Monday, September 30, 2019

A Shattering Glass Menagerie

When you think of vaunted authors of American Theater, few names loom larger than Tennessee Williams. 


Photo by T. Charles Erickson

Pick just about any famous play or screenplay from the mid-20th century - A Streetcar Named Desire, Camino Real, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof - and his name will be there.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

The Glass Menagerie (aka the play that started it all) is currently on stage at the Guthrie Theater, and it provides an interesting rear view 75 years after it's original publication. The definition of a smash success, this semi-autobiographical play immediately launched Williams into the upper echelons of the American literati, a precipitous climb which he struggled to withstand for many years (as beautifully described in his essay The Catastrophe of Success, which may hold more wisdom in our hyper-digital age than when it was first published). It's a strange play for a first work, with a wistful, haunting patina that is older than its years.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

For those who have (like I had) not seen The Glass Menagerie yet, the quick synopsis is: The play opens on the fire escape outside the Wingfield family apartment, which is composed of Tom, his crippled sister Laura, and their audacious mother Amanda (their father having flown the coop years before). Tom is desperately unhappy, spending nights full of dreams of becoming a working author or traveling adventurously and slogging away at the local warehouse by day. Laura is desperately shy and becomes increasingly insular as she ages, preferring her glass animal collection (the glass menagerie) to contact with the outside world. Amanda has spent years bootstrapping her children into adulthood but begins to panic about Laura's future as she yawns towards her late 20s with no suitors in sight, and recruits Tom to help her make a match for Laura. Tom inadvertently chooses the one person who can light Laura's flame: her childhood crush Jim O'Connor. Jim spends a lovely evening in courtship with the Wingfields until a devastating revelation cuts the night short and ends the play, leaving us all to wonder at Laura's future and the cruelty of chance.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

It doesn't sound like much but it's a full world in that apartment, architecturally designed by Mikiko Suzuki MacAdams. The characters drift through in ethereal costumes from Raquel Barreto, Christopher Akerlind's soft lighting design and the gentle hum of Darron L. West's sound design, which only enhances the dreamlike effect. Despite being housed on the cavernous Wurtele Thrust stage, the focus of our attention as an audience feels small, like viewing the play through an aperture. We're on a constant full zoom, whether it's on Laura's tinkling glass trinkets or the luminous candelabra and cushions on the floor. It's a total snap in time, a sepia-toned postcard to the past, and it leaves you in a bit of a hush as you exit the theater.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

The cast's sophisticated presence, three of four of whom are Guthrie newcomers, adds to this antique effect. I adored Remy Auberjonois in Cyrano de Bergerac last spring; as Tom here, he has less panache but a humble Jimmy Stewart quality that works for the play. Grayson DeJesus is everyone's favorite heartbreaker as Jim O'Connor, winsome and sweet and sentimental. Carey Cox, who was the understudy for on Broadway, is a spectral whisper across the stage as Laura. You can't help but feel sorry for the chaos around her, and she's just as delicate as the glass menagerie itself. The real star for me, though, was Jennifer Van Dyck as a magnificent Amanda Wingfield. Abrasive, direct and completely unflinching, Van Dyck is the blend of Joan Crawford and Kris Kardashian that you never knew you needed; I founder absolutely riveting throughout the show.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

I'm not really sure how to describe my feelings about The Glass Menagerie overall. It's a strange play - a first publication for the author that feels like a retrospective; 75 years old with monologues that feel right at home in our icily digitized modern social structures; a snapshot of the past with the everlasting tale of heartbreak and loneliness. I can say that it has haunted the edges of my subconscious since I saw it, licking at the back of my thoughts and turning into phantasm all its own. It's an unusually quiet season opener and worth a stop on one of our endlessly rainy fall evenings before it closes on October 27. For more information or to buy tickets, click on this link.

Photo by T. Charles Erickson

Friday, September 20, 2019

Bone Mother Sets the Tone for the Season

How do you define a witch? 


All images are copyright of Matthew Glover for Sandbox Theatre

Despite our burst of humid heat in the last week Minnesota is entering spooky season, which means costumes, minor toned music and pumpkin everything are about to inundate us all. I know several people who consider fall and especially Halloween to be their favorite time of year, and it seems like every year more friends are rejoicing over the return to orange and black and scary stories as soon as Labor Day passes.

But where does all this come from? Once you strip away the eerie movies and cotton cobwebs and holiday commercialization, what is left of Halloween?

Often it's tropes and mythologies that spread back hundreds or thousands of years. Take, for example, the Witch. Witch stories can be found in most cultures and invariably involve some version of an ugly old hag who negatively impacts the communities around her, usually with a curse or a dark spell. She might have a cauldron, a black cat, a pointy hat (or nose), and almost always lives in the woods.

But why does this narrative persist? What if the witch wasn't evil, or even magical, at all? What if she served some other purpose entirely?

All images are copyright of Matthew Glover for Sandbox Theatre
That is the question asked (and poignantly answered) in Bone Mother, the latest show from Sandbox Theatre. An original piece inspired by centuries of folk tales, Bone Mother tells an interconnected series of three stories about a girl named Vasilisa as she explores her feminine power. It begins with young Vasilisa, who seeks the "witch" Baba Yaga in the forest to learn the powers of the wilderness after Vasilisa's beloved grandmother dies. Soon bored with Baba Yaga's rudimentary chores, Vasilisa runs back to her village where she grows into a woman and becomes the town eccentric, alienated and lonely. She returns to Baba Yaga only to find that she still has more to learn from her community and must again live as an outcast, and out of the forest. It is many decades until Baba Yaga calls Vasilisa to her forest hut for one final encounter, where Vasilisa learns the true power of Baba Yaga and the magic of the wilderness. It's a beautiful story that felt distinctively feminine to me, full of cycles, renewal and strength.

In addition to the lyrical story, Bone Mother features aerial acrobatics in varying levels from all of its performers, who also trade in portrayals of each character through each iteration of the story. Carolina Gwinn is the first Baba Yaga and the final Vasilisa. She clearly had the most acrobatics training and brought just as much physicality to her facial expressions as she did to her silks work. I found her to be highly charismatic and fearless, a real presence on stage. The first Vasilisa and second Baba Yaga was played by Chasya Hill, a Liberian-American actress who recently relocated here from Birmingham, Alabama, and someone I predict is going to have a large impact on #tctheater this year. Hill has gravitas and a sonorous voice, and I couldn't take my eyes off her while she was on stage. Heather Stone plays the second Vasilisa and the final Baba Yaga. She has a less physical performance than Gwinn and Hill, but brought far more comedy to her performance. She was a welcome dose of levity in a story that can dip into the dark side, and I really appreciated what she contributed. Henry Ellen Sansone was alluring as the resident cat, with a mischievous Cheshire Cat flare that also added a touch of warmth. And Megan Campbell Lagas helps anchor the rotating cast of supporting characters, slipping in between mythical creatures and human portrayals with aplomb.

All images are copyright of Matthew Glover for Sandbox Theatre

One of the artistic values of Sandbox Theatre is to integrate visual design, physical performance, music and text; another is to limit consumption and minimize waste. These two tenets (of their core nine values) perfectly encapsulate the production design here. Because the performance is set in the hall of the Russian Art Museum and most of the blocking focus is on the silks, there is no set to speak of. Instead, we have a few strategically placed flood lights designed by Bryan Gunsch to set the tone for the plot; this works remarkably well, whether we are in the forest or swimming under a river. I loved Mandi Johnson's costume design, which adapted comfy athleisure wear with strategic accessories to give the actors the freedom to create highly physical performances but retain a sense of magic. And I especially appreciated the otherworldly, eerie music composed and performed by Anna Johnson, Emily Kastrul, Sarah Larsson and Willow Waters. It was the perfect accompaniment to a mystical, haunting, Russian-esque folk story, and it really coheres by the end of the show.

All images are copyright of Matthew Glover for Sandbox Theatre

Bone Mother is a truly unique performance, at once ancient and entirely original; modern but familiar; feminine and powerful. Something in it really moved me. I'm not sure if it was the effect of stripping away the trappings of elaborate sets and costumes and focusing on breathwork and the music of bodies, or the hearkening back to my favorite kind of fairy tales, or just the sense of womanly power that swept through the whole show, but I left Bone Mother feeling lightened, inspired and connected to a bigger world of spirits than when I had arrived. It's the perfect thing to watch as our seasons transition to a darker one and we prepare to sit more quietly inside ourselves. Tickets are selling very quickly, so make sure to snatch some up by clicking on this link before the whole run for Bone Mother is sold out by close on September 27.

Monday, September 16, 2019

Ride the Cyclone is an Un-missable Ride

Holy shit Becca Hart. 


Photo by Dan Norman

Pardon the profanity, but I'm just not sure how else to describe one of #tctheater's buzziest ingenues without it. Her performance in the Jungle's season opener Ride the Cyclone - which is a wild ride overall and worth seeing - is a standout that I'm calling early on as one of the best of the year. It's an audacious claim, I know, but I think it's warranted.

Photo by Dan Norman

Backing up a bit - Ride the Cyclone is a new musical that tells the story of a quintet of high school musicians, all of whom are killed as they ride a roller coaster called the cyclone. They are invited by a talking carnie machine named Karnak to play a game for the chance for one of the students to return to real life. The rules? They must unanimously vote for who they send back, which is tough with teenage attitudes running high. The wild card? A headless body was found under the cyclone, that of ghostly Jane Doe. No one knows who Jane is (including Jane herself), so she is entered to play with the five classmates for the chance to return and learn who she really was. Each player spins the wheel to make a case for their shot at Life 2.0, giving a solo about their distinct pasts and what we need to know about them. There are a few surprises revealed during these acts - an obsession with Weimar-era French drag; a fantasy about space sex with a race of kittens; an obsessive goody two shoes who couldn't be more insufferable if she tried; a surprisingly romantic Ukrainian whose tough facade reveals a goey sentimental center; and a lonely but kind girl who struggles to define herself outside of her peer's expectations. It's Mean Girls meets Phantom of the Opera (the Love Never Dies version, to be specific) with a sprinkle of Pippin, a truly weird mix of things that somehow works.

Photo by Dan Norman

The plot can get a little loose at times (if you can't tell in a previous paragraph, there's a *lot* happening here) and some of the stereotypes presented in the way the characters are written could use refinement, but overall I was surprised how well this show worked. That is high key thanks to the amazing performances, which are executed with a crisp military precision that makes the whole thing sparkle. At the heart of it (pun intended) is Becca Hart as the ghastly Jane Doe. I literally gasped the second she appeared on stage; her performance, but particularly her body work and choreography, is truly extraordinary. Nothing about her looks as if it's of this earth, and my jaw dropped several times as she floated through the stage. It's a stunning performance and worth your ticket price alone - do not miss this one, as it's going to be the talk of the town for months to come.

Photo by Dan Norman

The rest of the cast is excellent too. Jim Lichtscheidl (who also masterminded that crisp choreography) brings a striking physical performance as Karnak; he barely blinks and moves just like a machine. His otherworldly performance ties the loose stories of the students together, and he's a magnificent anchor for the show. Shinah Brashears lends her clarion voice as Ocean, the perfectionist that could, and her deliciously hateful performance could be in Mean Girls itself. Gabrielle Dominique is lovely as the shy Constance; I wish she had more time to shine. Michael Hanna is riveting as always as the dark Mischa, clearly having the time of his life. Josh Zwick relishes the strip you never saw coming as Noel, and although probably the weakest of the cast vocally, his charismatic performance is a lot of fun to watch. And Jordan Leggett goes all in as the crippled Ricky; he gives a full commitment that has more than a little Prince in it, and it's a welcomely weird surprise.

Photo by Dan Norman

This production design is one of my favorites in a long time that I've seen anywhere. Chelsea Warren's set design has so many layers, from Karnak's magical box to the handsome carousel with hidden projections and clues to the contestant's pasts; it's hyper-detailed and gorgeous. Trevor Bowen's costume design is wildly imaginative and it's so fun watching the crew prance around through various fantasies. Marcus Dilliard's lighting design and Sean Healey's sound design is seamlessly detailed, down to the crank activating each round of the game and the twinkling lights on each ride. Kathy Maxwell makes the most creative use of projection I've seen in a while, melting into the set design as one cohesive whole. Paul Bigot's wig and makeup design creates distinct characters for each performer. And the props design by John Novak shows the same care and attention to detail that makes every element of the show stand out.

Photo by Dan Norman

There's really no way to adequately encapsulate Ride the Cyclone into a textual review; all I can do is encourage readers to go and enter a world that is truly unlike any I've seen before. The season blurb online didn't really engage me - I decided to go because I trust the Jungle and wanted to know what they'd do with something so abstract, and I was more than rewarded. Becca Hart is truly transformative in this role, and I'm calling it as her star-maker performance in a run that's had several standouts so early on. The rest of this young cast is eager and talented and vivacious too, and you can't help catching some of the sparkle they release through their performances. It won't take much of your time - 90 minutes without intermission - but it will definitely leave you feeling changed. I can't think of a better show to usher in the Halloween season. Make sure to get your tickets before they disappear on October 20; click here for more information or to buy some.