0 Comments · Saturday, June 2, 2012
Honour
Pillow probably already knows that she’s going to have a tough time
making you feel sorry for her when she takes the stage for her solo
show at the Art Academy of Cincinnati. Having spent the early part of
her career as a runway model in New York, she bears a fine
resemblance to Julia Roberts with Halle Berry’s complexion, and
it’s that issue of racial identity that fuels the better part of
this personal history and emotional travelogue.
0 Comments · Saturday, June 2, 2012
If
you’re concerned about seeing modern dance and not “getting it,”
fear not. Pas de Monkéy Dance Project from Akron wants to keep dance
accessible — friendly, even. The young company affiliated with the
University of Akron might be gaining the training and the chops for
serious dance, but they don’t take themselves too seriously.
0 Comments · Saturday, June 2, 2012
If
you’ve had it up to here with Love Thy Neighbor, this is the show
for you. A Hands On Guide to the Apocalypse arrives just in
time, since 2012 — as we’re being frequently reminded — is the
year the Mayans tagged for the end of the world.
0 Comments · Saturday, June 2, 2012
This particular romp is by local playwright Alan Jozwiak and was
adapted from a short story he had published in a zombie quarterly.
Directed by Kevin Crowley and gamely acted by a cast of 10, including
a quintet of mainly high-school-aged zombies, it is beyond harmless
and moves toward the genuinely charming.
by Rick Pender
06.01.2012
Posted In:
Theater at 09:32 AM |
Permalink |
Comments (0)
There’s more theater
and performance than you can shake a stick at in Over-the-Rhine this
weekend, thanks to the 2012 Cincinnati Fringe Festival. (In fact, if
you stand on a corner in OTR and shake a stick, you could be mistaken
for a Fringe act …) You can read about all the Fringe productions
that are up and running here, but here’s half-dozen shows that CityBeat’s reviewers have
recommended: Grim & Fischer: A Deathly Comedy in Full-Face
Mask (this one has a limited run, closing on Saturday, and
it’s had brisk box office since it opened on Wednesday);
Methtacular (a one-man show about a musical theater
actor who’s a gay crystal-meth addict); Sweet, Burning Yonder
(an eco-sensitive comedy about the weird aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina); Quake: A Closet Love Story (about a
broken-up couple trapped in a closet after an earthquake); Don’t
Cross the Streams (a full-fledged musical that starts with a
movie about busting ghosts and spins way beyond); and Blown Up
(a FringeNext production by high schoolers). Go to
cincyfringe.com for more information about schedules and tickets.
While it’s not part
of the Fringe, Avenue Q, presented by Showbiz Players
at Covington’s Carnegie Center, has the same zany vibe. It’s an
X-rated musical with puppets that might visually remind you of Sesame
Street — until they open their dirty mouths. The show was a
surprise Tony Award winner several years back, and it promises lots
of laughs for those who go. Through June 10. 859-957-1940.
If you want something
more traditional, try Cincinnati Shakespeare Company’s production
of The Merchant of Venice, one of Shakespeare’s most
difficult plays. It’s officially categorized as a comedy because it
has humorous and romantic elements. But the central story about a
potentially fatal argument between a moneylender and a businessman is
anything but amusing. CSC’s artistic director Brian Isaac Phillips
takes on the role of the rapacious moneylender who has faced
anti-Semitic discrimination for his entire life. Is Shylock a villain
or a victim? Shakespeare gives him aspects of each, and CSC’s
production does not tilt in either direction. You get to decide, and
it won’t be easy. Box office: 513-381-2273, x1.
Be sure to consider
downtown’s newest performance venue, Speakeasy Theatre, storefront
space at 815 Race Street. Their inaugural production is Paul
Baerman’s The Whistler, set in 1965 in an unnamed
Southern city awash in racist attitudes. The Andy Griffith Show
is in its fifth season, and the guy who whistles the theme (played
here by local professional actor Michael G. Bath) is living off his
royalties. But life gets more complicated when he meets an
African-American trumpet player (played by Tony Davis) who shares his
passion for music. The Whistler will be onstage through June
10. Box office: 513-861-7469
Each week in Stage
Door, Rick Pender offers theater tips for the weekend, often with a few pieces
of theater news.
0 Comments · Friday, June 1, 2012
A musical based on an
iconic supernatural comedy from 1984 is the kind of show we’ve come
to expect during the Cincinnati Fringe. But there’s nothing
expectable about Don’t Cross the Streams, which begins with
that notion and then processes and reprocesses the idea to a point of
ridiculous hilarity.
1 Comment · Friday, June 1, 2012
I’m not inclined to
give you more detail than the program notes about what is “in”
the show. Yes, indeed, there is mesmerizing mindreading, crazy
karaoke, ventriloquist figures, a soulful song (oh my god, it is
really, really soulful) and he does make out with a puppet. You also
learn the secret trick as to how you too can get a one-man show in
the Cincinnati Fringe.
1 Comment · Friday, June 1, 2012
The
box Audrey is trapped in is a theater box office, and she is the
voice on the phone. Audrey’s calling is indeed the theater, but her
goal is the stage itself, not selling tickets to the audience. This
funny exercise in frustration was written by Casey Pilkenton, who
also plays Audrey and recorded all the various voices of those who
call.
0 Comments · Friday, June 1, 2012
Jeanne MamLuft is a
brainy director and accomplished choreographer (and filmmaker), and
it shows. Latitude, at the Hanke 1 performance space on Main
Street, gives MamLuft & Co. Dance the latitude, or room for
maneuver, if you will, to present modern dance in a fresh way.
0 Comments · Friday, June 1, 2012
Chicago-based artist and speaker Rebecca Kling, a transgender woman,
delivers some factual and personal answers as she earnestly covers a
range of trans- and sex-related topics in her one-woman Fringe show,
The
Storms Beneath Her Skin.