Thursday, October 23, 2025

Jazz vs. Clippers

Last night was the Utah Jazz season opener at the Delta Center and I got to go with my friend Angela (she has a season package and very graciously lets me pick several games to attend with her).  The game against the Los Angeles Clippers was so much fun (it is probably the most fun I've had at a game in over a year) because the Jazz dominated them from the opening tip-off to the final buzzer and they had a considerable lead during all four quarters (something fans haven't seen in over a year).  Keyonte George was the starting point guard and, despite the fact that he looks about 12, he did a great job leading the team.  He ended the night with 16 points and 9 assists (including an amazing steal in the first quarter).  It was great to see Lauri Markkanen shooting well again, after struggling last year, with 20 points and 5 assists.  The veteran of the team, Walter Kessler, was outstanding (he was the player of the game) and shot 7-7 from the field and 2-2 from the three-point line to end the night with 29 points.  He did a little bit of everything had the crowd cheering every time he touched the ball!  Our newest player, Ace Bailey (another player who looks about 12), didn't play much because he is still recovering from the flu but he scored his first points in the NBA with a really pretty breakaway dunk!  The crowd went crazy and he was so excited!  Our other rookie, Walter Clayton, Jr., also had a nice night with 10 points and it was good to see Taylor Hendricks back on the court with 13 points after an injury that sidelined him for most of last season.  Finally, I was really impressed with Brice Sensabaugh who scored 20 points and looked great with several three-pointers.  The Jazz got a decisive 129-108 win over the Clippers (the most points scored in a season opener in franchise history) and I loved cheering with the large crowd because it was electric.  I don't want to get my hopes up but it really looks like this team has some depth and I am actually looking forward to going to games again after so much disappointment last season!

Note:  My sister made me this awesome hoodie when I complained that all of my jerseys were for players who are not on the team anymore.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

After the Hunt

Despite some divisive reviews, my nephew and I decided to see After the Hunt at the Broadway last night.  I was initially very put off by several things but, upon further reflection, I think they were intentional and, ultimately, tremendously thought-provoking.  Alma Imhoff (Julia Roberts) is a well-respected philosophy professor at Yale University who is being considered for tenure along with her colleague and close personal friend Hank Gibson (Andrew Garfield). She and her psychiatrist husband Frederik (Michael Stuhlbarg) host a dinner party for several of her students, including her protege Maggie Resnick (Ayo Edebiri), and colleagues, including Hank, where a heated discussion takes place.  The next day Maggie accuses Hank of sexually assaulting her and turns to Alma for support but she is disappointed by her surprisingly indifferent response.  Hank also reaches out to Alma to protest his innocence but she reports him to the dean which results in his termination.  However, the situation becomes increasingly fraught as information about each of the three, and their motivations, comes to light.  I really enjoyed the juxtaposition between Alma and Maggie who are intriguing foils to each other.  They both may or may not have been assaulted (more about that later) but they each respond according to the social mores of the time in which their attacks occurred.  Alma represses what happened to her and counsels Maggie to do the same if she wants to succeed in the male-dominated world of academia but Maggie sees her victimhood as a way to publicly fight against the patriarchy.  My nephew and I, who roughly correspond to the generations depicted by these women, had an engaging discussion about their differing mindsets.  I did not enjoy the ambiguity of the narrative (Alma, Maggie, and Hank are slowly revealed to be incredibly unreliable narrators) because I wanted to know the truth but Guadagnino is emphasizing that the truth is sometimes difficult to ascertain and that it can be manipulated.  I also disliked the theatricality of the performances (Guadagnino even breaks the fourth wall to yell "cut!" after the last scene) which is further emphasized by an uncharacteristically melodramatic score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross but I think that this is a commentary on the often performative nature of pursuing social justice (which is provocative, to say the least).  Both Roberts and Edebiri are definitely compelling but I was most impressed by Garfield, who is playing against type, because he is very believable as an unsympathetic character.  This will not appeal to everyone (I still don't know what I think about its themes) but I have not been able to stop thinking about it and that might be the point.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Something Rotten at the Terrace Plaza Playhouse

Last night I went to the Terrace Plaza Playhouse for my fourth production of Something Rotten this year (it is safe to say that I love this show). As with most community theatres, some productions at the Playhouse are better than others but I would definitely put this one among the best! It is fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed it! Nick and Nigel Bottom (Brock Harris and Bryson Warner, respectively) are playwrights in Renaissance England who are tired of being outshined by William Shakespeare (Nick Balaich). Nick is desperate for a big hit because his patron Lady Clapham (Kassie Winkler) is withdrawing her support, Shylock (Glen Merrell) the moneylender is demanding that his loan be repaid, his wife Bea (Whitney Cahoon) is pregnant, and his brother has fallen in love with the daughter (Julia Green) of a Puritan (Nathan Fawcett) who wants to shut down his theatre for debauchery, so he contacts the soothsayer Thomas Nostradamus (Kaltin Kirby) to see what will be popular in the future. Nostradamus suggests writing a play with singing and dancing. Things go awry, however, when Nick asks Nostradamus to look into the future again to see what Shakespeare's most popular play will be and, instead of Hamlet, Nostradamus sees omelette (so close!). Nick tries to produce Omelette The Musical while Shakespeare, who is suffering from writer's block, tries to steal his own play back! All's well that ends well when Nigel reminds Nick to be true to himself. There are over 60 different musicals referenced in the hilarious numbers "A Musical" and "Make an Omelette" and it is always so much fun when I recognize a new show or line of dialogue. In this production I noticed a line from Ragtime for the first time in "Make an Omelette." I also love all of the allusions to Shakespeare and I was the only one in the audience who laughed when Shakespeare promises that he won't make the judge Falstaff appear foolish in one of his plays. Everyone in the cast is outstanding but I especially loved Balaich (my favorite character in the show is Shakespeare because he is portrayed as a rock star) for his over the top performances in "Will Power" and "Hard to Be The Bard," Cahoon for her spirited rendition of "Right Hand Man," and Kirby for the physicality of all of his antics while trying to see the future and in "A Musical." I also loved the gender swap from a lord to a lady with Winkler as Clapham because it is so funny to see Nick's former patron swoon over Shakespeare. The choreography (especially the tap dancing), costumes, sets, and projections are some of the best I've seen from this theatre and I was very impressed with all of the effort that went into such a great production of one of my favorite shows! Huzzah to everyone involved! It runs Mondays, Fridays, and Saturdays through November 15 and you definitely want to get a ticket (go here).

Monday, October 20, 2025

Good Fortune

I thought the trailer for Good Fortune looked hilarious so my nephew and I went to see it last night.  Unfortunately, it was not at all what I was expecting.  Gabriel (Keanu Reeves) is a low-level guardian angel responsible for saving people from accidents when they text and drive but he aspires to be an angel who saves lost souls.  He takes an interest in Arj (Aziz Ansari) after he saves him from an accident and begins watching him.  Arj is sleeping in his car and working temporary jobs because, even though he has a degree, he can't find a job in his field.  He eventually starts working as an assistant to Jeff (Seth Rogen), a wealthy tech investor, but is fired for using a company credit card to pay for an expensive dinner with Elena (Keke Palmer), a co-worker he is trying to impress.  When his car is impounded for unpaid parking tickets, Gabriel decides to intervene to show a despondent Arj that his life is worth living.  Arj is not consoled by seeing his future self because he is still struggling financially so Gabriel has him trade places with Jeff for a week to see that money does not solve all problems.  Chaos ensues when Arj sees that money does, in fact, solve all of his problems and refuses to switch back.  Gabriel's supervisor Martha (Sandra Oh) punishes him by taking his wings until he can get Arj to agree to switch back and both he and Jeff see what it is like to live the life Arj once lived.  This features a very heavy-handed message condemning the increasing disparity between the rich and poor and the inability to change one's circumstances through education or hard work.  However, in my opinion, this message is undermined by an ending that suggests finding joy in the little pleasures of life (such as tacos, dancing, and spending time with friends) as a way to endure the hardship.  This is meant to be uplifting but it is overly simplistic at best and insulting at worst.  I also found the plot to be very meandering with a lot of unnecessary tangents (so many scenes involving cold plunges).  Finally, I was expecting a comedy and I don't think I laughed once (all of the humor is shown in the trailer).  The only highlight for me was Reeves (Rogen and Ansari are portraying characters they've played many times before).  This was a bit disappointing and I recommend giving it a miss.

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Black Phone 2

I was really surprised by how much I liked The Black Phone so I was excited to be able to see the sequel, Black Phone 2, with my nephew last night.  I think it takes a lot of the ideas explored in the first movie and expands upon them.  Four years after Finney Blake (Mason Thames) killed the Grabber (Ethan Hawke), his sister Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) is having disturbing dreams about three dead boys at the Alpine Lake Camp, including one in which her late mother Hope (Anna Lore), who worked at the camp, calls her from a pay phone there.  Finney is still traumatized by his experience with the Grabber but he reluctantly agrees to go with Gwen and her boyfriend Ernesto (Miguel Mora), the brother of one of the Grabber's victims, to investigate the camp.  They arrive in the middle of a severe snowstorm and are stranded there with Armando (Demian Bichir), the owner of the camp, who remembers Hope and the three campers who were killed by a counselor and never found.  When Gwen begins having disturbing interactions with the Grabber in her dreams, Finney receives a call on the pay phone from him vowing to kill Gwen as retribution for his death.  They eventually realize that the Grabber was the one who killed the boys and that they must find their bodies in order end his power over Gwen.  What I enjoyed most about this story is that it mirrors the one in the original.  In the first movie, Gwen uses her supernatural ability to help Finney defeat a real monster and, in this one, Finney uses his real ability to help Gwen defeat a supernatural threat.  I also liked the continued use of the phone as a link to those beyond the grave, especially the connection between Gwen and her mother which becomes more significant as the movie progresses.  Gwen's dream sequences have a grainy Super 8 film aesthetic and feature plenty of gory imagery, particularly a decapitation using a windowpane, but my favorite scene is when Finney interacts with the three dead campers while in the phone booth because it is incredibly unnerving.  Thames and McGraw give great performances but Bichir is used mostly for exposition and there are a few other characters who feel a bit extraneous.  I think this is a good sequel but what keeps it from being a great one, in my opinion, is all of the cringe-worthy dialogue (of which there is a lot).  I still really liked it and would definitely recommend it to fans of horror.

National Theatre Live: Inter Alia

Yesterday afternoon I was really excited to see a screening of the National Theatre Live production of Inter Alia which was filmed earlier this year at the Lyttelton Theatre in London and presented by the Tanner Humanities Center and Salt Lake Film Society.  This new play by the same team responsible for the hit Prima Facie is brilliant and I was blown away by Rosamund Pike's powerful performance.  Jessica Parks (Pike) is a ground-breaking Crown Court Judge as well as a wife to Michael Wheatley (Jamie Glover) and a mother to eighteen-year-old Harry (Jasper Talbot).  While she is a rock star in the courtroom (she is backed by a band who performs live on stage during the courtroom scenes) known for refusing to back down from the misogynistic barristers who appear before her and for her tough stance on the perpetrators of sexual violence, she frequently feels compelled to downplay her accomplishments to soothe the ego of her husband, who is a less successful barrister, and defers to him in matters relating to their son because he is a man and she thinks that he can relate to what Harry is experiencing more than she can.  She shoulders most of the responsibilities for running the household (there is an incredible scene in which she frantically prepares for a dinner party as Michael and Harry make demands of her) and often feels guilty about her perceived failures as a mother.  Her professional and personal worlds collide when Harry is accused of rape at a party and her role as a judge who advocates for the rights of victims is at odds with her role as a mother who wants to save her son.  Pike is in constant motion, moving between a platform upstage, which represents her courtroom, an elaborate set center stage, which represents her home, and a large screen downstage, which depicts flashbacks with Harry as a child, as she juggles all of Jessica's many responsibilities (inter alia is a legal term which means "among other things"), and she deftly manages multiple costume changes on stage and a myriad of props.  She also effectively portrays many competing emotions, from a hilarious scene singing karaoke (of course she sings "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!") to a devastating one in which she confronts her husband for not stepping up and helping their son navigate the toxic masculinity on the so-called manosphere.  Both Glover and Talbot are also outstanding and I was especially moved by the latter's final scene with Pike because it is so emotional.  I loved this because, in addition to its clever staging and memorable performances, it is incredibly thought-provoking, particularly the difference between the moral definition of guilt and the legal one, and I know that I will be thinking about it for a long time to come.  The next National Theatre Live productions at the Broadway are Mrs. Warren's Profession on November 8, The Fifth Step on February 21, Hamlet on March 21, and Life of Pi on April 11 (I so excited for this!).

Saturday, October 18, 2025

The Woman in Black at Parker Theatre

Seeing Parker Theatre's production of The Woman in Black last year was one of the most frightening theatrical experiences I have ever had (at one point I was so scared I nearly jumped out of my seat and there were multiple times when members of the audience screamed out loud). I was, therefore, excited (terrified?) when I learned that they were bringing this show back for a limited run just in time for Halloween! I saw it last night and, while I was more prepared for when the woman in black suddenly appeared in the aisle next to me, I was still quite unnerved by the whole experience. In other words, I loved it! Arthur Kipps (Michael Hohl) is still traumatized by an encounter with an apparition that he had many years ago while settling the estate of Alice Drablow at Eel Marsh House on an isolated island that is only accessible by a causeway at low tide. He believes that he can rid himself of the nightmares that plague him by telling the story publicly on stage so he hires an Actor (Ben Lowell) to help him. The Actor convinces him that it would be better to act out the story rather than recite it from a manuscript so they begin rehearsing in a Victorian theatre using minimal props, realistic sound cues, and imaginative light design. The Actor portrays a younger version of Kipps and Kipps plays all of the other characters and narrates the play. The action on stage depicts Kipps attending Drablow's funeral, traveling to her house in an old-fashioned pony and trap, working alone in the eerie house, and witnessing unsettling events including the appearance of a strange figure dressed in black. They stop in between scenes to discuss their performances and, during one such break, Kipps promises a surprise. The Actor interprets this to mean that Kipps hired the actress who suddenly appeared on stage with them. The action concludes when young Kipps discovers the identity of the mysterious figure and when the Actor makes a startling realization about the actress portraying her. This is a very clever adaptation of the Gothic novel by Susan Hill because it uses imaginative stagecraft to tell the story. I particularly loved the smoke effects when Kipps is trapped in fog on the causeway, the light from a single torch when he gets lost in the marsh, as well as the shadows on a scrim and the creaking of a rocking chair when he discovers a room that seems to be haunted (people in the audience screamed during all three of these scenes) because the suggestion of something is often much more effective than the thing itself (especially the woman in black because she only appears a few times but I thought I saw her in every shadow). Both actors are outstanding! Lowell's performance really adds to the unease because his terror is palpable and Hohl seamlessly inhabits all of his characters with just the addition of an article of clothing or prop. In my opinion, this is the perfect show to see for Halloween (go here for tickets) but act quickly because it is a limited run with only nine more performances through Nov. 1.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Thriller 2025

Last night I had so much fun at Odyssey Dance Theatre's Halloween-themed dance extravaganza Thriller.  It is one my favorite Halloween traditions and, even though most of the dances are the same every year, I eagerly anticipate every one of them.  My favorites include a group of the undead cavorting in a graveyard in "Thriller" (I love this because it incorporates the choreography from Michael Jackson's iconic music video), a breakdancing mummy and his maidens in "Curse of the Mummy," misbehaving pandas at their first dance recital in "Miss Alli's Nightmare" (I love the one that slowly removes his costume and the once that sits down and refuses to dance), a Pas de Deux that goes horribly wrong in "Frankenstein & Frankenstein" (I love the inclusion of Gene Wilder's overwrought monologue about giving his creation life from Young Frankenstein), tap dancing skeletons that glow in the dark in "Dem Bones," a trio of serial killers who wield a variety of weapons in "Jason Jam" (this is a huge crowd favorite and they seemed even more deranged because they chased a victim through the aisles), scarecrows that terrorize a group of teens in a cornfield in "Children of the Corn" (I love that the cheerleaders' uniforms are from a different school every year), a coven of condemned witches seeking vengeance from beyond the grave in "Salem's Mass" (this is my favorite number), demonic dolls that come to life in "Chucky-Rama" (this features a different youth cast from various dance schools around the valley every night and they are always fantastic), acrobatic vampires stalking an unsuspecting victim in "Lost Boys," and an elaborate costume parade in "Trick or Treat" (my favorite was the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man).  There were also a few new dances and my favorite was a sexy tango in "Gomez & Morticia" (this was especially fun after seeing The Addams Family earlier in the week).  I was happy that Bubbles the Clown once again appeared in between numbers because he is hilarious (I was equally happy that Giggle Girl did not appear this year) and I laughed out loud at a new short film by Scott Winn featuring a dance-off between the wizards from Harry Potter and the vampires from Twilight judged by Gandalf ("You shall not dance!").  There was a large and enthusiastic crowd (it was at the Grand Theatre once again) and I loved cheering along with them for every number!  I highly recommend this for some Halloween fun (go here for tickets) but act quickly because there were very few empty seats last night.  It runs at the Grand Theatre through October 25 and at Tuacahn from October 28-November 1.

Note:  Every year I try to avoid eye contact with the undead who roam the aisles before the show but this did not save me last night because one of them kept sneaking up on me to hiss at me (at one point I jumped a mile out of my seat which made her laugh).  It turns out I was sitting next to her parents.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Utah Opera's The Shining

To say that I was intrigued when Utah Opera announced The Shining as the opening production for the 2025-2026 season would be an understatement!  As a huge fan of the novel by Stephen King, I have been counting down the days until I could see it and I was so excited to finally have the chance last night.  I admit to being a bit skeptical about how well the novel would translate to the stage but this production is outstanding and I think it brilliantly captures the terror of the Overlook Hotel.  Jack Torrence (Craig Irvin) is a recovering alcoholic tormented by the memory of his abusive father and by the fact that he is now perpetuating the cycle of abuse with his own son.  He hopes that a job as the caretaker for the remote and isolated Overlook Hotel while it is closed for the winter will be a new start for him, his wife Wendy (Kearstin Piper Brown), and his son Danny (Bella Grace Smith).  However, Danny immediately senses an evil presence in the hotel with a sixth sense that the hotel's cook Dick Hallorann (Patrick Blackwell), who possesses the same abilty, calls "the shining."  Dick assures Danny that he can use "the shining" to contact him if things get too dangerous for him at the hotel.  Jack finds a scrapbook detailing the hotel's infamous past full of murders, suicides, and Mafia hits and the ghosts haunting the hotel use his insecurities about being a good husband and father to influence him.  Eventually, the ghosts of Delbert Grady (Christian Sanders), the former caretaker who murdered his wife (Stephanie Chee) and daughters (Eva Peterson and Lilah Burrell), and his father Mark Torrence (Christopher Clayton) urge him to murder his family but, in a moment of lucidity, Jack implores them to leave with Hallorann, who has responded to Danny's call for help, and finds redemption by destroying the hotel and its ghosts.  I think the movie adaptation is a cinematic masterpiece but it is definitely the story Stanley Kubrick wanted to tell rather than the one Stephen King wrote so I was pleased that the libretto follows the novel because I prefer the more sympathetic portrayal of Jack.  Irvin gives a powerful performance and, while much of what he sings involves recitative, he does have a soul searching aria where he wishes to be a better husband and father in Act I and it is very affecting.  He also portrays Jack's slow descent into madness with nuance and it is very chilling to watch.  Brown gave me goosebumps with her beautiful performance of the aria "I never stopped loving you" in Act I and I also liked her characterization as both a loving wife and a fiercely protective mother because her Wendy is much stronger than the movie version.  Blackwell has a moment to shine in the epilogue and his deep rich tones in the aria exhorting Danny to be strong was the highlight for me.  The music itself is very atmospheric and it gets more ominous as the opera progresses but the sound design also adds to the unease (particularly the steam coming from the boiler because it foreshadows the tragedy to come).  The stage is configured as the lobby of the Overlook Hotel with a grand staircase leading to an upper level and various rooms made out of scrim to allow for eerie digital projections (some of which replicate the iconic images from the movie).  The costumes for the Torrence family have a fun 1970s vibe but I especially loved those worn by the ghosts attending the New Year's Eve Masquerade Ball.  I thoroughly enjoyed this opera and would definitely recommend getting a ticket to one of the two remaining performances (go here).

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

A House of Dynamite

The second movie in the double feature at the Broadway with my nephew last night was A House of Dynamite and it is incredibly tense and thought-provoking if ultimately anti-climactic.  The launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile from an unknown country is shown from three different perspectives.  The first perspective introduces the threat as Major Daniel Gonzalez (Anthony Ramos) and his team at Fort Greely in Alaska first detect the missile heading inbound to the United States on radar and attempt, unsuccessfully, to neutralize it with anti-ballistic missiles and as Captain Olivia Walker (Rebecca Ferguson), the senior  officer in the White House situation room, and her team assess the danger to the population and inform all high-ranking government officials.  The second perspective proposes possible responses as General Anthony Brady (Tracy Letts), the senior military officer at STRATCOM (the United States Strategic Command), advocates for nuclear retaliation against all known enemies and as Jake Bearington (Gabriel Basso), the Deputy National Security Officer, urges caution after contacting Ana Park (Greta Lee), the NSA's North Korea expert, and the Russian Foreign Minister (Andrei Kouznetsov).  The third perspective conveys the weight of making an impossible decision as the POTUS (Idris Elba) consults with Secretary of Defense Reid Baker (Jared Harris) and Presidential Military Aide Lieutenant Commander Robert Reeves (Jonah Hauer-King) in order to choose between several devastating options.  One of the things I found most compelling is how the narrative humanizes the characters who are responsible for keeping the country safe, often at the expense of their own families, especially when Walker tearfully advises her husband (Neal Bledsoe) to take their son (Nicholas Monterosso) and drive as far away as possible, when Baker calls his estranged daughter (Kaitlyn Dever) after he realizes that she lives in the targeted city, and when the POTUS calls the First Lady (Renee Elise Goldsberry), who is visiting Africa, to ask her opinion.  However, this is also extremely disconcerting because we see that these very human individuals tasked with keeping us safe are also fallible and are the weakest link in elaborate contingency plans. The action is frenetic as the camera shifts from person to person in the large ensemble cast and the suspense is almost unbearable as the countdown to impact is shown three different times with an unsettling score.  I was on the edge of my seat until the ending which I found very disappointing (I may or may not have uttered an expletive under my breath) even though it is probably the only way it could have ended.  I would recommend seeing this in the theater because it is a visceral experience but it will be available on Netflix beginning October 24.

Orwell: 2+2=5

My nephew was very eager to see Orwell: 2+2=5 so it was the first in a double feature at the Broadway last night.  It is an incredibly insightful (and deeply upsetting) look at the life and writings of George Orwell that is, unfortunately, very relevant in the world today.  It takes a nonlinear approach to show how his life experiences informed his world view and his work, most notably Nineteen Eighty-Four, with Damian Lewis narrating as the voice of the author.  Eric Arthur Blair, who wrote under the pen name George Orwell, was born into what he called the lower-upper-middle-class in which he felt his status very keenly, especially while at Eton, and came to abhor social classes.  His family was unable to afford university and his marks were not good enough for a scholarship so he joined the police force in what was then Burma.  He saw first hand the oppression of the powerless by the British and developed a hatred for imperialism.  He eventually volunteered to fight against Franco's military uprising during the Spanish Civil War where he experienced the evils of fascism and totalitarianism and also worked for the BBC for a time during World War II but resigned after observing media manipulation.  He began writing as a way to call attention to these issues.  The documentary then highlights the themes of Nineteen Eighty-Four by reiterating the motto of Oceania (War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength) and then applying it to the global situation today by highlighting the military invasions of Iraq, Ukraine, and Palestine; the growing income inequality around the world; and the spread of misinformation, anti-intellectualism, AI, and book banning.  For me the most chilling motif, shown multiple times with footage from the various movie adaptations of Nineteen Eight-Four, is when the protagonist Winston is forced to agree that 2+2=5 during his interrogation because I think that people have willingly abandoned what they know to be true in favor of what is expedient in our current political climate.  As distressing as this is to watch, it does end with the belief that people will not abandon their common decency and will eventually heed Orwell's warnings.  I think this is an important documentary for everyone to see and I highly recommend it.

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

The Addams Family at Draper Historic Theatre

I haven't been to the Draper Historic Theatre since I went with my cousins Emily and Julie to see Once Upon a Mattress in 2009! I returned last night for a production of The Addams Family because is it even October if you don't see this show? I had so much fun (even though I thought it started at 7:30 instead of 7:00 and barely made it after having to park two blocks away). The Addams family is not like other families because they are all obsessed with death and the macabre and rely on their dead ancestors to help them through life. Complications ensue when Wednesday (Olivia Lane) falls in love with Lucas Beineke (Elijah Carillo), a normal Midwestern boy, and wants to introduce his uptight parents, Mal (Jonathan Saul) and Alice (Ayssa Powers), to her father Gomez (Brett Lyman), her mother Morticia (Beth Weber), her brother Pugsley (Kai Sanders), her uncle Fester (Keith Nielson), her Grandma (Laura Shipp), and her family's manservant Lurch (Cameron Hess). She arranges a dinner and begs her family for one normal night but, of course, things go wrong when a mishap involving a poisonous potion occurs during a game of Full Disclosure. It is up to Uncle Fester, with the help of the ancestors, to convince everyone that love is the answer! The cast is fantastic because everyone is perfectly suited to their role! Lyman and Weber have some hilarious interactions with each other and I especially loved their version of "Tango de Amor" because Weber is at least a foot taller than Lyman so their lifts and dips are highly amusing! Lane has both the look (I love that she sports Wednesday's signature braids) and the voice for this iconic character and her renditions of "Pulled" and "Crazier Than You" are really powerful and were the highlights of the show for me. Sanders is adorable as Pugsley (he sings "What If" with a lot of emotion) and Hess is an absolute hoot as Lurch (he is so perfect for the role that he doesn't even wear platform shoes). I also really enjoyed Carillo (he reminded me of the actor George MacKay) because he is endearingly awkward. The choreography is a lot of fun and I liked how the ancestors are integrated, especially in "When You're an Addams," "One Normal Night," "But Love," "Secrets," "Full Disclosure," "Just Around the Corner," and "The Moon and Me" (another highlight of the show). I was really impressed with the costumes and I don't know which I liked more: Gomez's burgundy velvet smoking jacket, Morticia's slinky black lace gown, or Wednesday's black jumper and white blouse. The costumes for the ancestors are also quite elaborate with lots of quirky details to enhance the characterization (I loved the hoop skirt for Marie Antoinette). Finally, the set is minimal but very effective. The stage is configured as a spooky graveyard in the woods with simple pieces brought on stage (my favorites were Gomez's collection of Medieval torture devices) and projections for various rooms in the Addams mansion. I recommend this as a fun show to see with the whole family for Halloween (go here for tickets). It runs on various days through Oct. 30.

Note: I will definitely be back for their production of Elf The Musical because is it even December if you don't see this show?

Monday, October 13, 2025

Kiss of the Spider Woman

I was absolutely blown away by Kiss of the Spider Woman when I saw it at Sundance this year so I was really excited to see it again with my sister Kristine last night.  I loved it just as much, if not more, upon a second viewing!  During a brutal military dictatorship in Argentina in the 1980s, Luis Molina (Tonatiuh), a flamboyantly gay window dresser, is jailed for public indecency and placed in the same cell as a political dissident named Valentin Arregui (Diego Luna).  The Warden (Bruno Bichir) offers Molina early parole if he can get Valentin to reveal important information about his revolutionary activities but this seems unlikely as the two of them take an immediate disliking to each other.  However, the bleak conditions in the prison prompt Molina to begin describing his favorite movie musical starring Ingrid Luna (Jennifer Lopez) as a way to escape their circumstances and they soon form an unlikely bond.  As the musical comes vividly to life in technicolor, Molina starts to feel conflicted about betraying Valentin as life imitates art.  As a huge fan of movie musicals, I love that the characters use the genre as a way to escape from reality and as inspiration and I love all of the old Hollywood musicals that are referenced in the big production numbers (especially An American in Paris, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, and Singin' in the Rain).  I love the bright and effervescent color palette and the dynamic choreography, especially when juxtaposed with the drab and dreary scenes in the prison, because it really emphasizes the fantasy even if the songs themselves are largely forgettable.  Lopez is brilliant in a role that was made for her and I particularly enjoyed her singing and dancing in "Gimme Love" because she is dazzling. Luna is more subdued but I liked his sensitive portrayal of Valentin’s arc of learning how to love.  I was most impressed with Tonatiuh because he steals the show with an incredibly nuanced performance that is both tender and powerful and his rendition of "She's a Woman" is beautiful.  This might not be for everyone because there are some dark themes but, ultimately, it is about the transformative power of art and I highly recommend it.

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Roofman

I have been looking forward to Roofman ever since I saw the first trailer so my nephew and I went to see it with a big Saturday night crowd.  It is funny but it is also much more poignant than I was expecting and I really liked it.  Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum) is at loose ends and estranged from his wife and children after being discharged from the military.  He is especially upset at not being able to give his children everything they want so, after observing the routines and schedules of a local McDonald's restaurant, he breaks in through the roof at night and surprises the early morning shift in order to rob the safe. He continues until he is eventually caught and sentenced to prison but, once again, he exploits the routines and schedules to escape.  He takes refuge in a Toys "R" Us store while he waits for his friend, and fellow soldier, Steve (LaKeith Stanfield) to procure him the necessary documents to leave the country.  However, Steve is deployed and will not be back for six months so he creates a more permanent hiding place behind a display.  He figures out how to stop the CCTV cameras from recording, roams the store at night, subsists on peanut M&Ms, and washes in the employee bathroom but he gets bored so he sets up baby monitors around the store so he can observe the employees.  He surreptitiously intervenes when Mitch (Peter Dinklage), the ill-mannered manager of the store, refuses to accommodate a scheduling request from Leigh Wainscott (Kirsten Dunst) and this eventually leads to a relationship with her and her two daughters, Lindsay (Lily Collias) and Dee (Kennedy Moyer).  When Steve returns and provides his documents, his relationship with Leigh wreaks havoc on his plans for escape.  Tatum gives an outstanding performance, one of his very best, and he handles both the humor and the pathos with a deftness that is sometimes difficult to achieve.  He is so charismatic that you root for him to succeed even though what he is doing is wrong and I really liked his arc as he discovers that people just need love rather than things.  I appreciated the deliberate development of his relationship with Leigh, even if the action does get a bit bogged down towards the end, because it provides a compelling motivation for his actions.  Dunst is also outstanding (she has tremendous chemistry with Tatum) and Dinklage is an amusing villain.  I thought that I would probably enjoy this but I am surprised by just how much I liked it.  I highly recommend it!

Saturday, October 11, 2025

The Scarlet Pimpernel at Hopebox Theatre

One of my favorite novels when I was a teenager was The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy (I also loved the movie starring Jane Seymour and Anthony Andrews) so I am obviously a big fan of the stage adaptation. Last night I got to see it at the Hopebox Theatre and I was very impressed by the elaborate production. English aristocrat Percy Blakeney (Ricky Dowse) disguises himself as the Scarlet Pimpernel and recruits a band of followers to save his counterparts in France from the sinister Chauvelin (Dugan Brunker) and the guillotine during the French Revolution. He keeps his identity secret from his new wife Marguerite St. Just (Chrissy Andreasen), a Parisian actress, because he believes that she is helping Chauvelin, her former lover. He is also keeping his identity a secret from the Prince of Wales (Roger Brunker) by pretending to be a foppish nincompoop. His journeys to France are fraught with danger but he must make his most daring rescue when Marguerite is arrested trying to save her brother Armand (Porter Beesley). All three of the leads are fantastic and I loved their voices. Dowse is really entertaining as Percy and I laughed out loud at all of his dandified antics, especially his rendition of "The Creation of Man," but he is also very stirring in his performance of "Into the Fire" (my favorite song in the show) and quite affecting in "She Was There." Brunker is one of the best Chauvelins I've seen because his versions of "Falcon in the Dive" and "Where's the Girl" are incredibly passionate and his exasperation with Percy is a lot of fun. Andreasen is a lovely Marguerite and she sings "Storybook," "When I Look at You," and "I'll Forget You" beautifully and with a lot of emotion. The three of them also harmonize really well together in "The Riddle." The staging of the big musical numbers on such a small stage is extremely clever, especially "Into the Fire" because the boat used by the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel to travel from England to France appears suddenly from the rafters and the wings (I loved that Percy's boat is renamed Rachel's Resolve in honor of Rachel Rounds, the Wall of Hope recipient for this production, because it is such a touching detail), and the choreography is incredibly dynamic, particularly the integration of props (I loved the butterfly net and the cricket bat) in "Into the Fire" and "The Creation of Man" as well as the intricate patterns created by the dancers in "Ouilles Gavotte." This is a small community theatre but they really went all out with the costumes and set. Marguerite's gowns are gorgeous but the outfits worn by the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel take "frou frou" to the next level! The backdrop consists of marble archways and various set pieces for Marguerite's carousel at the Comédie-Française, Percy's study, the garden at the Bakeney estate, a prison, and the guillotine appear on stage by way of a turntable featuring a scarlet pimpernel. The guillotine is especially dramatic and a shadow effect used to show the drop of the blade is very effective. I had so much fun watching this show and I highly encourage everyone to get a ticket because, not only will you be entertained, you will be supporting a very worthwhile cause! It runs Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays (with a Saturday matinee) through Nov. 1. Tickets may be purchased here but act quickly because most shows are either sold out or have limited availability (although there is a possibility that more shows will be added).

Friday, October 10, 2025

Anemone

I was thrilled when I learned that Daniel Day-Lewis was coming out of retirement to star in his son's directorial debut, Anemone, and I immediately wanted to see it.  My nephew and I finally had the opportunity at the Broadway last night but, unfortunately, we were both incredibly disappointed.  In fact, the more we talked about it, the more we disliked it.  Ray Stoker (Day-Lewis) was so traumatized by his experiences as a paramilitary officer in Northern Ireland in the 1960s that he left his wife Nessa (Samantha Morton) and infant son Brian to live in self-imposed exile in a remote cottage in the woods.  Now, many years later, Brian (Samuel Bottomley) is struggling after joining the military himself and fears that he will end up just like his father.  Nessa sends Jem (Sean Bean), Ray's estranged brother, to deliver a letter asking him to return and help his son.  Tensions are palpable when Jem arrives because there is a lot of unresolved conflict between the brothers, most notably the fact that Jem is now married to Nessa and has raised Brian, but Ray eventually achieves a reconciliation with his brother and the possibility of one with his son.  Day-Lewis is a compelling presence (and often a terrifying one) on screen during the many scenes of protracted silence but it is in two very powerful monologues, especially the one in which he finally reveals the incident that psychologically scarred him, that he really proves why he is one of the greatest actors of his generation.  Bean and Morton are also outstanding actors but they are not given much to do beyond reacting with stoicism or concern, respectively.  The cinematography featuring the surrounding landscape is beautiful and atmospheric but there are also lots of intricately composed shots that range from vaguely symbolic (I had no idea what many of them were meant to represent, especially the supernatural elements) to utterly pretentious.  Finally, even though the story is slight, the pacing is still extremely sluggish (at least 30 minutes could have been removed from the runtime) and it becomes very boring tedious watching similar scenes over and over again. I really wanted to like this because I am a big fan of Day-Lewis but I wouldn't recommend it.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

TRON: Ares

Last night my nephew and I went to an early access screening of TRON: Ares in IMAX and I had so much fun watching it!  Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters), the CEO of Dillinger Systems, and Eve Kim (Greta Lee), the CEO of ENCOM, both have access to a generative laser that can reproduce digital structures in the real word.  Dillinger wants to militarize this technology, much to the dismay of his mother Elisabeth (Gillian Anderson) who wants to regain control of the company, and creates a highly sophisticated program known as Ares (Jared Leto) that can be used in battle while Kim wants to use it to solve world hunger and creates an orange tree.  However, the technology is in the early stages and anything created with it degenerates in 29 minutes.  Kim eventually finds a Permanence Code created by Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), the former CEO of ENCOM, and Dillinger will do anything to get it from her.  He sends Ares and another program named Athena (Jodie Turner-Smith) to the real world to capture the code but, when Kim destroys it, they bring her to the grid to extract it from her memory.  Complications ensue when Ares decides to ignore his directive and protect Kim and when Athena decides to do whatever is necessary to complete it.  When I walked into the theater, I was hoping for mind-blowing visuals, an epic score, a story that made sense, and a performance from Leto that wasn't too weird and I definitely got all of that!  We saw this in 3D and I absolutely loved all of the dynamic chase sequences, especially when Ares and Athena are trying to capture Kim in the real world and when Ares and Kim are trying to evade Athena in the digital world because the trails of light are absolutely dazzling, and the final confrontation between Ares and Athena because it is so striking to see the competing red and blue lights on their suits.  I also loved that when Dillinger hacks into the ENCOM server it is portrayed by having Ares and the rest of the programs physically break in to the digital structure.  I am a huge fan of Nine Inch Nails and the score is so propulsive that I could hardly take a breath.  I think the techno-synth music really emphasizes the tension between the digital world and the real world.  The story is so much better than I was expecting and I found the comparisons to Frankenstein, particularly when Ares rebels against his creator and discovers his humanity, to be very thought-provoking.  Finally, I really enjoyed the performances from everyone in the cast, especially Lee.  Leto is not my favorite actor but his surprisingly restrained delivery really works for the character and it often provides a bit of comic relief as Ares learns about the real world (I loved the running bit about his love for Depeche Mode).  This was everything I hoped it would be and I had an absolute blast watching it with my nephew!  I recommend it to fans of the franchise.

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Good Boy

The second movie in my double feature at the Broadway last night was Good Boy and I loved the message about the loyalty of dogs.  Todd (Shane Jensen) is suffering from chronic lung disease when he decides to move from New York City to the isolated house in the woods where his grandfather (Larry Fessenden) died and where his grandfather's dog Bandit (Max) disappeared.  When he arrives, his dog Indy (himself) immediately senses a presence and repeatedly tries to warn Todd about the danger.  As Todd's health worsens and his behavior becomes more erratic, especially towards Indy and his sister Vera (Arielle Friedman) who frequently calls to check on him, the presence becomes more malevolent and manifests itself as shadows, unexplained noises, the ghosts of Todd's grandfather and Bandit, and, eventually, a dark entity that stalks and then tries to consume Todd.  Indy must go to extraordinary lengths to protect him.  The story is told entirely from Indy's POV and this is an incredibly clever premise because, as someone who has spent a lot of time around dogs, I know that they can intuit things that their human owners cannot.  It is also quite ingenious because a dog is not necessarily a reliable narrator which allows the audience to interpret the goings-on in several different ways (I choose to see the presence as a metaphor for illness).  It is really scary at times (at one point I jumped out of my seat), with clever cinematography and atmospheric lighting that uses reflections and shadows very effectively as well as an incredibly unnerving sound design, but it is also very emotional because of how Indy's unconditional love for Todd is portrayed.  Finally, Indy gives a fantastic performance (I think he is a better actor than his human co-stars) that is very compelling.  I definitely recommend this to fans of horror (and dogs).

The Smashing Machine

Last night I went to the Broadway for a double feature (there are so many movies I want to see in October).  I started with The Smashing Machine because I love inspirational sports movies and I was really intrigued by Dwayne Johnson's physical transformation in the trailer.  Unfortunately, I found it very underwhelming despite an outstanding performance from Johnson.  Mark Kerr (Johnson) is an incredibly successful UFC fighter who has never lost a match but, for financial reasons, he also fights in the Pride Fighting Championships in Japan.  When he loses a fight against Igor Vovchanchyn (Oleksandr Usyk) in a controversial decision, he spirals into depression which is exacerbated by his worsening dependence on prescription and illegal drugs.  When he overdoses, his best friend and fellow fighter Mark Coleman (Ryan Bader) convinces him to enter rehab.  He gets sober and begins training at a camp run by fellow fighter Bas Rutten (himself) in order to redeem himself at the next tournament in Japan but his dysfunctional relationship with his girlfriend Dawn Staples (Emily Blunt) threatens his comeback.  Johnson completely disappears into this role (I thought it was the hair but he is still unrecognizable when his character shaves his head before a match) and gives the best performance of his career.  In the scene after his first loss in Japan you can see the coiled rage in his body as the camera follows him walking to the locker room and then you can see him release it when he breaks down crying once he is alone.  It is a very powerful moment and Johnson conveys everything that Kerr is feeling without any dialogue.  I also really liked the way the fighting scenes were filmed because we see most of the action through the ropes from the POV of a spectator.  However, I found the narrative itself to be somewhat pointless.  This is a mild spoiler so you may want to stop reading but the first act sets up a revenge match between Kerr and Vovchanchyn since the latter won on an illegal move and the second act sets up a match between close friends Kerr and Coleman (either would have created interest and tension) but neither of these matches happen.  The filmmakers also take great pains to portray Staples as toxic and there is an incredibly satisfying moment when Kerr finally realizes it but an end title says that they eventually reconcile and marry which lessens the impact of that scene.  I understand that the filmmakers wanted to highlight a fighter who impacted the future of his sport without a lot of recognition but, in my opinion, Kerr is not a compelling enough subject for a movie.  I recommend giving this a miss.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Laufey at the Delta Center

I recently discovered Laufey and now I am completely obsessed with her music because she has such a unique sound that blends jazz, pop, and classical elements.  I love her voice because it is so expressive and her orchestrations because they are incredibly lush.  I found out about her concert at the Delta Center quite by accident and was thrilled when I was able to get a ticket at the last minute.  The show was last night and it was incredible!  It is very theatrical with an elaborate set that is a cross between a fairy tale castle and a Busby Berkeley musical with a curved runway to a secondary stage shaped like a clock complete with moving hands and the glamorous costumes are inspired by the Golden Age of Hollywood.  The show is divided into five different thematic acts with an introduction on the screen reminiscent of a silent movie and an encore featuring a surprise song specific to each city.  The first act is inspired by romance and fantasy and Laufey wore a sparkly gown with a tulle skirt while performing "Clockwork," "Lover Girl" with the requisite claps from the audience, "Dreamer," "Falling Behind," "Silver Lining" (my favorite Laufey song), "Bored," and "Too Little, Too Late."  The second act is meant to mimic an intimate jazz club so she moved to the secondary stage wearing a 1920s-inspired beaded dress.  She performed a cover of "Seems Like Old Times" and then sultry versions of her songs "Valentine," "Fragile," "While You Were Sleeping," and "Let You Break My Heart Again" with a trio of musicians. The third act is billed as an enchanting interlude and included "Carousel" "Forget-Me-Not," and "Cuckoo Ballet" (featuring ballet dancers in tutus) with whimsical images on the screens.  The fourth act represents vulnerability and heartbreak and she performed "Mr. Eclectic," "Castle in Hollywood," "Promise," "Goddess," "Tough Luck," "Snow White," and "From the Start" (another favorite) in a costume with lots of sequins and fringe inspired by the Ziegfeld Follies.  The fifth act is about self-acceptance and growth so she performed a dramatic version of "Sabotage."  She returned to the secondary stage for the encore and the surprise song was "Street By Street" (she told the crowd that she picked this song specifically for Salt Lake City because she performed her first live show here and she was so surprised that people actually knew the words to it) followed by an emotional performance of "Letter to My 13 Year Old Self."  She sounded amazing live (I would love to hear her in a venue like Abravanel Hall with a full orchestra backing her) and played guitar, piano, and even the cello (during the instrumental "Cuckoo Ballet").  Her interactions with the large and enthusiastic crowd were charming and she was incredibly appreciative of them singing along to every word.  She even commented on the many Laufey-themed costumes (I did not get the memo about wearing bows and felt crowns).  I thoroughly enjoyed this concert and I am so glad that I was able to go!

Note:  Suki Waterhouse was the opening act.  I didn't know anything about her (beyond being Robert Pattinson's girlfriend) or her music but I really liked her set.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Paul McCartney in Las Vegas

I have loved Paul McCartney since I was in 5th grade.  It was then that I discovered a song called "Coming Up" and, even though I didn't actually know who sang it, I played it incessantly.  My dad said it was Paul McCartney and if I liked that song I should listen to the Beatles.  He presented me with his copy of Rubber Soul (he eventually gave me all of his Beatles records) and thus began my obsession with McCartney and the Beatles.  I have been lucky enough to see him in concert several times by now so I really debated whether or not I should get a ticket for his latest North American tour, especially since I would have to travel to get to a show.  I ultimately decided that I would be so sad to miss seeing him again and got a ticket for the show at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas (an incredible venue!).  I took a quick road trip this weekend (I had to drive in a torrential downpour for half of it) and, as is usually the case, I am so glad I did because the concert was amazing!  One of the reasons for my hesitation, besides the cost, was McCartney's voice.  He seemed to really struggle the last time I saw him but I think he sounded great Saturday night!  His voice was obviously not what it once was but I realized that it didn't really matter because he and the songs are so iconic.  He played for close to three hours with his usual band (Paul "Wix" Wickens on keyboards, Rusty Anderson on guitar, Brian Ray on bass, and Abe Laboriel, Jr. on drums) as well as an incredible horn section (Mike Davis on trumpet and fugelhorn, Paul Burton on trombone, and Kenji Fenton on saxophone and clarinet) and I was so impressed with his stamina because he sang and played either guitar or piano for every song (even when the band took a break).  He opened with "Help!" which whipped the crowd into a frenzy because this is the first time he has performed it solo.  He played quite a few other Beatles songs, including "Got to Get You Into My Life," "Drive My Car," "Getting Better," "I've Just Seen a Face," "Love Me Do," a beautiful acoustic version of "Blackbird," "Lady Madonna," "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite," "Something" while playing the ukulele as a tribute to George Harrison, "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" with lots of audience participation, "Get Back," and "Let It Be."  The older gentleman sitting two seats down from me was openly weeping for most of these but what reduced me to tears was when he played the new Beatles song "Now and Then" because it reminds me of my dad.  He played the usual Wings songs "Let Me Roll It," "Let 'Em In," "Jet," "Band on the Run," and "Live and Let Die" (complete with the most extensive pyrotechnics I've ever seen) but he also played "Letting Go" which I had never heard live before.  I loved hearing his solo songs "Coming Up" (obviously), "Come On to Me," "My Valentine" which he dedicated to his wife Nancy who was in the audience, and "Here Today" which he dedicated to John Lennon but my favorite moment was when he played "Maybe I'm Amazed" because I love this song so much (I also love watching Rusty play the guitar solo).  He ended the main set, as he often does, with a rousing rendition of "Hey Jude" and this was a lot of fun!  For the encore, he sang "I've Got a Feeling" with John Lennon using footage from the rooftop concert (this was really cool), "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," "Helter Skelter," "Golden Slumbers," Carry That Weight," and "The End."  Seeing an artist that I have loved for most of my life was such an incredible experience and I will be on a high from it for a long time.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

The Official Release Party of a Showgirl

I listened to The Life of a Showgirl the second it was released late Thursday night and my first reaction was that it is not Taylor Swift's best album and it is not my favorite Taylor Swift album but I liked it, especially "Opalite" and "CANCELLED!"  After a few more listens I started liking it more and more and "Elizabeth Taylor" and "Ruin the Friendship" joined my list of favorites.  After seeing The Official Release Party of a Showgirl in a packed theater with my sister last night, I now love the entire album, including "Honey" which was the only song I was still feeling lukewarm about, and I am even more convinced that Swift is a brilliant songwriter!  The premiere of the video for "The Fate of Ophelia," Marilyn's favorite song on the album, is included at the beginning after which Taylor describes the meaning behind the imagery.  I love how she embodies the ways in which women have been depicted through the ages, from subjects of Renaissance paintings to pin-up girls, cabaret singers, dramatic actresses on stage, dancers in Busby Berkeley spectacles, showgirls, and pop stars.  Lots of behind-the-scenes footage of the making the video is shown (it was fun to see all of the Eras Tour dancers again) and interspersed between these vignettes are lyric videos with introductions by Swift about the meaning and inspiration for each song.  I loved the metaphor comparing an opalite, a man-made version of a opal, to the way we can make our own happiness in "Opalite," still my favorite song on the album.  I was very surprised by my emotional reaction to her description of "Eldest Daughter" because I really related to what she said about perfectionism and not wanting to let anyone down.  The crowd laughed out loud when she said the innuendo-filled "Wood" is about superstitions with a big smirk on her face (the lyric videos feature the clean versions of the songs and some of the word changes also elicited much laughter).  Finally, her descriptions of "Wi$h Li$t" and "The Life of a Showgirl" really got me thinking that this might be a farewell album because, in the former, she says that all she wants now is to settle down with Travis and, in the latter, that she is passing the torch to Sabrina and a new generation of singers.  I basically spent $15 to see videos that will be available online Sunday night (Swift is a marketing genius) but I regret nothing because it was so much fun to be with lots of fans who were as excited about the new album as I was (a surprisingly broad demographic of people).  I will now be listening to The Life of a Showgirl on repeat for the foreseeable future.

Friday, October 3, 2025

Some Like It Hot at the Eccles

The 2025-2026 Broadway at the Eccles season began with a tap dancing extravaganza! I was really excited to see Some Like It Hot last night because I love the movie but had never seen the stage adaptation before. The musical follows the basic plot of the movie but it leans more heavily into the theme of identity and being true to yourself and I really liked it. During the Prohibition era in Chicago, two struggling musicians, Joe (Matt Loehr) and Jerry (Tavis Kordell), accidentally witness a mob hit by their boss Spats Colombo (Devon Goffman). In order to flee from the city without being caught, they are forced to disguise themselves as women, Josephine and Daphne, in order to join an all-female band, led by Sweet Sue (Dequina Moore), traveling to San Diego. Complications ensue when Joe disguises himself as an Austrian screenwriter to pursue the singer Sugar Kane (Leandra Ellis-Gaston), when the eccentric millionaire Osgood Fielding III (Edward Juvier) pursues Daphne, and when Spats eventually finds them. It turns out that Joe must discard Josephine and Kip von der Plotz and Jerry must embrace Daphne for them to find success and happiness. The choreography in this show is amazing! I am always impressed by tap dancing and I absolutely loved the dazzling performances in the dynamic high-energy numbers "You Can't Have Me (If You Don't Have Him)," "I'm California Bound," "Take It Up a Step," "Zee Bap," "Some Like It Hot," "Let's Be Bad" (the synchronization in this blew me away), "Dance the World Away," and "Baby, Let's Get Good." However, the number that impressed me the most is "Tip Tap Trouble" because the entire cast is involved in an epic chase sequence while tap dancing through constantly moving doors in the Hotel del Coronado. The precision and timing required for the complicated staging of this number is impressive, to say the least, and it is executed to perfection! Loehr and Kordell are outstanding dancers, especially when they dance in heels, and the ensemble is one of the best I've seen. This production features two powerhouse voices because both Moore and Ellis-Gaston just about blow the roof off the Eccles Theatre in "What Are You Thirsty For?" and "Ride Out the Storm," respectively. There are some really poignant moments, especially when Sugar sings about wanting to be a star in "At the Old Majestic Nickel Matinee" and when Osgood tells Daphne to just be herself in "Fly, Mariposa, Fly," but, like the movie, this show is really funny with lots of witty one-liners. I especially loved a running bit about how old Josephine looks but I laughed out loud at just about everything Osgood says and does (Juvier's hilarious performance is definitely one of the highlights). Finally, the Art Deco inspired sets and the glamorous costumes are a lot of fun. I had a blast watching this Tony Award-winning show and highly recommend getting a ticket (go here) for one of the five remaining performances.

Note: I have been sitting next to the same group of people ever since the Eccles Theatre opened (they have pretty much adopted me). This season they decided to give up one of their seats and my friend Angela was able to buy it. I had so much fun watching this show with her so I am really looking forward to the rest of the season.

Thursday, October 2, 2025

The Lost Bus

Yesterday my nephew and I went to a matinee of The Lost Bus.  I didn't know anything about this movie until I saw a trailer last week (it seems like it is not being promoted at all) and I could only find one theater showing it (which was a bit out of the way) but I am glad I made the effort because both my nephew and I really liked it.  Kevin McKay (Matthew McConaughey) is a down on his luck school bus driver who has recently moved back to the city of Paradise in northern California to care for his disabled mother Sherry (Kay McCabe McConaughey) and to reconnect with his estranged son Shaun (Levi McConaughey).  When a devastating fire erupts after a downed power line ignites dry brush, the Cal Fire battalion chief Ray Martinez (Yul Vazquez) eventually orders a full evacuation of Paradise and the bus dispatcher Ruby (Ashlie Atkinson) requests a volunteer to collect 22 children who have not yet been picked up by their parents from a nearby school.  McKay volunteers because, even though he is worried about his mother and son, he has a contentious working relationship with Ruby and is hoping to redeem himself.  He gets the children and their teacher Mary Ludwig (America Ferrera) on board but, because the fire has spread rapidly and so many people are trying to evacuate at once, they become trapped and he must go to extraordinary lengths to get them to safety.  Director Paul Greengrass is known for frenetic hand-held camerawork that puts the audience in the middle of the action and I was practically holding my breath the whole time (my nephew said his heart was racing) because it is so intense!  The sound design is incredibly immersive because you can hear the fire crackling all around you and the visuals are fantastic (they are eerily realistic).  McConaughey does a great job portraying McKay's quiet heroism and his interactions with Ferrera and the children add emotional weight to the spectacle.  This will begin streaming on Apple TV+ October 3 but I think it is definitely a movie that should be seen on the big screen!

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Satisfied

I began the month of September by seeing the proshot of Hamilton on the big screen so it is only fitting that I ended it by seeing Satisfied, a documentary about the actress who originated the role of Angelica Schuyler, last night.  Renee Elise Goldsberry always dreamed of being a mother and a Broadway star but pursuing one dream always made the other one more difficult.  This intimate portrait includes personal iPhone vlogs, interviews with colleagues and family members, and behind the scenes footage of the making of Hamilton from its beginnings as a workshop to its unprecedented success on Broadway as she chronicles her fight for both of her dreams.  She has early success on Broadway as Nala in The Lion King, Mimi in Rent, and the original Nettie in The Color Purple but struggles to get pregnant and suffers several miscarriages.  She is on a break from performing after finally giving birth to her son Benjamin and adopting her daughter Brielle when she is asked to audition for Angelica Schuyler in the workshop for Hamilton.  She turns it down multiple times but changes her mind after hearing a rough version of "Satisfied" and memorizes it in one day for the audition.  She makes the decision to sacrifice time with her family because she is incredibly passionate about the character and knows the show will become something special but it is demanding and her determination to be there for her children in the morning while performing every night takes a tremendous toll on her.  In one particularly poignant scene she is crying in her dressing room before a show because she is so tired but tells herself that she needs to get it together because people in the audience have paid so much money to see her.  In another she has her son come to her dressing room before a show so that she can spend more time with him but feels guilty after seeing him cry when the nanny comes to take him home.  However, there are also lots of joyous moments and I loved seeing footage of when the cast performed at the White House and the camaraderie of the "Ham4Ham" performances for the crowds outside the Richard Rodgers Theatre.  I was really impressed by her vulnerability and by the encouragement of her husband Alexis Johnson, especially when he says that he decided to do everything he could to support her after he heard her sing "Shadowlands" because that showed him that she has a talent that must be nurtured at all costs (it is my favorite song from The Lion King and hearing her sing it with the Utah Symphony brought me to tears so I understand his perspective).  The documentary concludes with a full-circle moment at the Tonys when she thanks God in an emotional speech for allowing her to have her children and the Tony Award.  Fans of Hamilton will love all of the never-before-seen footage from the show but this is also an inspiring story of resilience and perseverance that I highly recommend.  There are two more opportunities to see it in theaters (go here for tickets and information).

Monday, September 29, 2025

Dead of Winter

My nephew spontaneously joined me to see the action thriller Dead of Winter last night and we both really liked it (I liked it even more than I thought I would).  Barb Lindquist (Emma Thompson) is a recently widowed woman who runs a bait and tackle shop in northern Minnesota.  She embarks on a solo ice fishing trip to Lake Hilda, where she had her first date with her husband Karl, but gets lost in a blizzard and must ask for directions from a man (Marc Menchaca) at an isolated and dilapidated cabin.  She suspects that something is amiss at the cabin but continues on to the lake and reminisces about past fishing trips with her husband (Thompson's daughter Gaia Wise plays a young Barb and Cuan Hosty-Blaney plays a young Karl in flashbacks).  Her reverie is interrupted when she sees the man from the cabin restraining a young girl (Laurel Marsden) at gunpoint.  She follows them back to the cabin and, when she learns that the man and his wife (Judy Greer) plan to kill the girl (for reasons), she realizes that she is her only hope for rescue.  It was interesting to see Thompson in a role unlike anything she has done before (and initially a bit jarring to hear her speak with a Minnesota accent even though she pulls it off) and I was very impressed with her physical performance, especially during the final confrontation with Greer (also playing against type) on the frozen lake, as well as with the emotional depth she imbues the character without a lot of dialogue.  The action sequences are very compelling because Barb, as an older woman, is forced to use her ingenuity and both the stark winter landscape and the atmospheric score add to the tension.  I am a fan of movies featuring an ordinary person in extraordinary circumstances and this is a really good one.  It is a bit under the radar (we only found one theater showing it in our area) but it is worth seeking out.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Eleanor the Great

Last night my nephew and I returned to the Broadway (I have been there a lot this week) to see Eleanor the Great, Scarlett Johansson's directorial debut, and we both enjoyed it.  Eleanor Morgenstein (June Squibb) moves from Florida back to New York to live with her daughter Lisa (Jessica Hecht) after her longtime best friend Bessie (Rita Zohar) dies unexpectedly.  Her busy and distracted daughter signs her up for a class at the JCC but she accidentally ends up in a Holocaust survivor's support group.  When it is her turn to share with the group, she wants to explain the mistake but, because she feels so welcomed by the members, she tells Bessie's survival story as her own and this gets the attention of Nina (Erin Kellyman), a young journalism student grappling with the recent death of her mother who wants to profile Eleanor for an assignment.  They begin an unlikely friendship which helps Eleanor with her loneliness and Nina with her grief but it is tested when Eleanor's story takes on a life of its own and spirals out of control.  I think Eleanor's actions might be problematic for some, especially since it involves a very sensitive subject, and the resolution is a bit too convenient without much examination but Squibb is undeniably charismatic and delivers such a charming performance (one of her very best) that it compensates for many of the movie's flaws.  I also really enjoyed Kellyman's sensitive performance because it is a very authentic portrayal of grief (a scene where she smells the sweater that belonged to her mother is very moving and brought a tear to my eye) and a monologue by Zohar in the third act is incredibly powerful (I really liked that Bessie is the one talking about her experiences in flashbacks whenever Eleanor tells the story).  Much of this is very conventional, including the cinematography, editing, production design, and score, but I was charmed by the performances and think it is worth seeing for them.

Note:  My nephew was the youngest person in the theater and I was the second youngest!
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