PREVIEW: NT Live: All My Sons

This Sunday, get ready to attend the Michigan Theatre’s presentation of Arthur Miller’s captivating drama, “All My Sons,” broadcast live in HD from the National Theatre in London.

Featuring Academy Award-winner Sally Field, “All My Sons” tells the story of a family’s secrets being laid bare, and the true cost of the American Dream.

This one-time screening event is taking place on January 19th at 7:00 PM. Be sure to take advantage of this unique opportunity to enjoy one of Arthur Miller’s most beloved plays!

 

PREVIEW: Ovid’s Metamorphoses in a Modern Theatrical Adaptation by Mary Zimmerman

Published in the year 8, Ovid’s Metamorphoses are a group 15 books written as one epic poem. They describe, in a sometimes less-than-factual manner, the history of the world from creation to the stabbing of Caesar. The stories are independent, but connect through common themes, as Ovid was a great thinker, known for his philosophizing on the arts of falling in and out of love.

It might be hard to believe, but this ancient work has been adapted to affect a modern audience over two millennia later. If you love the classics, need something to do this weekend, or are interested in disproving your skepticism, I invite you to attend the theatre RC’s production.

Showtimes include:

Friday, January 17 at 7pm
Saturday, January 18 at 7pm
Sunday, January 19 at 7pm

all at the Keene Theater, 701 East University. Doors open at 6:45pm.

While this is a free event, the cast and crew worked tirelessly on this project, so there is a suggested donation of $5/person.

REVIEW: A New Brain

A New Brain follows the life of Gordon Michael Schwinn, a composer who must write songs about green frogs, spring, and “yes.” SMTD delivered a wonderful performance of this one-act musical, despite some problems with the original book itself.

I walked out of the Arthur Miller Theatre amused, but also slightly confused by some of the character relations and the plot. The relationship between Gordon and his partner Roger seems tense from the beginning, and it seems to be because Roger is obsessed with sailing in the open waters and Gordon struggles to write the songs that are stuck in his head and can’t get out. Their tenuous relationship throughout the course of the musical just seemed off to me, though Luke Bove and Jack Mastrianni performed their roles wonderfully.

The minister seemed unnecessary to the whole thing, while the presence of the homeless lady also confused me a bit, since her appearances and interactions with the rest of the characters didn’t seem to add much to the rest of the musical. She consoles Roger, sells Gordon’s books, and sings a poignant song asking for change—both for physical money and social change. While that message rang true, it seemed rather out of place for this musical. However, once again, Daelynn Jorifand her powerful voice stirred lots of emotions, especially during her solo number “Change.”

Finally, moments of the plot confused me a little as well, especially as Gordon started to hallucinate or when he first fell into a coma and the progression of that. Madeline Eaton, who plays Gordon’s mom, also had a shining moment in her song, “The Music Still Plays on,” though it seemed to suggest that Gordon had actually died while he was in the coma.

Nonetheless, the stage props and transitions, as well as the creative use of the ensemble, pushed these questions to the back of my mind. Given the few problems I had with the characters and plot, the SMTD cast was exceptional, selling the whimsical humor that underlies the nature of this play. Owen Claire Smith as the Thin Nurse and James Young as the Nice Nurse contrasted each other perfectly with their sassy attitudes. Especially during numbers such as “Gordon’s Law of Genetics,” the over-the-top choreography and break from characters added much entertainment to a somber and serious topic for a musical. The idea of Gordon dying before he could get all the songs he wanted to write out into the world is a stark reality for many individuals who have so much potential, and yet life (and death) happens. Thankfully, A New Brain approaches this prospect with lots of light and energy, inspiring us to make the most out of the time we get and giving us all hope that it will work out in the end.

REVIEW: ComCo Presents: Chest Hairs Roasting On An Open Fire

Let me tell ya, folks, there is nothing like raunchy humor in improv comedy to really get you in the holiday spirit.

Before the show, instead of plum fairies or whatever on my mind, I thought only of finals and what the hell I was going to get my brother for Christmas. Afterwards, here I am in full St. Nick mode, my cheeks flushed, my voice jolly, my generousitity with baked goods at an all-time high. My mood has been lifted from its normal haunt (the gates of hell) up to the North Pole. I am only a little bit terrified of a future full evolution into that bearded chimney penetrator.

When I stepped into Angell Hall Auditorium A that evening I was shocked to find the crowd so large I couldn’t find a seat. Almost every event I review hosts a meager audience, sometimes no more than an infant’s handful of people showing up. It was refreshing to see so many people showing up to support the school’s longest-running comedy group.

The show was structured into several creative exercises they called games. There was I like my men like I like my _____, a chaptered story, another with characters who could only say the same two sentences, and others. While the scenes almost always slapped, the way they accepted suggestions from the audience wasn’t optimal. Often a repeated, audience-endorsed phrase would be ignored in favor of another they deemed usable. A true improv artist would never cherry-pick in this way. But regardless of this minor transgression, the group showed how deeply talented they are at coming up with often complex jokes and wordplay on the spot. I was most impressed with how long they kept up the full novel about the murderous reindeer, though they had to scrap a few chapters early on because they weren’t panning out well.

I’m sure it takes a lot of confidence to get on stage without a script and play a fool for a room of peers paying $2 a ticket. And I’m sure the power of making an entire audience dissolve into laughter from something you came up with a second ago is worth much more than most other pursuits. There are few opportunities like this that so fully improve the mood of everyone involved. It takes a certain kind of person to pull forward such powerful extroversion for a constructive use.

If you posess any rational thoughts at all, you will be wondering when the next Comco performance is. You’ll be able to attend another in mid-January after the semester begins, again in Angell Hall Auditorium A at 8pm.

 

 

REVIEW: The Grapes of Wrath

First thing I want to say: I haven’t read The Grapes of Wrath. My sense of the story now: sad upon sad upon sad. So many of the characters die or disappear out of hopelessness!

I think it’s hard to make an audience connect with characters in a story that’s pretty relentlessly sad. Acting out tragedy looks exhausting and, honestly, felt a little exhausting to watch. Not that I think tragedy isn’t important or wise. I think it’s both, a lot. I was just reminded, after watching this play, that absorbing it well is a pretty delicate process. I need breaks from tragic circumstances to make me, when those moments come, want to empathize.

It’s in these breaks that I felt the play really shined.

My favorite breaks were the funny ones. I realized that well-done humor was going to make all the difference in the show when the guitar, banjo, and fiddle trio made the revving sounds for the car starting up for the trip. One, two, three false starts. A few of the characters said something like, “Hey, now. Quit playing,” and the whole room changed dynamic. The audience giggled and relaxed. We saw the characters as a little more like us; there was less of a barrier in way of talking, since it was modern English, and the music distracted from the constant, strong Southern (?) accents.

Another very important reason I began to care about the tragic storyline was for the realistic, sensitive portrayal of the mother, or “Ma.” She was a complete joy to watch. She always seemed to mean exactly what she was saying in a way that wasn’t too enthusiastic to be believable, like I felt some of the others risked. She gave Ma a deep sense of poise that none of the others quite pulled off, which gave her character nice dignity and made her performance very easy to believe. Especially for a storyline that hurts a little to buy into, a sad one, her understatedness was a much-needed anchor for my interest. The rest of the actors did an earnest and enthusiastic job, to be sure, but I craved more quiet moments, less accent, and a little more subtlety in how they showed anger and hurt. It felt like a lot of yelling and a lot of face-contorting. Ma matched their seriousness but more naturally, and I felt like she was the most inviting entry for the audience to care about the story.

Thank you, Ma, and thank you, well-timed comedy. You had almost lost me, and even if you bummed me out for a few hours, I appreciate that you tried a play with such a troubled story.

PREVIEW: A New Brain

As the semester wraps up, stop by the Arthur Miller Theatre tomorrow for the last performance of  A New Brain, SMTD’s production of the 1998 musical about a composer during a medical emergency. After collapsing into his lunch, composer Gordon wakes up in the hospital to find himself surrounded by friends, family, and a large green frog from the children’s show he is meant to be writing for. For just $13 with a student ID, don’t miss the matinee tomorrow at 2:00 PM.