Tuesday, October 22, 2019

DISCOVERING THE END OF THE ALPHABET – Part 2 (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alphabet Soup)

DISCOVERING THE END OF THE ALPHABET – Part 2
(a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alphabet Soup)

Part 2…more end of the alphabet adventures. To start things off, let's begin with a magnificent revival of an intense, disturbing Arthur Miller play.

A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE – Lyceum Theatre, New York







January, 2016. There are some productions that are so unique in design, so superb in concept and direction, so dazzling in performance, that typical words of praise fail to do it justice. This justifiably critically-acclaimed revival of Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge was one of them. Arthur Miller, one of our truly great playwrights, will never be accused of writing cheery, optimistic plays. Nor will he ever be accused of writing simple plays. His plays, both the masterpieces and the less-thans, almost demand our attention, our concentration, and when the plays are good, and, trust me, A View from the Bridge is one of the best, we willingly surrender to his words. The soaring artistic vision of director Ivo van Hove, immeasurably aided by designers Jan Versweyveld (scenic and lighting design), whose physical environment, a boxing ring-like square with benches on two sides and a door upstage, and Tom Gibbons (sound design), whose music was ominously playing softly in the background throughout the performance, never actually intruding on the action unless for a dramatic reason, but always there, adding a unnerving element to the proceedings, gave the play, set in a 1950s Italian Brooklyn neighborhood, a Greek tragedy feel. Stripped of kitchen-sink realism and the accoutrements of a traditional scenic design, van Hove focused on Miller's text, and the themes of denial, sex, and family blazed forth with the intensity of a laser. The superb cast (Mark Strong, Nicola Walker, Phoebe Fox, Russell Tovey, Michael Zegen, Michael Gould, and Richard Hansell), all veterans of London's Young Vic production, commanded our attention. The final tableau, a true coup de théâtre, of a blood-soaked stage as the top of the set slowly, very slowly, descended to enclose the playing area, stunned the audience into an almost reverential silence, the likes of which I have rarely experienced in the theatre. The New York Times' Ben Brantley put it this way: "This must be what Greek tragedy once felt like, when people went to the theater in search of catharsis. Ivo van Hove’s magnificent reconception of Arthur Miller’s A View From the Bridge, which opened on Thursday night at the Lyceum Theatre, takes you into extreme emotional territory that you seldom dare visit in daily life. At the end of its uninterrupted two hours, you are wrung out, scooped out and so exhausted that you’re wide awake. You also feel ridiculously blessed to have been a witness to the terrible events you just saw." Well said, Mr. Brantley.  Breathtaking theatre. – at the Lyceum Theatre, New York

YOUR OWN THING – Capen Auditorium, Normal, IL

How many of these songs are in your audition book?

April, 1970. First there was Hair, which had musical theatre purists wringing their hands in despair that rock music would take over Broadway and the traditional musical would die. They needn't have worried. By the early 70s, the craze had more or less ended, no doubt fueled by mega-bombs like Dude and Via Galactica. 1968's Your Own Thing, suggested by Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, but set in present day, i.e. the late 60s, was a huge off-Broadway success, spawning touring and resident companies, and launching the careers of many young, talented performers. One of these tours, a bus-and-truck job, made its way to Illinois State University's Capen Auditorium for two nights under the auspices of ISU's Entertainment Board. Back in the day, these were Equity tours, often with the same production credits as the originals, modified to accommodate one and two-night stands. As a result, even in the hinterlands, audiences often got a product that was first-rate and as close production-wise to the New York original as possible. Then, as now, I wasn't a big rock person, and, truthfully, I don't remember anything about the show, except that I found it entertaining enough and totally forgettable. Casting tidbit: Roger Rathburn, who played Orson, would make his Broadway debut the following year as the juvenile in the smash revival of No, No, Nanette. The local paper, The Pantagraph, gave Your Own Thing a positive review. – at Capen Auditorium, Normal, IL

THE VAMPIRES – Immediate Theatre Company, Chicago




March, 1988. Steve knew one of the actors, I forget who, so off we went to the far north side to a somewhat tatty storefront theatre on West Pratt. According to the director's notes, The Vampires is about career changes, mid-life crises, and the choices we make when we are at the end of the proverbial rope. Pretty much everything au courant in the 80s got a nod here, including drugs, meditation, gurus, and even vampirism. The Chicago Tribune's critic, Richard Christiansen, praised the show, and between the review and the director's notes, I wish I had better recall of the evening, but, alas, I don't. What I do remember, however, is having a couple of pre-show beers at a bar around the corner on Sheridan, where I think we may have been the first gay folks ever to walk into the place. It was actually quite fun. Of the play, no clue. – at the Immediate Theatre Company, Chicago
Immediate Sidebar: The original Immediate Theatre Company was an ensemble formed in the early 1980s and was disbanded in the early 1990s.  According to broadwayworld.com, "the company was known for its tight ensemble work and truthful acting," whatever that means. (I suspect it's actor psychobabble.) Their production of The Vampires consisted of a largely Equity cast, impressive for store front operations.

ZANNA, DON'T! - Bailiwick Theatre, Chicago

October, 2007. Tim Acito and Alexander Dinelaris' Zanna, Don't! is the musical equivalent of a puppy with sad brown eyes and a furiously wagging tale that is begging you to "love me, love me, love me." And I tried. I really did, but, despite the earnestness of the cast and the message that the world would be a better place if we all just loved each other more, I never really warmed to the piece. Set in a high school in an alternate, parallel universe where homosexuality is the norm and heterosexuality is the exception, Zanna's cast work tirelessly to put across the unexceptional material. Worked too hard, in fact, under Elisa Woodruff's trying-too-hard direction. I didn't hate it, but nothing stood out as special. The music was pleasantly bland and the characters sweet, but one-dimensional. At 57, perhaps I was simply too old for it. I'd lived through my generation being decimated by AIDS, experiencing first-hand the toll of the plague, and it's possible that Zanna's cheerfully optimistic message struck me as naïve and clueless about the harshness of the real world. Kerry Reid, of the Chicago Tribune, gave the show a nod. A modest show, modestly produced and modestly performed. – at Bailiwick Theatre, Chicago

YANK! – York Theatre Company (The Theatre at Saint Peter's Church), New York



March, 2010. A lovely, low-key, unassuming musical about love during World War II, Yank! (subtitled "A WWII Love Story) was fresh, original, and loaded with talent. Focusing more on story, and less on polemic preaching, Yank!'s tale of a gay young man, out of place and lonely, trying to navigate the dual land mines of his sexuality in a, let's face it, not friendly environment, the U.S. Army, and the terrifying reality of a war, received a loving production at York Theatre's intimate Theatre at Saint Peter's Church, seemingly in the bowels of the earth, based on the long elevator ride. If the production values were a bit, well, storefront, the performances sizzled, especially those of Jeffry Denman as the brash, unapologetically gay photographer for an Army weekly magazine, Ivan Hernandez as the hunky love interest, the remarkable Nancy Anderson, who played all of the women in the story, and Bobby Steggert, absolutely indispensible as Stu, the lonely, out of place lad. An homage of sorts to 1940s musicals, clichés abounded, and deliberately so, with book and score by brothers Joseph and David Zellnik. It didn't all work, but we and the rest of the audience left the theatre happy. Yank! won't ever change the world or redefine musical theatre, but as an evening of charm, it's first-rate. – at the York Theatre Company (The Theatre at St. Peter's), New York
About Mr. Steggert: We've been fans of the talented Bobby Steggert since we saw him in the Audra McDonald 110 in the Shade. Ragtime, Yank!, Big Fish, and Mothers and Sons followed. There was always honesty and humanity in Steggert's performances, and I truly believe he was poised for major stardom. But then, in 2016 or so, Steggert left the business, got his master's in social work, and now practices as a psychotherapist. Well done, sir. Theatre's loss is definitely mental health's gain.

XANADU – Helen Hayes Theatre, New York







There were a lot of slips in that afternoon's Playbill. All of them excellent, by the way.

July, 2007. James Carpinello was still being billed as "Sonny," but never returned to the show following his rehearsal (preview?) injury.  Even though Cheyenne Jackson opened the show two weeks earlier, he had not yet permanently joined the cast, so Curtis Holbrook was playing Sonny that afternoon. We went to this as an "it could be fun" Saturday matinee and had a blast!  OMG!  The songs and book were both campy and fun, the performances deliciously over the top, yet sincere, and that's rather a neat trick, and a master class in scenery-chewing technique was effortlessly taught by the divine Jackie Hoffman and Mary Testa, who have no shame whatsoever!  None. I loved them.  Kerry Butler, in the role played by Olivia Newton-John in the unfortunate film, was casting genius. Channeling her best Olivia N-J, she was truly a skating goddess. Curtis Holbrook was a delightful, clueless Sonny. Even Tony Roberts, whom I've never been a fan of, was quite wonderful and seemed to be having a terrific time. (Casting nugget…Patti Murin, currently playing Anna in Frozen at the St. James, performed the roles usually played by Holbrook.)  Love, love, love this show.  Mindless, happy, and a guilty pleasure. – at the Helen Hayes Theatre, New York
The Little Show That Could: Xanadu surprised the nay-sayers by receiving positive reviews, including a couple of out-and-out raves. The critics loved its campiness, it's cheerful spoofiness of all things Broadway, and it's almost puppy-dog desire to entertain. In a year that included In the Heights, Young Frankenstein, and critical darling Passing Strange, it scored four Tony nominations, including a Best Musical nod, but won none, losing the big award to In the Heights, that year's flavor of the month. (Sorry, not a fan of Heights. Sue me.) Quite an accomplishment for an unassuming little show playing at Broadway's smallest house. During that year's Tony season, Xanadu pulled one of the best, funniest PR-promotional campaigns I've ever seen. Go to YouTube and type in "Cubby Bernstein Xanadu" and enjoy. You can thank me later.






February, 2008. Just as delicious and campy good fun the second time around.  Annie Golden subbed for Mary Testa and proved she could shred scenery with the best of them. Jackie Hoffman was still criminally funny and the two of them took no prisoners. Kerry Butler and Tony Roberts seemed to have comfortably settled into their roles, and Cheyenne Jackson, now permanently in the cast as Sonny, was adorable and VERY tall. It's curious that for all the good press and positive reviews, Xanadu never was terribly successful on the road. Too campy? Too gay? Too New York? Today, it's a popular property with MTI and even, scarily, has a Xanadu, Jr. version. A proposed tour starring RuPaul Drag Race stars Ginger Minj and Jinkx Monsoon was cancelled due to poor ticket sales two weeks before opening earlier in September, 2019. A great show? No. But, dear lord, is it fun! – at the Helen Hayes Theatre, New York


YOUR ARMS TOO SHORT TO BOX WITH GOD – Shubert Theatre, Chicago





April, 1983. When is a venerable, old Chicago playhouse no longer a theatre, but instead a hand-clapping, Yes, Lording, amening gospel tabernacle? Short answer: when Patti LaBelle takes up residency on that venerable, old Chicago playhouse's stage. I don't think I'm far off when I say that I believed most of the people who crowded into the Shubert on that April Saturday night weren't there to see Vinnette Carroll's take on the Biblical Book of St. Matthew. After all, Box with God had been kicking around since 1976, had already been revived twice on Broadway, and had played Chicago three times before this engagement. Besides, if one wanted to see a musical based on St. Matt, there was always the insipid Godspell to quell any pseudo-Bible appetites. No, the reason the Shubert was hand-clapping, Yes-Lording, and amening was because this particular production had Ms. LaBelle heading up the thing, and with all due respect to the creative talents of Ms. Carroll, Alex Bradford, and Micki Grant (music and lyrics) and the abundantly talented folks sharing the stage with LaBelle, I don't remember anything about the evening except Patti LaBelle, all glorious voice, dynamic stage presence, and contagious joy. Could she act? Did anyone care one way or the other? I know I didn't. There's a reason why Patti LaBelle is a living legend.  All anyone had to do was to attend a performance at the Shubert in April, 1983 to find out why. – at the Shubert Theatre, Chicago

That's it for now… Until next time!
© 2019 Jeffrey Geddes

Friday, September 6, 2019

DISCOVERING THE END OF THE ALPHABET – Part 1 (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alphabet Soup)

DISCOVERING THE END OF THE ALPHABET – Part 1
(a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alphabet Soup)

X, Y, Z…and a lone U that was misfiled among the Xs. The sometimes neglected end of the alphabet. Not as popular as, oh, A, let's say, or S, or T, but still with a myriad of rewards. So what does the end of the alphabet hold in store today? Grab a cuppa and let's find out.

VISITING EDNA – Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago







September, 2016. David Rabe's powerful new play was, at nearly three hours, in need of a very careful trim of about twenty minutes. Considering it was in its first week of previews and had a major cast member depart only two days earlier, (in fact, the understudy filled in for the departed actor, K. Todd Freeman, with, I'm sure, very limited rehearsal) it was in excellent shape. Evocative, touching and haunting, this remarkable work will speak to everyone in one way or another. A mother and a grown son, living hundreds of miles apart, and now divided by more than just distance. A terminal illness, attempts to regain a closeness that has been absent for years, possibly decades. With soliloquies that sometimes soared with breathtaking brilliance, this was grade A theatre. Ian Barford, as the estranged son, was excellent, but with all due respect to the talented actors, it was Debra Monk, as Edna, the mother, who held it all together, and when she was offstage, the energy and focus occasionally stumbled. We've long been huge fans of Ms. Monk and she did not disappoint here. We'd both see it again. - at Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago
Sidebar: Tony-nominee K. Todd Freeman left the production by mutual agreement after two previews. Freeman is an ensemble member of Steppenwolf, and the statements issued after his departure were carefully worded and dignified. Bottom line, he didn't work out in the role. It happens. His understudy, Jeremy Sonkin, was on the night we saw the play and was excellent. Show biz "bible" Variety, gave Rabe's play the glowing review it deserved. Chicago critics overall were not as impressed.

VAMPIRE LESBIANS OF SODOM – Theatre Building, Chicago

 


September, 1995. I don't remember much about this production featuring Peter Mohawk and Honey West except that I hated every minute of it. This was only three months after Steve's death, so perhaps I was simply having a bad day and wasn't getting into the Charles Busch satire/spoof/silliness. Or perhaps it just wasn't very good. Either way, I was delighted when it ended. Had there been an interval, I would have escaped, but there wasn't, so I didn't. For the record, the Chicago Tribune gave the show and its players a good notice. – at the Theatre Building, Chicago

From the Revivals Department: According to the program, Vampire Lesbians first opened in Chicago in 1990, starred Alexandra Billings, played for a year, and set box office records at the Royal George Theatre. Huh. I would have vastly preferred seeing Ms. Billings. Though Honey West is as close to a LGBT icon in Chicago as it gets, I've never been a fan. Oh, well.

THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING – Booth Theatre, New York






July, 2007 . Bob's introduction to the incandescent Vanessa Redgrave. A one-woman show by Joan Didion, based on her memoirs about the death of her husband, and, for the play, the death of their daughter barely two years later, came to vivid life with the straightforward direction by David Hare, the deceptively simple production design, in which scenic designer Bob Crowley, costume designer Ann Roth, and lighting designer Jean Kalman proved that less is often more, and most of all in the exquisitely nuanced performance by Vanessa Redgrave. Your eyes never left Ms. Redgrave throughout the entire show, and she easily kept the audience in the palm of her hand. Sometimes quite funny, often very moving, the theatre alternately rocked with genuine delight, and moments later was stunned into pin-drop silence. Redgrave is a theatre legend, a master of her craft. This lovely play could not have been in better hands. Variety called it "unmissable theater." And The Guardian had this to say: "That the audience is rapt is an understatement. We are practically hypnotised by Redgrave's every movement. Every tilt of her head. The flicks of her wrists and wringing of her hands. How she lets her platinum hair down and shakes it out before pulling it again into a sensible ponytail. The way her hands calmly, neatly smooth out the wrinkles in her ankle-length skirt." I couldn't agree more. Unmissable, indeed. Thrilled that we saw it. – at the Booth Theatre, New York
From the Life Imitating Art Department: A couple of years later, in 2009 and 2010, within a span of fourteen short months, Vanessa Redgrave would experience gut-wrenching loss with the deaths of her daughter, Natasha Richardson, younger brother, Corin Redgrave, and younger sister, Lynn Redgrave.

VICTOR/VICTORIA – Marriott Theatre, Lincolnshire, IL
August, 1999. Love the film. Love it! Nothing I don't love about it. Pretty much hate the stage adaptation. The Broadway edition, when seen in Chicago on its way to New York, was among the worst things I'd seen on a professional stage. Still is. Film songs replaced with inferior songs, the lack of any real excitement, and a really, truly, outstandingly awful second act opener, "Louis Says." Follow that up a few years later with a stunningly bad dinner theatre production in suburban Wood Dale that we attended because we knew the leading lady, who gamely tried to get through the sludge. But wait! Between the Julie Andrews train wreck and the dinner theatre fiasco, Lincolnshire's venerable Marriott Theatre mounted a production that somehow managed to gloss over, not erase, mind you, much of the show's flaws. (Full disclosure. We went because we knew the actors playing Norma and Toddy, and were invited by Norma's husband, a colleague of Bob's.) Oh, "Louis Says" was, unfortunately, still around, and as awful as I remembered. And the superior film songs were still missed, but for whatever reason, Marriott managed to pull it off…almost. Perhaps, minus all the glitter, bells, and whistles of the Broadway incarnation, the show, warts and all, played better. Or perhaps in the more intimate setting of Marriott's in-the-round venue, and thanks to very broad direction and acting, it was just more fun. Whatever the reason, we enjoyed it. The stage product is still vastly inferior to the film original, but leads Paula Scrofano, Gene Weygandt, Kelly Anne Clark, hysterically funny as Norma and far and away the audience favorite, and Brian Robert Mani all delivered the goods, the audience had a good time, and all was well at Cassell's Nightclub. – at Marriott Theatre, Lincolnshire, IL


YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN – Hilton Theatre, New York
Young Frankenstein had a selection of marquee looks during its run.






January, 2008. Officially called The New Mel Brooks Musical Young Frankenstein. Seriously, Mel? Dial down the ego, dude. But then ego abounded in this show. (see From the Unchecked Ego Department) Egos, notwithstanding, including the uber-pretentious official title, any show that features a yodeling Sutton Foster and Megan Mullally rhapsodizing in song about her breasts can't be all bad. And it wasn't. It was big; it was loud; it had a jaw-dropping scenic and lighting design; it had a cast of some of Broadway's finest talents (Roger Bart, Megan Mullally, Sutton Foster, Shuler Hensley, Andrea Martin, Fred Applegate, Christopher Fitzgerald); it closely hewed to the beloved Mel Brooks film of the same title; and it was funny, sometimes, for example, in the case of the divine Ms. Foster, hysterically so. What it didn't have was a dynamic leading man. Oh, Roger Bart was very talented and did well enough, but he just didn't have either the presence or the charisma to fill the Hilton's large stage. And unlike Brooks' super-smash, Tony record-breaking The Producers, Young Frankenstein lacked real creativity, warmth, or characters you cared about. It was all too mechanical, paint-by-numbers. It was a tight, slick, entertaining, and professional show, with a pleasantly tuneful and instantly forgettable score by Brooks, a solid joke-laden book by Brooks and Thomas Meehan, and lively, if "I've-done-this-before-so-I'm-phoning-this-in," choreography and direction by Susan Stroman. The capacity audience could not have cared less and had a great time. So did we. But, whereas after seeing The Producers, especially with its peerless original cast, you wanted to talk about it and tell other people about it, with Young Frankenstein, you left the theatre, said "Well, that was fun," and then forgot about it. – at the Hilton Theatre, New York
From the Unchecked Ego Department: To say Mel Brooks and fellow lead producer Robert F.X. Sillerman didn't exactly endear themselves to the Broadway community with Young Frankenstein would be an understatement. Where to start? Well, how about the bad press they got when they decided to dump the announced and booked St. James Theatre, home of The Producers for its entire 6-year run, in favor of the larger Hilton Theatre? Ouch! And then, one can't forget charging a then-walloping $450 for a premium seat, an abhorrent practice instituted by Mr. Brooks when The Producers went super-nova, before the show opened. In 2007, that was unheard of. (And, please, don't get me started on premium seats. I could rant for days!!) Then they decided to limit theatre parties and groups to a paltry 50 seats maximum for weekend performances. Really bad move. And for the icing on the cake of missteps, producer Sillerman broke with long-standing tradition and refused to provide box-office grosses to the League of New York Theatres, claiming such information was "proprietary." But karma can be a bitch, and it came quickly in Young Frankenstein's case. Premium prices were dropped. (We paid standard box office of $121.50 for our seats in Row H Center in the Orchestra. Primo seats. And we bought them two days earlier.) The number of seats for groups and theatre parties were increased in an attempt to woo back the group and theatre party folks. But all of it was too little, too late for damage control. The bad PR die had been cast. Seven years earlier in 2001, The Producers was being touted as the hit to end all hits, the shot in the arm Broadway desperately needed. At the 2001 Tony Awards, the show dominated the awards and walked away with a record-breaking twelve of them. Mel Brooks was the new King of Broadway. Cut to the 2007-2008 season. How the mighty had fallen. Brooks' second Broadway outing got mixed-to-negative reviews. He, his co-producer, and his show all received mostly bad press pre- and post-opening. Young Frankenstein nabbed only three Tony nominations, two performance and one design, and won none. It closed after only 485 performances as opposed to The Producers' 2502 performances. For the Broadway community, it was schadenfreude to a delicious degree. To date, Mel Brooks has not returned to Broadway. Lesson? Well, as they say, pride comes before a fall, and Mel Brooks fell hard.

VALLEY OF THE DOLLS – Gerald W. Lynch Theatre (John Jay College), New York




Daniel Reichard (Jersey Boys) was a last-minute replacement for Hunter Bell.

March, 2010. Valley of the Dolls, the film, is my favorite so-terrible-it's-good movie. (Runners-up: Mommie Dearest and Torch Song, starring Joan Crawford.) What makes it both so terrible and so good is that everyone involved, bless their hearts, played everything so straight with nary a wink or eye roll in sight, giving the inherent camp permission to reign supreme. And so when The Actors Fund announced a star-studded benefit reading of Helen Deutsch and Dorothy Kingsley's screenplay of this iconic camp delight, I immediately bought tickets. Now perhaps the cast, Broadway vets all, upped the camp factor a teeny-tiny bit, well, perhaps more than just a teeny-tiny bit, I mean, seriously, folks, it's practically begging one to do so, with the result that we, the lucky folks in the audience, were convulsed with laughter and cheering like mad. And look, just look at this cast: Nancy Anderson, Craig Bierko, Heidi Blickenstaff, Charles Busch, Tovah Feldshuh, Julie Halston, Troy Britton Johnson, Julia Murney, Brad Oscar, Daniel Reichard, and Ed Watts. To the credit of this inspired cast and some canny direction by Carl Andress, the show walked that thin line between fun, delicious camp and over-the-top, unwatchable camp and never made a false move. I had an absolute blast! – a benefit for The Actors Fund at the Gerald W. Lynch Theatre, New York
(check out this YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcpXJJ3i3qs)
Flying the NOT Friendly Skies: Bob was supposed to see this with me. We'd even purchased a ticket on United rather than flying standby on Delta to ensure that he would get to New York in plenty of time for the show. The best laid plans, etc… Long story short, weather first delayed the flight, and then United cancelled it. And Bob missed the show. Sigh.

YOU'RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN
 – Civic Theatre, Chicago

 Pre-opening ad.

Post-opening ad.






Dennis Phillips replaced Blaine Parker as Schroeder during the long Chicago run.

 The much-missed Civic. The balcony was big, but it was all compact and intimate.

Proof that CB was an institution even as early as 1969.

 January, 1969; August, 1969. Clark Gesner's money geyser, also known as You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, based on Charles Schulz's iconic "Peanuts" characters, ran for nearly 1600 performances in its initial off-Broadway production, spawned a bumper crop of tours and regional productions, and, by now, has been done by every theatre group in the world. I exaggerate, of course, but probably not by much. And there's a reason for all that…the show is good, just plain good. The book doesn't speak down to younger audience members and has a wit that adults can enjoy. The score is charming and tuneful. Truth be told, I played my original cast recording down to the bare grooves. At the beautiful, art-deco space called the Civic Theatre, now sadly gone for twenty-five years and used for rehearsal spaces, storage, etc. for the adjoining Lyric Opera, the charms of this understated show shone through and the Chicago company, composed of veterans of the Montreal company, charmed the critics, the audience, and kept the Civic occupied until September of 1970. I loved it. – at the Civic Theatre, Chicago
Clark Who?: Clark Gesner is best-known for Charlie Brown. In fact, that was his only true success. He wrote other shows, titles that I'd never heard of, and, in 1979, wrote a big, fat Broadway flop, the one-performance only The Utter Glory of Morrissey Hall, which even star Celeste Holm, in a return to Broadway, couldn't salvage. And, oh, how I wish I'd seen it! Morrissey Hall's failure was preceded in 1971 by a failed Broadway transfer of Charlie Brown shortly after it closed its smash off-Broadway run. I wouldn't cry for Mr. Gesner, however. He was probably able to live quite comfortably off Charlie Brown royalties. Gesner died in 2002 at the age of 64.
From the "Folks Don't Learn" Department: In 1999, for whatever reason, folks with money decided that it would be a terrific idea to revisit the 32-year-old You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, toss in a couple of new numbers, eliminate one character (Patti) and replace her with another (Sally), renovate and refresh the look and sound of the show (bigger orchestra), cast it with some tried and true names, including BD Wong, who at 38 was far too old to play Linus, and book it into a Broadway theatre. Uh…didn't the original off-Broadway production try that Broadway thing way back in 1971 and fail after a month? Apparently, the producers felt things would be different this time around. They weren't.  Yes, the show got a favorable nod during its suburban Chicago tryout. Yes, the show got rave press for Kristin Chenoweth's Sally, which should have been enough to stimulate the box office, but You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown isn't a Broadway show. It doesn't fit in a Broadway house, even a smallish one like the Ambassador. The show struggled to fill even 50% of its seats, and most weeks hovered in the mid-40% range. That's not enough Peanuts fans to keep a show open. At the 1999 Tony Awards, Kristin Chenoweth and Roger Bart both won supporting Tonys, but the closing notice was already up and the show closed a week later after only 149 performances.

– Goodman Studio Theatre, Chicago


Pre- and Post-Opening ads.




August, 1972. Even though those lovable Peanuts characters bounded onto the musical stage only 5 ½ years earlier, by 1972 it was already a mega-popular hit and a money-maker for its licensor, Tams-Witmark. Regional and amateur theatres were licensing the property like mad. Goodman Children's Theatre, at the time an arm of the well-regarded Goodman Theatre, mounted a successful shortened "kid-friendly" edition of the show. With both morning and afternoon performances in Goodman's intimate Studio space, the show was popular enough to be extended twice. I don't remember anything about this production. For the record, the Goodman Children's Theatre has long since been gone. – at the Goodman Studio Theatre, Chicago
Charlies and Schroeders and Lucys…Oh, My!: At the time of Goodman's Charlie Brown, I was deep into rehearsals for Waukegan Community Player's production of the show, cast, improbably, as Charlie Brown. A good friend of mine was directing it, his original CB dropped out right before the start of rehearsals, and he asked me to step in as a favor. I did. It was not a match made in heaven. Then, as now, I'm too abrasive for Schulz's iconic, lovable creation, but I did okay, and I adored singing the songs "The Kite" and "Happiness." Two months later, I found myself once again in the Peanuts world in an abbreviated version for kids of Charlie Brown at the extinct and still-missed Barat College. This time I played Schroeder, which was a much better fit, and I loved every second of the show. I'm decades and decades too old for the show now, but I wouldn't mind giving "The Kite" another go. See if I can still do it.

And now for the lone "U."
UNCLE VANYA – Academy Festival Theatre (Drake Theatre), Lake Forest, IL





July, 1979. Prior to unearthing this program, I'd no idea that I'd seen a professional, or any production actually, of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya. But there's proof positive: a program and a ticket stub, so obviously I was there. Since the esteemed Russian playwright is not one of my favorites, and I can't imagine just going to see a Chekhov, I assumed there had to be a reason I trekked to Lake Forest to see one of his most renowned plays. A quick look at the program's cast list answered that question. Playing the role of Yelena Andreyevna Serebryakov was Katharine Houghton, co-star of the cloying Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? and, perhaps more famously, legend Katharine Hepburn's niece. Now why that would propel me to the Russian countryside is a mystery. Perhaps I was fantasizing that Aunt Kate would make a surprise appearance to the delight of audience, but, alas, that was not to be. Truthfully, I can't remember a thing about the performance, good, bad, or otherwise. I couldn't find a review in my archival website, but in an article published a month or so later when the Academy Festival Theatre shut down for good after a difficult, unprofitable season, Chicago Tribune theatre critic Linda Winer, called Vanya "reportedly dismal." And star Jack Ryland, who played Vanya, was quoted in a column by the Tribune's Maggie Daly, "We had three weeks of rehearsal and we should have had six and everyone has a different interpretation on how it should be done…" Well, okay, then. The cast consisted of many Chicago favorites and was directed by the respected George Keathley. I guess everyone's entitled to an off day. – at the Academy Festival Theatre (Drake Theatre), Lake Forest, IL
Swan Song: Uncle Vanya was the Academy Festival Theatre's penultimate show before it closed abruptly after a scheduled run of a new play, The Interview, which starred Keir Dullea and which I saw (to be discussed in a future post). A victim of artistic and fiscal mismanagement over the course of three artistic directors, a lack of real support from the wealthy, socially-conscious folks of Lake Forest, the Academy's home, who seemed more interested in the social value of entertaining stars at their homes, and a lack of a true identity, did the theatre in after twelve debt-laden years. It left a hole in the Chicago theatre scene that hasn't been filled even today.

And on that somber note… Until next time!
© 2019 Jeffrey Geddes

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