Caroline or Change Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/caroline-or-change/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Wed, 12 Oct 2022 18:16:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Congratulations 2022 Tony Nominees https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/09/congratulations-2022-tony-nominees/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/09/congratulations-2022-tony-nominees/#respond Mon, 09 May 2022 18:45:41 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16329 Revisiting our conversations with six of this year's nominees!

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As you probably know by now, this year’s Tony Award nominees were announced in New York this morning. Joshua Henry and Adrienne Warren did the honors. Congratulations to all the 2022 Tony nominees.

Our personal favorite nominations are those going to the shows Caroline, Or Change, Company and A Strange Loop in the musicals category. In the plays we’re thrilled to see Dana H., For Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf and The Lehman Trilogy amongst the nominees.

We’ve had conversations with many of this year’s nominees and you might want to take another look at what they shared with us. They include:

Simon Russell Beale in “The Lehman Trilogy” tour (Photo by Craig Schwartz/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

Simon Russell Beale who is nominated for his performance in The Lehman Trilogy.

“I’m a slightly stocky, middle-aged Englishman with a beard and I’m now pretending to be all sorts of different things just because I say so, rather than with any other help. And that’s quite fun. It’s not about emotional expression or effort. It’s about just keeping the mind focused. If you make a mistake, and I don’t think we’ve ever done a perfect performance actually, but if you make a mistake, you just have to forget it and move very quickly on.”

A side note: Beale is nominated as are his on-stage colleagues Adam Godley and Adrian Lester. Separating one performance from another is a fool’s game. They should have been nominated as a trio in the same way in which the three boys who originated the role of “Billy Elliot” in the musical of the same name were.

Shoshana Bean in “Mr. Saturday Night” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

Shoshana Bean who is nominated for her performance in the Jason Robert Brown musical Mr. Saturday Night.

“I think that I’m a culmination of all the things I’ve soaked up in my life. I’m very Streisand, there’s Frank Sinatra, Chrissie Hyde, John Mayer, Aretha Franklin…while it may seem original, we’re all using the same ingredients. What matters are your proportions. I go left when people think I’m going right. I don’t look at it as strategic decisions, it’s what I’m lead to do. It’s literally been what felt like it needed to happen.”

Dale Franzen who is a co-producer of nominees Caroline, Or Change and For Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf.

“I would say I am much more leaning into stories like that that I feel have such a harder time of being told. Let’s be honest, men aren’t telling those stories. They keep telling the stories that they want to see and I think that women have been shortchanged. I want to be part of changing that. That is not to say that if I’m sent something that I feel is really extraordinary and it happens to be written by a man or it’s a male story that doesn’t mean I won’t get involved. But I would say right now what I feel drawn to moving our stories forward.”

Matt Doyle in “Company” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

Matt Doyle who is nominated for his brilliantly comedic performance in the revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Company.

“I have a lot of experience in being incredibly anxious over general anxiety disorder and panic disorder. And I know the feeling very well of the surprise and the fear that Jamie experiences during that song. Also the staging is so smart and so brilliant. I think half of what you’re seeing on stage is me turning that kind of delight and excitement and thrill of what I get to do and what the audience gets to see every night into something that is coming off as surprise.”

Deirdre O’Connell who is nominated for her breath-taking performance in Dana H.

“It does feel like there is an infinite number of discoveries to be found. As a ride it’s pretty endless. I feel like it would be interesting to try to do a long run of it. It think you’d have to build breaks into it. the way the fatigue manifests itself is more like it sounds echo-y to me or I’m having a hard time hearing it right now. I could be wrong. It could be easier in terms of the doing it.”

Jayne Houdyshell in “The Music Man” (Photo by Julieta Cervantes)

Jayne Houdyshell who is nominated for her performance in the revival of The Music Man.

I really am a creature of theatre. I came up in the theatre. I chose the life of an actress because of my love of the theatre. It’s always been foremost home for me. I’ve had a few small opportunities to do television and film work. While I appreciate it very much, I don’t feel like the real trajectory of my career is about that or will probably ever be about that. I just am most a home in the theatre.

To read the full interviews with each artist, please click on the link built into their name.

Once again, congratulations to all 2022 Tony nominees!

Main Photo: Opening Night of “Company” (Photo by Rebecca J. Michelson)

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Joshua Henry Talks All About Broadway https://culturalattache.co/2022/04/28/joshua-henry-talks-all-about-broadway/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/04/28/joshua-henry-talks-all-about-broadway/#respond Thu, 28 Apr 2022 08:00:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16290 "What struck me when I just got here was how it was just absolute fun. Now it's not just 'fun' for me anymore. It's trying to do the right thing."

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This Saturday The Soraya in Northridge, California is going celebrate Broadway at the Soraya as part of their tenth anniversary. They’ve brought together three Broadway stars for the show: Eden Espinosa (Brooklyn, Wicked), Megan Hilty (9 to 5 and Noises Off!) and three-time Tony Award nominee Joshua Henry.

Joshua Henry (Photo by Paul Morejon/Courtesy The Soraya)

Henry received nominations for his performances in The Scottsboro Boys, Violet and the 2018 revival of Carousel. He’s an original cast member of In the Heights and has toured in Hamilton. Some of his other Broadway credits include The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess and Shuffle Along, Or the Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All That Followed. Most recently he became the first Black actor to play the role of Dr. Pomatter in Waitress.

I took this occasion to talk to Henry, who was just announced along with Adrienne Warren as the Broadway stars to announce this year’s Tony nominations, about his first-ever stage role, to look back on his career so far and to also look forward to where and what Broadway might and should become. What follows are excerpts from our conversation that have been edited for length and clarity.

There’s so much more to hear from Henry, so I strongly encourage you to watch the full interview on our YouTube channel for stories about Carousel, tick…tick…Boom!, Stephen Sondheim and more.

I want to start by asking you about something that Harold Hill says in The Music Man, the first role you ever played which was at Florida Bible Christian School. He says “A man can’t turn tail and run just because a little personal risk is involved.” It strikes me as though that is the journey every actor takes to try to get on Broadway. What are the kind of risks that you feel you’ve taken that have been most successful for you in getting this career that you have now? 

I love that quote. I would say one of the biggest risks that I took was when I was doing In the Heights and it was my first Broadway show and Lin-Manuel [Miranda’s] first Broadway show. We had just won the Tony Award for Best Musical. I was in the ensemble and I had the opportunity to go to a principal role on Broadway in Godspell and play Judas. [In the Heights] was going to run for a long time. But I was like, Oh, I definitely see myself as a principal.

So I decided to put in my four weeks notice, leave and go do Godspell. And this was in 2008. Long story short, the show lost its investment and it didn’t happen. So I find myself in between these two amazing things, just right in the middle of a valley. That’s one of the biggest risks I took. I’m so glad that I took it early on because it showed me the highs and lows of the business and how I need to find something to sustain myself beyond the highs and lows. 

When you think of Broadway as it was back when you were doing In the Heights and Broadway as it is today, pandemic aside if that’s possible, what do you miss most from the way it was and what do you like most about what it is now? 

That’s a good question. I’ll start with what I love about what it is now. I think we’re just much more aware of bringing lots of voices to the table creatively and management wise and producing wise. For instance, Black folks are much more in control of their narrative and the way that they run their shows. I think that’s really important.

What do I miss about what was pre-pandemic or even 2008? For me, it was just this incredible community. It’s still an incredible community, but what struck me when I just got here was how it was just fun. It was just absolute fun. I came from Miami, Florida and coming up to New York in 2006 it was just this world of wonder. And I think now it’s not just fun for me anymore. It’s trying to do the right thing. It’s also fun, but now I’m much more aware and I’m much more strategic in how I’m trying to amplify different voices.

Last year I saw the revival of Caroline, Or Change, a show I loved when it was first on Broadway. But it felt like time and audiences had caught up with it in a way they didn’t the first time around. If The Scottsboro Boys was given a revival today do you think this awareness you mentioned might breathe new life into the show?

Deandre Sevon and Joshua Henry in “The Scottsboro Boys” (Photo by Craig Schwartz/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

100 percent correct! Caroline, Or Change is a great example, it depends on the moment. The audiences in 2010 didn’t want to hear about this true story. I bet you now if Scottsboro Boys is on Broadway right now, oh my goodness! Art sometimes lines up with what’s going on. I’m so sad that I missed Caroline, Or Change because I heard it was incredible. Scottsboro Boys went to the West End and won some Oliviers there. It’s had a great regional life since I did it again at the Ahmanson Theater. It all depends on the moment and I do believe that if Scottsboro Boys came back right now that it would do really well.

You’re on Billy Porter‘s album The Soul of Richard Rodgers, which is completely a pop approach. I’m wondering how important you think it is for projects like that to exist so that people don’t think that Rodgers and Hammerstein or moving forward, even someone like Stephen Sondheim, is part of a previous generation or generations past, and that there’s still something viable about what these songs have to say and that young audiences should be paying attention to them.

The great thing about Stephen Sondheim music, Richard Rodgers music, is it’s just phenomenal storytelling, phenomenal lyric, incredible melodic lines. As someone who grew up in the 90s listening the R&B, pop, rock, jazz, I’m going to see great material through my lens and I’m going to want to interpret it like that, just like Billy Porter or Michael McElroy would want to in their lenses. And I think incredible material that speaks to us will stand the test of time and genre interpretation.

I’m glad to be part of a school of thought that wants to bring those incredible composers as current as possible just to people that don’t know and just think that that’s way back. And I hope that a lot of institutions now understand that and we can rethink some of these classics. They’re fine on their own. But what we’re talking about is bringing them to a newer audience and that’s going to take a little more fine tuning.

Do you remember your first audition for a Broadway show and the song you sang? What was it and what do you think your perspective would be on both how you think you performed it then and how you might perform it now?

Jessie Mueller and Joshua Henry in “Carousel” (Photo by Julieta Cervantes)

Oh gosh, my first Broadway show was off-Broadway at the time, but it was In the Heights. I sang the song “Hear Me Out.” That was a song that Benny sang to Nina’s dad to be like, “Hey, listen. I can handle some more responsibility and I can handle your daughter. Just trust me.” It didn’t make it to Broadway, but that song it’s very hip hop and R&B.

It’s funny that the the title “Hear Me Out” means so much more to me now. I have a hat I was just wearing and it says, “Be Heard.” So like, hear me out, you know? Now I think about it in terms of Broadway. I want to be heard in a different way now. I want more voices to be heard.

If I’m going to sing that song now, though, oh gosh. You know what, Craig? I think I’m going to cover that. I’m going to cover that song. I’m going to put it on Tik Tok because I haven’t thought about it in a little while and I’m going to text Lin. I’m going to be like, “Yo, check this out.” I’m so glad that you brought that up. 

To watch our full interview with Joshua Henry, please go here.

Photo: Joshua Henry (Courtesy his Facebook Page)

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Dale Franzen: Sisters Are Doing It For Themselves https://culturalattache.co/2022/04/27/dale-franzen-sisters-are-doing-it-for-themselves/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/04/27/dale-franzen-sisters-are-doing-it-for-themselves/#respond Wed, 27 Apr 2022 07:30:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16278 "Let's be honest, men aren't telling those stories and I think that women have been shortchanged. I want to be part of changing that."

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“I would just say this,” Tony Award-winning producer Dale Franzen told me last week. “I’m not interested in excluding gender. I’m interested in including gender. I want the table to get bigger. It’s not OK that 23 percent of Broadway producers are women. It doesn’t make for great art and it doesn’t make for equal representation. And we need to change that. So I’m very proud that this show is part of changing that.”

Nicholas Barasch and Morgan Siobhan Green in the “Hadestown” North American Tour (Photo by T Charles Erickson/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

The show to which she is referring is Hadestown, the musical that won 8 Tony Awards including Best Musical. It was Franzen’s first credit as a producer of a Broadway show. It was also the first musical for composer, lyricist and book writer Anaïs Mitchell – who won the Tony Award for Best Original Score. Lastly it was the first Tony Award for director Rachel Chavkin. She had directed one show previously on Broadway, Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812, which also earned her a Tony nomination for her work.

Hadestown is still playing at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York. The national tour has already started and is now playing at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles through May 29th. The immediate stops after LA are San Diego, San Francisco, Spokane and Seattle.

There aren’t a huge number of musicals where the book, music and lyrics are all written by one person. The Music Man, currently playing on Broadway, is one of the few. But Franzen felt the only appropriate choice artistically was to give Mitchell, whose CD of the songs got into Franzen’s hands leading to this show, the first crack at doing it all.

Dale Franzen (Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

I think the really deep part of Anaïs’s work is poetry,” Franzen told me. “Her poetry is very unusual, not to mention the fact that the whole show rhymes. When we started thinking about developing it into a more traditional Broadway musical, which was not our original intent, we talked about should we bring in another writer? What should we do? We loved her poetry so much that we were very worried that somebody else would come in and diminish that. For us a big part of the storytelling was how she was telling the story.

“Anaïs is a genius. I don’t say that lightly. The whole structure of Broadway or even a folk opera was not her world. She’s a folk singer who is used to singing a ballad with a band or a guitar. So she had a huge learning curve, but she’s very smart. This show was about the art and the story. We didn’t even want to go to Broadway. That wasn’t even part of the vision when we started this off.”

Franzen and Mitchell had discussed some kind of “funky, found space kind of event,” she revealed. But success begats other opportunities. The enormous popularity of Hamilton allowed other projects that might not seem like obvious choices to get a chance. Hadestown was just one such musical.

“I think the most exciting part of the journey was expanding the table. We had many people who made their Broadway debuts in this show creatively and on stage, including myself. I think it speaks to how Broadway needs to grow and change to grasp what’s happening in the world.”

Franzen is involved as a co-producer with two shows that are part of this Broadway season: the beautiful revival of Caroline, Or Change and a revival of for colored girls who considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf. She also has her hand in a third show that just opened to rave reviews in England, Prima Facie starring Jodie Comer. What do they have in common besides Franzen? Jeanine Tesori wrote the music for first show; the late Ntozake Shange wrote the second (which is directed by Camille A. Brown who co-directed and choreographed Fire Shut Up in My Bones) and Prima Facie was written by Suzi Miller.

“I would say I am much more leaning into stories like that that I feel have such a harder time of being told. Let’s be honest, men aren’t telling those stories. They keep telling the stories that they want to see and I think that women have been shortchanged. I want to be part of changing that. That is not to say that if I’m sent something that I feel is really extraordinary and it happens to be written by a man or it’s a male story that doesn’t mean I won’t get involved. But I would say right now what I feel drawn to moving our stories forward.”

The choices Franzen has made, so far, have not been safe bets. Hadestown was certainly a big gamble. Does that mean Franzen will continue to take big risks and avoid the tried and true? Even she doesn’t know what the future will hold, but she is certain about her present.

The company of “Hadestown” North American Tour (Photo by T Charles Erickson/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

“I shouldn’t say this because who knows, but I sincerely doubt you will see me going down the tried and true. There’s plenty of people who will do that. I recently said to my investors on for colored girls that I think of them as art investors, not commercial theater investors. And I said to them this is as high risk as Hadestown. The chances of this working are just as as steep. So the reason that you do it is to move the art forward; to have the first Black woman choreographer/director in 65 years and to be part of that history. But yeah, I doubt you’ll see me investing in shows that I know we’ll get the money for because, number one, I’m not interested. And number two, that’s just not my mission. I come out of the gritty, grimy nonprofit [world]. We have always struggled. And if I’m not going to take risks at this point in my life, there’s no point.”

For the full touring schedule for Hadestown, please go here.

Main Photo: Morgan Siobhan Green and Nicholas Barasch in the Hadestown North American Tour (Photo by T Charles Erickson/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

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Top 10 of 2021 https://culturalattache.co/2022/01/03/top-10-of-2021/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/01/03/top-10-of-2021/#respond Mon, 03 Jan 2022 08:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=15666 Happy New Year to everyone. Very soon we’ll begin new interviews and highlights for 2022. But before we do, here is my list of the Top 10 of 2021: #1: The Return of Live Performances There isn’t any one show that could top the fact that we were able to finally return to the glorious […]

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Happy New Year to everyone. Very soon we’ll begin new interviews and highlights for 2022. But before we do, here is my list of the Top 10 of 2021:

#1: The Return of Live Performances

There isn’t any one show that could top the fact that we were able to finally return to the glorious experience of live performance in theaters, concert halls, outdoor venues and more. As great as streaming programming, it could never replace the centuries old practice of communal celebration of life through plays, musicals, concerts and dance.

Yes there were new rules to get accustomed to. Some required masks, others didn’t. Proof of vaccination became required (and that’s a good thing in my book). The first time I returned to a theatre and found my seats was the best possible therapy for my soul. If you read Cultural Attaché I’m sure you feel the same way.

Walter Russell III and Will Liverman in “Fire Shut Up In My Bones” (Photo by Ken Howard/Courtesy Met Opera)

#2: Fire Shut Up In My Bones – Metropolitan Opera

While I wasn’t able to see Terence Blanchard‘s powerful and moving opera in person, I did take advantage of the Metropolitan Opera’s Live in HD series to see a live transmission from New York. Blanchard and librettist Kasi Lemmons have taken the memoir by Charles M. Blow and created an opera that is going to be performed around the world.

So rich is the storytelling, so brilliantly was the production directed by James Robinson and Camille A. Brown (who also choreographed), so spectacular was the singing, Fire Shut Up In My Bones was easily the single most impressive performance of the year.

Hopefully the Met will add additional showings of Fire Shut Up In My Bones via their Live in HD series or make it available for streaming online.

The opera will be performed at Lyric Opera of Chicago beginning on March 24th of this year. For more details and to get tickets, please go here.

Sharon D. Clarke and Arica Jackson in “Caroline, or Change” (Photo by Joan Marcus/Courtesy Roundabout Theatre Company)

#3: Caroline, or Change – Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54

I’ve been a fan of this Jeanine Tesori/Tony Kushner musical since I saw the first production (twice) in New York at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in 2004. I loved the show so much I saw it a third time when it came to the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles later the same year.

Color me pre-disposed to like this revival. What surprised me most was that even though this Michael Longhurst production was more lavishly produced than the original, it never lost one bit of its heart. Hugely contributing to the emotional wallop of this show was Sharon D. Clarke’s towering performance as Caroline. She’s definitely going to receive a Tony Award nomination and deserves to win for her remarkable work.

Caissie Levy, Kevin S. McAllister, Harper Miles and N’Kenge all made incredible impressions. Plus it’s always great to see Chip Zien on stage – I’ve been a fan of his since Into the Woods.

If you are in New York or going this week, you still have time to catch this amazing production before it’s last performance on January 9th. For tickets go here.

Santa Fe Opera (Photo by Craig L. Byrd)

#4: Santa Fe Opera 2021 Season – Santa Fe Opera

I had never attended a production at Santa Fe Opera prior to this summer. I don’t intend to miss any seasons going forward. This is a truly magical place to see opera. This summer found a smaller line-up than in non-COVID years, but the four consecutive nights in early August were a great introduction to this wonderful tradition.

On tap this year were The Marriage of Figaro, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Benjamin Britten), the world premiere of The Lord of Cries (John Corigliano and Mark Adamo) and Eugene Onegin. My personal favorite was Britten’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s play.

Each night, however, had plenty of joys to be found: whether it was my second time seeing Anthony Roth Costanzo in a opera (the first being Ahknahten), revisiting the joys to be found in Tchaikovsky’s brooding opera, enjoying the staging of Mozart’s classic opera or experiencing the tailgating experience that is de rigueur before each performance.

I’m excited about this summer’s season as my favorite opera, Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, is being performed at Santa Fe Opera for the first time.

“West Side Story” Publicity Photo by Ramona Rosales

#5: West Side Story

I was completely skeptical about what Steven Spielberg would do with one of my favorite musicals. That he had Tony Kushner working with him gave me some optimism. Try as I could to wrangle details from colleagues who were working on the film, I was completely unable to glean any information about what kind of updating and changes were being made.

When I saw the movie on opening weekend I was thrilled to discover that my concerns had all been for naught. Simply put, I think this is a vastly superior film than its Oscar-winning predecessor. I’ve always found this Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents musical emotional (let’s face it, it’s Romeo and Juliet), but seeing it so close on the heels of Sondheim’s passing probably intensified my emotional response.

Sondheim said how excited he was for audiences to see what had been done to West Side Story. I know he wasn’t a fan of the original film – feeling it was too close in presentation to the stage version – so I had my fingers crossed he was right. And he was. If you haven’t seen the film yet, do so. It’s the kind of film that must be seen on a big screen with terrific sound.

Lea DeLaria and Alaska 5000 in “Head Over Heels”

#6: Head Over Heels – Pasadena Playhouse

If you had asked me what the odds were that a jukebox musical using the songs of The Go-Go’s would be a show I would see at all, let alone twice, I would have given you huge odds against that happening. And I would have lost my shirt! What Sam Pinkleton and Jenny Koons did with this production was create the best party of the year.

Alaska 5000, Lea DeLaria, Yurel Echezarreta, Freddie, Tiffany Mann, George Salazar, Emily Skeggs and Shanice Williams put their hearts and souls into this story of family, acceptance and love. The all-female band rocked the house.

Both times I saw the show I opted for the on-stage/standing room seats and I wouldn’t have had it any other way. At the first performance Lea DeLaria made a comment during the show about my pants. For the second performance I had a better idea where to position myself to have an even better time than I did at the first performance.

This was a party I never wanted to end.

James Darrah, co-creator and director of “desert in” (Photo by Michael Elias Thomas/Courtesy Boston Lyric Opera)

#7: desert in – Boston Lyric Opera

This streaming opera/mini-series is definitely not your parent’s opera. It is guided by its own rules as it tells the story of a unique group of strangers (or are they) who congregate at a seedy motel.

The music was composed by Michael Abels, Vijay Iyer, Nathalie Joachim, Nico Muhly, Emma O’Halloran, Ellen Reid, Wang Lu and Shelley Washington. The libretto was written by christopher oscar peña.

Appearing in desert in are mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard (for whom the project was written), soprano Talise Trevigne, Tony-nominated performer Justin Vivian Bond (Kiki & Herb Alive on Broadway), actors Carlis Shane Clark, Alexander Flores, Anthony Michael Lopez, Jon Orsini, Ricco Ross and Raviv Ullman with vocal performances by tenor Neal Ferreira, Tony Award-winner Jesus Garcia (La Bohème), baritone Edward Nelson, tenor Alan Pingarrón, soprano Brianna J. Robinson, mezzo-soprano Emma Sorenson and bass-baritone Davóne Tines.

The project was directed by James Darrah who also oversaw the Close Quarters season of films from Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; directed a production of Les Enfants Terribles for Long Beach Opera (that took place in a parking lot) and, underachiever that he is, also directed The Lord of Cries at Santa Fe Opera.

You can still stream desert in. Go here for details.

Cécile McLorin Salvant (Courtesy Kurland Agency)

#8: Cécile McLorin Salvant – The Ford

Without a new album to promote jazz vocalist Salvant took to the stage at The Ford in Los Angeles for a concert with Sullivan Fortner that was nothing short of pure joy. She and Fortner have such a musical bond that she can make up the setlist on the spot and he’s ready to dive right in to dazzle the audience. As they did on this late September evening.

The only problem with seeing Salvant perform is you can never get enough. Truly. Rare is the performer who can so thoroughly enrapture an audience with their skill the way Salvant can.

That should come as no surprise for an artist who has won three consecutive Grammy Awards for her three most recent albums. Her newest album, Ghost Songs, is being released by Nonesuch Records in March. No doubt the next Grammy Awards season will find Salvant’s latest album on their list of nominees.

#9: Billy Porter: Unprotected

Porter’s memoir was released in the fall and it is one of the most inspirational and entertaining memoirs I’ve ever read. He’s a Tony Award (Kinky Boots), Emmy Award (Pose) and Grammy Award (also Kinky Boots) winning performer. He’s also been setting the fashion world on fire with his inventive and creative looks on runways from the Academy Awards to the Met Gala in New York. Let’s just say he knows how to make an entrance.

In Unprotected Porter details the many obstacles put in his way through challenges at home to being subjected to harsh criticism from his church to casting directors who thought he was too much. Though it all he remains steadfast in his individualism and his talent. It’s a lesson we can all use. As he says in his memoir, “My art is my calling, my purpose, dare I say my ministry.” I, for one, found a lot to learn from his ministry.

Gay men and women are not the only audience for Porter’s ministry. The life lessons he endured and his response to them is precisely the nourishment our souls need today. You can also clearly hear Porter’s voice in the book. So engaging and entertaining is his book I read it in one sitting. I found it impossible to put down. I think you will, too.

Ledisi

#10: Ledisi Sings Nina Simone – Hollywood Bowl

Anyone who is brave enough to tackle material made famous by the incomparable Simone either has a lot of guts or a lot of talent. Ledisi proved she had both in this memorable concert at the Hollywood Bowl in July (which she performed elsewhere as well.)

Ledisi wisely chose not to emulate her idol. Instead she made each song her own while still retaining a sense of what Simone’s original recordings offered. She released a seven-track record, Ledisi Sings Nina Simone, but added more songs to her concert. It was particularly interesting to her performance of Ne Me Quitte Pas and then hear it performed by Cynthia Erivo less than a week later at the same venue. Who sang it better? Let each who saw both shows answer that question.

Runners up: Vijay Iyer’s latest album Uneasy; Veronica Swift for her album This Bitter Earth; The Band’s Visit touring production at The Dolby Theatre in Hollywood; Jason Moran solo piano performance as part of LeRoy Downs’ Just Jazz series; Springsteen on Broadway; MasterVoices’ Myths and Hymns and Cynthia Erivo singing Don’t Rain on My Parade at the Hollywood Bowl.

Here’s hoping there’s even more to see and hear in 2022. What’s on your list? Leave your choices in the comments section below.

Happy New Year!

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My Favorite Tony Award Performances https://culturalattache.co/2020/06/05/my-favorite-tony-award-performances/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/06/05/my-favorite-tony-award-performances/#respond Fri, 05 Jun 2020 00:18:28 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9286 19 clips from the Tony Awards from 1969-2016

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Today would have been the annual Tony Awards ceremony. When theaters were forced to postpone, or in some cases completely cancel, performances the Tonys were also postponed. Tony Award Sunday is my favorite day of the year. Each broadcast has memorable performances. To celebrate the joy of live theatre and its biggest night, I offer you some of my favorite Tony Award performances through the years. Note all of the videos are in great condition, but the power of the performances more than compensates for the poor video quality.

Hair – 1969 Tony Awards

Nominated for Best Musical and Best Direction of a Musical, Hair opened on Broadway at the Biltmore Theatre and ran for 1,750 performances. The show, directed by Tom O’Horgan, did not win any Tonys. Amongst the original cast members were two of its creators Gerome Ragni and James Rado, Diane Keaton and Paul Jabara. The 2009 revival of the musical won the Tony Award for Best Revival.

Purlie – 1970 Tony Awards

Purlie was nominated for five Tony Awards including Best Musical. Cleavon Little and Melba Moore won Tony Awards for their performances. The show, directed by Philip Rose who co-wrote the book, first opened at the Broadway Theater and later moved to the Winter Garden and the ANTA Playhouse.

Chicago – 1976 Tony Awards

The original production of Kander and Ebb’s musical Chicago was nominated for 11 Tony Awards. It won none of them. Directed by Bob Fosse and starring Gwen Verdon, Chita Rivera and Jerry Orbach, the show ran for 936 performances at the 42nd Street Theatre.

A Chorus Line – 1976 Tony Awards

This is the reason Chicago didn’t win any Tony Awards. Michael Bennett’s show, with music and lyrics by Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban, was nominated for 12 Tony Awards and won nine of them. Its run of 6,137 performances made it the longest running Broadway musical. It is now number six on that list. Ironically, the revival of Chicago, still running in New York, is currently number two on that list with 9,692 performances so far.

The Act – 1978 Tony Awards

This is also a Kander and Ebb musical with the unique distinction of being the only Broadway show directed by Martin Scorsese. The show received six Tony nominations with the only win being for Liza Minnelli. The Act played at the Majestic Theatre and played for 233 performances.

Sweeney Todd – 1979 Tony Awards (though I have no idea who is sitting in as Sweeney)

Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler’s musical was nominated for nine Tony Awards. The show won eight of them including Best Musical, Best Actress for Angela Lansbury and Best Actor for Len Cariou. Directed by Harold Prince, Sweeney Todd played at the Uris Theatre (later renamed The Gershwin Theatre) for 557 performances.

Evita – 1980 Tony Awards

Evita, written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, was nominated for 11 Tony Awards. The show won seven including Best Musical, Best Actress for Patti LuPone and Best Featured Actor for Mandy Patinkin. Directed by Harold Prince, Evita played at the Broadway Theatre and ran for 1,567 performances.

Dreamgirls – 1982 Tony Awards

Dreamgirls was nominated for 13 Tony Awards and won six of them. The show, directed by Michael Bennett, played the Imperial Theatre and ran for 1,521 performances. The Henry Krieger and Tom Eyen musical featured the staggering Tony-winning performance by Jennifer Holliday as “Effie White.”

Cats – 1983 Tony Awards

Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical inspired by T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats was nominated for 11 Tony Awards and won seven including Best Musical. Trevor Nunn directed Cats which played the Winter Garden Theatre. The musical broke A Chorus Line‘s record for longest-running Broadway show with 7,485 performances. Betty Buckley won a Tony Award for her performance as Grizabella who sings the show’s best-known song.

Angela Lansbury and Bea Arthur – 1988 Tony Awards

Jerry Herman’s musical Mame opened in 1966 and was nominated for eight Tony Awards. Amongst the three winners were co-stars Angela Lansbury (as Mame Dennis) and Bea Arthur (as Vera Charles). 22 years later they reunited on the 1988 Tony Awards and performed their classic duet from the show. (This was the year The Phantom of the Opera won Best Musical.)

Grand Hotel – 1990 Tony Awards

Grand Hotel was nominated for 12 Tony Awards and won five including two for director and choreographer Tommy Tune and one for Michael Jeter as Otto Kringelein. The show opened at the Martin Beck Theatre and later transferred to the Gershwin Theatre. Grand Hotel ran for a total of 1,017 performances

Kiss of the Spider Woman – 1993 Tony Awards

Kander and Ebb won yet another Tony Award for this musical based on Manuel Puig’s novel (which also inspired the Academy Award-winning film.) Kiss of the Spider Woman received 11 Tony nominations winning seven of them including Terrence McNally for Best Book of a Musical and for the performances by Chita Rivera as “Spider Woman/Aurora,” Brent Carver as “Molina” and Anthony Crivello as “Valentin.” The musical, directed by Harold Prince, opened at the Broadhurst Theatre and ran for a total of 904 performances.

Passion – 1994 Tony Awards

The film Passione d’Amore by Ettore Scola was the inspiration for this Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine musical. The musical opened at the Plymouth Theatre near the end of Tony season and ran for only 280 performances. Donna Murphy, Jere Shea and Marin Mazzie starred in Passion. All three were amongst the 10 Tony nominations the show received with Murphy taking the Tony for Best Performance by an Actress. The musical won Best Score, Best Book and also Best Musical.

The Wild Party – 2000 Tony Awards

Composers Michael John LaChiusa and Andrew Lippa wrote musicals called The Wild Party. Both were based on Joseph Moncure March’s poem of the same name and both were produced the same year. LaChiusa’s show, directed by George C. Wolfe, made it to Broadway’s Virginia Theatre where it was nominated for seven Tony Awards. It did not win any and closed after a run of only 68 performances. The cast featured Toni Collette, Mandy Patinkin and Eartha Kitt.

Caroline, Or Change – 2004 Tony Awards

Playwright Tony Kushner (Angels in America) and composer Jeanine Tesori teamed up for this 2004 musical (also directed by George C. Wolfe) that received six Tony Award nominations. Anika Noni Rose was the sole winner for her performance as “Emmie Thibodeaux.” Caroline, or Change was scheduled to have a revival this season, but those plans have been postponed until next season. For anyone who saw the show at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre during its brief 136 performance run, Tonya Pinkins‘ performance of “Lot’s Wife” will stand as one of the greatest performances in modern Broadway history.

Fela! – 2010 Tony Awards

Fela! electrified audiences when it opened at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in 2009. The musical was nominated for 11 Tony Awards and won three (including Best Choreography by Bill T. Jones). Jim Lewis collaborated with Jones (who also directed) on the book of this musical about legendary Nigerian musician Fela Kuti. The show ran for 463 performances.

Hedwig and the Angry Inch – 2014 Tony Awards

It took 16 years for this Stephen Trask and John Cameron Mitchell musical to finally make it to Broadway. The show began its life off-Broadway at the Jane Street Theatre in 1998. Directed by Michael Mayer and starring Neil Patrick Harris and Lena Hall, the show was nominated for eight Tony Awards. Harris and Hall both won and Hedwig and the Angry Inch was awarded the Tony for Best Revival of a Musical. The show ran for 507 performances at the Belasco Theatre.

The Color Purple – 2016 Tony Awards

Alice Walker’s novel inspired this musical by playwright Marsha Norman and composers/lyricists Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray. This revival, directed by John Doyle, opened at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre and was nominated for four Tony Awards. It won for Best Revival of a Musical and for Cynthia Erivo’s performance as Celie. The Color Purple ran for 450 performances.

Hamilton – 2016 Tony Awards

Much like A Chorus Line (which also began its life at The Public Theater), Hamilton was the juggernaut at the Tony Awards that couldn’t be beaten. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical was nominated for 16 Tony Awards and won 11 of them. The show, directed by Thomas Kail, is still running at the Richard Rodgers Theatre with 1,919 performances so far.

What makes this performance particular emotional is that the Tony Awards took place just after the mass shooting at the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando. Given the recent events the cast opted not to use the prop guns that are usually seen in the show.

Those are 18 of my favorite Tony Awards performances. Let me know what your favorites are by posting your thoughts in our comments.

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Tonya Pinkins Has “Time Alone” on Stage https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/03/tonya-pinkins-time-alone-stage/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/03/tonya-pinkins-time-alone-stage/#respond Tue, 03 Oct 2017 17:17:39 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1227 From my point of view there are two groups of people: those who were lucky enough to see the extraordinary performance Tonya Pinkins gave in the musical Caroline, Or Change and those who didn’t. Those in the first category know what an amazingly powerful performer Pinkins is. For those who never saw Caroline, you now […]

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From my point of view there are two groups of people: those who were lucky enough to see the extraordinary performance Tonya Pinkins gave in the musical Caroline, Or Change and those who didn’t. Those in the first category know what an amazingly powerful performer Pinkins is. For those who never saw Caroline, you now have a chance to see her in another show, Time Alone at LATC. The play was written by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Alessandro Camon (The Messenger).

Time Alone is a series of monologues intertwined for 90 minutes. Pinkins plays Anna Jackson, a woman whose police officer son was recently killed in the line of duty. Alex Hernandez plays Gabriel, a young man serving time in prison for killing a gang rival.

I recently had a chance to talk to Ms. Pinkins by phone about the play, its challenges and the issues it raises.

Tonya Pinkins and Alex Hernandez star in "Time Alone"
Tonya Pinkins in “Time Alone” at the Los Angeles Theatre Center

What inspired you to join Time Alone?

I think probably my conservation with Alessandro. He’s a really beautiful writer and his language is so beautiful. I liked his humility about the whole subject matter and his openness to having a black person playing a role he felt he couldn’t have written for a black person because he’s not a black person. He wrote a really complex woman and I think there isn’t any race to grieving.

You’re doing a series of monologues. What are the challenges of not having another actor with whom to work?

Working with another actor is just easy – you can pay attention to the another actor and make him give you your performance. In this situation, you are relying a lot on the audience being your partner and some audiences are different and not willing to play along. I’m much more vulnerable and have no sense of what it will be every night. I guess I feel like the power of the piece is a line that Alessandro wrote about pain being the thing that connects us all

Is this a part that inspired you, scared you or both?

I think I was very afraid of the part because to do any role you have to be willing to inwardly explore what is the truth. That’s the way I work. I’m not inventing and go ‘I will do this.’ I have to let myself go there. I have to live in that tragedy every single day and it’s taking its toll on me. It’s a lot.

"Time Alone" is a play about grief shared by two strangers
Alex Hernandez as Gabriel in “Time Alone”

How do you shake off the part after a rehearsal or performance?

I go home and go to bed. I haven’t prepared on how big a toll it was going to take on me. It’s really devastating for both of us. I hope that by our willingness to go there, the cost we pay will be the cost the audience is willing to pay with us. By that I mean we all learn to sit with pain without doing something to fix it or go away and we all increase our capacity to bear pain, other people’s as well as our own.

Anna has a monologue where she talks about the idea of forgiveness. I heard echoes, not directly, of “Lot’s Wife” from Caroline, Or Change. Do these characters share any similarities?

They certainly share things. I think they both have been betrayed by life. I think they both are products of the time that they live in, even though they live in very different times. I think that the depth of their pain and frustration and rage is equivalent.

The death penalty is an unavoidable subject in Time Alone. What are your own views?

I’m not for it personally because I don’t believe we have the right to kill somebody else. I absolutely understand the desire to want someone to be dead because they caused you so much pain. I don’t think they are mutually exclusive positions. Anybody that would hurt a child, I wouldn’t want them on the planet, but because the way it is administered it’s biased. It’s class-driven. I wouldn’t give the state that permission. I think the only shift I’ve had is if a child of mine had to die, I’d want to be the person to administer that decision. I think how humane that would be.

For all the intensity this project possesses, I assume you need an outlet. What do you enjoy when you aren’t wrapped up with such intense characters?

I love comedy. I love love love comedy. I really like funny things. I did this rap rogue video and I thought everybody could have a laugh on me. We took every insult publically said about me and turned it into a rap song. There’s no name you can call me that’s going to make me now focus my attention on this name you call me. I love comedy and I love to laugh.

Do you have a dream project you’d like to do?

I’m focusing on writing and directing. When you get to a certain point as an actor you’ve worked with amazing people and had an education nobody else can ever have. Where can you use that? You have to move to the other side. I’ve written a franchise of environmental social justice horror film that’s very funny. Mother Nature is shouting her wrath. That’s what I’ve been working on all year. I’ve been enjoying myself. It’s very funny. I have to pull back some of the humor so you can have more terror.

Time Alone is in previews at the Los Angeles Theatre Center in downtown Los Angeles. Opening night is Saturday, October 7th. The show is scheduled to run through October 29th.

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Time Alone https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/02/time-alone/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/10/02/time-alone/#respond Mon, 02 Oct 2017 14:43:43 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1209 Los Angeles Theatre Center

Now through October 29th

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Shared loneliness is the common denominator between an imprisoned young man who killed a gang rival and a woman whose police officer son was murdered. This world premiere of Time Alone, a new play by Alessandro Camon stars Tonya Pinkins (Broadway’s Caroline, or Change) and Alex Hernandez. The show is in previews now at the Los Angeles Theatre Center with opening night on Saturday, October 7th. Look for an interview with Tonya Pinkins later this week at culturalattache.co.

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