Last night I went to see Utah Opera's production of The Little Prince. I almost didn't get a ticket because I don't usually like modern operas with librettos in English and my only experience with the novella by Antoine de Saint-Exupery, upon which the opera is based, is when I was forced to read it in French when I was a senior in high school (I didn't understand it at all). I am so glad that I decided to get a ticket any way because I loved it! The story begins with a Pilot (Jared Bybee) telling a group of school children (Choristers of the Madeleine Choir School) about a drawing of a snake eating an elephant. Every adult thought it was a hat which proves that adults can't see anything! Then he tells them of crash landing his plane in the desert and meeting the Little Prince (Nitai Fluchel) who wants a drawing of a sheep to eat all of the bushes, especially the baobab trees, threatening to overtake his planet. The Prince then recounts his life story on his planet which contains three volcanoes, one active and two dormant, and his beautiful, but vain, Rose (Grace Kahl). When the Rose treats him badly, the Prince decides to visit other planets. On the first planet, he meets The King (Tyrell Wilde) who has no subjects and only issues orders that can be followed such as commanding the sun to set. On the second planet, he meets the Vain Man (Joshua Lindsay) who wants to be the most admired man on an otherwise uninhabited planet. On the third planet, he meets The Drunkard (Addison Marlor) who drinks to forget his shame over drinking too much. On the fourth planet, he meets The Businessman (Jesus Vicente Murillo) who fails to see the beauty of the stars by his need to count and catalogue them to prove ownership. On the fifth planet, he meets The Lamplighter (Addison Marlor) who blindly follows orders to light and extinguish a lamppost every 30 minutes to correspond to day and night on his planet. The Prince finds all of these adults to be ridiculous (the allegory was lost on me when I read it in French) so he decides to visit Earth and lands in the desert. He meets a Snake (Joshua Lindsay) who tells him he can send him home any time he wishes. He sees a rosebush which makes him think his Rose is just ordinary. Finally, he sees a Fox (Melanie Ashkar) who tells him that you can only see with your heart not your eyes and that spending time with his Rose has made it special. He decides that he misses his Rose and wants to go back home. He takes the Pilot to a well to find Water (Melissa Heath) which saves him and makes arrangements with the Snake to return home. The Pilot is upset but the Prince tells him not to worry that he has died because his body is just a shell that is too heavy to return to his planet. The Snake strikes, the Prince disappears, and the Pilot repairs his plane. The story ends with the Pilot telling the children that he can always see the Prince by looking at the stars. This story of friendship, loneliness, love, and loss is so touching (I definitely need to read it again in English!) and Academy Award-winning composer Rachel Portman's music is incredibly beautiful. I loved the costumes, especially the king's long train, and the set, which consists of a book-lined study and transforms into hundreds of pages from books to represent the desert. The Choristers of the Madeleine School Choir, especially Fluchel who is amazing, are so talented and their voices add so much to the story. It is a magical production and I highly recommend it (go here for tickets).
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Dear Evan Hansen in Las Vegas
This weekend I went on my first road trip of 2019 and I had so much fun! I love road trips so when I found out that the musical Dear Evan Hansen was playing at the Smith Center in Las Vegas I got a ticket the day they went on sale. I have wanted to see this musical for a really long time and, even though it is coming to the Eccles Theatre next season, I didn't want to wait! I packed my car Thursday night so I could leave as soon as school was out on Friday to make it to Las Vegas for the Saturday matinee. It was a quick trip but worth it because I loved this show so much! Evan Hansen (Stephen Christopher Anthony) suffers from anxiety and feels insignificant and all alone ("Waving Through a Window"). Heidi (Jessica Phillips), his busy single mother, doesn't know what to do to help him ("Anybody Have a Map?"). His one friend, Jared (Jared Goldsmith), is only nice to him so his parents will pay for his car insurance and he is too scared to talk to Zoe (Maggie McKenna), the girl he likes. His therapist encourages him to write letters to himself to help build his confidence but Connor (Marrick Smith), a deeply troubled young man, intercepts one from the printer because it mentions his sister Zoe. When Connor takes his own life, his parents, Cynthia (Christiane Noll) and Larry (Aaron Lazar), find the letter, and assuming it is a suicide note, reach out to Evan. To comfort Connor's parents, Evan pretends that they were friends ("For Forever"). When Cynthia and Larry press for more information, Evan asks Jared to create a history of emails between him and Connor ("Sincerely, Me"). Larry and Zoe struggle to reconcile Evan's version of Connor with the difficult son and brother they knew ("Requiem"). Zoe tells Evan that the only nice thing Connor ever said to her was in his suicide note, which Evan wrote ("If I Could Tell Her"). Alana (Phoebe Koyabe), another lonely girl at school, wants Evan to do more to keep Connor's memory alive ("Disappear") so they create The Connor Project. Evan gives a heartfelt speech at an assembly ("You Will Be Found") about loneliness and it goes viral. He begins a relationship with Zoe ("Only Us") and bonds with her family ("To Break in a Glove") to the exclusion of Jared, Alana, and his Mom ("Good For You"). When the truth is finally revealed ("Words Fail"), Evan realizes that he was never really alone ("So Big/So Small"). This story is incredibly powerful and anyone who has ever felt like they don't belong will be moved by Evan's story (the people in my audience were so overcome they started applauding before the final song was over and didn’t stop). I loved every song and how they are staged but my favorite was "You Will Be Found" which brought tears to my eyes. I also really liked the set because it consists of a series of moving panels on which computer screens and social media posts are projected. This is now one of my favorite shows and I can't wait to see it again when it comes to SLC.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder at HCT
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Bohemian Rhapsody Sing-Along
My obsession with Bohemian Rhapsody knows no bounds! When I heard that there was a sing-along version showing in cinemas in the UK, I really hoped that it would reach the US! When I learned that it would be in a theater near me I immediately bought a ticket and went on Saturday night. I had heard complaints that people were not singing but I hoped for a fun and rowdy crowd. As soon as I entered the theater I felt the energy and knew it would be completely awesome! Sing-alongs (go here and here for others that I have attended) feature the full length movie with the lyrics to the songs on screen, much like Karaoke. The crowd was a little bit tentative during "Somebody to Love" but once we got to "Fat Bottomed Girls" everyone was singing at full volume! In the scenes where Queen performs "Killer Queen" on Top of the Pops and records "Seven Seas of Rhye" and "Bohemian Rhapsody," the words are not on the screen but we sang them any way, especially the Galileos! Everyone stomped and clapped during "We Will Rock You" and it really felt as if we were at a Queen concert! The absolute best part was the Live Aid concert. We did the claps for "Radio Ga Ga" and we participated in Freddie's call and response (although we couldn't sustain the "Ay-Oh" for as long as Freddie did which made us all laugh). By the time we got to "We Are The Champions," we all were swaying our arms in the air and we even applauded at the end of the concert. They included the words to "Don't Stop Me Now" and "The Show Must Go On" in the credits and most of us stayed to sing these songs as well. It was so much fun! My only complaint is that, even though I know the words to every single song (I have listened to nothing but Queen since I saw the movie for the first time), I paid so much attention to the words on the screen that I missed some of what was happening. I have seen this movie so many times that it didn't really matter but if you are seeing Bohemian Rhapsody for the first time I definitely recommend the regular format! As far as I know, the sing-along will be in theaters through the rest of this week so check it out if you want to have a good time...
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Replicas
I found the trailer for Replicas to be very intriguing so I decided to see as part of my Friday night double feature. Unfortunately, that decision was a mistake because this is a terrible movie. William Foster (Keanu Reeves) is a scientist working at Bionyne who is trying to transfer neural pathways in the brain from a human host to a synthetic host. His latest effort has been unsuccessful and he is feeling pressure from his boss (John Ortiz) and faces losing his funding. When Foster takes his family on vacation they are involved in an accident that kills his wife and three children. Grief stricken, he saves their neural pathways and coerces his colleague Ed (Thomas Middleditch) to clone their bodies so he can transfer their memories to their new brains. When they are successful he learns the true nature of the company he works for and that his boss considers his family to be the property of Bionyne. He figures out why his experiments have been failing and successfully transfers his own neural pathways into the synthetic host so it can fight everyone tracking his family. While the concept for this movie is really interesting, the execution is filled with flaws. The plot makes absolutely no sense. How did Foster survive a car crash that killed his entire family with only a scratch on his forehead? How was Ed suddenly able to clone three human beings after minimal success with animals? How was Foster able to survive mapping his own neural pathways when his previous experiments required a donor who had died? With a story this implausible I am sometimes willing to suspend my disbelief if I am given a reason to care. There are big themes here but there is absolutely no exploration of the ethics involved in playing God. The acting is abysmal. Reeves is known for his flat monotone delivery but some of his line readings in this movie are so bad they elicited laughter from my audience (for the wrong reasons). The CGI is a complete mess and the scenes where the synthetic robot attacks the bad guys (who are all wearing black suits so we can tell that they are villains) are so bad I had to wonder about the budget for this movie. Even if you thought the trailer looked interesting definitely give this a miss!
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