REVIEW:  Endearing yet complex, The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ an exceptional love letter to family

Award-winning playwright Joshua Harmon brings insight into his multifaceted life with textured humor in We Had a World, Harmon’s deeply personal family memory play inspired by his grandmother.

Will Conard brings warmth and amiability to narrator Joshua Harmon who highlights his indelible bond with his grandmother Renee and the mark and influence she made on his life, even as he has only seen her through rose colored glasses.

Amy Resnick and Will Conard in The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

Soulfully directed by Keira Fromm, The Huntington continues the regional premiere of Joshua Harmon’s autobiographical play We Had a World live and in person at the Calderwood Pavilion through Sunday, March 15.  This wonderful semi-interactive production runs one hour and 40 with no intermission and contains some adult humor.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Will Conard in the Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

Joshua Harmon is a brilliant playwright and is no stranger to depicting family dynamics as demonstrated in his fascinating and intricate French and Jewish multi-generational play, Prayer for the French Republic spanning from 1944 to 2016 recently presented at the Huntington in 2022.  It’s a family portrait with depth and complication taking place over decades and though it differs in tone, We Had a World also depicts its own intimate family portrait.

A play within a play of sorts, We Had a World focuses on Conard as playwright Joshua Harmon growing up with Eva Kaminsky as his orderly and sensible mother Ellen and Amy Resnick as his adventurous grandmother Renee spanning from the 80s through today.  It delves into family drama with wit and humor while exploring missteps, misunderstandings, trauma, abuse, and family secrets.

Will Conard and Eva Kaminsky in The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

Courtney O’Neill’s stylish and detailed brick trimmed setting acts as several significant places in this family’s life including Renee’s elegant Upper East Side NYC apartment and a posh Parisian hotel room.  Parisian love seats, warm lighting and upscale décor are just part of this inviting and multi functional backdrop. 

Amy Resnick in The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

Tyler Micholeau’s meticulous lighting cleverly clicks and darts on each character as if under the limelight to share their unique perspectives.  Each cast member is remarkable, but Amy Resnick is marvelous as Renee and a bit of a scene stealer.  Regardless of the flaws she has within her family, you still can’t help but revel in her unfiltered personality.  Bawdy, unapologetic, adventurous and a bit naughty, Resnick encapsulates Renee who can alleviate almost anything through her charismatic and unfiltered sense of humor.  Conard’s agreeable, peacemaking and well meaning Joshua blends well with Renee’s laissez faire rapport which hones a rare curiosity for the world as they learn from one another.  Resnick speaks to her grandson like an aspiring adult rather than a child which does not always sit well with Kaminsky’s Ellen. Kaminsky’s Ellen is practical, a tinge jealous and guarded while Renee seems carefree and wild.  With stubbornness and lively personalities, Kaminsky and Resnick share a fascinating rapport and together make quite the impression even as they insist they are not alike.

Eva Kaminsky in The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

A familiar and believable tight knit family, they undermine and judge one another and are so close, they cannot help but challenge each other as they thrust one another under the microscope. At times casual and humorous and other times unflinching, We Had a World has its share of raw and bitter resentments and family squabbling which has the potential to cut to the quick, but never lets the production become too heavy and serious even during intense times.

The production’s witty dialogue boasts a natural flow and the distinctive way these characters confide in each other and the audience with humor, candidness and ruefulness at times within the same thought makes it one of the best shows I’ve seen this year.  Humorous and poignant, it is a show you won’t soon forget.

Amy Resnick and Will Conard in The Huntington’s ‘We Had a World’ Photo by Annielly Camargo

The Huntington continues the regional premiere of Joshua Harmon’s autobiographical play We Had a World live and in person at the Calderwood Pavilion through Sunday, March 15.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Searing and stunning, Central Square Theater’s ‘The Moderate’ makes a lasting impact

To say it is riveting is an understatement.

 The Moderate is sure to alter your perspective on the digital world as much as it impacts each member of this small and likable cast.  Be sure to see The Moderate as much for its engulfing state of the art technology as for its stunning emotional core.

Innovatively designed and directed by Jared Mezzocchi, Central Square Theater continues Ken Urban’s The Moderate live and in person at Central Square Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 1.  This immersive production includes graphic and disquieting but necessary content including nudity and runs 80 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Nael Nacer in Central Square Theater’s ‘The Moderate’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

The Moderate is not shared chronologically which helps to make this production a mesmerizing digital journey from its very first frame.  Rewinding the clock to March 2020, a humble yet determined Frank Bonner, powerfully and evocatively portrayed by Nael Nacer, interviews for a job as an internet moderate while the world is in COVID isolation.

The Moderate packs a lot into its brief and swiftly moving timeframe.  It delves into a wide spectrum of themes including loneliness, isolation, family strife, trauma, the gravity of internet addiction, abuse, the dark web, racism, social media, the raw and exhibitionist side of human nature and the lengths one would endure to provide for family.

Nael Nacer and Jules Talbot in Central Square Theater’s ‘The Moderate’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

We live in an encompassing digital world and it is not likely to change any time soon and this technology is depicted in brilliant and meticulous ways.  The show is wisely served up with no intermission which elevates this production’s immersive and gripping style of storytelling. Captivatingly set up and directed, Christian Frederickson’s robust sound design, Mezzocchi’s Multimedia design, and Sibyl Wickersheimer’s distinctive set design invites the audience into not only into what Nael Nacer as Frank sees, but how each character is experiencing one another digitally and in real time.  You are not just an observer, but experiencing each frame navigating right along with the cast between the digital world and reality.

Nael Nacer and Celeste Oliva in Central Square Theater’s ‘The Moderate’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

This amazing show boasts an impressive cast.  Celeste Oliva is intense and relatable as Frank’s estranged and levelheaded wife, Edyth.  Nacer and Oliva fall into difficult and various misunderstandings and both still manage to remain sympathetic under their strained circumstances.  Nacer’s Frank is darkly humorous, naïve and charming in his frustrations over technology.  Jules Talbot brings a mix of lighthearted and dark humor as Rayne, a young maverick union fellow moderate who offers Nacer’s Frank valuable insight into the digital world.  Greg Maraio portrays Frank’s level headed manager Martin who is all too aware of the difficulty and dangers of their positions and the impact it is sure to have on their lives and Sean Wendelken makes a stunning impression as Gus.

Sean Wendelken in Central Square Theater’s ‘The Moderate’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

However amazing the show’s technology is delivered, what truly sets this show apart is its humanity.  It does have genuine lighthearted and humorous moments while remaining unflinching of its emotional toll and remarkably and honestly lays bare the cast’s individual vulnerability and urge to make a difference. Through this shared experience, you may empathize with what they are going through as well and have a better understanding of our real and unpredictable digital landscape.

Jules Talbot and Nael Nacer in Central Square Theatre’s ‘The Moderate’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Central Square Theater continues Ken Urban’s The Moderate live and in person at Central Square Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 1.  This immersive production includes graphic and disquieting but necessary content including nudity and runs 80 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Thoughts set adrift and a lady waiting in Lyric Stage’s humorous and ruminating new musical, ‘Penelope’

So many questions lie in an uncertain future.

Waiting can make you antsy, edgy, and frustrated while fluctuating between hope, anticipation and dread.  No one knows waiting quite like Penelope from Homer’s epic work, The Odyssey.  From a Cliffside island abode, Penelope waits for years for her husband to come home after the Trojan War with no idea of what’s ahead.  However, boasting an eclectic mix of catchy, playful, melancholy and soothing songs, thoughts travel even when the body does not and a lot can happen even while the world is still.

Directed with introspection by Courtney O’Connor with eclectic music direction by Dan Rodriguez, Lyric Stage presents Alex Bechtel’s new musical, Penelope live and in person at Lyric Stage Company in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 1.  This stirring and semi-interactive one woman cabaret style production contains adult language and runs 80 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Aimee Doherty in Lyric Stage’s ‘Penelope’ Photo by Nile Hawver/Nile Scott

Homer’s The Odyssey is considered one of the most influential and most read mythological works of all time and has been getting particular attention lately.  American Repertory Theater debuted Kate Hamill’s The Odyssey last year and this summer, Matt Damon leads an all star cast in Christopher Nolan’s new adaptation of The OdysseyThe Odyssey explores several significant themes including war, temptation, survival, and redemption, but it is not necessary to refresh yourself on Homer’s work to appreciate this musical.  Its focus is less on the plot and its exclusive focus is on Penelope’s perspective, Odysseus’s clever, steadfast, and powerful wife who holds onto hope for Odysseus’s return while touching upon a few themes from Homer’s classic work.  Penelope also explores the relatable nature of waiting and looking for answers while facing an unknown future.

Ethan Wood, Dan Rodriguez, Aimee Doherty, Kett Lee in Lyric Stage’s ‘Penelope’ Photo by Nile Hawver/Nile Scott

Illuminated in warm pastels and elegant and detailed oceanic ripples by Karen Perlow, Janie E. Howland’s wooden, wicker and stone set has certainly created a beautiful and inviting sanctuary for Aimee Doherty as Penelope in her Ithaca Cliffside abode in vibrant teal adornments.  Mikayla Reid’s breezy costumes further captures the musical’s carefree Grecian façade with the onstage orchestra adorned all in white and Doherty stands out in a flowing burgundy jumpsuit.  The manner in which the intimate orchestra take the stage accompanied by Alex Berg’s soothing and sweeping sound design provides comfort and solace and Doherty’s occasional interactions with them feel more like a collaboration than exclusively a one woman musical. 

Aimee Doherty, Ethan Wood, Dan Rodriguez in Lyric Stage’s ‘Penelope’ Photo by Nile Hawver/Nile Scott

However, Penelope’s heavy heart has much to consider in deep reflection in her soaring vocals as she waits for her husband’s homecoming. This musical takes its time, but in a gradual unfolding without dragging.  Every moment builds with care.  Doherty’s Penelope is clever, frank, graceful, charming and is all too aware of her place in the world in the Bronze Age, even with the show’s contemporary flair.  She remarkably evokes her thoughts and a myriad of complex emotions while quietly inviting you on this journey.  Doherty’s tense stillness, quiet anticipation, vulnerability and stark loneliness are palpable as her eyes flicker and in a jolting movement, her feelings may sweep over you as well.

Marissa Licata, Aimee Doherty, Dan Rodriguez, Ethan Wood in Lyric Stage’s ‘Penelope’ Photo by Nile Hawver/Nile Scott

As much as the musical is about the anguish of waiting and suffering as depicted in the frustrating Prayer and poignant number Lose My Mind, Penelope also provides its share of raw and humorous moments in both dialogue and song as demonstrated in the cheeky Drunk Iliad.  Funny, soothing, and earnest, Penelope unveils the wonder of the ordinary even if the waiting is the hardest part.

Directed with introspection by Courtney O’Connor with eclectic music direction by Dan Rodriguez, Lyric Stage presents Alex Bechtel’s new musical, Penelope live and in person at Lyric Stage Company in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, March 1. Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW: Vivo Performing Arts presents ‘What Makes it Great?’ with Rob Kapilow highlights the brilliance of Broadway’s Lerner and Loewe

What elements contribute to a great song?

On a grand piano alongside a trio of talented singers at center stage, NPR’s popular composer, conductor, and master music analyst Rob Kapilow continues his 27th year captivating audiences with his vast musical knowledge, sense of humor, and careful analysis of what makes the best songs tick.  Every note, lyric, and rhythm is meticulously constructed to bring out the excitement and enrich the scope of the piece and Rob Kapilow shows you just how they do it.  Though music styles and genres inevitably change, Rob Kapilow may make you see your favorite songs in a whole new light.

Rob Kapilow as Vivo Performing Arts presents ‘What Makes It Great’ Credit Robert Torres

Vivo Performing Arts, formally Celebrity Series of Boston, presented What Makes it Great? with Rob Kapilow live and in person at New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall in Boston, Massachusetts for one night only Saturday, January 17 at 8PM.  This semi-interactive performance ran 90 minutes and included a short question and answer session.  Click here for more information on the performance and here for a closer look at Vivo Performing Arts’ upcoming events. Click here to learn about all of Rob Kapilow’s works including his next stop in his What Makes it Great series.


Whether you are music virtuosos or a casual music listener, Kapilow consistently offers something new that in some way will change the way you hear music for the better.  Though often speaking to a large audience, Rob Kapilow is so personal, relaxed and friendly during his talks, it often feels like a one-on-one session on a baby grand piano.  He is so popular with the Vivo Performing Arts crowd, he offers at least two appearances a season tackling everything from swing to dance to classical to Broadway music revealing each song’s inherent brilliance.

Rob Kapilow, Emily Albrink and Ben Jones in Vivo Performing Arts Presents ‘What Makes it Great’ Credit Robert Torres

Featuring a few of American lyricist and librettist Alan Jay Lerner and Austrian composer Frederick Loewe’s classic Broadway songs from Camelot, My Fair Lady and Brigadoon, Kapilow uses a mix of sophistication, humor and an easy to follow delivery to explore each song’s appeal and emotional undertones through its carefully selected musical notes. 

Delving into the Golden Age of Broadway as well as Lerner and Loewe’s dynamic history, Kapilow chose a selection of lighthearted and dreamy songs as well as pivotal numbers from musicals that leads to a character’s imminent transformation.  With humor and grace, Kapilow also reveals what each song might have sounded like without its individuality and as he peels back each layer, What Makes It Great? becomes an eye-opening experience. 

Calling on a couple of Broadway love songs, Kapilow was accompanied by soprano Emily Albrink and stirring singer, actor, and musician Ben Jones.  Jones and Albrink share gorgeous harmony and lighthearted chemistry for duets Brigadoon’s Almost Like Being in Love and playful Heather on the Hill.

Rob Kapilow, Ben Jones, and Emily Albrink as Vivo Performing Arts

Touching upon Rex Harrison’s complex casting in My Fair Lady, Kapilow ties in music and lyrics which waltz together teetering on so many emotions for I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face in which Jones articulates in an animated and humorous rendition.

Rob Kapilow, Emily Albrink and Hayden Lockhart as Vivio Performing Arts presents ‘What Makes it Great’ Credit Robert Torres

In an elegant flowing dress, Albrink brimmed with excitement evident is her full and rich vibrato as she delivered an exuberant rendition of My Fair Lady’s I Could Have Danced All Night.  In a jacket, tie, and bathed in rose lighting, Jones croons, mastering the complex and emotional weight of Camelot’s stirring ballad If Ever I Should Leave You, before concluding with a bold finish. 

Rob Kapilow, Emily Albrink, and Ben Jones as Vivo Performing Arts presents ‘What Makes it Great’ Credit Robert Torres

From classic songs and American Standards such as It’s Almost like Being in Love from Brigadoon to the high-spirited I Could Have Danced All Night from  My Fair Lady to a humorous and not to be missed I Remember it Well from Gigi, Rob shows how compulsive American lyricist Lerner of the famed retail stores and poverty-raised and frugal Austrian composer Loewe poured themselves and their imaginations into their music to create some real Broadway magic.

Vivo Performing Arts, formally Celebrity Series of Boston, presented What Makes it Great? with Rob Kapilow live and in person at New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall in Boston, Massachusetts for one night only Saturday, January 17 at 8PM.  Click here for more information on the performance and here for a closer look at Vivo Performing Arts’ upcoming events. Click here to learn about all of Rob Kapilow’s works including his next stop in his What Makes it Great series.

REVIEW:  ‘Twas the Night Before’ by Cirque du Soleil a jubilant, vibrant and distinctive Christmas wonder

This soot-covered and shimmering Luis Tapia as Santa sure is full of surprises.

Putting its own pop and dance-infused twists on a number of Christmas Carols and illuminated by Nicolas Brion’s dazzling lighting design, Twas the Night Before by Cirque du Soleil unveils an icy winter wonderland full of stunts, sparkle, and incredible feats including striped bunnies and nine not-so-tiny reindeer.  It also emphasizes family and the true meaning of Christmas.

Photos : Michael Last
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

Twas the Night Before is Cirque du Soleil‘s first Christmas show.  Boasting Vinh Nguyen’s upbeat choreography to Jean Phi-Goncalves’s music compositions and Paul Bisson’s clever music direction, it took the stage live and in person as part of its national tour at the Boch Center Wang Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts through December 14 and continues in Chicago, Il through Sunday, December 28.  The semi-interactive, family-friendly production is approximately 85 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Photos : Michael Last
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

As snow pours outside through a picture window, Marion Thomer as inquisitive Isabella, wearing in pink headphones, thinks she has outgrown some of her family’s beloved Christmas traditions and is too engrossed in her music to listen to Nicolas Pulka as her father.  When Isabella is whisked away into a mysterious wintry world away from her family, her eyes are opened to a new world and what is truly important.

Twas the Night Before masters the gleeful giggling and excitement of the season as each cast member carries wonder and intensity demonstrating their vast talents.  Brion’s masterful lighting design is pure artistry as this enlivened stage glows and sparkles bathed in multicolored dancing lights that seem to have a mind of their own. 

Photos : Michael Last
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

Twas the Night Before by Cirque de Soleil shares a faint similarity in some aspects with The Nutcracker such as discovering a new world including disco king (Jesse Ferreira Da Silva) and queen (Melanie Lester Ferriera Da Silva) grooving nimbly on roller skates in epic feats while Isabella dives into Santa’s world integrating segments from Clement Clarke Moore’s iconic poem.  Aside from these faint similarities, Twas the Night Before jubilantly springs to life as its own vivid and unconventionally pastel-inspired creation.

Photo: MSG Entertainment
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

From the horn-infused Jingle Bells to Jolly Old Saint Nicholas, Jean Phi-Goncalves delivers bright, catchy, echoing and driving rhythms to the majority of the production’s rhythms seamlessly in sync to the action onstage.  Angels we Have Heard on High and other more spiritual hymns seem a little odd to put to dance, but Oh Come Emmanuel and Joy to the World are executed with stirring and exceptional zeal.

Photo: MSG Entertainment
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

A luminous pile of presents, an angular slide, striped bunnies, winter gear, colorful pajamas and disco ball are just a few of the distinctive sights in  Geneviève Lizotte’s silvery winter landscape enhanced by James Lavoie’s exuberant costume design.

Photos : Michael Last
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

The plot and silly humor in the production make for some sweet moments, but it is second to a wealth of awe-inspiring performances difficult to single out from Jesse Ferreira Da Silva and Melanie Lester Ferriera Da Silva’s daring and death defying disco dance to acrobat Katarina Sobinkovicova as Ava twisting in a hotel cart to the spinning feats of Elena Suárez Pariente to Nikolas Pulka navigating an Arial Lamp to the amazing and competitive hoop diving reindeer.  Each spirited act is demonstrated with intensity, merry exhilaration and spectacle culminating in a beautiful finale and tribute to the season.

Photo: Errisson Lawrence
Costumes : James Lavoie
Cirque du Soleil 2022

Twas the Night Before by Cirque de Soleil delivers the awe and skill one would expect from Cirque to Soleil with added zip and zeal of the festive Christmas season and stands a shining holiday treat fitting for the whole family.

With upbeat choreography by Vinh Nguyen, Twas the Night Before by Cirque du Soleil took the stage live and in person as part of its national tour at the Boch Center Wang Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts through December 14 and continues in Chicago, Il through Sunday, December 28.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  A summer not soon forgotten in Central Square Theater’s ‘Summer, 1976’

Some friendships are instant and others form through an inexplicable connection at just the right time. 

The latter is the case for Laura Latreille as free spirited Alice who meets Lee Mikeska Gardner as intellectual Diana through a babysitting co-op with their two daughters.  The daughters become fast friends and these unfulfilled mothers, fascinated with each other, become friends unexpectedly even in the face of their apparent differences. 

Paula Plum’s engaging direction explores friendship, societal expectations and much more in David Auburn’s dramedy, Summer, 1976 which ran at Central Square Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, November 30.  This candid two hander production contains adult content and runs 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information about Central Square Theatre and more on their upcoming production, Yellow Bird Chase.

Laura Latreille and Lee Mikeska Gardner in Central Square Theater’s ‘Summer, 1976’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Set in Columbus, Ohio during the Summer of 1976, two households sit side by side.  One is a cheerful yellow while the other is composed of sensible brick.  These distinctive houses by set designer Kristin Loeffler reflect two seemingly contrasting mothers’ personalities destined to become friends.

Justin Lahue’s colorful projections with Deb Sullivan’s illuminative lighting offers vibrancy to Kristin Loeffler’s summer set design through fireworks, sunsets, fireflies, clear blue skies and stoner psychedelic imagery.

Summer, 1976 is a reflective piece driven by a unique narrative.  Instead of two women recalling their own memories individually onstage, they share the stage and react to each other’s animated memories conversationally while correcting and playfully ribbing each other along the way.  The narration is a novel approach and it certainly draws on the compelling chemistry between Latreille’s Alice and Gardner’s Diana.  Their joys, heartbreaks, mischievousness and secrets unfold as the other is engulfed in the other’s story. 

Latreille portrays winsome, bold and seemingly carefree married housewife Alice exuberantly who tries not to think too far ahead while Gardner depicts immaculate, studious and practical single mother Diana who is always thinking ahead and encourages Alice to carefully think about her own future.  Occasionally engaging with the audience, Gardner and Latreille challenge each other while exposing one another’s hypocrisies and mutual stubbornness with a clever twist which changes the way you witness this tale.  It’s an important twist and revelation crucial to keeping this style of storytelling fresh.  From migraines to life changing decisions, these two sincerely root each other on and some of the most fulfilling friendships thrive with tough love under the best intentions.

Laura Latreille in Central Square Theater’s ‘Summer, 1976’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Taking place during a pivotal and role shifting era for women from the 50s to the 80s, Summer, 1976 insightfully explores these two mothers and their life choices who long to see and understand each other clearly.  It is the kind of familiar camaraderie prevalent in so many important relationships.  I admire the way the production takes a relatable look at friendship and how it evolves throughout the years through a combination of comic and somber moments.  Exploring the joyous and bittersweet, Summer, 1976 delivers a summer not soon forgotten.

Laura Latreille, and Lee Mikeska Gardner in Central Square Theater’s ‘Summer, 1976’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

David Auburn’s dramedy, Summer, 1976 ran at Central Square Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Sunday, November 30.  This candid two hander production contains adult content and runs 90 minutes with no intermission. Click here for further details and more on their upcoming production, Yellow Bird Chase.

REVIEW:  Manual Cinema cleverly performed vibrant and layered children’s production ‘Leonardo!  A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster’ at Wheelock Family Theatre

Recently, Wheelock Family Theatre and Manual Cinema presented a vibrant tale about terrible monsters and the true meaning of kindness. 

Based on books by Mo Willems and playfully choreographed by Sarah Fornace, Wheelock Family Theatre and Manual Cinema highlighted the inner workings of puppetry, voiceover and much more wrapped in two inspiring tales with Leonardo!  A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster which continued through October 19.  This lively, semi-interactive and captioned production ran 50 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for further information and here to learn more about Wheelock Family Theatre’s upcoming productions including the classic musical Annie kicking off this month.

Kevin Michael Wesson and Kary Gesine Bergman in Manual Cinema’s ‘Leonardo! A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster’ at Wheelock Family Theatre Photo credit Manual Cinema

It was easy to sense the buzz from the audience and the building excitement from the children as everyone settled into one of Leonardo!’s final performances.  Accompanied by multi-talented guitarist, narrator, character voices and vocalist Lily Emerson, Leonardo! Focuses on a monster named Leonardo, portrayed with bold yet self-effacing charm by Kevin Michael Wesson, who seems incapable of scaring anyone, so Leonardo sets out to become the monster everyone thinks he should be.

Leonardo! Is an engaging and sweet production, but what truly sets it apart is the amazing and transparent nature in which this show is put together.  Taking place inside an onstage studio, witnessing everything being created live piece-by-piece with lighting, live action, illustrated projections and video makes it a remarkable behind-the-scenes learning experience.  It was also refreshing to see innovative puppetry leaning away from CGI and strictly computerized methods and more towards book-influenced illustration.

The cast of ‘Leonardo! A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster’ Photo credit to Manual Cinema

Mieka Van der Ploeg’s textured costumes and chunky wigs are illustrations come to life as the audience has the option to focus on the projections of the finished product and/or the behind the scenes aspect of the production.   

Fueled by a blend of light pop, inquisitive, echoing and effervescent music by Ben Kauffman and Kyle Vegter and spirited lighting by Trey Brazeal and Nick Chamernik, Lily Emerson is a marvel delivering this clever tale in all its swift transitions and voices alongside Karly Gesine Bergmann as pensive Sam, Sharaina Latrice Turnage as unexpected Kerry, and Wesson as Leonardo.  It was also easy to see the enthusiasm from everyone involved. 

Lily Emerson and cast and crew of ‘Leonardo! A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster’ Photo credit Manual Cinema

Leonardo!  A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster was authentic, amusing, boisterous and brief enough to keep the young audience captivated while teaching them about life and making friends.  I particularly appreciated a section of the story about the library and its various ‘suses’ and the expression, ‘Scare the tuna salad out of him.’

At just 50 minutes, both tales link seamlessly together building on themes such as bullying, social anxiety, sibling rivalry and appreciating one another’s differences.  Leonardo! boasts a fascinating and layered universal message valuable to anyone from toddler to elder.

Sharaina Latrice Turage in Manual Cinema’s ‘Leonardo! A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster’ at Wheelock Family Theatre Photo credit Manual Cinema

Wheelock Family Theatre with Manual Cinema highlighted the inner workings of puppetry, voiceover and much more wrapped in two inspiring tales with Leonardo!  A Wonderful Show about a Terrible Monster which continued through October 19.  This lively, semi-interactive and captioned production ran 50 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for further information and here to learn more about Wheelock Family Theatre’s upcoming events including the classic musical Annie kicking off this month.

REVIEW:  Thinking outside the box in American Repertory Theater’s artistic autobiographical comedy, ‘300 Paintings’

What happens after a dream doesn’t go quite as planned?  For Sam Kissajukian, it’s finding another one.

Created and skillfully performed by dynamic Australian talent Sam Kissajukian, American Repertory Theater continues 300 Paintings live and in person at Farkas Hall at Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Saturday, October 25.  This cleverly executed production runs 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

300 Paintings Production Photo Sam Kissajukian in 300 Paintings. Photo: Evgenia Eliseeva

300 Paintings carefully balances insight and humor in a zig zag autobiographical and educational journey about making a new start when your initial dream goes awry.  Allowing the audience into his captivating methodology and thought patterns, Sam intimately reflects on this time with a step-by-step skewed and spontaneous comic logic that might be farfetched if it wasn’t for his unwavering confidence.  Warmly yet dryly tracing out his often outlandish and complex ideas, you will marvel at his resourcefulness as Sam reflects upon his choices in the aftermath of his decisions. For example, Sam takes apart the art of doing business through the Museum of Modernia in such an interesting and unpredictable manner that one might wonder why no one has ever thought of that before.  As Sam reflects, ‘A manic person will never do something the way you expect them to do it.’ 

300 Paintings Production Photo Sam Kissajukian in 300 Paintings. Photo: Evgenia Eliseeva

Part comedy and part fascinating art exhibition, this personal portrait has a sense of urgency as it tackles art, comedy, business, and mental health with sincerity and self deprecation while keeping the majority of his zany storytelling lighthearted and humorous.   

300 Paintings Production Photo Sam Kissajukian in 300 Paintings. Photo: Evgenia Eliseeva

300 Paintings also contains a sense of adventure, gusto and discovery as the story unfolds behind these 300 Paintings.  As Sam states, ‘No one would ever expect’ and I do think that is a deft description of this entire journey.  With a mix of humor and surprise, Sam shows that discovering what you are meant to do is as significant as the journey toward it.

300 Paintings Production Photo Sam Kissajukian in 300 Paintings. Photo: Evgenia Eliseeva

American Repertory Theater continues 300 Paintings live and in person at Farkas Hall at Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts through Saturday, October 25.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Teaching and learning through adversity in Gloucester Stage’s impactful ‘No Child’

“If you can read this, thank a teacher.”

An American proverb like this speaks volumes about teaching being the very foundation of most everything in life.  Without the inspiring art of teaching, the world would be a very different place.

To think some people know they are born to teach and through it all, they do just that.

Beautifully directed by Pascale Florestal, Gloucester Stage continues Nilaja Sun’s semi-autobiographical No Child, a one person production continuing live and in person at Gloucester Stage Company in Gloucester, Massachusetts through Saturday, August 23.  This insightful play within a play within a play contains strong language and runs 75 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Valyn Lyric Turner in Gloucester Stage’s ‘No Child’ Photo credit: Jason Grow Photographer

The poorest congressional district in the nation is within the Bronx. One teacher embarks on a dubious journey to teach 27 tenth graders and quickly wonders if she may be in over her head.  Valyn Lyric Turner, starring in this one person production, takes on this insurmountable challenge and rises to the challenge with grace, wit, humor, and integrity.

Narrated by Turner as Custodian Baron with a twinkle in her eye, Turner embodies a wide range of animated characters from youthful to the elderly in innovative and brilliant ways capturing distinct mannerisms, posture, tics, accents, diction as well as various expressions and languages.  In a performance that might have come off bumpy and awkward, Turner’s shrewd solo performance is engaging and lively with each character uniquely and astutely personified through smooth and fascinating transitions. 

Valyn Lyric Turner in Gloucester Stage’s ‘No Child’ Photo credit: Jason Grow Photographer

Turner as Janitor Baron speaks directly to the audience with sage musings and historical knowledge of the Bronx school Baron has cleaned since 1958 while sharing the story of aspiring theatre teacher Miss Sun.  In a tailored shirt and dark pants, Jose, Miss Sun, Jerome, Miss Kennedy, Miss Tam, Chris, and Janitor Baron are only a small portion of the dynamic characters Turner masterfully delivers in swift succession with finesse and unmitigated charm.  Not only exacting accents from southern to Jamaican at times within the same breath, but taking it one step further by occasionally correcting pronunciations in character from one character to another.  It is extraordinary to see Turner accomplish this amazing solo acting feat within this inspiring and absorbing tale.

Valyn Lyric Turner in Gloucester Stage’s ‘No Child’ Photo credit: Jason Grow Photographer

Hazy windows, a weathered light fixture, an uncovered beige radiator and a water stained linoleum floor punctuated by two red steel classroom chairs at center stage detail Christina Todesco’s intricate scenic design.  Sound designer Jacques Matellus conveys the production’s surroundings through the show’s atmospheric sound design which includes a metal detector, a moving train and the authentic sounding class bell.

Valyn Lyric Turner in Gloucester Stage’s ‘No Child’ Photo credit: Jason Grow Photographer

One of the many highlights of this production is it radiates not only what it is like to be a teacher in a challenging classroom, but unveils a number of significant perspectives including, as Custodian Baron states, what these “academically challenged” students are like facing fears, apprehension, frustration, lowered expectations and for some, an embattled home life. 

Valyn Lyric Turner in Gloucester Stage’s ‘No Child’ Photo credit: Jason Grow Photographer

A humorous, timely, poignant, educational and inspiring journey, No Child remarkably explores the distractions, sacrifices and challenges that even the most patient teachers face and the power of every victory in the classroom and beyond.    

Gloucester Stage continues Nilaja Sun’s semi-autobiographical No Child, a one person production continuing live and in person at Gloucester Stage Company in Gloucester, Massachusetts through Saturday, August 23.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW: Behind the scenes take center stage in Hub Theatre Company’s satire ‘The Understudy’

The understudy has a gripe…and he has a point.

Sharply yet familiarly written by hit show Smash creator Theresa Rebeck and resourcefully directed by Paula Plum, Hub Theatre Company of Boston continues The Understudy live and in person through Saturday, August 2 at Club Café in Boston, Massachusetts.  The action is not limited to the stage and contains adult language.  All tickets are on a pay-what-you can basis and the show runs approximately 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Kevin Paquette in Hub Theatre Company of Boston’s ‘The Understudy’ Photo by Kai Chao

Angelica Houston portrayed Eileen Rand, a savvy Broadway producer jilted and betrayed by Jerry.  Katherine McPhee as Karen and Megan Hilty as Ivy are competing actresses for the role of Marilyn Monroe in Bombshell, a new Broadway musical where the real drama took place behind the scenes.  This is the plot of Smash, a musical TV drama that lasted two seasons, but developed a cult following.

Like Smash, some elements of The Understudy are not meant to be taken seriously.   Though some of the core plot points between Smash and The Understudy bears some resemblance, it expands its satirical focus into films, theatre and what makes real art through a newly discovered Broadway work by renowned absurdist writer Kafka.  It also contains insightful commentary about creating quality work with meaning and creating less than quality work for profit while infusing inside humor about the nature of theatre.  What do audiences actually want? 

Kevin Paquette and Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia in Hub Theatre Company of Boston’s ‘The Understudy’ Photo by Kai Chao

Symbolically wearing a Bad Brains punk t-shirt and flannel by costume designer Kara McGuinness, some of the play’s funniest and strongest moments come from Kevin Paquette as Harry who is a fed up and a bit of an embittered savant theatre actor performing exacting accents who just happens to be holding out for real art while Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia as Jake is a determined movie star reluctant to do theatre.  Both actors are charismatic and humorously egotistical as they realize their roles.  Paquette as Harry engages the audience with real gusto commenting on the state of art thinking outside the box while Lauren Elias as harried stage manager Roxanne and the picture of practicality, tries to keep the production rehearsal on track.  Paquette, Mancias-Garcia and Elias share rapid fire banter, physical comedy and a few surprises as the show unfolds.

Lauren Elias and Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia in Hub Theatre Company of Boston’s ‘The Understudy’ Photo by Kai Chao

It also acts as a love letter to the stage managers of the world and does it well.  The play may be called The Understudy, but rocking a legendary Kiss T-shirt, clever, skeptical and sympathetic Elias as Roxanne rises to the challenge attempting to avoid impending theatre disasters while keep it together personally and professionally.  No small feat as Emily Bearce’s haunting lighting and Justin Lahue’s impressively gothic projections seem to possess a mind of their own.  When these elements work with Gage Baker’s rich sound design, it is all quite the spectacle.

Cristhian Mancinas-Garcia, Kevin Paquette and Lauren Elias in Hub Theatre Company of Boston’s ‘The Understudy’ Photo by Kai Chao

A day at the theatre with The Understudy unveils drama, secrets, romance, and takes its time with a twist ending you may not see coming.   A production may come together onstage, but the absurdity of how it gets there is the real story.  Thank a stage manager and an understudy today.

Hub Theatre Company of Boston continues The Understudy live and in person through Saturday, August 2 at Club Café in Boston, Massachusetts.  The action is not limited to the stage and contains adult language.  All tickets are on a pay-what-you can basis and runs approximately 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.