Friday, July 26, 2024
Deadpool & Wolverine
Wednesday, July 24, 2024
National Anthem
Monday, July 22, 2024
Widow Clicquot
Sunday, July 21, 2024
The Hunchback of Notre Dame at Murray Park Amphitheater
Friday, July 19, 2024
Twisters
Thursday, July 18, 2024
Ben Platt at the Eccles
Wednesday, July 17, 2024
Touch
Saturday, July 13, 2024
Longlegs
Friday, July 12, 2024
Hootie & The Blowfish at Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre
Thursday, July 11, 2024
Schubert's Symphony No. 6 at St. Mary's Church
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
Crazy for You at the SCERA Shell Outdoor Theatre
When the summer shows at the SCERA Shell Outdoor Theatre were announced, I was most excited for Crazy for You because it is so fun with lots of fantastic singing and dancing. I had a wonderful time watching this delightful production under the stars last night. Bobby Child (Cam Bronson) wants to be a dancer in the Zangler Follies but his fiance Irene Roth (Lauren Billings) is eager to get married after waiting five years and his mother Lottie (Tina Fontana) wants him to work at the family bank. He is sent by the bank to Deadrock, Nevada to foreclose on a theatre owned by Everett Baker (Quin Swallow) but he falls in love with Everett's daughter Polly (Aubrey Jackson) and decides to save the theatre instead. Polly doesn't want anything to do with him so he impersonates Bela Zangler and brings his friends from the Zangler Follies to Deadrock for a show to raise the money to pay the mortgage. Chaos ensues when both Irene and the real Bela Zangler (Evan Meigs) come to town! The plot is a bit thin but it matters not because the best part of this show is all of the classic songs by George and Ira Gershwin, including "Shall We Dance," "Someone to Watch Over Me," "Embraceable You," "I Got Rhythm," "They Can't Take That Away From Me," and "But Not For Me." The choreography is spectacular and I especially enjoyed watching the dancing from the talented and enthusiastic ensemble in "I Can't Be Bothered Now," "Slap That Bass" (the use of rope as lassos and strings on a bass is so fun), "Stiff Upper Lip," and "Nice Work If You Can Get It." I also loved all of the physical comedy in "What Causes That" (the kids sitting around me laughed out loud through the whole number). Jackson has a lovely voice and her versions of "Someone to Watch Over Me," "Embraceable You," and "But Not For Me" are incredibly poignant and show a vulnerable side to the indomitable Polly. Bronson is very charismatic and has some impressive tap dancing skills (I love to see tap dancing in a show which is why I was so excited to see this). Another standout from the cast is Billings. She only has one big number, "Naughty Baby," but she makes it count by vamping it up in a thrilling performance. This set might be my favorite that I've seen at the SCERA Shell! Very detailed set pieces rotate to become the Zangler Follies Theatre, the buildings on Main Street in Deadrock, and backstage at the Gaiety Theatre in Deadrock and the backdrops, featuring the New York skyline and the red rocks of the desert, are visually stunning. All of the period costumes are great but I really liked the glitzy showgirl costumes and the colorful cowboy shirts. I highly recommend getting a ticket to this entertaining song and dance extravaganza during its run at the SCERA Shell (go here) because it is the perfect way to spend a summer evening (especially if you are an old-school musical theatre fan). Who could ask for anything more?
Tuesday, July 9, 2024
Green Border
Monday, July 8, 2024
Daddio
Sunday, July 7, 2024
Janet Planet
Saturday, July 6, 2024
Fly Me to the Moon
Thursday, July 4, 2024
MaXXXine
Wednesday, July 3, 2024
The Nutty Professor at HCT
Other than one of the best versions of Fiddler on the Roof that I've ever seen, I haven't been very impressed with the shows at HCT this season. Happily, that changed with their production of the new musical The Nutty Professor, which I was able to see last night, because it is so much fun! I don't know what I loved more: the story, the performances, the choreography, the costumes, the sets, or the projections! Julius Kelp (Spencer Jackson Hohl) is a nerdy and socially awkward chemistry professor at Korwin College who is often reprimanded by the dean, Dr. Warfield (BJ Whimpey), for blowing up his lab. He befriends Stella Purdy (Bre Welch), a new adjunct professor, but when he is humiliated by the star football players (Eric Ascione and Even McKay Naef), he decides that he must make some changes in order to impress her. He creates a serum that transforms him into the handsome and charismatic, but narcissistic, Buddy Love and soon the entire studentbody, including Stella, is under his spell. However, when Stella sees that Buddy is having a negative influence on the students, she realizes that it is Julius who she truly loves! This is a delightful and entertaining show and I love the message that it is always better to be yourself. Hohl is absolutely hilarious as Julius/Buddy because he is so good at the physical comedy! A scene where the serum wears off and he keeps transforming from Buddy to Julius and back again at inopportune times, with just a change in posture and facial expression, had me laughing out loud. He is also incredibly charming in all of the scenes with the students and it is entirely believable that Buddy could have them all swooning over him (I think Hohl may have actually taken the serum because all of the girls around me were swooning over him, too!). Welch has a beautiful voice and I especially loved her performances of "Too Much for Me" and "While I Still Have the Time." Everyone in the ensemble is insanely talented but I have to give a shoutout to Phil Lewis for the epic baton twirling! The choreography by Afton Wilson is amazing and it is worth the price of admission just to see all of the dazzling song and dance numbers. My favorites were "Dance to My Own Drummer," "(Hey Is It Me Or) Is It Hot in Here," "Buddy's Place" (especially when Julius suddenly appears and starts dancing awkwardly and then all of the students mimic him), "Everything You've Ever Learned is Wrong," and "Step Out of Your Shell" (the ballroom dancing is lovely). All of Joy Zhu's costumes are incredible (I was impressed by the sheer number of them) but I really loved the purple sequined suit worn by Buddy the first time he appears and all of the purple and yellow uniforms worn by the Korwin College cheerleaders, football players, and marching band (probably because they are the same colors as my college alma mater). I always love the sets at HCT and this one is no exception! The attention to detail in Julius' laboratory (I loved all of the neon potions in the beakers) is fabulous! Finally, the projections featuring atoms and the periodic table on the LED screens around the theater and on the stage are very amusing! I really cannot say enough about every aspect of this production and I highly recommend that you do not miss it! It runs on the Young Living Centre Stage through August 17 and tickets may be purchased here (but act quickly because many shows are sold out).
Note: I saw Bre Welch last night in this show and her husband Addison the night before in Kiss Me Kate!
Tuesday, July 2, 2024
Kiss Me Kate at CPT
I went to see Kiss Me Kate at CPT a few weeks ago with my sisters but I had to leave at intermission because I was feeling sick. I was really disappointed because I had been looking forward to it and I liked it up to that point. I decided to get another ticket and, thankfully, I was able to stay for the whole show last night! Ironically, I enjoyed the first act, which I had already seen, much more than the second. This features the classic show-within-a-show conceit as a theatre company stages a musical version of Shakespeare's play The Taming of the Shrew. Chaos ensues when life imitates art and the former husband and wife actors Fred Graham (Addison Welch) and Lilli Vanessi (Michelle Blake) engage in backstage squabbling that mirrors that of their characters Petruchio and Katherine on stage. I especially loved the scenes from The Taming of the Shrew (I will be seeing it at the Utah Shakespeare Festival later this summer) because they involve a lot of physical comedy that made me and the rest of the audience laugh out loud as Fred and Lilli actually fight with each other in character ("Were Thine That Special Face" and "I Sing of Love" were highlights because they are absolutely hilarious). I think the story takes a detour in the second act in favor of random musical numbers ("Too Darn Hot") and a less compelling subplot involving a romance between Lois Lane (Keely Parry), who plays Bianca, and Bill Calhoun (Isaac Carrillo), who plays Lucentio ("Always True to You in My Fashion" and "Bianca"), until Fred and Lilli, as well as Petruchio and Katherine, suddenly get back together without much motivation. Even though the musical numbers in the second act are extremely well done (the tapping in "Too Darn Hot" is amazing and the English teacher in me loved "Brush Up Your Shakespeare") I found my mind wandering because I wanted more hijinks from the main couple. My complaints are with the material and not with the cast because the performances are fantastic. Both Welch and Blake have beautiful voices and their renditions of "So In Love" and "Where Is the Life That Late I Led," respectively, gave me goosebumps. As previously mentioned, their comedic timing and chemistry with each other is so much fun to watch. Parry and Carillo also have beautiful voices and the ensemble is incredibly talented but Jeremy Botelho and Brandon Garside practically steal the show as gangsters collecting on an IOU who end up on stage. The choreography, particularly for "Another Op'nin, Another Show," "Tom, Dick, or Harry," and "Too Darn Hot," is incredibly dynamic and high energy. The set, featuring backstage, an alley behind the theatre, dressing rooms, as well as a curtain and backdrops for the production of The Taming of the Shrew, is brilliant and the period costumes look great. I enjoyed this production even if the show itself is not my favorite. It runs on the Barlow Main Stage through July 13 and tickets may be purchased here.