Saturday, November 25, 2023
Gentri Christmas at the Eccles 2023
'Tis the Season
Friday, November 24, 2023
Thanksgiving 2023
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Wish
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
May December
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
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Next Goal Wins
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Brahms' Symphony No. 2
Friday, November 17, 2023
My Fair Lady at the Eccles
Thursday, November 16, 2023
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Live in Concert
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
Ballet West's Firebird
Saturday, November 11, 2023
Audra McDonald with the Utah Symphony
Friday, November 10, 2023
The Marvels
Saturday, November 4, 2023
Beethoven's Ninth
Friday, November 3, 2023
Priscilla
Monday, October 30, 2023
The Holdovers
Sunday, October 29, 2023
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 in Concert
Saturday, October 28, 2023
Anatomy of a Fall
Friday, October 27, 2023
Nyad
Thursday, October 26, 2023
Jazz vs. Kings
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.

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