Largo at the Coronet Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/largo-at-the-coronet/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Thu, 14 Nov 2019 19:15:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Get On Your Knees (NSFW) https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/11/get-on-your-knees-nsfw/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/11/get-on-your-knees-nsfw/#respond Mon, 11 Nov 2019 21:24:34 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=7328 Largo at the Coronet

November 12th - November 13th

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For those who might think this is a variation of the Gloria Estefan musical, you couldn’t be more mistaken. In fact, Jacqueline Novak’s Get On Your Knees, is a one-woman show about the act of fellatio. (Okay, we’re not going to be able to use that term repeatedly, so for those easily offended, please go to another posting.) There are two sold-out performances on Tuesday and Wednesday at Largo at the Coronet.

In her enormously well-received show, Novak spends nearly an hour-and-a-half talking about blowjobs (and other sex acts.) There’s some history, there are personal experiences, there’s keenly observed commentary and there is a celebration of the absurd.

In her New York Times review of the show, which named On Your Knees a Critic’s Pick,  Alexis Soloski said of the show, “The penis is her ostensible subject, yet there are other stories here: a coming-of-age one, and another about what it means to be the not-so-proud owner of both a sack of sex potatoes built, at least in part, to give pleasure to men, and a brain that finds a lot of the business of sex farcical.”

Whether great reviews or perverse curiosity inspired ticket sales, these two shows are sold out. You can always try to go the website to see if tickets might show up, but your best bet is to go directly to the theatre in hopes of catching a cancellation.

Artwork courtesy of Largo at the Coronet

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Tim Minchin Brings Matilda The Musical to Los Angeles https://culturalattache.co/2015/06/05/tim-minchin-brings-matilda-the-musical-to-los-angeles/ https://culturalattache.co/2015/06/05/tim-minchin-brings-matilda-the-musical-to-los-angeles/#respond Fri, 05 Jun 2015 21:06:44 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=815 It’s been six years since composer Tim Minchin began his public journey with Matilda The Musical. His adaptation of Roald Dahl’s classic book has won awards on both sides of the Atlantic. This week the touring production opens at the Ahmanson Theatre. On Monday, Minchin will be performing his stand-up material during a sold-out concert […]

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It’s been six years since composer Tim Minchin began his public journey with Matilda The Musical. His adaptation of Roald Dahl’s classic book has won awards on both sides of the Atlantic. This week the touring production opens at the Ahmanson Theatre. On Monday, Minchin will be performing his stand-up material during a sold-out concert at Largo at the Coronet.

At this point asking Minchin about his journey with the show seems redundant. Particularly since he articulated it so well in a recent article in the Sydney Morning Herald. Our conversation was predominantly about the use and role of satire in his comedy music and in musical comedy.

“I don’t think they are as different as people might think,” he says. “I guess there are a couple of distinctions. When you are writing to serve a narrative I think musicals work best when the songs are telling you something about the character, something about the story and telling the audience something about themselves. Every song should have that goal and how much you succeed is for other people to judge.”

He offers specific examples in Matilda. “’Loud’ is a social satire about opinion over information. ‘Quiet’ is about the need to find space. And ‘Miracle’ is about parents’ rose-colored glasses view of their own children. They have breaks, but you set the story as well. In comedy you just have to find something you are angry about and make it rhyme.”

Minchin laments the lack of use of satire in most contemporary musicals. “I think satire and wit is fundamental to what makes a good musical,” he offers. “Making musical theatre not mawkish or not saccharine is the first challenge. Wit is your first go-to thing to avoid mawkishness, to avoid over-sentimentality that, rather than making you care, makes you not want to. I think if you can get it right you can be incredibly disarming.”

Whether because of the success of Matilda or in spite of it’s success and the success of his stand-up work, Minchin can be self-deprecating. “I think my comedy is very manipulative,” he observes, “arguably not very funny. I’ve never read a book about the structure of jokes. I’m sure what I do is a fucking cliché and I’m sure I use the same tricks, but I wouldn’t know. I don’t ever unpack it until I’m having these conversations really. I’m quite good at getting my brain out of the way of stuff. I think to make art you need a lot of craft. You need some chops to take a great photo. To paint you need to know how to use paints and a brush. But once you’ve got some chops you need to try and forget about it. Pretend it’s not there. Pretend it’s an emotional and not an intellectual thing. Kind of suspend your disbelief a bit and try and write some version of the truth.”

Next up is a musical adaptation of the 1993 film Groundhog Day that will premiere next year in England. “Groundhog Day is in some ways more musically pop,” he says. “That’s a terrible phrase. What I mean is there are songs you could play on the radio that there isn’t in Matilda because they are so narrative and wacky and a bit dark. Groundhog Day is about how to live your life. I’ve thought really hard about how to reflect these stages of his life in music and what does that mean? What is he falling towards musically? What has he learned and how do you make that sing?”

After these first years of Matilda’s life, does he feel by doing interviews and attending openings like he’s in his own Groundhog Day? “Well if it is than I should be learning how to see things from a new angle without having to change my circumstance. I suppose that’s the lesson, isn’t it?”

Photo Credit: Joan Marcus

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