Paul Rudnick Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/paul-rudnick/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Tue, 23 Mar 2021 10:56:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 22nd https://culturalattache.co/2021/03/19/four-days-of-best-bets-march-19th-march-22nd/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/03/19/four-days-of-best-bets-march-19th-march-22nd/#respond Fri, 19 Mar 2021 07:01:15 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=13525 Over twenty options to enjoy culture at home this weekend!

The post Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 22nd appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

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Welcome to the weekend. For my Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 22nd plays are truly available in great abundance this weekend. There are nine different productions you can watch.

But that’s not all! There are operas both old and new; dance both modern and ballet; vocalists singing standards and show tunes; several jazz concert options; contemporary classical music and witty banter to start your weekend off just right. We have nearly two dozen options for you!

With so many plays available, one of them was destined to be my Top Pick this week. It’s almost as if it had been written in the stars. Topping this week’s list is the Public Theater’s radio play and bilingual version of Shakespeare’s Romeo y Julieta with Juan Castano as Romeo and Lupita Nyong’o as Julieta.

So here are the Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 22nd. The list begins with my Top Pick and is followed by events in the order in which they become available.

Lupita Nyong’o (Photo by Nick Barose/Courtesy The Public Theater)

*TOP PICK* RADIO PLAY: Romeo y Julieta – Public Theater – Now Available

William Shakespeare’s best-known play is certainly Romeo and Juliet. In this radio play version you’ll get to hone in on exactly what makes this play so riveting: the story and the words. But there’s going to be a difference: this is a bilingual version called Romeo y Julieta.

Director Saheem Ali and Ricardo Pérez González have adapted Alfredo Michel Modenessi’s Spanish-language translation for this audio only production.

Starring as the title characters are Juan Castano as Romeo and Lupita Nyong’o as Julieta. Ivonne Coll plays the Nurse, Hiram Delgado is Tybalt, Irene Sofia Lucia is Mercutio, Julio Monge is Friar Lawrence and Javier Muñoz is Paris.

The rest of the cast includes Carlo Albán, Karina Arroyave, Erick Betancourt, Michael Braugher, Carlos Carrasco, John J. Concado, Guillermo Diaz , Sarah Nina Hayon, Kevin Herrera, Modesto Lacen, Florencia Lozano,  Keren Lugo, Benjamin Luis McCracken, Tony Plana and David Zayas.

The Public is making closed-captioning available in both English and Spanish and are also providing a script to use to follow along for those who might want that. Just be prepared for a tragic story that ends with these words:

“For never was a story more of woe

Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.”

There is no charge to listen to Romeo y Julieta, but donations are encouraged.

The Picture of Dorian Gray

PLAY: The Picture of Dorian Gray – now – March 31st

Oscar Wilde’s classic story of a man who sells his soul in order that his good looks don’t fade gets a contemporary spin in this new version of the story by Henry Filloux-Bennett. This updated approach has Dorian as a social media influencer who doesn’t want to see his fame fade. It’s just as much a Faustian deal here as in Wilde’s original.

Starring in this production are Fionn Whitehead (Dunkirk), Alfred Enoch (seven of the Harry Potter films), Joanna Lumley (Absolutely Fabulous), Emma McDonald (Hamlet), Russell Tovey (Angels in America) and Stephen Fry (Wilde).

Tickets are £12 which at press time was equal to just under $17. There is a warning that there is strong language and references to mental illness and suicide. The production is recommended for audiences age 16 and higher.

Kellie Overbey, Emily Walton and Mary Bacon in “Women Without Men” (Photo by Richard Termine/Courtesy Mint Theater Company)

PLAY: Women Without Men – Mint Theater Company – Now – March 21st

This is the first of several plays that New York’s Mint Theater Company has started streaming. Set in Ireland in the 1930s, Hazel Ellis’ play depicts the unmarried teachers at an all-girls school. It is their interactions with one another that reveals petty jealousies and very different personalities.

This production was staged in 2016 and was directed by Jean Thompson. Appearing in Women Without Men are Mary Bacon, Joyce Cohen, Shannon Harrington, Kate Middleton, Aedin Moloney, Alexa Shae Niziak, Kellie Overbey, Dee Pelletier, Beatrice Tulchin, Emily Walton and Amelia White.

There is no fee to watch the play. Registration; however, is required.

David Friedlander, Jon Fletcher and Wrenn Schmidt in “Katie Roche” (Photo by Richard Termine/Courtesy Mint Theater Company)

PLAY: Katie Roche – Mint Theater Company – Now – March 28th

Also from Mint Theater Company is this 2013 production of Teresa Devey’s 1936 play. Katie Roche tells the story of a servant girl who has big dreams and finds herself torn between two men.

The play had its premiere with Ireland’s Abbey Theatre and made its first appearance in the United States in 1937.

Starring are Margaret Daly, Patrick Fitzgerald, Jon Fletcher, David Friedlander, Jamie Jackson, John O’Creagh, Wrenn Schmidt, Diana Toibin. Jonathan Bank directs.

There is no fee to watch the play. Registration; however, is required.

Ayanna Bria Bakari and Jasmine Bracey in “How to Catch Creation” (Photo courtesy Goodman Theatre)

PLAY: How to Catch Creation – Goodman Theatre – Now – March 28th

Half a century after a young woman’s girlfriend hits her with some very surprising news, four artists are coming to grips with the ramifications of that fateful day. That’s the premise of Christina Anderson’s How to Catch Creation which Chicago’s Goodman Theatre will be streaming on demand for two weeks.

This is not a reading of the play. Rather it is a capture of their 2019 production directed by Niegel Smith. The cast features Karen Aldridge, Ayanna Bria Bakari, Jasmine Bracey, Bernard Gilbert, Maya Vinice Prentiss and Keith Randolph Smith.

How to Catch Creation runs 2 hours and 15 minutes. There’s no charge to stream the production.

David Hyde Pierce, Sigourney Weaver, Kristine Nielsen and Billy Magnussen in “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” (Photo by Carol Rosegg/Courtesy IBDB.com)

PLAY: Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike – Broadway on Demand – Now – April 18th

You might think you need to know a lot about the work of Anton Chekhov to appreciate Christopher Durang’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike. While it certainly helps, it’s absolutely not essential. While the play does take place near a cherry orchard, there is familial conflict about what to do with a cherished home and the three siblings depicted all have names taken from Chekhov’s work, this comedy has proven popular around the world.

Durang had a rather circuitous route to Broadway with this play. Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike had its world premiere at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton in 2012. One month after closing there it went off-Broadway to Lincoln Center’s Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre. Two months after closing there it opened on Broadway and ultimately was named the Best Play at the Tony Awards.

One thing this play was able to do was keep its cast intact for all those moves. So the film that Lincoln Center is making available for free on Broadway on Demand features David Hyde Pierce, Billy Magnussen, Kristine Nielsen, and Sigourney Weaver.

I’ve seen this play two times and strongly recommend you allow yourself the time to relax, sit back and enjoy yourself.  In 2014 I interviewed David Hyde Pierce about the play and his direction of it when it played the Mark Taper Forum. You can read that interview here.

Kiera Duffy in “Breaking the Waves” (Photo by Dominic M. Mercier for Opera Philadelphia/Courtesy Los Angeles Opera)

OPERA: Breaking the Waves – Los Angeles Opera – March 19th – April 12th

The 1996 Lars von Trier film Breaking the Waves told the dark story of a husband, who is recovering from an accident at work, who encourages his wife to have sex with other men during his recovery. It was a bold film that featured a shattering performance by Emily Watson.

Composer Missy Mazzoli and librettist Royce Vavrek created an opera based on this film. Their work had its world premiere at Opera Philadelphia in 2016.

The work won universal acclaim including these comments by Alex Ross in The New Yorker:

“The opera created a world: it had a tone, a profile. There was an uncommonly strong relationship between libretto and music: the work felt urgent, driven by conviction, essential.”

Los Angeles Opera had scheduled a live production of Breaking the Waves, but the pandemic got in the way. In its place they are making a film of the opera directed by James Darrah available for free streaming (registration is required).

The original cast returns: Kiera Duffy, John Moore, Eve Gigliotti, David Portillo, Zachary James and Marcus DeLoach.

As you might imagine with this subject matter, a word of caution. This production includes explicit language, nudity and sexual content, some of a violent nature. Recommended for mature audiences only.

23 different options to watch the performing arts at home this weekend
Paul Rudnick (©David Gordon/Courtesy Theatermania.com)

CONVERSATION: Virtual Halston – Cast Party Network – March 19th – 5:00 PM EDT/2:00 PM PDT

If you’re going to have an afternoon salon filled with ribald conversation and witty repartee, it helps to have two masters participating. In this week’s edition of Virtual Halston with Julie Halston, she’s got a great guest: playwright/author/screenwriter Paul Rudnick.

His plays include I Hate Hamlet, Jeffrey, The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told and the upcoming book for the musical adaptation of The Devil Wears Prada. His screenplays include The Addams Family, The First Wives Club and In and Out.

Actor Peter Bartlett, who received a Drama Desk nomination for his performance in The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told, will also be joining.

Derek Douget Band (Courtesy Lobero Theatre)

JAZZ: A Night in New Orleans – Derek Douget – Lobero Theatre – March 19th

When winter turns to spring and Lent is approaching many people immediately think of New Orleans and its grand tradition of Mardi Gras. Even later in spring thoughts turn to the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.

Mardi Gras didn’t happen this year and JazzFest is postponed until the fall.

So what’s a fan of that glorious music supposed to do?

Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara is riding to your rescue this weekend. Saxophonist Derek Douget and his band will bring all that wonderful music into your home beginning Friday evening with A Night in New Orleans.

Joining Douget are Victor Atkins on piano; Ashlin Parker on trumpet; Herlin Riley on drums and vocals; Jason Stewart on bass and Don Vappie on banjo/guitar and vocals.

Tickets are $15, but you’ll have to provide your own beads!

Cindy Blackman Santana (Courtesy her website)

JAZZ: Cindy Blackman Santana and Guests – SFJAZZ – March 19th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM EDT

Drummer Cindy Blackman Santana is well connected. She’s recorded and toured with Joe Henderson, Pharoah Sanders, Joss Stone, Cassandra Wilson and more. She spent many years on the road as the drummer for Lenny Kravitz. She also toured with Santana and in 2010 Carlos Santana proposed to her.

But those aren’t the friends or guests that are part of this weekend’s Fridays at Five concert from SFJAZZ. She has recent Oscar-nominated composer/musician Terence Blanchard (Da 5 Bloods), guitarist Bill Frisell, the Kronos Quartet, saxophonist Joe Lovano and members of the SFJAZZ Collective joining for this concert from 2017.

There will be an encore presentation of this concert on Saturday, March 20th at 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT. Tickets are available with a monthly digital membership ($5) or an annual membership ($60).

Robert Ainsley and Renée Fleming (Photo courtesy Metropolitan Opera and PBS)

OPERA: Renée Fleming Live from the Met – PBS (check local listings) – March 19th from 2021

If you are a regular reader of Cultural Attaché you know that Renée Fleming is one of the most beloved sopranos in opera. Whether seen and heard in productions or recitals, she is regularly a fan favorite.

PBS is airing a recital Fleming gave from Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. last August.

The program includes works by George Frideric Handel, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Jules Massenet, Giacomo Puccini and Richard Strauss. Robert Ainsley serves as her accompanist.

Andrew Rannells (Photo by Luke Fontana/Courtesy PBS)

BROADWAY VOCALS: Andrew Rannells Live from Lincoln Center – PBS (check local listings) – March 19th from 2018

In December of 2017 Andrew Rannells performed in The Appel Room at Lincoln Center. The concert was filmed and first broadcast on PBS in 2018. The show returns to PBS this weekend.

Rannells is best known for his Tony Award-nominated performance in The Book of Mormon and for his appearance on the HBO series Girls. He was recently seen as Whizzer in Falsettos (his second Tony Award nomination) and in Ryan Murphy’s stage production and the subsequent film of The Boys in the Band.

This is a fun concert that shows the boy can sing more than just show tunes! Fans will want to check it out.

Ashley Shaw and Adam Cooper in “The Red Shoes” (Photo byJohan Persson/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

BALLET: The Red Shoes – Ahmanson Theatre – March 19th – March 21st $10

As part of their continuing Digital Series and their relationship with Matthew Bourne, Center Theatre Group and the Ahmanson Theatre are offering up a filmed performance of Bourne’s ballet The Red Shoes.

The ballet is inspired by the Michael Powell/Emeric Pressburger film from 1948 (which in itself was inspired by a story by Hans Christian Anderson).

Bourne uses the music of legendary film composer Bernard Herrmann (Citizen Kane, Psycho) for this ballet.

Ashley Shaw stars as a ballerina torn between her love for the composer who wrote her a ballet and the impresario who runs the ballet company and controls her career.

There will be five opportunities to stream The Red Shoes. Friday, March 19th at 8:00 PM PDT/11:00 PM EDT; Saturday March 20th at 5:00 PM PDT/8:00 EDT and 8:00 PM PDT/11:00 PM PDT and Sunday, March 21st at 1:00 PM PDT/4:00 PM EDT and 5:00 PM PDT/8:00 PM EDT.

Tickets are $10. This program will not be available for streaming outside the United States.

Daniel Brenna and Iréne Theorin in “Siegfried” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy San Francisco Opera)

OPERA: Siegfried – San Francisco Opera – March 20th – March 21st

Conducted by Sir Donald Runnicles; starring Daniel Brenna, Greer Grimsley, Iréne Theorin, Ronnita Miller and David Cangelosi. This revival of Francesa Zambello’s 2011 production is from the 2017-2018 season.

This third opera in Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen had its premiere in Bayreuth in 1876 where it was seen at the first-ever performance of The Ring Cycle.

The title character is front and center in the third opera in the Ring Cycle. He matures throughout the opera via the choices he makes. He encounters an enigmatic Wanderer, but doesn’t know this is Wotan in disguise. When Siegfried is able to reassemble pieces of Siegmund’s sword (Siegmund is his father) he uses it to kill Fafner who has the responsibility of protecting the gold that was stolen from the Rhinemadiens in Das Rheingold. He also comes into possession of the ring. But what will he do with it and how will that impact his pre-destined love for Brunnhilde?

Lisa Hirsch, writing for the San Francisco Classical Voice, said of the production:

“…perhaps the greatest strength of the production remains: a splendidly staged and remarkably sympathetic Siegfried that flew by. In 2011, part of its charm was the surprisingly sweet Siegfried of Jay Hunter Morris, a handsome man with a beautiful voice. With the young heroic tenor Daniel Brenna stepping into the role this year, some of the sweetness and charm is lost to a more conventionally brash portrayal of the character. Still, the opera really did come off as a scherzo, a comparatively light moment in the Ring despite the deaths of Mime and Fafner. The encounters between the Wanderer and Mime, Alberich, Erda, and Siegfried retain their tremendous emotional power and depth.”

Ute Lemper (Courtesy her website)

VOCALS: Songs from the Heart – Ute Lemper – March 20th – 2:00 PM EDT/11:00 AM PDT

Whether in concert halls, recording albums or gracing the stage of a musical, Ute Lemper has easily become of our most passionate and accomplished performers.

That wide range of material she handles will be on display in Songs from the Heart on Saturday. The concert will be streaming from Europe and includes songs from the musicals Cabaret and Chicago; from The Threepenny Opera; songs made famous by Édith Piaf and Marlene Dietrich, a song Lemper composed and also a song by Joni Mitchell.

I’ve seen her in multiple concert performances and also in the Broadway revival of Chicago. She’s absolutely amazing.

Joining Lemper for this concert will be Vana Gierig on piano; Tim Ouimette on trumpet; Matt Parrish on bass and Todd Turkish on drums and percussion.

Ticket are $24.99 and allow for 48 hours of access.

Jeremy Pelt’s “GRIOT: THIS IS IMPORTANT!” album cover (Courtesy Jeremy Pelt website)

JAZZ: Jeremy Pelt Quintet – Vermont Jazz Center – March 20th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

You’re probably asking yourself how often will I recommend a performance by Jeremy Pelt? As long as he keeps putting out great music like Griot – This Is Important! I will do so as long as possible.

This concert from the Vermont Jazz Center will focus exclusively on music from this new album.

Joining Pelt for this concert are Vicente Archer on bass; Victor Gould on piano; Chien Chien Lu on vibraphone and Allan Mednard on drums.

There is no charge to stream the concert; however donations are encouraged.

Sheila Carrasco in “Anyone But Me” (Photo by Shay Yamashita/TAKE Creative/Courtesy IAMA Theatre Company)

ONE PERSON PLAY: Anyone But Me – IAMA Theatre Company – March 21st – April 18th

Sheila Carrasco’s Anyone But Me is the first of two one-person shows by Latinx-American women that Los Angeles’ IAMA Theatre Company will start streaming this weekend. Carrasco stars in this show in which she depicts multiple women struggling to define themselves and realizing that where they are is not where they want to be.

Anyone But Me is directed by Margaux Susi.

Tickets start at $15 (based on your ability to donate to IAMA).

Anna LaMadrid in “The Oxy Complex” (Photo by Shay Yamashita/TAKE Creative/Courtesy IAMA Theatre Company)

ONE PERSON PLAY: The Oxy Complex – IAMA Theatre Company – March 21st – April 18th

The second play, The Oxy Complex, is written and performed by Anna LaMadrid. The play is set in the not-too-distant future – specifically the 500th day of quarantine. They Oxy of the title is not Oxycontin (source of opioid addictions), but rather Oxytocin.

What is oxytocin? It is defined by Medical News Today as:

“…a neurotransmitter and a hormone that is produced in the hypothalamus. From there, it is transported to and secreted by the pituitary gland, at the base of the brain.

“It plays a role in the female reproductive functions, from sexual activity to childbirth and breast feeding.”

So what is LaMadrid exploring in her show? All the things a woman might miss while being quarantined for so long. There is a reason, after all, that Oxytocin is called the “love hormone.”

Michelle Bossy directs. Tickets begin at $15 (based on your ability to donate).

Tomeka Reid (Photo by Lauren+Deutsch/Courtesy TomekaReid.net)

CONTEMPORARY CLASSICAL MUSIC: Bang on a Can Marathon Live Online – March 21st – 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT

For their spring live online marathon, Bang on a Can is showcasing performances from New York and Berlin.

Here’s the line-up:

3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT

Daniel Bernard Roumain Why Did They Kill Sandra Bland? performed by Arlen Hlusko; Arnold Dreyblatt; Mazz Swift and Rohan Chander △ or THE TRAGEDY OF HIKKOMORI LOVELESS from FINAL//FANTASY performed by Vicky Chow

4:00 PM EDT/1:00 PM PDT

Kristina Wolfe Listening to the Wind performed by Molly Barth; Miya Masaoka; Aeryn Santillan disconnect. performed by Ken Thomson and Adam Cuthbert

5:00 PM EDT/2:00 PM PDT

Ken Thomson Birds and Ambulances performed by Robert Black; Tomeka Reid Lamenting G.F., A.A., B.T., T.M. performed by Vicky Chow; Steve Reich Vermont Counterpoint performed by Claire Chase; Christina Wheeler and Molly Joyce Purity performed by David Cossin

6:00 PM EDT/3:00 PM PDT

Tyshawn Sorey; Jeffrey Brooks Santuario performed by Mark Stewart; Moor Mother and Bill Frisell

Jackie Hoffman (Courtesy her Facebook Page)

BROADWAY VOCALS: Jackie Hoffman – March 21st – 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT

I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Jackie Hoffman in the original companies of Hairspray and Xanadu on Broadway. She’s always a joy to watch. Sadly I didn’t get a chance to see her in The Addams Family, On the Town or Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

But you’ll get to see what makes Hoffman such a delightful and witty performer on Sunday.

She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest as part of his Concert Series. I can only imagine what stories she’ll have to tell and what songs she’ll choose to sing. We can all find out either in the live broadcast or in the encore showing (also on Sunday) at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT.

Tickets are $25.

Alex Tenreiro Theis (Courtesy Eryc Taylor Dance)

DANCE: Uncharted Territory: Dancers in Isolation – Eryc Taylor Dance – Premieres March 21st – 6:00 PM EDT/3:00 PM PDT

Eryc Taylor has conceived a new work born out of the crisis that has hit us all in the last year. This work, Uncharted Territory: Dancers in Isolation, was created via Zoom, and focuses on New York City dancers.

The company features Nicole Baker, Chris Bell, Taylor Ennen, AJ Guevara, Eryc Taylor and Alex Tenreiro Theis. Each dancer choreographed their own work. The film is revealed in five separate segments which explore themes of death, mental instability, paranoia, sexual frustration and stillness.

The music was composed by Daniel Tobias.

There is no charge to watch the premiere, though donations are encouraged. Uncharted Territory will remain available online through March 28th.

Max von Essen, Mikaela Izquierdo and Elisabeth Gray in “Yours Unfaithfully” (Photo by Richard Termine/Courtesy Mint Theater Company)

PLAY: Yours Unfaithfully – Mint Theater Company – March 22nd – May 16th

Though written in 1933, Miles Malleson’s Yours Unfaithfully remained unperformed until Mint Theatre Company produced the show in late 2016.

It seems strange that a story about a married couple exploring an open relationship came from 1933. The all-too-virtuous husband (Max von Essen) is a writer seemingly unable to get inspired. His wife (Elisabeth Gray) runs a progressive school. She suggests opening up their relationship.

Alexis Soloski, in her review for the New York Times, said:

“Under the polished direction of Jonathan Bank, and in the hands of a fine team of designers, its arguments remain provocative, while its structure feels familiar, its tone decorous. Maybe that only makes it more unusual. It’s a bit like a sex farce with real sorrow instead of slammed doors, and something like a drawing room comedy with moral conundrums peeking out beneath the cushions. It is often very funny; it is also very nearly a tragedy.

There is no fee to watch the play. Registration; however, is required.

Drawing of Jim Caruso by Andrea Selby (Courtesy Jim Caruso’s Facebook Page)

BROADWAY AND JAZZ VOCALS: Jim Caruso’s Pajama Cast Party – March 22nd – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Jim Caruso celebrates 50 episodes of Pajama Cast Party with this Monday’s edition. Which makes the absence of his usual venue for his weekly in-person Cast Party, Birdland, all that more palpable.

But this is a party and the show will celebrate turning 50. Joining this week are singer/songwriter Ben Clark, Broadway/pop singer Joshua Colley (Les Misérables), singer/artist Jared Wayne Gladly, Broadway’s Jason Kravits (Relatively Speaking), Brazilian singer/songwriter Denise Reis and Braodway’s Dee Roscioli (Fiddler on the Roof).

That’s this weekend’s Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 21st. But a few reminders before we go:

Los Angeles Philharmonic releases a new Sound/Stage episode entitled A Pan-American Musical Feast with special guest Chef José Andrés. The episode features performances of works by Tania León; Paul Desenne and Aaron Copland. For details on this episode and the whole series please go here.

The 92nd Street Y is still streaming last weekend’s performance by violinist Gil Shaham with The Knights. You can read details about their entire series here. Check out my recent interview with Shaham here.

The Metropolitan Opera concludes their Viewer’s Choice week with a 2006-2007 season production of Rossini’s Il Barbiere di Siviglia on Friday; a production of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin from the same season (and strongly recommended) and a production of Handel’s Agrippina from the 2019-2020 season on Sunday (also recommended). You can see details and clips from all three productions here.

On Monday the Met begins a weeklong celebration of Myths and Legends with a production of Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice from the 2008-2009 season. We’ll have full details on Monday with our preview of the the week’s full line-up.

I trust you’ll find something amongst the Four Days of Best Bets: March 19th – March 22nd to keep you entertained! Have a great weekend.

Photo: Artwork of the balcony scene from Romeo y Julieta by Erick Davila (Courtesy The Public Theater)

Correction: The name of Eryc Taylor Dance program is Uncharted Territory and not Unchartered Territory as we originally listed. Cultural Attaché has corrected the post above and regrets the error.

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Tommy Tune Loves Alliteration As in “Tommy Tune Tonite!” https://culturalattache.co/2018/03/13/tommy-tune-loves-alliteration-tommy-tune-tonite/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/03/13/tommy-tune-loves-alliteration-tommy-tune-tonite/#respond Tue, 13 Mar 2018 16:17:53 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=2211 All that is not given is lost. If you don't give it you are losing it.

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Actor, director, choreographer and entertainer Tommy Tune likes taps. And tall tales. And tunes. And Tony Awards. (Ten of them to be exact.) And he loves alliteration. Which probably accounts for the title of his show, Tommy Tune Tonite! Tune will be performing at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts on Friday and two shows at Feinstein’s at the Hotel Nikko in San Francisco on Sunday.

Tommy Tune won his first Tony Award in 1974 for the Broadway musical Seesaw. He won for Best Featured Performance by an Actor in a Musical. The show was directed by Michael Bennett (who won a Tony that night for Best Choreography before going on to do a little show called A Chorus Line.)

Tune won subsequent Tony Awards for A Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine (Best Choreography), Nine (Best Director of a Musical), My One and Only (Best Actor in a Musical, Best Choreography), Grand Hotel (Best Director of a Musical, Best Choreography) and The Will Rogers Follies (Best Director of a Musical, Best Choreography). To even things out he received a Special Tony Award in 2015 for Lifetime Achievement.

Tommy Tune (Photo Credit: Franco Lacosta)

I recently spoke by phone with the 79-year-old legend who had just completed rehearsals in New York for this week’s performances. We discussed his upcoming shows and his philosophy about life.

You are still rehearsing your show?

It’s my job to keep it fresh. I did 1,500 performances of My One and Only and we didn’t change the material, but that’s the technique. I sit down over tea in the morning and figure out my show. Then I go with the music director and figure out what works and what doesn’t. It’s a constant process. I have to keep changing it up. That’s the director/choreographer in me. If I were just a performer I would be grateful to do the same show every night. I can’t do it that way.

Instead you are on the road doing hundreds of performances a year. What do you do on the road to make each show unique for that audience?

I love being nomadic and going to different cities to do my show. When you are out doing a show, it’s very important I do one new thing every day like go to a museum for forty minutes to look at one painting. You pick up the vibe in the city because every city has its own vibe.  It’s important to take in one new thing.

Cerritos is a big place and then I go to Feinstein’s in San Francisco and I have to reign it in. It’s tricky. It takes a lot of time to perfect this type of entertainment. You aren’t with a company. Your scene partner is your audience.

Does the director in you butt heads with the performer in you?

The director is always butting in! I always have to tell him, “don’t bother me now, I’m on stage. Give me those notes after the show.” The director doesn’t get to come to the show, only the rehearsal. I don’t know anyone else who is a director/choreographer who does this on a regular basis. 

Legendary ten-time Tony Winner Tommy Tune stars in "Tommy Tune Tonite!"
Tommy Tune (Photo Credit: Franco Lacosta)

Do these shows satisfy your creative impulses as much as directing and choreographing a Broadway show?

It’s two different things. I’ve spent my life with a row of footlights in between. If you are on the stage those lights are shining on you. If you are on the other side, it’s a whole different thing. When I’m directing a show I’m in, with me playing my part, I’ll put my stand-in in and they do it and I go “That’s all wrong.” It felt so right but it wasn’t from my director’s head. As an actor I felt wrong, but the director was right. It’s like a split personality.

You just turned 79. Can you imagine yourself not dancing or singing or entertaining?

I don’t want to. I’m so grateful that I’m still doing it. Chita Rivera feels the same way. [Tune and Rivera regularly tour together.] Look what we’re doing and the people are enjoying it so much. It’s just a blessing. Chita said, when asked a similar question, “Nobody told me to stop.” It’s in our DNA. We have to do it. It’s an addiction of the very best kind.

You’ve said one reason for your not continuing to work on Broadway is that many members of your regular team of collaborators have passed away and that you feel “obsolete.” Do you still feel that way?

You work with people like Cy Coleman, Betty Comden, Adolph Green, Wally Harper and you develop a shorthand with these people. I live on and they are not alive. It’s generational. I can’t go looking for somebody my age. It’s not happening. I’m 79 for God’s sake. I can’t find people who have experienced what I have. It takes a toll on you.

The key to life is to stay interested. To have a curiosity about it and what’s next. That’s what’s great about touring. You don’t have a chance to get stale.  The good thing about performing is it’s not a contest. The people who see you want you to be good and the helps you be good.

A homage to the legendary director/choreographer
Paul Rudnick’s tweet about Tommy Tune

I know you aren’t on social media and don’t rely on modern technology. But recently playwright Paul Rudnick tweeted in response to a football trade announcement, “A gay man’s brain: when I saw the Seahawks’ Michael Bennett was being traded, I assumed it was for Tommy Tune.” Apart from the obvious humor there, what does it mean to you to know that you continue to inspire people?

That’s why we do it. To inspire life. To inspire a good time. To inspire creatively if people work in your field. It’s our purpose, isn’t it? It’s my life’s work. I think I’m using the gifts I’ve been given and I don’t take that lightly. All that is not given is lost. If you don’t give it, you are losing it. I’m happiest when I’m in a permanent state of creativity.

Photo Credit: Franco Lacosta

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Max Jenkins: Making a Big Impression in “Big Night” https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/26/max-jenkins-making-big-impression-big-night/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/26/max-jenkins-making-big-impression-big-night/#respond Tue, 26 Sep 2017 21:22:16 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1148 During the opening 10-15 minutes of Paul Rudnick’s play Big Night  (at the Kirk Douglas Theatre), you might find yourself wondering if Cary, the character played by Max Jenkins, ever has a slow gear. He does, but Jenkins’ fast and furious way with pithy one-liners is one of the play’s true highlights. Big Night takes […]

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During the opening 10-15 minutes of Paul Rudnick’s play Big Night  (at the Kirk Douglas Theatre), you might find yourself wondering if Cary, the character played by Max Jenkins, ever has a slow gear. He does, but Jenkins’ fast and furious way with pithy one-liners is one of the play’s true highlights.

Paul Rudnick's new play, "Big Night" opens at the Kirk Douglas Theatre
L-R: Tom Phelan, Kecia Lewis, Wendie Malick, Brian Hutchison, Max Jenkins and Luke Macfarlane in the world premiere of “Big Night” Photo by Craig Schwartz.

Big Night takes place the day of the Academy Awards. Cary is the new agent for Oscar-nominee Michael (Brian Hutchison.) He reassures his client that his odds of winning the award are good and that the industry has taken note. Michael is now wanted for a Star Wars film. Though both Michael and Cary are gay, the agent suggests using his acceptance speech as a political platform might not be in his best interest.

I recently spoke with Jenkins (who is openly gay) while he was driving to an appointment. He was happy to be in traffic (seriously), to talk about Big Night and to share his own views on how the industry treats actors, particularly those who are gay.

“My preparation was in making sure all these hilarious lines in the beginning were rooted in truth and were really particular to the character,” Jenkins reveals. “They weren’t just generally funny, but specifically Cary. A friend came to see the show. He was an agent’s assistant at William Morris Endeavor and is now a life coach. He said, ‘it was me.’ He was crying. It wasn’t theatrical to him.”

His role of Max Carnegie in The Mysteries of Laura, also allowed Jenkins to work his magic on witty comments. “I love the one-liners and I should be so lucky to do them my whole life,” he says. “I think the fact that I’m good at one-liners allows for me to be my weird self in other aspects of the character. For better or worse.”

Has Jenkins ever been on the receiving end of the advice his character gives out in the show? “If you are in a really mainstream project and a lot of eyeballs are on you, you have to play the game, but be yourself at the same time,” he says. “I can’t say that I’ve had much of an opportunity to do that yet. It’s only when I audition for straight roles, I feel I have to come in not being my normal self. People have such narrow imaginations, you have to pull the wool over their eyes. For the most part I don’t want to do roles like that unless it subverts expectations. I’m proud to do gay roles.”

The cast of “Big Night” at the Kirk Douglas Theatre

As Big Night was getting ready to go into previews, Jenkins tweeted about the show saying “literally all of the characters are gay as hell. It’s divine.” So I asked him how unique this opportunity was for him. “It’s amazing. I think we need to tip the scale – more of a balance. We all need to stick together a bit more and push ourselves to stay loyal to our own stories. I think it is happening more and more. I’m still a neophyte in this world, but I’m meeting a lot of amazing artists who are protective of their gay stories.”

Which lead us to the inevitable conversation about whether gay roles should be played by gay actors. “Whenever you see a gay lead character, it’s always played by a straight guy and he’s slumming it the way people treat him. I constantly audition for the lead gay role and end up playing the supporting gay role because it’s not attractive for the producers to have a gay actor play the lead role. I also find that gay directors fetishize straight actors telling their story because it is like a wish-fulfillment thing of a straight guy making out with another guy in front of you and being forced to do it. It might be a controversial opinion, but something I’ve seen in things I’ve worked on.”

Clearly outspoken, Jenkins feels that when he got brave enough to show the most secret and embarrassing parts of himself he started getting jobs. So I asked him what he keeps for himself. “My primary goal in life right now is to fall in love, because I haven’t experienced it for a long time. I’m holding that really close to my heart – really more than my career or my friends or anything. Ever day feels like a step closer to that. I almost don’t have words. I want that part of myself to come out. It hasn’t yet, but I’m hopeful it will.”

Photo Credits: Craig Schwartz (1st two images) and Luke Fontana

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Will writer Paul Rudnick have a Big Night when Big Night opens? https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/12/will-writer-paul-redneck-have-a-big-night-when-big-night-opens/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/09/12/will-writer-paul-redneck-have-a-big-night-when-big-night-opens/#respond Tue, 12 Sep 2017 21:07:15 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=741 Kirk Douglas Theatre

Opens: 9/8/2017 Closes: 10/8/2017

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Paul Rudnick is a classic under-achiever.  Amongst his ever-so-brief list of credits can be found:

I Hate Hamlet, Jeffrey, The Naked Eye, The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told, Valhalla and The New Century. That’s just some of his theatre credits.

For film he adapted Jeffrey, wrote Addams Family Values, the remake of The Stepford Wives and perhaps his best known film is In & Out.  The film starred Kevin Kline as a high school teacher who professed heterosexuality, but everyone wondered why he didn’t come out already. He was forced out when a former student outs him when he accepted an Academy Award.  (Rudnick was inspired by Tom Hanks acceptance speech for his Best Actor Oscar for Philadelphia.)

So fertile is the territory of awards show that Rudnick is returning to that ground with his new play Big Night. The show opens on Saturday at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. Again Oscar night plays a role as a working actor finds out how much this night will change his life. Will it be for profession or personal reasons? Or both?

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