Prima Facie Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/prima-facie/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Mon, 24 Apr 2023 03:03:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Revisiting Best Bets https://culturalattache.co/2023/04/23/revisiting-best-bets/ https://culturalattache.co/2023/04/23/revisiting-best-bets/#respond Mon, 24 Apr 2023 01:02:14 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=18324 Two operas, two plays, one jazz concert - all former best bets you have another chance to see

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Here are some previous Best Bets that have new opportunities for you to experience them:

Prima Facie – Golden Theatre – New York, NY

Jodie Comer stars in this play by Suzie Miller that is now playing on Broadway. Miller and Comer won Olivier Awards for Best New Play and Best Actress at this year’s Olivier Awards. Could Tony Awards all come their way?

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Good Night, Oscar – Belasco Theatre – New York, NY Sean Hayes stars in this play about Oscar Levant written by Doug Wright and directed by Lisa Peterson. The show originated in Chicago and received rave reviews for both the play and for Hayes.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

TRADE/Mary Motorhead – LA Opera at REDCAT – Los Angeles, CA – April 27th – April 30th

These two one-act operas by composer Emma O’Halloran and her librettist uncle, Mark O’Halloran, debuted at the Prototype Festival in New York earlier this year. Now they are in Los Angeles with original cast members Kyle Bielfield, Mark Kudisch and Naomi Louisa O’Connell in tow.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Dee Dee Bridgewater & Bill Charlap – SFJAZZ – San Francisco April 27th – April 30th

Rarely have two artists so perfectly melded their talents the way jazz singer Bridgewater and pianist Charlap do in concert. I’ve seen them twice and would go again and again given the opportunity. You have the opportunity to hear how great this duo is even if you don’t live in San Francisco. Their performance on April 28th will be streaming live at 7:30 PM PT (with an encore showing on April 29th at 11 AM PT).  

For in-person tickets and more information, please go here. For streaming tickets and information, please go here.

Champion – Met Opera Live in HD – Cinemas Worldwide – April 29th – 12:55 PM ET/9:55 AM PT

This Saturday the Metropolitan Opera will present Terence Blanchard’s first opera, Champion, in a live transmission from the Met in New York City. Ryan Speedo Green, Eric Owens, Latonia Moore, Stephanie Blythe, Paul Groves and Eric Greene star in this opera based on the true story of boxer Emile Griffith. The production is directed by James Robinson with choreography by Camille A. Brown (both of whom were involved in the world premiere of Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones.) Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts.

To find a theater near you, please go here.

Photo: Ryan Speedo Green in Champion (Photo by Ken Howard/Courtesy Met Opera)

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Best Bets Still Available: August 2022 https://culturalattache.co/2022/07/31/best-bets-still-available-august-2022/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/07/31/best-bets-still-available-august-2022/#respond Sun, 31 Jul 2022 18:18:27 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16694 A list of our favorite Best Bets that are still available as of August 1st

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Some of our Best Bets come and go. Others have lengthy runs or are part of tours that are ongoing. Here is a list of our favorite Best Bets that are still available as of August 1st:

MUSICALS:

AMERICAN PROPHET – Arena Stage – Washington, D.C. – July 15th – August 28th

The writings and speeches of abolitionist and statesman Frederick Douglass serve as the inspiration for this new musical from composer/lyricist Marcus Hummon and director/creator Charles Randolph-Wright.

This show was a recipient of the Edgerton Foundation New Play Awards prior to this world premiere.  Cornelius Smith Jr. stars as Frederick Douglass with Kristolyn Lloyd (original Broadway cast of Dear Evan Hansen) as his wife, Anna.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

BETWEEN THE LINES – 2ndStage – New York – June 14th – October 2nd

This musical is based on the young adult novel by  Jodi Picoult (Wish You Were Here) and her daughter, Samantha van Leer, from 2013. The story surrounds, Delilah, a young girl infatuated with Prince Oliver in a book she loves. Her world and his in the novel come together when he starts speaking to her.

Timothy Allen McDonald collaborated with Picoult and van Leer to write the book. Kate Anderson and Elyssa Samsel wrote the the music and lyrics. Jeff Calhoun (Newsies) directs with choreography by Paul McGill (Hedwig and the Angry Inch).

For tickets and more information, please go here.

FUNNY GIRL – August Wilson Theatre, New York – Open-ended run

When this musical opened this spring on Broadway it was the fact that it had been 58 years since the musical Funny Girl opened on Broadway and turned Barbra Streisand into one of the world’s greatest stars. Then came the whirlwind of controversy about whether Beanie Feldstein was miscast in the role.

She is no longer in the musical. Her understudy, Julie Benko, will be taking over the role until Lea Michele (Glee) assumes the role of Fanny Brice on September 6th

Enter Beanie Feldstein who is tackling the role of Fanny Brice. Like Streisand, Feldstein has only played a supporting role in one musical before this one (Hello, Dolly!). Joining her are Ramin Karimloo as love-interest Nick Arnstein and Jane Lynch as Mrs. Brice (through September 4th). Tovah Feldshuh will assume the role on September 6th.  Jared Grimes, the sol recipient of a Tony nomination for this production, dazzles in the role of Eddie Ryan.Michael Mayer directs the show which has a revised script by Harvey Fierstein.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

INTO THE WOODS – St. James Theatre – New York – Now – October 16th

This often-produced musical by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine was such a hit at New York City Center’s Encores series that it was inevitable the show would transfer to Broadway…and it has and the reviews and ticket sales are proof that was a great idea.

If you don’t know the musical, multiple fairytales are all taking place in the same forest at the same time. We’re big fans of Act II where not everything is as happy as it first seems. (Our favorite act is the second act.)

Lear deBessonet directs an all-star cast including Sara Bareilles as the Baker’s Wife, Gavin Creel as Cinderella’s Price and the Wolf, Joshua Henry as Rapunzel’s Prince , Brian D’Arcy James as the Baker, Patina Miller as the Witch and Phillipa Soo as Cinderella.

The recent announcement of an extension means there will be some cast changes that have yet to be announced.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

MJ THE MUSICAL – Neil Simon Theatre, New York – Open-ended run

It was, of course, inevitable that there would be a jukebox musical showcasing the countless hit songs by Michael Jackson. What may set this musical apart from failed attempts to use songs by The Beach Boys, Cher John Lennon and more is that the book is by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage and the show is directed and choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon.

Myles Frost makes his Broadway debut as MJ and was the recipient of a Tony Award for his performance. The show also won Tony Awards for Lighting and Sound Design. The other Tony Award recipient was Wheeldon for his choreography. (Kudos to the outstanding company of dancers that perform this show.) 

We’ve seen the show and while it does gloss over much of the controversy that surrounded Jackson, it is wildly entertaining. Based on the audience response, this show is likely to run for a very long time.

For tickets and more details, please go here.

MOULIN ROUGE! THE MUSICAL – Al Hirschfeld Theatre, New York/Touring Company: Currently at The Pantages Theatre, Hollywood – STRONGLY RECOMMENDED

Why turn Baz Luhrmann’s ground-breaking film into a musical? Because you can can can. It might seem impossible to out-Baz Baz, but director Alex Timbres has done exactly that. This is bigger, louder, more song-filled than Luhrmann’s film. Surprisingly it loses nothing in translation.

The musical won 10 Tony Awards including Best Musical. The Broadway production currently stars Ashley Loren as Satine and Derek Klena as Christian. The touring company stars Courtney Reed and Conor Ryan (with Yvette Gonzalez-Nacer as an alternate in the role of Satine).

For tickets and more information on Broadway, please go here. For touring dates, tickets and more information, please go here.

A STRANGE LOOP – Lyceum Theatre, New York – Open-ended run STRONGLY RECOMMENDED

The 2022 Tony Award for Best Musical and the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for drama went to Michael R. Jackson’s musical A Strange Loop. It’s an aptly named meta-musical about a gay Black man who’s writing a musical about a gay Black man who is writing a musical about…You get the picture.  

Stephen Brackett directs A Strange Loop. The ensemble features Antwayn Hopper, L Morgan Lee, John-Mihael Lyles, James Jackson, Jr., John-Andrew Morrison, Jaquel Spivey and Jason Veasey.

This is a wholly original musical that challenges everything we imagine a Broadway musical to be. Jackson does it in all the best possible ways.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

OPERA:

Isabel Leonard in “Carmen” (Photo by Curtis Brown/Courtesy Santa Fe Opera)

SANTA FE OPERA – Now – August 27th

Isabel Leonard as Carmen; Mitchell Harper choreographing The Barber of Seville; Quinn Kelsey as Falstaff; the first-ever Santa Fe Opera production of Tristan Und Isolde and the world premiere on Saturday of M. Butterfly by composer Huang Ruo and librettist David Henry Hwang are all good reasons to attend this year’s season at Santa Fe Opera.

If you’ve never been, you owe it to yourself to experience this amazing venue. And be prepared to tailgate!

For tickets and more information, please go here.

PLAYS:

HERE THERE ARE BLUEBERRIES – La Jolla Playhouse – La Jolla, CA – July 26th – August 21st

Anytime Moisés Kaufmann and Tectonic Theater Project have a world premiere, it’s a reason to go to the theatre. They’re the team behind The Laramie Project CycleThe Tallest Tree in The Forest, I Am My Own Wife and more.

This new play is an investigation into the Hoecker Album of photographs from Germany during World War II.  They are named after Karl-Friedrich Hoecker who was an SS officer for the Nazis. Most of the photographs were taken in the summer and fall of 1944.

As the webpage for this production asks, “What hidden secrets can a photograph reveal?” Kaufmann (who co-directs with Amanda Gronich) and Tectonic Theater Project will make it mesmerizing.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

ORESTEIA and HAMLET – Park Avenue Armory – New York – Now – August 13th

Director Robert Icke received an Olivier Award as Best Director for Oresteia, an adaptation of the three Greek tragedies written by Aeschylus. The show was a critical and commercial success in London.

Equally acclaimed was his production of Shakespeare’s Hamlet at The Almeida Theatre in London. Alex Lawther stars as the conflicted prince. 

Both shows appear in repertory. For tickets and more information for Orestia, please go here. For tickets and more information for Hamlet, please go here.

PRIMA FACIE – National Theatre Live – Beginning July 21st (check local listings)

Jodie Comer (Killing Eve) stars in this play by Suzie Miller as a young lawyer whose main clients have been men accused of sexual assault. Her perspective on what she’s doing gets challenged when she gets assaulted herself.

It’s a powerful role for Comer and she is considered a front-runner for the Olivier Award next year. She’ll also potentially be up for a Tony nomination as the play is scheduled to open in New York in the 2022-2023 season. So, too, might director Justin Martin.

But you can watch the play in a theater near you as it is part of National Theatre Live’s programming. To locate a theater near you and to get tickets, please go here.

For our weekly Best Bets, please check every Monday for that week’s selections.

Main Photo: Conor Ryan and Courtney Reed in Moulin Rouge The Musical Touring Production (Photo by Matthew Murphy/Courtesy Broadway in Hollywood)

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

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

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

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

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

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

Dale Franzen (Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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