by Rick Pender
03.08.2013
74 days ago
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Theater at 10:19 AM |
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Can you hear the clock ticking? That's not just because this weekend marks the "spring forward" to Daylight Savings Time early on Sunday. It's also because several theater productions are just about over: If you want to see them, you only have a few days left.
Leveling Up, the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park's show about video gamers,
is as contemporary as can be. One of its characters is recruited by the
NSA to fly drones into war zones — activity that totally blurs the
boundary between the real world and cyberspace, not to mention the moral boundaries between killing video villains and actual living people. (Review here.) The show is also about taking charge of your life in a world of maturity and responsibility, rather than retreating into simulated space. Deborah Zoe Laufer's script uses four characters,
all twentysomethings, who will seem like people you know — their
language, their actions, their concerns are the stuff of contemporary
life. Box office: 513-421-3888.
If you want something that's quite intentionally removed from everyday life, you need to check out the wry and ironic musical theater piece at UC's College-Conservatory of Music, Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera. (Review here.) It's an allegory and critique of corrupt capitalism, told with dark humor in a production by CCM Opera chair Robin Guarino (who has staged productions at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City). She knows how to present the stark humor and cynical attitudes in Brecht's script, and the talented CCM musical theater performers (accompanied by a small onstage orchestra dominated by woodwinds and brass) provide great renderings of Weill's score. This is a rarely produced work, definitely worth seeing. Box office: 513-556-4183.
Perhaps you prefer your cynicism in an 18th century mode: That's what you'll get with Cincinnati Shakespeare Company's production of Dangerous Liaisons, a story of the idle rich who entertain themselves by seducing and manipulating their naive colleagues — or their innocent offspring. (Review here.) It's not a pretty story, in that the central characters are scheming and out for their own entertainment and pleasure, often for revenge. But if you like nasty behavior, this production has it in spades. Two of CSC's best veterans, Corinne Mohlenhoff and Giles Davies, play the Marquise de Merteuil and the Vicomte de Valmont, a pair of arch schemers who relish making a mess of others' lives. It's not everyone's cup of tea, but it's a literate, cleverly plotted piece of theater. Box office: 513-381-2273 x.1. The previous three shows finish their runs this weekend. When the Rain Stops Falling at Know Theatre has one more week (it closes on March 16), but you should order your tickets now: I expect the final performances will be hard to get into on short notice. (Review here.) This is one of the best shows that Know has staged in several seasons, a fine, complex script performed by a talented cast of nine, directed by Cincy Shakes Brian Isaac Phillips. (Four of the cast members are CSC regulars.) They play four generations
of two families, strangely and fatefully intertwined. The story weaves
back and forth between 1959 and 2039; at first it seems to be
disjointed, then things suddenly beging to fall into place. By the time it's over — with several shocking moments along the way — you'll see how it all fits together. If you haven't seen this one yet, this is the ticket you need to get. Box office: 513-300-5669.
by Rick Pender
02.15.2013
95 days ago
Posted In:
Theater at 10:27 AM |
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If you're waffling between whether to go to the theater or
do something else this weekend, let me help you decide: You should get a
ticket to see When the Rain Stops Falling at Know Theatre. It's running through March 16, but it's going to be an in-demand ticket soon: I gave it a Critic's Pick in CityBeat (review here),
the League of Cincinnati Theatres bestowed eight nominations on it (I
believe that's the most they've given to any production this season),
and everyone I've talked to has been breathless in their praise of the
script, the cast, the design — well, the entire production. Andrew
Bovell's play bounces around in time between 1959 and 2039 and between
the histories of four generations of two families. That might sound a
bit complicated or confusing, but it's not: There are parallels and
intersections that slowly make sense, and the play uses language and
imagery to bring the stories together into a coherent narrative by
play's end. Two characters are played by two different actresses,
representing younger and older incarnations of these unusual women: One
is an intellectual in her early years, but becomes emotionally distant
due to a personal trauma; the other is a free-spirited young woman whose
life turns dramatically and becomes an older woman with fragmented
memories and a tenuous grip on the present. The stories are about
fathers and sons, parents and children, and how actions by one
generation reverberate down the line. Bovell's script reinforces these
echoes with lines and artifacts that recur in different contexts. It's a
brilliant piece of writing, and director Brian Phillips (he's artistic
director at Cincinnati Shakespeare) uses movement and scene
intersections to tell the story with nine actors (four from his Cincy
Shakes company). The LCT recognition singled out three performers, but
I'd suggest that the show is powerful because the entire ensemble is
operating in a powerful, parallel manner. You don't want to miss this
one. Box office: 513-300-5669
On Thursday evening I attended Leveling Up at the Cincinnati Playhouse, a world premiere by Deborah Zoe Laufer. It's an insightful slice of contemporary life, three
young men and a girlfriend who are obsessed with video gaming, stalled
in their post-college lives. They spend 20 hours a day online, and their
social skills (if they had them previously) have deteriorated amid the
rubble of a basement game room in Las Vegas. Laufer's script will leave
you feeling like you've eavesdropped on real life (in fact, they're
already playing when you enter the Shelterhouse Theatre — although the
"screen" they watch is the theater's invisible fourth wall: They are
staring forward at the central audience section and their attention
never wavers, even when they're having distracted conversations about
life. The divide between their world and being "IRL" ("in real life" as
they shorthand it) increasingly and distressingly — and sometimes
comically — blurs. Laufer's metaphor about "leveling up" in games and
its parallel to stepping up to levels of maturity gives the show meaning
and depth. The young cast are entertaining and convincing. I know this
show will appeal to young audiences, but I heard many in the audience
after the 90-minute performance who were impressed with the story and
what it tells us about society today. It's worth noting that this
weekend the Cincinnati Playhouse has two world premieres on its stages,
which Abigail/1702 (review here) on its mainstage. Box office: 513-421-3888.
Opening tonight is a production of Dangerous Liaisons
at Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. It's Christopher Hampton's stage
play that inspired the 1988 film many will recall featuring Glenn Close
and John Malkovich as manipulative French nobility who play games with
young innocents (including Michelle Pfeiffer). For CSC, the cast
includes two popular performers from the past: Giles Davies as the
Vicomte de Valmont and Corinne Mohlenhoff as the Marquise de Merteuil,
the scheming pair who put devious plots in motion. This promises to be a
delicious drama. Box office: 513-381-2273 x1.