For its 33rd iteration, the Humana Festival of New American Plays offered as many works that were based on ensemble and imagery as it did traditional dramatic plays. By the luck of the schedule during the weekend I recently attended at Actors Theatre of Louisville (ATL), I saw three works (Wild Blessings, a selection of writings by Kentucky poet Wendell Barry; Ameriville, a piece of performance art by UNIVERSES, a Hip Hope ensemble; and Under Construction, a script by avant-garde writer Charles Mee performed by the equally experimental SITI Company directed by Anne Bogart) that lacked traditional narrative form.
The 2012-2013 season of touring productions presented by Broadway in
Cincinnati marks a quarter-century of bringing high-quality shows to the
Aronoff Center, which the series has called home since it opened in 1995. The
shows that will keep the Walnut Street facility humming – not to mention nearby
restaurants – were announced today. They include the funky Blue Man Group
making its first appearance in Cincinnati, plus a selection of shows that have
been Broadway hits and award winners.
Blue Man
Group (Oct. 16-28, 2012) is a wild and crazy theatrical experience, a
performance act that has been combining comedy, music and technology for more
than 10 years. With no spoken language, the trio of guys with blue plastic skin
presents a show that’s big, loud, funny, silly, visually arresting – and not
easy to describe. The show won a special citation in the 1991 Obie Awards, and
recognition in 1992 from the Lucille Lortel Awards (for excellence in
off-Broadway theatre) and from the Village Voice’s Obie Awards.
Jersey
Boys (Nov. 28-Dec. 9, 2012), the story of Frankie Valli and the Four
Seasons, was a big hit for the series in 2008 when it sold approximately 64,000
tickets during a two-week run. It’s one of the best of the jukebox musicals,
and it should be a popular choice again. (Since it’s a repeat Broadway in
Cincinnati invites subscribers to choose between this one and Peter Pan to fill out a six-show
subscription.)
Memphis (Jan. 22-Feb. 3,
2013) is a fine musical derived from a true story about the challenge race
relations in that Tennessee city in the 1960s when a white DJ and a talented
black singer find themselves attracted to one another. The show, which won four
Tony Awards in 2010, has a rhythm-and-blues score and a lot of great dancing as
it tells a powerful story about love, show biz and how the races interacted.
One critic called this show “the very essence of what a Broadway musical should
be,” and I agree wholeheartedly.
Million
Dollar Quartet (Feb. 19-March 3, 2013) was also nominated for the best
musical Tony in 2010, losing out to Memphis.
It too is based on a real event that happened in Memphis, this one at the
studios of Sun Records on Dec. 4, 1956, when four young Rock-and-Roll musicians
intersected: Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash. It
was the only time they were together in a recording session, and the legendary
results are the subject matter of this lively show.
Peter
Pan (March 12-17, 2013) brings back one-time Olympic gymnast Cathy Rigby
who has made a career of performing in this show. She turns 60 in December,
which brings some kindof weird irony to playing the boy who “won’t grow up,”
but Rigby’s athletic skills for flying and fighting mean she’s popular with
audiences. She performed the role at the Aronoff in 2000 and 2006. This show is
the “choose-one” that subscribers get for their sixth choice.
War
Horse (March 26-April 7, 2013) won the 2011 Tony Award for best drama. Set in
England in 1914, it’s about an adolescent named Albert and his horse Joey, the
latter recruited to go with the troops to World War I in France. It’s an epic
tale of the powerful connection between Albert and Joey, and it’s told using
remarkably realistic “puppets,” a term hardly seems to suit the manner in which
life-sized horses are created and become key characters in this production.
Sister
Act (April 30-May 12, 2013) is a musical comedy based on the popular Whoopi
Goldberg film from 1992 about a woman whose life takes an unexpected turn when
she witnesses a crime and is “hidden” at a convent. This show promises a lot of
fun, and it’s been running on Broadway for almost a year. However, I’m afraid
that it strikes me as all too typical of the tendency to create shows from
mildly popular movies. That film was a vehicle for Whoopi, and without her, I
suspect the show is a meager reflection.
Prices for six-season ticket packages range from $149 to $543, depending
on seat location. Subscriptions go on sale on Monday at the Fifth Third Bank
Broadway in Cincinnati box office in the Mercantile Center downtown at 120 East
Fourth Street. You can also order subscriptions online at
BroadwayinCincinnati.com or by calling 800-294-1816.
Greater Cincinnati has two awards programs that recognize our excellent theater scene. Perhaps that’s good news, but you might wonder if this kind of competition between competitions is the best way to go.
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park has been celebrating its year-long 50th season with a remarkable number of premieres. Producing Artistic Director Ed Stern will sustain that commitment to new work with a world premiere to kick off the 2010-11 season in September. High will feature movie and stage actress Kathleen Turner in a drama already designated for a move to Broadway early in 2011.
I'm reviewing another show for next week's issue of CityBeat, but on a few nights ago I saw the final rehearsal of New Edgecliff Theatre's staging of Peter Shaffer's Equus. This is one you'll want to catch, and since this is the opening weekend, now's the time to do so — once this is reviewed by others and the buzz gets going, it will be hard to get tickets for the tiny Columbia Performance Center (3900 Eastern Ave., Columbia-Tusculum).
Cincinnati will see the regional premiere of The Book of Mormon a year from now. The winner of nine Tony Awards will be the highlight of Broadway in Cincinnati's 2013-2014 season at downtown's Aronoff Center for the Arts. It's set for a three-week run, Jan. 7-26, 2014. A show described as "the funniest musical of all time" that was created by the guys behind the satirical South Park TV series has enough raucous, off-color humor to melt away any winter chill that settles in following the holidays. It's about two naive and optimistic Mormon missionaries who tryto persuade residents of Uganda to follow their faith — but threatened by a maniacal warlord, the locals are more concerned with war, famine, poverty and AIDS than religion. The satire is laid on thick, and it's the kind of show that's bound to offend some people. Nevertheless, it's been a gigantic Broadway hit since it opened in March 2011; the tour that comes our way began back in August, so Cincinnati is an early stop.
The season will have a number of familiar titles, including another three-week run for the Broadway hit Wicked (March 5-23, 2014). The Wizard of Oz musical has been running on Broadway for a decade. There will also be two Andrew Lloyd Webber musicals, a new production of his 1978 musical Evita (Feb. 18-March 2, 2014), based on the show's successful 2012 Broadway revival; as well as another chance to see Lloyd Webber's phenomenal hit, The Phantom of the Opera (April 30-May, 11, 2014).The Broadway hit Rock of Ages took Arena Rock hits from the late ’80s by groups like Journey, Whitesnake, Styx and Bon Jovi and cobbled them together for an amped-up evening of Rock in the theater, particularly appealing to people who were, um, all about partying back in the day. Now it’s on the road, touring from city to city and inviting folks to relive their ill-spent youth — and have a raucous good time. It’s at the Aronoff Center starting tonight, running through Nov. 7.
The Cincinnati Playhouse’s incoming artistic director, Blake
Robison, today announced the shows to be produced for the 2012-2013 season.
Robison takes over from Ed Stern, who retires on June 30 after 20 years setting
the course for the respected regional theater. During Stern’s tenure, the
Playhouse has twice won Tony Awards — in 2004 as an outstanding regional
theater, and again in 2007 when its production of Stephen Sondheim and George
Furth’s Company moved to Broadway and
was named the season’s best revival of a musical.
Robison’s new season looks a little different from seasons that Stern has assembled in the past. In particular, he’s included two shows that offer journeys for the entire family — a big swashbuckling adaptation of The Three Musketeers (by Ken Ludwig, who wrote Lend Me a Tenor) to open the season on the Marx stage, and a seafaring expedition, Shipwrecked! An Entertainment – The Amazing Adventures of Louis de Rougemont (by Donald Margulies, whose usual fare is dramas — including Time Stands Still, currently onstage at Ensemble Theatre.
The season's schedule will include two world premieres, Abigail/1702, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa’s script based on a central character from Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. On the Shelterhouse stage, Robison will offer Deborah Zoe Laufer’s Leveling Up, about four twentysomethings mired in video games who find the real world a lot more complicated. (Laufer’s End Days was presented by Ensemble Theatre a year ago.) We’ll also see Dayton native Daniel Beaty perform his one-man show, Through the Night, in which he plays six African-American men, ranging in age from 10 to 60. The show recently earned positive reviews as well as Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle award nominations in New York City.
Robison has several selected classic plays for the Marx by two legendary playwrights whose plays, I’m astonished to say, have never been produced at the Playhouse. Next fall will see Neil Simon’s semi-autobiographical script, Brighton Beach Memoirs, set in 1937. Horton Foote’s The Trip to Bountiful (a television script best known for a 1985 movie version starring Geraldine Page), the story of an aging woman determined to return to her childhood home for one last visit, will be staged using African-American actors. Two more classic tales will be produced on the Marx stage: A Christmas Carol returns for its 22nd holiday season, and a new stage version of Double Indemnity, Billy Wilder’s spellbinding noir thriller from 1944.
Rounding out the season will be two Shelterhouse productions. For November and December, Robison has scheduled Hank Williams: Lost Highway, a show about the legendary Country artist created and staged by Randal Myler, who brought Love, Janis to the same space back in 2005. I suspect that Karen Zacarias’s The Book Club Play, a comedy about books and the people who love them, will be popular with audiences. It’s the story of a group that becomes the subject of a documentary with surprising results.
On the brink of his first season, Robison says, “It is an honor and a privilege to take the reins as the Playhouse’s new artistic director. To me, there is so much to celebrate here at the Playhouse — from the tremendous legacy of Ed Stern to the unlimited possibilities before us. What excites me most about joining the Playhouse family is the vibrant role that this theater plays within the region. The doors to the Playhouse are wide open, and we aim to invite as many people as possible inside.”
Here’s the season rundown in chronological order:
Among the eight winners announced for the 2012 Governor’s Awards for the Arts in Ohio are several Cincinnatians. Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park Producing Artistic Director Ed Stern, who retires at the end of the current theater season, and Executive Director Buzz Ward have been named the recipient of the year’s recognition in the field of Arts Administration. Louise D. Nippert will be honored in the category of Arts Patron.