Tuesday, January 24, 2023
One Bad Day (review)
Sunday, January 1, 2023
Top Ten 2022
Always a difficult list to put together. Always. I struggled, as ever, no least because of my rule that no one theatre gets more than a single listing on this per year. Plus I wanted to add at least two or three more plays. Some of the criteria are quality of performance and production, but also my view of the scripts.
- The Rage Fairy from Ballview Entertainment was one of the amazing, surreal pieces of theatre I've ever witnessed. Imagine if you will an apocalyptic version of Alice in Wonderland with a feminist lens.
- Metamorphoses from The Noise Within, a glorious retelling/re-imagination of Greek myth told with startling power, which moved me very deeply. I myself hold theatre is the correct medium with which to tell myth. In fact, I think LOTR should have been a cycle of plays not a trilogy of movies! This production demonstrates why.
- End Game from CityGarage, as ever a difficult choice because this theatre company does amazing shows all the time. I will only do one production from any one company for this list in a given year so I had to choose--and this one remained the strongest on offer, by a hair. This weird dreamlike meditation about endings might simply have resonated more because I'm in my sixties.
- We Should Meet in Air from Stepy Kamei, a friend of mine, startled me at the power of it, a seeming phone call to me from Sylvia Plath. That is all it was. Yet it was wonderful, and I was totally sucked in, and the knowledge I had this was on Sylvia's last birthday hit me in the end like a gut punch. Immersive theatre at its most intense.
- Asexuality! The Solo Musical from the Hollywood Fringe Festival is a one person musical which of all things should not work (rarely does) but in this case is a tour de force, complete with a glorious open ending--which of course is not really an ending because there really isn't any such thing, is there?
- Rapunzel Alone from the 24th Street Theatre marks a powerful re-telling of a fairy tale in almost grimly realistic terms during WWII, yet with puppets and gentle, fierce power.
- The Unsackable Man from ZJU combines something I love--Moby Dick by Herman Melville, the nearest thing the USA has to an Illiad or Mahabarata--with something I loathe, i.e. professional football. The result shouldn't work. It does. OMG it does to a degree and in ways beyond anything I would have imagined, up to and including all the nuances of the original in the end.
- A Midsummer Night's Dream from the Open Fist proves what a startling amount of interpretation lies even in some of Shakespeare's "lightest" texts. To be sure, this is also one of his best (there are some clunkers, to be honest) but this production asks a simple but profound question which gives a fascinating new context--namely, whose dream is this?
- Battlesong of Boudica from School of Night, one of the most fantastical and utterly theatrical offers an actual historical/mythological ritual enacted with masks and dance and puppets and drums--complete with a single mistake by the title character which changes the outcome. One little error. But mostly, this is a tale of rage kindled by a lack of honor, humility, kindness, or anything really save greed, arrogance, and fear. Topical, don't you think?
- The Children at the Fountain takes place just a few years from now, and deals with consequences, with courage taken to the highest and most beautiful (horrible) level. And handful of people, in one little house, make a choice. A series of choices. I'm a huge believer in how the intimate and individual is what what shapes the collective and the grand. This demonstrates that. And broke my heart.
Tuesday, December 13, 2022
The Many Lives of Abigail Season (review)
Spoilers ahoy!
Having enjoyed previous shows by Ballview Entertainment so much, I naturally enough looked forward to The Many Lives of Abigail Season. As per usual, what I did not do was try to find out much about the content. Fewer expectations mean I can allow myself to more thoroughly enjoy what a performance is trying to be.
But this is a review, so you want to know that. Here is my take: A noir mystery about a missing person entwining the adult film industry and high level string theory in quantum physics. Plus, you know, a pair of kid detectives. Same old, same old.
I mentioned this description to some friends and their reaction was a "Hell yes, I want to see that!"
Which makes plenty of sense. Words like zany, complex, mind-blowing, madcap, tragic all come to mind having seen this eighty-minute performance. Meg Colburn directed this play by Max Zumstein, centered around Mark Darling (Ty Aldridge) whose wife Abigail (Jenna Hogan) vanished without a trace months back. When he sees her in an adult movie--a scene not as graphic as it might sound, but somehow more disturbing--he ends up hiring kid detectives Mason (Lauren Adlhoch) and Stone (David Dickens) to try to find her. I would argue this set-up alone veers into the wonderfully bizarre. Pretty soon, in between scenes of the investigation we see Abigail in other lives--a nun, a business exec, a maybe secret agent. Along the way we also meet a cascade of wild characters including an effete but honorless private detective (Sean Alan Mazur), a brilliant physicist turned porn star (Sika Lonner), another porn star who seems to have become some kind of aspiring Boddisatva (Ian Michaels) plus two sets of what appear to be a brother and sister (Liz Mina and author Zumstein) who form a pair of truly wild duos, and a publicist AND her secretary (Antonia Czinger). Without an intermission, the plot and emotional roller coaster never really slows down very much.
What makes this work ultimately is that the people seem in some sense real, at least in terms of this weird world. We recognize them, even if they are weird. After all, haven't we all wished we could just be hired to have fun and become a star? Or had our personal interests and obsessions prove true, important, and feasible?
The character of Mark Darling in particular seems vividly "us" in some way. He's in many ways the most ordinary of characters. Not least is the fact he's unhappy, alone, yearning for a love he no longer has in a world that makes no emotional sense to him. At all. He's the point of the spear when it comes to the whole quest of the plot--and in the end he does survive, does end up enough for most the challenges he faces. If in the end he doesn't get all he longs for, we can hardly deny he's become stronger, even wiser.
The Many Lives of Abigail Season plays Wednesday Dec. 14, Friday Dec. 16, and Saturday Dec. 17 at 8:30pm with a matinee at 4pm on Saturday Dec. 17 at the Whitmore Lindley Theatre Center 11006 Magnolia Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 91601.
Wednesday, November 16, 2022
The Penelopiad (review)
Just before the Pandemic hit, I attended a reading at CityGarage of a play by Margaret Atwood based upon her novel Penelopiad. A friend of mine in the company was really jazzed, having already been cast in a scheduled full production!
Then, Covid19.
Happily, time has passed and CityGarage survived, and now they have resumed their plans to produce this play, which tells the story of the Odyssey from the point of view of Penelope, wife of Odysseus.
We begin in Hades, the afterlife, when the shade of Penelope (Peggy Flood) ponders her life and its consequences, She recalls her youth (Lindsay Plake) and how her father almost had her drowned due to an oracle. However, Penelope's mother (Angela Beyer) was a sea nymph and the children of such do not easily drown. She also gives her child some advice that will help and hurt her in the years to come, about being water which does not resist but envelopes, goes around, and in the end always wins.
Metaphors and similes being inexact, this proves of mixed value. Penelope later ends up wedded to the clever Prince of far away Ithaca (Emily Asher Kellis) who--like every other royal in the Bronze Age--had vied for the hand of Penelope's beautiful, remorseless cousin Helen (Marie Paquim), and whose unfaithfulness would later spark a war. The bulk of Penelope's story takes place in Ithaca, where initially she has little to do save bear a child, Telemachus (Courtney Brechemin). In particular she has to deal with Eurycleia (Geraldine Fuentes), her husband's old Nurse who spoiled him, and then spoils his son, with the careless and relentless will of someone only a little clever but not at all wise.
The real challenges arise, however, as the Trojan War proceeds, then ends, but Odysseus does not return for ten long years. Having done much to make Ithaca wealthy, Penelope finds herself the target of predatory suitors (Kat Johnston, Devin Davis-Lorton, Mary Egan) with only the help of a dozen special maids, slaves born on Ithaca and who had become dear to her (Loosema Hakverdian, Marissa Ruiz, Lea De Carmo). From such comes the tragedy to unfold, for the Maids haunt Penelope in Hades. Eventually we learn why.
So much for plot. What really makes up the beating heart of this production are the twin beats of ritual and theme. In a true echo of Greece's ancient theatre, much here is made of dance and masks, with the Maids switching between individuals enduring assault and hatred and a final blinding cruelty, and also a true Greek Chorus bidding us consider the world from the viewpoint of the less fortunate, the abused, the so-called "walk ons" and "extras" in life. This includes, of course, all women, to one extent or another. While a feminist work, this play seems mostly to focus on the more pervasive sins of Vanity and especially Cruelty. Indeed, Penelope at one point notes how she has watched the world in the millennia since she died. It has only grown worse, in her eyes. That is why she refuses to re-incarnate, to re-enter that cruelty, even though she remains tortured by her husband's charm which covers up his restlessness. Worse, she remains haunted by the shrill voices/images of her "doves" the murdered Maids she failed to protect.
Yes, it was not her fault. She tried. But she did fail. And more to the point, she should never have had to try. But this world is full of casual cruelty. Better to remain in Hades. That was what Penelope learned. Water does not conquer in the end. Water simply remains. It does not seem enough.
But also, the ritual which which the play appears before us demands some praise. In fact nearly the entire cast plays multiple roles, and sometimes I barely realized some played certain roles until I read the program. The way the cast members became ships, became waves, became ghosts, became slaughtered animals, etc. was part of how director Frederique Michel brought a frankly difficult play to life. It proves a wonderful dive into the imagination, rather than some over-extravagant outpouring into live special effects on stage (I'm looking at you Phantom of the Opera as well as a dozen others). When certain things happened on stage in this production, I flinched. Other times I giggled, usually with at least one character. This show despite its scale of wars and worlds, remained intimate not only in terms of the writing but our experience.
The Penelopiad plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 4pm until December 18, 2022 at CityGarage, Bergamont Station, 2525 Michigan Avenue, Building T1, Santa Monica CA 90404.