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Wednesday, March 16, 2016

The Last Days of Judas Iscariot




In The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, Springs Ensemble Theatre puts the infamous disciple on trial for betraying Jesus, arguably the most evil act of all time. This contemporary drama arrives while Christians celebrate the Easter season, and the show couldn't be more timely.

Read the rest of this review at the Colorado Springs Independent website...

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Sherlock Holmes: Assassins at Sea






Playwright:  C.P. Stancich


Venue:  Mary Miller Theater, 300 E. Simpson Street, Lafayette CO.

Running Time:  1 hour 35 minutes (includes 15 minute intermission) 

Date of Performance:  Saturday, March 5, 2016. 

Sherlock Holmes:  Assassins at Sea (hereafter Assassins) is the fifth Theatre Company of Lafayette (TCL) production of playwright C.P. Stancich’s works in the style of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s originals.  Doyle’s enduring crime stories are legendary, and Stancich revives Doyle’s classic characters in his own plays.  Thanks to Stancich, detective extraordinaire Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson have come back to life on the TCL stage for Assassins.

Stancich’s series now has six plays, and TCL has produced five of them.  Like a pub with a house band, TCL has lovingly adopted the British sleuth and his devoted American audience.  Opening night was a sell out crowd, as was the performance we saw the next evening.  There’s no shortage of Sherlock Holmes fans in Lafayette, and the Stancich/TCL team knows how to give those fans what they like.

Assassins is another Holmes hit for TCL and Stancich.  The script has plenty of disguises, twists, and turns to keep the audience guessing.  Given that the story is in the mystery genre, I can’t go into plot details without spoiling the story.  Suffice it to say that fans of Doyle’s original works won’t be disappointed, and fans of Stancich will be pleased to see his sense of humor permeating the plot.

The TCL production starts with a striking set.  Chris Pash and Sarah Spencer have designed a gorgeous setting that works remarkably well for all three locations (Baker Street, an alley, and aboard the ship Elyssia).  Sitting in our seats before the show began gave us an opportunity to enjoy the meticulous fit and finish of Pash and Spencer’s design.

Costume Designer Kim deJager’s work was also splendid; she not only had to fit the cast with appropriate turn of the 19th century outfits, but also with intricate disguises.  The costumes have the same attention to detail as the set.  

Director Fred Finke has put together a talented cast.  He makes full use of his beautiful set, blocking 7-8 actors at a time on the stage.  He has insisted that the cast keep the British accents as authentic as possible while never missing a beat or a mark.  The entire performance seems carefully and professionally orchestrated.
Don Thumim (Sherlock Holmes).  

Actor Don Thumim is Holmes, and he’s the right guy for the role.  Thumim is a veteran of the TCL stage, having last appeared there as a hunk.  His Holmes is considerably more respectable, as he should be.  Thumim’s range clearly includes both hunk and hero, and perhaps he will eventually get a role that requires both qualities.

Greg Christopher plays Watson, and he’s a gem.  Christopher is locked in on Watson, and he’s got a fine British accent.  Joe Illingworth (as Oscar Dove) blends his gestures and facial expressions into his performance, delivering some of the best moments in the show.  Spencer Womack plays Busby and carries the role with graceful dignity and a wink.
Greg Christopher (Watson).

The Assassins ladies are equally as capable.  Danice Crawford plays Olga Belasov in a white wig and with a wicked smile.  Not only that, but don’t mess with her. She’s packing.  Yes.  She has a gun in her purse.  (Crawford pulls double duty, also appearing as Sigrid Simm).  Sierra Burgoyne (May), Kristin VanEtten (Lady Constance) and Roz Bard (Mrs. Hudson/Trudy) add punch and humor to the proceedings


L-R  Hanna Richards (Claudia), Spencer Womack (Busby),
and Sierra Burgoyne (May).



I do have a quibble with Assassins.  It’s a mystery, and clues needed to solve the mystery are sprinkled throughout the script.  The audience needs to pay careful attention to the details.  Unfortunately, some lines are difficult to discern, sometimes due to the British accents and at other times due to the ambient noise of the Elyssia engines.  Perhaps the sound mix could be tweaked to reduce the interference.  As for the accents, one of the actors gets it completely right.  Joe Illingworth’s lines are as clear as a bell.  His delivery style is one that could be a model for the other actors.

As is typical of TCL productions, Assassins is a polished production with very good acting and direction.  The Lafayette community is lucky to have such a dedicated and accomplished theater company performing in a historic local landmark.  Whether you’re a Sherlock Holmes fan or not, Assassins is a great night out at the Mary Miller theater.
Spencer Womack (Busby).

NOTES:

This show is suitable for (and recommended for) all ages.  Even if there’s no food truck, the Odd 13 Brewing Company is a fine place to stop before or after the show.

This show closes on March 26, 2016.






PRE/POST SHOW RESTAURANT SUGGESTION:

We went to dinner with friends before the show at the Boulder Cork, 3295 30th Street, Boulder.  It’s one of the more mature steak houses in the area, operating at the same location for over 45 years.  Known for the Prime Rib, the Cork is a great place for a special occasion.  Which it was:  Denver Restaurant Week.  For $60/couple, you can get an app, an entree (don’t miss the Prime Rib), and a dessert.  

The service and the food were exemplary.  If you’ve never been to the Cork, or if it has been a while since your last visit, you might want to make a reservation.  I’m sure it will be on the Denver Restaurant Week list in 2017, so put a reminder in your smart phone.  Do the Cork with a discount during restaurant week. 

For a really special time, go with some friends.  We did…and it was delightful.

See the full menu here.  Happy Hour menu is here.



TICKETS HERE:


CREATIVE TEAM:

Producer/Production Manager: Madge Montgomery

Director:  Fred Finke

Assistant Director:  Marsha Morton

Scenic Design:  Chris Pash/Sarah Spencer

Sound Design/Sound Board Operator:  Tom Priestly 

Lighting Design:  Brian Miller

Costume Design/Properties:  Kim deJager

Stage Manager:  Marsha Morton 

Rehearsal Assistant:  Pat Smith


CAST:

Sherlock Holmes:  Don Thumim

John Watson:  Greg Christopher

Oscar Dove:  Joe Illingworth

Lady Constance:  Kristin VanEtten

May:  Sierra Burgoyne

Claudia:  Hannah Richards

Olga Belaslova/Sigrid Simm:  Danice Crawford

Barlow/Purser/Thug:  Roger Bolan

Busby:  Spencer Womack

Steward/Thug:  Stefanie Oke

[spectrum] lgbt new play festival


















Playwrights:  David Matthew Barnes ( Last Dance), John Minigan (A Monogamy of Swans), K.O. Johnson (A Place to Hide), Madolyn Whitmer (The Haunting of Camp Rod and Staff), Seth Freeman (The Authoress), Joe Gulla (Gayfever), Erik Champney (The Screens), and Tim Brennan (Contrition).


Venue:  Funky Little Theater, 2109 Templeton Gap, Colorado Springs CO.

Running Time:  2 hours and 5 minutes (includes 15 minute intermission) 

Date of Performance:  Friday, March 4, 2016.  (Opening Night.  All 8 plays are World Premieres.)


This is only Funky Little Theater’s second season, but somehow the small company has emerged out of a struggling Templeton Gap strip mall as a creative force that cannot be ignored.  [Spectrum] LGBT New Play Festival (hereafter Spectrum), proves that, politics aside, the size of a theater company does NOT matter.  

Funky’s Artistic Director, Chris Medina, had set his sights realistically low for Spectrum, hoping for as many as 30 submissions of short (10 minute) original scripts on an LGBT theme.  

Imagine Medina’s surprise.  

The scripts came pouring in…from Colorado, Minnesota, Texas, Illinois, New York, California, as well as Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and Australia.  By the deadline, 269 original scripts landed at Funky for Spectrum.

The end result is eight original, creative and engaging stories bursting off the Funky stage.  They run the gamut from silly to historical and to the truly tragic.  Funky’s Spectrum is a theatrical buffet served in scrumptious 10 minute bites.

A Monogamy of Swans, a drama by John Minigan, is set in Boston.  Actors Haley Hunsaker and Kristen Gutzeit have suitable “Bahston” accents to transport us to the Boston Public Garden where the question is whether to feed the swans or kill them.  Broken hearts, broken dreams and betrayal dominate this tense yet tender tale.

On the sillier side, Seth Freeman’s The Authoress is a gender bender.  If a new play competition is for “women and those identifying as a woman,” men enter at their own risk.  Dylan McClintock plays the straight guy with a competitive compulsion to obliterate gender lines.  McClintock walks the line between a confident but daring heterosexual and a closeted but flamboyant transvestite.  It’s fair to say tht McClintock is very funny in both of his wardrobes.

Comedies aside, however, Spectrum peaks with three 10 minute dramas that have the potential to develop into full length plays.  The first of these, and perhaps the most striking, is A Place to Hide by K.O. Johnson.  Based on a true story and set in a 1950s small Texas town, Johnson has combined the contemporary issues of race, sex, and police misbehavior into a breakout script.  Melvin Greer, Danielle Trina, and Benji  & Chris Dezaval act out Johnson’s script with honesty, fear, and compelling emotion.

Erik Champney’s The Screens is a tragic love story told in exquisite detail.  Bryan Dufaud and Benji Dezaval are the tragic lovers.  Dufaud is particularly striking; he’s institutionalized with dementia.  Dezaval is his heartbroken lover and caregiver who has all but lost his partner.

Tim Brennan’s Contrition is the last of the eight scripts to play out on the Funky stage, and it is arguably the best.  It’s a love triangle, with Christ Medina and Michelle Pantle competing for their common lover/husband/partner. Contrition is an emotional mashup, combining, love, hate and loss in what seemed like the quickest and most emotional 10 minutes for Spectrum.  

Funky had an embarrassment of riches land on them for Spectrum.  They made hard choices, leaving 261 scripts behind.  The eight Spectrum scripts they selected are winners for both Funky and for their audiences.  It was hard work, but the reading/rating crew did an outstanding job of picking extraordinary scripts.  

Make no mistake about it.  This Funky Fest Focuses on ALL our Families (the reference to a local "family" group is intentional), and celebrates them.  This is a breakout production for the Funky folks.



NOTES:

There is some adult language and some adult content in Spectrum.  Use discretion for preteens.

This show closes on March 19, 2016.

Photo Credit:  Funky Little Theater Comany.


TICKETS HERE:


CREATIVE TEAM:

Directors:  Delaney Hallauer (Last Dance), Luke Schoenemann (A Monogamy of Swans), Chris Medina (A Place to Hide and The Authoress), Dylan McClintock (The Haunting of Camp Rod and Staff and Contrition), Tracy Hunziker (Gayfever), Michelle Pantle (The Screens).

Scenic Design: Chris Medina

Sound Design:  Chad Orr 

Costume Design:  Delaney Hallauer

Stage Managers:  Emma Colligan & Chelsie Rigor


CAST:

Kim Bennett (Contrition)

Josh Boehnke (Last Dance and Contrition)

Emma Colligan (The Haunting at Camp Rod and Staff)

Benji Dezaval (The Screens and A Place to Hide)

Bryan Dufaud (Last Dance and The Screens)

Nicole Goeke (The Authoress)

Eric Goering (The Haunting at Camp Rod and Staff)

Melvin Grier (A Place to Hide)

Kristin Gutzeit (A Monogamy of Swans)

Delaney Hallauer (Last Dance)

Haley Hunsaker (A Monogamy of Swans)

Dylan McClintock (The Authoress)

Teri McClintock (The Authoress and Contrition)

Chris Medina  (Contrition and The Haunting at Camp Rod and Staff)

Michelle Pantle (Contrition)

Jessica Parnello (The Authoress)

Chelsie Rigor (The Haunting at Camp Rod and Staff)

Steve Sladoritz (Gayfever)

Will Sobilik (The Haunting at Camp Rod and Staff)

Danielle Thurman Trina (A Place to Hide)


[spectrum] reading and selection committee:

Michelle Pantle

Dylan McClintock

Chris Medina

Luke Schoenemann

Delaney Hallauer

Emma Colligan

Dan Kifer

Ellen Regina

Krista Rayne Reckner

Jeremiah Miller



Monday, February 29, 2016

Ideation



Playwright:  Aaron Loeb

Company:  Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company

Venue:  Boulder Chamber of Commerce, 2440 Pearl Street, Boulder CO.

Running Time:  95 minutes (no intermission) 

Date of Performance:  Sunday, February 28, 2016.  (Regional Premiere)

If you work in a corporate cube farm, you’ve probably wondered at times how the executives in the corner offices come up with all the crazy ideas that pass for “strategy.”  Part of the answer is “ideation,” or, as the rest of us might say, the formation of ideas or concepts.  The term “ideation” is a derivative of the noun “idea.”  It’s also corporate jargon designed to obscure processes and deflect attention.

The play Ideation is a dark comedy based on the sinister side of commercial endeavors.  The script takes an “idea” through all its possible permutations as it is “ideated.”  The results are at once very funny and very creepy.  Ideation is a creative mix of business jargon, pointed humor and a macabre marketing opportunity.  

Please excuse my lack of details here, but it would give away too much to go into the plot twists.  It is, however, fair to say that the humor is related to the brain(less) storming that is inevitably derailed by going off on absurd tangents.  If you’re a corporate manager who develops strategy, prepare to be skewered by Aaron Leob’s brilliant script.  

As for the dark side of Ideation, the message is social as well as commercial.  Ideation is a display of how ethics based solely on a return on investment for shareholders is the functional equivalent of no ethics at all.  That a product or service might be morally questionable is no reason not to make money (or a LOT of money) by providing it.

The story involves a work team developing a concept for a new service contract. They only have a few hours as they game out the scenarios (or "vision" them), trying to hit on the most efficient yet least visible solution.  Along the way, they lose track of their goal as the focus shifts from solutions to motives, conspiracies, and tests of their character.  As the clock ticks down, the results become increasingly more insane.

Ideation is a shocking yet elegant script.  Both funny and thought provoking, Ideation is social commentary delivered with the sharpness of a razor blade.  Loeb games out his creepy scenarios, each worse than the last.  Just when we think we have reached the ethical bottom of the barrel, that bottom falls out from under us.  Loeb keeps finding new and more repugnant options, challenging each of us to explore our own ethical limits.  

Early in the show, the script reveals the problem the work team must solve.  I have to admit that when I heard it, I thought it was a joke.  Or maybe more corporate jargon.  Or that perhaps I misheard the problem.  The premise, at first glance, is unthinkable.  After further review, however, what seems unthinkable on its face is recast as a blossoming business opportunity.

Ideation cast L-R:  Luke Sorge , Jim Walker, Karen LaMoureaux, Hossein Forouzandeh, Brian Shea.

Director Stephen Weitz has put together a strong cast and pushed them to credible performances in absurd situations.  Due to the Dairy Center renovations, Weitz puts his cast into an actual conference room at the Boulder Chamber of Commerce.  It’s a perfect setting for the script, but somewhat awkward for the audience.  The sight lines are sometimes difficult, as the audience is seated at the same level as the actors. 

Brian Shea’s (Brock) delivery veers from cruel and heartless to thoughtful and focused in a heartbeat.  Shea is the darkest guy on the stage; he starts the show by mercilessly taking down an intern (Luke Sorge as Scooter) like a lion killing its prey.  Sorge, for his part, bumbles and babbles as his short career is reduced to rubble by Shea’s hatchet job.  Sorge has the smallest role in Ideation, with the possible exception of Jim Hunt as J.D, who is never seen.  Still, Sorge makes a splash as the inept intern with an attitude and an agenda.

Karen LaMoureaux (Hannah) is the one who actually terminates Scooter, not because she wants to, but because she has to get Shea/Brock back under control.  LaMoureaux is the senior executive in charge of a gang of supposed genii who “ideate,” but she’s on the ropes from the outset.  LaMoureaux skillfully walks a tightrope trap set by her subordinates, slipping from time to time, but never quite falling off the tightrope.

Hossein Forouzandeh (Sandeep) is brilliant, exotic, convincingly paranoid and perhaps a conspirator.  He also has a thing for Hannah.  Forouzandeh is a compelling corporate agent, dedicated but subversive.  Dating his boss is reckless, but he’s a stud she can’t resist.  His male ego trumps his corporate ambitions.

Jim Walker (Ted) is less volatile than Brock, but nearly as dark.  Walker gives Ted a veneer of respectability, humor, and likability, all of which covers up his paranoid tendencies.  Just when you think Ted is going to be the adult in the room and yank the others back to reality, Walker takes a deep dive into the group's hysteria.  

L-R:  Hossein Forouzandeh, Jim Walker, Karen LaMoureaux, Brian Shea.
This is a crackerjack production, and the Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company (BETC) can be justifiably proud of it.  With minimal sets, limited lighting options, and costumes that are strictly business, BETC has spun an entertaining story that explores our morality in a painful but honest way.  

When Ideation is over, you may not have a sense of closure.  That’s because, as Loeb and BETC have beautifully explained to us, moral absolutes are theoretical, and arguably useless.  Moral dilemmas are authentic, but have no perfect solutions.  Ideation challenges the cast, and by extension all of us, to solve a hopeless problem full of moral dilemmas.  It's an exercise in futility requiring disturbing choices among evils.

The drama here is real; the comedy springs from the desperation and insanity of the story.  Even if you’ve never worked in a corporate environment, you will be disturbed by the ethical challenges and failures that are presented in Ideation.  We all know the ethical failures of Enron, the mortgage crisis, and Volkswagen.  Those failures had enormous consequences.   
I think we should all be glad that Ideation is fiction.  

The question I left the theater with though, was “has Ideation perhaps already happened?  I don’t know the answer, but I certainly hope it hasn’t.  Unfortunately, though, the ethical crisis in business is all too real.  We can only hope that the details of the Ideation story never play out in real time.  If they do, it will not be a comedy, dark or otherwise. 

NOTES:

BETC has taken this show on the road during the renovations at their usual venue, The Dairy Center for the Arts (recently renamed The Dairy Arts Center).

Ideation is showing at MobileDay, 2040 14th Street, March 3-13, and at the Boulder Chamber of Commerce, 2440 Pearl Street, March 16-20.

This show has adult themes and adult language.  The subject matter may be disturbing for young children (and perhaps for some adults).

Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company (BETC) has taken a challenge (temporary loss of its stage) and turned it into an opportunity.  Their last show (Vera Rubin:  Bringing the Dark to Light) was at the Fiske Planetarium.  Ideation is playing at two different locations around Boulder.  BETC doesn’t limit creativity to the script, the cast, and the crew.  They have cooked up their own version of creativity, putting their shows on the road and taking them into various community venues.  I know they had little choice, given the situation at The Dairy Center.  Down the road, however, I hope they make more such choices for creative reasons.  Bringing theater to the people is as important as bringing the people to the theater.


PRE/POST SHOW RESTAURANT SUGGESTION:

It’s Denver Restaurant Week, so we combined a special event for dinner after the Ideation matinee.  We had never been there before, so we got a 6:45 reservation at Shanahan’s Steak House, 5085 S. Syracuse Street in the Denver Tech Center.  For those who aren’t sports fans, Shanahan’s is former Denver Bronco’s Head Coach Mike Shanahan’s place.  I’m sure the current Broncos still frequent the place; it’s a very convenient short ride from their Dove Valley training facility.
Restaurant week 6 ounce filet.

It’s a high end steak house.  You know that when you drive up and they have valet parking (complimentary) so you don’t have to actually park your Honda Civic yourself.  The restaurant week special is a 6 ounce filet or pan roasted Scottish salmon.  It includes salad, a veggie, garlic mashed potatoes and dessert (Espresso Chocolate Mousse with raspberries).  We both had the filet, which was delicious, but at 6 ounces, I’m pretty sure none of the real Denver Broncos order it.  The service was exemplary.  One thing I watch for in high end restaurants during Restaurant Week is any indication that they look down their noses at the bargain diners (us).  Not a hint at Shanahan’s.  We were treated like Bronco royalty.

While you’re waiting for your table, check out the Bronco Bling in the display cases near the hostess stand.  There are a couple of Vince Lombardi trophies (also known as Super Bowl trophies), and some very impressive Super Bowl rings.  This is as close to that kind of memorabilia most of us will ever be.  Yes.  I took an iPhone pic of the bling.
Bronco Bling.


Photo Credit:  Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company (Bronco Bling and dinner by the author).

TICKETS HERE (Boulder Chamber of Commerce) and HERE (MobileDay):

This show closes on March 20, 2016.


CREATIVE TEAM:

Director:  Stephen Weitz

Production Designer:  Andrew Metzroth

Costume Designer:  Brenda King

Dialect Coach:  Gabriella Cavallero

Dramaturg:  Heather Beasley

Stage Manager:  Karen Horns


CAST:

Hannah:  Karen LaMoureaux

Brock:  Brian Shea

Ted:  Jim Walker 

Sandeep:  Hossein Forouzandeh

Scooter:  Luke Sorge

J.D.:  Jim Hunt (Mr. Hunt’s role is performed entirely off stage.)