Andy Einhorn Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/andy-einhorn/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Tue, 23 Feb 2021 03:05:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Best Bets: February 5th – February 7th https://culturalattache.co/2021/02/04/best-bets-february-5th-february-7th/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/02/04/best-bets-february-5th-february-7th/#respond Fri, 05 Feb 2021 05:01:40 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12978 Our list of great culture to watch this weekend for those who don't care about the Super Bowl (and even those who do!)

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Not everyone is going to watch the Super Bowl on Sunday. No doubt many readers of this column will be looking for alternatives to the big game. This weekend’s Best Bets: February 5th – February 7th feature plenty of opportunities to tune out the commercials (and the football) and relax into some amazing performances.

Clearly not all the fireworks are going to be taking place in Tampa. In fact, I’d be willing to wager that these are some of the best offerings on any given weekend in recent memory. Though I will admit there aren’t a lot of new offerings on Sunday, but many of these listings are for more than just one day.

Our top pick this weekend is drummer/multi-instrumentalist/composer Tyshawn Sorey at the Village Vanguard on Friday and Saturday.

So let’s get to it. Here are the Best Bets: February 5th – February 7th.

L to R: Cory Michael Smith, Lorena Martinez, Jovan Adepo, Giovanni Adams, Amaia Arana and Connor Paolo in “Christa McAuliffe’s Eyes Were Blue” (Courtesy of Center Theatre Group)

PLAYS/READINGS: Christa McAuliffe’s Eyes Were Blue – Center Theatre Group – Now – April 4th

If you’ve seen the film One Night in Miami, you are familiar with the work of playwright Kemp Powers. He adapted his play for the Regina King-directed film now available on Amazon. (Earlier this week the film received two Golden Globe nominations for Best Supporting Actor – Leslie Odom, Jr. and Best Director for King). Kemp is also the co-director and co-writer of Pixar’s newest film, Soul.

Christa McAuliffe’s Eyes Were Blue tells the story of twin brothers who find life treats them very differently. One brother has to battle with racism because of his dark skin and the other can pass as white. The play takes place in two different settings: New York City in the 1980s when they were just boys and a Minnesota courthouse in 2006, by which time their lives have taken very different paths.

This “produced reading” (meaning there are sets and costumes) stars Giovanni Adams, Jovan Adepo (Fences), Amaia Arana, Lorena Martinez (South Coast Rep’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Connor Paolo (Business Doing Pleasure), Adam J. Smith (Taken 3), Cory Michael Smith (1985), Larry Bates (Big Little Lies) and Justin Lawrence Barnes (InterVallum). It was directed by Jennifer Chang.

Center Theatre Group subscribers and donors can access Christa McAuliffe’s Eyes Were Blue for free. There is a $10 streaming fee for all others.

Jerry Quickley in “Whistleblower” (Photo by Arturo Bejar/Courtesy Philip Glass’ Days and Nights Festival)

MUSIC/DANCE FESTIVAL: Whistleblower – Philip Glass’ Days and Nights Festival – Now Available

In a lead-up to their tenth annual Days and Nights Festival in Big Sur, they are holding a digital celebration beginning this week. Composer Philip Glass created the festival and many of his works will be available through at least May. Ten projects have been announced so far and the festival launches with a film of the 2017 performance of Whistleblower.

Inspired by Edward Snowden’s leak of classified information, Whistleblower has music by Glass with concept and text by performance poet Jerry Quickley. Glass appears in this film. Also performing are Miranda Cuckson, Matt Haimovitz, David Harding, Tara Hugo, Lavina Meijer, Alex Weil and Alex Weston.

Also debuting this weekend are The Pattern of the Surface from Molissa Fenley Dance Company in a performance also from 2017 and Heart Strings, a musical depiction of the Dalai Lama’s escape from Tibet created by Tenzin Choegyal and Glass.

Tickets to watch each performance are $5. You can buy each for $20. The Festival is also offering discounts or comps for those who don’t have the ability to pay. You can submit a request for that here.

Patrick Page in “All the Devils are Here” (Photo Courtesy Shakespeare Theatre Company)

PLAYS: All the Devils are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain – Shakespeare Theatre Company – Now – February 7th

Patrick Page may be best known for his menacing portrayals of some of the theatre’s great villains. He was Tony-nominated for his performance as Hades in Hadestown. He also appeared opposite Denzel Washington in a Broadway production of Julius Caesar, The Green Goblin in the ill-fated musical, Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark and as Scar in The Lion King.

In this 80-minute film, the first-ever online production produced by Washington, D.C.’s Shakespeare Theatre Company, Page examines the many villains William Shakespeare created in his plays and how they progressed from simple stock characters in the playwright’s early works to fully-realized villains that set a new standard for the depiction of those characters we most love to hate.

Page has played his share of Shakespeare’s characters with STC including Claudius in Hamlet, the title character in Macbeth, Iago in Othello and Prospero in The Tempest.

Page wrote the script for All the Devils are Here. I’ve seen Page in multiple shows and can assure you that this is a perfect pairing of actor and material. And his voice…if you haven’t heard it (no doubt you have, even if you aren’t aware), you’re in for a real treat with his take on Shakespeare’s bad guys.

Tickets are $25

Jupiter String Quartet (Photo by Sarah Gardner/Courtesy Jupiter String Quartet)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Jupiter String QuartetKranner Center for the Performing Arts – February 5th – 1:00 PM EST/10:00 AM PST

Violinists Nelson Lee and Meg Freivogel, violist Liz Freivogel and cellist Daniel McDonough make up the classical music ensemble known as Jupiter String Quartet. It’s a family affair. Liz is Meg’s older sister and Daniel is Meg’s husband. This family, however, makes beautiful music together.

On Friday, February 5th they are releasing a new album with Jasper String Quartet that features works by Felix Mendelssohn, the world premiere recording of a work by Dan Visconti and Last Round by Osvaldo Golijov on Marquis Classics.

That same day they launch the first of four digital concerts in collaboration with the Kranner Center for the Performing Arts under the title Reflection and Renewal.

Each performance becomes available at 1:00 PM EST/10:00 AM PST and is free to stream.

This week’s first concert features Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 11 in F Minor, Op. 95, “Serioso” and Kati Agócs’ Imprimatur (her second string quartet). Imprimatur was commissioned by The Aspen Music Festival and School, Harvard Musical Association, and the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts/University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

The link takes you to the full line-up which will include works by William Bolcom, Haydn, Mendelssohn and Schubert.

Lucio Gallo in “Gianni Schicchi” (Photo by Bill Cooper/ ©Royal Opera House)

OPERA: Il trittico – Royal Opera House – Debuts February 5th – 2:00 PM EST/11:00 AM PST

This weekend the Royal Opera House begins streaming (through March 7th) their 2011 production of Giacomo Puccini’s Il trittico.

Il trittico is a trilogy of one-act operas. The three operas are Il tabarroSuor Angelica and Gianni Schicchi. The latter is the best-known of the three as it is the most commonly performed.

Jealousy and murder are on tap in Il tabarro involving the love triangle of Michele (Lucio Gallo), his wife Giorgetta (Eva-Maria Westbroek) and her lover Luigi.

Suor Angelica is the dramatic story of a nun (Ermonela Jaho) dealing with loss.

Gianni Schicchi (Gallo) depicts what happens when someone dies and the will goes missing. And you think your relatives were difficult?

Richard Jones directed this 2016 production (a revival of his 2011 production) and Antonio Pappano conducted.

Tickets are £3 which equates to roughly $4.10 (as of press time).

Playwright Michael R. Jackson (Photo courtesy TCG Books)

PLAYS/CONVERSATION: TCG Books’ First Friday with Michael R. Jackson – February 5th – 7:30 PM EST/4:30 PM PST

This year’s Pulitzer Prize for Drama went to playwright Michael R. Jackson for his musical A Strange Loop. TCG Books, a publisher who releases plays and musicals in book form, is hosting a conversation with Jackson on the occasion of their publishing A Strange Loop.

The leader character in A Strange Loop, Usher, offers perhaps the most succinct description of the show. “It’s about a black, queer man writing a musical about a black, queer man who’s writing a musical about a black queer man who’s writing a musical about a black queer man, etc.”

Jackson told the New York Times in a 2019 interview about his experience seeing Brian Dennehy in a production of Death of a Salesman. As a black, gay, young man he felt innate sadness and that Arthur Miller’s play revealed that in “America you’re worth more dead than alive.” But he also asked himself the question that would lead to A Strange Loop.

“What if I can make an old white man empathize with what it might be like to be a young, black, gay man and suffer — and not because he’s being killed by the police or destroyed in some way like that, but it’s actually an emotional journey from the inside?”

This conversation will take place on TCG’s Facebook Page. Those interested in buying the book can purchase it here.

Christian McBride’s New Jawn (Photo by Anna Webber/Courtesy Mack Avenue Records)

JAZZ: Christian McBride’s New Jawn – SFJAZZ – February 5th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

When jazz bassist Christian appeared at SFJAZZ in 2016 for this concert, he was certainly working out the material that ended up on his 2018 album Christian McBride’s New Jawn. The line-up on the album and this concert are the same: trumpeter Josh Evans, saxophonist Marcus Strickland, and drummer Nasheet Waits.

By the time the album was released, McBride and his ensemble coalesced their work into a Grammy-nominated work that garnered this praise from Hilary Brown in Downbeat Magazine, “The word ‘jawn’— a fresh new phenomenon—is familiar argot to Christian McBride, a Philadelphia native. And when it comes to trailblazing new, cool jazz concepts in eponymous trios or big bands, the venerable bassist always delivers. Enter his latest jawn—a pianoless quartet, born of a New York scene that sates East Coast soul-seekers and purists alike. Christian McBride’s New Jawn faithfully salutes its forebears—Gerry Mulligan, Ornette Coleman and the like—but leave it to this next-gen assimilation of bandleaders to take musical liberties.”

Hearing these four amazing musicians work on this material live well before putting it to vinyl is going to be a great way to launch your weekend.

Tickets are $5 which allows for one month of Fridays at Five performances or $60 for a complete year of them.

Tyshawn Sorey (Courtesy TyshawnSorey.com)

TOP PICK: JAZZ: Tyshawn Sorey – Village Vanguard – February 5th and 6th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

February is a busy month of drummer/composer Tyshawn Sorey. Next week Opera Philadelphia will unveil the world premiere of his Save the Boys, a composition written for and performed by countertenor John Holiday. But before that happens, he’s taking to the stage at the Village Vanguard in New York.

Sorey was recently profiled in the New York Times Magazine where writer Adam Schatz wrote, “Sorey who turned 40 over the summer, would be worth writing about for his drumming alone. The power, precision and inventiveness of his playing often draw comparisons with masters like Max Roach, Elvin Jones and Tony Williams. But Sorey refuses to play conventionally virtuosic drum solos — he prefers to play delicately and sparely, if at all — and he avoids being photographed with his sticks in the athletic poses that have defined the image of most jazz drummers. He is also a brilliant trombonist and pianist, and in the last few years he has become as arresting a figure in contemporary classical and experimental new music as he is in jazz..”

Joining Sorey for these two performances are saxophonist Joe Lovano (who just released a new album, Garden of Expression, on ECM Records last week) and guitarist Bill Frisell.

Tickets are $10 for each performance.

Brandon Jovanovich in “Lohengrin” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy San Francisco Opera)

OPERA: Lohengrin – San Francisco Opera – February 6th – February 7th

Conducted by Nicola Luisotti; starring Brandon Jovanovich, Camilla Nylund, Petra Lang and Gerd Grochowski. This Daniel Slater production is from the 2012-2013 season.

Richard Wagner’s Lohengrin had its world premiere in 1850 in Weimar. It is one of his few romantic operas.

The setting is Antwerp in the 10th century. Elsa is accused by Friedrich von Telramund of killing her brother in an effort to prevent Telramund from assuming the dukedom. The dispute is to be resolved by combat. In an answer to her prays a mysterious knight named Lohengrin appears. He agrees to help Elsa as long as she never asks who he is or where is from. When Lohengrin defeats Telramund in battle, but spares his life, revenge is foremost on Telramund’s mind.

Director Slater updated Wagner’s opera to take place in the mid-20th century in an unnamed Eastern European country.

Joshua Kosman, writing in the SF Chronicle, said of Jovanovich, “In his debut as the mysterious, nameless knight who shows up to defend Elsa of Brabant against the baseless charge of fratricide, Jovanovich combined sweet-toned lyricism and ardent heroism in just the proportions required by this tricky role. His singing was thrillingly pure and tireless, his stage presence simultaneously tender and aloof.”

Anna Netrebko (Photo by Julian Hargreaves/Courtesy Met Opera)

OPERA RECITAL: Anna Netrebko – Met Stars Live in Concert – February 6th – 1:00 PM EST/10:00 AM PST

Soprano Anna Netrebko is arguably one of the biggest opera stars in the world. She will be performing a recital from Vienna’s Spanish Riding School with pianist Pavel Nebolsin on Saturday as part of the Metropolitan Opera’s Stars Live in Concert Series.

The program is slated to include four works by Sergei Rachmaninoff; two by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov; three by Richard Strauss; five by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky an one each by Frank Bridge, Gustave Charpentier, Claude Debussy, Antonín Dvořák, Gabriel Fauré, Ruggero Leoncavallo and Jacques Offenbach.

During the recital Mezzo-soprano Elena Maximova will join Netrebko for two duets.

Tickets are $20 and the performance will remain on demand for 14 days.

A scene from “While Yet I Live” (Photo by James Leynse/Courtesy IOBDB.com)

PLAYS: While Yet I Live – Play-Per-View – February 6th – February 10th

Tony Award-winner Billy Porter’s semi-autobiographical play, While Yet I Live, had its world premiere in the fall of 2014. The cast was Lillias White (The Life, Fela!), Emmy Award winner S. Epatha Merkerson(Come Back, Little Sheba), Elain Graham (Smash), Sheria Irving (Romeo & Juliet, Ethel Sings), Kevyn Morrow (Moulin Rouge! The Musical), Sharon Washington (The Scottsboro Boys) and Larry Powell (The Gaze…No Homo).

They are all reuniting with director Sheryl Kaller (Next Fall, Mothers and Sons) to do a reunion reading of the play. The live reading takes place on February 6th at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST. It will be available afterwards on demand through February 10th at 11:30 PM EST/8:30 PM PST.

At the time of the production, Porter said, “This play is a love letter to my mother, my sister, and the women who raised me. Reflecting on my own life experience as a gay, black, Christian man, and survivor of abuse, I wanted to write a play that was about family, faith and the healing power of forgiveness, three things very necessary to move forward and make change in your life. Change is possible, but it takes patience.”

Tickets for the live performance range from $5 – $50 based on your ability to pay. To watch the show afterwards, the price is $15. All proceeds will benefit the Actors Fund Covid-19 Emergency Relief Fund​.

Dance Theatre of Harlem Company in “Passage” (Photo by Brian Callan/Courtesy DTH)

DANCE: Passage – Dance Theatre of Harlem YouTube Channel – February 6th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

Dance Theatre of Harlem launches a one-month Winter Series of virtual events and performances with Passage which begins streaming on the company’s YouTube Channel on Saturday, February 6th.

Choreographer Claudia Schreier created Passage for a commission from the Virginia Arts Festival and the State of Virginia’s 2019 Commemoration. Their event recognized the 400th anniversary of the arrival of slaves from Africa to Virginia.

Schreier told the Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State that Passage, “addresses themes of struggle and aspiration and reflects, in abstract, the fortitude of the human spirit and an enduring will to prevail. There are several images throughout the ballet that suggest descent or ascent, as well as the presence of water. The movement is borne out of this ebb and flow, much of which is drawn from Jessie’s sweeping score.”

The Jessie is composer Jessie Montgomery. If her name sounds familiar, the Los Angeles Philharmonic has recently included her works in their In Concert at the Hollywood Bowl series. Her music will also be performed by the orchestra in their Icons on Inspiration concert on Saturday (see immediately below for details).

On Friday, February 5th, Schreier and Montgomery will have a conversation on Dance Theatre of Harlem’s YouTube channel and Facebook page at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST.

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Icons on Inspiration – Los Angeles Philharmonic – February 6th – 9:00 PM EST/6:00 PM PST

The Los Angeles Philharmonic has certainly figured out how to go big with their events during the pandemic. Icons on Inspiration, their gala on Saturday night is no exception. They have a starry line-up of artists and music lined-up.

Lead by Music Director Gustavo Dudamel, their special guests are long-time Board member and Oscar-winner Julie Andrews, Oscar-winner Common, 13-time Grammy nominee Katy Perry, Oscar-winner Natalie Portman, soprano Liv Redpath, Colombian singer/songwriter and 2-time Grammy Award winner Carlos Vives and classical pianist and 4-time Grammy Award-nominee Yuja Wang.

The program will include Jessie Montgomery’s Starburst; Duke Ellington’s Martin Luther King from The Three Black Kings (arranged by Terence Blanchard); Tchaikovsky’s Scherzo: Pizzicato ostinato; Stravinsky’s Berceuse from The Firebird; Arturo Márquez’s Danzon No. 2; Romero’s Fuga can Pajarillo and Mahler’s Das himmlische Leben (arranged by Erwin Stein).

This event is a fundraiser, but you don’t have to make a donation to watch it (though donations are strongly encouraged).

Composer Arnold Schoenberg (Courtesy NYPL Archives)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Schoenberg & Bach – Bard College’s The Orchestra Now – February 7th – 2:00 PM EST/11:00 AM PST

Works by Bach, Lutoslawski, Carreño and Schoenberg are featured in Bard College’s TŌN (The Orchestra Now) first concert of their 2021 season. Leon Botstein leads the orchestra through performances of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3; Lutoslawski’s Funeral Music; Carreño’s Serenade for Strings and closes with Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night).

There is no fee to watch the concert (scheduled to run approximately 1 hour and 45 minutes); however reservations are required. Donations, of course, are accepted with a suggested donation of $15-$35.

Those are my official Best Bets: February 5th – February 7th, but you know I’ll always offer a few reminders of shows that might be ending, or only have one upcoming airdate. Here they are:

MUSICALS: This is your last weekend to catch You I Like the loving tribute to Jerry Herman from the Pasadena Playhouse. Fans of musical theatre – do not miss it! For more information about this show, check out my interview with creator Andy Einhorn here.

CLASSICAL MUSIC/POP MUSIC: For the second week in a row, there are back-to-back episodes of In Concert at the Hollywood Bowl on PBS stations nationwide. The two episodes are Fireworks and Gustavo and Friends. Check your local listings

OPERA: The first week of Black History Month at the Metropolitan Opera concludes this weekend with performances of Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro from the 1985-1986 season on Friday; Strauss’ Ariadne auf Naxos from the 1987-1988 season on Saturday and the 1978-1979 production of Puccini’s Tosca on Sunday.

That should keep you busy this weekend. Whatever you choose to watch from amongst my Best Bets: February 5th – February 7th, I hope you enjoy yourselves!

Photo: Tyshawn Sorey (Courtesy TyshawnSorey.com)

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It’s Jerry Herman that Andy Einhorn Likes https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/19/its-jerry-herman-that-andy-einhorn-likes/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/19/its-jerry-herman-that-andy-einhorn-likes/#respond Tue, 19 Jan 2021 11:00:13 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12601 "Maybe it's my own therapy session, but I'm going to own it. I think it's important to hear it. There's a healing quality that people need right now."

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During a musical there’s really one person who gets a true birds-eye-view of it all – the music director conducting each performance. Andy Einhorn, who served in that capacity for the 2017 revival of Hello, Dolly!, got the perspective of watching Bette Midler, Donna Murphy and Bernadette Peters play Dolly Levi. He also had the opportunity to analyze every element that made this Jerry Herman musical work.

Einhorn has long been a fan of Herman’s work. So it’s no surprise that early last year, shortly after the composer’s death, he presented You I Like at New York’s 92nd Street Y.

The Pasadena Playhouse, putting together plans for PlayhouseLive (their original programming platform during the pandemic), reached out to Einhorn to see about filming a revised version of that show.

Ryan Vona, Andy Einhorn and Nicholas Christopher in “You I Like – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

You I Like – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman reflects the absolutely enthusiasm that Herman put into such shows as Mame, La Cage aux Folles and, of course, Hello, Dolly! Einhorn brings his own passion for this material as both music director, accompanist, writer and on-camera host for the show.

As the Capitol in Washington, D.C. was being overrun on January 6th, I spoke by phone with Einhorn about You I Like, Herman’s many musicals and why his songs resonate today with him personally and audiences around the world. What follows has been edited for length and clarity.

In May of 2017 you posted on your Facebook page part of an interview Bette Midler gave CBS This Morning in which she said, “Never look back…if you’re looking back you can’t look forward, you can’t go forward.” You commented, “She’s the wisest.” How does that advice apply to your approach to You I Like?

As we began this phone call we are in a moment where we have to look forward. What’s happening in the world is the perfect reason why Jerry Herman’s music needs to be heard. There are messages of optimism, joy and life. People in this world are hurting and are looking for a salve to emerge from this moment and find a way forward. Jerry was the master of commanding us to listen.

When I think of my whole journey on Hello, Dolly! – which was interesting and exciting and all things in between – a lot of what I learned about life came from working with Jerry Zaks and Bette and their messages of pushing forward to not relying on what we know; using it as a foundation to be ourselves to build upon to go forward.

There have been multiple revues of Herman’s work before and you did a previous version of this show last year. What was your goal in making this version of You I Like different from others that came before it?

What I’ve tried to do is pinpoint why Jerry Herman is special. I think it’s all there in the music and lyrics. The lemonade moment in the pandemic was getting a second chance to re-evaluate this piece and adapt a two-act musical revue into a 90-minute program that takes you on the same journey. I’m hoping through this people will know and love Jerry Herman where his shows were bigger than he was. This is celebrating the man.

What are your thoughts on Mack and Mabel and Mame? The former has been revised multiple times to make the book work without ever truly succeeding. The latter expresses reverence for Southern traditions that would not be considered acceptable today. Can Mack and Mabel ever work and can Mame ever be revived?

My answer is yes. Part of our job as artists it to present material. I’m not always sure re-writing pieces is in our favor. We don’t have the authors with us now. We only have their perspective. Part of our job in presenting Showboat or Mame, we cannot deny how it was written or set. We have to be careful and we have to evaluate on a case-by-case basis that feels informed and educated. There was no part of Jerry that was racist. He was adapting a piece and it was a strong piece to adapt.

You’ve had a lengthy professional relationship with Audra McDonald as her music director/accompanist. She’s recently added Before the Parade Passes By from Hello, Dolly! to her repertoire. Did you have something to do with that?

Of course! (He laughs). I was the one who brought it up to her. Audra is an artist who can make you hear a song and make you really listen to it. I said, “this is a landmine song for you.” Audra is 50 and she’s had an amazing career up to this point. As we always do, you look at what’s on the horizon and where do we want to go. That song spoke to her about having a second chance and she found a lot she can relate to. I’m excited we’re doing the song now and I think it’s tremendous. At the end of the day she’s the magic that makes it work. I just have the spark of the idea.

One of Jerry’s lesser known musicals was The Grand Tour. In the song I’ll Be Here Tomorrow he wrote, “If before the dawn this fragile world might crack, someone’s got to try to put the pieces back.” As we speak the world is cracking. How do Jerry Herman’s songs give you personally the confidence that we’ll all be here tomorrow?

I don’t need to say it, you said his words. I get very emotional about it. For some reason this material really speaks to me. My partner said it best, “society always find a way out and is better.” We have to endure all of this, but we are going to get out of this.

The reason we speak in music and words is because everybody can understand them. They don’t always agree, but they hear it. I know his work exemplifies that. That lyric made me cry. It’s an enormous catharsis. Maybe it’s my own therapy session, but I’m going to own it. I think it’s important to hear it. There’s a healing quality that people need right now. It speaks to exactly what we need to hear.

You I Like is available to rent through PlayhouseLive through February 7th.

Photo: Lesli Margherita, Andrea Ross, Ryan Vona, Nicholas Christopher, Ashley Blanchet, and Andy Einhorn in You I Like: A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Playhouse Live)

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You I Like – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/14/you-i-like-a-musical-celebration-of-jerry-herman/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/14/you-i-like-a-musical-celebration-of-jerry-herman/#respond Thu, 14 Jan 2021 20:00:36 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12571 PlayhouseLive

Now - February 7th

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On Sunday Pasadena Playhouse’s PlayhouseLive debuted a newly filmed revue of the work of composer Jerry Herman called You I Like – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman. The show is available through February 7th.

Jerry Herman was the Tony Award-winning composer of such musicals as Hello, Dolly!MameMack and Mabel and La Cage aux Folles. He passed away in late 2019. This revue of his music was created by Andy Einhorn and had its first performance at New York’s 92nd Street Y early last year. Einhorn has reworked the show and it was filmed by Pasadena Playhouse for their PlayhouseLive programming.

Starring in You I Like are Ashley Blanchet (Frozen), Nicholas Christopher (Hamilton), Olivier Award-winner Lesli Margherita (Matilda The Musical), Andrea Ross (The Sound of Music) and Ryan Vona (Once). Einhorn serves as music director and our guide through the show.

Songs from all those musicals listed above are in the show as are some rarer songs from his early work like Parade and Milk and Honey. There are also songs from his lesser-known musicals such as The Grand Tour.

Einhorn has created a true love letter to Herman. His passion and knowledge of Herman and his work is presented lovingly. This show is filled with the unfettered joy that was the hallmark of Herman’s own view of life.

The performers are all terrific and seem to be enjoying their roles.

Andy Einhorn and Nick Christopher in “You I Like” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy PlayhouseLive)

A few moments definitely stand out: Christopher singing “If He Walked Into My Life” from Mame and “A Little More Mascara” from La Cage Aux Folles; “Time Heals Everything” from Mack and Mabel sung by Blanchet and pretty much everything Margherita does. Someone should seriously consider putting her in a revival of Funny Girl. (I know what purists will say, “she’s a bit too old for that.” Forget it…she’s got the talent to make it work.)

Andy Einhorn and Lesli Margherita in “You I Like” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy PlayhouseLive)

My initial response after seeing the show on Sunday (as I Tweeted) was “The best of times may not be right now, but You I Like is just what the doctor ordered.”

Tickets to watch You I Like are $24.99. If you think the show was only available on Sunday, January 10th, that was just a special opening night event featuring pre-show interviews with Bernadette Peters and David Hyde Pierce. Don’t delay. Any serious musical theatre fan will want to catch this show!

Photo: Jerry Herman (Courtesy PlayhouseLive)

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Best Bets at Home: January 8th – January 10th https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/08/best-bets-at-home-january-8th-january-10th/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/01/08/best-bets-at-home-january-8th-january-10th/#respond Fri, 08 Jan 2021 18:59:26 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12527 Over a dozen different shows you can watch this weekend!

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After the chaos that embroiled our country earlier this week, I think this is a good time to settle in for some soul-nourishing culture. Thankfully there are some truly great options in my Best Bets at Home: January 8th – January 10th.

This weekend I have a great mix of classical music, jazz, plays and a new musical revue celebrating composer Jerry Herman (Hello, Dolly!). Once you catch up on my reminders you can add opera and musicals to the list!

So let’s get right to it. Here are the Best Bets at Home: January 8th – January 10th:

Juan Pablo Contreras (Courtesy Juan Pablo Contreras)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Close Quarters #5 – Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra – Available Now

LACO continues their series of unique films that include performances of chamber music works. In Close Quarters #5, the music of Juan Pablo Contreras, Jimmy López and Jessie Montgomery is performed. Surrounding the performances is the story of a young woman on New Year’s Eve who finds herself alone after leaving a party and unsure of how she’s going to get home.

Contreras, whose work Pueblos Mágicos is the last piece performed in the film, curated the program. López’s Ccantu for solo piano opens the film. Montgomery’s Voodoo Dolls is between the two. All three pieces are terrific. I took particular joy in Pueblos Mágicos.

James Darrah directed the 42-minute film. The script was written by Christopher Oscar Peña and beautifully captures that emotional roller coaster that one experiences when left alone and is having to find acceptance and strength to move beyond. Note that there is strong language in the film.

AUDIO PLAY: The Nomad Project – Coeurage Ensemble – Available Now

Los Angeles-based Coeurage Ensemble has launched a very interesting series called The Nomad Project. The project consists of 10 stories based in Los Angeles and runs approximately 10-12 minutes.

Each of the stories is written to reflect a specific area of the city. By specific I mean down to GPS coordinates. This allows listeners to either listen from the comfort of their home or travel to those coordinates to hear the stories played out. Amongst the locations are Hollywood Boulevard & Western Avenue; the Walt Disney Concert Hall; outside the Faultline Bar; Sun Valley and more.

The playwrights who have created audio plays for The Nomad Project are Boni B. Alvarez, Kate Bailey, Mark Brown, Meghan Brown, June Carryl, Aaron Fullerton, Tom Jacobson, Ann Kimbrough, Roger Q. Mason, Shahrook Oomer and Yael Zinkow.

There’s no cost to listen to these audio plays. Donations, of course, are always welcomed.

Elijah Word in “Closer Than Ever” (Photo by Amy Pasquantonio/Courtesy MNM Theatre Company)

MUSICAL: Closer Than Ever – MNM Theatre Company – Now – January 10th

When Closer Than Ever opened in 1989 at the Cherry Lane Theatre, it charmed critics and went on to be named the 1990 Outer Critics Circle Award Winner for Best New Off-Broadway Musical. The completely sung-through show features songs by Richard Maltby, Jr., and David Shire (Baby, Starting Here Starting Now).

Closer Than Ever examines adult life vis-a-vis songs about marriage, divorce and second marriages, mid-life crisis, growing old and more. Maltby and Shire based the songs on the lives of their friends.

Florida’s MNM Theatre Company has produced a streaming version of this musical that will be available through Sunday.  Aaron Bower, Johnbarry Green, Shelley Keelor and Elijah Word star. Jonathan Van Dyke directed.

Tickets are $20 and allow for 48 hours of streaming.

Tom DeTrinis in “Making Friends” (Photo by Jeff Hammerton/Courtesy IAMA)

PLAY: Making Friends – IAMA Theatre Company – Now – January 18th

Seems like everyone is angry these days. Count amongst them Tom DeTrinis, who describes himself as a rage-aholic. In his one-man show, DeTrinis expunges some of that rage in very humorous was as he rants about transgressions from his childhood, his dislike of Rodgers & Hammerstein and particularly his disdain for New York City (rather ironic since he’s from NYC).

He portrays many of those who have offended him during this 67-minute show directed by Drew Droege. Note that this show contains adult material and language. Tickets start at $15 based on your ability to pay.

Chris Botti (Courtesy Paquin Artists Agency)

JAZZ: Chris Botti – SFJAZZ – January 8th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

This week’s Fridays at Five concert from SFJAZZ dates back almost exactly one year. On January 10th, 2020, trumpeter Chris Botti performed at the venue. That concert will be streamed only once at the time listed above.

Botti is a Grammy Award winner and best-selling artist who, in addition to his own albums, has collaborated with Joshua Bell, Tony Bennett, Michael Bublé, Lady Gaga, Yo-Yo Ma, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon, Sting, Barbra Streisand and more.

To view this concert you must have either a monthly membership ($5) or an annual membership ($60).

Conductor Lorenzo Viotti (Photo ©Brecia Amisano – Teatro alla Scala/Courtesy Hilbert Artists Management GMBH)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Teatro alla Scala Orchestra – January 9th – 2:00 PM EST/11:00 AM PST

The orchestra from Milan’s fabled La Scala has a streaming concert on Saturday. The program will feature performances of Johannes Brahms’ Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op. 90 and Antonin Dvorak’s Symphony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70. Leading the orchestra is conductor Lorenzo Viotti.

The concert will be available for viewing on the Teatro alla Scala website, their YouTube channel and their Facebook page.

If you can’t see the concert as it happens, they usually remain available for a few days afterwards.

Anne Akiko Meyers (Photo by David Zent)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Anne Akiko Meyers and Fabio Bidini – The Sorting Room Sessions at The Wallis – January 9th – 11:00 PM EST/8:00 PM PST

Violinist Anne Akiko Meyers and pianist Fabio Bidini team up for this intimate recital of music by French composers. On the program is Charles Gounod’s Ave Maria; Maurice Ravel’s Sonata No.2 in G Major and Jules Massenet’s Meditation from Thaïs.

Meyers has released over 30 albums. Her most recent recording is Estonian Lullaby which features the music of Arvo Pärt and was released earlier this year.

Italian pianist Bidini has released 13 albums and in addition to his performance career, teaches at Los Angeles’ Colburn School

Tickets are $25 and allow for 24 hours of streaming.

JAZZ: Exploring Billie’s Influence – 92nd Street Y – January 10th – 3:00 PM EST/12:00 PM PST

Grammy Award-winner Christian McBride hosts a conversation about the legendary Billie Holiday with Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dianne Reeves and Cassandra Wilson.

All three women have recorded albums as tributes to Lady Day. Let’s be honest, what female jazz singer can ignore the enormous impact Holiday had on all singers?

Will there be any singing? It doesn’t appear so from the website, but given the enormous talent on stage, this will be a riveting conversation with our without performances.

Tickets are $15.

JAZZ: Neal Caine Quartet – Smalls Live – January 10th – 5:00 PM EST/2:00 PM PST and 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST

Jazz bassist Neal Caine is not only one of jazz music’s finest bass players, he’s also one of its most in-demand. Caine has performed and/or recorded with Jon Batiste and Stay Human; Brian Blade; Betty Carter; Harry Connick, Jr. Big Band; Benny Green; Dr. John; Elvin Jones Jazz Machine; Diana Krall, Branford Marsalis; Delfeayo Marsalis Quintet; Ellis Marsalis Trio; Wynton Marsalis;

If you haven’t heard his 2005 album Backstabber’s Ball, you should check it out.

Joining him for these two sets at New York’s Smalls are Donald Edwards on drums; Jerry Weldon on tenor sax and Anthony Wonsey on piano.

If you can afford to make a “reservation” for either performance, those funds go to the venue and the musicians. Otherwise, you can find the performances streaming live on Small’s website.

Philip Glass (Photo by Steve Pyke/Courtesy PhilipGlass.com)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Piano Sonata by Philip Glass – CAP UCLA – January 10th – 6:00 PM EST/3:00 PM PST

The world premiere of composer Philip Glass‘ first piano sonata took place in 2019 in Germany. The piece was performed by pianist Maki Namekawa who asked the composer to write the sonata for her.

She returns to the work in this special filmed performance that was recorded live in Austria for CAP UCLA.

The sonata came into being after a conversation Namekawa and her husband, Dennis Russell Davies, had with the composer in the back of a restaurant in 2017.

Zachary Woolfe, in his New York Times review of the sonata’s first American performance by Namekawa in 2019, said, “For all the work’s switches of mood — between major and minor, churning and calm — the stakes feel low, though not unagreeably. Even when it’s headlong, as in the chugga-chugga perpetual motion of the third movement, the work is light, even superficial, a revue of Glassian riffs that’s pleasant and passing. While it’s imposing, at nearly 30 minutes, the sonata feels larky.”

Lesli Margherita in “You I Like – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena PlayhouseLive)

MUSICAL: You I Like, A Musical Celebration Of Jerry Herman – Pasadena Playhouse/PlayhouseLive – January 10th – February 7th

Jerry Herman was the Tony Award-winning composer of such musicals as Hello, Dolly!, Mame, Mack and Mabel and La Cage aux Folles. He passed away in late 2019. This revue of his music was created by Andy Einhorn and had its first performance at New York’s 92nd Street Y early last year. Einhorn has reworked the show and it was filmed by Pasadena Playhouse for their Playhouse Live programming.

Starring in You I Like are Ashley Blanchet (Frozen), Nick Christopher (Hamilton), Olivier Award-winner Lesli Margherita (Matilda The Musical), Andrea Ross (The Sound of Music) and Ryan Vona (Once). Einhorn serves as music director and our guide through the show. (Next week look for my interview with Einhorn!)

Songs from all those musicals listed above are in the show as are some rarer songs from his early work like Parade and Milk and Honey. There are also songs from his lesser-known musicals such as The Grand Tour.

On the virtual opening night there will be a Q&A with Bernadette Peters (who appeared in the recently revival of Hello, Dolly! and also Mack and Mabel) and David Hyde Pierce (also in Hello, Dolly!) with Einhorn and Pasadena Playhouse’s Danny Feldman.

Tickets are $29.99 to watch the virtual opening. All other viewings will be $24.99.

That’s my list of the Best Bets at Home: January 8th – January 10th. But, of course, there are a few reminders:

David Bowie fans will not want to miss his musical Lazarus, which is being made available for three performances this weekend from DiceFM. For full details go to my preview here.

New York’s 9th annual Prototype Festival launches this weekend with an intriguing program of new works. My preview has full details.

The Public Theater’s Under the Radar Festival has begun and I have a full rundown of the programming available.

The operas available this weekend from the Metropolitan Opera from this week’s Epic Rivalries theme. They are Cavalleria Rusticana by Pietro Mascagni and Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo on Friday; Gaetano Donizetti’s Maria Stuarda on Saturday and Giuseppe Verdi’s Il Trovatore on Sunday. You can find full details here.

Here’s to taking a break, enjoying some great performances and recharging ourselves!

Enjoy the Best Bets at Home: January 8th – January 10th and enjoy your weekend.

Photo: Lesli Margherita, Andrea Ross, Ryan Vona, Nicholas Christopher, Ashley Blanchet, and Andy Einhorn in You I Like: A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Playhouse Live)

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An Evening with Audra McDonald EXTENDED https://culturalattache.co/2020/12/09/an-evening-with-audra-mcdonald/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/12/09/an-evening-with-audra-mcdonald/#respond Wed, 09 Dec 2020 16:47:06 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12101 New York City Center Online

December 9th - January 3rd

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As she has done countless times during the pandemic, six-time Tony Award-winner Audra McDonald is lending her talents to help raise money – in this case New York City Center. The is called, appropriately enough, An Evening with Audra McDonald. The concert will first air on December 9th at 7:30 PM EST/4:30 PM PST and will remain available for viewing through January 3rd.

One can imagine what her set-list might look like. She has long championed Jason Robert Brown and as a result has pretty much made The Stars and the Moon from Songs for a New World her own. Her roles in Ragtime and Porgy and Bess may yield a song or two from those musicals. She often includes Make Someone Happy in her concerts from her album, Sing Happy. Ain’t It de Truth? from Happy Songs might also be included.

NY City Center has released a clip of McDonald performing I Can’t Stop Talking About Him, so that’s a given.

Andy Einhorn, who regularly serves as her accompanist, will be in that role again for this concert.

New York City Center is home to the Encores! series of revived musicals, often some of Broadway’s more neglected titles, that has sent several of their productions to Broadway: Gypsy with Patti LuPone and Laura Benanti; Finian’s Rainbow with Cheyenne Jackson and Kate Baldwin and a little show called Chicago which is the longest-running revival in Broadway history.

McDonald, of course, has appeared on Broadway in 12 different plays and musicals. Her six Tony Awards are equally split between both. She recently recorded A Streetcar Named Desire in the role of Blanche DuBois for the Williamstown Theatre Festival (available for streaming on Audible). On television she will be seen next year in HBO’s The Gilded Age.

Tickets are $35. There are also VIP tickets available for An Evening with Audra McDonald that includes pre-show and post-show events. The link above will provide details about that.

Photo of Audra McDonald courtesy of New York City Center

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Live with Carnegie Hall: Audra McDonald https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/22/live-with-carnegie-hall-audra-mcdonald/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/22/live-with-carnegie-hall-audra-mcdonald/#respond Wed, 22 Jul 2020 07:01:14 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9817 Carnegie Hall Website

July 23rd

Archived for later review

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Carnegie Hall continues their series of daytime live streaming events on Thursday, July 23rd, with six-time Tony Award winner Audra McDonald. Live with Carnegie Hall: Audra McDonald will take place at 2:00 PM EDT/11:00 AM PDT on Carnegie Hall’s website.

McDonald made her solo concert debut at Carnegie Hall in 2002. She has subsequently performed as a solo artist there in 2004, 2006, 2011 and 2015.

Of course, most people know her from her Broadway career. She made her Broadway debut in the musical The Secret Garden. That was a minor stop before her career hit the fast lane with her performance in the 1994 revival of Carousel. She won her first Tony Award (for Best Featured Actress in a Musical) for her performance as Carrie Pipperidge.

Look at how nervous she was at her first Tony Awards ceremony:

That was followed by Terrence McNally’s Master Class and the musical Ragtime. She received Tony Awards as Best Featured Actress in both those shows.

A dry patch soon set in where she only received a Tony nomination for the musical Marie Christine. Her next Broadway show was a Lincoln Center production of Shakespeare’s Henry IV.

Things starting looking up again when McDonald received her fourth Tony Award for her performance as Ruth Younger in the 2004 revival of A Raisin in the Sun.

The 2007 revival of the musical 110 in the Shade yielded another nomination. When she starred as Bess in 2012 revival of The Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, she received her fifth Tony Award (for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical).

Her most recent nomination (and also her most recent win) was for her performance as Billie Holiday in Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill. With this sixth Tony Award she not only become the most awarded actress in Tony Award history, she now has won at least one Tony Award in all four categories for an actress.

On the big screen she’s been seen in such films as Hello, Again, Beauty and the Beast, Ricki and the Flash and Cradle Will Rock. Her small-screen credits include The Good Fight, The Good Wife and Private Practice.

She’s received one Emmy Award and two Grammy Awards (both Grammys for her performance in Los Angeles Opera’s production of Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.)

In her spare time (and when live performances were happening), she has appeared in concerts in just about every major performance venue. She has also released six solo recordings.

To boot she’s long been active in social issues including homelessness, LGBTQ rights and more.

All of this well-documented and perhaps perfunctory information is just a way of saying this should be a truly fascinating 60-75 minutes.

Joining McDonald for Live with Carnegie Hall: Audra McDonald will be Andy Einhorn on piano and serving as music director. Mo Rocca (CBS Sunday Morning correspondent) will be the moderator.

If you cannot watch this event live, Carnegie Hall archives these events for later viewing at your convenience.

Photo of Audra McDonald courtesy of her Facebook page.

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Culture Best Bets at Home: May 22nd – May 25th https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/22/culture-best-bets-at-home-may-22nd-may-25th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/22/culture-best-bets-at-home-may-22nd-may-25th/#comments Fri, 22 May 2020 14:00:27 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9139 There are plenty of options for this holiday weekend

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Welcome to Memorial Day Weekend! Did you think we’d make it this long staying safer at home? We have and one reason is the amazing culture offerings that are available for us to enjoy from the comfort of our living rooms. This long weekend is no exception. Here are your Culture Best Bets at Home: May 22nd – May 25th.

Gillian Anderson in “A Streetcar Named Desire” (Photo by Johan Persson/Courtesy of NT Live)

A Streetcar Named Desire – National Theatre Live – Now – May 28th

This week’s offering from National Theatre Live is the 2014 production of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire starring Gillian Anderson as Blanche, Ben Foster as Stanley and Vanessa Kirby as Stella. Benedict Andrews directed this Young Vic production.

Williams won the 1948 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for this play about two sisters (Blanche and Stella) who find themselves sharing a small apartment in New Orleans with Stella’s volatile husband, Stanley. He doesn’t trust his wife’s sister and thinks there’s much more going on with her than she admits. Tensions rise as he becomes more distrustful and Blanche’s drinking, which she tries to conceal from them, becomes more and more problematic.

Andrews took a non-traditional approach to this production which was modern in look and feel and involved a set that was constantly in motion. Anderson earned rave reviews for her performance. Susannah Clapp, writing for The Guardian said of her performance:

“Gillian Anderson captures both Blanche’s airy pretensions to grandeur and her desolate loneliness. Her Blanche is a deeply sensuous, tactile woman whose natural instinct is to stroke Stanley’s hairy forearms or to provocatively disrobe in front of a flimsy curtain. But Anderson also conveys Blanche’s emotional solitude: she is especially fine in the scene with her nervous beau, Mitch, where you sense two helpless people desperately reaching out to each other.”

The Royal Ballet’s “Anastasia” (Photo by Tristram Kenton/©2016 ROH)

Anastasia – The Royal Ballet – Now – May 28th

The classic story of the young girl who may be Anastasia, the daughter of Tsar Nicholas II and the only person to survive the assassination of the Romanovs in 1918, was first turned into a one-act ballet by Kenneth MacMillan in 1967. Four years later he completed the full-length ballet set to music by Tchaikovsky and Bohuslav Martinu.

As part of their programming available for home viewing, The Royal Ballet has made this 2016 production of this ballet available for free streaming. Natalia Osipova dances the role of Anastasia. Christopher Saunders dances the role Tsar Nicholas II. Christina Arestis dances the role of Tsarina Alexandra Feodorova and Thiago Soares dances the role of Rasputin.

Cynthia Erivo (Courtesy of the Artist)

PBS Shows – Now – May 26th

Social media has been filled with posts about PBS making 20 Broadway musicals and/or concerts available for viewing through May 26th. A careful examination found that not all productions are available in all areas.

The following titles may be available regardless of where you live in the United States:

Annaleigh Ashford in Concert; Megan Hilty in Concert; Celebrating Sondheim; Leslie Odom, Jr. in Concert; A Broadway Celebration at the White House; Macbeth with Patrick Stewart; Alfred Molina in Red; Doubt from the Minnesota Opera and Cynthia Erivo in Concert.

Residents in these counties: NY: Bronx, Dutchess, Kings, Nassau, New York, Orange, Putnam, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk, Sullivan, Ulster, Westchester; NJ: Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic, Somerset, Sussex, Union, Warren; CT: Fairfield; PA: Pike have access to the following titles:

Buried Child with Ed Harris and Amy Madigan; Richard Thomas in Incident at Vichy; Bill Irwin and David Shiner in Old Hats; School Girls or, The African Mean Girls Play; Jay Sanders in Uncle Vanya and Kelli O’Hara in a New York Philharmonic concert of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Carousel.

Sutton Foster in Concert seems to be an expired link.

Joseph Ziegler in “Timon of Athens” (Photo by Cell vo Tiedemann/Courtesy of Stratford Festival)

Timon of Athens – Stratford Festival – Now – June 11th

In this Shakespeare play, the title character starts off rather care-free. He’s generous to a fault which prompts his friends to take full advantage of that generosity. When suddenly he finds himself bankrupt, he also finds himself without those same friends. Disillusioned and bitterly disappointed, he leaves Athens and becomes a hermit.

Joseph Ziegler plays Timon in this 2017 production directed by Stephen Ouimette. Ben Carlson plays the philosopher Apemantus; Tim Campbell plays Timon’s friend Alcibiades and Michael Spencer-Davis plays Timon’s steward, Flavius.

This is part of Stratford Festival’s At Home series where each week a new production becomes available for streaming for three weeks. Still available are productions of Macbeth and The Tempest.

Anne-Sophie Mutter and Mutter Virtuosi (Photo © 2014 Nan Melville/Courtesy of Carnegie Hall)

Anne-Sophie Mutter: Mutter Virtuosi – May 22nd – May 24th

This 2014 Carnegie Hall concert by violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter found her leading the Mutter Virtuosi Ensemble and playing violin. The ensemble is comprised of young students and professional string players who are alumni of the Anne-Sophie Mutter Foundation. 

The program for this concert included: Bach’s Concerto for Two Violins, Strings, and Continuo in D Minor, BWV 1043; the US premiere of André Previn’s Concerto for Violin and String Orchestra (with two Harpsichord interludes); Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons and the Presto from Concerto in G Minor for Violin and Orchestra, RV 315 (L’estate) and Bach’s Air on the G String.

The program is available of Medici.tv and does not require membership. It is free.

Are you ready for more Best Bets at Home: May 22nd – May 25th?

Joyce DiDonato in The Royal Opera’s “Cendrillon” (Photo by Bill Cooper/©2011 ROH)

Cendrillon – The Royal Opera – May 22nd – June 4th

Of Jules Massenet’s best-known operas, his version of the Cinderella story isn’t top of the list. The opera had its world premiere in 1899 in Paris and features a libretto by Henry Caïn.

This 2011 Royal Opera production stars Joyce DiDonato as Cendrillon, Alice Coote as Prince Charming, Ewa Podlés as the Stepmother and Eglise Gutierrez as the Fairy Godmother.

Laurent Pelly directed this production. The orchestra is lead by Bertrand de Billy.

The company of SF Opera’s “Moby Dick” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy of SF Opera)

Moby Dick – San Francisco Opera – May 23rd

The next in the streaming productions from San Francisco Opera is Jake Heggie’s opera based on the Herman Melville novel no one wanted to read in high school. The libretto is by Gene Scheer. For those who might be worried, they have condensed this whale of a book into an opera that runs just shy of two-and-a-half hours.

Heggie, who is perhaps best known for his opera Dead Man Walking, was commissioned by the Dallas Opera, San Francisco Opera, Calgary Opera, San Diego Opera, and the State Opera of South Australia to write Moby Dick. The opera had its world premiere in Dallas in 2010. Reviews were overwhelmingly positive.

Jay Hunter Morris sings the role of the single-mindedly determined Captain Ahab. First mate Starbuck is sung by Morgan Smith and Queequeg is sung by Jonathan Lemalu. Interestingly, Ishmael, the narrator of the book, is not part of the opera.

Leonard Foglia directed this 2012 production (which was a San Francisco Opera premiere) and the orchestra is conducted by Patrick Summers.

This SF Opera production is available for viewing beginning at 1 PM EDT/10 AM PDT on Saturday, May 23rd through 2:59 AM EDT on May 25th/11:59 PM PDT May 24th.

Our Lady of 121st Street – LAByrinth Theatre Company – May 23rd

In the movie The Big Chill the characters talk about how there’s always great post-funeral bash. When friends of the family of Sister Rose show up at the funeral home in Our Lady of 121st Street, they can’t have that bash…until they find out who stole her body.

Don’t get carried away thinking this will be a riotous broad comedy. It comes from the mind of Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis. This dark comedy reveals what happens when life’s circumstances bring old friends back together who haven’t fully sorted out lingering issues nor overcome old wounds.

LAByrinth Theatre Company, who first premiered the play, will do a virtual reading with many of the members of the original off-Broadway cast on Saturday, May 23rd at 8 PM EDT/5 PM PDT. The reading will be available for viewing for 24 hours.

The reading will be directed by Elizabeth Rodriguez and feature eight members of the original Off-Broadway cast: Elizabeth Canavan, Liza Colón-Zayas, Scott Hudson, Russell G. Jones, Portia, Al Roffe, Felix Solis, and David Zayas. Joining them are Bobby Cannavale, John Doman, Laurence Fishburne, and Dierdre Friel. David Deblinger will read stage directions.

Glyndebourne’s “The Marriage of Figaro” (Photo by Alastair Muir/© Glyndebourne Productions Ltd.)

The Marriage of Figaro – Glyndebourne – May 24th – May 31st

Michael Grandage directed this 2012 production of the Mozart/DePonte opera at Glyndebourne in Sussex County, England. He updates the setting to the 20th century during the waning days of Franco’s regime in Spain.

The Marriage of Figaro is a comic opera in which Figaro and Susanna plan to get married. In order to do so, they must navigate the wandering hands and eyes of her employer, Count Almaviva.

The opera continues the story that was started in Rossini’s The Barber of Seville.

Figaro is sung by Vito Priante. Lydia Teuscher is Susanna and Isabel Leonard sings the role of Cherubino. The countess is sung by Sally Matthews and her husband, Count Almaviva, is sung by Auden Iverson. Robin Ticcati conducts the orchestra.

Grandage, best known for his work on stage (he’s a Tony Award-winner for directing the play Red by John Logan), made his debut as a director of operas with Billy Budd at Glyndebourne.

Angela Lansbury, Jerry Herman and Carol Channing (Courtesy of JerryHerman.com)

Lyrics and Lyricists – Jerry Herman: You I Like – May 24th – May 31st

The 92nd Street Y in New York is celebrating the 54th anniversary of the opening of Jerry Herman’s musical Mame at the Winter Garden with this concert from the Lyrics and Lyricists series celebrating the composer.

In addition to Mame, Herman’s musicals include Milk and Honey, Hello Dolly!, Ben Franklin in Paris, Dear World, Mack and Mabel, The Grand Tour and La Cage Aux Folles. Herman, who died in 2019, was the recipient of three Tony Awards and a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement.

Participating in this concert (which took place earlier this year) are Tony Award-winner Cady Huffman, who made her Broadway debut in the original production of La Cage Aux Folles; Quentin Earl Darrington (who starred as Coalhouse Walker in the 2009 revival of Ragtime); Bryonha Marie Parham (Prince of Broadway); Andrea Ross (The Sound of Music) and Ryan Vona (Beautiful).

This concert was conceived and music directed by Andy Einhorn (Hello, Dolly! revival) and was directed by Huffman.

Jerry Herman: You I Like becomes available on May 24th at 7 PM EDT/4 PM PDT and will remain available through May 31st at 11:59 PM EDT/8:59 PM PDT.

Don’t forget you can also check out SFJazz’s Wayne Shorter Celebration Part 1 on May 22nd. The Metropolitan Opera offerings this weekend are Don Giovanni, Faust and Manon.

That’s it for this weekend’s Best Bets At Home: May 22nd – May 25th

Enjoy your long weekend!

Update: This post has been updated to correct the composer of The Barber of Seville as Rossini, not Mozart. Cultural Attaché regrets the error.

Main Photo: Gillian Anderson in A Streetcar Named Desire (Photo by Johan Persson/Courtesy of NT Live)

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