Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Limbo
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Street
Saturday, May 1, 2021
Four Good Days
Friday, April 30, 2021
Thierry Fischer Conducts Bach, Wynton Marsalis, Carter & Wagner
Sunday, April 25, 2021
Mortal Kombat
Saturday, April 24, 2021
Madeline Adkins Plays The Lark Ascending
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
Daddy Long Legs at HCT
Note: I also highly recommend Les Miserables which is currently playing on the Young Living Stage. Many performances are sold out but some matinees have recently been added later in the run (go here for tickets).
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
The Music Man at CPT
Last night it was so much fun to see a full production of The Music Man at Centerpoint Legacy Theatre (the first for CPT since the pandemic). I really love all of the old classic musicals, especially The Music Man, because they remind me so much of my Grandma Anderson. Every single familiar song made me want to sing along, especially "Ya Got Trouble," "Seventy-Six Trombones," "The Wells Fargo Wagon," and "Gary, Indiana," but I somehow controlled myself! This show tells the well-known story of a traveling salesman who comes to swindle the residents of River City into buying band instruments and uniforms but falls in love with a librarian instead and this production is very well done! I really enjoyed the entire cast! Russell Maxfield is incredibly charismatic and charming as Harold Hill and Mailee Halpin has a beautiful voice as the uptight yet vulnerable Marion, particularly in the songs "Goodnight My Someone," "My White Knight," and "'Till There Was You." Chad Wilkinson is the embodiment of befuddled pomposity as Mayor Shinn ("Not one poop out of you, madame.") and Angela Brown is hilarious with her version of a Grecian Urn as Eulalie MacKecknie Shinn (as a sometime character actress, Eulalie is my dream role). Tyler Bender as Zaneeta, Mayor Shinn's oldest girl, and Brevin Gardner as Tommy Djilas, a boy with reform school written all over him, are amazing dancers who lead a terrific ensemble in the big production numbers (more on them later). Micah Thornton is adorable as Winthrop, especially when he lisps, while Bridget Maxwell is an absolute hoot as Amaryllis and I laughed out loud during her cross-hand piano piece (I love this young actress because she stole the show as Gloria in HCT's production of Wait Until Dark and again as Lavender in HCT's production of Matilda). The feuding school board members, Nathan Asay, Eric Corrington, Paul Dixon, and Jeffrey Duncan, harmonize beautifully in "Goodnight Ladies," "Sincere," and "Lida Rose" and they are definitely a highlight of the show. The sets are also very well done and I especially liked the two-level library, the interior and exterior of the Paroo house, the fountain in the park, and the footbridge. The energetic choreography is a lot of fun and it is executed very well by the talented cast, particularly in "Seventy-Six Trombones," "Marion the Librarian," and "Shipoopi." I had a smile on my face throughout the entire show because it is just so delightful and I highly recommend it for a bit of nostalgic fun (go here for tickets).
Friday, April 16, 2021
French Exit
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Voyagers
Sunday, April 11, 2021
The Hunting Wives
My Book of the Month selection for April was The Hunting Wives by May Cobb (the other options were What Comes After by Joanne Tompkins, Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala, Libertie by Kaitlyn Greenidge, and People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry) and this murder mystery involving bored housewives behaving badly is wildly entertaining! Sophie O'Neill has left behind a dysfunctional childhood and a high profile job as a magazine editor in Chicago to live a quiet life in the small town of Mapleton, Texas with her husband Graham and young son Jack. She fills her days with running the trails near her home, gardening, and writing a lifestyle blog but she quickly finds herself bored with the slower pace. She connects with an old high school friend who introduces her to a popular group of wealthy society women. She obsessively stalks them on social media and longs to join them in their exploits so she is thrilled when she is invited to one of their weekly skeet shooting parties. They call themselves the Hunting Wives and Sophie soon learns that these evenings also involve copious amounts of alcohol and excursions to nightclubs to hunt for a different sort of prey. Sophie eventually becomes enamored with Margot, the leader of the group, and engages in some questionable behavior which threatens her relationship with Graham. When a young woman is found murdered where the group practices their skeet shooting, Sophie begins to suspect that the group is involved somehow. This is a quick and easy read full of scandal and gossip that I enjoyed much more than I thought I would. The first person narration follows Sophie as she makes one bad decision after another, some of which will make you want to scream with frustration when you are not howling with laughter. Almost all of the characters are incredibly unsympathetic but they were compelling enough to keep me reading at every opportunity because I had to know what happens to them and I found the twist at the end to be very original and satisfying (I figured it out right before it was revealed). This is not usually the kind of book that I would pick if left to my own devices (it is quite salacious and over the top) but it is a lot of fun. I recommend it to anyone looking for a bit of escapism.
Friday, April 9, 2021
Domingo Hindoyan Conducts Roberto Sierra, Bartok & Mozart 41
Wednesday, April 7, 2021
Les Miserables at HCT
I don't think I will ever get tired of hearing the dramatic opening notes of the musical Les Miserables. They moved me to tears the first time I heard them performed live at the Palace Theatre in London on a study abroad trip in 1990 and they did once again as I heard them performed at Hale Theatre last night! I love the moving story of Jean Valjean's redemption, which is based on Victor Hugo's masterpiece, and I love the beautiful music by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg so I have seen Les Miserables at least 30 times (a conservative estimate) and I have to say that HCT's current version is a great production. The cast features Casey Elliott, Bradley Quinn Lever, and Brad Robins, whose meeting while performing in HCT's 2014 production of Les Miserables prompted them to form the popular trio Gentri, and I was really excited to see them reprise their roles as Jean Valjean, Enjolras, and Marius, respectively. Their performances were definitely a highlight of the show for me, particularly Elliott's version of "Bring Him Home," Lever's version of "Red and Black," and Robins's version of "Empty Chairs at Empty Tables." I also really enjoyed Cecily Ellis Bills as Fantine, Clotile Bonner Farkas as Madame Thenardier, and Rebecca Burroughs-Kremin as Eponine (I judge every production by how Eponine sings "On My Own" and her version gave me goosebumps). However, my very favorite performance of the night was Adam Dietlein as Inspector Javert. He is absolutely brilliant in the role because he holds himself, in both his mannerisms and his facial expressions, so rigidly and this characterization is perfect for the unyielding Javert. His rendition of "Stars" is incredibly powerful and it elicited the most applause and cheering last night after "Bring Him Home" (they had to stop the show because the applause went on for so long after this number). The costumes and sets are similar to those in the original Broadway production but also feature just enough flourishes to keep the show fresh (I loved all of Cosette's dresses and Madame Thenardier's gown for "Beggars at the Feast"). I do wish that the barricade could have been on the turntable because the reveal of Enjolras hanging upside down while holding the red flag as it slowly rotates in the original production is one of the most dramatic moments of the show (I miss this moment in the new staging on Broadway as well) but I like that HCT's barricade allows the entire audience to see "A Little Fall of Rain" and "Drink With Me." I think "Javert's Suicide" is staged particularly well because it really seems as if he is jumping from a bridge to his death and I also quite enjoyed the staging of "Master of the House" because even the young Eponine (Olivia Dietlein) steals from the guests. I love this show so much (it will always be a sentimental favorite) and seeing it at HCT last night made me very happy. I highly recommend getting a ticket but be aware that several secondary ticketing sites have been inflating prices significantly (go directly here for the best prices). It runs on the Young Living Stage through June 19.
Note: I think I might need to see it again for the MWF cast because it features Kyle Olsen as Jean Valjean and he blew me away as Sydney Carton in A Tale of Two Cities.
Tuesday, April 6, 2021
Godzilla vs. Kong
Thursday, April 1, 2021
The Ten Commandments
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Cherry
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
Six Minutes to Midnight
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Nobody
Saturday, March 27, 2021
Marc Albrecht Conducts Mahler & R. Strauss
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
Zack Snyder's Justice League
Saturday, March 20, 2021
The Courier
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Sound of Metal
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
The Trial of the Chicago 7
Monday, March 15, 2021
The Lost Apothecary
My Book of the Month selection for March was The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner (the other options were The Final Revival of Opal & Nev by Dawnie Walton, What's Mine and Yours by Naima Coster, Too Good to be True by Carola Lovering, and In a Book Club Far Away by Tif Marcelo). This novel combines elements of historical fiction, mystery, and fantasy and I absolutely loved it. In the present day, Caroline Parcewell is in London by herself, on what should have been a ten year anniversary trip, after finding out that her husband has been unfaithful. Feeling lonely and at loose ends, she spontaneously joins a tour group of mudlarkers on the banks of the Thames River in search of relics from the past brought in by the tide. She finds an old vial with a marking of a bear on it and this reawakens a long dormant passion for historical research as she unravels the mystery of its origin. In 1791, Nella Clavinger is the proprietor of an apothecary who, motivated by her own tragedy, secretly dispenses poison to desperate women who have been wronged or betrayed by the men in their lives. She meets the twelve-year-old Eliza Fanning when the latter requests a poison on behalf her mistress for her to use on her husband. Their interactions inadvertently expose Nella's activities and put both of their lives in danger. The narrative alternates between the two timelines as Caroline uncovers events in the present as they happen to Nella in the past and I found this device to be very compelling. I was surprised by the fact that I enjoyed Caroline's story just as much as Nella's (even though I particularly loved all of the period details that transported me to 18th century London) because I am such a fan of historical fiction. Their experiences mirror each other in that they are both victims of duplicitous men and they struggle to take action according to the social norms and attitudes of the time but I loved that Caroline is inspired by the process of investigating Nella's life and that it informs the resolution to her situation. I was fascinated by the concoction of the poisons (the epilogue with recipes for the more innocuous potions is a lot of fun and I would actually like to try some) and I was very intrigued by the introduction of magic into the narrative. I read this novel in just two sittings because I was so invested in both of the main characters and I highly recommend it, especially to fans of historical fiction or fantasy!























