Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Oh, Those Summer Nights

Summer: Traditionally when theatres go dark as people play outdoors. And yes, for two weeks Salem theatre hit a lull, where you could only see improv comedy and stand-up without leaving town. I hope you enjoyed your break—the Summer Theatre Season in Salem begins now:

Albany Civic Theatre: Footlight Frenzy, by Ron House. A raucous back-stage farce (think Noises Off) directed by Albany’s Bob Olin. Check out the cast interview on the Theatre Talk podcast at kmuz.org. July 10 to July 25.

Pentacle Theatre: Chicago, the Tony-award winning musical by Kander & Ebb and Bob Fosse, directed by Ken Hermens and James Steele. You may remember it from the 2002 film with RenĂ©e Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Set in the roaring 20s, it tells a tale of crime, jealousy, and unquenched desire for fame. Pentacle packs in the razzle dazzle—and all that jazz—into its intimate space. July 10 to August 1st.

Children’s Educational Theatre: An extravaganza of theatre for and by young audiences. Performances start at the Salem Art Fair (July 17–19) with an adaptation of “The Jabberwocky” and continue through the following week at assorted venues. Check out the full calendar at cetsalem.org and take your kids to see some great plays.

Keizer Homegrown Theatre: Our own annual Shakespeare in the park production at the Keizer Rapids Amphitheater, this year featuring A Midsummer Night’s Dream, directed by Linda Baker. The twist: these lovers escape from their retirement home and the overbearing eye of their children. Bring a camp chair and enjoy some of Gilgamesh brewery’s finest at this lively outdoor event. July 22 to 25 only.

Theatre 33: The Willamette University offshoot company presents another series of staged readings by Oregon playwrights. Next up is The Snowmaker by Aleks Merilo, a thriller directed by the immensely talented Raissa Fleming. If you are looking for new plays, find them here. Sunday, July 26th only.

Enlightened Theatrics: Taking Broadway to Salem with Hair, directed by Vincenzo Meduri. Yes, that Hair, one of the most culturally-significant plays to come out of the 1960s (it’s a political satire, really). And yes, with nudity—but come on, people, it’s only one scene, and the music is fabulous. Let the sun shine in. July 29 to August 16.

WOU Theatre: Shakespeare’s other cross-dressing comedy, As You Like It. “All the world’s a stage,” “No news but the old news,” and a few other good lines. Directed by David Janoviak with a mixed cast of student- and community actors, including the brilliant Gregory Jolivette. July 30 to August 1 only.

Brush Creek Playhouse: Unfortunately, the Silverton company had to cut its traditional summer melodrama, but they will be back in September with their teen/youth show, You Know I Don’t Love You, another original piece by father-daughter team Michael and Emily Wood.

Look for more shows in August from Albany, Pentacle, and Theatre 33, and a downtown block party from Enlightened Theatrics on August 1st. Also look for a stronger presence from the Salem Theatre Network. These are exciting times for theatre in Salem. Don’t let anyone tell you differently.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

A Long Walk for a Short Drink


Much Ado About Nothing at Albany Civic Theatre, directed by Johanna Spencer, is a production that desperately wants to be a farce, but the play keeps getting in the way.

Much Ado is one of Shakespeare’s most frequently produced comedies, and with good reason: the wit of Benedict and Beatrice, the sighs of Claudio and Hiro, the buffoonery of Dogberry and the Watch. The language is mostly in prose, and there is plenty of opportunity for physical comedy. In short, it is a crowd-pleasing play that is relatively easy to produce. I have seen productions from bad to excellent, but for my money, nothing is superior to the 1993 film starring Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson.  

Albany Civic Theatre (for those who have never been) is an easy thirty minute drive south of Salem. The company was founded in 1950, four years before Pentacle and twenty-five years before Brush Creek. The theatre itself is converted from an old cinema (formerly the Rialto). As such, the house is long and narrow, and the stage is a narrow proscenium. Sightlines are decent, although as the house fills, spectators move rapidly away from the stage.

Albany’s Much Ado makes some interesting choices. It opens with Beatrice winning a real fencing match—a nice foreshadow to the verbal sparring that is to follow. Several roles are casually gender-switched, notably the patriarch Leonato (now Leonata), a refreshing update on Shakespeare’s boys’ club. The production is set in the American 1920s, so much fun is had with flapper skirts, the Charleston, and Teddy Roosevelt hats. Original musical arrangements for “Hey Nonny Nonny” and the funeral dirge are a pleasant addition.

Unfortunately, the acting never rises to the passion of the play itself. Benedict, played by newcomer Rory McDaniel, is cartoonish and self-indulgent. Not every line of Shakespearean imagery needs to be pantomimed, nor does every innuendo deserve a pelvic thrust. He brings ample energy, but he comes across as a horny adolescent. Beatrice, on the other hand, played by Catherine Polan Orzech, is bright, powerful, and self-assured, and if she takes some of her beats from Emma Thompson, it does not hurt her performance. Except that the styles are in such a contrast, it is as if the pair are acting in different plays.

For the rest of the cast, they are at sea whenever the play takes a real emotional turn. The wedding scene is bloodless, as if the stakes are too low for anyone but Claudio to get excited about. The audience was likewise subdued. It was actually Benedict’s slapstick that the audience enjoyed the most, along with Dogberry and Verges’, and the endless excursions of the Keystone Cops (playing the Watch). The production wants to live here, in the land of farce, but Shakespeare keeps pulling them out of it by demanding an emotional sincerity that is never attained. At three hours long, it was far too tedious for this neighbor. Much Ado runs through April 4.

Elsewhere in the Valley

·         Theatre Talk, Friday, April 3 at 8:30 am on KMUZ Radio.
·         S.K.I.T. Theatre Showcase, Tuesday, April 7, at Bethany Baptist Church.
·         A Bench in the Sun, at Brush Creek Playhouse. Opens Friday, April 10.
·         Auditions: For Accidentally Yours, at Brush Creek, April 11.

·         Auditions: For Chicago, at Pentacle, April 11.