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

JHP Entertainment

Entertainment News, Reviews and Interviews

  • Home
  • About
  • Features
  • Contact

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

January 16, 2020 by Jonathan

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

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

———————————————

RAPID FIRE WITH LA CAGE DIRECTOR, JEF ELLIS

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

RAPID FIRE WITH MACON KIMBROUGH, GEORGES IN LA CAGE

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

RAPID FIRE WITH KRISTIAN DAMBRINO, JACQUELINE IN LA CAGE

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

KRISTIAN DAMBRINO: a Franglish chameleon.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

———————————————

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

To be a part of the energized, eclectic vibe that is Circle Players’ La Cage aux Folles, CLICK HERE to purchase tickets as the show runs Friday, January 17 through Sunday, February 2 at Z. Alexander Looby Theatre (2301 Rosa Parks Blvd). Tickets are $15 for Thursday performances and $20 Fridays-Sundays. To keep up with the latest from Circle Players follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter 

If you’ve enjoyed this latest Rapid Fire 20 Q, be sure and CLICK HERE to check out previous conversations. if you are interested in coverage for your latest entertaining endeavor, simply click the contact page and drop me a note. You can also follow JHP Entertainment on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Ann Street-Cavanagh, Broadway, Broadway Musical, Circle Players, Interview, Jef Ellis, Jerry Herman, Kristian Dambrino, La Cage aux Folles, Macom Kimbrough, Michael Baird, Musical, Musical Theatre, Nashville, Rapid Fire, Rapid Fire Q&A, Theatre

Theatre Review: There’s no such thing as too much hype to describe the theatrical experience that is ‘HAMILTON’; on stage in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall thru January 19

January 3, 2020 by Jonathan

Joseph Morales and members of the cast of ‘Hamilton’/all photos by Joan Marcus, courtesy Hamilton National Tour

Nashville theatre audiences have anxiously awaiting the arrival of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway blockbuster, Hamilton, right here in Music City since Tennessee Performing Arts Center first announced its eventual 2020 arrival during the season announcement party back in April of 2018. Well, the wait is over! Hamilton has ascended upon TPAC’s Jackson Theatre.

Before attending the show Tuesday night, I had honestly never listened to the soundtrack, other than catching occasional televised performances on the Tonys, the Grammys, the Olivier Awards and the like. Partly because I initially hoped to see it on Broadway or Chicago, where I had friends in both companies, but mostly because I kept hearing Hamilton described as a hip-hop musical. While I consider myself musically well-rounded, I’m not exactly a hip-hop aficionado, or a history buff, for that matter. I just didn’t know if I wanted to sit through a two and a half hour musical that tells the tale of Alexander Hamilton through rap and hip-hop. Damn. I’m here to tell you, after experiencing it live, on stage, in a packed house. I was foolish to deny myself this long.

When I say there was a packed house, I’m not exaggerating. My best friend and I arrived to the theatre Tuesday night an hour and a half before curtain (normally, I breeze in as the house opens half and hour before the show begins). When we arrived, valet was surprisingly quick, which reassured me we were simply early. Nope. Once inside TPAC’s lobby, we walked into the biggest crowd of folks I’ve ever seen at the venue and you could feel the buzz of excitement. Hamilton had arrived and Nashville was ready.

As time ticked away, the hour wait flew by. Some passed the time waiting in line for a photo op at the Hamilton selfie wall, while many visited the merch booth for the usual t-shirts and mugs, or Hamilton-centric items like golden quill pens. I myself managed to thankfully find a spot on a bench near the theatre entrance and struck up a conversation with a lady and her daughter who were excited to be there. What’s more, they were there because they had entered TPAC’s ticket lottery and had won the chance to purchase two prime seating tickets for $10 each! CLICK HERE for more about the Hamilton/TPAC ticket lottery.

Once inside the theatre, more selfies were taken as patrons flooded the room. There it was. The set. The first glimpse of what some have described as the most important theatrical experience of our generation. Set Designer, David Korins–whose work includes everything from Pee Wee Herman’s playhouse for its recent stage run to Beetlejuice’s frighteningly fanciful Broadway set–created the Hamilton set. Upon first glance, it appears nautical in nature, with ropes, pulleys and wooden platforms invoking ideas of a ship. Perfect, as we soon discover through the lyrics of the show’s first tune, Alexander Hamilton that the founding father was not only an immigrant orphan, but that he also worked on a trade charter as a young teen.

To the casual viewer, the set seem to remain the same throughout the show. But with the added technical craft of lighting designer Howell Binkley, the set, at times represents everything from a courtroom to the physical representation of the growing age of enlightenment that was New York in the early 18th century. Such a seemingly simplistic set, but so cleverly utilized and smart. While many current shows seem to be following the trend to feature completely realistic projections, Korin’s wooden scaffolding set, complete with a surprise dual…or should I say duel (see the show, you’ll get the reference)…turntable floor feature, enhances the action of the show and the music, but doesn’t distract from it.

On the subject of the music of Hamilton, as mentioned above, yes, hip-hop is predominant, and not just in style, but in reverence to the genre itself. It can’t be coincidence that the show’s second musical number, My Shot, begins with Hamilton spelling out his name in a rhythmic patter, “A-L-E-X/A-N/D/ER”. That’s surely a nod to legendary rapper Notorious B.I.G., who rapped, “N-O/T-O/R-I/O/U-S” within the lyrics of his iconic 1997 cross-over hit, Going Back to Cali. That’s not the only Biggie nod, as midway through act one’s Ten Dueling Commandments commands memories of B.I.G.’s The Ten Crack Commandments, a track from the performer’s final studio recording. Notorious B.I.G. isn’t the only hip-hop artist Miranda pays homage to. The opening of Cabinet Battle #1 has a Jay-Z Izzo intro vibe. Heck, the cabinet battles themselves are even staged like classic rap battles, mic-drop and all., There’s also a similarity between Hamilton’s Meet Me Inside to DMX’s Party Up in Here. 

It’s not just hip-hop that’s references in Miranda’s brilliant soundtrack. There’s also more than a few winks to the art of showtunes themselves. The most obvious, nods to Gilbert and Sullivan, Jason Robert Brown and Rodgers and Hammerstein. For Gilbert and Sullivan, it’s the hilarious inclusion of a direct lyrical lift from Pirates of Penzance, featured during Hamilton’s Right Hand Man when General George Washington refers to himself as “the very model of a modern major general”. Jason Robert Brown’s The Last Five Years’ Nobody Needs to Know, pops into Hamilton during Say No To This. My favorite of these three…during My Shot, Hamilton references South Pacific’s Carefully Taught.

Other lyrical nods may or may not be intentional, but rather, perhaps only coincidental, but I doubt it. Miranda has proven himself a true lover of musical theatre by including lyrical taps to things like 1776: The Musical’s Sit Down, John. While it covers the same subject matter as Hamilton’s The Adams Administration, it’s given a decidedly edgier and hilarious feel when accompanied by an unexpected expletive. There are literally a couple dozen theatre references, intentional or not, throughout the show, but I digress.

Rap and Showtunes are just two of the musical genres Miranda includes within Hamilton. Perfectly setting the scene with acknowledgement to the factual time during which the action is set, Hamilton also includes period-authentic instrumentation. During King George’s Act 1 jewel, You’ll Be Back, a harpsichord is featured. What’s the significance? A harpsichord perfectly repersents the time period as many composers of the day included parts for the now oft-forgotten instrument in their arrangements. Then there’s an actual piece originally composed by composer Wilhelm Richard Wagner included in Hamilton during Helpless, when Alexander proposes to Eliza. The classic piece in question…commonly known as Here Comes the Bride, is actually titled Bridal Chorus and was first presented by Wagner during his 1850 opera, Lohengrin.

OK, enough…probably too much…about the trivial musical winks, but I had to mention, as listening for them and recognizing them became one of my favorite aspect of seeing the show for the first time.

Because of its continued success and popularity, Hamilton is still on Broadway, while simultaneously embarking on their National Tour…there are two current US tours in fact,—The Philip Tour and the Angelica Tour. Nashville’s TPAC is playing host to The Philip Tour.

Starring as Alexander Hamilton is Joseph Morales, who was previously part of Hamilton’s Chicago company. As Hamilton, Morales plays the founding father , whom we first meet at age 19 when he arrives in New York in 1776. For those droves of Hamilton fans, Morales, and anyone who ever plays Hamilton, has the unenviable task of stepping into the role orignated by Miranda himself, daunting, indeed. To his absolute credit, Morales approaches young Hamilton during Act 1 with a convincing naïveté paired perfectly with an excitement to make his mark on the new world. I’m not gonna lie. From his first notes of the eponymous Alexander Hamilton to the finale, Morales evoked chills as I learned more about Hamilton than I ever realized I needed to know. Morales portrays Hamilton from enthusiastic young man with a vision through the pain of losing his son, jeopardizing his marriage and his ultimate untimely death, running the gamut of emotion in a believable, but unforced way

Cast as Hamilton’s counterpoint and eventual assassin–Come on…that’s no Spoiler..even I knew that–is Jared Dixon as Aaron Burr. Alright, I have to admit it, the only reason I know Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton is thanks to an early 90s Got Milk? commercial (directed by Michael Bay, btw) in which a Hamilton historian misses out on a radio trivia contest while eating peanut butter sandwich with not enough milk to wash it down…again….I digress. 

Dixon as Burr, the OG frienemy, is not only the perfect foil for Morales’ Hamilton, but also the perfect scene partner, their lyrical sparring make for some of the show’s most enjoyable moments. Plus there’s the running gag of the way everyone lingers on then pronunciation of Burr’s surname, which begins with the tune Aaron Burr, Sir and continues throughout the show.

The Schuyler Sisters

As well-known to Hamilfans as Hamilton and Burr there’s also The Schuyler Sisters, Angelica, Eliza…and Peggy (see the show, you’ll get the reference). Cast as Hamilton’s love interest and eventual wife, Eliza is Erin Clemons. Her physical beauty, and that of the actresses playing her sisters, only accentuated by the glorious costumes courtesy costume designer Paul Tazewell, Clemons is the perfect scene partner for Morales’ Hamilton, not only vocally holding her own, but wowing the audience during numbers like the gorgeous Helpless, an r&b ballad with a healthy dose of the romanticism of a Cole Porter standard. 

As Angelica, Ta’Rea Campell is mesmerizing. Presented not only as Eliza’s selfless sister, but also as Hamilton’s unrequited love, Campbell’s performance presents a subtle depth to the character, especially during her featured turn alongside Clemons and Morales during the gorgeous Satisfied.

Nyla Sostra’s Peggy is memorable, mostly because the character herself is played as forgettable. That said, Sostra snags the spotlight in the dual role of Maria Reynolds, with whom Hamilton had an ill-fated illicit affair that would prove a potential thorn in his political side. In a wardrobe move straight out of Bette Davis’ Jezebel, when Sostra takes to the stage in a red dress as Reynolds, the heat is on.

As expected, other historical figures present in Miranda’s Hamilton include the aforementioned King George III, George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

Joseph Morales and Marcus Choi in ‘Hamilton’

As George Washington, Marcus Choi plays our first president with a bit of wit and wisdom, making me personally long for a leader with those same qualities. Songs like Right Hand Man, Stay Alive and One Last Time showcase Choi’s talents perfectly.

Neil Haskell as King George III is everything you’d hope a self-centered royal would be…and then some. With equal parts Sir Elton John at his campiest mixed with your anything-but-average spoiled monarch, Haskell steals every scene he’s in…and interestingly, he interjects himself throughout the action of the play, even though it all takes place stateside.Haskell’s King George puts the ham in Hamilton in the best way possible during You’ll Be Back, What Comes Next and I Know Him…all containing a happy sing-song 60s Brit-pop melody. A nice contrast the the soundtrack predominately heavier rap aesthetic.

King George III

Warren Egypt Franklin’s Thomas Jefferson—clad in a purple topcoat that rivals anything rock royalty Prince ever wore and strutting like a banty rooster with a cockiness that’s reminiscent of another Jefferson…TV’s George Jefferson as played in the 70s by Sherman Hemsley—he too holds his own and steals the limelight whenever he’s on stage. What’d I Miss, Cabinet Battle #1 and Election of 1800, among his musical highlights. Franklin also does double duty appearing as Marquis de Lafayette, changing it up a bit donning a humorously heavy accent and a less flashy topcoat for the role.

Also doing double duty in two supporting roles Desmond Sean Ellington as Hercules Mulligan and James Madison, Elijah Malcomb as John Laurens and Philip Hamilton, the aforementioned Nyla Sostre and Nick Sanchez who plays three roles: Philip Schuyler, James Reynolds and Doctor. 

These actors, along with the rest of the ensemble and the leads, bring the story of Hamilton to glorious life. 

In addition to Lin-Manuel Miranda’s inventive book, music and lyrics, Hamilton also boasts an electrifying array of movement as choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler. To that end, the visual presentation of the ensemble dancers, whether dressed in full military garb, or stripped down to petticoats and form-fitting pants and sleeveless undershirts, as dressed by Tazewell, perfectly accentuates the movement. At times, while the leads perform vocally, the ensemble beautifully accentuates their words with movement. Much like the genre-crossing inclusion of music, many dance forms are presented in Hamilton, from ballet, to jazz, hip-hop and even touches of traditional tribal dance. Proving once again, Miranda and company deserve every bit of hype, but more importantly, praise for THE musical of our time.

Hamilton continues its extended run at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with performance through January 19. To follow Hamilton, check them out on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

You can discover all the latest from TPAC by checking them out online or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Entertainment, Theatre Review Tagged With: Broadway, Broadway to Nashville, Broadway Tour, HAMILTON, Hamilton Musical, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Review, TPAC

Lythgoe Family Panto officially an annual Music City event as ‘Aladdin and His Winter Wish’ plays TPAC’s Polk Theatre through December 22

December 21, 2019 by Jonathan

Kira Kosarin and Damon J. Gillespie starring in Aladdin and His Winter Wish/

Just as they did by presenting their take on Peter Pan during the holiday season last year, The Lythgoe Family has once again teamed up with TPAC to present yet another familiar tale with a decidedly modern twist as Aladdin and His Winter Wish continues its two-week run at Polk Theatre thru Sunday, December 22.

While based on the centuries old Middle Eastern folk tale, with a couple of lighthearted winks to a certain Arabian tale from the House of Mouse, Lythgoe Family’s Aladdin and His Winter Wish steps right into the 21st Century by combining elements from the original story, and classic British Pantomime with pop tunes and enough Nashville-centric one-liners, jokes and jabs to keep the audience in stitches whether they be 8 or 80. 

For the uninitiated, as I did when I reviewed Peter Pan last year, allow me to explain a little about traditional British Pantomime. It’s a centuries old theatrical art-form known as Panto for short. Granted, when most Americans hear the word pantomime, thoughts of mimes with clown-white faces mimicking attempts of escaping non-existent boxes come to mind. While that is indeed a type of pantomime, this pantomime is much different.

With roots tracking back nearly as far as recorded time itself, pan-to—in the more modern sense—presents a familiar story, usually a favorite children’s fairy tale, but with comedy, music, encouraged audience interaction and just enough double-entendre to keep parents entertained as well.

Not only are there local mentions of things like Pedal Taverns and Nashville and surrounding cities (sorry Memphis, but you kinda deserve being the brunt of a few jabs), the show is chocked full of modern pop tunes that drive the story along. 

Opening the show with a high energy belly dance-vibe take on The Pussycat Dolls’ 2009 mega-hit Jai Ho!, the ensemble gives a hint of the fun to come. As the story of Aladdin and his brother Wishee Washee (what can I say, their Mom, The Widow Twankey owns a laundry service) unfolds (pun fully intended), we learn that the two street rats dream of bettering life for themselves and their mother. This leads to the brothers joining forces for their take on the early 80s hit, Matthew Wilder’s Break My Stride. When Aladdin meets the Princess, there’s a little classic country flavor as he wistfully croons You Don’t Know Me, a song made popular in the 1950s by country legend, Eddy Arnold.

Bruce Vilanch as The Widow Twankey, flanked by sons, Aladdin (Gillespie) and Wishee Washee (Jonathan Meza)

The Widow Twankey then kicks things up a notch alongside the ladies of the chorus for a rollicking cover of Old Time Rock and Roll. 

As the story continues and we learn that Aladdin believes his way into the Princess heart is through some miracle of riches, the audience is treated to his version of the Bruno Mars hit, Billionaire. Keeping it in an R&B vein, the Genie closes out Act 1 on a high note with a simply perfect rendition of Earth, Wind and Fire’s Fantasy.

Act 2 opens with another Bruno Mars tune, Treasure, performed by the company. Not forgetting one of Aladdin’s most treasured moments…Spoiler Alert….the magic carpet scene is, well, magical indeed. Perfectly framed by the sappy but sweet On the Wings of Love and the optimistic Walking on Sunshine. By show’s end, there’s the inevitable wedding followed by a wonderful winter surprise as the cast sings a faithful Let it Snow…another Spoiler Alert…you better believe it does…IN the theatre! Always a crowd pleaser!

And that’s just the music. The entire show is brimming with hilarious one-liners, clever jokes, a few bad-but still laugh inducing-puns and more than a handful of inside jokes referencing the actors and their previous claims to fame.

Audiences may not be readily familiar with The Lythgoe Family name, but chances are they’re very familiar with some of the projects they’ve spearheaded for television. Case in point, Nigel Lythgoe, the family’s patriarch, alongside son, Simon Lythgoe, have at one time both produced everything from So You Think You Can Dance to American Idol, while son Kris Lythgoe also worked with the family on So You Think You Can Dance and other projects.

This brings us back to Lythgoe Family Panto, which Kris and wife Becky Lythgoe began in 2010 with their take on Cinderella. 

As was the case during last year’s Nashville presentation of Peter Pan, the company of Aladdin and His Winter Wish is also peppered with well-known talent of all ages and a healthy selection of Music City performers both on stage and behind the scenes.

In the title role is Tennessee native, Damon J. Gillespie. While he’s got roots in Tennessee, and seems to only be beginning his career, he, too has an impressive resume, having appeared on Broadway in Newsies and Aladdin, as well as television shows like Rise, Empire and Inside Amy Schumer. As Aladdin, Gillespie is perfectly mischievous and quite the charmer.

While Disney fans might be expecting Aladdin’s love interest to be named Jasmine, for this iteration, his intended is simply referred to as The Princess, as played by Kira Kosarin, who garnered popularity as well as three Kid’s Choice Award nominations for Favorite TV Actress for her starring role as Phoebe on Nickelodeon’s The Thudermans during the show’s four season run. Kosarin’s Princess is naturally beautiful with an enchanting voice to match. Who can blame Aladdin for doing whatever it takes to win her heart?

Richard Karn and Kira Kosarin as The Sultan and The Princess

Starring as The Princess’ father is Richard Karn as The Sultan. Karn, of course starred alongside Tim Allen in the hugely popular ABC sitcom, Home Improvement as Al Borland, Tim’s best friend and co-host. Karn’s comedic timing is perfectly suited for this type of interactive theatre where they encourage the audience to cheer to good guys and jeer the bad. Heck, on opening night, there was a minor snafu with a line or two and at one point the door of the set didn’t work as expected, but Karn and company rolled with the punches, even occasionally cracking up themselves. A truly endearing occurrence reminding older audiences of such classic comedy moments as The Carol Burnett Show when she and her co-stars couldn’t help but laugh at themselves.

Unlike that famous animated tale, this Aladdin isn’t an orphan. To that end, Jonathan Meza co-stars as Aladdin’s appropriately named brother, Wishee Washee. While Meza may be new to Nashville theatre, he’s no stranger to Lythgoe Family Panto as this marks his eighth show with the company. Audience members in the pre-teen to teenage range might also be familiar with Meza as Josh from the popular Nick Jr. bilingual musical series Jumpitz. Meza’s Wishee Washee not only plays second banana (and leap frog partner) to brother Aladdin, he also serves as narrator, therefore constantly breaking the fourth wall to get audience responses and reactions to what’s going on within the story. Another aspect of Panto that makes it fun for the whole family.

Rounding out Aladdin’s family is comedy icon and LGBT legend, Bruce Vilanch as Aladdin and Wishee Washee’s mother, the Widow Twankey. As a comedy writer, Vilance has provided the scripted banter for the Oscars and Emmy Awards for years. Early in his career, he wrote for and worked with everyone from Bette Midler and Donny and Marie Osmond and even penned two of my all-time favorite holiday specials, The Paul Lynde Halloween Special and the unforgettable (as much as George Lucas would like to try) Star Wars Holiday Special! Fans of a certain age will no doubt remember him as a frequent panelist (and writer) for Hollywood Squares in the late 90s and early 2000s. Of course this isn’t the first time Vilanch has appeared onstage stage in dresses and women’s wigs. In 2002, he took over the coveted role of Edna Turnblad during Broadway’s original run of Hairspray, then the following year, join the National Tour in the same role. As the Widow Twankey, Vilanch steals every scene he’s in, especially when she takes a shine to the evil sorcerer. 

Josh Adamson as the evil Abanazar

Speaking of…Josh Adamson stars as Abanazer, the show’s villain…think Jafar. Adamson, a native Aussie, has previously been seen in number of regional theatrical productions, including several Lythgoe Family Pantos, both here and in Australia, including Cinderella, Snow White and previous productions of Aladdin. Perfectly evil, but not so much as to truly scare younger audience members, Adamson is the consummate bad guy, maniacal laugh and all.

Rounding out the main cast are Mykal Kilgore as Genie and Alexis Gilbert as Alexa, the Slave of the Ring. 

Mykal Kilgore and Damon J. Gillespie as The Genie and Aladdin

As for Kilgore he’s yet another performer familiar to many theatre-goers having appeared on Broadway in Hair, the first national tour of Book of Mormon. He was also seen in both recent televised musical productions of Jesus Christ Superstar and The Wiz. With more than a few nods to Will Smith’s recent turn as Genie for the big screen, Kilgore holds his own and makes the role truly his with a voice as smooth as Stevie Wonder and some fabulous moves.

Gilbert once again joins the Lythgoes, having previously appeared on stage in Aladdin as the Slave of the Ring, as well as previously appearing on Season 14 of So You Think You Can Dance. As a professional dancer, she’s worked with everyone from You Tube star Matthew Santoro, as well as pop superstar Pharrel Williams and electronic music superstars Daft Punk. And, Yes, you better believe the take full advance of the name Alexa with a number of jokes at that other Alexa we’re all so fond of talking to on our personal devices. While she floats in and out of the story, at the common of whomever is wearing the ring, Gilbert steals every scene she’s part of, thanks to her remarkable dance moves.

Which leads me to the ensemble. With the Lythgoe Family’s ties to dance, the remainder of the company is made up largely of phenomenal dance talent including Daniel Thomas, Albanus Thierry, Anna Melendres, Rachel Melendres, and Nashville’s own Chelsea Hough.

Speaking of Nashville, directing Aladdin and His Winter Wish is Ernie Nolan, known to Music City audiences for his work as Executive Artistic Director at our beloved Nashville Children’s Theatre. The show’s choreographer, Chase Benz is also another Nashville native. Now residing in Los Angeles, Benz’s impressive resume drops names like Brittney Spears, JLo, Rihanna, Back Street Boys and many more.

TPAC’s own Christi Dortch co-produced the show, alongside primary producers Becky and Kris Lythgoe, Kris also wrote the show.

Aladdin and His Winter Wish continues its holiday run in Nashville at TPAC‘s Polk Theatre with six performances remaining. On Friday, December 20, there’s a 7p.m. evening performance, on Saturday, December 21, there’s an 11a.m. morning performance as well as a 3p.m. matinee and a 7p.m. evening show and on Sunday, December 22, 12noon matinee and a 5p.m. final early evening performance. Tickets range in price from $45-$55. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets.

In case you don’t make it to Aladdin, I have it on good authority that the Lythgoe Family plans to continue to bring these entertaining American Pantos to Nashville with yet another new-to-Music City production next year!

Immediately following a very brief holiday break, TPAC’s Broadway series returns with the highly anticipated Nashville premier of the first-ever touring company of Hamilton onstage at TPAC’s Jackson Hall from December 31 thru January 19. CLICK HERE for tickets or more information. CLICK HERE to learn about TPAC’s recently announce $10 ticket lottery for every single Music City Performance. You can also discover all the latest from TPAC by checking them out online or on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

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

Filed Under: Review Tagged With: Aladdin, Christmas, Holiday, live theatre, Lythgoe Family Panto, Panto, Theatre, Theatre Review, TPAC

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

December 11, 2019 by Jonathan

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

November 15, 2019 by Jonathan

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Theatre Review: Nashville Rep’s production of ‘Every Brilliant Thing’ a thing of brilliance indeed; on stage at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre thru Sunday

November 8, 2019 by Jonathan

Straight off, I should apologize to anyone who sat near me earlier this week during Nashville Repertory Theatre’s invited dress rehearsal for their current limited-run presentation of Every Brilliant Thing directed by Lauren Shouse and starring the amazing Mark Cabus. I’m apologizing because I don’t think I’ve ever had a theatrical piece touch me in such a profound way. I was literally sobbing (thankfully, mostly inaudibly) with tears streaming down my face for a good portion of the show. 

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a big ole softie and I’ve cried at everything from seeing The Color Purple on stage for the very first time, to…well…Publix commercials, but there’s something about Cabus’ delivery, coupled with Shouse’s direction and the clever intimate staging that has the audience on all four sides of the action, thanks to several cocktail tables set up around three sides of the set.

Scenic designer Gary Hoff presents a stripped-down set consisting of little more than a few area rugs grouped together to form a larger square, a comfy leather chair, a side-table,  a couple crates of vintage vinyl, a record player and an ottoman. In addition to the cocktail tables and chairs for some audience members, there’s also a few chairs and tables set up to the left and right of the traditional theatre seating.

Director Shouse wisely moves Cabus throughout the audience, both those seated near him at the tables as well as those seated in the rows of stacked theatre seats. This movement amongst the audience aides in pulling them into the feel of the story. Also aiding in the involvement of the audience, prior to the play’s start, Stouse greeted audience members as she passed out seemingly random objects like a balloon, a pack of cigarettes, a soda pop or a book and instructed the audience to listen for the number attached to the object and to simply read aloud the accompanying phrase when that number was called out.

As Cabus, the story’s narrator, takes to the stage, he begins telling the story of a young boy whose mother had attempted suicide, or as the boy’s father referred to the incident…she did a ’stupid thing’. As a young boy, and not quite able to fully comprehend the gravity of his mother’s actions, the boy decides to begin a list, a list of Every Brilliant Thing that might be reason enough not to do such a stupid thing. As Cabus reads the list, he frequently calls out a number from the list. It’s at that time the audience member who has the corresponding object with that number on it, reads aloud that particular entry. Further involving the audience, occasionally throughout the play, Cabus also calls upon random audience members to act as various characters throughout the narrator’s life, a veterinarian, his father, a school psychologist and his first love to name a few. 

Perhaps it’s the simplicity of the entries, things as commonplace as seeing someone fall over, bubble wrap or, my personal favorite….the voice of Nina Simone, but mostly it’s Cabus’ remarkable talent and his ability to tell this tale as if it’s his own, while simultaneously reacting on the spot to the audience, and engaging everyone around him as he exposes the shared vulnerability in all of us. 

Broaching subject matter as varied and relatable as the death of a beloved pet to suicide, depression, first love, lost love and finding the beauty in the smallest of gestures and the grandest of happenings, Every Brilliant Thing is unlike anything I’ve ever seen. By play’s, when the narrator has kept the list going again and again just when he’s needed it throughout the trials and tribulations of everyday life, there’s a million things on the list. Suffice it to say, I’d like to add at least a few more…Nashville Rep,  director Lauren Shouse, star Mark Cabus and Every Brilliant Thing about this production of Every Brilliant Thing.

Following Wednesday afternoon’s inited final dress rehearsal, and last night’s preview performance, Nashville Rep’s Every Brilliant Thing continues its all-too-brief run at TPAC’s Johnson Theatre with performances Friday, November 8 at 7:30p.m., Saturday, November 9 at 2:30p.m. and 7:30p.m. and a final Sunday, November 10 matinee at 2:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $25 to $45. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or for more information.

Up next at Nashville Rep is Patrick Barlow‘s A Christmas Carol playing November 30-December 22. Check out Nashville Rep online HERE and follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

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

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Every Brilliant Thing, Mark Cabus, Nashville Rep, Nashville Repertory Theatre

Theatre Review: Audiences are soaking up the friendship, fun and musical merriment of ’The SpongeBob Musical’; at TPAC’s Jackson Hall thru Sunday as National Tour continues

November 8, 2019 by Jonathan

Even though I myself had only seen one or two random episodes of Spongebob Squarepants over the last twenty years, my subconscious had absorbed—if you will—some basic facts about the  jaundiced, angular, happy-go-lucky sea-dwelling sponge and his fellow Bikini Bottom inhabitants. That said, when I first heard about The Spongebob Musical on Broadway, I envisioned something akin to one of those live touring shows based on kiddie tv with actors parading around on stage in larger than life character costumes. Of course I soon learned that director Tina Landau opted to forgo the expected cartoony look of the characters as created by the late, great Stephen Hillenburg, instead representing the majority of residents of Bikini Bottom in human form with clever wardrobe, hair and makeup nods to their animated aquatic selves. What I hadn’t expected, until I arrived at TPAC’s Jackson Hall earlier this week for Opening Night in Nashville of SpongeBob’s first-ever National Tour, continuing here in Music City through Sunday, November 10, was a neon rainbow of color, light and sound that magically bridges the gap of ridiculous cartoon goofiness with some genuinely lovely musical theatre moments.

Having kicked off the tour just last month, it would seem the company is still working out being in a new venue each week as there was a slight delay to opening the theatre to patrons for the show’s Nashville premiere. That said, once the eager audience gained entry, I was immediately struck at the the instantaneous lift in spirit and presence of joy. Perhaps in an effort to buy more time to work out some rumored opening night tech glitches, as the audience took their seats, a few members of the company casually gathered on the edge of the stage and began an impromptu jam sesh. Once the anxious audience had filtered in, and assumably, the technical issue resolved, the show began. 

Even the most casual of SpongeBob fans will surely marvel at what lighting designer Kevin Adams, projection designer Peter Nigrini,  sound designer Walter Trarbach and costumer and set designer David Zinn, together with director and co-conceiver Landau have created, for the visual and audio results do indeed transform the venue into an entrancing and inviting underwater land of laughter, fun and friendship.

Of course what makes The SpongeBob Musical even more enchanting is, well, the music. The soundtrack boasts tunes by an undeniable who’s who from virtually every genre of music and I do mean EVERY genre…throughout the show the audience is treated to tunes by everyone from Cyndi Lauper, Plain White T’s and Aerosmith’s Joe Perry and Steven Tyler to Yolanda Adams, Panic! At the Disco, Lady Antebellum and more. In addition to all the new music written specifically for the musical, there’s even a reworking of David Bowie’s No Control from his 1995 Outside release that reunited him with Brian Eno. When I say this musical has something for everyone, I mean it, and that’s largely thanks to original SpongeBob Broadway music director Patrick Hoagland, arranger Tom Kitt, music coordinator John Mezzio, music supervisor Julie McBride and touring music supervisor Timothy Hanson.

Speaking of the show’s music, the opening number, Bikini Bottom Day (by indie/folk singer/songwriter Jonathan Coulton) as performed by SpongeBob and company perfectly sets up the feel of the show. As SpongeBob (Lorenzo Pugliese) awakens and prepares to head to his job as a fry cook at The Krusty Krab, Bikini Bottom’s most popular eatery, he sings this cheery wake-up. As he passes by his best pal, a rather large pink starfish named Patrick Star (Beau Bradshaw), Patrick questions if it’s morning already, to which SpongeBob replies, “It sure is and I’m singing the opening number.” That hilarious lyric serves to let the audience know that the lines are indeed blurred between fantasy and reality, between cartoon and human, between Bikini Bottom and the rest of the world. The remainder of the opening also introduces us to SpongeBob’s other bestie, Sandy Cheeks (Daria Pilar Redus), a science-lovin’, karate-choppin’ squirrel who lives underwater thanks to a diving suit and helmet.

This seems as good a time as any to further elaborate on the look of the characters. As alluded earlier, rather than SpongeBob and company looking like a furry fetish convention has converged upon the town, goofy oversized amusement park or sportsball mascot costumes are nowhere to be found. Instead of Pugliese being confined to a giant yellow square spongy costume, as SpongeBob, he’s the human personification of the character dressed in a short-sleeved yellow button-down with a red tie, suspenders and brown checked pants. He plays the plucky sponge with a childlike excitement reminiscent of Paul Rubens’ Pee Wee Herman, making you feel he is truly excited to be in this show.

Meanwhile, Bradshaw’s Patrick, rather than being covered in pink makeup from head to toe, is simply dressed in loud green board shorts, a pale pink Hawaiian floral shirt, bright pink socks and sneaks, all topped off with a pink fauxhawk. He’s the perfect Hardy to Pugliese’s Laurel, bringing a simplistic, good-natured kindness to the role. 

As Sandy, Redus wears a simple white science-y-looking jumpsuit and in place of her bubble helmet, hair and wig designer Charles G. LaPointe has opted to have her wear an afro, accented, of course with Sandy’s signature pink hibiscus bloom. Redus’s Sandy is smart and reserved when needed and her over-the-top southern accent—Sandy’s from Texas, after all—fit right in here in Nashville. 

While there are several other costume highlights featuring all the colors of a box of crayons, including Sheldon Plankton & his robot wife, Karen (Tristan McIntyre & Caitlin Ort), Mr. Krabs (Zach Kononov), Pearl (Miami Maszewski), Mrs. Puff (Natalie L. Chapman) and the Sardines, it’s Larry the Lobster (Dorian O’Brien) and Squidward (Cody Cooley) who get the biggest reception from the audience due to the cleverness of their costumes.

As I said at the beginning of this review, while you don’t have to be a fan of the animated series, I’ve been told if you are, there’s tons of Easter eggs peppered throughout. While I hadn’t seen more than a few episodes of the series prior to attending the stage musical, I must admit, in the days since, I’ve set my dvr to record SpongeBob and as I’ve found myself staying up late to bingewatch ‘just one more episode’, I’ve picked up on a few things. One example…late in the show, when the residents of Bikini Bottom are celebrating their survival of the volcano, Patrick asks if mayonnaise is an instrument…for those of us in the know…that’s a reference to a 2001 episode title Band Geeks in which Patrick poses the now famous question (famous at least to the legions of fans who’ve tuned into the animated series for two decades now).

I love that the stage version includes a foley artist, credited as Foley Fish. It’s also pretty cool that said foley artist is Ryan Blihovde is a graduate from Nashville’s own Belmont University! As the on-stage Foley Fish, Blihovde provides live sound affects like the spongy squish of SpongeBob as he walks across the stage or the thud of Pearl’s footsteps. She’s a whale in the animated show, thus explaining yet another inside joke that viewers will no doubt appreciate, when she mentions she and her father, Mr. Krabs are different species. 

Which reminds me…if you’re thinking SpongeBob The Musical is only for kids, think again…in addition to the plethora of hummable tunes, gorgeous set design and overall visually stunning look of the show, there’s more than a few levels of humor for all ages. Yes, some jokes are obvious and the kids in the audience were loving it, but there were a few moments peppered in just for the adults. One in particular that resulted in an audible guffaw from yours truly happens when Sandy is explaining how she can stop the volcano. During her presentation, she taps a wipeboard with a pointer as detailed drawings of her theory appear. In the last slide as she explains how her Eruptor Interruptor will save Bikini Bottom, the illustration on the board looks suspiciously like a lady’s bikini area…pre-wax. I about spit out my limited edition Seanut Butter and Jellyfish Goo Goo Cluster! And yes, you read that right…Goo Goo, one of Nashville’s most famous confectioners has teamed with TPAC to create a special chocolate covered peanutty treat, with a sea of surprises inside, available exclusively in the concessions area during the run of SpongeBob The Musical, but I digress.

With a story concerning the possible end of days for the residents of Bikini Bottom, thanks to the pending eruption of a volcano, Kyle Jarrow’s book of the musical is simple…SpongeBob and friends must overcome their insecurities to band together to save the day. To that end, the story broaches lessons in relationships, good vs. evil and never underestimating ones own self-worth. That’s just one aspect of the show that does a brilliant job of playing to both the youth and the older members of its audience, for what’s a show based on a cartoon worth, if there’s not at least a few morals to the story cleverly hidden among the laughter and songs?

On that note, musical highlights are a plenty in SpongeBob The Musical. BFF features Pugliese and Bradshaw’s SpongeBob and Patrick in an all-out declaration of their bond. The catchy tune penned by Plain White T’s is simply joyous. 

Pugliese gets his show-stopping moment as SpongeBob with (Just A) Simple Sponge, Panic! At the Disco’s contribution to the score. During this number, Pugliese’s SpongeBob defies the expectation and label put upon him by his boss, Mr. Krabs as he announces he is NOT A Simple Sponge. The visuals of this song heightened by the use of blacklight and ensemble members dressed in black blending into the background behind SpongeBob while neon yellow sponge squares dance behind him forming everything from musical notes as he plays his trademark noseflute, to taking shape of a superhero cape, a bit of foreshadowing for the audience of SpongeBob’s inevitable hero status by show’s end.

Daddy Knows Best, featuring Kononov and Maszewski as Mr. Krabs and his daughter, Pearl, showcases both actors vocal skills in a tune that’s neatly nestled somewhere between Streisand’s Papa Can You Hear Me from Yentl and Minnelli and Grey’s Money Makes the World Go ‘Round from Cabaret.

Hero Is My Middle Name, penned by Cyndi Lauper and Rob Hyman, and performed herein by Pugliese, Bradshaw and Redus is another inspiring anthem during which our trio convince each other they can indeed save Bikini Bottom. 

Super Sea Star Saviour, Yolanda Adams’ addition to the score, features Bradshaw’s Patrick surrounded by adoring sardine followers that just might put you in mind of JC Superstar mixed with a little Sister Act.

As he does with his four-tentacled wardrobe, Cooley’s Squidward also steals the show musically with his long-anticipated Act 2 epic number, I’m Not a Loser that kicks off with an almost unseen quick-change into a sparkly tux and continues with some of the show’s most tap-tastic footwork, including a Busby Berkley-inspired kickline featuring ensemble dancers backing. Christopher Gattelli’s choreography is showcased here, but shines throughout the entirety of the musical. Executed so effortlessly by the entire ensemble, it’s easy to forget the hours they must put into it to make it seem so simple.

A few reprisals—more great original numbers like John Legend’s sweet (I Guess) I Miss You and Chop to the Top, from Nashville’s own Lady Antebellum, which includes some impressive physicality from Pugliese as he and Redus climb the volcano to thwart its erupting—and the story wraps neatly with the expected outcome of SpongeBob and friends saving the day, and their beloved Bikini Bottom. But don’t rush out of the theatre in hopes of beating the crowd to the valet or your’ll miss a post-script all-in of the entire company (and it’s grateful uplifted and joyous audience) as the night ends with a rousing rendition of that earworm of a theme song from the original animated series!

The SpongeBob Musical continues its Music City stop with shows at TPAC through Sunday, November 10. Friday & Saturday evening performances are at 8p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees are at 2p.m. and 1p.m. respectively and the show wraps with a final Sunday evening performance at 6:30p.m. Tickets range in price from $45-$90. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or from more information.

Not in Nashville? The SpongeBob Musical continues its National Tour with dates across the US and Canada including stops in Oklahoma City, Dayton, BrookVille, New Brunswick, Philly, Toronto, Detroit, Wilmington, Morgantown, Lexington and more through July 2020. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets in your area or to see the full tour schedule.

To keep up SpongeBob and the entire Bikini Bottom gang, follow SpongeBob The Musical on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.

Up next at TPAC, it’s the beloved favorite, CATS, followed by the highly anticipated Hamilton as their 2019-2020 Broadway Season continues. CLICK HERE for tickets or more info. You can also follow  TPAC on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Wanna check out previous Rapid Fire conversation

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Public on-sale date announced for Tony-winning ‘Hamilton’ National Tour in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall December 31, 2019-January 19, 2020

November 7, 2019 by Jonathan

Early this morning, TPAC finally announced the long-awaited details of the public sale date for the highly anticipated Music City debut performances of Hamilton. Producer Jeffrey Seller and Tennessee Performing Arts Center revealed that tickets for the Nashville leg of the first-ever National Tour of the eleven-time Tony®-winning musical will go on sale on Monday, Nov. 11 at 10 a.m. Tickets will be available at TPAC.org and in person at the TPAC box office (505 Deadrick Street) in downtown Nashville. Tickets will be available for performances Dec. 31, 2019 – Jan. 19, 2020.

 There is a maximum purchase limit of eight (8) tickets per account for the engagement. When tickets go on sale, prices will range from $79 to $199 with a select number of $349 premium seats available for all performances. Additional fees will apply to online purchases. As TPAC has offered for many of their recent shows, there will be a lottery for $10 seats for all performances. Lottery details will be announced closer to the engagement.

Jeffrey Seller noted, “It’s tempting to get tickets any way you can. There are many sites and people who are selling overpriced, and in some cases, fraudulent tickets. For the best seats, the best prices and to eliminate the risk of counterfeit tickets, all purchases for the Nashville engagement should be made through TPAC.org.”

Hamilton is the story of America’s Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, an immigrant from the West Indies who became George Washington‘s right-hand man during the Revolutionary War and was the new nation’s first Treasury Secretary. Featuring a score that blends hip-hop, jazz, blues, rap, R&B, and Broadway, Hamilton is the story of America then, as told by America now.

With book, music and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda, direction by Thomas Kail, choreography by Andy Blankenbuehler and musical supervision and orchestrations by Alex Lacamoire, Hamilton is based on Ron Chernow’s biography Alexander Hamilton.

The Hamilton creative team previously collaborated on the 2008 Tony Award®-winning Best Musical In the Heights.

Produced by Jeffrey Seller, Sander Jacobs, Jill Furman and The Public Theatre, Hamilton features scenic design by David Korins, costume design by Paul Tazewell, lighting design by Howell Binkley, sound design by Nevin Steinberg, hair and wig design by Charles G. LaPointe, casting by Telsey + Company, Bethany Knox, CSA and General Management by Baseline Theatrical.

Hamilton will be the fourth production in TPAC’s current Broadway at TPAC 2019-2020 Season, having began the season with Dear Evan Hansen, Once on This Island and their current offering, The Spongebob Musical (on stage at Jackson Hall thru Sunday, November 10). The add-on special presentation of CATS will take to TPAC’s Jackson Hall November 19-24.

Following Hamilton, the season will continue with My Fair Lady, Escape to Margaritaville, Summer: The Donna Summer Musical and Roal Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, as well as add-on specials including Blue Man Group, Jesus Christ Superstar and The Color Purple. CLICK HERE for tickets or more info. 

With five shows still remaining in the current season, Flex Package Season Subscriptions are still available. CLICK HERE for more details. To keep up with what’s happening at TPAC, follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

For more about Hamilton on Tour, CLICK HERE to check them out online or follow them onFacebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

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

Filed Under: Breaking News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Broadway, BroadwayInNashville, HAMILTON, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Theatre, Tony Awards, TPAC

RAPID FIRE Q&A with ’The SpongeBob Musical’ stars Lorenzo Pugliese, Beau Bradshaw and Daria Pilar Redus; at TPAC November 5-10

November 5, 2019 by Jonathan

Just last week as the cast of The SpongeBob Musical’s first-ever National Tour prepared to turn TPAC’s Andrew Jackson Hall into their beloved undersea world of Bikini Bottom, I had the chance to pose a few questions to Lorenzo Pugliese, Beau Bradshaw and Daria Pilar Redus who star as SpongeBob and his besties, Patrick Star and Sandy Cheeks. So, sit back, grab a carton of Drinkable Sausage and check out the conversations below!

——————————

RAPID FIRE FIVE WITH LORENZO PUGLIESE, SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS IN THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL

Lorenzo Pugliese, SpongeBob in The SpongeBob Musical

JHP: I understand you were actually a fan on the SpongeBob animated series when you were a kid. What’s it feel like to now be playing him in the Nation Tour of the stage musical?

LORENZO PUGLIESE: It’s a dream come true! If you told me even a year ago that I’d be playing SpongeBob in the First National Tour of The SpongeBob Musical, I’d probably tell you you were crazy.

JHP: Do you have to be a fan of the series to enjoy the stage version?

LORENZO PUGLIESE: Not at all! Part of the genius of this show is that it works both ways. Whether or not you’ve seen the TV show, you’re going to love this musical. Because with or without the association of these iconic characters, you are getting a fantastic story with great characters and a killer score!

JHP: The animated version was created by the late Stephen Hillenburg. While the essence of his characters is ever-present, the musical’s co-creator and director Tina Landau has opted to give the characters a more human appearance. Your own character, for instance, as SpongeBob, you’re not sporting a bright sunshine yellow costume made of sponge and you’re not wearing square pants. Was it more of a creative challenge for you to find SpongeBob’s voice and characteristics without the benefit of the animated version’s trademark physical appearance?

LORENZO PUGLIESE: Being able to bring this super iconic character to the stage was and is the hardest thing I’ve ever done. But having the privilege to work with the original creative team that put this whole show together has made it possible. My character is a result of their brilliant direction and guidance.

The cast of The SpongeBob Musical

JHP: Was SpongeBob really your first professional audition?

LORENZO PUGLIESE: SpongeBob was my first ever New York audition! It feels like I won the lottery.

JHP: Just between us….what’s the secret ingredient in the Krusty Krab’s most infamous menu item, the Krabby Patty?

LORENZO PUGLIESE: I’ll never tell 😉

RAPID FIRE FIVE WITH DARIA PILAR REDUS, SANDY CHEEKS IN THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL

Daria Pilar Redus, Sandy Cheeks in The SpongeBob Musial

JHP: In the animated series, Sandy is a science loving, martial arts practicing squirrel from Texas. How much fun are you having playing het?

DARIA PILAR REDUS: Sandy is such a rewarding role to play! It’s a blast to do martial arts and show off the smarts while getting to tap into the more vulnerable, soft side of Sandy as well. It’s a side that we don’t get to see a lot of in the animated series, so I love being able to explore all of her layers!

JHP: Prior to being cast, had you seen the musical or were you very familiar with the original animated series?

DARIA PILAR REDUS: I saw the musical during its run on Broadway and absolutely loved it! I was a HUGE SpongeBob fan growing up, and actually remain a fan of the animated series to this day. After seeing the musical in NYC, I couldn’t wait until I’d get the chance to be a part of something as beautiful and fun as The SpongeBob Musical!

Daria Pilar Redus as Sandy Cheeks and Lorenzo Pugliese as SpongeBob in The SpongeBob Musical Photo by Jeremy Daniel

JHP: From the images and clips I’ve seen, scenic and costume designer David Zinn has done a marvelous job representing the fun and vitality of Bikini Bottom, even winning the Tony for SpongeBob’s scenic design. Is there a set detail or particular costume that you wish every audience member could get a closer look at to truly appreciate his creative genius?

DARIA PILAR REDUS: Absolutely! I wish everyone could get a close up on Squidward’s legs, although they’re so cleverly done that perhaps they should remain a mystery! The Mermaid costume is actually a collection of colorful rubber kitchen gloves that creatively make up the tail! Every costume in the show was designed so creatively and specifically!

JHP: Also mirroring that same energy is the show’s choreography by Christopher Gattelli, who won the Tony for his choreography of Broadway’s Newsies. How would you describe the choreo in SpongeBob?

DARIA PILAR REDUS: The choreography alone is a reason to come and see the show! There is everything from tap, to hip hop, classic musical theatre, and more! It’s specific, clever, and downright awe-inspiring.

Redus, Pugliese and Bradshaw as Sandy, SpongeBob and Patrick in The SpongeBob Musical

JHP: Hero Is My Middle Name, written by Cyndi Lauper and Rob Hyman and performed near the end of Act 1 by you, Beau and Lorenzo, has proven to be one of the show’s most beloved songs. Performing it night after night the past few weeks as the tour has began, what has the song come to represent to you?

DARIA PILAR REDUS:  Sandy’s circumstances in this song are quite a bit different from that of her two friends. After being outcasted by the community she trusted for so long, it isn’t an easy decision to forgive and do what’s best for the greater good. But she does just that. This song is about friendship, loyalty, forgiveness, courage and strength. The journey from being defeated to being unstoppable is challenging, Sandy is more sure of her decision every new show!

RAPID FIRE FIVE WITH BEAU BRADSHAW, PATRICK STAR IN THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL

Beau Bradshaw, Patrick Star in The SpongeBob Musical

JHP: Alright, I’m just gonna ask. While studying musical theater in college in Pittsburgh, did you ever fathom that a year later you’d be touring the country as the human counterpart to a famous pink cartoon starfish?

BEAU BRADSHAW: Actually, yes! I saw this show on Broadway during my senior year of college and all I could think about was how much I wanted to play Patrick. This is really a dream come true. 

JHP: Speaking of touring, what’s life on the road been like since the tour first kicked off just a few weeks ago?

BEAU BRADSHAW: Life on the road is a lot of fun. Getting to see all of these different cities is definitely the best part. The worst part about it is all the packing we have to do. 

JHP: As Patrick, you share a lot of your onstage times with Lorenzo’s SpongeBob. What’s he like as a on-stage best pal?

BEAU BRADSHAW: He’s the best. I couldn’t ask for a better scene partner. We really feed off of each other’s energy and that makes the performance exciting and new every night.

JHP: I have to confess…while my nephews grew up watching SpongeBob, I’ve honestly never seen an entire episode. Do you recommend a quick binge of a few episodes before taking in the show, or is it entertaining in its own right that familiarity with the characters isn’t necessary?

BEAU BRADSHAW: If you’ve watched SpongeBob you will definitely be rewarded with some fun Easter eggs but it’s definitely entertaining all on its own. The music alone is a reason to see this show. 

JHP: You’re not just playing an iconic character, you’re also performing musical numbers by some of today’s most iconic and well-known musicians, singers and songwriters. What’s that like, and do you have a favorite amongst the show’s tunes?

BEAU BRADSHAW: I feel so fortunate to be able to sing music by these amazing artists. The score is so well written that it’s honestly, an actor’s dream. My favorite song would have to be (I Guess I) Miss You by John Legend. It such a beautiful song about two best friends realizing how much they love one another. It’s also one of the shows only ballads.

———————————————

To keep up SpongeBob and the entire Bikini Bottom gang, follow SpongeBob The Musical on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.

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

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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

October 26, 2019 by Jonathan

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

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

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

———————————————

RAPD FIRE Q&A WITH CRYSTAL BOWERSOX

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

JHP: What can audiences expect from Trauma Queen?

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

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

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

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

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

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

———————————————

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

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

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

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

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 22
  • Go to Next Page »

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