George Salazar Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/george-salazar/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Sat, 16 Dec 2023 01:20:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Would You Like a Spectacular Margherita For the Holidays? https://culturalattache.co/2023/12/14/would-you-like-a-spectacular-margherita-for-the-holidays/ https://culturalattache.co/2023/12/14/would-you-like-a-spectacular-margherita-for-the-holidays/#respond Thu, 14 Dec 2023 22:22:30 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=19653 If there’s one great thing about traditions, it is that they are best enjoyed when they are skewered. When, as the Brits say, we take the piss out of them. Though I don’t have hard facts on this, I believe that the Pasadena Playhouse Holiday Spectacular will do just that. One reason I am fairly […]

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If there’s one great thing about traditions, it is that they are best enjoyed when they are skewered. When, as the Brits say, we take the piss out of them. Though I don’t have hard facts on this, I believe that the Pasadena Playhouse Holiday Spectacular will do just that. One reason I am fairly confident of this is the casting of the always talented and reliably irreverent Lesli Margherita as one of the four cast members in the show.

Lesli Margherita (Photo by Michael Kushner/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

Margherita is an Olivier-Award winner (the British equivalent of the Tony Awards) for her performance in Zorro: The Musical. She made her Broadway debut as Mrs. Wormwood in Tim Minchin‘s musical Matilda. She previously appeared in Pasadena Playhouse’s You I Like: A Musical Celebration of Jerry Herman.

The show opens on December 14th and joining Margherita in the show are MaryAnn Hu, George Salazar, Jason Michael Snow and, perhaps, you (see below.) The Pasadena Playhouse Holiday Spectacular is directed by Sam Pinkleton (Head Over Heels at the Pasadena Playhouse and choreographer of Stephen Sondheim‘s final musical, Here We Are) who co-created the show with Randy Blair. The show runs through December 23rd.

But what it is? That was where I started my conversation recently with Margherita. What follows are excerpts from that interview that have been edited for length and clarity. To see the full interview, please go to our YouTube channel. (You don’t want to miss this one…it’s a hoot.)

Q: It seems as though all the details about this show are being carefully kept under lock and key. I know that Sam Pinkleton is the co-creator and director and that the four of you are in the show. Given how little I know and the public knows about this show, how much did you know when you were first approached by the Pasadena Playhouse about being part of their holiday spectacular? 

Not a thing. When the artistic director, Danny Feldman, reached out to me he said, Holiday show. Sam Pinkleton, who I had wanted to work with forever. And it may or may not be this way, but he said the concept right now is curtain up. You on an empty stage. And I said, in. Then I knew the three other actors – who were phenomenal. That was enough for me to say yes. We really didn’t know anything until the first day of rehearsal. 

You probably know a lot more now since you’re ten days away from opening.

Correct. We know a lot more now. We’re still keeping a lot of it a secret. I can tell you that spectacular is a loosely used term for this show. But it is hysterical. It is heartwarming and is probably not what you think it’s going to be.

There was only one thing that disturbed me knowing that Sam Pinkleton, you and George and others are involved in this show. The website says it is appropriate for children six years and older. I was hoping there would be at least a one in front of the six.

That actually was very surprising to all of us involved. I will tell you, though, in rehearsal there should be a designated person just to be like, “you can’t say that.” But it is family friendly. That was unexpected for me. Holiday shows and adult content for me kind of go hand-in-hand. So I was shocked. 

I am expecting everything and the kitchen sink thrown in on a very low budget.

That is exactly what you’re going to get. What they told me I’m allowed to say is that it’s about a holiday spectacular that is coming from another town that has been playing an out-of-town tryout [and is] coming to the Playhouse. There are four people involved that are the creative team of this holiday spectacular that may or may not arrive on time for the opening night at Pasadena Playhouse. So what does that mean when a 65-person plus animals flying everything doesn’t arrive in time? What do those four people then have to put on in place of that? 

That concept sounds like it would be it would be fairly structured and scripted, but it also seems like it affords all four of you tremendous freedom. Does it? 

Completely. It is very structured. But there is a lot of freedom in it and that’s what makes it so fun. I can’t keep a straight face when I’m supposed to. There is a lot of audience interaction and opportunity for the audience to get involved. Each night a different local group, whether it be a choir or a marching band or a dance troupe, every night we’re highlighting a local Los Angeles group. But there’s plenty of room for hijinks. 

What are the challenges for you as a performer in a show like this? You only have 14 performances.

Leslie Margherita, MaryAnn Hu and Jason Michael Snow in “Pasadena Playhouse Spectacular” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

The hard thing for me is I am portraying the director of this piece. I’m kind of the cat wrangler for the whole thing. So I have very clear points as to where we need to go and what needs to happen. The hardest thing for me is not wanting to get carried away. I need to keep things going. That’s a tough job for me because if something’s funny, I want it to go on forever. 

Those first few shows are going to be very telling and very fun because I think that’s when we really find out what is going to happen. I think by the end of it we’ll probably be pros at it.

But I actually prefer not knowing what’s going to happen because that’s really where all the great nuggets from.

Are you able to channel all the many directors with whom you’ve worked into this character?

Correct. And I really hope they don’t recognize themselves in it. Everyone that we have worked with or have stories about informs these characters. There’s a director, a stage manager, a costume supervisor and a crew member. So all of these people that we love and adore, we’re kind of lampooning. It’s very Waiting for Guffman. We’re skewering other major city’s holiday spectaculars, with all the major sets and everything.

You haven’t been working with Sam Pinkleton for that long, but will Sam find his way into this show as well? 

Sam is this entire show. He is the most genius. For years people have said, “You guys must know each other. You must have worked together.” And we haven’t. This was the perfect introduction for us both to work together. Now I don’t want to ever work with anyone else. He is all over this.

Holiday shows, if I’m thinking about the ones that happen in other cities, one of them has a row of long legs. There is the absolutely inevitable appearance of Santa Claus. They usually revolve around the same 12 or 14 holiday songs that we all know and love. Can you assure me that we are not going to be subjected to the very same songs that are in every show everywhere around the world? 

I can absolutely assure you that you are going to get a version of all of those things, of the long legs and the snow falling and the Santa appearance, but you will not be hearing those same songs. What Sam and Randy did was they pulled some deep cuts that are incredible. If you do hear a couple of those same old chestnuts, I guarantee they have never done been done like this before. You’re not going to be subjected to the same, I don’t want to say tired, but the same old holiday spectacular. But if for some reason you wanted to see a chorus line of reindeer, you may get that. It just may not be how you think it’s going to be. 

How important do you think it is, for the theater community, for there to be shows that can only be done once instead of this desire for everything to be part of a bigger machine?

I think it is so important. The one thing that disappointed me about Broadway was how corporate it was. I understand it. I understand people have to make money. It’s so special to create something just once in a capsule. Not everything has to transfer. Not every off-Broadway show has to go to Broadway. There are special things about shows that just exist, for a certain amount of time, that people at the top of their game create because we have to keep doing that. Otherwise we will just be stuck with stagnant shows that tour for years and years and years and never change. We have to keep pushing the boundaries.

Speaking of Broadway, I do have to ask you one question about Matilda. The mere mention of When I Grow Up can bring me to tears. How do you get through a thousand performances without that song impacting you? Or can you? 

It’s pretty well documented how much I love that show and how grateful I was to be a part of it. The way that my track was, I could watch Revolting Children every single night from the back of the house because I made an entrance. And I did watch it every single night for over a thousand performances. Had I been able to see When I Grow Up, I don’t think I would have been able to go on after it.

Lesli Margherita on the “Matilda” swings (Photo courtesy Lesli Margherita)

We had a bunch of pre-checks for the shows, for the kids, the sets and the swing track was part of it. I would always watch it and just ball, even just in rehearsal. What Tim wrote and that whole team that set-designed, that moment of the swings is so incredible.

I cried often and the most I cried was when I knew some of these kids were leaving and it was their last time on the swings. It was something that I dreaded every few months when the kids got too big. I was a blubbering mess the whole time.

I don’t think I’ll ever do a show like that again. I’m so, so grateful that it took me so long to get to Broadway. It was just incredible.

I lose it every time the adults take over the swings.

I finally got to do it. On the final day they let me on the swings and there’s the picture of my face like that. The best moment.

We’re living in in a troubled world. I think it’s safe to say trip theaters are having troubles getting people back in. We’re all having huge problems getting together. If you could have one wish for the holiday season for 2023 going into 2024, what would it be? What would you like to see this holiday season bring that is different than previous holiday seasons?

Peace is the obvious answer. We’re just more divided now than ever. Finding a way to coexist. Finding a way to let people be who they are. Live your life and let someone else live theirs. It’s all of that. But for sure, peace, because it’s really feels like the world is on fire.

After 14 performances as well as several weeks of the holidays around you, infiltrating every moment of your waking day, are you planning on celebrating the holidays by doing anything but the holidays? 

We run until the 23rd and I’ll probably just be sleeping through the holidays. I always celebrate with with my family up north. So I think I’m going to make my husband drive and I’ll conk out with my dog in the back. I’ll celebrate, but be exhausted. I’m sure I’ll be exhausted.

To watch the full interview with Lesli Margherita, please go here.

Main Photo: Lesli Margherita and George Salazar in Pasadena Playhouse Holiday Spectacular (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

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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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Koons & Pinkleton Turn “Head Over Heels” On Its Head https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/19/koons-pinkleton-turn-head-over-heels-on-its-head/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/19/koons-pinkleton-turn-head-over-heels-on-its-head/#respond Sat, 20 Nov 2021 00:29:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=15548 "I think how we've approached this, from looking at it with the Playhouse, was as an invitation back. Welcome home. Welcome back!" - Jenny Koons

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“It has a big beating heart. It’s actually not snarky, it is completely exuberant. The Go-Go’s music is utterly exuberant.” That’s how co-director/co-choreographer/co-conceiver Sam Pinkleton says of the Pasadena Playhouse production of Head Over Heels which officially opened last weekend.

Sam Pinkleton

Pinkleton and Jenny Koons (the other half of the creative team) have put together a show that feels both of the moment and just what we need in this moment. Anyone who knows such songs as We Got the Beat, Vacation and Our Lips Are Sealed already knows how buoyant they are. To experience those hit songs as part of an audience given a chance to be on the stage with the cast is a gift after so much time during the pandemic wondering when the isolation might end.

Halfway through rehearsals I spoke with Koons and Pinkleton about taking on a significantly revised version of a musical that, frankly, failed on Broadway. Their journey began when they saw Head Over Heels in New York.

“We saw Head Over Heels together in New York on Broadway,” Koons says, “and had a great time and really fell in love with the joy of it and the way that the Go-Go’s music had been integrated.” It should be noted that the storyline is based on Arcadia by Sir Philip Sidney which was published in the late 16th century.

As much as they both enjoyed the musical, it wasn’t the type of show they usually do. The two have collaborated on Burn All Night at American Repertory Theatre and a new production of the Elizabeth Swados musical Runaways in New York.

“The way that it was presented on Broadway, which was very much a proscenium musical with two acts, was not necessarily how either of us works,” Pinkleton revealed. That wasn’t the kind of show the Pasadena Playhouse had in mind either.

Koons says, “When the Playhouse approached us about imagining this in a different form as a party – people on the floor, everyone dancing to the beat – it felt like a question of can we take what we loved about the experience we had and make it amplified even more. So it was less about how do you reduce something and more about how we take what we love and make those things even louder in real life.”

As both Pinkleton and Koons began their exploration as to the best way to answer that question, it became apparent that they were doing more than just a production of a pre-existing show.

“It feels like a gift that we are coming at this with fresh eyes; making new musicals is really hard and really ugly,” said Pinkleton. “I feel like we’re having the process of making something new, even if the script in the show is kind of a given.”

Along with the team at the Pasadena Playhouse, there was a reason they wanted to do something different with Head Over Heels.

The Go-Go’s

“In this moment of twenty twenty one,” Koons says of their thinking, “what is the story that we’re all telling as we come back together. I think how we’ve approached this, from looking at it with the Playhouse, was as an invitation back. Welcome home. Welcome back! What does it mean to be gathering again in person.”

It’s an invitation that for anyone and everyone – whether your knew The Go-Go’s music or the story in the show.

Pinkleton explains. “Welcome back to people who just happen to be walking down the street. Welcome back to people who would never expect to come into a theater. I don’t think that that’s something we’re imposing on this show. I actually think that’s the heartbeat of the show. I think there’s a queerness and an openness and a curiosity – the show is about that. It’s the story of people who go on a journey to discover that everything they needed, they had the whole time.”

What Koons and Pinkleton did so well with the show was to assemble a cast where anyone who sees the show will find themselves represented on stage. The cast includes Alaska 5000 (best known from RuPaul’s Drag Race season 5 and the winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race All-Stars season 2); Yurel Echazarreta (a member of the Broadway cast of Head Over Heels); recording and drag artist Freddie; Lea DeLaria (jazz singer and star of Orange Is the New Black); Tiffany Mann (Be More Chill and Waitress on Broadway); George Salazar (Pasadena Playhouse’s Little Shop of Horrors); Emily Skeggs (Fun Home on Broadway) and Shanice Williams (The Wiz on NBC).

Jenny Koons

That was precisely the point offers Koons.

“The goal has been to create something unique for the performers and artists that we gather. I feel like we’re constantly on our toes for how we really shape this to them. We made a joke in the first week that it’s like the Queer Avengers. How do we make sure that all eight and that the humans we have gathered feel able to be there for ourselves in a way that can invite audience members to do the same.”

They two directors also made sure that their vision was shared by the cast they hired Koons offered.

“With the performers that we have gathered this feels very much like a shared mission. Yes, we’re doing a show, we’re doing it in the midst of a crazy moment in time. And all of us are coming to this with the spirit of an open invitation that really is for everyone.”

As much as you might enjoy the show, Pinkleton believes it’s something more that will be part of the experience of seeing Head Over Heels.

“The thing we’ve been missing the most is bodies,” he says, “living, breathing humans. So nothing is going to be more spectacular than the humans. And that’s true for the performers, and that’s true for the audience.”

As someone who experienced the show on the stage with the show happening all around me, I can vouch that the greatest joy came from dancing, celebrating and enjoying this shared space with so many wonderful people.

To watch the complete interview with Jenny Koons and Sam Pinkleton, please go to our YouTube channel here.

Head Over Heels continues at the Pasadena Playhouse through December 12th. For tickets go here.

Main Photo: Lea DeLaria, Alaska 5000, Shanice Williams and George Salazar in Head Over Heels (Photo by Jeff Lorch/All photos courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

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The “Head Over Heels” Cast Invites You to Their Party https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/15/the-head-over-heels-cast-invites-you-to-their-party/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/15/the-head-over-heels-cast-invites-you-to-their-party/#respond Mon, 15 Nov 2021 21:00:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=15517 "I want to welcome audience members who feel like they stick out like a sore thumb. Come here and stick out like a sore thumb with all of us. " - George Salazar

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Whenever I was at a party back in the early 1980s and a song by The Go-Go’s came on, everybody was dancing. Whether they were full-on dancing or just unable to resist the beat, the band’s ebullient music made it impossible to stand still. It wasn’t a party until you heard songs like We Got the Beat, Our Lips are Sealed and Vacation.

In a bold move destined to say that the past nearly two years of challenges need to make way for some fun, the Pasadena Playhouse is presenting a radically re-thought version of the Broadway musical Head Over Heels which uses The Go-Go’s music. Co-directors/co-choreographers Jenny Koons and Sam Pinkleton have created a production that’s meant to be a party celebrating each and every one of us.

That spirit of having fun was fully on display when I was invited to attend a preview of the work-in-progress. Three songs were performed out of costume and unamplified. Then it was time to talk to the cast: Alaska 5000 (best known from RuPaul’s Drag Race season 5 and the winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race All-Stars season 2); Yurel Echazarreta (a member of the Broadway cast of Head Over Heels); recording and drag artist Freddie; Lea DeLaria (jazz singer and star of Orange Is the New Black); Tiffany Mann (Be More Chill and Waitress on Broadway); George Salazar (Pasadena Playhouse’s Little Shop of Horrors); Emily Skeggs (Fun Home on Broadway) and Shanice Williams (The Wiz on NBC).

Tiffany Mann in “Head Over Heels”

What follows are highlights from my conversations with the cast who made it clear that this show is going to be a party for everyone with dancing by the audience (many of whom have the ability to be on stage) strongly encouraged. As a company they all feel that the show’s themes of inclusivity will be more accepted than it was when Head Over Heels first opened.

George Salazar: I saw the original Broadway company of the original production of Head Over Heels, and I was head over heels in love with that show. 

Alaska 5000: I know Head Over Heels was on Broadway a really short time ago, and so much has changed in our conversation. Now everyone has pronouns after their names in their email. This show is like on the forefront of that. I’m glad we’re doing it right now. 

Yurel Echazarreta: There’s just so much more awareness and even language that we have created. [We’ve] become more aware of the inclusivity and the diversity within humans. I think if the show on Broadway would have happened now it would have been with more cultural awareness. The show helps us chart where we are today. Everything has a time and space and place, and that show helped to get us to where we are here. Now [we’re] able to celebrate an elevated movement even more now.

George Salazar: We as a society and as an industry, we’re really sitting in front of a mirror for a year and a half, questioning – myself included – questioning choices that we’ve made. So this show is a celebration of differences and the celebration of unity among this family, the royal family, they’re so broken and separated. Over the course of this play they see past differences and they work together. By the end there’s this beautiful, renewed love that permeates through this space and I think the audience is really going to feel that.

Tiffany Mann: I think that we have no choice but to sit and first examine ourselves without distraction and in examining ourselves, we realize there are other humans among us and they want to be accepted. And I think in 2021, we have a lower tolerance for people who don’t walk that walk and create lasting human hearts among each other.

Emily Skeggs: I think it’s an understatement to say the world has experienced a seismic shift in a lot of things. What was really exciting to me is there’s this recognition in the world for us to be happy, what kinds of stories where we’re showcasing in the theater and who comes to the theater to experience it and who gets to see themselves.

Freddie: So much has happened in the past year. I think the time is right. I think that people need a sense of community. People are needing a sense of belonging and a space to come together and really feel celebrated. And this is that space. So it’s more than just a show and it’s a celebration of life.

Lea DeLaria and Alaska 5000 in “Head Over Heels”

Lea DeLaria: think The Go-Go’s music can tell any kind of story. I knew them as a punk band. I think their contribution to culture is just big. They deserve to be in the Hall of Fame. They deserve to have a great big fun jukebox musical with their music. 

Tiffany Mann: It’s a part of the heartbeat of this culture of American music.You know the music. As soon as it comes on, you don’t even may not even know that you know the lyrics, but you may find yourself singing along the same such feel good music.

Shanice Williams: The music is timeless. I did not grow up listening to it, but when I hear it it makes me want to dance.

Emily Skeggs: [We’re] inviting the audience to join us in the celebration of who we are.

Freddie: I think queer liberation is about everyone feeling like they are worthy of being celebrated. No matter how you show up, you’re beautiful, you’re amazing, you’re perfect.

Tiffany Mann: Whether you agree with every part of the escape, we all agree that we need more than just a break from all the things that are going on outside of us. I just would invite whoever, regardless of your opinions and your beliefs, to just immerse yourself in the world and you will see a little bit of yourself and everybody else.

George Salazar: I want to welcome audience members who feel like they stick out like a sore thumb. Come here and stick out like a sore thumb with all of us. 

Lea DeLaria: We’ve provided [the audience] a dance floor. I want them to become crazy. I want them to jump up and down on that dance floor like we used to get to The Go-Go’s in the 80s. I just I want them to jump up and down and have a time of their life because this is a celebration for all of us. I think we’re all thrilled to be here. 

Check back later this week for our interview with Jenny Koons and Sam Pinkleton.

Head Over Heels is now playing at the Pasadena Playhouse through December 12th.

Main photo: Alaska 5000 and Lea DeLaria in Head Over Heels (All photos by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

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Best Bets: May 28th – May 31st https://culturalattache.co/2021/05/28/best-bets-may-28th-may-31st/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/05/28/best-bets-may-28th-may-31st/#respond Fri, 28 May 2021 07:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=14570 The Top Ten shows you should see this weekend!

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It’s the first holiday weekend and the traditional start of the summer season. Though things aren’t starting the way we have become accustomed to, there will be more and more live events starting to happen as the summer rolls out. In the meantime, we have your Best Bets: May 28th – May 31st.

In addition to our top pick, Ballet Hispánico, which we announced yesterday, we have a few plays, some jazz, classical, Broadway music and opera for you.

Here are this Memorial Day Weekend’s Best Bets: May 28th – May 31st:

Ballet Hispánico in “Tiburones” (Photo by Paula Lobo/Courtesy Ballet Hispánico)

*TOP PICK*: DANCE Ballet Hispánico 50th Celebration – May 28th – June 10th

Latin dance company Ballet Hispánico celebrates their Diamond Anniversary with the streaming presentation of three new works by Lauren Anderson, Ana “Rokafella” Garcia and Belén Maya and classic works from their repertoire by Graciela Daniele, Nacho Duato, the late Geoffrey Holder, Ann Reinking, Pedro Ruiz and Gustavo Ramirez Sansano.

The show willl feature several special guests.

Amongst them will be Tony Award-winner Lin-Manuel Miranda (Hamilton) and Academy Award nominee Rosie Perez (Fearless).

The show debuts at 6:30 PM ET/3:30 PM PT on May 28th and will remain available for two weeks. There’s no charge to watch this wonderful celebration.

Brandon Kyle Goodman in “The LATRELL Show” (Photo by Tom Dowler/Long Haul Films /courtesy IAMA Theatre Company)

PLAY: The LATRELL Show – IAMA Theatre Company – Now – June 20th

Brandon Kyle Goodman stars in and wrote this play about a talk show host, Latrell Jackson, whose perhaps best known for saying whatever he wants on any subject. He’s quick with the jokes and even quicker to share his opinions.

As a gay Black man, he’s been around the block a few times. As he embarks on filming a very special episode, Latrell is forced to reveal there’s more to his public persona than easy laughs and quick criticism.

Stefanie Black and Devere Rogers co-directed The LATRELL Show. This is definitely a show for those not afraid of frank talk, explicit language and the presentation of ideas that don’t remotely fall into the world of political correctness. In other words, recommended for mature audiences.

Tickets range from $15 to $100 depending on your ability to pay.

Ed Dixon in “Georgie: My Adventures With George Rose” (Photo by Carol Rosseg)

PLAY: Georgie: My Adventures With George Rose – TheaterMania – Now – July 18th

You don’t need to know who George Rose was to enjoy this one-man show. But it doesn’t hurt to have a few facts about this very likable and charismatic performer.

Rose was nominated for five Tony Awards: Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Coco; Best Featured Actor in a Play for My Fat Friend and Best Actor in a Musical for The Pirates of Penzance.

His two other nominations resulted in wins for the actor: Best Actor in a Musical for My Fair Lady (1976 revival) and for The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Ed Dixon, who as a young actor was cast in a production of The Student Prince with Rose, became friends with the older actor. Dixon was gay, but had never experienced someone who was as vocal about being gay as was Rose.

This is the starting point for Dixon’s one-man show that was named Best Solo Performance by the Drama Desk Awards. Throughout the 90-minute show, Dixon tells stories, impersonates not just Rose, but his famous friends like Richard Burton and Katharine Hepburn and offers up some song and dance.

This clip above is not from this film, but from promotional materials from the Signature Theatre.

Tickets are $25.

Kasey Mahaffy, Erika Soto, Justin Lawrence Barnes and Rafael Goldstein in “Alice in Wonderland” (Photo by Craig Schwartz/Courteys A Noise Within)

PLAY: Alice in Wonderland – A Noise Within – May 27th – June 20th

Enough of the adult material, here’s a play for the whole family. Lewis Carroll’s 1865 novel Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland was adapted by Eva Le Gallienne & Florida Friebus for the stage. The show first opened on Broadway for a very short-lived run in 1982 (18 previews and 21 performances.)

Stephanie Shroyer originally conceived and directed this production. Erika Soto plays the title character.

The rest of the cast plays multiple characters with Susan Angelo as the White Queen; Rafael Goldstein as the Mad Hatter; Julanne Chidi Hill as the Cheshire Cat and Justin Lawrence Barns as The Queen of Hearts.

This is an 85-minute film staged by Julia Rodriguez-Elliot. Josh Grondin wrote the original score.

Tickets are $25 – $40. Unlike other productions where you can stream at your leisure, there are set times each day to watch Alice in Wonderland.

Destiny Muhammad (Courtesy San Francisco Symphony)

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Resilience: Destiny Muhammad – San Francisco Symphony – Now Playing

Harpist/vocalist Destiny Muhammad has curated this episode of San Francisco Symphony’s Sound Box series. On her website she is described as representing a genre that ranges from Celtic to Coltrane. She’s well-known in the Bay Area which makes this collaboration with the SF Symphony an obvious fit.

The theme for her Sound Box is Resilience.

She came up with the theme after seeing all her professional engagements get cancelled due to the pandemic. As with most of us, it took both personal and professional resilience to navigate her way through it all.

Muhammad has put together a very impressive program for this filmed concert. The pieces being performed include Confessions to My Unborn Daughter by Ambrose Akinmusire; Tell Him Not to Talk Too Long by Mary Lou Williams; Serenade by William Grant Still and her own composition Hope on the Horizon.

What makes this program of particular note is that the harp is rarely a featured instrument. This won’t be like any other filmed concert you’ve seen recently.

Tickets are $15.

Jessie Mueller with the American Pops Orchestra (Photo by Elman Studio/Courtesy PBS)

BROADWAY VOCALS: One Voice: The Songs We Share – PBS – May 28th (check local listings)

In this new PBS series, Luke Frazier leads the American Pops Orchestra in a celebration of the songs that have come from Broadway. Whether you know the songs because you saw the musicals themselves or heard them performed by popular singers and bands, you know the songs. By the way, did you know The Beatles recorded a song from The Music Man?

In this episode Tony Award winner Jessie Mueller is one of the performers. She originated the role of Carole King in Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. Also on this show are Amber Iman (Shuffle Along, or The Making of the Musical Sensation of 1921 and All that Followed); tap dancer Luke Hawkins; RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 9 top 5 finisher Alexis Michelle and Sam Simahk (2018 revival of Carousel).

These artists will be performing songs from Carousel, Damn Yankees, Funny Girl, Hello Dolly!, La Cage Aux Folles, The Roar of the Greasepaint The Smell of the Crowd and The Wiz.

A second episode, which immediately follows on most stations, will featured sacred music and includes Michelle Williams from Destiny’s Child; American Idol’s Justin Guarini; soprano Maureen McKay and more.

David Donnelly and Teo Dubreuil in “Within The Golden Hour” (Photo by Tristan Kenton/Courtesy ROH)

DANCE: 21st Century Choreographers – Royal Ballet – May 28th – June 27th

Kyle Abraham, Crystal Pite and Christopher Wheeldon are the choreographers whose work is showcased in this program from The Royal Ballet in the United Kingdom.

Wheeldon’s Within the Golden Hour, created for the San Francisco Ballet is up first. Abraham’s duet, a precursor to a longer work that was commissioned by the Royal Ballet for their 2021-2022 season follows.

The program concludes with Pite’s Statement and Solo Echo. The latter piece set to the music of Johannes Brahms.

Tickets are £16, which is being billed out as $18.50 on The Royal Ballet website.

A still from Blackhorse Lowe’s “Gallup” (Photo by Blackhorse Lowe/Courtesy LA Opera)

OPERA: Gallup (Na’nízhoozhí) – LA Opera – Debuts May 28th

Gallup, New Mexico, is called Na’nízhoozhí in the Navajo language. It’s also the location of this digital short from LA Opera. What stands out about this particular piece is that it features new music composed by Matthew Aucoin. He is the composer of the opera Eurydice which had its world premiere at LA Opera in February of 2020.

Singing in this piece are Anthony Roth Costanzo and Davóne Tines. (Two other terrific reasons to watch Gallup).

Two men from the Navajo Nation are also involved: director Blackhorse Lowe and Jake Skeets whose poetry was set to music by Aucoin.

This isn’t a perspective we commonly get to see in the performing arts. I, for one, can’t wait to see and hear this work.

Curtis Taylor (Courtesy his website)

JAZZ: Curtis Taylor Quartet – Jazz at LACMA – Debuts May 28th – 9:00 PM ET/6:00 PM PT

As restrictions start to get lifted, programming like Friday Jazz on the plaza at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art might return. Until that time, LACMA continues debuting filmed performances. This week’s features trumpeter Curtis Taylor.

Taylor, who originates from Ohio but calls Los Angeles home, is a bandleader and an in-demand musician. Amongst the artists with whom he has recorded and/or toured are Cyrus Chestnut, Billy Childs, Gregory Porter and Patrice Rushen. He’s also toured with the legendary James Carter as a member of his quintet.

His most recent album, Snapshot, was released in 2019.

This concert will also include an interview with Taylor. This concert will be available for viewing after its debut on LACMA’s YouTube Channel.

George Salazar (Photo by Nathan Johnson/Courtesy Seth Concert Series)

BROADWAY VOCALS: George Salazar – Seth Concert Series – May 30th – 3:00 PM ET/12:00 PM PT

The first show I saw George Salazar in was Here Lies Love at the Public Theater in New York. The other show I saw him in was Pasadena Playhouse’s Little Shop of Horrors in the fall of 2019. Between those two productions he made his Broadway debut in the 2011 revival of Godspell and starred in the musical Be More Chill.

I’m sure he’ll have plenty to talk about with Seth Rudetsky in this weekend’s Seth Concert Series. He’s also a good singer, which makes him a great guest.

I’m sure he’ll have plenty to talk about with Seth Rudetsky in this weekend’s Seth Concert Series. He’s also a good singer, which makes him a great guest.

If you can’t catch this show as it streams live on Sunday afternoon, there will be a rerun on Sunday at 8:00 PM ET/5:00 PM PT. Tickets for either showing are $25.

There are no significant performing arts events on Monday’s holiday. So that completes this week’s Best Bets: May 28th – May 31st. But you know there are always going to be a few reminders:

JAZZ: Saturday is your last chance to watch the worldwide International Jazz Day 2021 Concert with performances by Dee Dee Bridgewater, Gerald Clayton, Andra Day, Herbie Hancock, Stefon Harris, Dianne Reeves and more.

BROADWAY VOCALS: Monday is your last day to catch Sutton Foster’s Bring Me to Light concert with special guests Raúl Esparza, Joaquina Kalukango, Kelli O’Hara and Wren Rivera.

OPERA: Last weekend’s Met Stars Live in Concert performance by Isabel Leonard, Ailyn Pérez and Nadine Sierra is available on demand through June 4th.

VARIOUS: Monday is the final day to catch a multitude of performances that were part of the Voices of Hope Festival from Carnegie Hall. This includes performances by The Kronos Quartet, Ute Lemper, Jason Moran, Davóne Tines with Jennifer Koh and more.

PLAY: Christine Quintana’s Clean starts its week of streaming as part of South Coast Repertory’s Pacific Playwrights Festival.

OPERA: The operas available this week from the Metropolitan Opera are the 1996-1997 season production of Giordano’s Fedora on Friday; the 2010-2011 production of Strauss’s Capriccio on Saturday and Rossini’s Le Comte Ory from the same season on Saturday. Monday is the start of Aria Code: The Operas Behind the Podcast (the Met’s collaboration with WQXR) and will feature the 2019-2020 season production of Puccini’s Turandot.

That should keep you pretty well occupied this weekend. With this much to see, who has time for a barbecue?

Enjoy your weekend! Enjoy the performing arts!

Photo: Ballet Hispánico in Línea Recta (Photo by Paula Lobo/Courtesy Ballet Hispánico)

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Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/16/best-bets-october-16th-october-18th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/16/best-bets-october-16th-october-18th/#respond Fri, 16 Oct 2020 07:01:11 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11146 Over a dozen performances to enjoy this weekend

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The first thing you might notice about Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th is I’ve left out the words at home. This doesn’t reflect a re-thinking of our coverage. Instead, for the first time during the pandemic I have a live event you can attend as part of this weekend’s listings (if you live in Los Angeles).

As I mentioned a couple weeks ago, cultural events are picking up now that we’ve entered the traditional fall season. This week proves that point as we have 13 different shows for you to consider. Plus a few reminders, just in case you don’t find something you like. But seriously, what are the odds of that?

So here are our Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th:

The company of “Shipwreck” in rehearsal (Photo courtesy The Public Theater)

Shipwreck – The Public Theater – October 16th – 12:00 PM EDT/9:00 AM PDT

Starting on Friday – for an open-ended run – is a radio play from The Public Theater called Shipwreck. This is a recent work from playwright Anne Washburn who was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 2009.

The play was scheduled to be part of The Public Theater’s 2020 season and has been recorded and produced for listening at home.

In Shipwreck a group of friends have gathered in upstate New York. What starts out as a glorious day, suddenly turns dark and stormy. That applies to both the weather and to the relationships. It turns out that even close, liberal friends, can find their belief systems challenged in present-day America.

Performing Shipwreck are Mia Barron, Brooke Bloom, Phillip James Brannon, Rob Campbell, Bill Camp, Raúl Esparza, Jenny Jules, Sue Jean Kim, Bruce McKenzie, Joe Morton, Jeremy Shamos and Richard Topol. Saheem Ali directs.

When the Almeida Theatre in London produced Shipwreck in 2019, the play earned strong reviews. Amongst them was this comment from Michael Billington writing in The Guardian: “…this is an important play that not only examines the Trump phenomenon but also asks why he was elected: one character shocks his friends by explaining that he voted for Trump because a failing democracy needs a shock to the system. It is precisely the argument you sometimes hear in Britain about a no-deal Brexit being a catalyst for change.”

Andra Day (Courtesy Buskin Records)

Andra Day – Los Angeles Philharmonic Sound/Stage – October 16th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

The fourth episode of the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Sound/Stage online series starts running on Friday and it is the first one to feature a solo artist without the orchestra: singer/songwriter Andra Day.

Day is perhaps best known for her hit song, Rise Up. She’ll perform that song along with Gold (both songs are from her 2015 album Cheers to the Fall) and also Nina Simone’s classic song, Mississippi Goddam. She will also appear in an interview as part of the program.

Included in the program as well will be performances from Flypoet Summer Classic that was filmed at The Ford.

For details about the full Sound/Stage series, please check out our full preview here.

The Donmar Warehouse production of “Henry IV” (Courtesy St. Ann’s Warehouse)

Henry IV – St. Ann’s Warehouse – October 16th – October 22nd – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT

Brooklyn’s St. Ann’s Warehouse has partnered with London’s Donmar Warehouse to stream Shakespeare Trilogy on Film, three of his plays performed by all-female casts. They began by streaming the 2013 production of Julius Caesar last week. (Don’t worry, you have another chance to see it).

This week the 2016 production of Henry IV is streaming.

Phyllida Lloyd (who, for better or worse, was the director of Mamma Mia! both on stage and screen) directed all three plays.

In this version of Henry IV, the two Shakespeare plays have been condensed into one 135-minute play. Harriet Walter, who is perhaps best known for her roles in Sense and Sensibility and Atonement, plays Henry.

Ben Brantley of the New York Times, called Walter “one of the great Shakespearean interpreters of her generation” in his review of this production when it played St. Ann’s Warehouse in 2015.

He also said of Lloyd’s Henry IV, which is set in a women’s prison, “It’s a multilayered act of liberation. Prisoners are allowed to roam the wide fields of Shakespeare’s imagination; fine actresses are given the chance to play meaty roles that have been denied them; and we get to climb out of the straitjackets of our traditional perceptions of a venerated play.”

The third play in this trilogy is The Tempest, which will become available on October 23rd – October 29th. But fear not, the entire trilogy (which includes Julius Caesar) will be available for streaming at will October 30th – November 1st. All viewings are free.

Mary Stallings (Photo by Ronald David/Courtesy SFJAZZ)

Mary Stallings and Bill Charlap Trio – SFJAZZ – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

This week’s Friday’s at Five concert from SFJAZZ features vocalist Mary Stallings with the Bill Charlap Trio (which includes Peter Washington on bass and Kenny Washington on drums). The concert is from March, 2018.

If Mary Stallings isn’t familiar to you, let me start by sharing this review from her concert.

“At 78, Stallings has entered territory that’s largely uncharted. Her voice sounds remarkably lithe and strong, and her gift for blues-tinged phrasing links her directly to matriarchs Billie Holiday and Dinah Washington.

“The only precedent for a world-class jazz vocalist sounding this good closing in on 80 is Ernestine Anderson (the extraordinary Sheila Jordan is still going strong at 89, but she’s a very different kind of jazz singer). Considering how relatively little Stallings has recorded, her performances feel like precious, ephemeral experiences, and she made the most of her time with Charlap’s trio, a unit that’s been touring and recording together for more than two decades.”

Those were the words of Andrew Gilbert writing in the San Francisco Classical Voice.

Stallings’ most recent album was last year’s Songs Were Made to Sing. She has kept some pretty fine company during her career: Tony Bennett, Billy Eckstine, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Joe Williams and the list goes on. Her best known recording was Cal Tjader Plays, Mary Stallings Sings which came out in 1960.

This collaboration with the Bill Charlap Trio should be a great way to start your weekend.

The lead cast of “Sticks & Stones”

Sticks & Stones – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

The story of David versus Goliath gets a new telling in the musical Sticks & Stones which was written by composer John McDaniel and lyricist/bookwriter Scott Logsdon.

A concert performance of Sticks & Stones will stream this weekend as a fundraiser for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and Lady Gaga’s Born This Way Foundation.

Teen bullying is the theme of Sticks & Stones with the Biblical story serving as the setting for the story.

An impressive cast has been assembled for the concert. Audra McDonald plays David’s mother, Nizevet. Javier Muñoz, who was the first actor to take over the title role in Hamilton after Lin-Manuel Miranda left the show, plays David’s father, Jesse. George Salazar, who appeared in Be More Chill, plays King Saul. Joshua Colley (2014 revival of Les Misérables) is David and Mykal Kilgore (Motown: The Musical) is The Prophet Samuel.

The concert will be available for streaming through October 20th. There is no charge to watch Sticks & Stones, but donations are encouraged.

Aaron Diehl Trio – Caramoor – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Because I think he is one of the finest pianists working today, I’ve written about Aaron Diehl a few times and have interviewed him. He plays both jazz and classical music. (You can read the interview here.)

For this concert he’ll be performing standards and some of his own compositions with Aaron Kimmel on drums and Paul Sikivie on bass.

Rather than reiterate his credits or offer more praise, just listen to the music.

This concert is streaming from Caramoor in Katonah, NY which is a bit more than 40 miles from Manhattan. They are presenting the Aaron Diehl Trio in association with Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Tickets are free for Caramoor members. If you’re not a member, there is a $10 fee to watch the live stream concert.

Ben Williams (Courtesy his website)

Ben Williams Live – Blue Note New York – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

At the 2009 Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz International Bass Competition, the musicians had a mightily impressive jury to win over. Ron Carter, Charlie Haden, Dave Holland, Robert Hurst, Christian McBride and John Patitucci were the judges. They awarded 1st place to Ben Williams.

Williams will be performing live from Blue Note in New York on Friday.

In addition to the live stream listed above, there is an encore showing at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT.

Lest you think his competition victory was a fluke, he’s gone on to work with George Benson, Terence Blanchard, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Stefon Harris, Roy Hargrove, Chaka Kahn, Pharrell and many more.

His most recent album is I Am a Man which was released earlier this year. It’s a terrific album. He also released an instrumental-only version called I Am a Man: Mentals.

Tickets for either the live performance or the re-stream are $15.

Los Angeles Dance Festival Week #3 – October 16th – October 18th

The third week of Los Angeles Dance Festival is upon us. The show, which runs two hours, becomes available at 9:00 PM EDT/6:00 PM PDT on October 16th and will remain available until 3:00 AM EDT/12:00 AM PDT on October 19th.

This week’s line-up features Charlotte Katherine & Co (modern dance), Nannette Brodie Dance Theater (modern dance), Kybele Dance (multi-cultural contemporary dance), Poets In Motion, MarieElena Martingano & Camryn Eakes, John Castagna (contemporary ballet), Louise Reichlin & Dancers/Los Angeles Choreographers & Dancers (contemporary dance), The Dance Narrative Project, Lula Washington Dance Theatre (modern dance) and SIDFIT South Korean Artists: Lee Jihee, Kim Jubin. 

San Francisco Opera’s “Atilla” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy SF Opera)

Atilla – SF Opera – October 17th – October 18th (begins 10:00 AM through 11:59 on 10/18)

This marks the second weekend of opera productions streamed by San Francisco Opera this fall. This weekend finds a rarely performed opera by Giuseppe Verdi: Atilla.

Verdi’s opera, his ninth, had its premiere in Venice in 1846. The libretto was based on Zacharias Werner’s play Attila, König der Hunnen (Attila, King of the Huns) and was written by Temistocle Solera.

Atilla isn’t an easy man to please. Odabella, a prisoner of war, hopes to kill Atilla in retribution for his killing of her father. Ezio, a Roman Envoy, wants to cause havoc in the empire with Atilla’s help. Instead he infuriates him.

Amongst those who have survived the carnage that is dividing the empire is Foresto. He reunites with Odabella who had assumed he was dead.

Meanwhile Attila has a dream where an old man tells him not to enter Rome. He disregards the advice and marches in. In doing so, he sets off a series of events that will ultimately lead to his death.

This 2012 production marked the return of Atilla to San Francisco Opera after 21 years. Ferruccio Furlanetto sings the title role. Ana Lucrecia García sings Odabella. Diego Torre is Foresto and Quinn Kelsey sings the role of Ezio. Gabriele Lavia directed and Nicola Luisotti conducted.

In looking up reviews of this production, my favorite quote comes from Joshua Kosman writing in the San Francisco Gate. He wrote, “…it was a swift, short onslaught marked by ferocity and thunder. The difference was that only the title character died, and everybody else had a grand time.”

Atilla runs 1 hour and 50 minutes. It will become available at 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT and ends on Sunday, October 18th at 11:59 PM PDT/2:59 AM EDT on October 19th.

Orpheus performs digital concert with Liev Schriber and Karen Slack at Hilldale Park, 10/01/2020. Photo by Chris Lee (Courtesy Orpheus Chamber Orchestra)

Speaking Truth to Power – Orpheus Chamber Orchestra – October 17th – October 22nd

Most classical music fans are well-acquainted with Ludwig van Beethoven’s Egmont Overture. Fewer are familiar with the subsequent nine pieces that follow which call for soprano, narrator and orchestra.

In Beethoven’s work (inspired by a play by Johann Wolfgang Goethe) he used the story of Lamoral, Count of Egmont, whose execution prior to the start of the Eighty Years’ War inspired a movement that led to Netherlands’ independence.

The composer was using this work as a statement against Napoleon.

The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra has commissioned a new translation to reflect our present-day world. Egmont was adapted by playwright/translator Philip Boehm.

Joining Orpheus for this performance are Liev Schreiber as the narrator and Karen Slack singing the soprano parts.

Schreiber won a Tony Award for his performance in the 2005 production of David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross. He also starred in the Showtime series Ray Donovan.

Slack made her Metropolitan Opera debut in their 2006 production of Verdi’s Luisa Miller. She also sang the role of Emelda Griffith in Terence Blanchard’s Champion at San Francisco Opera. (That production will be streaming next week by SFJAZZ beginning on October 21st.)

The concert was recorded in Beechwood Park in Hillsdale, New Jersey, following social distancing guidelines.

Speaking Truth to Power begins streaming at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT on October 17th and remains available through October 22nd. Tickets to watch the performance are $15.

Lizz Wright (Photo by Jesse Kit/Courtesy Kurland Agency)

Lizz Wright – Mandolin – October 17th – 9:00 PM EDT/6:00 PM PDT $15

I’ve seen singer Lizz Wright several times in concert. From the first time I heard her 2003 record, Salt, I was hooked. She has a beautiful voice and has a unique ability to make each song she sings her own.

Rather inexplicably she has only recorded five other albums since her debut. The most recent was 2017’s Grace. She does appear on No Beginning No End 2 by José James which was released earlier this year.

If you don’t know Lizz Wright, I strongly encourage checking out this concert. If you do, you know how terrific it’ll be.

Ticket are $15.

Jon Lawrence Rivera (Photo by Kelly Stuart)

March – Los Angeles LGBT Center Anita May Rosentein Campus Parking Lot – October 17th – November 15th

Our first live and in-person event (and the reason the title of this column was changed). The venue is the parking lot below the Anita May Rosentein Campus at the Los Angeles LGBT Center. Sixteen cars will be admitted per performance. The audio will be broadcast to you through your radio.

The title of this play is March and it was conceived and directed by Jon Lawrence Rivera. The cast has contributed to the writing of the play during exercises and rehearsals.

A pandemic is gripping the world in March. The time could be a quarter century into the future – or not. Three Trans/Gender Non-Confirming women need to find a place where The Military will not find them. Not much is known beyond that. A little mystique never hurt anyone, did it?

The cast of March includes Miss Barbie Q (MJ), Chad Christopher, Matthew Clark, Amir Levi, Marcelino Mendoza, Coretta Monk, and Roland Ruiz.

What makes this so appealing is that Rivera is one of the most interesting and talented writer/directors working in Los Angeles theater. I have no idea what to expect from March, but I have absolutely no doubt that it will be fascinating.

Performances take place only on Saturday and Sunday. There are two performances each night. One at 7:30 PM and one at 9:00 PM. The per car price to attend is $20.

Keala Settle (Courtesy her Facebook page)

Keala Settle & Seth Rudetsky – October 18th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Anyone who saw The Greatest Showman knows who Keala Settle is. She introduced the song This Is Me to the world in her role as Lettie Lutz, the bearded lady in the film. She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest this week for his conversation/concert show.

If you only know Settle from that film, you’re missing out. She was memorable as Norma Valverde in Hands on a Hardbody. It’s a role that yielded multiple nominations including a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She’s appeared in the musicals Les Misérables, Waitress, Hairspray and South Pacific.

If the Sunday live performance does not work for you, there will be an encore showing of the concert on Monday, October 19th at 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT. Tickets for each showing are $25.

That’s the official list of Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th. A few reminders before we go:

Donizetti Week at the Metropolitan Opera concludes this weekend with Maria Stuarda on Friday; Roberto Devereux on Saturday and Don Pasquale on Sunday. You can read our full preview here.

Table Top Shakespeare: At Home has the following plays this weekend: Henry VI, Part 2 on Friday; Henry VI, Part 3 on Saturday and Richard III on Sunday. You can read our preview here.

Part 2 of Evelina Fernández’s A Mexican Trilogy is now streaming from Latino Theater Company. The play is called Hope and will be available through October 22nd. For details read our preview here.

That is my complete list of your Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th. Whatever you choose to watch, I hope you enjoy!

Photo: Aaron Diehl (Photo by Maria Jarzyna/Courtesy AaronDiehl.com)

Update: Center Theatre Group has changed the dates for Luis Alfaro’s trilogy of plays. Though originally announced to start this week, they have been rescheduled to start November 6th. We have removed “Electricidad” from this weekend’s Best Bets.

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Night of a Thousand Judys https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/12/night-of-a-thousand-judys/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/12/night-of-a-thousand-judys/#respond Sun, 12 Jul 2020 23:12:27 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9690 ThousandJudys.com

July 14th

8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

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For eight years, New York has celebrated Judy Garland with an annual concert called Night of a Thousand Judys. This year, thanks to the pandemic, the event will be taking place online and available for all to see. The concert begins at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT on Tuesday, July 14th and can be viewed at the event’s website. If you can’t make it as it happens live, Night of a Thousand Judys will remain on the website for one month.

This annual event is a fundraiser for the Ali Forney Center which serves LGBT homeless youth. You don’t need to make a donation to watch the concert, but donations are obviously encouraged.

The line-up of talent for this year’s Night of a Thousand Judys is stellar: Tony winners Lena Hall (Hedwig and the Angry Inch) and Alice Ripley (Next to Normal) are joined by Tony nominees Beth Malone (Fun Home); Eva Noblezada (Hadestown), Adam Pascal (Rent). They are joined by Ann Hampton Callaway, Spencer Day, Natalie Douglas, Nathan Lee Graham, Ann Harada (Avenue Q), L Morgan Lee (A Strange Loop), George Salazar (Be More Chill), Billy Stritch, T. Oliver Reid (Hadestown), Jessica Vosk (Wicked) and Bright Light Bright Light.

Justin Sayre is the host for Night of a Thousand Judys. He’s the executive story editor and writer for the television series The Cool Kids and 2 Broke Girls.

What can you expect from this show? Each artist will put their own stamp on a song recorded by Judy Garland. Think The Wizard of Oz, The Harvey Girls, A Star Is Born, Summer Stock and perhaps a song or two from her Carnegie Hall concert.

Whether you are a friend of Judy’s, a fan of Judy’s or just want to enjoy some good music, Night of a Thousand Judys is an annual tradition that we will all get to see this year! Or as Judy sang in her most popular song, “The dreams that you dare to dream really do come true.”

Photo of Judy Garland is a publicity still for The Harvey Girls.

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More Cabaret from Feinstein’s/54 Below https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/12/more-cabaret-from-feinsteins-54-below/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/05/12/more-cabaret-from-feinsteins-54-below/#respond Tue, 12 May 2020 19:59:54 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=8974 Feinstein's/54 Below YouTube Channel

May 12th - May 17th

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Last month we highlighted one of New York’s most ambitious schedule of streaming cabaret events. There’s now more cabaret from Feinstein’s/54 Below and we’re sharing this week’s highlights with you. Each event becomes available at 6:30 PM EDT/3:30 PM PDT on their YouTube Channel.

The Year of Living Dangerously – May 12th

It never occurred to me that Peter Weir’s 1982 film The Year of Living Dangerously would make a good musical. But I have to admit, it never occurred to me that it wouldn’t. Thomas Tierney and Jeffrey Haddow have adapted the novel by Christopher J. Koch and this is a concert presentation of the musical.

Scarlett Strallen (A Gentlemen’s Guide to Love and Murder) takes on the role of Jill, played in the film by Sigourney Weaver. She’s a homesick attaché at the British Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia in 1965. Guy Hamilton, played in the film by Mel Gibson, is an Australian reporter covering the events there as the nation teeters on the edge of revolution. Kevin Earley (A Tale of Two Cities) plays this part. An in the role of Billy Kwan, the diminutive Australian-Chinese photojournalist, is Marc delaCruz (If Then.) Filmgoers might remember that this is the part for which Linda Hunt won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Andy Karl and Orfeh: Legally Bound – May 14th

We previously wrote about this show when married couple Andy Karl and Orfeh performed at Feinstein’s at Vitello’s. You can read the show’s description here.

Joe Iconis and Family – May 15th

When Be More Chill opened on Broadway last spring, it became almost a cult musical. Its fans and followers were devastated when the show didn’t reach a broader audience and closed in August. Joe Iconis wrote the music and lyrics for the musical.

When he isn’t writing musicals, he’s often found on the stage at Feinstein’s/54Below performing with his “family.” By family we mean his extended family. In this concert from May of 2019, his family included his Be More Chill cast members George Salazar, Morgan Siobhan Green, Gerard Canonico, Lauren Marcus and Jason SweetTooth Williams, plus Annie Golden, Krysta Rodriguez, Nick Blaemire and over a dozen more performers.

For fans of Iconis’ work, according to his website he has three musicals in development: The Untitled Unauthorized Hunter S. Thompson Musical, Punk Rock Girl and Love In Hate Nation.

54 Sings Grand Hotel: The 25th Anniversary Concert – May 17th

In 1990, Grand Hotel was nominated for 12 Tony Awards including Best Musical. It won five of those awards including two for Director/Choreographer Tommy Tune and one for the late Michael Jeter for Best Featured Actor in a Musical.

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the show, original cast members Liliane Montevecchi, Karen Akers, Tim Jerome, Walter Willison, Brent Barrett, Ben George, David Jackson, Ken Jennings, Hal Robinson, Meg Tolin Piper, David White, Penny Worth and Chip Zien reunited to sing the songs of Robert Wright, George Forrest and Maury Yeston. They are joined in this concert by Michael Choi, Bill Coyne, Joshua Dixon, Erin Marie, Nathan Meyer, Chelsie Nectow, Michael Jayne Walker and Jackie Washam.

There’s even More Cabaret from Feinstein’s/54 Below next week. Check back for updates!

Photo Joe Iconis by Ben Arons/Courtesy of Joe Iconis’ website

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A Little Shop Talk… https://culturalattache.co/2019/09/25/a-little-shop-talk/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/09/25/a-little-shop-talk/#respond Wed, 25 Sep 2019 14:00:23 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=6878 "I was most excited about the casting, not because it is diverse, but because it felt so right."

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It’s two weeks before the official opening night at the Pasadena Playhouse for their production of the Howard Ashman and Alan Menken musical Little Shop of Horrors. The cast has been in the rehearsal room (which in this case is the Carrie Hamilton Theatre) and are on the cusp of moving onto the main stage for the remaining rehearsals before performances begin.

So what do they do? A press event where two songs are previewed (Downtown and Somewhere That’s Green.) Then it was time to talk. So here are excerpts from my conversations with the cast and director of Little Shop of Horrors.

Mj Rodridugez from "Pose" plays "Audrey"
(L-R) Brittany Campbell, Mj Rodriguez, Cheyenne Isabel Wells and Tickwanya Jones in Little Shop of Horrors. (Photo byJenny Graham)

Mj Rodriguez plays Audrey. She is best known for her role as Bianca on Pose.

It was definitely a show I wanted to be a part of. Before this happened I always thought I’d be one of the Ronettes.  This is the best surprise I could have gotten. Playing Audrey and being a woman of color and not being a stereotypical blonde, I think we’re stepping out of the range of that and not pinpointing women to be dumb blondes.

George Salazar plays Seymour. He was most recently seen in Broadway’s Be More Chill.

I sang Suddenly Seymour with a trans actress at a NY Civil Liberties Union benefit. From that point on I was telling people I wanted to do Little Shop with a trans actress as Audrey. I felt that made sense and how important I think it is that we do a production like the one we are doing here to normalize everything. We are all human beings just trying to tell stories.

Pasadena Playhouse's production of "Little Shop of Horrors" opens tonight
Kevin Chamberlin and George Salazar in “Little Shop of Horrors” (Photo by Jenny Graham)

Kevin Chamberlin (Dirty Blonde) plays Mr. Mushnik.

I think it’s very edgy and I hate to use the word “woke,” but it is aware. There are other productions. I think this is the first time it has been done using a trans actress in the role. I hope it is the beginning of a long trend.

Mike Donohue directs the show. He’s the director behind The Legend of Georgia McBride (seen in Los Angeles at the Geffen Playhouse).

I think something we’ve all been thinking about is this show started in this gritty downtown theatre. It’s not a big slick, fancy show. It was written to be dry and toothy. Thinking of that grit has been an important thing for us here.

Amber Riley (London’s Dreamgirls) sings the part of Audrey II (the plant).

After talking to Mike about his vision about what this was going to be, I just jumped at the chance to do it. After all, who doesn’t want to be an alien plant? He wanted to create this world on skid row that looked like this world and I thought that was so intriguing. And what a challenge to play a role sung by a male baritone and I’m a female soprano.

Howard Ashman and Alan Menken wrote "Little Shop of Horrors"
Matthew Wilkas and George Salazar in “Little Shop of Horrors” (Photo by Jeff Lorch)

Matthew Wilkas plays Dr. Orin Scrivello. He’s known for his role in Gayby.

I think right now it is a really great time because it’s basically a show about capitalism and how money and greed destroy people and society. There’s a plant that says “you have to feed me human blood” in order to become successful and this guy does that. Today with Trump being President and all that’s going on in the world, we can see how capitalism and money is costing us so much morally.

Chamberlin:   It’s a camp classic based on the Roger Corman film. It has the whole theme of this plant brings out the worst in people. The capitalistic greed, to want to kill for fame and success. And it touches everyone in the show – literally and figuratively.

Salazar:  It’s equally parts silly, equal parts absurd, equal parts honest and heartbreaking. Menken & Ashman found such a beautiful way for this world to exist in a believable way.

Mj Rodriguez and George Salazar head the cast of "Little Shop of Horrors"
The cast of “Little Shop of Horrors” (Photo by Jenny Graham)

Donohue:  It does actually have this profound vulnerability to it. It’s a story about people who are profoundly lonely and isolated because of their circumstances and they are longing for a connection and to feel seen and taken care of and have someone who champions them and roots for them. I find the show surprisingly emotional.

Salazar: What I really appreciate about this production is that this feel likes any street in any town I walk on. For me, being mixed race, it feels really important for young mixed race people, they see themselves represented on stage.

Riley: I think it says, as far as the casting, to look for talent outside of what you may think is the norm. And people are a lot more capable than we give them credit for. Talent comes in all sorts of packages.

Rodriguez: There’s not the challenge of me singing it, but there’s the mental challenge of what people are going to think. Because this is someone totally different and I sing differently. I’ve always had this range, but I haven’t had the ability to do this on a broad scale like this.

Wilkas: I hope it doesn’t feel weird. It makes complete sense to me. I was most excited about the casting, not because it is diverse, but because it felt so right. I think every person in this cast is perfectly suited for their role. I’m excited to see Mj in this – Ellen Greene [who originated the role of Audrey and also played the part in the film version] made it so iconic. Mj’s take is completely different and completely valid and I think will elevate the production and the part as well.

Chamberlin: It’s a testament to the show that it works on the high and the low level. It’s scrappy and it’s also sophisticated. They are saying something timeless.

Little Shop of Horrors has its official opening tonight and will run through October 20th at the Pasadena Playhouse

Main photo:  George Salazar in “Little Shop of Horrors” (Photo by Jenny Graham)/All photos courtesy of the Pasadena Playhouse

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