Showing posts with label Grand Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grand Theatre. Show all posts

Thursday, March 21, 2024

Arsenic and Old Lace at the Grand Theatre

 
Last night I had a lot of fun seeing the hilarious play Arsenic and Old Lace at the Grand Theatre.  Mortimer Brewster (Bryan Harper) visits his elderly aunts Abby (Betsy West) and Martha (Alyssa Hickman Grove) only to discover a dead body in the window seat.  He learns that several old and lonely men have visited, answering an advertisement for a room to rent, and that the Brewster sisters have done their Christian duty by ending their misery with a glass of elderberry wine (with the addition of arsenic).  Their nephew and Mortimer's brother Teddy (Jim Nelson), who believes that he is Teddy Roosevelt, buries these men in the cellar because he thinks he is digging locks for the Panama Canal.  Chaos ensues when Mortimer's other brother Jonathan (David Hanson), a homicidal maniac, returns to the house needing to dispose of his own dead body which eventually ends up in the window seat, too!  Add an unwilling accomplice (Isaac Maltby), a bumbling policeman who really wants to be a playwright (Robert A. Easton), and a curious fiance (Katie Plott) and you have a thoroughly entertaining dark comedy that will keep you laughing all evening!  I really enjoyed the physicality of the performances and the cast has great comedic timing.  I especially loved it every time Teddy charges up the staircase as if he were in the Battle of San Juan Hill and when Mortimer and Jonathan each think they are hiding a different body in the window seat.  I also enjoyed the over the top characterizations because Harper is completely overwrought as Mortimer, West and Grove are incredibly dry and understated as the Brewster sisters, and Hanson is suitably menacing as Jonathan.  Finally, I loved the elaborate multi-level set (the staircase and window seat are fantastic) which includes all of the little details that you would see in a fussy drawing room inhabited by spinsters (the lace antimacassar on the back of the chair was my favorite) and the period costumes (the old fashioned dresses worn by the Brewster sisters are so funny compared to the other costumes).  This play is a classic comedy for a reason and fans of the genre are sure to love it (there was a big crowd last night).  It runs Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays (with several Saturday matinees) through April 6 (go here for tickets).

Friday, October 6, 2023

Sweeney Todd at the Grand Theatre

Last night I went to see Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street at the Grand Theatre and I think it is the best production I've seen there!  Sweeney Todd (Dallyn Vail Bayles) is a Victorian-era barber who has just returned to London after 15 years of exile in Australia.  When he learns the tragic fate of his wife and daughter, he immediately wants to get revenge on Judge Turpin (Patrick Kintz), the man who ruined his life by bringing false charges against him.  He returns to his former rooms above the pie shop run by Mrs. Lovett (Tamara Howell) and, when he discovers that she has kept all of his barbering tools, he decides to set up shop and lure the judge in for a shave so he can slit his throat.  However, the judge eludes him and he vows to take vengeance on the whole human race.  He begins to kill all of his customers and Mrs. Lovett uses the bodies in her meat pies!  Eventually, his quest for revenge turns to madness.  As with all Stephen Sondheim musicals, the music is absolutely brilliant and I love the operatic quality of the songs in this show (even if they are really dark).  Bayles and Howell have beautiful voices and really bring these despicable characters to life in a way that is both comedic and tragic.  Their rendition of "A Little Priest" is a highlight and had me laughing out loud while Howell's version of "By the Sea" is incredibly poignant.  Brock Dalgleish, as Anthony Hope, gave me goosebumps when he sang "Johanna" (my favorite song in the show) as did Samantha Paredes, as Johanna, during "Green Finch and Linnet Bird."  I also really enjoyed "The Ballad of Sweeney Todd" and its many reprises sung by the ensemble because it functions as a Greek chorus with a group of Londoners recounting the legend of Sweeney Todd.  The period costumes and elaborate multi-level set vividly bring Victorian London to life and the dramatic red lighting emphasizes the horror of what is happening.  The staging of the murders is clever with Sweeney's barber chair over a trap door with a slide that sends the victims to the bake house.  I love this show and this production is so good!  It runs at the Grand Theatre through October 28 (go here for tickets) and I highly recommend it!

Note:  It was a lot of fun for me to see my former student Christian Johnston as Pirelli (he is really good).

Friday, August 25, 2023

[title of show] at the Grand Theatre

Last night I went to see [title of show] at the Grand Theatre and, once again, I was really happy to have the chance to see a show with which I was unfamiliar!  This musical about the writing of a musical is clever and funny (especially if you are a fan of Broadway) and I really enjoyed it.  Jeff (Jacob Barnes) and Hunter (Brian Cota) are two struggling writers living and working temp jobs in New York.  They hear about a new musical theatre festival and, even though the deadline for submissions is only three weeks away, they decide to enter with the help of their friends Susan (Ashley Coombs) and Heidi (Michelle Lynn Thompson) and a pianist named Larry (Jonathan McDonald).  As they struggle to write material for an entirely original musical, they realize that their conversations about writing the musical are more interesting than what they are writing and that becomes the show.  Once it is accepted by the festival, the show's subject becomes the process of mounting a show Off-Broadway and then transferring it to Broadway (including videos on YouTube called The [title of show] Show that you can actually find on YouTube).  It is so meta because Jeff Bowen (music and lyrics) and Hunter Bell (book) really wrote the show about their experiences with their friends Susan Blackwell and Heidi Blickenstaff and the four of them actually starred in productions both on and off Broadway with Larry Pressgrove as musical director!  It is so fun!  My favorite songs are "An Original Musical," about how hard it is to come up with an original idea (I loved the lyric that makes fun of turning movies into musicals), "Die, Vampire, Die," about refusing to listen to the doubts inside your head about your art, "Change It/Don't Change It," about refusing to abandon your original idea to make it more commercial, and "Nine People's Favorite Thing," about being proud of your work no matter what.  The song "Secondary Characters" also made me laugh (this show explores a lot of the tropes found in Broadway musicals).  All of the actors do a great job with the material and give energetic performances but I was especially impressed with McDonald because he plays the piano on stage.  Speaking of which, the audience is also located on the stage (it is a so-called Backstage Production) so it really feels like you are observing the writing process inside Jeff's loft apartment.  I was very pleasantly surprised by this show and I would definitely recommend it, especially to fans of musical theatre.  It runs at the Grand Theatre through September 9 with shows Thursday - Saturday (go here for tickets).

Note:  This show does contain a lot of profanity (in fact, there is a running bit about the need to clean up the language for families, tourists, and the ladies who see matinees).

Friday, May 19, 2023

In the Heights at the Grand Theatre

Last night I was really excited to see In the Heights at the Grand Theatre.  I love this show so much and this is a fantastic production!  A woman named Claudia (Sonia Maritza Inoa-Rosado Maughan) acts as an abuela, or grandmother, to everyone in a small community in Washington Heights.  Usnavi (Armando Serrano) runs a bodega which is beset with problems, including a refrigerator that doesn't work, and tries to keep his wayward cousin Sonny (Avery Sims) in line but dreams of returning to the cool breezes of the Dominican Republic.  Vanessa (Sophia Morrill Mancilla) is hoping to escape the barrio, and an abusive mother, to move downtown but a credit check for her new apartment stands in her way.  Nina (Aisha Marie Garcia) is the pride of her parents, Kevin (Monte Garcia) and Camila (Sophia Valdez Davis), and the whole neighborhood because she received a scholarship to Stanford.  But college is a lot harder than she thought it would be, especially since she has to work two jobs to make ends meet, and she is thinking of quitting.  Benny (Onias Snuka) dreams of taking over the cab company owned by Kevin but his interest in Nina sours his relationship with his employer.  Abuela Claudia has looked after all of them their whole lives and she just might find a way to help them make their dreams come true!  The entire cast, which is made up of POC, is amazing but the standouts for me are Garcia and Snuka as Nina and Benny.  My favorite songs in the show are "When You're Home," "Sunrise," and "When the Sun Goes Down" and Garcia and Snuka perform them with so much emotion that I had tears in my eyes during all three!  I also really enjoyed Whitney Harris Gutirrez as Daniela because she is so dramatic and her renditions of "No Me Diga" and "Carnaval del Barrio" are so fun.  The ensemble is also really strong and they can really dance!  Speaking of which, the choreography for "In the Heights," "96,000," "The Club" (the dance-off between couples is so sultry), "Blackout," and "Carnaval del Barrio" is incredibly energetic but I absolutely loved that it seamlessly includes a member of the ensemble who is in a wheelchair (Mason Burr is a fantastic dancer).  I was also really impressed with the set, which features storefronts for Daniela's salon, Usnavi's bodega, and the Rosario Cab Company as well as Claudia's stoop with fire escapes connecting them, and the lighting design, especially the fireworks and the candlelight procession during "Alabanza."  I have seen this show many times and this production is one of the best!  Definitely get a ticket (go here).

Friday, March 31, 2023

Harvey at the Grand Theatre

Last night I had the opportunity to see a delightful production of Harvey at the Grand Theatre.  I was especially excited for this play because I had never seen it, or the movie adaptation starring Jimmy Stewart, before and I was very pleasantly surprised by how moving I found it!  A social climber named Veta Louise Simmons (Kristin Housley) is exasperated when her brother, Elwood P. Dowd (Roger Dunbar), interrupts one of her gatherings by introducing his imaginary friend Harvey, a six foot one-and-a-half inch tall white rabbit, to her high society guests.  Veta is humiliated by his behavior, and what it might mean for her daughter Myrtle Mae (Niki Rahimi) and her chances for an advantageous marriage, so she makes the drastic decision to have him committed to a sanitariam called Chumley's Rest.  However, when Veta attempts to explain the existence of Harvey to Dr. Sanderson (Aron Cain), he mistakenly assumes that she is the one who needs to be committed.  Hijinks ensue when everyone, including Dr. Harold Chumley (Mickey Goldstein), the orderly Duane Wilson (Robert A. Easton), Nurse Ruth Kelly (Angie Nicole), and Veta's lawyer Judge Omar Gaffney (Jeffrey Owen), tries to determine who is really crazy!  In the end, Veta realizes that Elwood is a kind man and that she doesn't want to change him even if it means living with Harvey!  I really loved the message about the importance of kindness, which seems particularly salient in these times, and Dunbar is fantastic as Elwood because he exudes warmth and charm in every scene even when all of the other characters are caught up in the chaos.  Housley is also a lot of fun to watch, especially when Veta becomes hilariously overwrought on Dr. Sanderson's fainting couch!  Speaking of which, the elaborate sets consisting of the wood paneled library in the old Dowd family mansion and the reception room of Chumley's Rest are quite impressive.  There is a fun bit of business involving a maid (Teresa McLeod) as the sets are changed from one to the other that is very effective as well as some great special effects that make the invisible Harvey an actual presence on stage (I especially liked his inclusion during the bows).  This heart-warming show put a huge smile on my face and I highly recommend it (go here for tickets).

Friday, February 17, 2023

The 39 Steps at the Grand Theatre

I was so excited to see a new production of The 39 Steps at the Grand Theatre last night because it is one of the funniest plays I have ever seen!  It is a hilarious spoof of the 1935 spy movie of the same name by Alfred Hitchcock and features many references to other movies by the director, including Psycho, Strangers on a Train, Rear Window, North By Northwest, and Vertigo.  There are only four actors performing all of the roles and the action is lightning fast with scene changes and costume changes happening right on stage.  Nicholas Dunn plays Richard Hannay, a man at loose ends who becomes embroiled in a plot to stop a ring of spies from stealing military secrets after a mysterious woman named Annabella Schmidt is stabbed to death in his apartment.  Mara Lefler plays Annabella and several other women who become romantically involved with Hannay when he travels to Scotland to clear his name.  Michelle Lynn Thompson and Max Huftalin play every other character, including actors, traveling salesmen, policemen, innkeepers, farmers, spies, and more.  All four actors have brilliant comedic timing and I especially enjoyed it when Thompson and Huftalin performed several different characters in the same scene simply by changing hats and accents!  I also really enjoyed the physicality of the performances, such as when Dunn and Lefler get stuck trying to climb over a turnstile and when the two of them try to get undressed for bed while handcuffed together.  The audience sits right on the stage so it is an intimate space that is perfect for this show.  The sets and props are very minimal with pieces that are moved and reconfigured to become various locations such as Hannay's flat in London, a music hall, a train, a bridge, the moors, a crofter's cottage, a manor house, a hotel, an assembly hall, a police car, and the London Palladium.  The lighting design is brilliant, especially a sequence where Hannay is being pursued by planes across the moor, during another chase sequence on a train, and when Hannay jumps off a bridge.  The costumes are a lot of fun and are used to great effect to distinguish between the different characters.  I laughed out loud during the entire show and I had a wonderful time.  It is a Backstage at the Grand production and runs Thursday-Saturday until March 11 (go here for tickets).  I highly recommend it!

Friday, August 26, 2022

Disenchanted at the Grand Theatre

Last night I went to the Grand Theatre to see a production, in partnership with On Pitch Performing Arts, of Disenchanted.  I was not at all familiar with this musical but it is absolutely hilarious!  Masters of Ceremonies, Snow White (Christy Rolfe), Cinderella (Cariel Goodwin), and Sleeping Beauty (Chelsea Morris), along with their accompanist (Jennifer Morgan), present a vaudeville show telling how it really went down with all of the princesses before Walt got a hold of their stories!  Belle (Amy Shaffer) describes how crazy it is to live with objects that talk to her all of the time in "Insane," Hua Mulan (Jason Sin) explains why she really dressed like a man (spoiler alert: she's a lesbian) in "Without The Guy," the Little Mermaid (Andrea Del Mar Santiago) regrets her decision to give up her tail in "Two Legs," Pocahontas (Erin Dawson) points out all of the historical inaccuracies in her portrayal in "Honestly," the Princess Who Kissed a Frog (Quesley Bunch) wonders why it took so long for her to become a storybook princess in "Finally," and Princess Badroulbador (Allegra-Bree Mooreno) laments the fact that her name was changed to Jasmine and that she was relegated to a mere love interest in "Secondary Princess."  The ensemble speaks out about the fact that they were all drawn by men in "Big Tits," that they did not receive any compensation for their life stories in "Not Von Red Cent" featuring Rapunzel (Jenn Tate), that they are forced to starve themselves to keep their figures in "All I Wanna Do Is Eat," and the fact that the princes get all of the credit in the expletive laden "A Happy Tune."  They end the show with the message that they are all good enough as they really are in "Perfect" and a request that you forget the princesses you know in "One More Happ'ly Ever After."  I laughed and laughed at this show and I loved all of the funny little details such as when a stage hand brings out a leaf blower during Pocahontas' song and when Cinderella exchanges her glass slippers for Mickey Mouse slippers because her feet hurt!  Some of the cast members are better singers than others (Bunch was my favorite) but all of their characterizations are brilliant.  Their sparkly costumes incorporate the iconic elements that the Disney Princesses are known for but they have been adapted to be more appropriate for a stage show at a nightclub and they are so much fun.  The audience is sitting right on the stage so it has the feel of an intimate cabaret show and even features audience participation (I was singled out because I was sitting away from everyone else).  I had so much fun watching this musical spoof and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here).

Note:  This show features humor and language that some might find inappropriate.

Saturday, June 11, 2022

Head Over Heels at the Grand Theatre

Last night I went to the musical Head Over Heels at the Grand Theatre.  I didn't know anything about this show beyond the fact that it features the music of the Go-Go's but that was enough to get me there because they were one of my favorite bands when I was a teenager.  I am so glad that I spontaneously decided to get a ticket because I loved it.  The story is an adaptation of The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia by Sir Philip Sidney and it has a wonderful message about acceptance and living authentically.  Basilius (Zac Freeman) rules the peaceful and prosperous kingdom of Arcadia but he is incredibly rigid and refuses to deviate from long-held traditions to the detriment of his family.  His youngest daughter Philoclea (Elizabeth Petrucka) is in love with her childhood friend Musidorus (Michael Scott Johnson) but he doesn't approve of the match because he is a lowly shepherd.  He also expects his oldest daughter Pamela (Michelle Lynn Thompson) to marry well but she keeps rejecting all of her suitors while her handmaiden Mopsa (Madison Melia) pines away for her.  His wife Gynecia (Melody Baugh) is unhappy with her role but he refuses to give her a voice in ruling the kingdom.  He is summoned by the Oracle Pythio (K.J. Leuthauser) who gives him four prophecies of doom.  In order to save the kingdom, Basilius has the family go on a journey to Bohemia filled with mistaken identity, love triangles, sexual awakening, and self-discovery along the way.  Philoclea is eventually allowed to marry Musidorus, Pamela discovers her love for Mopsa, Basilius and Gynecia rekindle their love for each other, and Basilius gives up the crown in favor of Gynecia which creates a more open society.  Of course I loved all of the songs, especially "Mad About You" when Musidorus proposes to Philoclea, "Good Girl" when Philocea is forced to refuse him, "Our Lips Are Sealed" when both couples get together but decide to keep their love secret, "Head Over Heels" when both Basilius and Gynecia develop feelings for Musidorus who is posing as an Amazon warrior named Cleophila, "Heaven is a Place on Earth" when Basilius and Gynecia have an encounter but both believe that they are with Cleophilia, and "We Got the Beat" when the kingdom is saved.  I was really impressed with all of the performances, especially Petrucka because I loved her voice and Johnson because he is hilarious (especially as an Amazon warrior).  Everyone in the ensemble does an outstanding job with the choreography, particularly when they portray Musidorus' sheep.  The elaborate Elizabethan costumes worn by the main cast and the set featuring thatched cottages, stylized trees, and pastel tents give the production a fairy tale vibe that is very effective.  This show is so much fun (I had a hard time stopping myself from singing and dancing along with the cast) but it is also a wonderful reminder to accept people for who they are.  I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here) to one of the remaining performances through June 18.

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Noises Off at the Grand Theatre

Noises Off is one of my very favorite plays and I have seen it many times, including productions at PTC and the Utah Shakespeare Festival, so I was thrilled when I found out that the Grand Theatre was performing it this season.  I saw it last night and it wasn't quite up to par with those other productions but I definitely enjoyed it.  Lloyd Dallas (David Hanson), a temperamental and sarcastic director, is staging a play called Nothing's On starring Dotty Otley (JJ Neward), an aging television star, as Mrs. Clackett, Gary Lejeune (Nick Dunn), a scatterbrained actor incapable of improvising, as Roger Tramplemain, Brooke Ashton (Taylor McKay Barnes), a young and inexperienced actress involved with Lloyd, as Vicki, Frederick Fellowes (Michael Scott Johnson), an insecure and accident prone actor, as Philip Brent, Belinda Blair (Amy Williams), a reliable actress who knows all of the gossip about the cast, as Flavia Brent, and Selsdon Mowbray (Richard Scott), an accomplished actor who has a drinking problem and a tendency to miss his cues, as the Burglar.  Poppy Norton-Taylor (Anne Louise Brings) is the put-upon assistant stage manager who is also involved with Lloyd and Tim Allgood (Alvaro Cortez) is the overworked stage manager tasked with fixing every problem.  Act I involves a disastrous dress rehearsal before opening night involving missing props, a malfunctioning set, an actor questioning his character’s motivation, and a missing contact lens.  Act II takes place backstage while the show is on tour and features the deterioration of a relationship between Dotty and Gary where they do everything to sabotage each other's performance and Lloyd's ill-fated attempts to keep both Poppy and Brooke happy (and multiple attempts to have Tim buy them flowers).  Act III takes place at the end of the run and features a complete breakdown with the actors ad-libbing the entire scene.  I thought the performances were a bit uneven and the pace was sometimes sluggish (especially in the first act) but the physical comedy throughout had me laughing out loud.  I especially enjoyed it when Gary has a spectacular fall down the stairs (the audience spontaneously applauded after this), when two different understudies play the Burglar after Selsdon misses his cue and then finally enters, and when Frederick tries to perform with a head injury and a broken arm.  The elaborate set, especially backstage, and the costumes work really well for a play-within-in-play that fails so dramatically.  It has flaws but it is a lot of fun!  It runs at the Grand Theatre on the south campus of Salt Lake Community College through April 16 and tickets may be purchased here.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...