Saturday 31st of July 2010
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Solas Nua's American premiere

Ford's Theatre

CENTERSTAGE makes sweet music

Happenstance Theatre has created a theatrical travelogue of sights and sounds to whisk us off to the exotic Arabia celebrated in Western culture pre-1950. It's a collage of video, verse, music, and dance that the company has produced as

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Get your tickets...

Keegan Theatre has begun selling tickets for its annual Ireland trip.  The $20 raffle tickets offer a chance to win a trip to Ireland for two.  The trip is timed to coincide with Keegan's 2009 Ireland Tour, which is happening in the fall.  The winning ticket will receive round-trip airfare for two to Ireland, one week accommodations for two, dinner with the Keegan 2009 Ireland Tour cast and the crew and a pair of tickets to attend the 2009 Touring production (in the touring city of your choice).  You can purchase your raffle tickets at the Keegan box office before or after any performance, by calling the box office at 703-892-0202 (ext. 2) or by This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .  The drawing will be held in July during the run of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest at Church Street Theater.  By the way, you don't have to be present to win.

Another great fundraiser...

The global economic meltdown and the global flu pandemic did not curtail Washington Shakespeare Company from raising $253,000 with its annual Will on the Hill event.  The funds raised will go towards the company's education and outreach initiatives.  The yearly event held on May 4th brings national politicians and media stars together to perform an original work that borrows liberally from the Bard's canon.  This year's play was titled A Midsession Night's Dream and was written by Peter Byrne and directed by David Muse. The play follows a young Senate page as he falls asleep during a filibuster and dreams of meeting William Shakespeare.  Together, the two travel through Washington using Shakespearean verse to resolve partisan conflicts.

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Move to the Groove...

Dance is the Answer 2009In addition to the DC Tango Festival, which begins this weekend; the annual citywide event Dance Is The Answer is taking to the stage on April 23rd. This combination of lectures, classes, open rehearsals and performances (many of which are free) runs through May 3rd and includes just about every major (and minor) professional dance group in the Washington area. Featuring 70 artists, companies and venues who are partnering to bring dance into all of our lives, there has to something for even the most dance-phobic person out there. Participating organizations include the Washington Ballet (photo to the left), the Kennedy Center, Joe Goode Performance Group, Dance Place, Joy of Motion Dance Center and StepAfrika!.  For a schedule of events, map to venues and more information visit danceistheanswer.org.

 

Theatre & More for April 22nd-28th

This week's offerings include tango, theatrical dance, benefit concerts, a kid's show featuring a handkerchief, PEN/Faulkner author discussion and student playwrites, as well as a couple of short-run shows.

Don't Blink Or You'll Miss These Short Run Shows...
  • Tony Kushner's The Illusion...April 23rd-May 2nd -- Woolly Mammoth's Mitchell Hébert directs this University of Maryland Department of Theatre production. Tony Kushner’s adaptation of a Pierre Corneille's classic French comedy will run in the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center’s Kogod Theatre.
  • El mundo es un pañuelo (The World is a Handkerchief)...April 25th-May 2nd -- GALA Hispanic Theatre is offering this children's show about a Titiloco the Clown and magical hanky ride to far away lands.
     
  • Red Herring...Closes April 26th -- Ist Stage, McLean, Virginia's first professional theatre company is closing it's current production which began April 17th. This is the fourth show of the company's inaugural season. This spy thriller/love story was written by Michael Hollinger and won Philadelphia's Barrymore Award for outstanding new play. Tickets are $15 - $25.
  • Lore: A Mystery Awaits...April 25th and 26th -- Deviated Theatre presents the world-premiere of its theatrical dance production Lore, which is about a troubled kingdom in a far away world where mystery lurks and political intrigue runs rampant. Tickets $8-$22. It's being performed at Dance Place. You can watch a preview to your right.
     

Theatre Highlights...
  • Young Playwrights Festival...May 4th at 7 pm -- CENTERSTAGE’s 23rd annual event features professional readings of five plays from Maryland students. The playwrights range from third to 12th graders and have been selected from more than 350 student submissions. Tickets are free, but must be reserved in advance. Call the Box Office at 410-332-0033 to RSVP.
Off The Theatre Path...
  • PEN/Faulkner Author Discussion...Friday, April 24th at 8 pm -- Novelists Amy Bloom and Susan Choi discuss human relationships across political and cultural landscapes. Each is an award winning author who will read from their works and sign books during the post-show reception which happens after the discussion. Tickets to the Folger Library event are $15.
  • A Musical Quilt: Together in Unity Benefit Concert...April 25th at 7.30 pm -- This HIV/AIDS fundraiser concert is co-sponsored by Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church, Bethesda Jewish Congregation, and River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation.  proceeds will benefit the Dennis Avenue Health Center HIV/AIDS Program, the Association of Francois-Xavier Bagnoud and La Clinica del Pueblo “Entre Amigas” Program. The concert features African-American gospel and doo-wop by the WAMMIE-award winning a cappella group Reverb, Latin American chamber choir Choral Cantigas, traditional klezmer instrumentals by the Attonements Klezmer Duo, and choral selections by the combined choirs of Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church and River Road Unitarian Universalist Congregation, who will be joined by soprano soloist Judy Bennett. It's happening at the Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church (6601 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, MD).
     Director Henri-Georges Clouzot's 1955 film
  • Emotions in European Cinema...Saturday, April 25th from 2-7 pm -- The final in Washington Post's film critic Desson Thompson's three-part series on how European filmmakers evoke the big emotions in ways that Hollywood films do not. This discussion will focus on fear -- the Hollywood horror film cliché -- but subtler way European filmmakers create anxiety and terror. The Goethe-Institute seminar is followed by a champagne and dessert reception with a showing of Henri-Georges Clouzot’s 1955 film Les Diaboliques -- a thriller set in a French boarding school, with a heart pounding finale.
  • Swing Into Spring!...April 25th at 8 pm -- Doug Bowles and His SingCo Rhythm Orchestra present a swing dance to benefit the Capital City Symphony. The event features swing dancing (free lessons for those how don't know how), drinks and dessert. This performance and dance is happening at Atlas Performing Arts Center and tickets are $45 per person.
     DC Tango Festival
  • The DC Tango Festival...April 28th to May 2nd -- Musicians, dancers, and singers from Argentina and Uruguay share the dance of passion with audiences during this ten day event. The 2009 DC Tango Festival is happening all over town with workshops and classes being held at Trinity University, events at various embassies and performances at GW's Lisner Auditorium.
A Musical Collage...
The cast of CIVIL WAR (Photo by Mark Ramont)

Ford's Theatre song cycle hits the right notes


The Frank Wildhorn, Gregory Boyd, Jack Murphy musical Civil War is a multi-media spectacular that packs an emotional punch.  Ford's production offers incredibly strong vocals highlighted by a two-story set, moving stage and backlit by a video montage.  The play covers race relations in the U.S. from the outbreak of the War Between The States to the inauguration of President Barack Obama.  Songs meld from one to the next in this fast-paced performance, which is best described as a song cycle or theatrical concert.
 
Mixing blues, soul, country, folk and rock music, the show is a definite winner.  Politically alternating songs give the piece its story structure, as we bounce back and forth between North and South perspectives.  At a point deep within the war (which both sides envisioned as a quick victory) we realize the songs have become the same -- odes to a lost way of life, wondering why the fighting ever began and a longing to return home.  It's an emotional cost of war, which we are experiencing in this country even today, as battles take longer than expected to "win" and the people fighting begin to wonder why they agreed to enlist in the first place.
 
Utilizing the diverse cast to sing for each side of the spectrum adds to this everyman and everywoman idea that the people fighting each other are members of the same families and the same nation.  However, the musical's focus that the sole cause of the war was slavery and its depiction of Abraham Lincoln as an almost saint-like figure gives it a one-dimensionality which belies the complexity of the conflict.
 
First produced in 1999, Civil War bases many of its numbers on actual people or letters written during the conflict.  A Nurse's Diary was inspired by Hannah Ropes, a nurse for the Union soldiers.  The song Sarah was based upon Sullivan Ballou who was a Union soldier and whose wife was named Sarah.  The song takes its tone from a letter he wrote to her before his death.  Additionally, the works of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln are also included.
 
Director Jeff Calhoun and costume designer Wade Laboissonniere have chosen to dress the cast in a mix of modern and period clothing.  This brings a timeliness to the story, for as we watch young men in jeans sing about being afraid to die, one can hardly not think of soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan.  And when the characters on stage realize the true cost of war to the individuals fighting it -- the post traumatic stress disorder, the wounded men, the orphans, the broken families -- one can't help but make a comparison to the soldiers coming back from Iraq who are being denied care by VA hospitals.
 
Aaron Rhyne's videos cover the stage with an aged style of frayed edges and sepia tones, which gives a resemblance to an ever-changing photo album.  The videos take the forefront at the end of the production when name after name of the over 3 million soldiers who fought in the war appear on the stage covering it in white light.
 
Among the songs, several standout, including: If Prayin' Were Horses, Missing You (My Bill), Candle in the Window, Father How Long?, Freedom's Child, and Northbound Train.
 
This musical treat is running until May 24th, so there is plenty of time to enjoy it.  If the evening I saw Civil War is any indication -- a standing ovation -- audiences are embracing it and loving its high caliber cast.
 
Further Resources:
 
Show Details:
The Civil War
Written by: Frank Wildhorn, Gregory Boyd and Jack Murphy
Music by: Frank Wildhorn
Produced by: Ford's Theatre
at 511 10th Street NW, Washington DC (between E & F Streets)
 
Ticket Info:
Run Dates: March 27th to May 24th, 2009
Showtimes: Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays & Fridays at 7.30 pm, Saturdays and Sundays at 2.30 pm & 7.30 pm -- additional matinees on May 14th at Noon and May 21st at 11 am
Ticket Prices: $16 -- $52
Box Office: 202/397-SEAT, 1-800-899-2367 or online
Show Length: 2 hours -- no intermission
 
Cast & Crew:
Director: Jeff Calhoun
Music Director: Jay Crowder
Vocal Director: Dave Clemmons
Designers: Tobin Ost (Set),  Michael Gilliam (Lighting),   Wade Laboissonniere (Costume),  David Budries (Sound),  Aaron Rhyne (Video) and Cookie Jordan (Wig and Make-up)
Cast: Sarah Darling, Elliot Dash, Eleasha Gamble, Michael Goodwin, Darryl Reuben Hall, Sean Jenness, Matthew John Kacergis, Kellee Knighten, Michael Lanning, Kingsley Leggs, Michael "Tuba" McKinsey, Aaron Reeder, Bart Shatto, Timothy Shaw, Chris Sizemore, Stephen Gregory Smith and Bligh Voth
 
Wednesday, April 22nd performance reviewed by Rich See


 

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