Saturday, July 31, 2021

The Green Knight

As a huge fan of the actor Dev Patel and the director David Lowery, I was beyond excited to see The Green Knight last night and it certainly did not disappoint!  I think it is absolutely brilliant and it is now my favorite movie of the year (so far).  Gawain (Patel) is the dissolute nephew of King Arthur (Sean Harris) and, while he is eager to prove himself, he fears that he is not destined for greatness.  On Christmas Day, King Arthur invites Gawain to join him and his Knights of the Round Table.  He knows that he is not worthy to sit at the king's side so, when a mysterious Green Knight (Ralph Ineson) summoned by his mother Morgan Le Fay (Sarita Choudhury) enters and issues a challenge, Gawain recklessly accepts.  He is allowed to strike the Green Knight with his ax on the condition that he submit to the same blow one year hence at the Green Chapel.  Gawain beheads the Green Knight, who does not falter, with one stroke but spends the following year in torment about keeping his end of the bargain.  He eventually sets off on a literal, but mostly metaphorical, journey to perform acts of courage and chivalry and undergo a test of honor at the castle of a lord (Joel Edgerton), lady (Alicia Vikander), and enchantress (Helena Browne) before facing the Green Knight.  This is a bold retelling of the classic legend and, even though I usually don't like it when liberties are taken with the source material, the final sequence absolutely blew me away and I am sure that I will be thinking about it for some time to come! The cinematography is beautiful and atmospheric but the action is slow because events are not explained but, rather, shown through imagery and symbolism.  Patel is riveting in the role and I was completely enthralled by his performance!  In fact, the last time I was so spellbound by a movie was when I saw A Ghost Story, also written and directed by Lowery.  This is definitely not for everyone and, if you prefer a more straightforward narrative, this is not a movie you will enjoy.  At my screening there were several people who walked out in the middle but there were also many people, myself included, who remained through the credits until the house lights came on in order to ponder the message about what it means to live with honor!  I think it is a masterpiece and I can't wait to see it again!

Note:  I usually taught Beowulf as part of the epic poetry unit in my British literature classes but every so often I would substitute Sir Gawain and the Green Knight just to mix it up.  If I was still teaching, I would definitely make the switch this year!

Friday, July 30, 2021

Jungle Cruise

I pretty much had to see the movie Jungle Cruise because it is based on one of the few rides at Disneyland that I will willingly go on!  I saw it last night at a Thursday preview and I really enjoyed it.  At the height of World War I, Dr. Lily Houghton (Emily Blunt) finds an artifact that leads to the Tree of Life which, according to legend, has powerful healing powers.  She and her fastidious brother McGregor (Jack Whitehall) travel to Brazil and hire a reluctant Captain Frank Wolff (Dwayne Johnson) to take them down the Amazon River in his dilapidated steamboat to find it.  They have a series of misadventures involving heat, wild animals, cannibals, and treacherous rapids but they are also being pursued by an ancient conquistador (Edgar Ramirez) who is trying to undo a curse that has kept him in the jungle for hundreds of years and a German aristocrat (Jesse Plemons) who wants to use the power to win the war.  Many of the action sequences feature very obvious (and subpar) CGI but they are certainly entertaining and exciting.  Johnson and Blunt are fantastic and have great chemistry, especially with their back-and-forth bickering (but not when their relationship inevitably turns romantic).  All of Frank's groan-worthy puns are so much fun because they reminded me of the ride at Disneyland.  Whitehall provides a lot of comic relief and, while McGregor's backstory might divide critics and audiences, I found it to be very affecting.  Ramirez is suitably creepy as Aguirre but I found the story of the Spanish conquistador to be very convoluted.  Plemons steals the show as the bombastic Prince Joachim and I laughed out loud at many of his over-the-top antics.  I also enjoyed the music by James Newton Howard and, rather unusually, Metallica (an instrumental version of "Nothing Else Matters" is used in a key scene and I think it is very effective).  This is not a masterpiece but it is a fun summer blockbuster that most will probably enjoy and I definitely recommend it.

Note:  This reminded me a lot of The Mummy, one of my favorite action movies, because they both feature smart, capable, and adventurous female characters (and they both have fun scenes involving library ladders).

Saturday, July 24, 2021

The Magical Music of Harry Potter at Deer Valley

Last night I got to experience three of my favorite things, the Utah Symphony, Harry Potter, and an outdoor performance in the mountains, and it was absolutely wonderful!  As if those weren't enough incentives to get a ticket to last night's concert at Deer Valley, the guest conductor was Enrico Lopez-Yanez!  I enjoyed him so much during his last appearance with the symphony because he was incredibly charming and engaging!  I was really excited to see him again and he certainly didn't disappoint last night!  He came out in full Hogwarts regalia and conducted a roll call for House affiliation (I am Ravenclaw in case you were wondering) before beginning the concert with "Hedwig's Theme" from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by John Williams.  Next the orchestra played "The Weasley Stomp" from Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by Nicholas Hooper.  They continued with "Fawkes the Phoenix," "Dobby the House Elf," "Gilderoy Lockheart," and "The Chamber of Secrets" from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by John Williams.  One of my favorites was "Nimbus 2000" from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone because I could picture the Quiddich match in my head as the orchestra played it.  The first half of the concert ended with selections from the Suite from Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by John Williams and included "Aunt Marge's Waltz," "The Knight Bus" (which was very popular with all of the kids sitting around me), "A Bridge to the Past," and "Double Trouble."  The latter included four vocalists, Julia Bradshaw (Gryffindor), Mariah Stanelle (Ravenclaw), Mitchell Mosley (Hufflepuff), and Tate Forshay (Slytherin), and it was a lot of fun!  After the intermission, the orchestra played "Witches, Wands, and Wizards" from Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by John Williams and "Death of Cedric" from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by Patrick Doyle.  Then Lopez-Yanez picked several kids (and one 25 year old) in costume from the audience to compete in the Tri-Wizard Tournament and sent them to pick their wands while the orchestra played "Diagon Alley" from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.  He had the contestants name as many magical creatures as they could while the orchestra played "Buckbeak's Flight" from Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and then use their wands to cast a spell during "The Quiddich World Cup (The Irish)" from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.  The audience crowned the winner and she was given an actual Tri-Wizard Tournament Cup!  Next came the Symphonic Suite from Harry Potter which included "Fireworks," "The Flight of the Order of the Phoenix," Harry & Hermione," "Obliviate," "Lily's Theme," and "Courtyard Apocalypse" (I loved the dramatic drums in this piece).  The concert concluded with "Harry's Wondrous World" from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and the encore was "Hogwarts' Hymn" from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.  I love all of the Harry Potter movies so it was a lot of fun to hear all of the music played live, especially in the mountains where it was actually cool enough for me to need a jacket!  I think all of the remaining concerts in the Deer Valley Music Festival are sold out but you might have some luck calling the box office!

Friday, July 23, 2021

Old

I am a huge M. Night Shyamalan fan (I even like the Shyamalan movies that most other people hate) and I have been looking forward to Old for what seems like forever so I saw it at the earliest possible opportunity which was a Thursday preview last night.  Guy (Gael Garcia Bernal) and Prisca (Vicky Krieps), along with their children Maddox (Alexa Swinton) and Trent (Nolan River), are vacationing at a resort on a tropical island.  There is a lot of tension between them and it turns out that they are giving their children one final vacation before announcing their intention to divorce.  The manager of the resort (Gustaf Hammarsten) tells them about an exclusive and secluded beach and offers to have an employee (Shyamalan) drive them there for the day.  They decide to go but are annoyed when they are joined by a doctor named Charles (Rufus Sewell), his trophy wife Chrystal (Abbey Lee), his daughter Kara (Kyle Bailey), and his mother Agnes (Kathleen Chalfant), as well as a nurse named Jarin (Ken Leung) and his wife Patricia (Nikki Amuka-Bird).  A rapper named Mid-Sized Sedan (Aaron Pierre) is already there having spent the night with a woman he just met.  When the woman's drowned body is discovered in a cove, they are all horrified to discover that it has decomposed at a rapid rate.  They are also stunned to see that the children are changing drastically every hour (Maddox is played by Thomasin McKenzie at 16 and Embeth Davidtz as an adult; Trent is played by Luca Faustino Rodriguez at 11, Alex Wolff at 15, and Emun Elliott as an adult; and Kara is played by Mikaya Fischer at 11 and Eliza Scanlen at 15).  Evidently, time is passing at a rate of one year for every 30 minutes on the beach and the guests can't seem to leave.  This is an absolutely brilliant concept and I really enjoyed the discussions about living in the present and cherishing the time spent with loved ones.  The tone is incredibly surreal (it reminded me of an episode of The Twilight Zone) with line deliveries that are almost hysterical in pitch, jarring camera work that emphasizes the disorientation of the characters, and an uncomfortably menacing sound design.  Many might disagree with these choices but they worked for me and I enjoyed the effect.  However, I didn't enjoy the typical Shyamalan plot twist as much as I usually do (I think it is anti-climactic after the tense build-up).  I really need to think about Old a bit more before I decide if I love it but I definitely didn't hate it.

Note:  When I say that I like the Shyamalan movies that most other people hate I, of course, do not mean The Last Airbender.  Did anyone like that movie?

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Pig

When I first heard about the movie Pig, I had certain preconceived notions about the kind of movie it would be, especially since it starred a deranged looking Nicolas Cage, so I decided not to see it.  However, I started reading rave reviews (which admonished viewers to go into the theater knowing as little as possible to fully enjoy it) so I changed my mind.  I went to see it last night and I'm not sure what I expected but it certainly wasn’t a philosophical meditation on finding meaning in a seemingly meaningless world!  Robin Feld (Cage) is living off the grid in a rustic cabin deep in the woods of Oregon.  His only means of support is selling truffles to Amir (Alex Wolff), who then sells them to the trendy restaurants in Portland, and his only companion is his prized foraging pig.  He is a broken man and he clearly has his demons.  One night he is savagely attacked and his pig is stolen which leaves him devastated.  He enlists the help of a reluctant Amir, who has his own demons, to help him find his pig and their search brings them to Portland, where is is revealed that Feld was once a well-regarded chef.  That is really all you should know before going in but you should also know that this is a complex character study rather than a traditional revenge thriller (there is a scene of shocking violence but it is not at all what you are expecting) and that might prove disappointing for some.  I think it is brilliant because, while it is definitely a slow burn, everything that happens builds upon and expands the central idea.  Cage is really hit or miss with me but this is one of his best performances.  His delivery of a monologue at the midway point is absolutely haunting and it gave me goosebumps.  Wolff is also very good and Amir's character arc is as compelling as Feld's.  This is definitely one of the best movies I've seen this year and I highly recommend it!

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Escape Room: Tournament of Champions

I liked the movie Escape Room a lot more than I thought I would.  I enjoyed the premise, the design of the rooms, and the suspenseful action sequences.  My only problem was with the ending because it lacks any kind of credibility and it slows down the action with a lot of clunky dialogue in an attempt to explain everything.  There is also a groan-worthy cliffhanger that I thought was a blatant bid for a sequel (and I was right).  Did you enjoy the lengthy recap of my review for the first movie?  More about that later!  Last night I went to see the promised sequel, Escape Room: Tournament of Champions, and this time around I didn't like it as much as I thought I would.  After surviving the escape rooms set up by the Minos corporation, Zoey (Taylor Russell) and Ben (Logan Miller) are suffering from PTSD and want to hold Minos accountable for the deaths of the other players.  They follow a clue to a dilapidated warehouse in New York but eventually end up in another escape room with Theo (Carlito Olivero), Nathan (Thomas Cocquerel), Rachel (Holland Roden), and Brianna (Indya Moore).  Once again, the players must solve puzzles in order to escape from elaborately staged rooms or face deadly consequences.  This movie begins with a lengthy bit of exposition recapping everything that happened in the first one (maybe the filmmakers wanted to pad the runtime, which is 88 minutes, to compensate for a thin plot?) but this just serves to emphasize that the original characters are more sympathetic than the new ones.  The premise for the new game, namely that each player is the sole survivor of his or her respective game, is not as compelling as the original one (each player has a secret which is revealed in one of the rooms) and there is not even an attempt at characterization.  The new players are dispatched very quickly, without leaving much of an impression, in order to get to the reason why Zoey was lured back into the game and this, once again, strains credibility. We also get a cliffhanger that is even more groan-worthy (is the whole world just one elaborate escape room?).  I will concede that the design of the rooms, especially the subway car and the bank lobby, and the action sequences within the rooms are actually an improvement upon the original but I just didn't care as much about whether or not the characters survived them.  You can give this one a miss.

Thursday, July 15, 2021

Haydn's Cello Concerto No. 1 at St. Mary's Church

Last night I drove back up to the mountains for an intimate Utah Symphony concert at St. Mary's Church in Park City.  I've gone to a few of these concerts, which are part of the Deer Valley Music Festival, and they always end up being absolutely wonderful.  St. Mary's is a beautiful church with amazing views of the mountains through a wall of plate glass windows and it is a fantastic venue for chamber music!  The concert began with String Sinfonietta by Vivian Fung.  I really enjoyed this piece, especially the second movement, which seemed very atmospheric and otherworldly, and the third movement, because the musicians plucked the strings of their instruments (and even tapped on their instruments to create a rhythm) through this whole section and it was really cool.  Next the orchestra played Within Her Arms by Anna Clyne.  The title comes from a poem by Thich Nhat Hahn, in which the Earth wraps her arms around a dear one who has died in order to transform her into flowers to comfort those left behind, and it is dedicated to Clyne's mother who died suddenly and unexpectedly.  This piece is mournful and elegiac and I thought it was hauntingly beautiful.  The concert concluded with Concerto No. 1 for Cello and Orchestra by Joseph Haydn with Utah Symphony Principal Cello Matthew Johnson as soloist.  This piece is very technically challenging and Johnson performed it beautifully.  As predicted, this was a wonderful evening filled with incredible music!  I believe that all of the remaining concerts at St. Mary's are sold out but there are a few tickets available for some of the other shows at Deer Valley (go here).

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

The Loneliest Whale: The Search for 52

I have been able to go whale watching twice (in Alaska and Australia) and seeing a whale breach is one of the most exhilarating experiences I have ever had.  I think whales are absolutely fascinating so I was intrigued by the trailer for The Loneliest Whale: The Search for 52 and I even drove about 45 minutes out of my way to see it at the only theater that is screening it in my area yesterday.  At the height of the Cold War, the U.S. Navy developed classified methods to listen underwater for Soviet submarines.  However, it was difficult to distinguish the sounds of submarines from those of marine life so an oceanographer, Dr. William A. Watkins, was enlisted to help classify the sounds.  In 1989 he discovered a single whale that broadcast at a 52 hertz frequency.  No other species of whale broadcast at that frequency so he started tracking the signal until his death 2004.  He was never able to see it or discover another whale who broadcast at the same frequency so it was dubbed "the loneliest whale in the world" and it gained a certain notoriety because people related to its outsider status.  This captured the imagination of filmmaker Joshua Zeman, who believes the ocean is a mysterious environment where unknown discoveries are still possible, and he assembled a team of scientists to try and locate the loneliest whale.  Interspersed between images of their search are discussions about the mythological characteristics of whales, the history of the whaling industry, the discovery that whales use sound to communicate with one another, the origins of the movement to save the whales, the disruption of whale communication by shipping traffic, as well as the social nature of whales and whether this solitary whale would experience the emotion of loneliness.  I found all of this to be very interesting but the footage of the whales encountered during the expedition is absolutely breathtaking, especially the images from trackers placed on the whales because they are so immersive!  I enjoyed this documentary very much but, honestly, I don't think it needs to be seen on the big screen (it will be available on VOD starting July 16).

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Kristin Chenoweth at Deer Valley

Last night I got to see Kristin Chenoweth perform with the Utah Symphony at Deer Valley and I can't even begin to express how much I loved this concert!  I know that I am starting to sound like a broken record but I really missed seeing concerts at Deer Valley last summer!  Sitting outside and listening to music is so wonderful, especially up in the mountains because the temperature is a lot cooler than in the valley, and Kristin Chenoweth puts on a fantastic show!  Last night she was a bit emotional because this is the first opportunity that she has had to perform in front of people since the pandemic started.  She began with "Que Sera, Sera" and then performed a heartfelt version of Trisha Yearwood's "The Song Remembers When."  Next she sang "Zing! Went The Strings of My Heart" and gave an emotional rendition of "The Sweetheart Tree" which she dedicated to a friend who had recently died because it was her favorite song.  One of my favorite songs in the show was an incredibly sultry version of "Desperado" by The Eagles.  She brought out a guitar player (Josh Bryant) that she said she knew to perform with her and, after the song ended, he planted a very passionate kiss on her to the delight of the audience!  She gushed, "I didn't say how well I knew him!" Before the intermission, she sang "I Could Have Danced All Night" from My Fair Lady and then she said that she had to go change her clothes and we all had to go to the bathroom and buy a copy of her album, For The Girls, which was half price!  She returned to the stage with two incredibly talented vocalists, Crystal Monee Hall and Marissa Rosen, to perform "I'm a Woman" with choreography.  She was in the middle of a Broadway show, which included that song, and it only had a few performances before the pandemic shut everything down so she said that it was a lot of fun for the three of them to perform it again!  She also had them join her for "You Don't Own Me" and a beautiful rendition of "Hard Times Come Again No More."  Another favorite moment came next when she sang "Popular" from Wicked.  After this she introduced herself to all of the straight men and said she played Glinda in the show.  That got a huge laugh!  Then she sat on the piano and sang an incredible version of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow."  She gave the stage to Crystal and Marissa (she loves mentoring young singers) who sang "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" which was amazing!  During her last concert at Deer Valley, she gave one of the best performances of "Bring Him Home" from Les Miserables that I have ever heard and she did again last night!  I loved it so much!  Next came "Yesterday Once More" by the Carpenters (I may or may not have sung along to this) and she ended the show with a beautiful song written by her music director Mary-Mitchell Campbell called "Reasons For Hope."  For the encore, she sang "Smile" which seemed very appropriate for the past year.  I had such a wonderful time at this concert and I hope that she keeps coming back to Deer Valley because I will certainly be in the audience!

Saturday, July 10, 2021

We Are the Brennans

My Book of the Month selection for July was We Are the Brennans by Tracey Lange (the other options were Sisters in Arms by Kaia Alderson, Razorblade Tears by S. A. Cosby, The People We Keep by Allison Larkin, and 56 Days by Catherine Ryan Howard) and I really loved it. In fact, I stayed up reading into the early morning hours several times because I was so riveted by the story. Sunday Brennan wakes up in a Los Angeles hospital room with severe injuries from a car accident after a night of drinking. She eventually decides to return home to New York to be with her close-knit Irish-Catholic family to recover and deal with her legal situation. However, it turns out that she abandoned her father Mickey, her brothers Denny, Jackie, and Shane, and her fiance Kale (who has since married someone else) and fled to California five years ago without explanation after a traumatic incident and has never spoken to them about it. She tries to reconnect with her loved ones but she is not the only one who has been keeping secrets and the repercussions of her secret threaten to destroy the happiness and security of all of the Brennans. The family members love each other fiercely and they think that sparing each other from any unpleasantness is an act of kindness but it is driving them apart. Ultimately, they must learn to trust each other to get through their problems together. This family is incredibly dysfunctional and each character makes terrible decisions but I still found them all to be very sympathetic. The family dynamic feels authentic because it is informed by Lange's own experiences growing up with a large Irish-Catholic family and the interactions between the family members are both humorous and heart-breaking (and incredibly relatable). I was the most invested in the relationship between Sunday, Kale, and his wife Vivienne because it is so awkward, especially when Sunday and Kale realize they still have feelings for each other, and it is tragic because they could be together if they had only communicated with each other. The narrative alternates between multiple perspectives and Lange uses the device of ending a chapter with a conversation that is picked up in the next chapter by a different POV which is incredibly effective at drawing in the reader because I literally couldn't put this book down! It seems like a new secret is revealed in every chapter, several of which really surprised me, and I really appreciated the fact that every problem isn't magically solved in the end but the resolution still feels incredibly hopeful. If you love a good generational saga as much as I do, I highly recommend We Are the Brennans.

Friday, July 9, 2021

Black Widow

Last night I finally had the chance to see the long-awaited movie Black Widow at a Thursday preview and it was both entertaining and surprisingly poignant.  In a flashback scene set in 1995, a young Natasha Romanoff (Ever Anderson) and Yelena Belov (Violet McGraw) are surrogate daughters to Alexei Shastakov (David Harbour), a Russian super-soldier akin to Captain America named Red Guardian, and Melina Vostokoff (Rachel Weisz), a Black Widow, to help maintain their covers as part of a sleeper cell in Ohio.  When the mission ends, both Natasha and Yelena are subjected to psychological reprogramming in the Red Room training facility to become Black Widows themselves.  The action resumes in the immediate aftermath of the events in Captain America: Civil War with Natasha (Scarlett Johansson) on the run from Secretary of State Thaddeus Ross (William Hurt).  Yelena (Florence Pugh) is still a Black Widow subject to chemical mind control by the head of the Red Room, General Dreykov (Ray Winstone).  However, while on a mission, she comes in contact with the antidote that removes the Red Room's control and sends it to Natasha who comes looking for her in Budapest.  Yelena's story brings up unsettling memories of a former mission (we finally find out what happened in Budapest with Clint Barton) so Natasha decides to find and destroy the Red Room with the help of Alexei and Melina who also have ties to Dreykov.  The action is absolutely thrilling, especially in the many hand-to-hand combat sequences, and I was really impressed by Pugh because she definitely holds her own with Johansson who is as kick-ass as usual.  I have always really enjoyed the character of Black Widow but I especially loved her arc in this movie because she is forced to confront the demons from her past and is able to find a bit of redemption.  I also loved the exploration of what it means to be a family and the interactions between Natasha, Yelena, Alexei, and Milena are highly emotional as they process the trauma they have all been through but they are also often quite humorous, particularly a running gag about the superhero landing pose.  My only complaint is that the stakes are not as high as they could have been because we know Natasha's fate and that casts a bit of a pall on the proceedings.  Nevertheless, this is a worthy send off for Scarlett Johansson and the Black Widow character and I would highly recommend seeing it in IMAX.

Note:  This also feels like a beginning for Florence Pugh in the franchise but I am not sure how I feel about the set-up for her character (it goes without saying that you should definitely stay for an end credits scene).

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Utah Symphony at the Waterfall

It was a lovely night for an outdoor concert last night!  This Utah Symphony concert at the Waterfall Amphitheatre at Thanksgiving Point is always one of my favorite events of the summer and I really missed it last year!  It felt so good to be sitting outside listening to wonderful music!  I brought a blanket, a picnic, and a book and happily waited in the sunshine for the orchestra, under the baton of Conner Covington, to take the stage for a stirring and patriotic program.  The concert began with Liberty Fanfare by John Williams and continued with Variations on America by Charles Ives (I loved all of the different versions of the theme from My Country, 'Tis of Thee in this piece).  Then the orchestra played the Overture to West Side Story and this made me really excited for the new movie coming in December.  Next came Semper Fidelis, which is the official march of the U.S. Marine Corps, by John Philip Sousa and this was quite stirring!  The first set concluded with Lincoln Portrait by Aaron Copland.  It was narrated by Lt. Governor Deidre Henderson and it was amazing because it combined the words of Abraham Lincoln with incredible music.  After the intermission, the orchestra played Silver Fanfare by Peter Boyer, Olympic Fanfare and Theme by John Williams (this made me realize that the Summer Olympics will be on in just a few weeks!), "Hymn to the Fallen" from Saving Private Ryan by John Williams, and "Nimrod" from Enigma Variations by Edward Elgar (which was absolutely beautiful).  The final piece, Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, is a Utah Symphony summer tradition and I am really happy that it is back!  It is absolutely epic and the final theme (you can probably hear it in your head right now) gave me goosebumps!  I loved it!  For the encore, they played a rousing rendition of Stars and Stripes Forever by John Philip Sousa which ended in a spectacular fireworks show!  I had so much fun at this concert (I love outdoor performances) and I am looking forward to seeing the Utah Symphony perform several more concerts at the Deer Valley Music Festival this month (go here for information and tickets).

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Guys and Dolls at HCT

Last night I saw HCT's wildly entertaining production of the old favorite Guys and Dolls and I thoroughly enjoyed it! The story, which is a bit dated but still a lot of fun, revolves around the romantic struggles between Nathan Detroit (Blake Barlow), who runs the oldest established permanent floating crap game in New York, and Miss Adelaide (Kelly Pulver), his long-suffering fiancee of fourteen years, as well as Sky Masterson (Preston Taylor), a charismatic professional gambler, and Sarah Brown (Jisel Soleil Ayon), an uptight sergeant with the Save-a-Soul Mission who is trying to reform him. When Nathan Detroit bets Sky Masterson that he can't take Sarah to Havana, chaos ensues! All four leads give wonderful performances but I found Taylor to be incredibly appealing as Sky, especially in "Never Been In Love Before," and I laughed out loud at Ayon's drunken antics in "Havana" and "If I Were a Bell." The choreography in this show is fantastic and "Luck Be a Lady" and "Sit Down You're Rockin' The Boat" are absolute showstoppers! I also really enjoyed Miss Adelaide's performances of "Bushel and A Peck" and "Take Back Your Mink" with the Hot Box dancers. The period costumes are a lot of fun, particularly all of the patterns used in the men's suits (I loved the pinstripes) and all of the details on the Save-A-Soul Mission uniforms. I am almost always impressed with the set design at Hale but Kacey Udey really outdid himself with this show. I loved the bold primary colors used in Mindy's Cafe, the Hot Box, and the Save-a-Soul Mission and I loved the contrast with the tropical pastel palette used in the Havana scenes. The projections on the giant LED screens are very well-done and enhance, rather than detract from, what is happening on stage. Finally, the technical aspects of this show are also outstanding. There are set pieces coming in from the wings, up from the pit, and down from the rafters for nearly every scene and it is quite impressive how seamlessly this happens (especially so early in the run). This is a fun, colorful, and energetic show that everyone will enjoy (the tween sitting next to me loved it) and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here). It plays on the Young Living Centre Stage through August 14.

Note:  Also, don't forget Always Patsy Cline playing on the Sorenson Legacy Jewel Box Stage through August 28 (go here for tickets).
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