REVIEW:  Unlocking memories inside The Huntington’s stirring and remarkable ‘Fun Home’

It’s funny what you recall in life. 

Memories can be tricky.  As time goes by, perspective changes as a person grows, transforming a memory and gradually revealing details once never considered or understood before.  Alison’s home seals in cartoonist Alison Bechdel’s intimate memories as she writes her memoirs through her work, ruminating on her childhood and upbringing to discover what makes her feel like she is stuck in life.  Alison uses cartoons because drawing as a child, she recalls, ‘I need real things to draw from because I don’t trust memory.’

Five-time Tony award-winning musical Fun Home explores different perceptions of reality within the Bechdel household.  They wrestle with it, deny it, but ultimately, must come to terms with it.  Based on Alison Bechdel’s graphic novel memoir with complex direction by Logan Ellis, Taavon Gamble’s dynamic choreography and Jessie Rosso’s compelling music direction, The Huntington continues Fun Home live and in person at the Huntington in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, December 14. This poignant musical deals in some mature themes and runs 1 hour and 40 minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Lyla Randall and Nick Duckart in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J Franklin

The Huntington is known for its extraordinary sets and Fun Home is no exception.  Beneath a delicately adorned chandelier, Fun Home takes an intimate look inside a family seemingly full of zeal and an antique house so tidy and flawless in all its finery flanked with towering bookshelves, a fireplace, grand piano, detailed wallpaper and richly placed stained glass, it neatly hides any cracks and crevices underneath. Tanya Orellana’s rolling sets meticulously combines Gothic Victorian-style details with Pennsylvania’s natural beauty in a portrait landscape of trees.  While Fun Home unveils the Bechdel family’s complicated world piece by piece, it may also quite symbolically depict Alison’s increasing ability to see the forest for the trees. 

Sarah Bockel in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J. Franklin

Led by and musically directed by Jessie Rosso, this intimate, seven piece orchestra sits through an open piece of “sky” carved into the backdrop in a soothing, fiddle-laden soundtrack which blends light, airy, and melancholy.  From its opening song, It All Comes Back to the Flying Away finale, Jeanine Tesori’s captivating musical numbers hold a spectrum of rich and multi-faceted meaning.  The catchy, Partridge Family-inspired with a hint of Jackson 5 grand number, Rainbow of Love is a particular highlight, enhanced by matching reflective and fringed retro costumes, just a portion of Celeste Jennings’s colorful and era exacting costume design.

Sarah Bockel and Lyla Randall in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J Franklin

With its share of comedic and uplifting moments, Alison looks back on her relationship with her enigmatic and intellectual father Bruce and her traveling and ill at ease mother, Helen.  Alison is the only individual that outwardly transforms in this piece, thanks to the exceptional work of Maren Phifer in for Lyla Randall as adorably precocious and impressionable Small Alison in braids and overalls who springs to life in an ingenious manner. Phifer performs an impeccable and chiming version of Ring of Keys and shines with Odin Vega as Christian and Caleb Levin as John in the darkly humorous title track, Fun Home in impressive harmony.  Maya Jacobson aptly depicts naïve, anxious, excitable, yet awkward Medium Alison while Sushma Saha is walking confidence as cool and collected Joan.

Caleb Levin, Odin Vega, Lyla Randall in Fun Home; Directed by Logan Ellis; Photo by Marc J Franklin

With black rimmed glasses and short dark hair, Bockel slips into Alison’s wounded façade, a mature, jaded and intellectually-driven individual.  With a dark sense of humor, Bockel is an omnipresent narrator on this emotional journey evoking confusion, warmth, sorrow, and frustration realizing every fine detail of Alison’s younger years while struggling to build strength into each new discovery.

Sushma Saha and Maya Jacobson in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J. Franklin

Director Logan Ellis strives to examine the physical and intellectual similarities between Alison and Nick Dukart as Alison’s father and it is fascinating to witness their side by side similarities. Duckart allows Bruce’s flaws override what is often viewed as an overtly sympathetic performance.  He skillfully lays bares the many sides of Bruce as a critical businessman and showman with a refined intellect, and perpetually occupied to become an expert on most everything.  Seemingly a friendly, strict, and hardworking family man, Bruce is also secretive, unsettling, dazed and closed off.  Duckart’s melodious and affecting baritenor vocals captures Bruce’s complex and unspoken feelings in each number, including the poignant song Pony Girl, but most notably in his harrowing rendition of Edges of the World.

Sarah Bockel and Nick Duckart in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J. Franklin

Each Alison is earnest in portraying their wrought frustration in every moment they attempt to identify and make a genuine connection to him, but especially in the bittersweet song, Telephone Wire.  Duckart depicts Bruce with a defensive irritability yet tempered with overpowering warmth for Alison which encapsulates some of the brighter moments in the musical.

Duckart and Jennifer Ellis as Alison’s conflicted musician mother Helen share tense and affective moments together and it is easy to see Helen’s teetering vulnerability within each argument and in all the weighted and lonely moments where Ellis imagines her life should be. 

Unassuming, overwhelmed, and misunderstood surrounded by outward perfection, Ellis’s Helen lives her life distancing herself from reality putting others first reflected in the heartrending and beautiful number Days and Days, a number in which Ellis brought me to abrupt tears. 

Jennifer Ellis in ‘Fun Home’ Directed by Logan Ellis Photo by Marc J. Franklin

Some things cannot be fixed.  Painful and difficult times as well as those joyful moments might not have been as once imagined.  The key is to learn from it and take the next step.

The Huntington continues Fun Home live and in person at the Huntington in Boston, Massachusetts through Sunday, December 14. Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Life is full of surprises in Lyric Stage’s unconventionally ‘Rooted’

Plant a tree and save the planet.  Be a ‘smartie plants’ and explore the ‘wood wide web.’

That is a few of the many mottos and a bit of humor uttered by Emery, a disabled recluse spending life in a tree house in the small town of Millersville, Pennsylvania.  Emery talks to plants more than people with the exception of her sister and caretaker Hazel as well as her cousin who she depends on for everything.  Longing for companionship she is comfortable with, Emery decides to post about her plants on YouTube.  What could go wrong?

L to R Lisa Tucker as Emery and Karen MacDonald as Hazel Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography

Directed conscientiously by Courtney O’Connor, Lyric Stage Company presents Deborah Zoe Laufer’s dramedy Rooted continuing live and in person at Lyric Stage Company in Boston, Massachusetts through June 25.  The show is 100 minutes without one intermission.  Click here for more information and tickets.

The stage unfolds with blooming splendor as a lively, bending tree hovers over the cast.  Soothing and eclectic music by Dewey Dellay as well as streaming and transformative lighting by Karen Perlow provide a warm and peaceful vibe as Emery carefully handles the greenery surrounding her.  Janie E. Howland’s meditative and functioning set at first sight provides an oasis from the real world.   

Lisa Tucker as Emery Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography

Rooted explores various topics such as the internet, climate change, healing, taking risks, and companionship with insightfulness and humor as Hazel and Emery manage one surprise after the next.  The small cast is rooted in connection to one another.  With sun hat and a mix of modest and eccentric attire by Chelsea Kerl, Lisa Tucker portrays plant loving and serious Emery with fragility and compassion while evoking determination and anxiety bubbling just under the surface as she faces decisions she has never encountered before in her sheltered existence.  Karen MacDonald portrays Emery’s sister and lifetime caretaker Hazel, an adventurous spirit who longs to ‘spread her leaves’ beyond this small town.  Dressed in a short diner uniform with white go-go boots, MacDonald lights up as chatty Hazel, exuding Hazel’s frank and responsible yet opportunistic spirit as Hazel struggles with day-to-day-life.  With Emery as careful observer and Hazel’s big and cynical personality, Tucker and MacDonald are definitely yin and yang in this production, but manage at times to streamline their differences.    Katherine Callaway as impressionable and naïve East Coopersville native Luanne brings a unique outlook and has an ultimately calming effect on the group. 

L to R Katherine Callaway as Luanne Karen MacDonald as Hazel and Lisa Tucker as Emery Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography

Finally, the plants themselves by Props Artisan Lauren Corcuera deliver subtle charm as these sentient beings gauge the frequently changing energy and emotion of the production’s increasingly complex environment.

Rooted challenges a few of life’s bigger questions and is ultimately one wild and engaging production about what can come from good intentions as three uniquely flawed individuals work together to maneuver hope and healing to the masses during life’s surprising turns.

Katherine Callaway as Luanne and Lisa Tucker as Emery Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography

Lyric Stage Company presents Deborah Zoe Laufer’s dramedy Rooted continuing live and in person at Lyric Stage in Boston, Massachusetts through June 25.  The show is 100 minutes without an intermission.  Click here for more information and tickets.

REVIEW: The Huntington’s bold and savory comedy, ‘Clyde’s’ serves up the works

Talk about mouthwatering fare.

Don’t arrive to Clyde’s hungry as Lynn Nottage’s illustrative script is not only a feast for the senses, but Clyde’s is where the sandwich is undeniably king in every sense of the word.  For a group of enigmatic employees struggling to get out from under a scant Pennsylvania trucker stop, the sandwich is the key to all things great.  However, with a tyrannical boss at the helm, Clyde has plenty to say over whom or what reigns supreme.

Harold Surratt as Montrellous and April Nixon as Clyde in Lynn Nottage’s Tony award nominated play Clyde’s Photo by Kevin Berne

Directed intuitively by Taylor Reynolds, The Huntington, in a co-production with Berkeley Repertory Theatre, presents captivating, Pulitzer Prize-winning and Tony award-nominated dramedy Clyde’s through Sunday, April 23 live and in person at the Huntington Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts.  The show is one hundred minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Clyde’s is a fascinating, no holds barred yet comedic look into the hectic lives of Clyde’s employees and the mysterious reasons why they are there.  Nottage’s sterling script balances the heartache of home life and arduous work when the cards are stacked with the dream of pursuing perfection. 

Louis Reyes Mcwilliams as Jason and Cyndii Johnson as Letitia in Lynn Nottage’s Tony Award nominated play, ‘Clyde’s’ Photo by Kevin Berne

The cast does an amazing job collaboratively building surprising comedic moments within a show rife with tension and serious themes.  Harold Surratt epitomizes wise and discerning Montrellous as he poetically describes the art of the sandwich with ‘intangible grace and aromas’ and deems artichokes as ‘grace notes.’   Surratt, unconventional in multicolored and kaleidoscopic garments, portrays amiable Montrellous as the calm within a fiery storm.   Surratt’s warm smile and soothing vocals can charm almost anyone into discovering the joy in life’s simplicity.  Wesley Guimaraes as sous-chef Rafael share some of that optimism and grace striving to achieve the peace that Montrellous seemingly exudes.  Guimaraes shares some refreshing, playful, and flirtatious scenes with Cyndii Johnson as Letitia on prep.  Their remarkable chemistry is a highlight of the production.  Johnson enthusiastically captures the outspoken, fast talking, and sympathetic Letitia who is both caring yet not to be trifled with while Louis Reyes McWilliams searingly portrays guarded Jason, building his own tension with every careful move.

Cyndii Johnson as Letitia and Wesley Guimarães as Rafael in Lynn Nottage’s Tony award- nominated play ‘Clyde’s’ Photo by Muriel Steinke

However, the prime source of unease can be found in Clyde, a force to be reckoned with depicted glacially by April Nixon.  From Montrellous’s unique ensembles to Leticia’s exuberant headscarves, costume designer Karen Perry creates incredible and vampy ensembles that exude Nixon’s egotistical, booming, and militaristic Clyde.  Tiger prints, multicolored, scalloped sleeves, sparkling pumps, and astounding incandescent wigs by Megan Ellis help bring out Nixon’s spicy Clyde in and out of the kitchen.  Nixon’s gusto is evident from the very first scene, channeling the kitchen’s mood under Clyde’s manicured fingertips.

April Nixon as Clyde and Harold Surratt as Montrellous in Lynn Nottage’s Tony award-nominated play ‘Clyde’s’ Photo by Kevin Berne

Aubrey Dube’s catchy and upbeat sound design fuel this bustling and rustic kitchen designed by Wilson Chin.  Plants, boom box, storage boxes, utensils, silver gleaming fridge, grill, Tupperware, and to go boxes are reminiscent of the authentic clutter out of The Bear or Kitchen Nightmares.  The flashy and vibrant monument sign, fueled by lighting designer Amith Chandrashaker, work spectacularly with the show’s memorable score and its fast paced setting.

As Montrellous muses, ‘over complication obscures the truth’ so take a trip to Clyde’s for a bold and powerfully- charged dramedy where aspiration is never off the menu.

The Huntington, in a co-production with Berkeley Repertory Theatre, presents captivating, Pulitzer Prize-winning and Tony award-nominated comedy Clyde’s through Sunday, April 23 live and in person at the Huntington Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts.  The show is one hundred minutes with no intermission.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW:  Fueled by a tight knit cast, August Wilson’s ‘Seven Guitars’ by Actors’ Shakespeare Project strums a spiritual and resonating tune

A shadow lingers over Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

In the aftermath of World War II, grief and death lingered like a shadow over the world’s existence.  In the late 40s in the Pittsburgh Hill District of Pennsylvania, that shadow hovers over a close knit group of friends in August Wilson’s gripping mystery, Seven Guitars.  Love, loneliness, grief, friendship, and the blues strike a chord as each character in Seven Guitars search for their share of happiness in an area nicknamed ‘The Crossroads of the World.’

Directed conscientiously by Maurice Emmanuel Parent, Actors’ Shakespeare Project presents August Wilson’s Seven Guitars through March 5 live and in person at Hibernian Hall in Boston, Massachusetts.  Hibernian Hall provides an intimate theatre setting without a bad set in the house.  Seven Guitars is intended for mature audiences and runs for two hours and 45 minutes with one 15 min intermission.  Click here for more information and tickets.

Vera at the Funeral (0034).jpg: Maya Carter (front) with Johnnie Mack, Dereks Thomas, Regine Vital, and Omar Robinson in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars at Actors’ Shakespeare Project. Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography.

Written after August Wilson’s Fences, it is easy to see a few of the earmarks of Wilson’s lauded work including Wilson’s rich and cadenced dialogue.  Fences and Seven Guitars are set in Pittsburgh in a neighborhood backyard, and some of the characters in Seven Guitars and Fences share some loose similarities including the ill-advised, but unwavering loyalty from Rose Maxson in Fences and Vera Dotson in Seven Guitars

Jon Savage’s inviting backyard scenic design features a multi-tiered set, colorful garden plot, mood setting hanging string lights, and an inhabited patio dining set. From lively to tense and shocking moments, Amanda E. Fallon’s affective lighting combined with Abe Joyner- Meyers’s mood induced sound design and Dewey Dellay’s haunting and carefully crafted music composition impressively maneuver this evolving and multi-layered production.  Costume Designer Nia Safarr Banks utilizes classic colors and retro patterns to enhance each character’s distinct personality including vintage flowing dresses and plumed bowler hats.

Red at the Funeral (0042).jpg: Johnnie Mack, Dereks Thomas, Maya Carter, Omar Robinson, and Regine Vital in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars at Actors’ Shakespeare Project. Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography.

However, one of greatest strengths of this particular production is Parent’s great care in the cast’s tight bond.  Whether pondering their own mortality, listening to the radio, shooting the breeze or gripped by a suspenseful moment, the cast easily draws in the audience by their natural and captivating chemistry.

Schoolboy with Bandmates (2793).jpg: Anthony T Goss, Dereks Thomas, and Omar Robinson in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars at Actors’ Shakespeare Project. Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography.
Schoolboy with Bandmates (2793).jpg: Anthony T Goss, Dereks Thomas, and Omar Robinson in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars at Actors’ Shakespeare Project. Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography.

Following the funeral of Floyd ‘Schoolboy’ Barton (Anthony T Goss), Seven Guitars follows a group of friends that gather to honor a complicated man.   Goss skillfully depicts Barton’s sass, swagger and charm, but also his admirable determination and dream to be among the haves than the have-nots.  His resolution for success makes him sympathetic despite his egotistically justifiable wrongdoings.  He has compelling chemistry with Maya Carter who delivers a moving performance as devoted, spiritual, and skeptical Vera.  Carter’s intense opening monologue is relatable and heartrending and Carter only gets better from there.  On a lighter note, Regina Vital’s fiercely independent, loyal, and charismatic Louise provides a wealth of humor and fun, especially when she goes toe to toe with Omar Robinson as Canewell, Dereks Thomas as Red Carter, or Valyn Lyric Turner as Louise’s seemingly impressionable niece Ruby.   Robinson as talkative and good natured Canewell, Thomas as ladies man Red, Mack as Hedley and Goss as Floyd share some engrossing camaraderie whether it is for a spontaneous dance with makeshift instruments, playing pranks on each other, or sharing their riveting musings about the future.  However, when they are enjoying themselves, it is a relaxed vibe that is a joy to watch.

Hedley Plays Along (1671).jpg: Johnnie Mack, Dereks Thomas, Anthony T Goss, and Omar Robinson in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars at Actors’ Shakespeare Project. Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography.

Johnnie Mack delivers a searing and multi-dimensional performance as peculiar, lonely and hardworking dreamer Hedley.  In overalls and an apron, Hedley has lofty dreams and supportive friends, but lives in a sad reality.  Mack seamlessly navigates Hedley’s intermittent moods with rising tension weaved into some compassionate moments. 

Visions of grandeur, ambition, and destiny play more than a medley in August Wilson’s Seven Guitars on a landscape that has experienced harsh realities.  For August Wilson’s richly drawn and dynamic characters, one cannot help but share their hopes for a brighter future.

Actors’ Shakespeare Project presents August Wilson’s Seven Guitars through March 5 live and in person at Hibernian Hall in Boston, Massachusetts.  Click here for more information and tickets.