickets are $15 for Thursday performances and $20 Fridays-Sundays. 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: Uncategorized Tagged With: Ann Street-Cavanagh, Broadway, Broadway Musical, Circle Players, Interview, Jef Ellis, Jerry Herman, Kristian Dambrino, La Cage aux Folles, Macom Kimbrough, Michael Baird, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theatre

Rapid Fire Q&A with Pipeline-Collective’s David Ian Lee; ‘Star Wars Holiday Special LIVE’ staged reading at Jamison Hall tonight, Wednesday, December 11

December 11, 2019 by Jonathan

Having made my parents stand in line at the Belle Meade Theatre back in the spring of 1977 to be among the first of my friends to see the original Star Wars movie, you better believe I eagerly sat inches away from my 13″ black and white TV in my bedroom later that next year to tune into The Star Wars Holiday Special. You also better believe I totally geeked out when I heard Pipeline-Collective‘s Producing Artistic Director David Ian Lee was assembling some of Nashville’s favorite theatre folk to recreate the classic, beloved and yes, oft ridiculed holiday special LIVE on stage!

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away….OK, OK,…last week–by way of email–I I had the chance to pose a few questions to Lee for the latest installment t of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire as he and his cast prepared to go where no man has gone before….Oh, wait! Wrong franchise…as he and some of my theatre crushes take to The Factory at Franklin‘s Jamison Hall on Wednesday, December 11 to present a one-night-only staged reading of The Star Wars Holiday Special benefitting Make-A-Wish.


RAPID IFIRE WITH THE STAR WARS HOLIDAY SPECIAL LIVE DIRECTOR, DAVID IAN LEE

JHP: I’m old enough to have actually tuned into the one and only televised broadcast of the original Star Wars Holiday Special. When did you first become aware of it?

DAVID IAN LEE: Growing up you’d hear whispers about the special, but the whole thing sounded like a fever dream or like some kind of prank. In the late 90s – as the Internet became a thing and George Lucas started to talk about making Episodes I, II, and III –clips and images began to circulate, and any evidence that the special had once existed was like catnip.  In 2003 I bought a bootleg on eBay, and when the package arrived I felt I’d obtained explicit contraband. I took a day off of work to watch it, I was so pumped… and then I watched it. Whatever you’ve heard about The Star Wars Holiday Special – however you might imagine it in your mind – it’s like the Grand Canyon or The Matrix: You have to see it for yourself. 

JHP: Where did the idea come from to present a staged reading of the special?

DAVID IAN LEE: My wife, Karen also happens to be my co-Producing Artistic Director, which means that we talk a lot about Pipeline and also a lot about Star Wars; or, maybe more accurately, she listens to me talk a lot about Star Wars. I call myself a Completist in that I watch and I love it all: The original films, the prequels, the Ewok movies, every animated series, and, yes, even the Holiday Special. About a year ago I got my hands on a copy of an original shooting script, and an idea began to form that we might adapt the text into a staged reading: We’d retain as much dialogue as possible, translate descriptive action into narration, and substitute any copy written music with more earthly holiday songs. And we’d lean into the camp. I’d tell people about my half-ironic passion project, and I was encouraged that responses ranged from enthusiastic to emphatic that we had to do this. Karen wasn’t sold right away; the Holiday Special is an obscure bit of ephemera for folks who haven’t seen it, and for people who have… Well, they’ve seen it. While I was away on a job this summer I spent my downtime adapting the shooting script, and when I got home we had a reading of the piece in our living room with a bunch of friends and collaborators. Everyone’s sides hurt from laughing, and with that the die was cast for A Very Special Live Staged Reading of The Star Wars Holiday Special: LIVE, On Stage… and Special! (or AVSLSRoTSWHS:LOS…AS! for short), provided we could find the right charitable organization to support and a space that would have us. The second concern resolved itself when Benji Kern generously offered Studio Tenn’s space on a dark night to stage the reading. 

JHP: For those not familiar, can you tell me a bit about Pipeline-Collective?

DAVID IAN LEE: Pipeline-Collective’s work is guerilla-style, with emphasis on the craft of the actor, dynamic storytelling, and theatrical magic on a shoestring budget. We foster relationships and collaborations that cross state lines and into non-arts realms. Through innovative programming such as the Playground Series (which seeks to make “dark nights” a thing of the past), The Salon (a new works project run in collaboration with Studio Tenn), and theatrical benefits that call attention to the work of charitable organizations, Pipeline-Collective extends the reach of the arts, empowering theatremakers to tell their stories.

JHP: The special performance will benefit Make A Wish Foundation. How did this partnership occur?

DAVID IAN LEE: Pipeline’s inaugural production was Anne Nelson’s The Guys, presented on the anniversary of September 11th by a team almost entirely comprised of expat New Yorkers. Proceeds benefited the FealGood Foundation, whose mission is in service of first responders. We found such value in that project that now about once a year Pipeline presents a theatrical event intended to raise awareness of and funds for a charitable organization. When we decided to explore an adaption of The Star Wars Holiday Special, we knew that we wanted to create a theatrical benefit, but finding the appropriate charitable organization took some time. The 501st Legion is such a wonderful organization, with a mission equally devoted to having fun and doing good work. The 501st Legion Make-A-Wish Endowment Fund allows Make-A-Wish America and Make-A-Wish International to grant Star Wars-related wishes to children diagnosed with life-threatening medical conditions. We’re thrilled to do our small part to contribute to this worthy cause.

JHP: What can you tell me about the cast you’ve assembled for the staged reading?

DAVID IAN LEE: The problem with this cast is that they’re all impossibly brilliant, and every one of them – in a “normal” show – could be regarded as a ringer. Of course, AVSLSRoTSWHS:LOS…AS! is anything but normal, and when you’ve got a cast overflowing with ringers it means that what you really have is just a damn fine cast. There are too many people to single out individually, and I don’t want to give anyone short shrift, so let’s just say I just cannot believe our good fortune to have such a company. We’ve been posting images of our performers to Facebook and Instagram, so folks should check out the embarrassment of riches there. We have such a marvelous aggregation of Nashville’s theatrical talent! 

JHP: Most staged readings are simply actors sitting on stage reading the script, but the show is billed as A Very Special LIVE staged reading The Star Wars Holiday Special, Live on stage…and SPECIAL! So, I gotta ask…what makes it so special? 

DAVID IAN LEE: Well, a fine dose of hyperbole and humor goes a long way towards making the case for satire, but also  – though our reading has great affection for the Holiday Special  – we do treat the 1978 variety show as a jumping-off place, resulting in what Lucas might have called “a few new surprises.” Our narrative is streamlined, and our musical numbers are intended to evoke the spirit of the original special while commenting on the absurdity of the whole endeavor – plus, we send folks back into the street giddy with holiday cheer. And, I mean, how many staged readings feature appearances by the Dark Lord of the Sith and the man with the bag?

JHP: As a legit fan of the original special, which includes an animated segment that introduced Boba Fett, a full two years before his film debut in 1980’s Empire Strikes Back, I’m curious…how do you plan on presenting that in the staged reading? 

DAVID IAN LEE: Tragically, certain aspects of the original special didn’t translate to our reading, including a ten-minute animated sequence created by Nelvana Ltd.  People have fond memories of this sequence: the animation is cool, the voice performances include Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford, and Mark Hamill, and Boba Fett is introduced in appropriately mysterious and sinister fashion. For a time, we explored different ways of translating the animated sequence to the reading; we talked about puppets, about acting the sequence out with action figures, about piping the actual audio into the theatre. But, at the end of the day, a problem remained that the animated sequence itself is a self-contained in-universe short film that Chewbacca’s son, Lumpy, watches in order to distract himself from dangerous Stormtroopers that have forced their way into his home. We wanted to keep our focus on Chewie and his family, and so: This is the way.  Still, for those seeking some sweet, sweet Mandalorian action, might I strongly recommend Disney+.

JHP: Another aspect of the original special that I love was the appearance of Diahann Carroll as Mermiah, a holographic entertainer. I totally stan Meggan Utech, who’s cast as Mermiah. What can you divulge about her performance?

DAVID IAN LEE: Do not allow my previous answer to crush your spirits on Life Day: Oh, Mermeia absolutely appears in our reading! How could she not? The infamous sequence in which Chewbacca’s father, Itchy, is given a mind-evaporator cassette by Art Carney and conjures up a Holographic WOW is, frankly, one of the things that drives people to seek out bootlegs of The Star Wars Holiday Special. The original sequence is readily available on YouTube – as is the full special – and I strongly encourage anyone curious as to why the special is considered to be something halfway between camp and a synaptic breakdown to check it out. Meggan’s Mermeia is delightful, evoking the spirit of Diahann Carroll’s iconic performance while finding her own fun, playful, flirtatious take on the character. Instead of This Minute Now, she’ll be singing a song that’s equally appealing while in the vein of our take on the material. 

JHP: Pipeline-Collective’s AVSLSRoTSWHS:LOS…AS! is a one-night-only event. Any chance for a fully fleshed-out stage production with an extended run in the future?

DAVID IAN LEE: Here and now there’s so much spectacular storytelling happening in Star Wars: I was in California for the opening weekend of Galaxy’s Edge (which means I’ve yet to experience Rise of the Resistance). All I want for Christmas is Jedi: Fallen Order (and I know my co-Producing Artistic Director is reading this, so that’s a cheap plug). The Mandalorian and Resistance are great television programs. And, of course, a week after our reading I have tickets to Rise of Skywalker. But… Who knows? Pipeline has yet to announce our summer programming. And always in motion is the future.

JHP: What’s you holiday wish for family and friend this Life Day season? 

DAVID IAN LEE: I try to write a daily inspirational quote on my office door. The only quote I repeat is Princess Leia, from The Star Wars Holiday Special, which I write every year at this time: “No matter how different we appear, we’re all the same in our struggle against the powers of evil and darkness. I hope that this day will be a day of joy, in which we can reconfirm our dedication and our courage. And, more than anything else, our love for one another. This is the promise of the Tree of Life.”


What better way to end out chat than with a quote from Princess Leia herself? As for AVSLSRoTSWHS:LOS…AS!, you’re only hope of witnessing this one-night-only benefit event at Jamison Hall inside The Factory at Franklin (230 Franklin Road, Franklin, TN) is to CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. This event is General Admission. All tickets are $15. Members of The 501st Legion will be on-hand to take photos with those in attendance so be sure and arrive when the doors open at 6:30p.m. to give yourself time to enjoy an extra bit of fun before the 7:30p.m. curtain.

Can make it tonight, but feeling generous as Life Day approaches, CLICK HERE to make a donation to Make-A-Wish.

To keep up with the latest from Pipeline-Collective, find them online at Pipeline-Collective.com, ’like’ them on Facebook and Instagram.

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: 2019, Christmas, David Ian Lee, Interview, Pipeline-Collective, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 10 Q, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Staged Reading, Star Wars, Star Wars Holiday Special

RAPID FIRE Q&A with singer/songwriter Crystal Bowersox; starring in ‘Trauma Queen’, presented by Studio Tenn at historic Franklin Theatre

October 26, 2019 by Jonathan

At 7p.m. on Saturday, October 26, former American Idol season 9 favorite, singer/songwriter Chrystal Bowersox, who now calls Nashville home, will star in Trauma Queen a new musical theatre piece presented by Studio Tenn at The Franklin Theatre, just off the square in downtown Franklin, TN.

 Bowersox broke the Idol mold when she appeared on the original run of the wildly popular reality competition series porting dreads and tattoos instead of the typical teen pop look of many of her fellow Idol hopefuls. Finishing her Idol season as the runner-up, Bowersox is still marching and singing to her own beat and Trauma Queen proves it as she invites Saturday night’s audience to join her for an original night of theatre. Trauma Queen is indeed an original night of theatre in every sense of the term as she combines everything from a predominately one-woman-show and a concert along with heavy doses of musical theatre and even a touch of single-mom real talk.

Earlier this week, as Bowersox was preparing for this weekend’s show, I had the opportunity to pose a few questions to her for the latest in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire.

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RAPD FIRE Q&A WITH CRYSTAL BOWERSOX

 JHP: Having worked on Idol myself during the first two original seasons, I know a little about the behind-the-scenes. As a former Idol contestant, what do you look back at with fondness?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Well, you know it’s a crazy ride, then!! Thanks for taking the time to do this interview. A lot of it was and still is a blur to me – it was a trying time in my personal life having just had a baby a few months prior to the audition. I struggled to find quality child care for my son during the process and my mind was way more focused on the well being of my child than on my participation in the competition. That dynamic made it difficult for me to just sit back and enjoy the trajectory our life was on. I was simultaneously struggling to afford my insulin and healthcare costs pertaining to my Type 1 Diabetes, but things got easier once I advanced past the top 10 stage of the competition. I fondly remember the moments on set with the crew and contestants – the jokes and conversations had with vocal coaches, hair and make-up personnel – visits from the well known celebrities and their families in the green rooms after show tapings – experiencing Los Angeles restaurants with a little bit of status – all of these things were new and incredibly unfamiliar to me having grown up poor on a farm in the midwest. It was all very strange and wonderful at the same time. I am especially grateful for the stability the show brought to the life of my son and I.

JHP: Alright, just gotta ask…what’s your oddest Idol memory?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Ha! There were so many odd moments. One that was televised was right after a live performance of the song, People Get Ready. I had cried at the end of the song because I’d spotted my father in the audience wearing sunglasses (he only wears them indoors if he knows he’s going to cry). I was overwhelmed with gratitude in that moment for everything that was happening, for how far I’d come in just a few months. I went from crashing on my dad’s couch, basically homeless with a baby, to being carted around by drivers and covered in expensive clothes and make-up on prime time television. When Ryan Seacrest came over to talk to me after the performance, I saw a handkerchief peeking out of his breast pocket. I grabbed for it to dry my eyes, but it wouldn’t budge. So I pulled harder and when it ripped out of his pocket, I realized that it was only the corner of an actual handkerchief, just taped into place. I still have it. Laughing through tears, I said, “Ugh…. Hollywood!!” Nothing is quite as it seems there.

JHP: Oh, wow. I totally remember watching that. What was the genesis of Trauma Queen as a stage show?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: It’s been nearly 10 years since my time on American Idol. A LOT has happened in my personal and professional life since then. About 2 years ago, my mother lost her home to a devastating fire. The farm house that I grew up in burned to the foundation. It was a rough upbringing. I didn’t have a lot of fond memories in the house. So there were a lot of feelings to sort through with the loss of it, and emotions that I hadn’t yet sorted through regarding my past relationships, traumatic life experiences and issues with addiction. What better way to sort through them all of them but by creating a piece of art? My music has always existed that way – My pain put into words and music has been healing for not only myself, but also for my audiences. I wanted to continue that effort in a new, unique way.

JHP: I understand you’ve collaborated with two-time Pulitzer Prize nominee and Peabody winner, Willy Holtzman and singer/songwriter/producer Marty Dodson (who’s penned songs recorded by everyone from Plain White T’s to George Strait) on this project. How did you guys meet and come to work together?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Willy Holtzman is an amazing human being. One of my absolute favorites. I’m so honored to work with him, and with Marty Dodson, who writes incredible songs for many well known artists. I met both Willy and Marty in New York City. I was reading for a part in another musical that they were both working on. Willy approached me one day and said, “I’m pretty sure your wikipedia page doesn’t do your story justice. Let’s write it out.” I resisted the idea at first – there were parts of my personal story that I wasn’t very proud of. The thought of putting it all out there was terrifying. As we went through the process of writing the script (which took about a year) Willy helped me realize that by talking openly about my mistakes, missteps and triumphs I could liberate myself from any guilt or shame I held. He convinced me that by sharing my story, I could possibly help others heal and do the same. I’m grateful he kept pushing me out of my miserably comfortable zone. Ha!

JHP: How did you get connected with Studio Tenn to collaborate on Trauma Queen?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: The first mention to me of Studio Tenn was from Bob and Merle Higdon, just about a year before I actually connected with Studio Tenn. Bob and Merle had mentioned to me then that Melinda Doolittle worked with Studio Tenn frequently and suggested she and I connect. When Willy Holtzman and I finished our script, he reached out to Benji Kern who he had worked with years prior and suggested we all work together on our new show Trauma Queen. Studio Tenn has been trying to reach me through the cosmos for a while! I feel as though it has been the intention of the universe for quite some time that we should all come to know one other.

JHP: As you mentioned, my pal Benji Kern, Studio Tenn’s interim artistic director is producing. How has it been working with him on this project?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Oh my goodness, I LOVE working with Benji. He is a man of big, wonderful ideas, and has the determination to bring them to fruition. He has been so inspiring to watch and learn from. I admire his talent and work ethic. He’s not the kind of person who sits and simply wonders, “It would be cool if this happened”. He makes it happen! Benji is my spirit animal.

JHP: Gotta admit, Trauma Queen is indeed an intriguing show title. Was it immediately the title, or were there other contenders?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Initially, the title, Trauma Queen was a little ha-ha joke of an idea. But I spent a lot of time with it and the phrase developed into a much deeper title in my heart. Women (and men, especially) are often told not to be so dramatic… We are taught from a young age to harden the emotional parts of ourselves – that our feelings should be squelched and minimized so as to not ruffle any feathers and make others around us more comfortable. I do not agree with this. I believe that the practice of hiding parts of our hearts does more damage than good. I prefer to be open and honest with my feelings. A Trauma Queen is defined in my opinion as a woman, a person, who has the courage to truly conquer their demons. Someone who has learned from their mistakes and chooses to rule over them like battle scars, replacing shame and guilt with a sense of accomplishment and pride, rather then letting negativity take control of their psyche – which will cause all sorts of other disfunction in life. A Trauma Queen is anyone who has been to hell and back emotionally but decides to rise like a phoenix from the ash of their past.

JHP: What can audiences expect from Trauma Queen?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: Bring your Hollywood hankies! We’ve been calling this a “Theatrical Rock Concert” rather than a musical, because the majority of songs included in the show are ones that I’ve released previously on past albums. Some of the songs are brand new and help support the characters and stories. I explain the genesis of each song as if I’m in that moment of my life, in real time. Actors play out the different characters in each story, as the music plays on. We shine a spotlight on the generational cycle of abuse and disfunction in families, with the triumphant realization that history doesn’t have to be repeated. There will be tears; however, there will be a lot of laughs, too. I’ve managed to cope with my past through a lens of humor despite the darkness of some of the stories.

JHP: One of the aspects of your life you touch on in Trauma Queen is being a single mom. Has that experience affect you in regard to presenting your authentic self as a performer?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: I haven’t spoken publicly about my son’s father. Trauma Queen will change that. I’ve written songs about the loneliness of it all, for myself and from my son’s perspective, but have never really touched on any of the details surrounding that chapter in our lives. American Idol was adamant that I not publicly share that story as it didn’t fall in line with the “America’s Sweetheart” persona. There is such a stigma surrounding the phrase, “Single Mother”. I am determined to change someone’s mind about it. I didn’t want to be a single mom. That was my son’s father’s choice. I knew it would be the most difficult road to travel. While that remains true, I am so grateful that my life has played out this way. Every ounce of strength I’ve ever had has come from my love and devotion to my son, and from my determination to give him a better life than I ever had before him. He will never have to question how loved he is. I try to teach him that living authentically and honestly is important, and that you absolutely can make a living doing something you’re passionate about every day of your life if you’re determined to work hard and make it a reality.

JHP: Following this weekend’s presentation of Trauma Queen, what’s next for you…and the show?

CRYSTAL BOWERSOX: I can’t predict the future, but my hope is that people will have been inspired by it enough that interest will grow in the production, and the show will be able travel to different cities and theaters. After the show this weekend, I will be launching a KickStarter crowd sourcing campaign to hopefully fund my next independent album release. The record will include a few of the songs from Trauma Queen. I’ll continue to tour in November and release the new record sometime in the spring of 2020.

And I think I’ll finally be due for a real vacation with my boy. I haven’t taken a single one in ten years. Yeah, I think it’s time. He and I deserve it.

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Crystal Bowersox’s Trauma Queen will be presented by Studio Tenn at 7p.m. Saturday, October 26 at The Franklin Theatre (419 Main Street, Franklin, TN). At the time of this interview, a select number of tickets remain. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets. To keep up with the latest from Crystal, CLICK HERE or follow her on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter.

Up next at Studio Tenn is Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella on stage at Jamison Hall at The Factory at Franklin from December 6-29. CLICK HERE  for tickets or more information. You can always check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or follow their socials at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

Wanna check out previous Rapid Fire conversations? CLICK HERE. Interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor? Click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram and Facebook.

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare, Uncategorized Tagged With: 2019, American Idol, Crystal Bowersox, Interview, Live Music, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, Singer/Songwriter, Studio Tenn, The Franklin Theatre

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