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:  Love and family drive a moving and powerful world premiere of ‘Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?)’ presented by Chuang Stage and Seoulful Productions

Family can be complicated.  Some ancestors have passed away and maybe you would give anything to speak to or enjoy a meal with them one more time.  Others you endure and it can be so emotionally draining, it is a battle to stay connected.

Featuring a special opening act concert performance by Sarah Shin on Wednesday, November 27 prior to Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?), this particular evening presentation manages to explore both types of relationships.

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

Written and performed affectively by Zoë Kim and perceptively directed by Chris Yejin, Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) , a world premiere production from Chuang Stage and Seoulful Productions, is a moving autobiographical recollection on love and family continuing live and in person at Boston Center for the Arts in Boston, Massachusetts through Saturday, November 30.  This bilingual one woman performance is 75 minutes with no intermission.  The paper program not only offers details on the show, but also features a wonderful and fitting cookbook section on Korean comfort food.  Click here for more information and for tickets which are limited.

Sarah Shin Photo credit to Chuang Stage

Candid and engaging, Did You Eat‘s featured a special opening act performance by Sarah Shin.  With a peach electric guitar, she paid tribute to her late grandfather who led a big life with a big family.  With yearning vocals, she longs for conversations with him about her craft knowing what she knows now.   Though the song might have been explored an octave lower, it is a lovely and personal number that resonates with anyone who discovers they have common ground with those who have come before them. 

With rich accompaniment by Alison Yueming Qu, Shin also performed a raw and humorous song about the aftermath of a breakup enhanced by Shin’s soaring and unique vocals.

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

Accented by ethereal and shrouded pastel colored drapes and a multicolored painted floor, Did You Eat evokes a guileless innocence and Aegyo in Szu-Feng Chen’s cheerful and lively set design and costuming featuring braids and sunflowers, a bloom which symbolizes resilience. Katie Kuan-Yu Chen’s lingering and at times dreamy sound design with Michi Zaya’s distinctive projections and Ari Kim’s dynamic lighting illustrates a wide range of emotions from hyper vigilance to love at first sight.

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

A mother (Umma) who was not ready to become a mother but wanted to please her family and a father (Appa) who wanted to please his family and prove his manhood by having a son.  Diving into the dysfunction and expectations set by a Korean family, Did you Eat is a multifaceted journey performed and recounted by Korean-American Zoë Kim in a stirring one woman performance.  Her use of the second person perspective is part of what makes Kim’s story engulfing for the audience as she navigates the struggle she endured growing up and the repercussions it had on her psyche and well being.

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

A winding journey that is at times funny, haunting, harrowing, relatable and always powerful, Kim transitions each feeling with skill, physical prowess, and a natural fluidity as each scene intensely alters in tone.  An earnest piece steeped in emotion, the production is enhanced by Christopher Shin’s striking chorography that varies from subtle to sharp and abrupt movements to interpretive dance.  Kim army crawls, slices the air, and slides across the floor and yet also emits joy through childlike movements and a beaming smile.

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

The term Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) is inherently a phrase used in love language and how actions speak louder than words and yet words are significant and binding.  Kim also longs to please her family and within its raw honesty through resentment, isolation, shame, guilt and seemingly impossible circumstances, shares a beautiful life lesson about identity, trust, self love and what it takes to shine.   

Zoë Kim in Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) Photo by Maggie Hall Photography

 Written and performed affectively by Zoë Kim and perceptively directed by Chris Yejin, Did You Eat? (밥 먹었니?) , a world premiere production from Chuang Stage and Seoulful Productions, is a moving autobiographical recollection on love and family continuing live and in person at Boston Center for the Arts in Boston, Massachusetts through Saturday, November 30.  This bilingual one woman performance is 75 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets which are limited.

REVIEW:  Karin Trachtenberg’s ‘My Mother Had Two Faces’ examines the woman in the mirror

They say beauty is only skin deep.

My Mother Had Two Faces explores beauty in all of its forms and how to accept the person in the mirror including the flaws on both the outside and on the inside.

Written by Karin Trachtenberg in a heartfelt performance and directed and developed by Jessica Lynn Johnson, The Rockwell presented the one woman self reflecting play, My Mother Had Two Faces:  Reflections on Beauty, Aging, and Acceptance live and in person at The Rockwell in Somerville, MA through Sunday, March 3, but this production is currently touring.  Karin will make her next stop at the United Solo Festival at Theatre Row on March 14 in New York City. The show is approximately 60 with no intermission.  Click here for more information and here for further details and for tickets.

Karin Trachtenberg in ‘My Mother Had Two Faces’ Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

The magnifying mirror is beauty’s classic frenemy.  It stands out on a vanity counter strewn with jewelry, makeup and all the items it takes for a person to enhance their best features.  The magnifying mirror enlarges all the remarkable parts of the face, but is also unrelenting and unforgiving for all the parts that glaringly need improvement. For Karin’s Swiss mother, it was a beacon of hope and an essential part of her daily routine that gave into an illusion that goes back generations that women must look perfect in today’s society.  As the show most poetically asks, ‘What does it mean to be seen by the envelope and not the letter?’ 

This revelatory production is not just about beauty, but it is a memoir about healing.  As a ritual for Karin’s Buddhist faith, it is a therapeutic journey into the past to get better insight into Karin’s struggles in order to achieve enlightenment.  My Mother Had Two Faces delves into important moments for Karin, her mother, and her family’s history while masking family trauma.

Karin and Lindt chocolate Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

Offering free Lindt chocolates as a tribute to Karin’s family heritage, My Mother Had Two Faces is an engaging, bare, honest, and sincere portrayal of the good, the beautiful and the horribly ugly with humor, joy, fear, grace, and anguish in the sting and string of life’s revelations.  Accompanied by slideshows, photos and much more shared through a multimedia screen by 3 Cubed, Karin shares some of her mother’s reflections in a thick and playful Swiss accent and an occasional lighthearted free spiritedness.  Dressed in black, Karin is a blank canvas for her mother and her own various idiosyncrasies, frustrations, hypocrisies, earnest dreams and more.  It is an eye opening journey accompanied only by the wise, sensible, and logical musings of the woman in the mirror exploring her most wonderful and toughest experiences.  Eric Bornstein’s expressive and finely-detailed masks are effective aides during the production with well timed lighting while sound and tech designer Bobby Raps rewinds the clock with a vintage soundtrack that includes the theme song to Mission Impossible and Edith Piaf’s Non je ne regrette rien (No regrets).

Karin Trachtenberg and Eric Bornstein’s masks Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

Karin paints a well rounded portrait of her enigmatic and glamorous mother and therefore making invaluable discoveries about herself and her family on this healing journey.  It is funny and moving and may encourage you to take a closer look in the mirror at what makes a person who they are.

Photo credit to Karin Trachtenberg

My Mother Had Two Faces:  Reflections on Beauty, Aging, and Acceptance will next be at the United Solo Festival at Theatre Row on March 14 in New York City. The show is approximately 60 with no intermission.  Click here for further details and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Greater Boston Stage Company gets spooky with ‘We Had a Girl Before You’

Just in time for Halloween, Greater Boston Stage Company stages one creepy ghost story.

Taking a cue from the success of last year’s one man show, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Greater Boston Stage Company decided to draw from a few classic and haunting tales for this one woman show, We Had A Girl Before You.

Directed by Weylin Symes, Greater Boston Stage Company presents Trevor Schmidt’s We Had A Girl Before You live and in person at Greater Boston Stage Company in Stoneham, MA through Sunday, November 5.  It is 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Annie Barbour in Greater Boston Stage Company’s ‘We Had a Girl Before You’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Wearing spectacles and with hair pulled back in a tight bun is just one of Annie Barbour’s many personas as she depicts Edwina Trout, a lonely and inquisitive woman who embarks on an ardent journey to work as a lady’s companion.  Longing for love and a sense of belonging, she travels with hope on a dangerous journey to Wichham Manor.

Kathy Monthei’s gloomy and effective set boasts a distant and lit manor on a high hill, a large full moon, a wide staircase, a veiled and translucent black curtain, and bronze-like etchings on the walls with a built in crawl space.  The show relies a great deal on David Remidios’s moody sound design and spontaneous special effects for a few jump scares along the way.

Annie Barbour in Greater Boston Stage Company’s ‘We Had a Girl Before You’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Annie Barbour not only depicts Edwina Trout, but a number of unsavory characters on her journey such as a gruff and surly barmaid and an abusive and resentful teacher.  The physical prowess that Barbour carries is substantial, but she handles it while exacting accents, mannerism, and conversations varying from a dark scowl to a hypnotic stare.  Trout is far more complex of a part than it seems and Barbour handles these variations of temperament believably.  ‘We Had a Girl Before You’ is not as strong of a story as a classic tale of ‘The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,’ but it contains enough chilling content and wily twists  that make for an interesting day at the theatre. 

Annie Barbour in Greater Boston Stage Company’s ‘We Had a Girl Before You’ Photo by Nile Scott Studios

Greater Boston Stage Company presents Trevor Schmidt’s We Had A Girl Before You live and in person at Greater Boston Stage Company in Stoneham, MA through Sunday, November 5.  It is 90 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW: Theatre Kapow delivers a clever and engaging ‘Feast’

You are part of this feast as an honored guest.

Megan Gogerty’s interactive and dynamic Feast makes you part of this production and it won’t be long until you get reeled into dinner conversation.  New Hampshire’s Theatre Kapow brings back theatre in a unique way all while delivering real dessert (and a little extra) and as a person starved for the arts, Megan Gogerty’s Feast will leave you full while remaining behind the computer. 

Directed by Matt Cahoon who offers an insightful introduction, Theatre Kapow presented Megan Gogerty’s Feast live with select performances from Friday, September 25 through Sunday, September 27.  This show contains mature content and has its own share of dark notes.  Click here to learn more about Theatre Kapow’s 13th season, We Can Get through This and much more.

Feast is an intriguing blend of the classic and contemporary featuring to-the-minute pop culture references while unraveling an ancient mystery.  Cleverly self-aware through its philosophies and contextual principles, Carey Cahoon is the hostess of this part conversation and part confessional one-woman show in 75 minutes – no small feat for one person.  Opening night had a few technical glitches, but Carey didn’t miss a beat, picking up the moment she left off.

Feast acts as much a warning as a mystery and does not shy away from raw and difficult topics, but Carey’s candor makes these subjects easier to swallow.  From government to grief, Feast is not preachy or “political” per se, but you’d be remiss if the conversation doesn’t cause you to look inward.

Carey Cahoon is refined, biting, powerful, but most of all compelling as Agathae, an upper-class socialite getting to know the company she is keeping.  She handles this complex personality with zeal through her gripping, slow-burn performance and combined with Megan Gogerty’s innovative script, keeps the tension rising as revelations are unveiled.

The show could have been one note and a bit long, but Matt Cahoon’s discerning staging and Tavya Young’s ominous lighting made interesting use of the limited space and various props, especially for an evocative scene involving a curtain.  Multi-faceted, shrewd, and on its own calculated mission, Feast also markedly holds onto the famous proverb, ‘Revenge is a dish best served cold.’

Theatre Kapow presents Lauren Gunderson’s ‘Natural Shocks’ from October 23-25 Photo courtesy of Matthew Lomanno Photography/Theatre Kapow

Theatre Kapow continues its 13th season with a live stream of Lauren Gunderson’s Natural Shocks from October 23 – 25.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW: Soprano-actress Christina Pecce puts her own spin on a few famous faces in fabulous ‘Witches, Bitches, and Divas!’

In a white suit and glittering heels, soprano and actress Christina Pecce may have paid homage to Beyonce (her style reminiscent of Beyonce’s suit at the Superbowl 50 halftime show), but certainly stepped into quite a few famous shoes with ‘Witches, Bitches, and Divas,’ a one night only, one woman cabaret that took place at the American Repertory Theatre’s (A.R.T.) Oberon Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts on Sunday, September 8.  Click here for a closer look at ‘Witches, Bitches, and Divas!’ and here to see where Christina will perform next.

Don’t be deceived by the title.  No witches, bitches, or divas actually appear in the show unless you are referring to “every woman” Christina Pecce.  Her one woman show steps into all three categories to create a partly auto-biographical and comedic musical show covering the likes of Elphaba (Witch) from the Tony award-winning hit musical ‘Wicked,’ Miss Hannigan from the classic musical, ‘Annie‘ (Bitch, if left to interpretation), and diva Mariah Carey.  She also chooses zany selections about marriage and shows off her classically-trained vocal talents performing a soaring French opera and then a tonally-deaf singer with Flanders and Swann’s A Word to My Ear.  The bottom line is Christina Pecce can sing just about anything.

Witches Bitches and Divas Oberon Cambridge

The Oberon in Cambridge, Massachusetts Photo credit to Witches, Bitches and Divas

Accompanied by a trio of powerhouse musicians which included Music Director Steve Bass on piano, drummer George Darrah, and bassist Nick Francese, Christina brings humor and personal anecdotes while adding her own spin to various medleys.  She tackles subjects like nannies, drinking, and gravity and even sneaks in an amusing little drinking game too.

From Sondheim to Nat King Cole, Christina makes her time onstage an unpredictable, interactive treat as she occasionally wanders through the crowd, serenading a few audience members.  She also left a piece of her heart onstage in a stirring rendition of Sondheim’s ‘Being Alive.’  Pecce last appeared at the Oberon in February and from the glowing reception she received when she returned, it certainly will not be her last time.

American Repertory Theatre’s Oberon is an intimate and inviting night club without a bad seat in the house that welcomes a variety of shows throughout the year.  Located at 2 Arrow Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the Oberon is American Repertory Theatre’s second stage for theatre and nightlife.  Click here for upcoming events at the Oberon, here to learn more about Christina Pecce, and here for more about the American Repertory Theatre.