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Rapid Fire 20 Q with director, set designer and cast members of Circle Players’ ‘Avenue Q’; on stage at Looby Theatre January 10-20

January 9, 2019 by Jonathan

With Circle Players’ Avenue Q opening Thursday, January 10, I thought it would be fun to chat with the show’s director, set designer and members of the cast for my latest Rapid Fire 20 Q. Fair Warning, much like the show itself, the following interviews aren’t exactly 100% kid friendly. (How’s that for extra incentive to read on?)

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RAPID FIRE 20 Q WITH CAST & CREW OF CIRCLE PLAYERS’ AVENUE Q

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q DIRECTOR, BRIAN JONES

JONATHAN H. PINKERTON: Earlier this theatre season, Circle Players presented one of the first of many area productions of Newsies and now you’re directing Avenue Q, another show that’s proven to be popular with Middle Tennessee theatre companies. What about Circle’s Avenue Q will make it stand out amongst the rest?

BRIAN JONES: When we chose this show over a year ago, we didn’t realize that so many other theatre companies, including a local professional company, would also be producing the show. As such, we decided to think outside of the box to  give our audiences an alternative view of the show. Working with my incredible set designer, Jim Manning, we were able to develop a concept that is a fresh take on the show but still pays homage to the original designs that everyone typically uses. Additionally, we casted this show a bit larger than is traditionally done instead of double casting many of the puppet roles to give more people an opportunity to be a part of this fun show. Overall, we think we’ve put together a show that audiences will love.

JHP: Many of the main characters of Avenue Q are puppets, but the actors controlling them are in full view of the audience. Did this affect your direction for the show?

BRIAN JONES: As a director, my priority was to ensure that the audience pays attention to the puppets and the actors just fade away. That impacted how blocking and staging were developed which many times was counterintuitive to acting without the presence of puppets.

Generally, working with puppets isn’t any Nashville actor’s forte and so learning to make inanimate objects come to life was a  big focus of the rehearsal process. I was fortunate to have previous experience with the show at a theatre in Florida (playing Nicky/Trekkie) where I learned some basic techniques that I was able to share with the cast. But ultimately, the cast spent their own time in front of mirrors perfecting every movement and giving and receiving feedback from myself and with each other.

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q SET DESIGNER, JIM MANNING

JHP: I asked Brian about directing a show whose cast includes puppets. On a similar note, what challenges did you face in designing a urban neighborhood set inhabited by humans and puppets?

JIM MANNING: Brian allowed me to take a really different spin on this show.  Most sets for this show that I’ve seen (and designed) before have a fairly realistic street scenes inspired by Sesame Street.  I don’t want to give too much away, but the inspiration for this production comes from a different place–a place where puppets and human coexist.

JHP: Your sets frequently include little hidden gems. In Newsies, one such thing was a little hidden panel that slid to reveal an unexpected fun detail. Can you give me a hint of any set surprises in Avenue Q?

JIM MANNING: You know I love a good hinge.  Spoiler Alert: There’s not one hinge on this set.  But the math of it alone took a minute.  Like any Jim Manning set, there’s usually a trick or two hidden in plain sight…

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q’s KATE MONSTER, CARLY ROSE

JHP: This is your first show with Circle. What’s the experience been like so far?

CARLY ROSE: Working with Circle has been an incredible experience. Not only do I get to work with some of Nashville’s most talented, kind, and hardworking people, but Circle’s board has been extremely supportive and made us all feel very taken care of.

JHP: Tell me about Kate Monster?

CARLY ROSE: Kate wears her heart on her sleeve, honestly, she wears it on her forehead. In everything she does she leads with her heart.

JHP: Prior to being cast in Avenue Q, had you had any experience with puppets?

CARLY ROSE: I had never worked with puppets professionally. I don’t think we can count scaring my little brother with a rubber dog puppet as a child “professional.”

JHP: Ha! Yeah, probably not. How are you least like Kate Monster?

CARLY ROSE: Kate and I have a lot of similarities but she lacks my winning sense of humor and she hates porn.

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q’s PRINCETON, ALEX PINEIRO

JHP: Like your co-star, Carly, Avenue Q is also your Circle debut. What’s the best part of being in a show at Circle?

ALEX PINEIRO: Circle has been absolutely amazing to work with! Something that’s always drawn me to Circle is the quality of their shows and this is the first opportunity I’ve had to audition for the company! From early on I knew this show was gonna be something special. Everyone is so dedicated to their craft and I hope it’s something that will be seen through the product we’ve all created together!

JHP: You play Princeton. What’s Princeton’s worst quality?

ALEX PINEIRO: Princeton spends most of the show trying to find his purpose in life. He gets so tangled up in trying to find it that he lets life pass him by instead of accepting the fact that it’s okay to not know where your life is headed for a little.

JHP: A quick peek at your bio reveals that prior to Avenue Q, you recently spent 7 months as part of a musical dinner theatre production in Pennsylvania. What was that like?

ALEX PINEIRO: It was amazing! I was working on the original musical The Home Game with Blue Gate Musicals. It’s the longest contract I’ve had to date so far and it really taught me how to keep things fresh and new every night on stage. After all, we performed the show 175 times!

JHP: What’s the most challenging aspect of doing the show with a puppet on your arm?

ALEX PINEIRO: Honestly, getting his mouth to line up with my words. After working it for two hours, I feel like I completed a full arm workout! But, as Brian said in rehearsal one day, he doesn’t want it to look like an old kung foo movie where their mouths don’t line up with their words.

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q’s LUCY & MRS. THISTLETWAT, TAYLOR SIMON

JHP: You play Lucy the Slut, Mrs. Thistletwat, and a brief turn as Purpose Boxes in Avenue Q.  How much fun are you having in this show?

TAYLOR SIMON: This show has been a dream show of mine for 15 years. Getting to do more than even the traditional double-casting of the show would allow me to do just makes me feel more connected to the show and definitely makes it more fun! I don’t like having a lot of downtime backstage because it takes me out of the story and I get distracted so I’m loving having the opportunity to do so much.

JHP: When not acting, you also appear around town as part of the improv troupe, Lady Bits. Who would make a better addition to the troupe, Lucy the Slut or Mrs. Thistletwat?

TAYLOR SIMON: My gut reaction was  Mrs. Thistletwat, but Lady Bits is a super inclusive improv comedy troupe, so I think they both would be embraced with open arms. They both could bring different aspects and points of view. Mrs. Thistletwat is older, and commands respect, so I think she could very easily command the stage and if a skit was getting off track she could put it back on the rails. Lucy is very quick-witted, and is good at making sharp comeback‘s when she feels insulted. Those skills definitely come in handy in improv comedy when you have to make something up on the spot!

JHP: Who among your Avenue cast mates is likely to crack wise and go slightly off-script?

TAYLOR SIMON: I’m not trying to call anyone out because I think it only adds to the show, but my girl Abigail Nichol playing the girl Bad Idea Bear has added some adorable improvised moments that crack me up!! You can tell she’s having a blast and making it her own and it only makes it better. Love you Abigail!

JHP: If you lived on Avenue Q, which puppet would you want as your roommate?

TAYLOR SIMON: I think I’d want Kate as my roommate because even though she can be “loud as the hell she wants” sometimes, she seems like a genuinely kind, thoughtful person who just wants to help her community.

RAPID FIRE WITH AVENUE Q’s ROD, CLINT RANDOLPH

JHP: Avenue Q is your third show with Circle. What keeps you coming back?

CLINT RANDOLPH: It feels like home. Circle Players offers a supportive environment for performing artists to thrive and express their creativity. Actors are allowed to explore and grow as performers with the guidance of very visionary directors. There is also a tangible sense of camaraderie that develops amongst the cast members throughout the experience. Everyone is  working tirelessly toward accomplishing a single goal: putting on a great show. And Circle Players always delivers a great show.

JHP: In the show, you voice Rod, a closeted, uptight investment banker who lives with his best friend, Nicky. Those familiar with the show know that these two are obvious parodies of Sesame Street’s Bert and Ernie. So…just between us….are Bert and Ernie more than just pigeon pals?

CLINT RANDOLPH: I can’t really say. All I know is that I’ve never seen them on Grindr or Scruff.

JHP: In addition to being an actor, you also teach middle school theatre. Who’s more out of control…the Avenue Q cast mates, or your students?

CLINT RANDOLPH: Definitely the Avenue Q cast. This a crazy bunch of people. But it makes for one helluva puppet show! It’s so much fun to perform this show with them every night. We crack each other up all the time.

JHP: OK, so I’m down to my last question….one more teacher-related question…what lessons do you think Avenue Q has the potential to teach its audiences?

CLINT RANDOLPH: Firstly, don’t take yourself so seriously. Laugh at yourself every now and then. Secondly, appreciate life for its little moments. It’s only temporary. Enjoy it while it lasts.

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Beginning Thursday, January 10 thru Sunday, January 20, audiences have several chances to heed Clint’s words–do just as the above clever advert suggests–and enjoy Circle Players’ bawdy, yet thought-provoking production of Avenue Q at the Looby Theatre located at 2301 Rosa Parks Blvd. Thursday-Saturday shows are at 7:30 p.m. with Sunday matinees at 3 p.m. Thursday tickets are $15. Friday-Sunday tickets are $20. Click Here for tickets.

Following Avenue Q, Circle Players will continue their 69th season with If/Then from March 220April 7 and A Chorus Line from May 31-June 16. Be sure to follow Circle Players on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter for the latest news, tickets and details about the rest of their current season and news of the company’s upcoming landmark 70th season.

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, Twitter and Facebook.

 

Filed Under: Entertainment, Rapid Fire 20 Q, Theare Tagged With: Alex Pineiro, Avenue Q, Brian Jones, Carly Rose, Circle Players, Clint Randolph, Interview, Jim Manning, live theatre, Nashville, Nashville Theatre, Q&A, Rapid Fire Q&A, Taylor SImon

Theatre Review: Dreaming of a White Christmas? Look no further than the high-energy stage version of Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’ tapping its way across the country and into audiences’ hearts this holiday season

November 16, 2018 by Jonathan

Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’ stars Kelly Sheehan, Jeremy Benton, Sean Montgomery and Kerry Conte, onstage in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall as holiday tour continues

With it’s lavish sets, gorgeous costumes and top-drawer cast, the 1954 film Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, which starred Danny Kaye, Bing Crosby, Vera-Ellen and Rosemary Clooney, has been a holiday tradition for…well…64 years. Moving the magic from screen to stage more than a decade ago, playwrights David Ives and Paul Blake adapted the story into an equally resplendent stage musical. The show is currently in Nashville at TPAC’s Jackson Hall through Sunday, November 18 as the national tour makes its way across the country guaranteeing audiences everywhere a glistening, gleaming, smiling, singing, happy, tapping, merry-making White Christmas.

While I wasn’t around in 1954 for the initial release of the film, an annual viewing has become somewhat of a holiday tradition since first discovering it by way of a late-night TV broadcast some forty years ago on Christmas Eve while staying up late to help my mom wrap those last few gifts. Fast forward to a few years back when the national tour of the stage musical played TPAC. I was in heaven, after all, what could be better than a glorious new musical featuring a soundtrack jam-packed with Irving Berlin tunes, lovingly based on a classic movie? Mind Blown.

So, how do you replicate the on-screen chemistry of Crosby and Kaye playing ‘odd couple’ best pals, let alone Clooney and Ellen as squabbling sisters? The simple answer, you cast Sean Montgomery, Nashville’s own Jeremy Benton (back for his fifth time with the tour), Kerry Conte and Kelly Sheehan. Montgomery smoothy fills the Crosby bill while Benton eases into the goofiness of Kaye while elevating the role with some of the most impressive dance moves I’ve ever seen onstage. As for the ladies, Sheehan’s Judy might look more like Clooney than Vera-Ellen, but her dance moves rival those of her character’s creator. At times Conte’s singing voice is blissfully similar to that of Rosemary Clooney, but there’s also times, especially in her line delivery, that she possesses a more regal intonation reminiscent the equally talented chanteuse, Peggy Lee. Just another interesting fun fact…when the film was released, Clooney was under contract with Columbia Records and was therefore prohibited from appearing on the film’s official soundtrack record album release. Instead, Decca Records brought in Lee to record vocals for the vinyl. (I warned you it’s my favorite).

Just as the film, White Christmas begins in 1944 near the action of a WWII battlefront at a drab army camp as besties Phil Davis (Benton) and Bob Wallace (Montgomery) attempt to bring holiday cheer to their fellow soldiers. Amidst the wartime setting, Benton and Montgomery perform heartwarming versions of composer Berlin’s classics, Happy Holiday and the title tune, White Christmas.

Conrad John Schuck and Karen Ziembra as General Waverly and Martha Watson in Irving Berlin’s ‘White Christmas’

As the boys wrap their battlefront performance, their gruff commanding officer, General Henry Waverly (Conrad John Schuck) emerges initially seeming to break up the fun, when in truth, he thanks them for their little Christmas show and wishes his men well with a speech about his hopes for them ten years in the future. Shuck, who now calls nearby Franklin, TN home, has enjoyed a prolific career in TV, film and on stage. Among his many memorable roles, he appeared in several Robert Altman films including M*A*S*H, played Sergeant Enright on TV’s McMillan & Wife, brought Herman Munster back to life in the 90s starring as the bolt-necked patriarch in the updated series Musters Today, played a comedic robot cop in one of my cherished childhood favorites, Holmes and Yoyo. Oh, and did I mention he costarred as Col. Wm F. Cody alongside Reba in her Broadway debut as Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun? But I digress.

Ten years in the future it is, as action then fast-forwards to Christmastime1954. This finds Wallace and Davis, now a hugely successful performing duo, about to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show. The stark contrast from the show’s more somber setting to the vivid set and costumes of the reprise of Happy Holiday and the toe-tapping, mood-lifting Let Yourself Go put me in mind of Dorothy’s arrival in Oz as she emerges from the black and white emotionless Kansas to the vibrant wide-eyed extravaganza that is Munchkinland. This also reminded me of a bit of useless trivia. White Christmas, the film, wasn’t just shot in spectacular Technicolor. It was also the first Paramount Pictures movie to be released in VistaVision, a then-new wide-screen format that enhanced the projection area of standard 35-mm film. Think of it as mid-50s version of 4K.

Benton and Montgomery bring 50s technicolor to life onstage in ‘White Christmas’

That said, the musical’s scenic designer, Anna Louizos and costumer, Carrie Robbins brilliantly pay homage to the beautifully dreamlike, overly saturated full spectrum of colors presented in the original as they dip their respective pallets into nearly every color in the rainbow helping to create a living technicolor spectacular.

Colors aren’t the only thing saturating White Christmas. It’s also full of Berlin tunes, so much so that even the incidental musical will have Berlin-philes beaming as they hear bits and bars from several of the legendary composer other notable tunes. While the show is indeed tune-full, it’s also satiated with patented boy-meet-girl (with complications) saccharine plots. As mentioned above, this time we’ve got army buddies Bob Wallace (Montgomery) and Davis (Benton) and their chance/fateful meeting with Betty and Judy Haynes (Conte and Sheehan, respectively).

From the beginning there’s not just sparks, there’s fireworks as Montgomery’s Wallace and Conte’s Betty lock horns while Benton’s Davis and Sheehan’s Judy see through the resistance and set their sights on matchmaking. This leads to a clever duet between Montgomery and Conte. Clever because they’re each in their own dressing rooms, he, backstage at The Ed Sullivan Show and she, in her dressing room at a local nightspot while both contemplate the shared unpredictability of  Love and the Weather (one of many Irving Berlin tunes not originally featured in the film, but added for the stage musical adaptation).

Conte and Sheehan recreate the iconic ‘Sisters’

Next up is a spot-on recreation of one of the film’s most iconic scenes, Sisters in which Sheehan and Conte, twinning in gorgeous heaven-blue dresses with matching feather fans wax lovingly on the bond of sisterhood, a bond so strong that only one thing can come between the two…when one sister attempts to even think of going after the other sister’s man. Bravo to Randy Skinner, the show’s director and choreographer, for finding the perfect balance between honoring the iconic moments like this, while breathing revived life into other segments of the show. Not gonna lie. I may or may not have teared-up during this number…and a few others throughout the show.

The Best Things Happen While You’re Dancing offers Benton and Sheehan a chance to sway lovingly across the floor. The staging of this number is beautiful as the set and ensemble disappear while Benton and Sheehan’s Phil and Judy escape their surrounding in a dreamlike stage induced by the peacefulness of dancing cheek to cheek.

Any time I talk about White Christmas—you’d be surprised how often that is—I inevitably mention my hands-down favorite moment in the film in which Phil has hoodwinked Bob into a train trip to Vermont to unknowingly join the Haynes Sisters as they perform a Christmas Eve show at an inn (which just so happens to be owned by their former General). In the film, clever cinematography transforms a table napkin, an advert and pine needles into a snow-scene all atop a table in a boxcar as the quartet ride the rails. The scene is sweet as they sing of Snow, but the whole sequence only lasts about two minutes. For the stage musical, it’s an all-in as the ensemble packs the boxcar for an expanded version of the song. It’s as if Skinner is giving me my own special holiday gift every time I see this show.

On the subject of gifts to the audience, enter Tony-winner Karen Ziembra as Martha Watson. Played by Mary Wickes in the film, Martha is The General’s right-hand-woman as she oversees the day to day running of the lodge and, at least for the holidays, helps him care for his visiting granddaughter, Susan (a role shared during the tour by Emma Grace Berardelli and Kayla Carter). Ziembra, like her film-version predecessor, lights up the stage and steals the spotlight with every snide remark, every double-take and every movement, but when she belts out the opening note of her sole solo Let Me Sing and I’m Happy…DAMN! That’s how you do it, folks. Not to be too outdone by a Tony-winner, later in the show, young Susan gets her chance at the tune, to audience-cheering results.

Act 1 ends with what is easily the moral of the show, Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep and the optimistic and gorgeous Blue Skies.

While Act 1 contains enough punch to be a show all its own, Act 2 somehow amps up the thrill of it all as it opens with a no-holds-barred I Love a Piano. A mind-boggling number than clocks in somewhere around a full nine minutes of tap triumph featuring Benton, Sheehan and a dozen ensemble members in perfect step. And YES, on opening night of the Nashville leg of the tour, several audience members leapt to their feet for a spontaneous mid-show ovation in appreciation.

Other Act 2 highlights include a hilarious gender-bending Sisters reprise courtesy Montgomery and Benton, Sheehan’s breathy, bluesy ballad, Love You Didn’t do Right By Me that morphs into a duet with Montgomery on How Deep is the Ocean, and of course the magnificent film-tactic finale. Spoiler Alert…YES, it snows on stage!

Irving Berlin’s White Christmas continues in Music City at TPAC’s Jackson Hall with five more performances thru Sunday, November 18, with a Friday evening performance at 8p.m., Saturday matinee at 2p.m. and a Saturday evening performance at 8p.m., a Sunday matinee at 1p.m. and a final Sunday evening performance at 6:30p.m.. For more information, CLICK HERE. TPAC is offering two ticketing specials for the remainder of the run. Rush Tickets are available for $30. Simply visit the box office 90 minutes prior to curtain and inquire about availability. There’s also a special on groups of four tickets, just give the promo code JOLLY.

Following the Nashville leg of the tour, White Christmas heads to Tulsa, OK from November 20-25, Atlanta, GA from November 27-December 2, Denver, CO from December 5-15, Orlando, FL from December 18-23 and finishes out the holiday season in Miami, FL, December 20-30. CLICK HERE for ticket links to all remaining cities. To keep up with all things White Christmas, CLICK HERE or follow the tour on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

In addition to White Christmas, TPAC’s holidays are in full swing as they host a wide variety of Christmas-themed shows including: Broadway Princess Party, Nashville Rep’s 10th and final year of A Christmas Story, The Hip Hop Nutcracker, A Drag Queen Christmas, Nashville Ballet’s annual presentation of Nashville’s Nutcracker and Peter Pan and Tinkerbell: A Pirate Christmas. CLICK HERE for the full calendar, dates and ticketing information. Follow TPAC 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: Theatre Review Tagged With: Christmas, Holiday Movies, Irving Berlin, Irving Berlin's White Christmas, Jeremy Benton, John Schuck, Karen Ziembra, Kelly Sheehan, Kerry Conte, live theatre, Movies, Musical, Musical Theatre, National Tour, Review, Sean Montgomery, Theatre, Theatre Review, White Christmas

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