Month: June 2012

The Stratford Festival 2012: 42nd Street is Gaudy good fun

The Stratford Festival 2012: 42nd Street is Gaudy good fun

dale88fc48d94231b65549111ee2ebfe Photo: David Hou

Ok, it’s a corny show. But it’s gaudy good fun. This ultimate Broadway showbiz story, 42nd Street came back from a 1933 blockbuster film starring Ruby Keeler in Busby Berkeley’s elaborate dance routines and became a megahit musical, recreating its nostalgia and melodrama onstage. Still about becoming a star and creating a hit show, it also re-established tap dancing as a creative Broadway show element after tap had been dropped from new shows for decades.  42nd Street ran for nine years on Broadway and re-introduced that kitschy line, “You’re going out there a youngster. But you’ve got to come back a star!” It also became a tragic Broadway legend on opening night when producer David Merrick had to stop the raucous final applause to announce that its legendary director/choreographer Gower Champion had succumbed to cancer in his hotel room just a few hours before.

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Stratford Festival : You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown

Stratford Festival : You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown

Archness Alert: If you love the comic strip Peanuts and agree with this show’s program-book writers that it is art to be likened to Dickens, Balzac and Chaplin, this is the musical show for you.  If, however, you’re not a fan of cutesy, repetitive comic-pages cartoon stories – like Cathy, Beetle Bailey, or in this case, Peanuts, you may find this simple re-enactment of the strip the equivalent of a a ride on a small tricycle when you’ve paid for a limousine.  Stratford’s staging is impeccable and splendidly cast.  Director/choreographer Donna Feore makes it play like a dream-party with masterful entertainment. But I guess I’m too old and diabetic to be fed cotton candy.  Pogo, Doonesbury, si; but this is just the cartoon’s same old bland routines played out.

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The Matchmaker by Thornton Wilder, The Musical.

The Matchmaker by Thornton Wilder, The Musical.

matchmaker1c95daf2-b615-4a46-9f52-c76bfa6e0424 I’ve loved this play ever since I saw the incomparable Ruth Gordon enchant her audience and everyone on stage in it as Dolly Levi some 56 years ago. What I did not know was that Wilder completed it in Stratford, Ontario when

Tyrone Guthrie invited him to work there on revising his unsuccessful source-play, The Merchant of Yonkers. In fact, Guthrie, Stratford’s founding director, won a Tony Award for best direction on Broadway with The Matchmaker. It now plays less often than the musical adapted from it, Hello, Dolly! ; but much of Wilder’s beloved wit and even a lot of his madcap farcical comedy get lost in the musical.

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Dangerous Liaisons: joyous audience reaction from this spicy period piece.

Dangerous Liaisons: joyous audience reaction from this spicy period piece.

Les Liaisons dangereuses is the first epistolary novel ever written in France. It dates from the end of the 18th Century, several years before the taking of the Bastille in 1789 which marked the beginning of the French Revolution. Apart from announcing the moral disintegration of a society soon to be  physically removed  by the classes that suffered under the aristocracy, which is the milieu the author shows us.  Choderlos de Laclos’ work also illustrates, in a certain way, a critique of the theories of Jean Jacques Rousseau, the 18th century philosopher who prefigured the French romantic movement by teaching that one should follow one’s own nature.

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Slow scene changes and costume problems hamper this production of Dangerous Liaisons at the OLT

Slow scene changes and costume problems hamper this production of Dangerous Liaisons at the OLT

 

John Muggleton (Valmont) and Venetia Lawless (la Merteuil)  Photo: Alan Dean

What do British singers Adele and David Bowie have in common with pre-French Revolution society?

Very little, it seems. Yet, recordings by the 24-year-old Adele and occasional pieces by 65-year-old Bowie are director Geoff Gruson’s choice of background (and too often intrusively foreground) music for the Ottawa Little Theatre production of Christopher Hampton’s Dangerous Liaisons.

Based on the 1752 epistolatory novel by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos, the drama is about the evil games of rivals and former lovers, the Marquise de Merteuil and the Vicomte de Valmont, who use sexual connections to humiliate and destroy their victims.

Perhaps, Gruson intends the jagged disconnection between musical style and setting to raise awareness of the decadence of the French aristocracy and/or to point out that sexual degradation is timeless. However, the effect is more often jolting and starkly inappropriate for a period piece, particularly when a violinist in 18th-century costume follows the opening of 21st-century pop music.

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International Children’s Festival:The Man who Planted Trees.

International Children’s Festival:The Man who Planted Trees.

by the Puppet State Theatre from Scotland

A work of the same name,  by  the  award winning creator of animated films  Frédéric BACK is at the origin of this performance that was based on the life of Elzéard Bouffier, a shepherd from the south of  France, as told    by French novellist Jean Giono. Giono is known for his novels dealing with the agricultural world of the south of France where poor  farmers are often in disputes with neighbours, fighting over  land but mostly over  water because certain  areas of the south are  so arid.  The  lack of water brings many individuals to despair. (You might have seen Manon des Sources for example or the whole series of Giono’s films that were very good indeed).  Here the performance  from the Puppet State Theatre from Scotland,  brings  together among other things a slick puppet performance involving some good ventriloquist techniques by the manipulator of   the puppet who is called “DOG”. He is a would be  actor and self conscious performer who has to get his nose into everything.  A regular little  smart aleck of the kind we used to see on the Ed Sullivan show, or the Casino circuit, who delighted the adults with racy jokes, Here his vocabularly has calmed down and it is very suitable for children.  I’m sorry they never told us the name of the actor who spoke for him because his repartees and quick answers brought gales of laughter from the whole house.

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Titanic the Musical: An Historical Recipe for Success.

Titanic the Musical: An Historical Recipe for Success.

The maiden voyage of the Titanic — fueled by greed, incompetence, indifference and a rigid class structure — was a recipe for disaster. By contrast, the 1997 Peter Stone/Maury Yeston award-winning musical — firmly rooted in historical fact, music that recalls the period and (thankfully) devoid of sentimentality — is a recipe for success.

So is the beautifully sung Orpheus Musical Theatre Society production of Titanic the Musical — a work that is as much opera as it is traditional musical theatre.

The well-researched vignettes about a small selection of crew members and passengers from each of the three classes on board, gives a human face to the massive maritime disaster that is far more powerful than the horrendous statistics: 1,514 people drowned after the RMS Titanic hit an iceberg on April 15, 1912; just 710, most of them first-class passengers, survived. Many more of the 2,224 on board would have lived, if the ship had carried the requisite 54 lifeboats instead of just 20, but the ship’s owner, the White Star Line, and the designer opted for additional space on the luxurious first-class decks and cabins instead of safety. After all, the huge ship was touted as unsinkable, wasn’t it?

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Vincent Van Gogh: A Life in Paintings.

Vincent Van Gogh: A Life in Paintings.

This show is presented by Third Wall Theatre by the  Stichting Vrije Val/Muziektheatre Frank Groothof Production    in association with the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands

Why couldn’t Van Gogh, who killed himself in 1890 at the age of 37, have integrated some of the joy of the sunflowers he painted so exuberantly into his own tormented life? That’s just one of the many questions Frank Groothof’s compelling one-man show provokes.

In Ottawa for a single night at The Gladstone Theatre,  the 75-minute production traces Van Gogh’s life from boyhood through the years of exploding creativity and growing obsessive behaviour to, ultimately, his death. Groothof plays both the painter and his younger, devoted brother Theo using a cap and increasingly agitated body language to depict the former and glasses and a gentle demeanour to capture the latter.

Recorded music from the 19th century and images of Van Gogh’s figure studies, portraits, and marvellous land and city scapes displayed on a large screen dovetail with the narrative.

It’s not a perfect piece of work. One wishes for a touch more insight into Van Gogh’s childhood, and Groothof, whose native tongue is not English, does muff lines. But like Van Gogh and his art, the well-paced show is both layered and passionate.

Ottawa International Children’s Festival: Smoothly seductive Wolf captivates children

Ottawa International Children’s Festival: Smoothly seductive Wolf captivates children

Figuren Theatre from Germany, featuring puppet master Mathais Kuchta has constructed a little village of cuddly almost life size puppets to tell the story of maman goat, her little goats and the big bad wolf. That Grimm fairy tale we have all heard is told in a very kindly grand fatherly way so as not to alarm the small ones, after all it’s not a nice story. This smooth talking seductive wolf weedles his way into the household while Maman goat is absent and swallows all her babies…all seven of them. We even hear his stomach gurgling as he digests his meal. It all works out but not until some terrible things happen to the wolf  and the billy goats run into the audience and hide among the children, much to their delight.

The performance at times did seem to be a bit too wordy but the round cuddly puppets came to life. the children had a great time and no one seemed frightened by that strange wolf with the huge stomach.

Lots of fun for the very young..around 3 years and up.

International Children’s Festival: Australian performance artist steals the show!!

International Children’s Festival: Australian performance artist steals the show!!

 

A production of Insite Arts from Australia, written, conceived, created and performed by Fleur Nobel.

This show is in a category of its own. Much too sophisticated to be billed as a children’s show it is essentially an experiment in intermedial performance techniques where film, puppetry, sculpture, drawing, choreography, photography, lighting effects, sound experiments all collide to create an inbetween space where all these techniques and technologies aquire new meanings. The children obviously enjoyed  it because it creates images that they have certainly never seen before and as for the rest of us, we came out wondering what had hit us.

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