Ted Clark's live talk show is a subversion and celebration of the art form
0 Comments · Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Talk shows used to be about talk.
Conversation was cultivated, not cut off. Ted Clark is here to reverse that trend with Ted Clark After Dark,
a local talk show that could — and often does — go anywhere at any
time.
by Rick Pender
08.27.2012
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Company recently found out Columbia Performance Center was no longer available
New Edgecliff Theatre will cancel its first production of the season,
largely the result of its need for a new venue. The group has performed
in the Columbia Performance Center, the "pink church" on Eastern Avenue
in the Columbia-Tusculum neighborhood on Cincinnati's East Side, for
several years. Without much notice over the summer, NET was informed by
the property's owner that the facility would no longer be available.
Artistic Director Jim Stump tells me that they've been notifying the
actors and designers who had been recruited for a staging of Eric
Bogosian's
Talk Radio that the production, scheduled to open on
Sept. 27, is not going to happen. He wrote to me in an email, "This is
due to a number of factors, not the least of which was the suddenness of
our losing the Columbia with little warning. This meant we spent a
significant portion of the time we would normally dedicate to the first
production to the search for a new venue. In the end, we didn't feel we
could present a production of the quality our audiences would expect."
NET is still seeking a permanent solution to its venue needs, but Stump says the company will present
The Santaland Diaries and The 12 Dates of Christmas at the Aronoff's Fifth Third Bank Theater in December.
by Rick Pender
08.24.2012
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Most of the theaters in town are gathering their strength
for the fall season, so there's not much to recommend this weekend —
unless you haven't made it to the Carnegie in Covington yet to see the
delightfully silly production of Xanadu. (Review here.) The recipe for
this delicious concoction is a really lame movie from 1980, some clever
new writing by playwright Douglas Carter Bean, really inventive
direction by Alan Patrick Kenny (the guy who staged Jerry Springer: The Musical
a few summers back) and a cast who can sing (Pop tunes from the ’80s),
dance (to a disco beat, no less), act (like Greek muses, well, kind of)
and do it all on roller skates! This weekend is your final chance to see
the production.
After Xanadu closes on Sunday, our local theaters will pretty much be
dark for a week or so. Then right after Labor Day, you'll have tons of
choices. Look for my Curtain Call column in the upcoming issue of
CityBeat for a glimpse of what's in store for September.
by Rick Pender
08.17.2012
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Theater at 11:19 AM |
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If it weren't for the Carnegie's production of Xanadu,
there wouldn't much to point you for theater choices in mid-August. I'm
happy to report that the judges from the League of Cincinnati Theatres
and I are in agreement that
this frothy piece of roller-disco and Greek mythology is a great piece
of silly entertainment. (Review here.) It's great to see the work of Alan Patrick Kenny
onstage again in Cincinnati. I should mention that this show
constituted his master's thesis for his graduate degree from U.C.L.A.,
and his advisors came to town to pass judgment on it. They apparently
gave him a passing grade, completing his academic efforts and
green-lighting him for his new job teaching musical theater at the
University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point. I hope it's not too long
before he gets another gig locally, but in the meantime, I bet the folks
in central Wisconsin will be highly entertained. If you want to catch
Xanadu, you should call for tickets now, since the positive buzz means
that tickets will be getting snapped up between now and the final
performance on Aug. 26. Box office: 859-957-1940.
One other show that some of you might find entertaining is Rounding
Third, on board the Showboat Majestic.
It's about two wildly different guys coaching a Little League team — one
is a win-at-all-costs kind of guy, the other is a geek who just wants
the kids to have fun. You can imagine the fireworks. The LCT judging
panel recommended it, and I can say that it's got two solid actors
performing it. I thought the script was a tad predictable, but it's got
some good laughs, and if you love baseball (or if you played Knothole
ball here in Cincinnati) you'll find a lot to identify with. Box office:
513-241-6550.
Old cult favorite's strange magic charms audiences at the Carnegie
0 Comments · Monday, August 13, 2012
Summers
in Cincinnati tend to have theater in short supply. Thanks to the
Carnegie Center in Covington, there’s a bounty of fizzy fun in the form
of the very tongue-in-cheek musical Xanadu, staged by Alan Patrick Kenny.
by Rick Pender
08.10.2012
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Theater at 10:36 AM |
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The theater scene is still in vacation mode this weekend,
so there are only a few choices. Your best sure bet is the final weekend
of The Hound of the Baskervilles at Cincinnati
Shakespeare Company through Sunday. [REVIEW LINK]I suspect if you're a
Sherlock Holmes fan with a sense of humor, you'll love this production:
It does follow the plot of Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle's ace detective's
greatest adventure, but it does so in a very tongue-in-cheek and
slapstick manner. It's also a romp for three actors who play all the
roles, including veteran CSC actor Jeremy Dubin who is Holmes as well as
all the villains (or potential villains) in the piece. It's as much fun
watching the trio do quick costume changes as it is following the story
of a cursed family on a remote moor in Northern England. It's been a
busy box office for this production, so be sure to call in advance if
you want a ticket. 513-381-2273, x1.
The Carnegie Center's production of
Xanadu doesn't open
until Saturday, but the odds are good that it will be worth seeing since
it's being staged by wunderkind director Alan Patrick Kenny. Read more about Kenny here. The musical is based on the cult-favorite cinematic flop from
1980, reinvented more recently as a stage production by a clever
creative team. Kenny, who dazzled local audiences for three years with
productions at New Stage Collective (2007-2009), returns for a brief
directing stint before he moves off to Stevens Point, Wisc., where he'll
be teaching theater at a University of Wisconsin campus. He's spent the
past two years studying directing at UCLA — and being engaged in some
creative staging and a bit of professional work, too, while on the West
Coast. He's one of the most inventive and fearless directors to stage
work in Cincinnati in recent years, so Xanadu at the Carnegie s a
production that's probably going to draw a crowd. (It's only having
eight performances, through Aug. 26. Box office: 859-957-1940.
I saw the Showboat Majestic's
Rounding Third when it
opened on Wednesday evening. It's a tale of dads who coach Little League
baseball from very different perspectives. I'm afraid the script is
rife with cliches and stereotypes, but the actors — it's a two-man show;
when they address the team, they're talking to the audience — capture
the essence of their characters. Mike Sherman plays a win-at-all-costs
head coach while Michael Schlotterbeck is a gentle nebbish who's trying
to connect with his geeky son by offering to be an assistant coach.
They're differing philosophies are the meat of the story, and they do
end up learning from one another — although the story is pretty
predictable from the get-go. Nevertheless, a baseball story in August
might be just the thing you're looking for in some summer entertainment. 513-241-6550.
Alan Kenny stops by to stage 'Xanadu' on his way to a promising theater career
0 Comments · Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Cincinnati native Alan Kenny, fresh
from graduate studies and a nearly completed master’s degree from UCLA,
is back in town to stage the campy musical Xanadu at Covington’s
Carnegie Center. It opens on Saturday for an eight-performance run,
through Aug. 26.
CSC's adept cast has a ball
0 Comments · Sunday, July 29, 2012
The process of translating clichés into high humor is a
delicate one. Luckily for Cincinnati
Shakespeare Company, the able three actors assembled for a very
tongue-in-cheek retelling of the Sherlock Holmes tale The Hound of the Baskervilles know their way around slapstick and shtick.
by Rick Pender
08.03.2012
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Light entertainment is what most of us are looking for
onstage during August, and Cincinnati Shakespeare Company has just the
answer: The Hound of the Baskervilles. The amusing script
takes Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's class Sherlock Holmes tale and turns it
into a silly romp around the moor. CSC's cast of three veteran
performers — Nick Rose, Jeremy Dubin and Brent Vimtrup — have just the
right attitude to keep it amusing from start to finish without becoming
tiresome. That's also due to the work of director Michael Evan Haney.
He's the longtime associate artistic director at the Cincinnati
Playhouse in the Park, and he's done fine work on other stages locally,
but this is his debut with Cincy Shakes. It's a fine partnership,
building on his experience with a similar show — a funny romp through
Around the World in 80 Days that entertained Playhouse/Shelterhouse
audiences several years back and then moved on to New York City where it
had a successful run at the Irish Repertory Theatre. Hound is like
drinking fine English tea from a dribble cup. Review here. Tickets: 513-381-2273, x1.
While other theaters are largely dormant, the folks at Cincy Shakes are
very busy in August. In addition to the aforementioned production at
their Race Street theater, they also launch their Shakespeare in the
Park series this weekend with a performance of
The Tempest at Seasongood Pavilion in Eden Park. It gets its first outing on Saturday evening at 7 p.m. Go to cincyshakes.com for more dates and locations. These are free performances, so they're definitely worth checking out.
And in case you need a reminder that we have a great theater scene
locally, here's a tidbit. The Phoenix Theatre in Indianapolis just
announced its 2012-2013 season; this is a fine theater company, rather
like Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati in its presentation of new works. But
they're touting their September production of
Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson as the "Midwest Premiere," and they've given a similar designation to their January-February staging of next to normal.
Um, I'm sorry to burst their bubble, but those shows have already been
onstage here in Cincinnati (and I believe we're in the Midwest). Both
were produced last season. In fact, ETC offered next to normal
last September (not long after the Tony and Pulitzer prize winner closed
in New York) and already presented a sold-out revival in June. Know
Theatre gave us the hard-rockin' version of our seventh president in a
heavily sold run last spring. So the Indy theater's claims are more than
a bit overblown. But we'll let them believe their own hype, and aren't
we smug that we didn't have to leave town to see those shows. That being
said, the Phoenix is offering Seminar, a snarky drama by Cincinnati native Theresa Rebeck (her play Dead Accounts had its world premiere at the Cincinnati Playhouse back in January) this fall (Oct. 25-Nov. 25) and Nicky Silver's dark comedy The Lyons next spring (Feb. 28-March 31). Both could be worth the drive. www.phoenixtheatre.org.
The Thompson House's new art gallery is locked and loaded
0 Comments · Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Go up the imposing staircase at Thompson
House, continue past the second floor and on to the third, and you’ll be
in the Thompson House Shooting Gallery, where art is the weapon at
hand.