THE MAN WHO STOPPED LOVING WOMEN by Pittsburgh playwright Michael McGovern will be presented April 8 at 7:30 pm by The Silver Theater Project at The Glitter Box Theater, 460 Melwood Avenue as part of its Spring 2018 Salon Play Reading Series.
The Silver Theater Project was founded in May 2017 by Michael McGovern as a way to provide a creative outlet for playwrights and performers age 40 and above in the Pittsburgh area. This past Fall it produced three popular Salons, which, in addition to the readings, also featured desserts and drinks in the comfortable lounge at The Glitter Box.
“Script, actors, intimacy is what we go for,” explains McGovern. “Our audience enjoys the small theater space and the chance to meet the actors and writers before and after the performances. And yes, audience members always stay and chat with us after the show.”
THE MAN WHO STOPPED LOVING WOMEN was originally performed as part of the inaugural Pittsburgh Fringe Festival in 2015. It’s a drama with comedic overtones about a writer who shuts off his emotions and the effect it has on the women in his life. During the course of an evening its four characters grapple with love, sex, and alcohol. McGovern describes the play as “Neil Simon meets Edward Albee.”
The cast features Brian Czarniecki, Lucia Metrailler, Christopher St. Pierre, and Samantha A. Camp.
The second Spring Salon presentation, THE SHORT ORDER PLAY FEST, featuring plays and monologues by Pittsburgh area writers will take place June 9 & 10.
The Sliver Theater Project is a project of New Sun Rising. THE MAN WHO STOPPED LOVING WOMEN will be performed April 8 at 7:30 PM at the Glitter Box Theater, 460 Melwood Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. More information can be found here.
Writer/performer Dean Temple knows what it’s like to get sued by the US government, and his new show
Voice of Authority lets you in on all the fun. The comedy solo show will be at the Pittsburgh Fringe Festival
April 6-8.
“You really don’t know what to do when you get hit with any lawsuit, never mind one this size,” says
Temple. And while he did get himself a lawyer, Temple took the opportunity to spend the next two years
– a court order prevented him from working – with family friend and mentor Zachary Solov, a former Balanchine
dancer and choreographer of the Metropolitan Opera Ballet. “Zachary’s career was just peaking at
age 23 and he got drafted into World War II,” says Temple. “What he does during the war, finding a place
in the Army as a dancer and a performer, inspires me to change my life entirely.”
Bringing this story to the stage and finding the comedy in it has proved immensely challenging. “Making
theatre from a personal and autobiographical perspective is scary. It requires vulnerability and honesty,”
says director Courtney Laine Self. “A lot of times, it means I’m asking questions of Dean that you wouldn’t
typically ask in polite conversation.”
The show, which covers the span of the lawsuit and the last years of Solov’s life, takes a humorous look
at the voice in our heads that leads us to doubt ourselves, and how giving into that voice can lead to bad
choices. Going after what you really want can be scary, but Solov’s stories teach Temple that focusing on
your dreams can get you through any adversity.
Voice of Authority makes its Pennsylvania premiere at Pittsburgh Fringe 2018 at the Allegheny Unitarian
Universalist Church. Tickets can be purchased here.
“Voice of Authority” will be held at the Allegheny Unitarian Universalist Church, Downstairs, 416 W North Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15212
Shows are at 7:30pm Friday, April 6, 4:15pm Saturday, April 7 and 8:45pm Sunday, April 8
The show contains tense situations and bawdy humor that are not be appropriate for all ages.
When Georgie Burns (Robin Abramson) kisses Alex Priest (Anthony Heald) at a train station in London, a series of unexpected events are set into motion in Simon Stephens’ “Heisenberg.”
There are a lot of uncertainties once the character’s “meet-cute” in the St. Pancras railway terminus. Let’s take into account some key factors: She’s a brash, young American woman, and he is a quiet Irishman. She likes to photograph people, and he doesn’t like to have his picture taken. Then, there are the mathematical inequalities of the character’s ages, she is in her 30-40s, and he is 75.
Georgie is a whirling dervish. She muscles her way into Alex’s life, even though he rebuffs her earliest advances. Early on, he asks, “Why are you talking to me?” Alex, who seems bothered by her presence, doesn’t seem to realize he needs her. They need each other. But it is the variations of those needs that is the crux of “Heisenberg.” No spoilers, sweetie.
After a big revelation in the bedroom, the play barrels toward its conclusion. The momentum never wavers (no entropic uncertainty here).
Anthony Heald (as Alex) and Robin Abramson (as Georgie) enjoy a date after an unexpected chance meeting.
Werner Heisenberg was a German physicist whose theory states, “The more precisely the position of some particle is determined, the less precisely its momentum can be known, and vice versa.” Picture Jeff Goldblum watching water droplets slide down Laura Dern’s hand. It all has to do with chaos and uncertainty. The play deals with the same issues, but with drama not science.
Heisenberg also theorized that when you observe something you also change it. Any actor will tell you that their performance will change based on the audience. On press night, the audience rose to their feet to applaud the Abramson and Heald and deservedly so.
Abramson and Heald are a dynamic duo.
In the hands of another actor, Georgie could be seen as annoying, cloying and grating. Not so here – thanks to Abramson’s likability. She is charismatic and charming. It’s a delight to watch her on any Pittsburgh stage.
Heald’s accent is light. It’s not one of those thick, Irish brogues that will make you wish you brought a translator. There’s nary one “feckin’” or “gobshite” in the whole play, and that, as Martha Stewart would say, is a very good thing. Too many actors always try to sound like Mickey “One Punch” O’Neill in “Snatch” when they strap on their Irish. Ironic shout out to Dialect Coach Don Wadsworth for turning down the Rah Rah Erin Go Braugh!
Heald is a very young looking 73, which puts him in the perfect age bracket to play Alex Priest, however, he didn’t seem old enough. That’s more a compliment than a criticism.
Tracy Brigden returns to the Public Theater to direct, and she does a masterful job. “Heisenberg” is ninety minutes with no intermission, and once you get past the first ten minutes…the play flies by.
Brian Sidney Bembridge’s set is spare. There are four benches that are reworked into various shapes, a butcher’s case, a bed and a dining table. Four benches that are onstage the entire time. You could call it a plank constant (Planck Constant?).
Excellent lighting work from the aforementioned Bembridge, who is perfectly matched with Zach Moore’s sound design.
Keep in mind that “Heisenberg” is not a spectacle to behold like “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.” There is little pomp and circumstance. It’s a tight two-hander on a barren stage. It’s elegance and simplicity. Kudos to Ted Pappas for following “Forum” up with something completely unexpected.
-MB
“Heisenberg” plays until April 8, 2018 at Pittsburgh Public Theater’s O’Reilly Theater, 621 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15222. For more information, click here.
Mike “Buzz” Buzzelli takes you through the experience that is Quantum Theatre’s production of INSIDE PASSAGE, by Gab Cody, directed by Sam Turich, performing through March 25th, 2018. For tickets and more information, visit www.quantumtheatre.com Continue reading “Review: INSIDE PASSAGE, Quantum Theatre”
An adult Maya (Linda Kanyarusoke) reminisces about her strange and difficult journey growing up as an intellectual Black girl in the rural South in “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.”
Young Maya (Kendall Arin Claxton) and her brother Bailey (Malic Williams) are deposited at the doorstep of her grandmother’s store in Stamps, Arkansas. Momma (Denise Sheffey-Powell) and Uncle Willie (Sam Lothard) raise the children as their own. One day, Maya and Bailey’s biological father (Maurice Redwood) cart the kids off to their birth mother, Mother Dear (Roxie Robinson) in St. Louis.
After a series of unfortunate events that would make Lemony Snicket cringe, Maya and Bailey end up back in Stamps, Arkansas with Momma and Big Willie. A few years later, she and her brother are sent off to Oakland, California to reunite with Mother Dear once again.
Actually, the plot isn’t important in this play. There really isn’t one. “Caged Bird” is a bunch of autobiographical stories strung together to give us a sense of the narrator; Marguerite Anne Johnson – the woman who becomes one of America’s best known poets – Maya Angelou.
“Caged Bird” is a series of lovingly crafted stories by the author and two playwrights who adapted the book for stage, Myra Platt and Malika Oyetimein.“I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” is compelling and lyrical as the poet herself.
After the tragic events in St. Louis, Maya spends a great deal of time finding her voice. When she does, she lifts that voice and sings, full of the hope the present has brought her.
Side note: The play contains an amazing rendition of the James Weldon Johnson’s “Negro National Anthem.”
Director Monteze Freeland has a strong cast and uses them wisely.
Claxton is effervescent, sparkling and joyous. She is brimming with the enthusiasm of the bright, energetic youth she portrays. Whereas Kanyarusoke is a thoughtful, logical, detached adult. It’s a clever juxtaposition. Kanyarusoke has a powerful presence, almost as much as Maya Angelou herself.
Lothard is charming as Uncle Willie and frightfully menacing when he plays Maya’s tormentor, Freeman.
Denise Sheffey-Powell, (Malic) Williams and Redwood are also charismatic, and Brenden Michael Peifer provides some much needed comic relief.
Britton Mauk’s set is simple but elegant. It’s a series of wooden panels in muted Easter egg tones; the faded turquoise of a robin’s egg to the pale, pink hues of a cumulus cloud at sunset. Even though Jason Via provides a few important props, the best set pieces are invisible. There’s a lot of good space work (miming) from the actors. The minimalism works well on the sparse stage, proving you don’t need a lot of props to convey action. There are, however, some beautiful costumes from Kim Brown.
Life hands Marguerite Anne Johnson some bitter lemons, but Maya Angelou makes sweet Southern tea with them, and it’s a joy to watch the transformation.
Note: Bring your winter coat. For some reason, the theater is ice, ice cold.
“I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” is at the New Hazlett Theater, 6 Allegheny Square East, Pittsburgh, PA 15212. For more information, click here.
A bright young woman from Ghana joins an eclectic group of immigrants when she takes a job as a cashier at the Super Union grocery store in Manhattan’s Upper West Side in “Citizens Market,” a world premiere play by Cori Thomas.
Soon after arriving in America, Akosua AKA Sunday (Ngozi Anyanwu) applies for a job at small supermarket. Jesus (Juan Francisco Villa) hires her, based on the recommendation of Sunday’s roommate, Ciata (Shamika Cotton). Meanwhile, a cantankerous couple, Bogdan (Jeff Howell) and Morfina (Ann Talman), cause a fracas on the street outside the store.
In an esoteric pact with a nearby church (Senior Job Program?), Bogdan and Morfina are soon stocking shelves at the store in exchange for bread and other groceries.
The lives of the Super Union employees become entangled. Jesus – mostly pronounced “Hey Zeus” – has a thing for Ciata. Sunday is fighting her fear of public speaking – stemming from an incident with a man in her village. And Bogdan and Morfina can’t stop bickering – they are George and Martha of Romania (no one ever expects an Edward Albee joke).
While the play veers off in several directions, the characters continue to come together. They are “there” for each other. E. M. Forster’s words, “Only Connect!” reverberate in the hapless lives of the Super Union employees. Their bond is strong (they have a super union!).
The cast is superb.
Sunday is the moral center of the play. It’s easy to root for the shy, foreign girl who finds her inner strength. Imagine creating a new life for yourself in a completely new country – in another language no less. Anyanwu is a joyous Sunday. She shines in the role.
Cotton’s Ciata is delightful. She is the stronger woman of the two main character. She is charismatic and charming as well.
Villa does a fine job as Jesus. His character starts out cocky and self-assured and soon his hidden vulnerability rises to the forefront.
Howell and Talman steal the show as the quarreling couple. Howell is having a marvelous year. He’s fresh from a hilarious performance in “A Funny Thing Happened on the way to the Forum” and now he’s making audiences laugh across the river.
It’s great to see Talman on the City Theatre stage. The actress has been on numerous television shows and worked on and off Broadway for years (she even starred opposite Elizabeth Taylor in “The Little Foxes”), but is originally from the area (USC).
The play moves fast at a quick ninety minutes – no intermission. Kudos to director Reg Douglas for keeping the show moving briskly.
The premiere play stumbles in a few small ways. It doesn’t pass the Bechdel Test: When Sunday and Ciata chat in the breakroom, they only talk about the men in and out of their lives. Also, there’s a happy ending that seems tacked on. It feels forced and unearned. It raises more questions than it answered. That said, you’ll still cheer for Sunday and her accomplishments. There’s wonderful symmetry between the opening scene and the final one.
The tenuous relationship the U.S.A. has with its immigrant population could be explored even more here, and – with a few tweaks – turn “Citizens Market” from a cute, little play into an important political commentary.
P.S. Those are hot right now. See: “Hamilton.”
If you can ignore a few minor quibbles, you’ll have an enjoyable time at “Citizens Market.” Grab your shopping cart and browse the aisles. It’s the most fun you’ll ever have in a grocery store.
“Citizens Market” runs until March 25 at the City Theatre, 1300 Bingham Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15203
Bernarda Alba’s second husband has recently passed away. Mourners roam the theater freely and mingle with the audience. One plays a hauntingly solemn tune on a violin. Soon after the lights dim and the funeral hymn ends, the widow Alba appears and decrees that her household of 5 daughters shall observe eight years of mourning. In 1930’s Andalusia, that means no boys allowed until the moon has waxed and waned a solid 96 times.
Set entirely inside the confines of the house, the daughters are initially intimidated into obedience. Of course they slowly succumb to the heat of the scorching Spanish sun. Their passions manifest themselves both by lashing out at each other and in their lust for the local lothario, Pepe “el Romano.” Pepe visits the eldest daughter’s window nightly to court her…but is hers the only window in the Alba household that he frequents? In fact, is this even the only house in Andalusia where he speaks sweet words to a captive female audience?
Federico Garcia Lorca titled this play “The House of Bernarda Alba” for a reason. The fierce need of the widowed matriarch to preserve status and propriety through familial tyranny requires an actress who can demand attention and obedience simply with posture and presence. Alex Williams’ every moment on stage embodies Alba’s intangible essence leaves no question as to who is in charge. Late in the show, director Monica Payne allows us a fleeting glimpse of the widow’s vulnerability and fatigue. It is a truly beautiful moment that a lesser actor/director combo might have easily overplayed.
While all five actresses are well-cast, Lorca has clearly picked favorites as Adela (Aenya Ulke) and Martirio (Michelle Iglesius) have the bulk of the best-written scenes. The sisters are opposite sides of the same coin of love, longing, and jealousy. The raw, honest dialogue Ulke and Iglesius each speak, will make you wonder if either sister was truly in the wrong.
Thanks to Stephanie Mayer-Staley’s design, the house itself is a major character in the production. The simple placement of chairs within three confining walls make the space feel smaller and smaller as tensions rose. Cat Wilson’s light design included silhouettes of the outside world (of men) cast ominously through the walls. In fact, no men appear in the play, they are represented only as literal shadows of influence.
The five daughters range in age from 19-39. The effect was lost in a cast of all college students. Also, the positioning and repositioning of the chairs involved exaggerated, stylized movements. Such fluid choreography seemed at odds with the play’s tempo and economy of language. Fortunately, neither of these factors were distracting enough to take away from the power of the piece.
After a 90-minute whirlwind of three uninterrupted acts, the audience is released from the Casa D’Alba with more questions than resolutions. How far can one go to preserve a reputation? Does mother really know best? Could you have gone eight years without dating when you were twenty?
On the way out, another emotionally wrecked theater-goer asked this reviewer on the way out: “Where’s the closest place I can get a vodka martini?” Lots of interesting questions arise after seeing this play.
-NM
“The House of Bernarda Alba” runs to March 11 at the Ruah Theater in the Pittsburgh Playhouse, 222 Craft Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. For more information, click here.
On Tuesday, February 27, the Pittsburgh Public Theater opened its doors to welcome donors, actors and press into the O’Reilly Theater to introduce incoming artistic director Marya Sea Kaminski and usher in the 2018-2019 season.
Outgoing Producing Artistic Director Ted Pappas said a fond – if only temporary – farewell (Pappas will return to direct Lucas Hnath’s “A Doll’s House – Part Two” next March).
The new season is comprised of some fresh, original programming. It also features some twists on some familiar favorites.
Marya Sea Kaminski introduces the 2018-2019 season on the Public’s O’Reilly stage.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
By Kate Hamill
Directed by Desdemona Chiang
September 27 – October 28, 2018
Kate Hamill’s wild adaptation of Austen’s classic love story is anything but plain Jane. To save the family estate, the Bennet sisters are in a flurry to find suitable men to marry—except Lizzy who’d rather risk the family fortunes than force a second date. This madcap romance is filled with clever seductions, awkward escapes, and perhaps just enough luck to win at this wicked game called love.
SWEAT
By Lynn Nottage
Directed by Justin Emeka
November 8 – December 9, 2018
Winner of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize
The folks at Olstead’s Steel Tubing in Reading, Pennsylvania work, drink, and dream together, until layoffs and lockouts at the factory begin to drive them apart. By following the lives of nine friends between 2000 and 2008, this combustible drama unearths the brutal consequences of a battered economy and dares to ask how we begin to heal. Critically acclaimed on Broadway, Sweat was awarded the 2017 Pulitzer Prize.
The O’Reilly Theater, 621 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15222
THE TEMPEST
By William Shakespeare
Adapted and Directed by Marya Sea Kaminski
January 24 – February 24, 2019
Marya Sea Kaminski’s premiere production will crack open this old story to unleash a world where magic reigns, sailors sleep with fish, spirits surround us, and love can strike like lightning to brighten the darkest night. Told from a female perspective with an original score, this Tempest will swirl with vicious plots, ridiculous jokes, and the powerful pull between violent revenge and veritable forgiveness.
A DOLL’S HOUSE PART 2
By Lucas Hnath
Directed by Ted Pappas
March 7 – April 7, 2019
Remember when Nora walked out and slammed the door behind her in Ibsen’s 1879 masterpiece, A Doll’s House? Well, she’s back. It’s 15 years later and Nora confronts Torvald to demand that he officially divorce her. She navigates some hilarious and harrowing negotiations with her husband, their daughter Emmy, and their nanny Anne Marie, as we watch the woman who once up-ended the rules of marriage return to set the record straight. A must-see for theater-lovers and anyone who’s ever tried to be married.
INDECENT
By Paula Vogel
Directed by Risa Brainin
April 18 – May 19, 2019
Based on incredible true events, this story of a Jewish playwright and his resilient acting troupe unfolds with unexpected joy, beautiful stagecraft, and the contagious melodies of a live Klezmer band. In 1923, Sholem Asch’s first play opens on Broadway—a love story between two women set in a brothel—and scandal erupts when the entire cast is arrested for obscenity. Indecent unearths the perilous history of this groundbreaking work of literature, and reveals the way art can deeply connect us even in a world unravelling.
MARJORIE PRIME
By Jordan Harrison
Directed by Marya Sea Kaminski
May 30 – June 30, 2019
In the near future, “primes” are programmed to look, sound, and smile like our dearly departed. With young Walter, Marjorie recalls the good old days of their marriage despite the frustrations of her rapidly failing memory. He acts and feels like family, even as Marjorie’s own daughter seems less and less familiar. Jordan Harrison (writer for Orange is the New Black) brings us this inventive, intimate play about a world where advancing technology can lead us back to who we are and to the people we love.
The Pittsburgh Public Theater is located at 621 Penn Avenue – in the heart of Pittsburgh’s Cultural District – Pittsburgh, PA 15222. For more information, season subscriptions and more click here.
David Whalen, one of Pittsburgh’s most beloved stage performers, returns to the Steel City to portray a character he’s come to know very well: Sherlock Holmes. See David play the great detective once again in HOLMES AND WATSON, by Jeffrey Hatcher, directed by Andrew Paul, performing at the New Hazlett Theater through March 3rd, 2018. For tickets and more information, visit www.kinetictheatre.org Continue reading “DAVID WHALEN – Actor, HOLMES AND WATSON, Kinetic Theatre”
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DAVID WHALEN - Actor, HOLMES AND WATSON, Kinetic Theatre