Saturday, November 25, 2023

Gentri Christmas at the Eccles 2023

Last night I went to my first Christmas concert of the season and I definitely picked a good one!  The Gentlemen Trio, or Gentri as they are more commonly known, was established when Casey Elliott, Bradley Quinn Lever, and Brad Robins were cast in a production of Les Miserables at HCT (they recently reprised their roles of Jean Valjean, Enjolras, and Marius, respectively, in another HCT production) and then continued singing together after the run was over.  My sister Marilyn is a huge fan so we went to their Christmas concert last year and we loved it so much we decided to make it a tradition!  This year's show at the Eccles Theater was amazing!  They began with "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" and the arrangement included snippets from "Carol of the Bells" and I really liked it.  They continued with "Little Drummer Boy," "Gesu Bambino," and an incredible arrangement of "Still Still Still" with snippets from the score of the movie The Mission (I love this song because I sang it in choir in college).  They were joined by vocalist Yaphet Bustos for "Angels We Have Heard on High" and by the Rise Up Children's Choir for "Do You Hear What I Hear?" and "What Child Is This?" (which featured the Christmas story acted by several members of the choir in costume).  The first set ended with a bluesy mashup of "Go Tell It On The Mountain" and "Joy To The World" with Brad Wheeler on harmonica.  After the intermission, they performed "We Three Kings" with another guest vocalist, Ellie Barry, and then "I Saw Three Ships."  Next they had their music director Stephen Nelson arrange a piece on the spot from a movie score and a Christmas song suggested by the audience (they did this last year as well).  Our audience picked the score from The Lord of the Rings trilogy and "Mistletoe" by Justin Bieber and, believe it or not, the result was really good!  Next they performed an original song called "Somewhere In Your Silent Night" which is very moving.  A mashup of "Coventry Carol" and "Poor Wayfaring Stranger" with dramatic themes played by a cello was definitely my favorite of the night but a close second was their arrangement of "O Holy Night," which is my favorite Christmas song, featuring the Rise Up Children's Choir.  The concert concluded with a powerful rendition of "O Come All Ye Faithful" with Bustos, Barry, and the children.  Both Marilyn and I loved this show and it was the perfect way to begin this holiday season.  There are a few tickets available for both of the shows today (go here) and I highly recommend getting one!

Note:  I always hope that I will hear "O Holy Night" performed live at least once during the holiday season and I am so happy that I got to hear it last night!

'Tis the Season

I actually put my Christmas tree up last week because I like to enjoy it for as long as possible (one year I put it up on Halloween).  One of my favorite things to do during the season is watch Christmas movies with just the tree illuminating the living room.  I am also looking forward to lots of holiday traditions, performances (including several Christmas concerts and four productions of A Christmas Carol), and time with my family (my niece and her fiance will be here for some epic games of Shanghai rummy).
It's the most wonderful time of the year!

Friday, November 24, 2023

Thanksgiving 2023

I spent Thanksgiving with my family (Sean came home from college but we were missing Tashena and her fiance Tucker who live in Washington) and it was a wonderful day.  We had a somewhat non-traditional dinner because we had ham instead of turkey but we did have all of the other side dishes including potatoes, yams, stuffing, asparagus, pomegranate salad (a family favorite), a relish tray, and rolls.  Everything was delicious!  In the evening we had pie and lots of other treats (my sisters are very good bakers) and then we played Shanghai rummy (an absolutely crazy card game that really gets going).  I am so grateful for my family and that I am able to spend so much time with them.  I hope that you had a happy Thanksgiving with the people you love!

Thursday, November 23, 2023

Wish

I have had the tradition of taking my nephew to the new Disney/ Pixar movie over the Thanksgiving break ever since he was a little boy (we have seen The Good Dinosaur, Moana, Coco, Frozen II, Encanto, and Strange World together) but he did not want to see Wish with me last night so I went by myself.  Maybe I should have listened to him.  King Magnifico (Chris Pine) is a powerful sorcerer who has the power to grant wishes.  He and his wife Queen Amaya (Angelique Cabral) establish the kingdom of Rosas and, to keep the inhabitants safe, he has them give him their wishes which he keeps safe until he grants one every month in an elaborate ceremony. A young girl named Asha (Ariana DeBose) hopes that King Magnifico will grant her grandfather Sabino's (Victor Garber) wish in honor of his 100th birthday but she learns that he is very selective about the wishes he grants in order to control the population for their own good.  Dismayed about the fact that her grandfather's wish is deemed too dangerous to grant, she wishes on a Star, instead, and it comes to help her which threatens the power of King Magnifico and he turns to forbidden magic to stop it.  It is only when Asha realizes that the power of stardust is within her and all of the inhabitants of Rosas that they are able to rescue their wishes.  The animation, which is a combination of computer generated and hand drawn, is absolutely beautiful.  DeBose has an amazing voice and I really enjoyed her vocal performance and some of the songs, especially "Knowing What I Know Now."  Pine is a fun and interesting villain who starts out with good intentions but lets absolute power corrupt him absolutely and his song "This is the Thanks I Get?" was a highlight for me.  Having said that, I found the story to be very disappointing.  There is a lot that happens simply to evoke nostalgia rather than advance the plot, including when Star grants the wish of all of the woodland animals to speak (the only wish it actually grants) and the inclusion of unnecessary side characters based on the seven dwarfs.  It seems like an origin story for many other better Disney movies and it is not very compelling or memorable.  I didn't necessarily hate it but I wish it had been better.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

May December

Last night my nephew and I went to the Broadway to see May December and we both found it to be incredibly thought-provoking.  Elizabeth Berry (Natalie Portman) is a television actor who inserts herself into the lives of Gracie Atherton-Yoo (Julianne Moore) and her husband Joe Yoo (Charles Melton) because she will be portraying Gracie in an upcoming independent movie about their scandalous romance.  Gracie had an extramarital affair with Joe, who was then in seventh grade, was arrested, gave birth to their first child in prison, and then married him when she was released.  Twenty years later, as their twins are about to graduate from high school, they seem like the perfect suburban family but, as Elizabeth starts delving into the past, the facade comes crumbling down.  This is really campy, with one of the funniest line readings I've ever heard and an incredibly melodramatic score, but then it becomes absolutely devastating.  All three actors give amazing performances because their characters are so complex and reveal themselves little by little.  Gracie seems confident and happy around Elizabeth and her neighbors and broken and fragile behind closed doors with her family but then we see how passive-aggressive she is with her daughters and how manipulative she is with Joe.  Moore uses changes in her facial expressions and voice, slipping into and out of a breathy lisp, to show her character's intent and it is masterful.  Elizabeth seems like an ambitious method actor trying to understand the character she will be portraying so that she can do justice to the story but then she starts to blur the lines between reality and art to actually become Gracie and her behavior is just as predatory.  Portman's performance is brilliant because she eventually mimics all of Gracie's mannerisms and the transformation is so subtle that you don't realize how unsympathetic she has become.  Joe protests that he is not a victim and that he has been happily married to Gracie for twenty years but he is constantly bullied and belittled by her.  Melton's role is less showy but no less powerful, especially when Joe realizes the full impact of what has been done to him (by both women).  There is so much to unpack with all of these characters and it is fascinating!  I loved the use of mirrors because we eventually see who these characters really are when reflected by others and the focus on Joe's hobby of raising monarch butterflies is the perfect metaphor for the transformation these characters go through.  The more I think about this movie, the more I like it and I would definitely recommend it.

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

White Christmas at CPT

Last night I got to see CPT's delightful production of White Christmas with both of my sisters and it was so much fun! The three of us grew up watching the movie version because it was our mom's favorite so this show is very nostalgic for us. Broadway stars Bob Wallace (David Simon) and Phil Davis (Craig Williams) meet the Haynes sisters, Judy (Danna Facer) and Betty (Bailee DeYoung), and decide to follow them to Vermont where they have a gig over the Christmas holidays at the Columbia Inn. There they meet their former commanding officer from the war, General Waverly (Eric Millward) , who now owns the inn but is having financial difficulties due to the lack of snow. Wallace and Davis decide to bring their show, with a few numbers featuring the Haynes sisters, to the Columbia Inn and invite the soldiers from their company to a performance on Christmas Eve. Add a busybody receptionist (Melody L. Baugh) and a precocious granddaughter (Scarlett Burt) who want to be in show business, an overwrought stage manager (Ian Wellisch) feuding with a taciturn handyman (Nathan Burt), and love gone awry between both couples and you have a thoroughly enjoyable show full of big old fashioned song and dance numbers! The four incredibly talented leads do a really good job with the singing and dancing in "Sisters" (this is my favorite song in the show and my sisters and I are always ready to perform our version if the actresses playing the Haynes sisters are ever unable to go on), "The Best Things Happen When You're Dancing," "Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep," "Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me," and "How Deep Is the Ocean." The ensemble is fantastic and I loved the staging and the high-energy choreography in "Let Yourself Go," "Snow," "Blue Skies," "I Love a Piano" (I was especially impressed with the tap dancing in this number because it is pretty spectacular), and the iconic "White Christmas" (complete with audience participation and snow falling throughout the theatre). However, Burt absolutely steals the show with her adorable version of "Let Me Sing and I'm Happy" and it brought the house down. The costumes (and there are a lot of them) are really fun and the sets are quite elaborate, especially the lobby and the barn decorated for Christmas at the Columbia Inn and the shimmering curtains in the Regency Room. This show has such a heart-warming message and it is sure to give you a big dose of Christmas cheer! It runs on the Barlow main stage through December 21 (go here for tickets).

Monday, November 20, 2023

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes

I promised my sister that I wouldn't see The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes without her (we are huge fans of both the books and movies in The Hunger Games franchise) and, even though it was really hard to wait, I am so glad that we were able to see it together last night because we both loved it and couldn't stop talking about it on the drive home!  Eager to restore the former prosperity and honor of his family, Coriolanus Snow (Tom Blyth) volunteers to become a mentor to one of the tributes in the 10th Annual Hunger Games, a scheme devised by Head Gamemaker Volumnia Gaul (Viola Davis) and the Academy Dean Casca Highbottom (Peter Dincklage), who created the games, to increase viewership.  He is assigned Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler), the female tribute from District 12 who is also a member of a traveling musical group known as the Covey.  He wants her to win in order to claim the prize money given for mentoring the victor in the games so he begins proposing changes, such as introducing the tributes to the Capitol and allowing sponsors to send them supplies during the game, in order to help her.  However, he soon forms a bond with Lucy Gray and will eventually risk everything, even his humanity, to save her.  I loved almost everything about this movie!  The story is so clever and compelling because it traces the genesis of the various elements used in the subsequent Hunger Games as well as Snow's transformation into the tyrannical leader of Panem and it is a pretty faithful adaptation of the book (events that are left out, such as the funerals of Arachne Crane and Felix Ravinstill and Snow's search for a guitar for Lucy Gray, are not really necessary in my opinion).  I loved the production design because the Capitol is clearly rebuilding after the devastation of war but there are definitely glimpses of what it will become and the academy, the zoo, and the arena are exactly like what I pictured when reading the book.  The costumes are so dramatic and I especially loved the academy uniforms, Lucy Gray's dress, and Dr. Gaul's wild outfits.  The use of bluegrass music for Lucy Gray's songs is brilliant (I especially loved "Nothing You Can Take From Me," "Pure as the Driven Snow," and, of course, "The Hanging Tree") and I loved all of the callbacks to the original score.  The cast is perfect because Blyth looks the part and portrays all of Snow's conflicting motivations so well, Zegler has an incredible screen presence and her performance of the songs is a highlight, Jason Schwartzman is an absolute hoot as Lucky Flickerman and looks like he could really be a relative of Stanley Tucci's Caesar Flickerman, and Davis steals the show by chewing up the scenery as the evil Dr. Gaul.  My only complaint is that the third act is a bit rushed but I understand the necessity of it (I've heard that there is a four hour cut in existence).  I think this is the strongest movie in the franchise since Catching Fire and I highly recommend it to fans!

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Next Goal Wins

Last night I went to see Next Goal Wins because I simply cannot resist an inspirational sports movie and I enjoyed seeing this true story (told with a few wild embellishments according to a priest, played rather amusingly by director Taika Waititi, who breaks the fourth wall to narrate) with a large crowd who frequently laughed out loud.  Thomas Rongen (Michael Fassbender) is coerced into to coaching the football team in American Samoa, notorious for losing by the widest margin (31-0) ever during a game against Australia, after being fired from the U.S. men's national team.  The organizer of the team (Oscar Kightley) just wants them to score one goal, which they have never done in international play, but Rongen is a volatile alcoholic with anger management issues and immediately butts heads with the devoutly religious, traditional, and laid back players.  The team eventually finds success but they also teach Rongen that there are more important things than winning.  This is full of the usual sports movie tropes, such as a training montage to "Everybody Wants to Rule the World," a motivational locker room speech, as well as a suspenseful come from behind win, and it definitely includes a white savior narrative (although it is somewhat subverted by the fact that the team wins in spite of Rongen).  Fassbender's performance is surprisingly bad and I actually cared about the individual members of the team (especially a transgender player, the first to ever compete in a FIFA qualifying match, brilliantly portrayed by Kaimana) more than Rongen and I wish that their character arcs had been emphasized more.  Despite all of this, however, there is enough heart and humor (I loved all of the references to The Karate Kid) to make this an entertaining watch and I recommend it, especially to fans of the genre, although it is definitely one you can wait to see when it streams.

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Brahms' Symphony No. 2

Last night I was back at Abravanel Hall for another Utah Symphony concert and it was wonderful.  The orchestra began with a modern piece called Prelude a une nuit americaine by Mathilde Wantenaar.  It is meant to represent a sultry evening with just the hint of jazz in the air and I really enjoyed the energy and vitality, especially the tension created by the themes played by the brass.  Next came Death and Transfiguration by Richard Strauss and this was my favorite piece of the evening because I could definitely envision a dying man searching for what lies beyond just by closing my eyes and listening to the music.  It begins very slowly with beautiful themes played by the woodwinds and a solo violin to represent dreams once cherished during a lifetime.  Then there is a dramatic change in tone with a crash of timpani and fanfares from the brass leading to some intense passages from the violins to depict the reality of the human condition.  The piece concludes with the stroke of a gong signifying the transcendence needed to achieve the greatness once dreamed of.  The performance was incredibly powerful!  After the intermission, the orchestra concluded with Symphony No. 2 by Johannes Brahms.  Guest conductor Markus Poschner, a world-renowned expert on Brahms, explained that this piece celebrates both the joy of living and the melancholy that exists below the surface.  I was really struck by the notes played by the cellos and basses at the beginning of the first movement which eventually develop into themes by the horns, the woodwinds, and then the violins with underlying hints from the trombones and tuba threatening the calm.  The melancholy themes, which I loved, come from the cellos in the second movement while the oboes play a lighthearted theme recalling the first movement in the third.  The final movement ends triumphantly with the trombones!  What I most enjoyed about this concert is that, like the one two weeks ago, the three pieces were tied together thematically through their exploration of the highs and lows of the human experience.  I highly recommend getting a ticket to tonight's performance of the same program (go here).

Friday, November 17, 2023

My Fair Lady at the Eccles

I'm a big fan of the musical My Fair Lady (there is just something comforting about all of the old favorites from Broadway's Golden Era) so I have been looking forward to the Lincoln Center production currently touring ever since the 2023-2024 Broadway at the Eccles season was announced!  I was able to see it last night and, unfortunately, I was a little bit underwhelmed by it.  When Professor Henry Higgins (Jonathan Grunert) and Colonel Pickering (John Adkison) encounter a Cockney flower girl named Eliza Doolittle (Annette Barrios-Torres) in Covent Garden, Higgins boasts that he could pass her off as a duchess at the Embassy Ball within six months by teaching her to speak properly.  Even though Eliza is a success at the ball, she becomes a true lady when she compels Higgins to treat her like one.  While I love all of the music in this show and wait with great anticipation for all of my favorite songs, including "Wouldn't It Be Loverly," With a Little Bit of Luck," "Just You Wait," "The Rain in Spain," "I Could Have Danced All Night," "On the Street Where You Live," "Get Me to the Church on Time," and "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face," I found the performances to lack energy despite the fact that everyone in the cast has a beautiful voice (especially Borrios-Torres).  The big production numbers, "With a Little Bit of Luck" and "Get Me to the Church on Time," are the best scenes in the show thanks to Michael Hegarty's comedic turn as Alfred P. Doolittle (and some cross-dressing can-can dancers) but every other number has surprisingly unimaginative choreography and nothing really grabbed my attention.  I especially found the ball scene to be oddly anticlimactic because it features couples dancing without much opportunity for Eliza to practice her correct diction with Professor Zoltan Karpathy (Christopher Isolando).  The costumes at Ascot are usually a highlight of the show for me but the ones in this scene are muted pastels rather than the dramatic black and white ones that you usually see (they are admittedly very beautiful, especially the hats, but they do not have a lot of impact).  I did, however, love the jewel-toned gowns, particularly Eliza's golden one, at the ball and both Higgins and Pickering have some opulent dressing gowns and smoking jackets.  The other aspect of the production that really impressed me was the set, especially the opera house in Covent Garden, Henry Higgins' wood paneled study (I loved the spiral staircase connecting the two levels and the large arched window), and the Embassy ballroom (the lighting in this scene is gorgeous).  I will always love this show and this version is "loverly" enough for me to recommend it but, honestly, I have seen much better local productions (especially this one) with tickets at half the price.  It runs at the Eccles Theatre through November 18 (go here for tickets).

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Live in Concert

Last night I got to see Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse while the score was played live by an orchestra and a DJ with a turntable.  It was awesome!  Seeing it on the big screen again reminded me of how much I love this movie and the soundtrack!  A Brooklyn teenager named Miles Morales (Shemeik Moore) is bitten by a radioactive spider and, after waking up with superpowers which disrupt his life, he returns to the alley where he was bitten.  He finds a secret lab with a supercollider created by Kingpin (Liev Schrieber) to access parallel universes in order to bring back alternate versions of his wife and son who died during an altercation with Spider-Man (Chris Pine).  Spider-Man is ultimately killed while trying to destroy the collider but not before several incarnations of Spider-Man from parallel universes appear.  These include a down-and-out Peter B. Parker/ Spider-Man (Jake Johnson), spunky Gwen Stacy/ Spider-Woman (Hailee Steinfeld), the cartoon Peter Porker/ Spider-Ham (John Mulaney), a monochromatic Spider-Noir (Nicolas Cage), and Peni Parker (Kimiko Glenn) a young Japanese girl who pilots a biomechanical spider.  They help Miles discover his powers and find the motivation to fight Kingpin as well as other familiar villains.  The animation in this movie is absolutely dazzling and the music by David Pemberton is just as exciting.  The score was performed by Broadway Sinfonietta, an orchestra composed of women (mostly WOC) conducted by Emily Marshall, and they were a lot of fun to watch because the music features lots of percussion (the percussion section took up half the stage).  I really loved all of the dramatic and exciting themes punctuated by the percussion, especially "Security Guard" as Miles runs away from school after discovering his powers, "Are You Ready to Swing?" as Spider-Man and Miles swing through the trees at Alchemax, and "Miles Morales Returns" when Miles joins the fight against Kingpin, but I also enjoyed the more poignant themes, such as "Destiny" (I loved the trombone) when Spider-Man asks Miles to destroy the collider before he dies, "On Your Way" when Miles learns the truth about the Prowler, "This Spark in You," when Miles' dad talks to him through his door, and "Saying Goodbye" when all of the Spider-People return to their own universes.  Another really cool element of the score is the use of unusual sounds recreated on a turntable, such as the scratching in "Into the Spider-Verse," the howls in "Green Goblin Fight," an elephant trumpeting in "The Prowler," and the clicking of a pen in "Kingpin Clicks," and DJ Damage was on hand to provide these effects (he was also really fun to watch because was so animated).  It is really cool when the songs featured in the soundtrack blend seamlessly into the score, particularly when Miles sings along to "Sunflower" by Post Malone and Swae Lee and when "What's Up Danger" by Blackway and Black Caviar (I love this song so much and I am not alone because the audience applauded for it) fades into "Miles Morales Returns."  I love seeing films in concert but I think this one just might be my favorite because the sights and sounds were so dynamic!  I hope Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse will be next!

Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The Helsinki Affair

My Book of the Month selection for November was The Helsinki Affair by Anna Pitoniak (the other options were The Last Love Note by Emma Grey, Again and Again by Jonathan Evison, What the River Knows by Isabel Ibanez, This Spells Love by Kate Robb, and Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward). In my late teens and twenties I was obsessed with spy thrillers (my dad used to joke that I would read anything with a hammer and sickle on the cover) so I was really excited for this selection (I was even more excited when I learned that the protagonist is a woman). CIA agent Amanda Cole is languishing in Rome as the deputy station chief when a low ranking officer of the Russian FSB walks in off the street to warn them that a powerful U.S. senator will be assassinated in Cairo the next day. She instinctively believes him but the station chief does not and no action is taken. When the senator is assassinated in the exact manner specified, she is recalled to Washington D.C. and promoted to station chief. As she investigates the motive for the assassination, she uncovers a vast Russian plot that takes her around the globe but she also finds a troubling connection to her father dating back to his time as a CIA operative in Helsinki in the 1980s. Eventually, Amanda must choose between loyalty to her country and loyalty to her father. What I loved most about this novel is that it is very much a contemporary story about stock manipulation using the algorithm to promote so-called "meme stocks" but it is also interspersed with flashbacks to the past involving lots of Cold War intrigue (which reminded me of all the spy thrillers by Ludlum, Le Carre, and Forsyth that I read and loved in my youth) culminating in a dramatic and suspenseful confrontation in Helsinki when the two stories converge. There are agents, double agents, triple agents, moles, red herrings, conspiracies, betrayals, and lots of action involving spycraft so I was completely riveted from beginning to end (and the ending is ambiguous enough to suggest that this might be the beginning of a series which I would welcome) and couldn't put it down. While I loved all of the spycraft, I also really appreciated Amanda as a character because she grapples with being a woman in a man's business, the toll that being an operative takes on one's personal life, and the fear of losing one's humanity (I also loved Kath Frost, a legendary Cold Warrior who helps Amanda navigate all of the above, because it is so refreshing to get a woman's point of view on being a spy). As an avid fan of the genre, I really enjoyed this and would highly recommend it!

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Sweeney Todd at the Empress

I was thrilled to see the closing performance of Sweeney Todd at the Empress Theatre last night.  It joins The Sound of Music and A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder as one of my favorites from this theatre and I am sad that it has now closed because anyone reading this will not be able to see it!  Benjamin Barker (Todd Christensen), a Victorian-era barber, was unjustly accused and condemned to exile in Australia by the lascivious Judge Turpin (Matthew Davids) who coveted his beautiful wife.  He returns to London 15 years later as Sweeney Todd after being rescued at sea by Anthony Hope (Tyler Rasmussen) and, when learns that his wife has died and that his daughter Johanna (Boston Bean) is now a ward of the judge, he vows revenge.  He returns to his former rooms above the pie shop run by Mrs. Lovett (River Robinson) and, when he discovers that she has kept all of his barbering tools, he decides to set up shop and lures the judge in for a shave so he can slit his throat.  However, the judge eludes him when Anthony rushes in to announce his plans to elope with Johanna and Sweeney 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!  The music in this show always gives me goosebumps because it is operatic in scale (with very macabre themes) and this cast is more than up to the challenge!  I absolutely loved Robinson's performance as Mrs. Lovett because she is hilarious with her over the top facial expressions and uproarious physical comedy!  I especially enjoyed her rendition of "By the Sea" because she really leans into the humor rather than the poignancy of the moment (as some actresses do in this scene) and I laughed out loud at her reaction to kissing Sweeney!  She is also really funny in "The Worst Pies in London" and "Parlor Songs" as well as "A Little Priest" with Christensen.  Speaking of Christensen, he really impressed me with his incredibly powerful version of "Epiphany" and he matched Robinson beat for beat in "By the Sea" by acting resigned (rather than oblivious as most actors do) to her advances.  I love how various citizens of London are used to narrate the tale of Sweeney Todd and the ensemble in this production is outstanding in "The Ballad of Sweeney Todd" and its many reprises and I thoroughly enjoyed their choreography in "God, That's Good."  Rasmussen and Bean also have beautiful voices and do a great job with "Johanna" and "Green Finch and Linnet Bird," respectively.  This is a complicated show and I was very impressed with how they staged moving Sweeney's victims from the barber chair to the bakehouse in such a small space.  I also loved the set, especially all of the iron work on Judge Turpin's house because it actually looks like the metaphorical bird cage that Johanna is trapped in.  Finally, the costumes are some of the best I've seen at this theatre, particularly those worn by the ensemble because they bring Victorian London to life, and I laughed out loud as Sweeney's wig becomes more and more disheveled and deranged!  I really loved this production but, as I mentioned previously, the run is now over.  I will, however, recommend getting a ticket for Sherlock (go here) which is the next production.

Ballet West's Firebird

Yesterday I went to a matinee Ballet West performance featuring a trio of ballets celebrating the 60th anniversary of the company.  I definitely prefer full length ballets but, over the years, I have come to appreciate these one-act pieces and I really enjoyed this production.  The first piece, Firebird, is a classical ballet choreographed by Ballet West's founder William Christensen and it is based on a Russian fairy tale with music by Igor Stravinsky (so I obviously loved it).  An Evil Magician (Tyler Gum) keeps a group of princesses captive in his castle and turns the knights who come to rescue them into stone.  A Prince (Jordan Veit) enters the Magician's garden and encounters the Firebird (Amy Potter), a magical creature illuminated by light, and immediately captures her.   In a beautiful Pas de Deux, the Firebird struggles in the Prince's arms so he releases her.  In gratitude, she gives him one of her feathers to use if he is ever in peril.  When the princesses are released into the garden, the Prince woos the loveliest one (Kazlyn Nielsen) in another beautiful Pas de Deux where they vow their love for each other.  He attempts to rescue the Princess but the Magician appears with a group of wild animals, who wear incredible masks created by Logan Long (I especially loved the insects) and wield torches of fire, and tries to turn him into stone.  He reveals the Firebird's feather which summons her to the garden and soon the Magician is defeated (very dramatically), the princesses are released, and the stone knights are brought back to life.  The ballet concludes with the marriage and coronation of the Prince and Princess.  I especially enjoyed Potter's performance as the Firebird, because all of her stylized movements mimic those of a bird, and the traditional Russian costumes in the coronation scene.  Next came the world premiere of Fever Dream which is a modern ballet choreographed by former Ballet West soloist Joshua Whitehead (I liked him when he danced with the company) featuring music that he composed and contemporary costumes.  In this piece, a dreamer is torn between his mundane life and the unsettling and eerie dream world and I loved all of the innovative patterns created by different groups of dancers and the dramatic use of red to highlight some of the dancers.  The final ballet, Stars & Stripes, is a patriotic extravaganza choreographed by George Balanchine with music by John Philip Sousa.  It is divided into five campaigns with three different regiments of dancers, a Pas de Deux, and a thrilling finale and it is meant to mimic a parade with marches in unison and athletic leaps and spins.  My favorite was the second campaign because the regiment was led by my favorite dancer, Katlyn Addison.  The costumes for the women are so much fun because they incorporate military uniforms (I loved the epaulets) with tights and pastel tutus!  This was a wonderful production but, unfortunately, last night was the final performance.  However, The Nutcracker is up next and you don't want to miss this holiday tradition (go here for tickets).

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Audra McDonald with the Utah Symphony

Last night I spent an incredible evening with Audra McDonald and the Utah Symphony (and my friend Angela) at a concert featuring lots of Broadway classics and standards from the great American songbook.  I loved every minute of it!  The orchestra began with "Carousel Waltz" from the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical Carousel and then the incomparable Audra McDonald took the stage with a powerful performance of "I Am What I Am" from La Cage aux Folles.  She continued with "Pure Imagination" from the movie Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (which I've heard her sing before) and she told a hilarious story about performing her next song, "Cornet Man" from Funny Girl, in a competition as a 14 year old girl and being criticized for not picking a more appropriate song!  Next came "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" by Duke Ellington, a sultry rendition of "Summertime" from Porgy and Bess, and then a spirited version of "I Could Have Danced All Night" from My Fair Lady (a song she has always been hesitant to sing because it is such a standard for all sopranos).  She talked about her hobby of gardening (very badly) which led her to add the song "I Always Say Hello to a Flower" to her repertoire and I thought her performance was really fun!  She ended her first set with "Home" from The Wiz and she just about blew the roof off Abravanel Hall with her powerful vocals!  After the intermission, she returned to the stage with "Before the Parade Passes By" from Hello, Dolly!  Next, she performed a lovely arrangement of "Bein' Green" accompanied by a guitar and a beautiful mashup of "You've Got to Be Carefully Taught" from South Pacific and "Children Will Listen" from Into the Woods (I loved this so much).  She continued with "Can't Stop Talking" from the movie Let's Dance and then an amazing rendition of "Somewhere" from West Side Story.  She told the crowd that she found her next song, "I Love Today," on singer-songwriter Emily King's social media (it was written by King's mother Kim Kalesti) and reached out to her to ask if she could sing it.  It is a beautiful song about living in the moment and living life to the fullest and I loved it!  She concluded her main set with a really cool arrangement of "Life is a Cabaret" from the musical Cabaret.  For the encore, she sang a mashup of "Happy Days Are Here Again" and "Get Happy" with her music director Andy Einhorn and the crowd exploded into an appreciative standing ovation!  Both Angela and I have seen her perform before and both of us agreed that McDonald's vocals were especially powerful last night and we both found her to be even more loquacious than usual with lots of funny anecdotes to introduce every song.  It was an amazing night and, if you are a fan of Broadway, I highly recommend getting a ticket to tonight's concert (go here).

Friday, November 10, 2023

The Marvels

Last night I saw a Thursday preview of The Marvels and I was pleasantly surprised by how much I liked it!  Dar-Benn (Zawe Ashton), a Kree leader who is trying to restore her planet after it was damaged by Captain Marvel (Brie Larson) when she defeated the Supreme Intelligence, locates a Quantum Band and uses it to create a jump point in space.  Carol Danvers/ Captain Marvel and Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) are enlisted by Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) to investigate the jump point and their light-based powers become enmeshed with each other and with those of Kamala Khan/ Ms. Marvel (Iman Vellani) because she has the other Quantum Band.  This causes the three of them to switch places when they use their powers (and provides endless amusement and some great action set pieces).  Eventually they realize that Dar-Benn is creating jump points to plunder the atmosphere, water, and sunlight from planets that are significant to Danvers and the three of them must work together to stop her.  I have been vocal in my criticism of the MCU for becoming bloated with too many characters, stories, and timelines for the casual movie fan to keep up with but, honestly, as someone who has only seen WandaVision, I didn't find the story hard to follow (I thought Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness was much more convoluted).  Obviously a familiarity with the TV shows (particularly Ms. Marvel) will provide a greater appreciation for the subtleties of each character but I found the quick recaps to be sufficient for my own understanding and enjoyment.  I really loved the deeper exploration of Danvers as a character, especially her relationship with Rambeau and her developing role as a mentor to Khan.  Larson, Parris, and Vellani have really fun chemistry in their scenes together and some of these scenes are absolutely bonkers (in the best possible way).  I laughed out loud so many times!  I think Dar-Benn is fine as the villain because her motivation is understandable (she reminded me of Killmonger in this respect) while Goose the Flerken and Prince Yan (Park Seo-joon) steal the show!  Finally, this movie has the second best use of a Beastie Boys song this year and the best use of a song from the musical Cats ever!  I had so much fun with this movie and definitely recommend it!

Note:  It goes without saying that you should stay for a mid-credits scene.  It's a good one!

Saturday, November 4, 2023

Beethoven's Ninth

The program for last night's Utah Symphony concert was curated by guest conductor and creative partner David Robertson to portray all aspects of the human experience from the depths of despair to the pinnacle of joy and it was absolutely spectacular!  The evening began with a piece of sacred choral music called Christus factus est by Anton Bruckner which was performed by the Utah Symphony Chorus unaccompanied.  It was both sorrowful and powerful and featured atmospheric lighting which allowed Robertson to simply appear at the podium without an introduction.  Next, the orchestra and chorus were immediately joined by soloists Celena Shafer (a Utah favorite), Deborah Nansteel, Chad Shelton, and Zachary Nelson for a semi-staged version of Act III from the opera Wozzeck by Alban Berg.  The theme of this opera is the impending doom felt by Berg at the end of the Great War and this act tells the story of a poor and abused soldier named Wozzeck who is driven mad with jealousy over his wife Marie's infidelity with a drum major.  After Wozzeck kills Marie he becomes obsessed with the blood and, in an attempt to wash it away, he wades into a pond and drowns while his child is playing with neighbor children.  There are two crescendos played by the brass and percussion after Wozzeck kills Marie that are incredibly dramatic and convey the enormity of what he has done.  They gave me goosebumps!  After the intermission came what is widely regarded as the greatest symphony ever written!  The orchestra was once again joined by the chorus and the soloists for Symphony No. 9 by Ludwig van Beethoven and I was completely swept up by the emotion of this celebration of the universal brotherhood of man.  I was captivated by the very first hushed note which soon erupts to create a first movement that is incredibly stirring and dynamic.  The second movement is lively and exuberant and the third movement brought me to tears, as it always does, because it is so hauntingly beautiful.  All of this is merely the prelude to the incredible fourth movement featuring the chorus and soloists singing the lyrics from the poem Ode to Joy by Friedrich Schiller to the accompaniment of the instantly recognizable main theme played by the orchestra.  This performance was absolutely amazing and, even though it is over an hour in length, it felt like it went by in an instant.  I cannot recommend this concert enough and I suggest you get a ticket to tonight's performance (go here) as soon as you can because there were very few empty seats at Abravanel Hall last night (with good reason).

Friday, November 3, 2023

Priscilla

I was so excited to be back at the Broadway last night to see Priscilla because I am a huge fan of Sofia Coppola and I have been anticipating it ever since Cailee Spaeny won the Volpi Cup at the Venice FIlm Festival for her performance.  It is a fascinating if melancholy coming of age story that initially left me a bit disappointed but, the more I think about it, the more I appreciate it.  Priscilla Beaulieu (Spaeny) is a shy and lonely teenager living in West Germany, where her father is stationed, when she is invited to a party and meets Elvis Presley (Jacob Elordi), who is doing his military service.  She comforts him over the recent death of his mother and they bond over their shared homesickness for the U.S.  Despite the objections of her worried parents, she is soon spending all of her free time with him and grows despondent when he is discharged from the Army.  She eventually visits and then moves into Graceland where she is completely controlled, manipulated, isolated, and ignored by Elvis.  She becomes a wife and mother before she finally finds the courage to create a life for herself.  This reminded me, beat for beat, of Marie Antoinette and that is both a good thing and a bad thing.  The compelling story is similar in that a young and naive girl is thrust into a situation for which she is completely unprepared, is forced to mold herself into someone else's ideal, and is not allowed to have a voice while living in a rarefied environment of luxury.  The gorgeous production design is also similar in that it brilliantly immerses the audience into a different time and place while including anachronistic music to create a vibe (my favorite is the use of "Crimson and Clover").  Unfortunately, it also feels like an insubstantial bit of spectacle because the protagonist still feels like a mystery when all is said and done and this left me wanting to know more about who she really was.  However, upon reflection I think that is actually the point because Priscilla didn't really have an identity while she was with Elvis.  Spaeny gives an incredible performance, literally transforming from a child to a young woman right before our eyes.  She is able to communicate so many emotions with just a glance or one word of dialogue and it always appears that she has so much more to say.  Elordi is unbelievably appealing and charismatic as Elvis and it is easy to see how Priscilla could fall under his spell but he also vividly portrays a darker side to the king of rock and roll so it is understandable why she would leave.  I'm still thinking about this one but I would definitely recommend it.

Monday, October 30, 2023

The Holdovers

Yesterday I was able to see an early screening of The Holdovers at the Broadway and I absolutely loved it!  It is definitely one of my favorites this year!  An unpopular and curmudgeonly teacher at a prestigious New England prep school named Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) is forced to remain at school over the Christmas break to supervise the students who are not able to go home, or the "holdovers," as punishment for failing the son of a prominent donor.  Several students and staff remain behind but, eventually, they all find somewhere to go except a depressed and acerbic 15-year-old named Angus Tully (Dominic Sessa) and the head cook, Mary Lamb (Da'Vine Joy Randolph), who is mourning the recent death of her son in Vietnam.  At first the three of them, who are each struggling with their own inner demons, clash with each other but, after a series of misadventures, they form an unlikely bond.  Angus helps Paul make peace with his past and Paul helps Angus see a future for himself while the two of them help Mary get through her first Christmas without her son.  I've heard many critics say that this is the type of movie they don't make any more and I definitely echo that opinion.  It is set in the early 1970s and it looks like it could have been made then with a grainy film aesthetic and amazing production design (I loved the retro studio logo at the beginning) but, more than that, it is a character-driven drama about flawed people that used to be much more prevalent in that decade.  I loved all three of the main characters, especially Mary because she took the job serving ungrateful and entitled students so that her son could get a good education only for him to end up going to Vietnam but then she sees beyond the privilege when she gets to know one of the students.  I wish that her character had been explored more fully but I really appreciate the care with which the mentor-student relationship is portrayed (particularly a scene where Paul explains why it is important to study history).  It is very heartwarming and affecting but there are lots of little moments that are quite funny (I laughed out loud multiple times).  Giamatti is brilliant as always and Randolph steals every scene she is in but I was very impressed with newcomer Sessa because he has a very striking screen presence and more than holds his own with the two more experienced actors.  This is a movie that I can see myself watching over and over again and I highly recommend it.

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 in Concert

Yesterday I saw Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 on the big screen at Abravanel Hall as the Utah Symphony played the score by Alexandre Desplat, one of my favorite movie composers, live.  This was so much fun for me because I have seen all of the previous movies in the franchise in this format and I have loved experiencing them all in such an immersive way!  As with all of the other concerts, many members of the audience came in costume (I was representing House Ravensclaw) and cheered out loud when all of the characters made their first appearance on screen.  There was thunderous applause when Professor McGonagall protects Harry from Snape and then fights a duel with him (my favorite scene in the movie) and when Neville kills Nagini.  In this final installment Harry must face Voldemort in the Battle of Hogwarts and it has the darkest tone with the highest stakes in the franchise and the score reflects this with lots of powerful themes featuring the brass and timpani.  I especially love "Dragon Flight" as Harry, Ron, and Hermione escape from Gringotts on the back of the dragon guarding the vaults, "Panic Inside Hogwarts" when McGonagall fights the epic duel with Snape, "Statues" when the professors cast spells of protection over Hogwarts, "Broomsticks and Fire" as Harry, Ron, and Hermione escape from the Room of Requirement, "Courtyard Apocalypse" when Voldemort and his minions attack Hogwarts, and "Showdown" when Harry finally confronts Voldemort.  There are also some really beautiful and haunting themes played by the strings, such as "Severus and Lily" when Harry looks into the pensieve and learns from Snape's memories that he has been protecting him all these years and "The Resurrection Stone" when Harry asks James, Lily, Sirius, and Remus to be with him when he surrenders to Voldemort (this scene made me cry the first time I saw it because it is such an emotional moment).  I also really loved that a variation of "Hedwig's Theme," originally composed by John Williams, is used multiple times because it is so iconic and reminds us of everything Harry, Ron, and Hermione have been through during their years at Hogwarts!  I have loved every performance in Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series but the Harry Potter concerts have been my favorite because I love these movies so much!  If you have not attended one I highly recommend it (go here for the remaining concerts in the series).

Saturday, October 28, 2023

Anatomy of a Fall

My nephew has made a lot of new friends in college but, apparently, he has missed going to movies with me (which I think is really sweet) so I arranged for us to see Anatomy of a Fall at the Broadway last night.  This was one of my most anticipated movies from the fall festivals (it won the Palme d'Or at Cannes) and both Sean and I found it to be incredibly thought-provoking.  When Samuel Maleski (Samuel Theis) falls to his death from the attic window of his isolated chalet in the mountains of France, an autopsy is unable to determine is it was an accident or murder.  His German wife Sandra Voyter (Sandra Hüller) becomes the prime suspect because she was the only one home at the time.  She is eventually put on trial when an audio recording of an argument between her and her husband surfaces.  Her lawyer (Swann Arlaud) introduces evidence suggesting a suicide, even though she is very uncomfortable with this defense, but the aggressive public prosecutor (Antoine Reinartz) builds a case, based on a subjective interpretation of the audio recording, showing that the marriage was troubled and that their fights often escalated to violence.  Their young son Daniel (Milo Machado-Graner), who is visually impaired and was out for a walk when his father fell to his death, struggles to make sense of the evidence he hears in court but he must ultimately decide who to believe before he testifies.  This is an incredibly tense courtroom drama made even more so by including a language barrier (Sandra is German and, therefore, not fluent in French so she often lapses into English when testifying) because this creates even more opportunities to misconstrue her meaning.  It is a cautionary tale about the ways in which private moments between two people can appear very differently to others when they become public and I was absolutely riveted!  In fact, Sean and I both came to different conclusions about Sandra's culpability (in my opinion her guilt or innocence almost doesn't matter) and I am still thinking about it!  Hüller gives a brilliant and highly nuanced performance (the Oscar buzz surrounding her is entirely warranted) but Machado-Graner is absolutely amazing because the camera is often on him during the courtroom scenes and his reactions inform the audience how to feel about the various revelations.  Finally, this movie features one of the best uses of a song (an instrumental version of "P.I.M.P" by 50 Cent no less) that I have ever seen because it has multiple meanings and becomes more and more important as the narrative progresses.  Believe the hype about this one!

Friday, October 27, 2023

Nyad

I went to see Nyad at the Broadway last night and I really liked it (I am a sucker for inspirational sports movies).  On her 60th birthday, former long distance open water swimmer Diana Nyad (Annette Bening) feels that she is standing on the sidelines of life as a sports commentator and decides that she wants to revisit the dream of swimming from Havana, Cuba to Key West, Florida that she abandoned after one ill-fated attempt at age 28.  She enlists her best friend Bonnie Stoll (Jodie Foster) to be her coach, assembles a team, including a navigator named John Bartlett (Rhys Ifans), and begins training for a swim that is so dangerous many believe it cannot be done.  She faces challenges from Gulf Stream currents, storms, hypothermia, dehydration, sharks, and jellyfish as well as her own inner demons (shown as flashbacks to the father who pushed her to succeed and to the coach who abused her) and push back from her team for taking them for granted but, after four failed attempts, she perseveres and makes it to Key West on September 2, 2013 after swimming 110 miles in 53 hours.  This is the first narrative feature from award-winning documentarians Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin (I really loved Meru) and I think this compelling true story about triumphing in the face of overwhelming odds in an extreme sport is a perfect fit for them.  Even though I knew the outcome I was on the edge of my seat from the suspense created by their use of immersive cinematography showing all of the dangers in the water and the integration of actual footage from the swim and the news coverage of it is very well done.  I really loved the message that it is never too late to pursue a dream and the portrayal of a strong female friendship is very refreshing to see.  I also enjoyed the tremendous (and vanity-free) performance from Bening as the sometimes unsympathetic Nyad and the incredibly moving one from Foster as her biggest supporter.  The score by Alexandre Desplat is outstanding but I particularly enjoyed all of the music that Nyad uses to keep a rhythm to her strokes, especially "The Sound of Silence" by Simon & Garfunkel and "Heart of Gold" by Neil Young.  This is a stand up and cheer movie about an incredible feat of epic determination and I highly recommend it.

Thursday, October 26, 2023

Jazz vs. Kings

My friend Angela renewed her Utah Jazz ticket package and, just like last season, she very graciously allowed me to select several games to attend with her.  The first game I picked, against the Toronto Raptors (for reasons), is not until January but, when Angela let me know that the ticket for the game last night was available, I jumped at the chance to go!  The arena is once again known as the Delta Center (which is really funny to me because I still called it the Delta Center for years after the name changed) so there was a big celebration out on the plaza before the game and it was so much fun to be there.  The atmosphere inside was just as electric because it was the first game of the season and we have several new players with a lot of promise on the roster.  The Jazz played the Sacramento Kings and they let them take an early lead in the first few minutes of the first quarter.  Despite 24 points from Jordan Clarkson, 19 from Lauri Markkanen, 15 from John Collins and some exciting back-to-back layups from Talen Horton-Tucker and Walker Kessler, the Kings never relinquished that early lead for the rest of the game and even led by as many as 23 points in the fourth quarter.  It was a bit frustrating because the Jazz couldn't seem to stop Sacramento's offense, especially their three-point shots, while their own offense struggled to find a rhythm (I think they are still learning how to play together as a team).  By the fourth quarter, the Kings were basically having their way with the Jazz and they ended up winning 130-114.  Despite the loss I was really excited by what I saw from our rookie Keyonte George (I like him a lot).  He ended up playing 19 minutes and finished with eight points (including an exciting dunk that got the crowd cheering), two rebounds, and two assists.  I am looking forward to watching his progress this season!  It was also a lot of fun to spend time with Angela and I'm so glad I got to go to the game with her even with the final outcome.

Note:  The Jazz won every game I attended for the past two seasons.  It looks like my streak is now over.

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

The Rocky Horror Show at PTC

I have been waiting for PTC's production of The Rocky Horror Show with great ANTICI.....say it.....PATION. I was able to see it last night and I had so much fun! This cult classic is a campy spoof of science fiction B-movies complete with an usher named Magenta (Ginger Bess) who introduces the story. While driving home on a rainy night, a young and naive couple named Brad (Alex Walton) and Janet (Alanna Saunders) get a flat tire and end up at the castle of Dr. Frank-N-Furter (Jeremiah James), a cross dressing mad scientist from the planet Transsexual in the galaxy Transylvania, who is having a wild party with his entourage, including Riff Raff (Hernando Umana) and Columbia (Micki Martinez), to unveil his latest creation Rocky (Michael Dalke), a beautiful and muscular man designed to give pleasure. Hi-jinks (and a floor show) ensue! The Narrator last night (the role rotates between three different Utah personalities) was the popular former news anchor Randall Carlisle and he got some of the biggest laughs of the evening, especially with his references to BYU. The rest of the main cast is also outstanding with great voices and excellent comedic timing! James is perfect as Frank with all of his over-the-top facial expressions and I loved his flamboyant rendition of "Sweet Transvestite" and his surprisingly poignant version of "I'm Going Home." Walton provides a lot of the comedy as the nerdy Brad and I laughed out loud during "Damn It, Janet" and "Once in a While." The same could be said of Saunders as the prudish Janet because the physical comedy as she loses her sexual inhibitions during her performance of "Touch-A Touch Me" is a highlight of the show. The choreography is so much fun, particularly the iconic number "Time Warp" and the dazzling "Floor Show." I also loved how Frank's seduction of both Janet and Brad is staged and the ending of the song "Space Ship" provides a lot of laughs. The costumes, including corsets, garters, fishnet stockings, and high heels, are fabulously outrageous and the hair and makeup are very glam while the stage features a spooky castle backdrop (I loved all of the freestanding candelabras) with lots of quirky laboratory set pieces. A live band is also located on stage and they sound fabulous! Of course, what makes a live performance of The Rocky Horror Show so much fun is all of the audience participation! Even though it had been quite a while since I'd seen it, I remembered the words to the songs, when to use all of the props (prop kits are available to purchase for $5.00 online and in the lobby before the show), and most of the talk backs! I always think it is so funny to yell "asshole" and "slut" every time the names Brad and Janet, respectively, are mentioned. To be sure, this show provides a fun and raucous night out but, more than anything, it has a powerful message about acceptance that is needed now more than ever and I highly recommend it! It runs at PTC through October 31 with several matinees and late night performances (go here for tickets).

Note:  One of my fondest memories from participating in high school theatre is when a bunch of us climbed up to the catwalk and performed "Time Warp" at a late night rehearsal.  It was so fun to perform it again last night at the end of the show.

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

The Birds

I am a huge fan of Alfred Hitchcock (my rankings change all of the time but he is definitely one of my top three favorite directors) so I was really excited to see The Birds, which is back in theaters in honor of its 60th anniversary, last night.  I have seen this movie many times but it was a very different experience seeing it on the big screen!  Socialite Melanie Daniels (Tippi Hedren) meets a man named Mitch Brenner (Rod Taylor) in a San Francisco pet store as he attempts to buy two lovebirds for his eleven-year-old sister Cathy (Veronica Cartwright).  On impulse, she decides to buy the birds and take them to him at his family home in the small Northern California town of Bodega Bay where she meets his former girlfriend Annie (Suzanne Pleshette) and his disapproving mother Lydia (Jessica Tandy).  As the relationship between Melanie and Mitch develops, the town is inexplicably and viciously attacked by a variety of birds.  What is so brilliant about this movie is the almost casual introduction of the romance between Melanie and Mitch with subtle foreshadowing of the horror to come.  Then, when the birds finally begin attacking, the tension is almost unbearable.  I was especially unnerved by the suspense as Melanie waits for Cathy outside of the schoolhouse while birds ominously gather on the playground and when Mitch, Melanie, Lydia, and Cathy anxiously wait inside their house for an attack they know is coming.  The practical effects, involving both real and mechanical birds, really hold up because they are quite disturbing, particularly the attack on the school children as they are running away, the attack on Melanie as she is trapped in a phone booth, and the attack on Melanie in the attic.  The sound design is absolutely brilliant because the sound of the birds attacking is terrifying but the use of silence is even more effective at creating an atmosphere of dread.  Finally, the ending is so bleak (my audience sat in stunned silence even after the lights came back on) but it is the perfect way to emphasize the fact that we are all powerless against the forces of nature.  This is one of Hitchcock's best movies, in my opinion, and I'm so glad I got to see it on the big screen (especially during the month of October).

Monday, October 23, 2023

Pumpkin Carving 2023

Since Tashena is living in Washington and Sean is in college living in a dorm, Marilyn and I thought that we probably wouldn't be doing some of our holiday traditions this year.  Then Marilyn got a text from Sean asking when we would be carving pumpkins!  We had our annual pumpkin carving party last night while he was home for dinner (my family gets together every Sunday for dinner) and it was a lot of fun!
I am quite proud of my pumpkin this year because it actually turned out like the pattern!
I have a picture like this from every year since he was a little boy!  We'll see if he wants to do gingerbread houses for Christmas!

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Ballet West's Dracula

Two years ago I had the opportunity to see Ballet West's amazing production of Dracula and it immediately became one of my favorites.  I was, therefore, really excited when I found out that it would open the 2023-2024 season and I loved seeing it again last night.  In Act I Dracula (Tyler Gum) emerges very dramatically from a tomb in the crypt of his castle and summons all of his brides who dance at his command.  I really loved the choreography in this scene because the brides, who wear ethereal white dresses, are controlled by Dracula with just a glance or gesture and he works them up into a frenzy as they leap (and sometimes fly) across the stage.  Renfield (Vinicius Lima), Dracula's minion, brings a young woman named Flora (Amy Potter) to the castle in a horse-drawn carriage (the horses are portrayed by dancers Kai Casperson and Phillipp Mergener and their costumes are very macabre).  The brides help Dracula to beguile her and the two of them dance a gorgeous Pas de Deux before he transforms her.  In Act II an innkeeper (Jake Preece) and his wife (Emily Adams) are celebrating the birthday of their daughter Svetlana (Katlyn Addison) with a group of peasants who perform various dances based on the folklore of the area.  The costumes worn by the peasants are very vibrant and colorful and I loved the patterns the women make with ribbons and the ones the men make with staffs in these dances.  Svetlana is in love with a peasant named Frederick (Hadriel Diniz) and, when they become betrothed, they dance another beautiful Pas de Deux.  They also perform a series of solos and I loved it when the choreography has Svetlana spinning on her heels.  Dracula hears of Svetlana's beauty so he sends Flora into the village to capture her and bring her to his castle.  In Act III Flora flies back and forth across the stage directing the other brides to prepare Dracula's bedchamber.  When Svetlana arrives Dracula attempts to beguile her in a stunning Pas de Deux where she appears to glide across the stage (I think Addison is a beautiful dancer and her grace and elegance are really on display in this role) but Frederick and her father interrupt him when they suddenly appear at the castle to rescue her.  A battle, featuring lots of special effects, ensues.  The performances are outstanding and the choreography is exciting but I also loved the atmospheric music by Franz Liszt (after the Utah Symphony concert the previous evening I immediately recognized the use of the Dies irae from the Requiem Mass), the beautiful costumes (including all of those I mentioned previously as well as a cape worn by Dracula which, when unfurled, looks like a bat's wings), and the striking sets (especially the dark and gloomy crypt in the castle).  This production is absolutely perfect for Halloween and I highly recommend it (go here for tickets).

Note:  I decided not to subscribe this season because I wanted to be able to choose performances based on casting.  I really enjoy seeing Katlyn Addison, my favorite dancer in the company, in a main role.

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