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Rapid Fire

Rapid Fire Q&A with star Joel Diggs and director Jon Royal; wrapping their ‘Topdog/Underdog’ run alongside star Eddie George at Nashville Rep thru Sunday, February 24

February 23, 2019 by Jonathan

For their February offering, Nashville Repertory Theatre has chosen playwright Suzan-Lori Parks’ thought-provoking 2002 Broadway play, Topdog/Underdog. The debut production garnered the playwright the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the first such honor awarded a woman of color. The two-person story centers around brothers named Lincoln and Booth (obviously those names are no coincidence and not surprisingly, key to a certain plot point) as they face the day to day struggles of making their way, and their mark on the world; a world filled with preconceived notions and expectations for men of color. Eddie George, yes, THAT Eddie George, he of the 1995 Heisman Trophy, stars as Linc, the oldest of the two brothers, while gifted Nashville-based actor, Joel Diggs stars as Booth. At the helm of Nashville Rep’s production is director, Jon Royal. Royal previously directed The Rep’s Smart People last February. Among Royal’s other notable directorial efforts, Street Theatre’s brilliant 2014 production of Passing Strange and Nashville Shakespeare Festival’s Othello, which also starred Eddie George.

Always excited to chat about shows that are a bit unfamiliar to me, I recently had the opportunity to reach out to the stars and the director for the latest in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q. Unfortunately, due to circumstances beyond my control, George was unable to participate. Thankfully, Diggs and the director were available, so I give you an abbreviated, yet informative and revealing Rapid Fire 13 Q.

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Diggs (left) and George (right) star as Booth and Linc in Nashville Rep’s “Topdog/Underdog” (production photos by Michael Scott Evans/courtesy Nashville Rep)

RAPID FIRE 13 Q WITH TOPDOG/UNDERDOG STAR JOEL DIGGS AND DIRECTOR JON ROYAL

RAPID FIRE WITH TOPDOG/UNDERDOG STAR, JOEL DIGGS

Joel Diggs

JHP: How familiar were you with the work prior to being cast as Booth in Nashville Rep’s Topdog/Underdog?

JOEL DIGGS: I was somewhat familiar, in that I knew of Suzan-Lori Parks, and that she wrote this great piece, but I had never read it. I did see the production with Eddie and Jeff Carr many years ago though.

JHP: What can you tell me about Booth?

JOEL DIGGS: Booth is deeply troubled, caused by his parents abandonment of he and his brother. He is a very impulsive person, who wants love so bad, he creates fantasies to fill that void.

JHP: While the playwright delves into more serious aspects of the brother’s relationship with each other, there’s still that unbreakable bond of brotherhood. In what ways does the dynamic between you and your co-star, Eddie George mirror that of the relationship between your characters?

JOEL DIGGS: He’s someone who is very well known, and I can see how that relates to Booth admiring Lincoln, because “Linc’s the Man!” Eddie and I are relatively the same age and have many things in common, as well.

JHP: Among the subplots, there’s the inheritances the brothers were left. While Lincoln opened his and spent it, Booth kept his, never opening it, which seems somewhat uncharacteristic for Booth. What’s the significance of this?

JOEL DIGGS: I believe Booth is trying to hold on to the memory of hope in his mother.

JHP: Other subplots deal with the brothers and their relationships with women, Linc’s wife, Cookie and Booth’s girlfriend, Grace, who are spoken of, but never seen. Why do you think the playwright chose to mention the women, but not include them as part of the cast. 

JOEL DIGGS: The women can be felt very strongly, but I feel the playwright may be showing the plight of the Black man in America, the so called head, being disposable, therefore dooming the entire family.

JHP: What is it about Booth that drove you to the role?

JOEL DIGGS: I know people like him, and the challenge of bringing him to life. 

JHP: The entirety of the play is presented as a two-man show. What’s the biggest challenge and biggest reward in sharing the stage with only one other actor?

JOEL DIGGS: The reward is getting to tell such a beautifully written story, and having to deal with so many layers, an actor’s dream. The challenge is the amount of work it takes to do that!

RAPID FIRE WITH TOPDOG/UNDERDOG DIRECTOR, JON ROYAL

Jon Royal

JHP: How did directing Topdog/Underdog for Nashville Rep come about?

JON ROYAL: Rene Copeland asked me how I felt about this script last February. I told her that I loved it! She asked if I’d be up for directing it about a month later.

JHP: From the beginning, did you have a clear vision of what you wanted for the Pulitzer-winning piece?

JON ROYAL: After reading and rereading the piece, I felt like I had a clear understanding for what the script was telling me it was about, but developing that is the biggest part of my job as the director.

JHP: What was it about Eddie George and Joel Diggs’ auditions that spoke to you as a director?

JON ROYAL: I’m pretty sure that Eddie and Rene had already talked about him playing Lincoln, so that meant that the search was on for an actor to play Booth. Joel is very natural onstage. They have great chemistry together.

JHP: How would you categorize you style of directing as it relates to Topdog/Underdog?

JON ROYAL: My style of directing for this piece has been about the beautiful delicious beats that Suzan has written.

JHP: Why is this play, and this production in particular, an important piece for the Nashville theatre community?

JON ROYAL: It’s important because this play is incredible. It’s such a densely, well written piece that connects with people across all walks of life. It’s been produced here twice and a playwright of Suzan-Lori Parks’ caliber should be presented to our local audiences even more. To Rene and the Rep’s credit, this is the third season in a row that this company has produced a play written by a black woman, as part of their season. I’ve been here all of my life, I’d say this kind of consistency is long overdue. 

JHP: What do you hope audiences come away from Topdog/Underdog feeling or contemplating?

JON ROYAL: I hope that audiences contemplate what it means to be in community with each other, as in we are all family. I hope we also look at what we’ve inherited from our birth families and what we’ve inherited from America.

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Nashville Rep’s Topdog/Underdog concludes its run at TPAC’s Andrew Johnson Theatre with performances Saturday, February 23 at 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and a final matinee on Sunday, February 24 at 2:30. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

Following Topdog/Underdog, Nashville Rep continues their current season with Lee Hall’s stage adaptation of the popular film, Shakespeare in Love with performances March 23-April 13. CLICK HERE for tickets. To keep up with the latest from Nashville Rep, CLICK HERE, or follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Drama, Eddie George, Interview, Joel Diggs, Jon Royal, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Pulitzer Prize, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Theatre, Topdog/Underdog

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast and crew of Studio Tenn’s ‘Always…Patsy Cline’; at The Factory at Franklin’s Jamison Theatre February 8-24

February 7, 2019 by Jonathan

Megan Murphy Chambers and Melodie Adams star in Studio Tenn’s “Always…Patsy Cline” (all photos by MA2LA courtesy Studio Tenn)

For their current production, Studio Tenn is tackling one of Music City’s favorite jukebox musicals about one of Nashville’s favorite legends as they present Always…Patsy Cline onstage at Jamison Theatre at the Factory in Franklin from Friday, February 8 thru Sunday, February 24. Created and originally directed by Ted Swindley, Always…Patsy Cline weaves together a unique story of friendship between Patsy Cline, the iconic country singer and a fan, Louise Seger, who continued their bond by way of a series of letters written between the two after meeting in Texas honky tonk after one of Cline’s shows. As Studio Tenn prepped for opening night, I recently had the chance to chat with the show’s director, Benji Kern, costumer, Blake Danford and stars Megan Murphy Chambers and Melodie Madden Adams for the latest edition of my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.

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RAPID FIRE WITH STUDIO TENN’S ALWAYS…PATSY CLINE STAR, MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS

JHP: Was playing Patsy a role that was on your radar prior to Studio Tenn announcing their production?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Honestly, no. Since the show’s never been done in Nashville outside of the productions at the Ryman, I didn’t anticipate getting to take a crack at it.  And I’m absolutely delighted to have been wrong about that! Patsy is proving to be a stretch and a challenge in all the best ways.

JHP: Alright, I gotta ask. You may or may not know, but Mandy Barnett is a good friend of mine. Of course she is known for her portrayal of Patsy in playwright Ted Swindley’s legendary mountings of the show here in Nashville at the historic Ryman Auditorium. That said, what’s it feel like not only taking on this role, but doing it here, where you’ll no-doubt not only play to fans of Patsy, but also fans of Mandy and her portrayal?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: I’m doing my best not to approach it from a place of comparison – it would be foolish indeed to use either of those ladies as a yardstick against myself, so I’m doing my best to go after it the same way I do any other role. Both Patsy and Mandy are Nashville icons, so I’m paying homage, looking at it with fresh eyes, and trusting Benji and Jason Tucker, the show’s musical director, to help me wring every bit of joy and musicality from the material that I can!

JHP: Speaking of friends, opposite your Patsy, you’ve got Melodie Madden Adams as Louise. I first became familiar with you both at Boiler Room Theatre several years ago. Is that when you two met?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: It was! We met after getting cast in Guys and Dolls in (I think?) 2003 and clicked instantly.  Melodie is so hilarious, generous and talented, and we are laughing our asses off every day during rehearsal. I feel unbelievably secure on stage with her, and it’s such a boon to the show to get to skip the “getting to know you” portion of the process. Our friendship let us get right to the good stuff!

JHP: As far as Patsy’s stage clothes, you could say she had two distinctive looks, cowgirl and country queen. From what I’ve seen in promo pics, costumer Blake Danford has recreated some of Patsy’s iconic looks. What’s your favorite?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: Way to give me a Sophie’s Choice question, Jonathan All of my costumes are being designed and built for me by Blake Danford and Allison Hearn (wardrobe supervisor), which [swoooooooon] and they’re all going to be spectacular. That said, that red cowgirl getup is beyond dreamy, and I have a feeling my little black number will be one that I want to sneak into my purse on closing night.

JHP: Had Patsy not met her untimely death at what was still the height of her career and popularity, do you think her star would have continued to burn bright, or would her fame have faded?

MEGAN MURPHY CHAMBERS: THE BRIGHTEST. Patsy’s talent was too massive for her to have faded into the background. I imagine her being a Dolly, Loretta, or Cher type; she was already a bit of a shape-shifter, and knew how to ride the wave of popular interest. I can see her enduring and evolving stylistically, and mentoring and collaborating with future generations of performers. She sang with such depth and feeling in her twenties – it haunts me to think what kind of intensity she could have served us with another 30 years under her belt.

RAPID FIRE WITH STUDIO TENN’S ALWAYS…PATSY CLINE STAR, MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS

JHP: I mentioned when I spoke to Megan that you two have a long history of sharing the stage, both in theatrical and music endeavors. How has your off-stage friendship enhanced your portrayal of the friendship between Louise and Patsy?

MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS: Honestly it really felt like such a head start on the process. Megan and I joke that we can almost speak to each other onstage telepathically and so it’s helpful with a show that is so centered around such an established relationship.

JHP: Of course the two of you also frequently share the stage as part of MAS Nashville. So you know I gotta ask…when are we getting more from MAS?

MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS: I hope really soon, but for now it’s really fun to support each other with all of our other projects we have going on!

JHP: Were you a fan of Patsy Cline’s music prior to being cast in Studio Tenn’s Always…Patsy Cline?

MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS: I was familiar with her songs for sure, but I wouldn’t call myself a fan. Even in the short time we have been rehearsing I see why her music touched so many people.

JHP: The play was inspired by Louise and Patsy’s friendship and correspondences. When’s the last time you wrote someone an actual letter?

MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS: Does a thank you note count? If not, it’s been awhile, but I’m lucky to have friends who still enjoy writing actual letters. One being Megan!

JHP: While the show is predominately about the music, by the nature of Patsy’s real-life story, there’s plenty of emotional moments. I’ve seen Always…Patsy Cline more times than I can remember, and it never fails. During key scenes, my eyes always ‘sweat’. How do you play those emotional moments night after night?

MELODIE MADDEN ADAMS: I approach those key scenes by channeling my own life experiences that relate to what’s going on onstage. For me, I really connect with the moments when you see Patsy as a mother and when she talks about her baby boy. It always makes me think of my little boy back home.

RAPID FIRE WITH STUDIO TENN’S ALWAYS…PATSY CLINE COSTUMER, BLAKE DANFORD

JHP: Having created the costumes for Studio Tenn’s Beauty and the Beast, as well as assisting on consuming for last year’s breathtaking debut of Frankenstein, you’re back for Always…Patsy Cline. How many costumes have you created for this jukebox musical?

BLAKE DANFORD: Patsy has about seven costumes, Louise stays mostly in the same look, and the band members each have one look! So about fifteen total.

JHP: What went into researching wardrobe options for Always… Patsy Cline?

BLAKE DANFORD: The great thing about creating costumes based on something someone wore so “recently”, historically speaking, is that there are a plethora of photos of the original looks, and many of them are still in existence! That definitely makes research easier, as all of that information is quite readily available. In addition to just specifically researching Patsy’s clothes, a lot of care was done to understand the era as well to influence Louise and the band.

JHP: I’ve seen promo pics of Megan in the iconic red and white cowgirl outfit. While it’s instantly recognizable, there are some subtle differences from Patsy’s actual outfit. As a designer, how do you decide when to not simply duplicate an iconic look, but rather honor the original while adding your own touches?

BLAKE DANFORD: Thank you for noticing the differences! Something I hold dear to my heart in every project I do is honoring expectation. So, I kept all the key points, (red, cream, fringe) and took the opportunity to “crisp” it up a little bit. The original was just a shirt tucked into a skirt, whereas ours is built as a jacket. The material in the original is a light cotton, where ours is a denim. It’s details like these that I feel lends a sense of gravity to the character, and convey the “character” of Patsy.

JHP: I saw on Studio Tenn’s social media that some of those involved in the show recently visited the Patsy Cline museum. From what I understand, this was after you had already designed much of the wardrobe for the show. Are you glad you waited until after you created your own versions of the iconic wardrobe?

BLAKE DANFORD: As I said previously, in the era we are in, photos of these pieces are quite readily available online, so I was able to get most of the information I needed ahead of time. It was, however, such a thrill to see those pieces in person and see the things that I got correct in my research!

JHP: In keeping with the letter writing theme that was the springboard for the creation of Always…Patsy Cline, if you could write Patsy a letter, what would you ask?

BLAKE DANFORD: Oh goodness, that’s a tough question! I don’t know that I would necessarily have one specific question, but I would love to be able to exchange letters with Patsy, herself. It would be an absolute treat to get to chat with her and hear the stories that she accumulated in her life.

RAPID FIRE WITH STUDIO TENN’S ALWAYS…PATSY CLINE DIRECTOR, BENJI KERN

JHP: Always…Patsy Cline is kind of unique in that it’s a two-person musical (plus a small band). For Studio Tenn’s production you’ve cast two of Nashville’s favorites, Megan Murphy Chambers and Melodie Madden Adams. You’ve worked with both actresses in the past. Tell me what it is about each of them that embodies the characters of Patsy and Louise?

BENJI KERN: The friendship between Patsy and Louise was really important to me coming into the production. Not only are Megan and Mel both insanely talented, but they have an offstage friendship that has created a wonderful chemistry between the figures they are portraying. Megan has a natural ear which is key to shows where you are embodying an icon. She also has the smarts to pay tribute and honor Patsy which is important as trying to do impersonations will always fall short. Mel is a fantastic story teller, inviting, and captivating. So it just made sense that these intrepid women would take on these roles.

JHP: In addition to the leading ladies, Always…Patsy Cline features a six-person band. Seeing as how the songs are nearly as vital to the story as the dialogue, and again, because Nashville is Music City, who’s musical director and who’ve you got in the band?

BENJI KERN: We are excited to be working with Jason Tucker as the music director for this show. It’s an honor to have him join the Studio Tenn family. In addition to being music director, Jason will be conducting and playing piano. Joining him are steel guitarist Michael McElravy, guitarist Lindsey Miller, bass player Luke Easterling, drummer Ben Andrews and fiddler Cassie Shudak.

JHP: Several people connected to Patsy Cline, including family members, still live in the area. Since Studio Tenn is just minutes from Music City, any chance you’ve reached out to any of them to extend an invite during the run of the show?

BENJI KERN: Yes!  We have had the great fortune to work with The Patsy Cline Museum.  In addition, one of our Board of Directors, Larry Westbrook’s father did Patsy Cline’s taxes.  He has been in contact with the family on Studio Tenn’s behalf.

JHP: The story of Always…Patsy Cline is told through the eyes of Louise Seger, a fan who randomly struck up a friendship with the star and continued that relationship via a series of handwritten correspondences. Have you ever written a fan letter, or, I guess in today’s terms…a fan email?

BENJI KERN: I have not written a fan letter in the Louise terms, but I have reached out to people via my Instagram handle.  Let me tell you, I’ve freaked out when they have responded.

JHP: Just last year, Always…Patsy Cline celebrated its 30th anniversary, Ted Swindley having debut the work back in 1988. What is it about Patsy’s music and this play that endures?

BENJI KERN: Patsy was the entire package. She was a star, captivating audiences with her earthy and authentic energy and incredible voice. She was a trail blazer, paving the way for female artists, making her way into the boys club in the music industry and holding her own.  We all know Crazy which is the number one played Juke Box song of all time. Her music continues to speak to audiences not only because of her iconic voice but most importantly, the way she told a story with each song.

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Audiences will have a chance to see exactly what Benji meant by saying, “the way Patsy Cline told a story with each song” when Studio Tenn’s Always…Patsy Cline plays Jamison Theatre at The Factory at Franklin (230 Franklin Road, Franklin, TN) from February 8-24. Shows are 7 p.m. Thursday-Saturday with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Tickets range in price from $30 to $87.50. CLICK HERE for more information or CLICK HERE to purchase tickets.

Following Always…Patsy Cline, Studio Tenn will continue their 2018-2019 season with The Sinatra Legacy: A Musical Tribute to Ol’ Blue Eyes onstage at the historic Franklin Theatre in Downtown Franklin March 13-17. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.

In the meantime, be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare, Uncategorized Tagged With: Always Patsy Cline, Benji Kern, Blake Danford, Celebrity Interview, Franklin, Interview, Megan Murphy Chambers, Melodie Madden Adams, Nashville, Patsy Cline, Rapid Fire, Studio Tenn

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Studio Tenn’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’; onstage at Jamison Hall in The Factory at Franklin now thru December 30.

December 8, 2018 by Jonathan

‘Beauty and the Beast” opens at Studio Tenn on Friday, December 7 and continues through Sunday, December 30 (graphics and production images by Tony Matual/MA2LA/courtesy Studio Tenn) Actor headshots courtesy the artists)

For their holiday offering this year, Studio Tenn is presenting Disney’s Beauty and the Beast. As the company readied for the show’s Friday, December 7 opening night at Jamison Hall at The Factory at Franklin, I recently had the opportunity to chat with members of the cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q.

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RAPID FIRE WITH HATTY KING, BELLE IN BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

JHP: Tell me about Belle?

HATTY KING: Belle is a lovely balance of strong and soft. Her mother died when she was young, so she had to grow up quickly to care for her father-this is where her strength comes from- but it didn’t harden her. Instead, it gave her an appreciation for life, and a thirst or adventure. She realizes that life is precious, and she longs to live fully.

JHP: What about Belle’s personality do you most identify with?

HATTY KING: There’s a youthful exuberance about Belle. She’s smart and grounded, but would totally race you to climb a tree. The idea of maintaining a childlike playfulness is certainly something close to my heart.

JHP: Studio Tenn has quite the reputation for creating gorgeous costumes for their shows. While aspects of Belle’s looks tend to follow the now-iconic and recognizable blue peasant girl and gold ballgown wardrobe pieces, something tells me Blake Danford, who’s costuming the show, has put his own spin on things. What’s your favorite Belle look in the show?

HATTY KING: The gold dress, oh my. It’s the perfect combination of authentic 1700’s decadence and classic Belle…and I’m not kidding about the decadence. Most of the dress is hand-sewn and it’s exquisite.

JHP: Two yeas ago you were Ariel in a local production of The Little Mermaid and now you’re starring as Belle, who, unlike Ariel, marries into her princess title. Which princess still remains on your to-do list?

HATTY KING: I recently got to see Anastasia in New York, and the role of Anya captured my heart. I’d love play her!

RAPID FIRE WITH PAUL BASWELL, GASTON IN BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

JHP: You’re playing Gaston. What’s the best party of being such an over-the-top narcissistic character?

PAUL BASWELL: Overall, the self confidence he exudes has been really fun to play with. It’s really taught me a lot personally.

JHP: This is your first time in a Studio Tenn production, right? What’s the experience been like so far?

PAUL BASWELL: I’d have to say it’s greatly exceeded my expectations. The talent in Nashville is astounding, and this has to be one of the most professional companies I’ve ever had the pleasure to work with. There’s nothing better than getting to go to work and laugh everyday.

JHP: As Gaston, you get to share a few scenes with on of my favorites, Curtis Reed, who’s playing Gaston’s loyal sidekick, Le Fou. Are you guys having fun?

PAUL BASWELL: He is actually one of the first friends I made when I moved to Nashville just over a year ago! I was so excited when I found out we would get to work side by side. We belly laugh every single day! He is insanely talented and creative and is always coming up with great ways to add depth to our scenes together. I couldn’t imagine doing this without him!

JHP: Gaston isn’t just your character’s name, it’s also the title of your big production number. Does choreographer Anna Perry have some fun surprises in store for fans of Gaston’s self-adoring sequence?

PAUL BASWELL: Without giving too much away, I’ll be chugging beer and belching! : Anna has done an amazing job with the entire show, and I can guarantee that you won’t be disappointed with Gaston. Everyone knows she can create gorgeous dance sequences, but the audience will be pleasantly surprised to see that she also has a knack for staging delightful bar scenes and brawls!

RAPID FIRE WITH JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA, MADAME DE LA GRANDE BOUCHE IN BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

JHP: Tell me about Madame De La Grande Bouche.

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: The Madame is quite the character. She is the life of the party, and she’s always ready for one! She’s kind of like the wacky Aunt at all of your family gatherings.

JHP: In the classic 1991 animated film, your character, though called simply Wardrobe, was voiced by hilarious comedian, Jo Anne Worley. In the 2017 live action remake, Garderobe was played by the always divalicious Audra McDonald. Having known you for a few years now, I can totally see aspects of both of these grande dames in you. Would Playful Diva accurately describe your Madame De La Grande Bouche?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I think my Madame definitely has a sense of play. I think she comes off silly at times, only because she is completely serious in everything she does. Before she was Enchanted, she was THE opera diva. She was commanding the royal stage. So she is ready to bring in thunderous applause, but she also has no patience for ridiculousness. Madame Bouche would not be the woman to anger. As long as you let her be the center of attention, you can sit with her.

JHP: It’s been a minute since you’ve been in a Studio Tenn production. What are you enjoying most about being part of this show?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: I am just absolutely having a ball! I love fantasy so much! What could possibly be better, than playing and enchanted object, and singing a Disney score?! I also love any chance I get to use my classical voice. My roots are in classical music, so it always feels special when I get to sing it.

JHP: As Madame De La Grande Bouche, many if your scenes are with Hatty. What’s she like as a scene partner?

JENNIFER WHITCOMB-OLIVA: Hatty is such a treasure. I love every moment I get to share with her. She’s such a warm, and giving scene partner. She has a way of making everything seem so natural. The way she glides from song to scene with such passion, is so wonderful to watch.

RAPID FIRE WITH BRADLEY GALE, LUMIERE IN BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

JHP: What do we need to know about Lumiere?

BRADLEY GALE: I’d say the only thing you really need to know about Lumiere is that he’s sassy, the opposite of tight-lipped, never afraid to be in the “spotlight”, but most importantly loyal and loving (sometimes to a fault!)

JHP: Lumiere is frequently paired on-stage with Cogsworth, played in this production by Shawn Knight. Tell me about working opposite him?

BRADLEY GALE: It’s always a little nerve wracking when you’re the new kid in school especially when the teacher pairs you up to partner on a project with someone like Shawn Knight! But after our first encounter in callbacks he immediately pushed my fears aside. Shawn is a master class in timing and moreover a generous and supportive scene partner. From day one we started a witty banter full of the perfect balance of loath and love and now we’ve taken it to the stage.  I’ll let the audience be the ultimate judge; but I’m very proud of what we’ve been able to create together in such a short amount of time; as Shawn said on day one of rehearsals, “when shopping for Cogsworth memorabilia at Disney World…You just can’t buy Cogsworth without Lumiere!”.  And I wouldn’t want it any other way!

JHP: Aside from the show’s titular tune, Something There is probably my favorite. Wanna take a minute to just gush about what it’s like to be in a show with such a gorgeous score written by musical theatre legends Alan Menken, Tim Rice and Howard Ashman?

BRADLEY GALE: Singing the music of Beauty and the Beast is nearly every musical theatre kids dream come true. Its themes are probably some of the most recognizable musical themes of our time and the harmonies you’ll hear are EXACTLY what you want to hear at the end of every belty show-stopping number! When you add in voices like those assembled for this production its a soundtrack that I’ll happily be listening to on repeat through the month of December. Aside from the on stage voices just wait till you hear this orchestra under Stephen Kumer!

JHP: I frequently say I could live on a Studio Tenn set. Mitch White is designing the set for Beauty and the Beast. What can you tell me about it and other technical aspects of the show?

BRADLEY GALE: Mitch White never disappoints and this one is a doozy. You’ll walk in to Jamison Hall and immediately feel like you’ve walked into the castle. I don’t want to ruin any surprises but let’s just say;  it’s huge and it is Blue-tiful. ;-P. Don’t even get me started on the costumes and wigs! Blake Danford has designed and executed amongst numerous other magical pieces, a set of the coolest Candle stick hands I’ve ever seen…And yes they do light up!!!  Also, Allison Hearn has made me feel like a gorgeous hair model from Versailles! Much love and gratitude to our amazing design team!

RAPID FIRE WITH PATRICK THOMAS, THE BEAST IN BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

JHP: Who is The Beast to you?

PATRICK THOMAS: The Beast, though a magical Disney character, is still very much a human like any of us. He is any one who has ever let their circumstances define them. He blames a world he does not understand instead of his own shortcomings for his misfortunes. Unable to see the goodness around him he is temperamental, withdrawn, and full of self-loathing. In the most human way possible, it takes real love and inner beauty to thaw a heart that had long grown cold.

JHP: Playing The Beast isn’t just extra hair/makeup/prosthetics. I’m guessing it’s also a different approach to your physicality, speech and attitude. Is there one of these aspect that, once you’ve adapted it, you feel you become The Beast?

PATRICK THOMAS: Not necessarily. It’s a combination of the costume, the lower vocal placement, wider stance, broader shoulders, all of it really. Needless to say I’ve spent lots of time in front of a mirror lately in an effort to get it just right.

JHP: Some Studio Tenn audiences might remember you best for your appearances in the company’s popular Legacy series or the performance-heavy Christmas specials. Those are pretty straight-forward music performances, rather than theatrical characters with a bit of dialogue and character development. How much fun are you having stepping into a character like The Beast?

PATRICK THOMAS: This feels like a return to my roots (though most wouldn’t know it.) Both my parents were Broadway actors so I grew up hearing musical theatre. Having the chance to act and sing in a totally different style has been quite freeing. It’s a nice break from my pop/country music career.

JHP: While The Beast eventually shows his softer side, much of the show sees him grousing and gnarling at those closest to him. Do you see parallels between The Beast’s emotional transformation and the overall moral of the show?

PATRICK THOMAS: Of course. No one tells a story like Disney and there’s a reason this one is such a classic. Hopefully as audiences watch this magical production they will pick up on the underlying theme. Beauty is indeed found within. And hey, even if they miss it, at the very least we hope everyone will leave thoroughly entertained.

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With Studio Tenn’s flawless history of presenting Broadway-worthy productions time and time again, there’s no doubt their production of Beauty and the Beast will be talked about until the final petal falls. Studio Tenn’s Beauty and the Beast plays Jamison Hall at The Factory at Franklin with select matinee and evening performances from Friday, December 7 thru Sunday, December 30. Thursday thru Sunday evening performances begin at 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees begin at 2 p.m. Special Wednesday, December 26 performances will be at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Tickets range in price from $30-$90. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets.

Following the 7 p.m. Sunday, December 9 performance, Studio Tenn is offering an exclusive post-show Meet and Greet with Belle for an additional $5. CLICK HERE to purchase the additional Meet and Greet tickets. On Saturday, December 15 and Saturday, December 22, Studio Tenn is offering Backstage Tours at 12noon prior to the 2 p.m. matinee performance on those two days. CLICK HERE to purchase the additional Backstage Tour tickets.

After Beauty and the Beast, Studio Tenn’s 2018/2019 Season continues with Tennessee William’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof from Friday, February 8 thru Sunday, February 17. That will be followed by this year’s Legacy Series entry, The Sinatra Legacy: A Tribute to Ol’ Blue Eyes, onstage at The Franklin Theatre, Thursday, March 14-Sunday, March 17. Studio Tenn will wrap their current season with Damn Yankees from Friday, May 17 until Sunday, June 2. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information.Be sure to check out Studio Tenn online at StudioTenn.com or on social media at Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Beauty and the Beast, Bradley Gale, Christmas, Disney, Franklin, Hatty King, Interview, Jamison Hall, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Patrick Thomas, Paul Baswell, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Studio Tenn, The Factory at Franklin, Theatre, TN

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast and crew of ‘The Game Show Show’; Backstage at Chaffin’s through December 22

December 7, 2018 by Jonathan

In addition to Chaffin’s Barn’s main stage theatre space, where they’re currently presenting Elf: The Musical, Nashville’s oldest-continuing dinner theatre also features a second on-site venue, Backstage at The Barn. Currently on backstage is The Game Show Show: Holiday Edition. As the title suggests, it’s all about the fun of TV game shows. Presented in three acts, The Game Show Show sends up everything from Match Game (’77 to be exact), Judge Judy, To Tell The Truth and even includes a bit of audience participation in a friendly physical competition segment reminiscent of Double Dare…all with a timely holiday slant. If you read my column or follow me on social media with any regularity, you know I’m more than a little obsessed with anything 70s and/or TV, so I knew I just had to chat with members of The Game Show Show’s cast and crew for the latest installment in my recurring interview segment, Rapid Fire 20 Q. In the spirit of game shows (or perhaps because math isn’t my strong suit and I wanted to chat with all seven cast members) there’s actually a Bonus Question, so it’s technically Rapid Fire 21 Q.

RAPID FIRE 21 Q WITH CAST AND CREW OF THE GAME SHOW SHOW

Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s “The Game Show Show” cast members Joy Tilley Perryman, Gerold Oliver and Charlie Winton

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN

JHP: You’re directing as well as appearing in The Game Show Show, right? What can audiences expect to see from you?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: I wear lots of hats in this show, I am even in the stage manager’s booth at times.

JHP: In preparing for this show, did you do any research by watching old game show clips on YouTube or the Game Show Network?

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: I grew up on game shows, so I didn’t have to do a ton of research, but I did enjoy watching old Match Game clips on YouTube.

JHP: Who’s your all-time favorite TV game show host? 

JOY TILLEY PERRYMAN: Monty Hall

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S JOHN MAULDIN

JHP: I understand you’re stage managing The Game Show Show. The show consists of three acts, the first—a sort of mash-up of Judge Judy and To Tell The Truth, the second—a homage to Match Game ’77 and the third—Reindeer Games…which of these three is your favorite, and why?

JOHN MAULDIN: Yes, I’m stage managing the show but I make an appearance as a special Holiday icon in To Tell the Truth, so since I get to work on stage with this fun cast I would say this is my favorite. However, Match Game will always have a special place in my heart because I watched it a lot as a kid so there is a major kick of nostalgia during that for me. Reindeer Games is also great because it is just pure fun and so audience-centric that there is a great energy throughout the theatre. All 3 make for a fun night out!

JHP: What exactly do you suppose reindeer games are, and why wouldn’t they let poor Rudolph play?

JOHN MAULDIN: I imagine there to be a lot games of tag played by the reindeer, maybe some hide and seek, and there is probably a killer game of capture the flag. I guess there is the fear of the different and unusual from the other reindeer that prevents Rudolph joining in their games. I mean we know that it all works out well in the end. Our diversity is our strength, it’s true. Everyone has something special about them to offer the world and when given the chance they can shine!!

JHP: If you were playing Match Game ’77 and were going for the final match, would you choose Charles Nelson Reilly, Brett Somers or Fannie Flagg?

JOHN MAULDIN: Charles Nelson Reilly hands down. He was just so iconic and identifiable with the show.  I don’t know if we would have matched but I’m sure it would have been hilarious regardless.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S CHARLIE WINTON

JHP: As host of the second act of The Game Show Show, I hear you’re channeling a bit of classic Match Game host, Gene Rayburn. What’s one trait of Rayburn’s that audiences can look forward to seeing in your portrayal?

CHARLIE WINTON: Gene was a charming man and always seemed to be having a great time, I am striving for that in my performance.

JHP: You’re also hosting the third act, Reindeer Games, which is full-on audience participation. Should audience members be the least bit hesitant of volunteering to play?

CHARLIE WINTON: I think anyone that likes to have fun and laugh would enjoy playing our reindeer games!

JHP: Like their main stage shows, Backstage at Chaffin’s also features the delicious prime rib buffet with more sides and options than Santa’s sleigh-full of presents. What’s one item on the buffet you could live off of?

CHARLIE WINTON: Prime rib is my favorite! Add a little horseradish sauce…. yum!

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S MEGAN DEWALD

JHP: I hear your Match Game character is a bit like Mary Ann Mobley. TV nerd that I am, of course I know who she was, but you’re way too young to have ever seen her in anything, except maybe a rerun of her late-90s appearance on Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (told you I was a TV nerd)…in the spirit of this all-game show themed Rapid Fire…Tell the Truth…did you have to look her up to figure out how to approach this character?

MEGAN DEWALD: I absolutely had to look her up, and when I did, I was blown away by her beauty and her precise diction, although in my research I discovered she tended to drop the ending “k” in words like “think”. She’s been a blast to emulate.

JHP: You’re also playing Vixen, the Gift Exchange Host. What’s the worst gift you’ve ever received that you either re-gifted or returned?  (It’s ok, you can tell me…hardly anyone reads these interviews anyway)

MEGAN DEWALD: My Mimi, bless her heart, gifts me an overpriced plastic bracelet every year. They look like they have been made from colored newspaper and dipped in clear coat, then embellished with tarnished studs. Totally not my style, and they are so large that they fall off my wrists. I have a small hoard of them in my jewelry box that I regift occasionally. I don’t have the heart to tell her that I hate them because it’s the thought that counts. Don’t rat me out!

JHP: Who among your cast is most likely to get tickled by an audience member’s response and break out into uncontrollable laughter?

MEGAN DEWALD: Ha! It would definitely be me. I’m easily tickled, and I love to laugh. I tend to snort when I laugh, which makes others around me laugh, and their laughter makes me laugh harder. It’s a vicious cycle.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S GEROLD OLIVER

JHP: Tell me about your role(s) in The Game Show Show?

GEROLD OLIVER: I play a few different Characters. I play a caricature of Byrd (the bailiff) from Judge Judy in the first act, the late great poetic comic Nipsey Russell in the second act, and I play myself in act three!

JHP: From what I know, The Game Show Show is mostly improv. How much fun is that?

GEROLD OLIVER: One of my worst nightmares is breaking character on stage and laughing during a performance. I get to live my nightmare with some of the funniest people I’ve ever had the chance to perform with!

JHP: What is it about games shows that audience find so enticing?

GEROLD OLIVER: I’m sure it’s the prizes. There aren’t too many better feelings in the world that are more uplifting than walking in a place with nothing and walking out with something that you earned.

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S KARI CALDWELL

JHP: I hear you’re parodying Judge Judy as Judge Trudy in Act 1’s To Tell the Truth sendup. While she’s not exactly a game show, she’s definitely a daytime TV icon. Which cast member should you never play To Tell the Truth with?

KARI CALDWELL: This is a tough one. All of my fellow cast mates are Naughty Little Liars. So, I guess I will have to go with Joy. I always take her so seriously she could probably pull the wool over my eyes. 

JHP: I understand you also appear in the Match Game segment as a flamboyant character that might remind the audience of Joanne Worley. Full Disclosure…she’s one of my favorite game show panelist of all time, so I can’t wait to see your take on her. What’s the best part of channeling someone like her for a character?

KARI CALDWELL: I’m really old so I knew who Joannne Worley was without having to look her up but I still watched Match Game and tons of Laugh In snippets.  She cracks me up. It has been a delight to play a big mouth goofball. I might have been type cast! 

JHP: If you could produce a new TV game show, what would it be called and what would the premise be?

KARI CALDWELL: All contestants would wear a disguise on I Mustache You A Question and go into businesses and ask for a service they may or may not offer. The contestants are judged on their ability to carry out the charade with the people in the business and dedication to their disguise. 

RAPID FIRE WITH THE GAME SHOW SHOW’S ELIJAH WALLACE

JHP: From what I know, you’re Match Game character is a parody of Charles Nelson Reilly. Which is sort of a conundrum because wasn’t Charles Nelson Reilly a bit of a parody of everything outrageous and over the top?

ELIJAH WALLACE: He really was quite a character. He did everything on the show from wear hats all the time to hide his baldness and not wearing socks or pants on stage to being flown in with a hawk in his hand and feathers in his mouth. He liked making a scene as most theater people do.

JHP: If you were a contestant on the old school Hollywood Squares and you could chose either Paul Lynde or Rose Marie for the win, which one would you choose? (Dear Reader, Go ahead, Google them if you need to….I’ll wait)

ELIJAH WALLACE: I think Paul Lynde since he played Mr Macafee in the movie, Bye Bye Birdie and he was just so quirky and fun which would match my style. I think we would have gotten along great!

JHP: I understand you also play Tiny Tim in the To Tell the Truth segment. Please tell me it’s not just the God Bless Us Everyone, but also the ukulele-playing, tulip-tiptoeing 60s singer. Or is that just wishful thinking on my part?

ELIJAH WALLACE: It is wishful thinking unfortunately, but I don’t think the Tiny Tim that I am is quite traditional either. He has some nice surprises up his bedraggled sleeves! You’ll have to come see the show to fully understand what I mean!

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From my conversations with the cast, it’s evident it will be a fun time, indeed, so, dare I say it…Come on Down! as The Game Show Show continues Backstage at Chaffin’s Barn through Saturday, December 22. Evening performances are Thursdays-Sundays, December 6 thru 22  at 7:30 p.m. Remaining matinee tickets are available Thursday, December 6 at 12noon, Sunday, December 9 at 2 p.m., Wednesday & Thursday, December 12 & 13 at 12noon, Sunday, December 16 at 2 p.m. and Thursday, December 20 at 12noon. Thursday Matinee Show Only tickets are $19. (Patrons can also bring their own sack lunch, with drink options available for purchase. Thursday Matinee and Box Lunch tickets are $27.50. Box Lunch service begins at 11 a.m with Thursday matinees beginning at 12noon. Sunday Matinee  and Evening Performance Only tickets are $35/adults or $16/children 12 and under. Dinner and Show—which includes the aforementioned delectable full prime rib buffet—tickets are $60/adults or $30/youth/students. Sunday buffet service begins at 12noon until 1:30 p.m. with the show beginning at 2 p.m. Dinner service for evening performances begins at 5:30 p.m. and continues until 7 p.m. with a 7:30 p.m. curtain. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets, or for 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.

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, Theare Tagged With: 70s, Backstage at Chaffin's Barn, CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Charlie Winton, Christmas, Elijah Wallace, Game Show, Game Shows, Gerold Oliver, Holiday, Interview, John Mauldin, Joy Tilley Perryman, Kari Caldwell, Match Game, Megan DeWald, Q&A, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, Reindeer Games, The Game Show Show, To Tell The Truth, TV

Rapid Fire 20 Q with cast of Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre’s ‘Elf: The Musical’; on stage thru December 22

November 17, 2018 by Jonathan

Earlier this weekend, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre opened their production of Elf: The Musical, thus christening the unofficial start of Nashville theatre community’s Christmas Season. In anticipation of opening weekend, I recently had a chance to chat with several members of Chaffin’s cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q. Seeing as how the holidays are upon us, I’ve taken the liberty to not only include fun information about the show, the actors’ performances and such, but to also ask them about their own holiday traditions, memories and hopes.

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RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH THE CAST OF CHAFFIN’S BARN’S ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

RAPID FIRE WITH CHASE MILLER, BUDDY HOBBS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: Alright, I just have to tell you, when I heard you had been cast as Buddy, I immediately thought…’genius casting’. Has playing Buddy become an unexpected dream role?

CHASE MILLER: Well first of all, thank you so much! That’s incredibly kind. I remember when the show opened on Broadway back in 2010 thinking what amazing fun it would be, and now it’s real life! Playing Buddy is most definitely a dream, not to mention a whole lot of fun. The antics…the unadulterated joy…He really is a gift.

JHP: What’s one aspect of Buddy that you’d like to incorporate more into your own personality?

CHASE MILLER: One of my favorite things about Buddy is his fresh set of eyes on the “real world.” Sure, that leads to some comic cases of misunderstanding now and then, but it also allows Buddy to approach every bit of the world with an open heart and an open mind, because he doesn’t know any better. With the world being what it is these days, it’s hard not to lose a little faith in humanity, but Buddy would never dream of it. He has an innate ability to hone in on the good in people, and that’s a great reminder for me to make sure I’m putting enough love and kindness out into the world, whether I expect to get it back or not.

JHP: What’s your favorite childhood Christmas memory?

CHASE MILLER: Christmas is always a source of amazing memories for me, but if I had to choose I think “Decorating Day” would be my favorite as a kid. Usually the Saturday after Thanksgiving, we’d stay in our pajamas the whole day, blast Christmas tunes through the entire house, and we wouldn’t stop until everything was finished. Tree, lights, decor, the whole bit. Decorating for Christmas in my PJs is still one of my all-time favorite things.

JHP: The show is full of memorable scenes. What’s your favorite?

CHASE MILLER: Gosh, that’s a toughie… There are so many good ones! One that thoroughly tickles me though is when Buddy apologizes for shoving 11 cookies into the DVD player. I love playing through that scenario in my head. The thought of Buddy seeing the DVD player and 1. Assuming it was built for cookies, 2.Trying ten other times with ten other cookies, and 3. Even though the previous ten were a total bust, going in with that eleventh cookie. THAT’S  the one to determine that maybe… just maybe… it wasn’t built for that. It makes me laugh every time I think about it.

RAPID FIRE WITH CHRISTINA CANDILORA, JOVIE in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: You play Jovie. What can you tell me about her?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: She’s a tough broad. A little depressed when it comes to Christmas. She’s hard on herself because she’s a bit jaded by men. Having been on her fair share of bad dates she’s  weary about going on a date with a guy she might actually like. I think she’s got some

walls built up, thankfully buddy breaks those down.

JHP: How much fun are you having sharing the stage with Chase as Buddy?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: I don’t think I can properly put into words how much fun I’m having with him! I have so much love and respect for him. He makes me laugh…all the time. He’s so perfect in this role. It’s an utter delight getting to bring these characters to life with him.

JHP: What’s one Christmas tradition you have with your own family that you love?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: Christmas Eve dinner. I come from a big Italian Catholic family, so we do a thing called “The Feast of 12 Fishes”..all day long. We eat and drink and eat and drink some more! It’s a continuous amount of food with lots of laughs and love.

JHP: Chaffin’s Artistic Director, and the show’s director, Martha Wilkinson recently posted to social media that Everett Tarlton, the show’s choreographer, was quoted as saying the choreography is “very Fosse meets Sesame Street” why is that an accurate description?

CHRISTINA CANDILORA: Hah! I actually wasn’t there when that was said. However, I can see what he means by that. We are using a lot of imagination with this show. Everett’s choreo is always fierce, but it has fun child like feel added to it this time round. For example, Melissa Silengo and Everett become a puffin and a walrus at one point if that gives you an idea of the Sesame Street fun.

RAPID FIRE WITH SETH BENNETT, MICHAEL HOBBS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: Since holiday games are fun…Here’s a word game for you…How would you describe Michael in five words?

SETH BENNETT: If I was to describe Michael in five words they would be insightful, deprived, passionate, warmhearted, and honest.

JHP: Michael doesn’t believe in Santa. Tell me one reason why we should all believe in Santa.

SETH BENNETT: I think we should all believe in Santa because he inspires us to try and be kinder and more compassionate to others around us, which I think we could all use a little more of.

JHP: What makes Elf such a great holiday musical?

SETH BENNETT: Elf is such a great musical for the holidays because it is so lighthearted and warm. It is extremely humorous and even watching Buddy the Elf just makes people smile.

JHP: Do you prefer snow on Christmas or a bit of warmth and sunshine?

SETH BENNETT: Personally, I much prefer snow on Christmas rather than sunshine. Although I love being outdoors and in the sun, I feel like the snow just adds something special on Christmas. Also one of my favorite family memories involves playing in the snow, so it will always have a special place in my heart.

RAPID FIRE WITH GREG FREY, WALTER in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: How would you describe Walter?

GREG FREY: I think, like so many men, Walter is just misunderstood. He’s the George Bailey, Bob Wallace, Luther Krank and other infamous Scrooge like characters that remind us that without hope and the child like ability to ‘believe’ humanity is lost. At his core he is a good guy and loves his family, but allowed himself to get trapped in the American dream and things that truly are not important!

JHP: Aside from Elf, of course, what’s your favorite Christmas movie?

GREG FREY: That’s a tough one with so many good one out there! Much depends on my mood and need for either nostalgia or a laugh. Let’s just say a Christmas season does not go by without me watching White Christmas or Christmas with the Kranks!

JHP: Peppermint bark or candy canes?

GREG FREY: For taste alone, probably Peppermint bark…. but Christmas memories usually win out with me, and candy canes are tried and true. Whether topping a tree, crushed and sprinkled on candy cane cookies, inserted in some coffee or a cup of  hot chocolate (or just your mouth), candy canes are a winner!

JHP: As a kid, was there one Christmas toy you cherished above all the others?

GREG FREY: Fortunately, I don’t remember getting too many ‘duds’ as a kid. One gift that brought hours, days, years of enjoyment for me were roller skates. These were not the type you get when you rent some at the local roller rink (do those still exist?) but were metal frames that clamped around your toes and strapped around your ankle to what ever shoe you chose to wear. Primitive, yes, but oh so fun! We had a huge finished basement with tons of room for circling forever with our 45’s blasting away on my sister’s little portable record player! Memories like that,  along with my own family treasures,  keep the Christmas Spirit alive for me year round!

RAPID FIRE WITH BRIAN RUSSELL, SANTA CLAUS in ‘ELF: THE MUSICAL’

JHP: You’re playing Santa Claus as well as Fulton Greenway. How much fun is that?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Santa’s a hoot in this script.  Yes, he’s sentimental; and yes, he’s jolly.  but he’s also a college football fan with a taste for single malt cocoa, if ya know what I mean.  Knowing this was the Bob Newhart Elf role adapted from the movie also makes playing the droll lines a whole lot easier.  Besides, with my very tall and very mean Greenway, I get my daily karmic balance in spades.

JHP: In a recent Facebook post, you shared that you got your start as a professional actor at Chaffin’s nearly 38 years ago and that it’s been nearly two decades since you last appeared on stage at The Barn. What’s it like being back?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Now that we’re open, I’m guessing I’ll have a little more time to ponder this question for real.  Since waiting tables there is also my one of my “Burger King” jobs,  driving there and being in the building has not been all that much different (rehearsals tend to keep one hopping and not musing).  I guess when the memories actually begin to hit me is when I’m viewing from an old actor’s eye the photos on the wall from our past shows, remembering the amazing times with great productions and great friends that I’ve had when I could work there, and feeling the loss of the beautiful friends and colleagues that have since passed.  I started this vagabond life out there with a load of energy and a full head of hair, so the chance to come back is truly indescribable.  And I am GRATEFUL!

JHP: A follow-up question in reference and reverence to your lengthy career on stage. Any advice for the new kids in the show?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Advice, eh….if this nutty, crazy business is your passion, if you can’t really see yourself doing anything BUT this as a career, follow that dream and do everything you can to accommodate that passion. Above all, don’t fear unemployment….heck, nothing in Nashville lasts more than 10 weeks, so being out of work is a given. Find your way to comfort and career fulfillment despite that pesky notion no work and make yourself as marketable as you can…..triple threats work A LOT!!!

JHP: Just between you and me…who among the cast is likely to wind up on the Naughty list?

BRIAN RUSSELL: Well, Martha natch.  Thinking the band is probably on that list permanently as well….

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Elf: The Musical opened Thursday, November 15 and continues through Saturday, December 22. As Nashville’s longest-running Dinner Theatre, in addition to the show itself, Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theatre also offers a delicious buffet-style dinner along with the show. Throughout the run, Elf will be presented Thursdays at 12noon and 7:30p.m., Fridays & Saturdays at 7p.m. Additional showtimes include matinee performances on Wednesday, November 28, December 5 & 12 at 12noon, and Sunday, December 9 & 16 at 2p.m. Tickets for Evening performances and Sunday matinees include the full buffet dinner option with Dinner and Show tickets priced at $60 for Adults & $30 for Youth and Students or Show Only tickets available for $35 for adults & $16 for Children 12 and Under. Matinee tickets are available with the option of a Box Lunch for $27.50, or show only for $19.00. For Wednesday and Thursday matinee performances, Doors Open at 11a.m. for Box Lunch patrons, with the show beginning at 12noon. For Sunday matinees, Doors Open at 12noon with buffet service until 1:30p.m. and showtime at 2p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings, Doors Open at 5p.m. with dinner service from 5:30p.m.-7p.m and Curtain at 7:30p.m.

Fair Warning: Chaffin’s Christmas shows inevitably ALWAYS SELL OUT, so get your tickets today. Tickets may be purchased by calling the Box Office at 615.646.9977 (ext. 2) or 1.800.282.2276. You can also CLICK HERE to purchase tickets online.

In addition to Elf, Chaffin’s will also present a special children’s show, All I Want For Christmas is My Two Front Teeth, with morning matinees at 11a.m. Fridays & Saturdays from December 7-22. CLICK HERE for tickets.

The holiday fun keeps coming at Chaffins with The Game Show Show: Holiday Edition in their Backstage Theatre space, with weekend performances November 23-December 22. CLICK HERE for more information, or check back next week when I feature members of the cast in my next Rapid Fire 20 Q.

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

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

Filed Under: Rapid Fire 20 Q Tagged With: Brian Russell, CHAFFIN'S BARN, CHAFFINS BARN DINNER THEATRE, Chase Miller, Christina Candilora, Christmas, Elf, Elf: The Musical, Grey Frey, Holiday, Interview, Live Performance, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Seth Bennett

Rapid Fire 20 Q with director and cast of Nashville Repertory Theatre’s ‘A Doll’s House, Part 2’; at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru November 3

October 26, 2018 by Jonathan

Directed by René Copeland and starring Cheryl White, Galen Fott, Corrie Green and Rona Carter, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s presentation of A Doll’s House, Part 2 is currently on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru November 3. While Nashville Rep’s production marks the play’s regional premiere, playwright Lucas Hnath’s sequel to Henrik Ibsen’s classic debuted on Broadway starring Laurie Metcalf just last year.

Making Nashville Rep’s regional premiere run even more special, the women of the cast will stick around following this Saturday’s October 27 7:30p.m. performance as they are joined by Nashville businesswomen Bonnie Dow, Lucia Folk, Jill McMillan and Joelle Phillips for a special post-show talkback, Women Talk Back, during which the audience will have an opportunity to pose questions as the cast and special guests discuss feminism as it relates to Ibsen and Hnath’s characters from the 1800s and today.

In anticipation of the special Women Talk Back event and the show’s ongoing run, I recently had an opportunity to chat with the entire cast of A Doll’s House, Part 2…including the show’s lone male star…as well as Copeland, who’s not only directing the show, but who is also Nashville Rep’s longtime Producing Artistic Director, for the latest installment in my recurring interview feature, Rapid Fire 20 Q.

The cast and director of “A Doll’s House, Part 2”. From left: Rona Carter, Cheryl White, René Copeland, Galen Fott and Corrie Green

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RAPID FIRE WITH RENÉ COPELAND, DIRECTOR OF ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: From a director’s standpoint, what attracted you to A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RENÉ COPELAND: This play fires on several cylinders for me.  I love good dialogue, and in this play the dialogue is smart and funny, and has a unique tone to it—it is a sequel to a play set in the late 1800’s, yet it uses contemporary vernacular so it sounds incredibly modern.  On the page the dialogue is sort of mapped out like free verse poetry, so working with the actors to unlock the code, like a musician unlocks the code of a music score, is great fun.  It’s hard and also fun. I also appreciate the particular sense of humor in the play, and I always love a play that will use humor to explore provocative ideas.  I like plays that make you laugh AND think, so that when you leave the theatre you feel really energized. And this play is very demanding of both me and the actors, which I like.  I think theatre artists working on this play really have to work at the top of their game—each character is textured and complicated and each scene is crafted to work a certain way that you have to shape very carefully.  And then, as a woman I am of course interested in the question of how we balance our lives between the things we do for those we love and the things we do for ourselves—what is expected of us culturally and what we expect of ourselves. The questions posed by this play are completely about now.

JHP: Let’s play a little word association. Using only a single word, how would you describe each of your cast members in regard to their character portrayal in A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RENÉ COPELAND:

Cheryl as Nora—stunning; Galen as Torvald—compelling; Rona as Anne Marie—irresistible; Corrie as Emmy—intriguing

JHP: From rehearsals to now, is there a theme, scene or ideal in the play that’s come to more prominence that you’d originally thought when you took on the project?

RENÉ COPELAND: Nora tells a story near the end of the play about how difficult it is to hear your own voice, after a lifetime of not making a decision without wondering what “he” would think. Cheryl’s way of telling this story has moved it way beyond words on a page and it has come to have special meaning to me.

JHP: What can you tell me about the talkbacks scheduled to follow certain performances during the run?

RENÉ COPELAND: I love Talkbacks for any show, but this show is particularly conversation-inducing. If you come on a talkback night and stick around for a few minutes to chat with us, I know you’ll be glad you did.  You are going to have a lively conversation about this play in the car on the way home anyway, so why not stick around and have that conversation with us, the director and the actors?  Plus it’s really great for us to get a chance to hear real time feedback—it makes us all better at our jobs.  So talkbacks actually contribute to the artistic process. It’s very informal and it usually ends up being a fun sharing session, with plenty of behind-the-scenes insight and gossip along with serious exploration of ideas.

RAPID FIRE WITH CHERYL WHITE, NORA IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: In the fifteen years that has passed between the story depicted in Henrik Ibsen’s original and Lucas Hnath’s A Doll’s House, Part 2, has A) Nora changed, or B) simply cultivated characteristics that were already present?

CHERYL WHITE: I’m going to pick C) All of the Above!  Nora is now worldly, no longer naive about the workings of society.  She is self-reliant and passionate.  She found her voice at the end of Ibsen’s play and has nurtured it and it now sustains her.  She perhaps has more work to do to understand the ramifications of her newfound freedom on those she left behind.  And when thrust into an old environment with old relationships, she definitely stumbles into some old pitfalls!

JHP: Taking place in the late 1800’s requires period-costumes. What can you tell me about Nora’s  wardrobe, designed by Trish Clark?

CHERYL WHITE: One of the truly exciting aspects of this play is that the costumes and set reflect the period, but the dialogue and physicality (especially for Nora) are contemporary.  So even though I wear a corset and numerous heavy layers (petticoats and over-skirts and such), I strive to speak and move as a contemporary woman.  Not only does the wardrobe inform how I move, it also functions as a tangible obstacle for Nora and as a metaphor for the societal constraints she rails against.

JHP: Much of the play revolves around confrontation between Nora and those she left behind fifteen years prior. How do you prepare yourself for those heated scenes?

CHERYL WHITE: Each of the four characters in this play has a lot to lose.  Their personal stakes are high.    So it’s imperative that I really listen to what’s being said to Nora, that I never lose sight of what I, as Nora, need to win, and finally, that I breathe deeply.  Because when Nora let’s go, she really let’s go!!

JHP: What has surprised you most about this play?

CHERYL WHITE: That I agree with all four characters in the play.  Their viewpoints are wildly divergent, and yet I find everything they say to be true and valuable.

RAPID FIRE WITH GALEN FOTT, TORVALD IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: What can you tell me about Torvald?

GALEN FOTT: Judging only from Ibsen’s play (or “Part 1”, as we call it!), I think you might say that Torvald is a stifling, controlling, chauvinistic coward. But it’s also true that he is simply playing out the role that is expected of him by the paternalistic society of 1870s Norway. Then Nora walks out, and suddenly he’s a single father of three (albeit with a nanny-in-residence). But Nora’s leaving shook Torvald to the core. Now let’s flash forward to “Part 2”, where we meet him again 15 years later. I think it’s clear that Torvald has been “working on himself” in the intervening years, trying to figure out what happened, trying to work out what’s right and wrong, what’s fair and unfair. There are moments in “Part 2” when “old Torvald” reemerges, but he’s at least trying to evolve.

JHP: While Torvald is perceived as a successful businessman in Ibsen’s work. Nora having left him in the original piece definitely had its affect on him. As an actor, how have you found a balance in playing an outwardly strong man dealing with that inner brokenness?

GALEN FOTT: In this play, we see almost exclusively the private, “broken” side of Torvald. However, I do relish my first 30 seconds onstage, before Torvald realizes Nora has returned. For that half-minute, it feels like Torvald is in a completely different play from everyone else, a mundane tale of a banker who has dashed back home to retrieve some papers he forgot. Little does he know…

JHP: To some purist, the entire notion of a Part 2 to Ibsen’s classic might, at first, seem audacious at best. What is it about playwright Luca Hnath’s continuation that completely lives up to the iconic original?

GALEN FOTT: While Hnath’s play is written completely in the modern vernacular, there’s nothing anachronistic or “cheeky” whatsoever about the story and ideas. Hnath addresses all the same issues that Ibsen raised, and does so with complete fairness and seriousness. (Not that the play isn’t very funny at times!) And much of Hnath’s writing, particularly Nora’s gorgeous final monologue, I wouldn’t hesitate to call “worthy of Ibsen”.

JHP: In the conclusion of the original, Nora walks out on Torvald and their three children. In Part 2, the cast is made up of yourself, Cheryl White as Nora, Rona Carter as Anne Marie, the family Nanny and Corrie Green as Torvald and Nora’s daughter, Emmy. I gotta know…Do we find out what happened to the other two children?

GALEN FOTT: Well…not so much. Ivar and Bob would be around 22 and 20, respectively. From what Emmy says about them, it sounds like Bob is a bit emotionally unstable, but Ivar is “the opposite of Bob in every way”. And that’s all we learn! I think “Part 3” needs to focus entirely on poor Bob, don’t you?

RAPID FIRE WITH CORRIE GREEN, EMMY IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: You play Emmy, one of Nora and Torvald’s three children she abandoned as depicted in the final scene of Henrik Ibsen’s original. Part 2 picks up fifteen years later. In finding your voice for Emmy, did you imagine certain mother/daughter circumstances that she missed that might have molded her current fiber?

CORRIE GREEN: I think in my approach of the character the whole concept of becoming a woman without your mother was something I was drawn to. Certainly there are thousands of moments daughters spend with their mothers that shape who they are emotionally. That being said the idea that Nora was absent for Emmy’s first crush, first boyfriend, first fight with a close friend, becoming a woman, etc. were moments that I knew going into my preparation that had to have shaped Emmy. I didn’t think that they were moments that would fuel a dislike for Nora, however it made me think of who those moments were left to and all of those things were left to Torvald. We know from the text, both A Doll’s House, and A Doll’s House Pt.2 , that Torvald is not someone who is going to be extremely emotionally nurturing when it comes to his children. Thus approaching Emmy became a balance of figuring out what emotional support, and representation did she have growing up and how does that effect her. Certainly you will find that Emmy is simple in her emotions towards people and that she has no “animosity” towards Nora, but in order to understand that I had to imagine growing up without the emotional support of a mother.

JHP: In a scene from the play, Emmy confronts her mother, Nora, about having been left with her father and siblings. She says something like, “I think in a lot of ways things turned out better because you weren’t around.” Why do you think Emmy feels that growing up without her mother was to her advantage?

CORRIE GREEN: So on the positive side of growing up without a lot of emotional support is this idea that Emmy grows up intellectually much faster than the average kid. I think this is because of the fact that she had to learn everything sort of on her own. So she develops this strength in doing things herself, and finding things out for herself that wouldn’t have happened had she not found out about what happened to her mother. I think Emmy feels she has conquered the dark truths of the world because of the fact that she copes with problems intellectually and not emotionally. She doesn’t allow things to defeat her like her peers, and I think this is something Emmy prides herself on.

JHP: On the flip side, what negative affect, if any, did being raised by Torvald alone have on Emmy?

CORRIE GREEN: I think that one of the downsides is the idea that Emmy has on how to communicate with people, and primarily the sort of emotional numbness she has towards various things. I think a lot of this has to do with the fact that Emmy was raise viewing the post-Nora Torvald. That Torvald didn’t tell her anything about her mother, didn’t keep any of her mothers things, is known via Ibsen’s play to believe that the raising of children should be left to the mother, the depression that overcomes him post-Nora that numbs him to the idea of ever loving again. All of these characteristics result in a child who is brought up to become emotional but only on the surface, and to sort of have some wiring issues when it comes to her ideas on the world. Not having a mother around and only being raised by a father who believed in the norms of the time means that in a way Emmy wasn’t nurtured. Which I think comes across on the stage in various ways during her interaction with her mother. One of which being in the way she chooses to address her father as “Torvald”, which isn’t a very friendly, family driven address for ones dad.

JHP: Often, you hear about actors avoiding each other backstage or during off-time to aide in the believability of their onstage tension. With so much of A Doll’s House, Part 2’s interaction being confrontational, has that been the case for you and your cast mates, or is there a sense of family among you, in spite of the intense action on stage?

CORRIE GREEN: Oh no, I think the cast has formed a family of sorts. I don’t know what I would do if they weren’t so kind and willing to help me transition into Nashville and into the life as a working Actor. As someone, who just graduated and is from a different state, the fact that everyone was willing to take me under their wing including Rene and our tech crew was extremely comforting! Although, we don’t get to see Galen much before the show because all of us ladies are getting ready for the show in our dressing room, and he has to spend pre-show in his own dressing room by himself because he is the only guy. What a problem to have. But other than that we are all kind to each other, we talk with each other, and I love them all dearly. Its a great cast with all around good vibes!

RAPID FIRE WITH RONA CARTER, ANNE MARIE IN ‘A DOLL’S HOUSE, PART 2’

JHP: What does the audience need to know about Anne Marie?

RONA CARTER: That she’s loyal. Loving. And has had to deal with a lot in her lifetime. And, if there were a phone in those days you could pick it up call her and she’d be there in a heartbeat to help.

JHP: Early on in the play, upon Nora’s unexpected return, as Anne Marie, your greeting to her isn’t exactly what you’d call warm. That gives the audience an immediate sense of Anne Marie’s take-no-guff character. How much fun is that to play?

RONA CARTER: Rona is personally not like Anne-Marie at all. So it’s a lot of fun to play a character like that and, to some audiences it’s hilarious and others it seems a bit disconcerting because of our sentimentality. One of my first lines is you got a little fatter and you got a little older. Just telling it like it is.

JHP: Nashville Rep has a reputation for presenting some of the most gorgeous sets around town, courtesy of set designer, Gary Hoff. What can you tell me about the set of A Doll’s House, Part 2?

RONA CARTER: Gary always creates the  most wonderful environments to play on as an actor. This one is beautiful and has an element I’ve not seen in any others that he’s created. It has a raked stage which means it starts at stage level at the front and works up to 2 feet in the back, so it’s tilted. It’s very presentational and it’s a struggle for the characters to work in that environment. Just as we struggle in life with all her questions in relationships. And, just like the Kleenex box from the 2000s on the stage it gives one the element of something very unique at play here.

JHP: With so much of the play focusing on Nora’s actions in the first and their subsequent affects on her and the family, what do you think audiences will take away from the show?

RONA CARTER: Every audience members going to have a different view on all four characters I think. This is one of the few plays I know of that I’ve been in where you’re going to see a clear cut view from each of the four characters in this play. Each having a strong reason for doing and being who they are. And it could be any of these audience members in part or in whole. And I think people have long discussions about their relationships with others. Marriages. Dating. Loving.

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Galen Fott and Cheryl White in a scene from Nashville Rep’s “A Doll’s House, Part 2”

Audiences will indeed have their chance to peek inside A Doll’s House, Part 2 as the show continues through Saturday, November 3 with performances Friday, October 26 at 7:30p.m., Saturday, October 27 at 2:30p.m. & 7:30p.m., Wednesday & Thursday, October 31 & November 1 at 6:30p.m., Friday, November 2 at 7:30p.m. and Saturday, November 3 at 2:30p.m. & 7:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $25 to $52.50. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. For further details about Saturday, October 27’s special Talkback, Women Talk Back following the 7:30p.m. performance, CLICK HERE. For more about Nashville Rep, CLICK HERE to check out their site, or follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: A Doll's House Part 2, Henrik Ibsen, Ibsen, Interview, Lucas Hnath, Nashville, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theatre

Rapid Fire 5 Q with Jason Lewis, directing Circle Players’ ‘Hair’ on stage at Looby Theatre thru Sunday, October 21

October 19, 2018 by Jonathan

The cast of Circle Players’ ‘Hair’ (photo courtesy Circle Players)

Circle Players’ current production, Hair wraps its three-week run with performances Friday, October 19-Sunday, October 21 at the Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). First presented on stage 50 years ago, and therefore typically thought of as late-1960s anti-war, musical love-in, the current mounting of the show becomes interestingly relatable to what’s going on in the world around us thanks to director Jason Lewis’ creative eye. Peppering his cast with a few familiar faces, Lewis also reinforces the show’s familial Tribe vibe. With just a few shows left in the run, I recently got the chance to speak with Lewis about the show, his take on it and his cast for an abbreviated version of my recurring Rapid Fire interview feature.

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RAPID FIRE 5 Q WITH HAIR DIRECTOR, JASON LEWIS

JONATHAN H. PINKERTON: Having directed for Circle before, what keeps you coming back?  

JASON LEWIS: Circle Players, through my many returns to Nashville, has always provided me a creative home, even more so now in a directorial capacity. While I was away in New York, old school Circle alums Maggie Bowden and Sue Stinemetz would try to coax me to return and direct for Circle. In the years between their subsequent passings, I faced my own personal setbacks.  I now work for Circle to honor their memories.  People always ask why I don’t just do ‘paid stuff’ since the quality of work is of such caliber and my response is always the same… “Somebody has to be the Mr. Schuester (of Glee fame).”  My background being in education, I love discovering new talent and thrive in the community theatre setting, wowing audiences by exceeding expected results.

JHP: What is it about Hair that drew you to the project?

JASON LEWIS: Well since being back I had helmed one epic show, one funny show and one of spectacle, so to me Hair was a nice middle ground. I wasn’t 100% sure until the Parkland shooting and it’s aftermath. Watching a government do nothing as our youth are (preventatively) being killed off? Watching kids march out of school in protest as we’ve not seen SINCE Vietnam? Instantly, I knew what show I HAD to do. People are on edge politically but they still need hope…and love.

JHP: Among you cast, I spotted a name or two you’ve worked with in the past. what is it about these actors that makes you want to team with them again on this project?

JASON LEWIS: Of my cast I’ve probably worked with Maggie Wood and Scotty Phillips the most.  Both were in Reefer Madness and Bring it On.  Maggie has such a versatile wide range in her abilities, thus a perfect person for each of the roles I’ve given her so far. Scotty works hard and isn’t afraid to step outside his comfort zone.  He stands out in a lead and as an ensemble member. Few local artists can claim that.

JHP: They’re not the only ones you’ve worked with amongst your cast, right?

JASON LEWIS: Besides the aforementioned,  I’ve worked with Amanda Creech, Barrett Thomas and Erica Patterson on Jesus Christ Superstar and Sara Shumway in Reefer/Bring It On and Gillion Welsh and Jarvis Bynum in Reefer, as a director. I also recently shared the stage with Seth Austin Brown, Blake Holliday & Stephanie Twomey in The Full Monty.  Besides being hard workers, the one thing they all have in common is fearlessness when it comes to getting weird, something vital in a Hair tribe member. 

JHP: As a director, what do you hope to get from your actors?

JASON LEWIS: Authenticity and vulnerability as well as completing homework character research assignments in creating their tribe member.  Hair isn’t just about singing, dancing and acting.  My tribe is honoring those actors who workshopped Hair and brought it to life by immersing themselves in 60s counter-culture. Also, I ask that they give themselves over to the uncomfortable moments freely, it is the only way to truly create the organic work of art Hair must be. Never be disingenuous to the material!

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Circle Players’ Hair continues for a final weekend with performances Friday and Saturday, October 19 & 20 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, October 21 at 3 p.m. All tickets are $20. Click Here to purchase tickets. For a little more about the cast, Click Here. It should be noted that Circle Players’ website does indeed offer an Audience Advisory of the  show for “nudity, strong language, simulated drug use, adult content and situations that may not be appropriate for all ages”. That said, what better reasons to join the tribe?

Be sure to follow Circle Players on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter for the latest news, tickets and details about the rest of their 69th Season.

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 Tagged With: Circle Players, Director, Hair, Interview, Jason Lewis, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Rapid Fire 5 Q

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

October 12, 2018 by Jonathan

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

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

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

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

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

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

Evan Alexander Smith

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

October 8, 2018 by Jonathan

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

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

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

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

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

Angela Grovey

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JHP: What can you tell me about Annie?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Scott Cote

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Rapid Fire Q&A with bon vivant, revered theatre critic and all-round theatrical legend, Jeffrey Ellis, directing ‘The Boys in the Band’ at The Barbershop Theatre September 27-October 1

September 20, 2018 by Jonathan

When I heard Jeffrey Ellis was tackling playwright Mart Crowley’s iconic 1968 masterwork, The Boys in the Band for the show’s long-overdue Nashville premiere production at Barbershop Theatre  September 27-October 1, I knew it was going to be epic. You see, Jeffrey isn’t just one of Nashville…and the world’s…most respected and admired theatre critics (he is Senior Contributing Editor of Broadwayworld.com, after all), but he’s also a talented director, who, because of his love to theatre, as well as cinema and all things entertainment, always provides a keen and thoughtful version of any show he helms that inevitably leaves his audiences satisfied, engaged and with a new interest in discovering more about what they’ve witnessed.

That said, imagine my disappointment when I realized I wouldn’t be in Nashville for the upcoming run of Ellis’ take on Crowley’s groundbreaking play. Coming to terms with the devastation caused by my ill-timed travels, I reached out to Jeffrey for my latest Rapid Fire interview just hours before time to board my flight. Lucky for me, in addition to all the aforementioned well-deserved and true accolades referenced above, Jeffrey is also a skilled and gifted writer, so basically this interview wrote itself. Enough intro…below is our conversation.

Rapid Fire 10 Q&A with Jef Ellis, directing The Barbershop Theatre’s The Boys in the Band 

Jeffrey Ellis

JONATHAN PINKERTON: I’m shocked to learn this will be the Nashville debut for The Boys in the Band. Why do you think it’s never been mounted here before?

JEFFREY ELLIS: I think initially producers were skeptical of how it would be received by a Nashville audience. The first show I directed – 1999’s La Cage Aux Folles for Circle Players – was sort of regarded in that way and, as the script was written, the two lead characters didn’t embrace or kiss throughout the show and I wanted to change that. My thought process was that if audiences had stayed with us to the end, they wouldn’t be offended by the sight of two men kissing. Instead, they would welcome it as the natural progression of their relationship.

And after that initial reluctance, the play became mired in a lot of controversy: was it too stereotypical, was it too flamboyant and queeny – the typical things gay men have always asked about their own behaviors, to be quite honest – and so it fell into disfavor.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: First produced Off Broadway in 1968 , the play recently enjoyed its first-ever Broadway run in celebration of its 50th anniversary. It’s about time, huh?

JEFFREY ELLIS: Without question! Now, with the 50th anniversary of its first New York production, set against the backdrop of all the advances made for GLBTQIA civil rights in the past ten years, looking back at an earlier era is very timely and prescient. The Boys in the Band shows us that the more things change, the more they stay the same and it’s important – to me, at least – to pay homage to Mart Crowley’s play which has proven to be a watershed moment in theater, gay, straight or otherwise.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: What makes The Boys in the Band as relevant now as when it premiered?

JEFFREY ELLIS: The characters are so sharply defined, so indelibly written, that their stories are universal. The issues they dealt with at a time when virtually everything they did that designated them as homosexual could have led to arrest and conviction. It’s vital that we remember our history, to learn from it and to refuse to ever go back to being treated as second-class citizens. GLBTQIA people in the 21st century stand on the shoulders of every man and woman who came before them, who sacrificed themselves to ensure a greater sense of community and belonging. We should always be grateful.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: Why do you think The Boys in the Band is a good fit for The Barbershop Theatre?

JEFFREY ELLIS: The very first time I was at The Barbershop Theater, to see Verge Theater’s production of Kimberly Akimbo, I was taken by the intimate nature of the venue and I recognized instantly that a play like The Boys in the Band could be presented there in the way I’ve always envisioned it: Like the story being told, with a gathering of friends who don’t always like one another very much, but who will always defend one other. The audience becomes active participants in the play’s action in such an intimate space and the actors will feed off their energy during every performance.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: For those who might label this a ‘gay play’, how would your respond?

JEFFREY ELLIS:It isn’t just “a gay play,” it is THE gay play that changed the course of American theater, a play in which the characters are presented honestly and authentically, allowing audiences for the very first time to see how a group of gay men would interact with one another. It’s a very brave play, the original cast were a courageous group of men who dared to play these flawed, but all too real, characters as they existed in real life. I have never been prouder of any theater project in my life than I am of this production.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: How much are you loving your cast?

JEFFREY ELLIS: They are remarkable. I cannot say enough about their ability to breathe life into these characters – characters who have lived in my heart and my brain since I read the play when I was 12 years old. The nine men in my cast have willingly come on board and they have given me their trust to craft a production of a play that changed my life, that proved to me I was not alone in the world when I was in sixth grade and gave me hope that I would someday find my own people just like this rag-tag group of characters created by Mart Crowley did.

The nine actors in The Boys in the Band give so much of themselves in every rehearsal and will give so much more during the show’s six-performance run – they lay bare their souls. And as they do that, they honor every gay man who has ever been bold enough to admit who he is and to live an authentic life.

These nine men have become my family – they are my brothers and my sons. They have listened to my stories about my own life as a gay man and they have shared the details of their own lives in the process. We are inextricably bonded now – and I will be hard-pressed to have such an experience ever again.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: When I saw you at TPAC recently, you shared a story of the precise moment you saw your cast bonding. Do you mind sharing that with my readers?

JEFFREY ELLIS: We had a photo call before rehearsal one night and the cast seemed surprised that I would be taking the pictures, so I explained that I came from the place and time where to get a journalism degree meant studying photography. And I treated them like so much cattle, ordering them around and telling them exactly how to stand, where to put their hands, what angle to tilt their face – that kind of stuff – and while we did it, we had fun and we laughed a lot, I told off-color stories and we had fun.

That carried over into our rehearsal and I realized that night they my cast had bonded, we had indeed become a family and I knew in that particular moment that the show would be the same show I’ve always seen in my mind, even after all these years.

At the end of rehearsal that night, I asked each actor with which character did they most identify and each man chose the character he is playing, which was extremely gratifying because it proved I had made the right casting choices. But more important, it meant that we were all on the same page, creatively, and that we anything is possible.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: What can you tell me about your technical/creative team?

JEFFREY ELLIS: Sara Kistner is my production stage manager and we’ve worked together on several shows, including South Pacific and The Little Foxes – we yell and scream at each other and move on because we trust each other and believe in each other. Emily Daigneault, who designed props for The Little Foxes is back on the team, providing our time period-senstive props for The Boys. Dan Hayes, whom I’ve known since he was fresh out of college and acting at Actors Playhouse of Nashville, is my costume designer and previously he did that for my production Picnic a few years ago. Daniel DeVault is lighting designer; it’s our first time to work together, but obviously we’ve known each other for several years and I’ve always been impressed by his work.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: How would you describe the look and feel of the show, as you’ve envisioned it?

JEFFREY ELLIS: Initially, I planned to give it a real mid-century look and feel, but as I’ve delved more deeply into the literature of the play and become even more acutely aware of who Michael, the protagonist of the play at whose apartment the birthday party takes place, is and what his sense of style is – which is, remarkably, quite similar to my taste. Michael’s apartment is timeless and, hopefully, kind of elegant in the way some small-town Southern queen would see himself living in Manhattan when he escaped the clutches of his mama and them.

JONATHAN PINKERTON: What’s been the most gratifying aspect of directing this cast in this particular play?

JEFFREY ELLIS: I discovered early on that in my own life, I’ve never been completely honest about who I am and what I believe. Directing The Boys in the Band with this band of remarkable brothers I have assembled has forced me to take a look at myself and how I’ve lived my life and to make me want, more than anything, to be honest and authentic in my sexual orientation. These wonderful actors have taken everything I’ve thrown at them, assimilated it into their own performances to craft characters who are endearingly human and straightforward. And, truth be told, that’s who I’ve always wanted to be, even if I haven’t always been as successful as I may have hoped.

JONATHAN PINKERTON:What do you hope audience take away from The Boys In The Band?

JEFFREY ELLIS: An understanding of what we’ve all been through, how our lives have changed since 1968, to gain knowledge about how far we’ve come, while recognizing how far we still have to go in the never-ending struggle for acceptance. I hope they will love these men as much as I always have and to see the universality of their stories and how they relate to their own personal stories.

The Barbershop Theatre‘s production of The Boys in the Band directed by Jeffrey Ellis runs September 27-October 1 with shows nightly at 7:30 p.m. and a Saturday Matinee on September 29 at 2:30 .m. Tickets are $15. Click Here to purchase or for more information.  Stay informed about upcoming events at The Barbershop Theatre by liking them on Facebook and following them on Instagram. For the latest on Jeffrey Ellis find him on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Celebrity Interview, Debut, Director, Interview, Jeffrey Ellis, LGBTQ, LGBTQIA, Mart Crowley, Nashville, Nashville Debut, Nashville Theatre, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, The Barbershop Theatre, The Boys in the Band, Theatre Interview

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