Saturday, December 2, 2023

Appalachian Spring

I really enjoyed last night's Utah Symphony concert because it featured such an eclectic program.  The orchestra was joined by pianist Awadagin Pratt for Johann Sebastian Bach's Keyboard Concerto in A Major.  What I really liked about this piece is that it features melodies played by the piano and strings together interspersed with showier passages for the piano.  Pratt has a light touch and is known for being agile, creative, and inventive so it was very entertaining watching his fingers fly up and down the keyboard.  He joined the orchestra once again to perform Rounds for Piano and String Orchestra by Jessie Montgomery.  According to Montgomery, it was inspired by the interconnectedness found in nature and how every living thing interacts with and impacts all of the living things around it with a multitude of outcomes.  I loved it because it evoked so many different emotions as I listened to it.  I especially enjoyed a passage where Pratt stood up to pluck the strings of the piano (I've never seen that before).  This piece was written specifically for Pratt and he improvises the conclusion so if you attend tonight's performance you will hear something entirely new.  After the intermission, the orchestra performed the Overture from The Greatest, an opera about Muhammad Ali composed by guest conductor Teddy Abrams.  He described it as loud, brash, and violent and I liked the urgency of the themes played by the strings, the bold fanfares by the brass, and the dramatic use of percussion.  The concert concluded with Appalachian Spring by Aaron Copland in its entirety rather than just the Orchestral Suite which is normally performed.  I always love hearing this piece performed live because the themes of peace and remembrance during war are incredibly poignant.  I especially love the variations on the Quaker hymn "Simple Gifts" which is first developed by a solo clarinet and then repeated by various instruments.  I was really excited for this concert because of Appalachian Spring but I ended up loving Rounds just as much and I recommend getting a ticket to tonight's performance (go here) to hear both of them!

Friday, December 1, 2023

Festival of Trees 2023

Yesterday I was a hostess at the Festival of Trees for the thirteenth year!  Various individuals and organizations decorate and then donate trees, usually to commemorate someone who has been ill or died.  These trees are put up for auction and then displayed at the Mountain America Expo Center for the public to view for the duration of the festival.  All of the proceeds go directly to Primary Children's Hospital so it is a really worthwhile cause.  In addition to the trees, there are centerpieces, wreaths, quilts, and gingerbread houses with lots of crafts and treats for purchase (I really love the cinnamon rolls).  Most of the trees below were in my assigned area but I also spent some time walking around and some of my favorite are also included.
My main job was to watch the tree below.  It sold at auction for $100,000 which is the most any tree has sold for in the history of the festival!  It was featured on the news yesterday morning so many people were looking for it and were eager to hear the story behind it.  I was inundated by people (but it kept me busy so my shift went by very quickly).
The festival continues at the Mountain America Expo Center through Saturday.  Go here for more information and tickets.

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Elf The Musical at HCT

Last night I saw HCT's production of Elf The Musical and I got a big dose of Christmas cheer! Santa Claus (Josh Richardson) tells the story of Buddy (David Paul Smith), a human who mistakenly believes that he is an elf because he crawled into his bag as a baby and was raised at the North Pole. After discovering who he really is, Buddy decides to find his dad, Walter Hobbs (Douglas Irey), and ends up bringing Christmas cheer to his new family, his girlfriend Jovie (Kelly Coombs), and everyone in New York City. The staging of the musical numbers is so much fun with exciting choreography and energetic performances. I especially loved the use of tricycles ridden by the elves in "Happy All the Time," the taxi cabs and police cars in "World's Greatest Dad," the tinsel used as jump ropes in "Sparklejollytwinklejingly," the confetti made of shredded paper in "Just Like Him," the real ice skates and a spectacular ice rink (with some cool technology that allows the actors to actually skate on it) in "A Christmas Song," the bags of toys in "Nobody Cares About Santa," and, of course, Santa's flying sleigh in the reprise of "A Christmas Song." The dazzling set pieces rise from the pit, descend from the rafters, and come in from the wings and my favorites were the snow globes used to designate the Empire State Building, Macy's Department Store, Rockefeller Plaza, and Central Park. I also loved the giant snowflakes with disco balls inside them hanging throughout the theatre. The costumes for Santa, Buddy, the elves at the North Pole, and the employees at Macy's are colorful and whimsical and I even liked the contemporary costumes worn by the employees at Greenway Publishing because they coordinated in shades of blue, gray, and green. Smith, who has appeared in many shows at HCT and is one of my favorites, is perfect as Buddy because his physicality and facial expressions are hilarious and his interactions with Coombs, as Jovie, are really sweet (they appeared together in HCT's production of Daddy Long Legs). I also really enjoyed Michelle Blake as Emily Hobbs and Cole Young as Michael Hobbs because their voices blend very well in the songs "I'll Belive In You" and "There Is a Santa Claus." However, Joanna Johnson, as Deb, steals every scene she is in because she is a hoot! I had a smile on my face from beginning to end and you would have to be a cotton-headed ninny-muggins to miss this show! I highly recommend it, especially to families during the holiday season (the little boy sitting near me was absolutely enthralled). It runs on the Young Living Centre Stage through January 6 (go here for tickets).

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Dream Scenario

I was really intrigued by the trailer for Dream Scenario so I went back to the Broadway (my second home) last night to see it.  I found it to be hilarious and thought-provoking.  Paul Matthews (Nicolas Cage) is a mild-mannered evolutionary biology professor who inexplicably begins appearing as a benign presence in other people's dreams.  When a former girlfriend writes an article about the phenomenon that goes viral he becomes an overnight sensation.  He basks in all of the attention he receives from his daughters (Lily Bird and Jessica Clement) and his students and, even though his wife (Julianne Nicholson) warns that there will be negative consequences, he appears on television and tries to parlay his new-found fame into a book deal by signing with an agent (Michael Cera).  Suddenly his presence in everyone's dreams becomes malevolent which causes him to be feared and then vilified.  He loses his job and his family and finds it impossible to appear in public without being attacked.  Eventually, people stop dreaming about him but he tries to hold on to his notoriety by writing a trashy tell-all book and appearing at third-rate events.  This is an incredibly clever social satire about the fickle nature of fame and how someone or something can quickly catch the attention of the collective unconscious and then, just as quickly, disappear.  The commentary about the devastating effects of cancel culture is particularly fascinating and the scene where Matthews films a tear-filled apology, which seems to be de rigueur for any celebrity embroiled in a scandal, is quite amusing.  I also really enjoyed the scene where his prospective agent tries to get him to take a deal endorsing Sprite, because it perfectly embodies influencer culture, and all of the dream sequences, because they blur the line between the real and the surreal.  Cage, with a balding head, large glasses, graying beard, and over-sized parka, gives one of his best performances as an ordinary man caught up in a situation that he doesn't understand and can't control because his sputtering reactions to what is happening to him (both good and bad) are so funny.  There is a sub-plot in the third act about a device inspired by Matthews that allows people to visit other people's dreams that didn't really work for me but most of this had me laughing out loud.  I definitely recommend it.

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Saltburn

The second movie in my double feature at the Broadway yesterday was Saltburn.  I was so excited to see this and it definitely did not disappoint!  Oliver Quick (Barry Keoghan) is a scholarship student at Oxford who struggles to fit in with his wealthier classmates.  He attracts the attention of the popular and aristocratic Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi) when he loans him his bicycle but gains his sympathy by describing his traumatic childhood with an alcoholic mother as well as the recent death of his father.  He is eventually invited to Saltburn, the vast estate owned by Felix's family, where he ingratiates himself to his parents Sir James (Richard E. Grant) and Lady Elspeth (Rosamund Pike) and his sister Venetia (Alison Oliver) but alienates his cousin Farleigh (Archie Madekwe) who is jealous of the attention lavished on him.  Oliver continues his machinations until the current guest, Poor Dear Pamela (Carey Mulligan), is sent packing and he enjoys a summer of excess and depravity until his obsession becomes malevolent.  This is both highly amusing (there were hoots of laughter in my screening) and provocative (there was also a lot of nervous giggling) and I loved it!  Keoghan is incredibly disturbing and you cannot look away as Oliver engages in one debauched act after another (there is an especially titillating scene involving a bathtub), Elordi is so charming and charismatic that it is easy to see why Felix would become the object of a powerful obsession, and Pike is an absolute hoot as the vacuous Elspeth.  However, Madekwe is absolutely brilliant because Farleigh is unlikable but yet strangely sympathetic as someone who is accepted but doesn't really belong and he nails this complexity with a highly nuanced performance.  I loved all of the elaborately composed shots, especially all of the reflections in ordinary objects because they show how much Oliver wants to belong to Saltburn, the opulent production design, and the killer (pun intended) soundtrack.  This features some interesting commentary on the class system but I appreciate the style with which it is presented a lot more!  There are some structural issues (I don't think the final recapitulation is necessary because the twist has been obvious all along) but this is wildly entertaining and I highly recommend it to fans of black comedies. 
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