Last night I went to see a production of Hadestown: Teen Edition by Acting Up (a theatre company of high school students) at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts. This is one of my very favorite musicals because it recontextualizes the mythology of Orpheus and Eurydice to expose what is wrong with the world, including climate change, poverty, and the exploitation of workers, while espousing the hope that the the world could be better through the power of love and art. The teens in Acting Up always do a phenomenal job and last night was no exception because I was blown away by the amazing talent on the stage! This production does not feature musicians playing live on stage but this allows for a large ensemble of over forty which is quite impressive. The choreography for the expanded ensemble is especially powerful in "Why We Build the Wall," because seeing a large group of workers marching in formation is intense, and in "Wait For Me (Reprise)," because they become a maze for Orpheus and Eurydice to walk through, a tunnel for them to walk under, and obstacles for them to climb over and it is incredibly dramatic. I also enjoyed the choreography for the male ensemble in "Our Lady of the Underground" because it is really athletic. Gage Gillette is outstanding as Orpheus (one of the best I've seen in this show) because the role requires a tremendous vocal range as well as vulnerability and, not only does he hit all of those high notes, he gives impassioned performances of "Come Home With Me" and "If It's True" (I found it entirely plausible that he could sway all of the workers to his side). I was also impressed by his guitar playing in "Epic I," "Epic II," and Epic III." Emma Stewart has a beautiful voice and she brings a lot of pathos to her performance as Eurydice. My favorite songs in the show are "Any Way the Wind Blows" and "Flowers" and I loved her heartbreaking renditions (the latter brought tears to my eyes). Cedric Smith is a very compelling Hades because he has a rich baritone voice that is deceptively charming in "Hey, Little Songbird" but menacing in "Why We Build the Wall." Emma Pierson is a lot of fun to watch as Persephone because she is a great dancer and she can definitely sing the blues, especially in "Our Lady of the Underground." Her voice also blends really well with Smith's in "How Long?" My favorite performance was from William Madsen because he is a charismatic and appealing Hermes. He has a great voice and a captivating stage presence, particularly in "Road to Hell" and "Way Down Hadestown." I love the role the Fates (Katelynn Lee, Claire Moreira, and Lexi Williamson) play in the story and the three of them harmonize beautifully in "When the Chips Are Down" and "Doubt Comes In." The set features a brick mansion in an old New Orleans neighborhood with a wrought iron balcony on the top level and a large metal factory with train tracks that lead to a station on the bottom level (I think it is more elaborate than the Broadway production) and the costumes are very striking, especially all of the boiler suits worn by the workers. If you love this musical as much as I do, I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here) to this production because it is extremely well done. It runs at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays through March 28.
Phaedra's Adventures
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Undertone
I was excited to see Undertone at a matinee yesterday because it got a lot of buzz at Sundance this year. I found it to be incredibly unsettling! Evangeline "Evy" Babig (Nina Kiri), the host of a popular podcast about paranormal activity with her friend Justin (Adam DiMarco), has moved back into her childhood home to care for her comatose mother (Michele Duquet) who is in the last stages of a terminal illness. The old house is filled with religious iconography which unnerves Evy because she is an unbeliever. Justin receives an anonymous email that includes ten audio files of a couple named Jessa (Keana Lyn Bastidas) and Mike (Jeff Yung) as they seemingly become possessed by a demon known for driving mothers to murder their own children. They decide to record an episode for their podcast using the audio files with Evy as the skeptic and Justin as the believer. However, as they listen, Evy begins to experience the same phenomena as the couple and she spirals into madness. Kiri and Duquet are the only actors who appear on screen so most of what happens is depicted through sound. It is incredibly immersive, and disturbing, because the audience hears what Evy hears and it is easy to believe that the sounds are coming from inside the house because of the way the dark and empty spaces are filmed. There were many moments when I thought I saw something lurking in the shadows in response to something I heard. It is one of the most atmospheric movies I have seen and the escalating dread is unbelievably intense. What I loved most is that, unlike many recent horror movies, the ending is ambiguous (Evy could be possessed or she could be the victim of her own isolation, grief, and guilt) so the tension painstakingly created in the first two acts is not derailed by a tedious explanation in the third. See this in a theater with the best sound capability possible!
Saturday, March 14, 2026
The Secret Agent
The second movie in my double feature featuring the Academy Award nominees for Best Picture yesterday was The Secret Agent (click on the titles to read my commentaries for Bugonia, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, Sinners, and Train Dreams). There is a lot to unpack but I found this to be absolutely riveting. During the military dictatorship in Brazil in 1977, Armando Solimoes (Wagner Moura) is a former science professor on the run from a phony corruption charge brought by Henrique Ghirotti (Luciano Chirolli), the head of a utilities company who is threatened by his research. He arrives in Recife during Carnival to visit his son Fernando (Enzo Nunes) who lives with his maternal grandparents (Carlos Francisco and Aline Marta Maia) after the murder of his wife Fatima (Alice Carvalho). He stays at a safe house for political dissidents run by Dona Sabastiana (Tania Maria), adopts the name Marcelo Alves, and is aided by a resistance leader named Anisio (Buda Lira) who inadvertently involves him with the corrupt chief of police Euclides (Roberio Diogenes). He learns from another resistance leader named Elza (Maria Fernanda Candido) that Ghirotti has hired two hitmen, Augusto (Roney Villela) and Bobbi (Gabriel Leone), to kill him so he decides to flee with his son. Mayhem ensues. The action is nonlinear and there are a lot of characters to keep track of so I only had the vaguest notion of what was going on at any given time (it is definitely a slow burn with lots of colorful details specific to the time and place) but everything mostly comes together in the conclusion even if that conclusion is abrupt and a bit anticlimactic. What I found most compelling is the portrayal of the sometimes absurd (the corrupt police chief is trying to cover up the discovery of a leg found in the body of a shark) and often cruel reality of living under a military dictatorship and the escalating tension surrounding Armando's uncertain fate is almost unbearable. Moura's performance is captivating because he is playing multiple versions of himself in different timelines (he even plays the adult version of his son in present day) and the changes in characterization are subtle but powerful. Finally, I loved the 1970s vibe in the costumes, production design, and soundtrack (the use of vintage camera equipment also adds to the period verisimilitude). I have not been able to stop thinking about this and I highly recommend it!
Note: Now that I have seen all of the nominees, I want Sinners to win Best Picture but I wouldn't mind if One Battle After the Other does.
Train Dreams
When the Academy Award nominees for Best Picture were announced last month, there were two movies that I had not seen yet (click on the titles to read my commentaries on Bugonia, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, and Sinners). Since I always like to see each of the nominees on the big screen, I went to a double feature for the remaining movies yesterday beginning with Train Dreams. It is a hauntingly beautiful and meditative look at the extraordinary story of America at the beginning of the 20th century through the eyes of an ordinary man. Robert Grainier (Joel Edgerton) is brought to the Pacific Northwest on a train as an orphan with no recollection of his parents and spends his early years alone and without purpose until he meets and falls in love with Gladys (Felicity Jones). They build a cabin on an acre of land near a river and have a daughter named Kate but he is forced to leave them for long periods of time to work in the logging and railroad industries which transform the country. As he witnesses the rapid growth taking place around him, he has many experiences, including a series of tragedies involving strangers, co-workers, and family members, which cause him to search for meaning. What I loved most about the narrative is that there is no answer and yet Grainier still continues to live with hope and the memories of those lost all around him. It is slow but incredibly moving and I loved Edgerton's restrained performance (one of his very best) because he is able to evoke so many emotions with very little dialogue (so much so that the voice-over narration by Will Patton sometimes feels intrusive). There is a large supporting cast of characters who drift in and out of Grainier's life but I especially loved William H. Macy as Arn Peeples, a grizzled explosives expert, and Kerry Condon as Claire Thompson, a surveyor for the U.S. Forest Service. The cinematography is absolutely gorgeous (I lost count of how many times I was mesmerized by the beauty of a particular shot) and the atmospheric score by Bryce Dessner enhances the otherworldly vibe. I really loved this and highly recommend it!
Friday, March 13, 2026
Little Shop of Horrors at the Empress Theatre
Last night I went to see a really fun production of Little Shop of Horrors at the Empress Theatre and I had a great time! Seymour (Riley Ernst) and Audrey (Taylore Cahoon) both work in a run-down flower shop on Skid Row owned by the persnickety Mr. Mushnik (Nate Fairclough). Seymour thinks that displaying a strange and interesting plant, which he found during a total eclipse of the sun, will bring more business to the shop but he can't find it in any of his reference books so he names it Audrey II because he is secretly in love with his co-worker. The shop becomes wildly successful because of Audrey II but Mr. Mushnik worries that it isn't thriving. Seymour inadvertently discovers that Audrey II likes drinking his blood after he cuts himself on a thorn and, eventually, it grows to a giant size and asks him to feed it more. When Seymour cannot spare any more of his own blood, his first victim is Audrey's boyfriend Orin Scrivello (Carl Smith), a sadistic dentist, which wins him the love of Audrey but now her namesake wants more and more. Seymour enjoys the notoriety that Audrey II brings him but soon feels guilty about everything he has done to feed it. He wants to destroy it but realizes too late that Audrey II has an evil plan for world domination! The music is a great mix of rock and roll, doo-wop, and Motown. A girl group, including Crystal (Michelle Frierson), Chiffon (Leyla Vave), and Ronnette (Rebecca Meats), acts as a sort of Greek chorus narrating the action and the three of them bring a little bit of sass and a lot of vocal power to the songs "Little Shop of Horrors," "Skid Row (Downtown)," and "Da-Doo." They harmonize really well together and they were the highlight of the show for me. Smith is hilariously unhinged and his rendition of "Dentist!" was definitely a crowd favorite, Cahoon is over the top in her characterization of Audrey and she does a great job belting out "Suddenly Seymour" but she also shows some vulnerability in "Somewhere That's Green," and Ernst is so much fun to watch with all of his nerdy and awkward mannerisms in "Grow for Me" and his growing confidence in "Suddenly Seymour." I really enjoyed how Audrey II is portrayed. The puppets (operated by Easton Fairclough), which grow larger and more elaborate as the show progresses, look great and they function really well (I was particularly impressed with how the largest one eats people) and I loved the smooth and seductive vocal performance from Joshua Adams in "Feed Me (Git It)." The set, which is dominated by Mr. Mushnik's flower shop, is now among my favorites at this theatre and it was fun to see all of the changes (I was impressed with how quickly they happen) as the shop becomes more successful and as it gets overtaken by Audrey II (I especially loved an effect used in "Don't Feed The Plants" at the end of the show). There are three more opportunities to see this fantastic show and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here).
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