Sara Bareilles Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/sara-bareilles/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Mon, 30 Sep 2024 17:14:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 REST IN PEACE: Gavin Creel: “It’s Really Hard to Fake Joy” https://culturalattache.co/2024/09/30/gavin-creel-its-really-hard-to-fake-joy/ https://culturalattache.co/2024/09/30/gavin-creel-its-really-hard-to-fake-joy/#comments Mon, 30 Sep 2024 17:14:44 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=18810 "It means more than just you're not alone. It means you're not alone in your desires, your dreams, your wishes, your hopes. I've got them, too. So let's both dream together."

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Today the sad news that Gavin Creel passed away hit the news. Over the twenty years that I’ve seen Gavin Creel on stage, I can honestly say that he always radiated joy. Whether it was as Jimmy Smith in Thoroughly Modern Millie (Tony nomination); Claude in the 2009 revival of Hair (Tony nomination); Steven Kodaly in the 2016 revival of She Loves Me or Cornelius Hackl in the 2017 revival of Hello, Dolly!, Creel seems to be having as much fun as the audience. He won a Tony Award for his performance in Hello, Dolly!

This is my interview with Gavin when he was touring in Into the Woods. Thank you Gavin for your time, your artistry and your generosity. You will truly be missed.

Gavin Creel and Katy Geraghty in the Broadway production of “Into the Woods.” (Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

Whether that’s intrinsically a part of the characters he’s playing or just who he is as an actor, Ceel is easily one of the most likable people in musicals today. Take his performance as The Wolf and Cinderella’s Prince in Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s Into the Woods. Even though The Wolf is menacing (in a dandy sort of way) and the Prince is “raised to be charming, not sincere,” Creel is sincerely charming and, when the role calls for it, charmingly sincere.

Into the Woods is finishing its mini-tour of ten cities with a final stop in Los Angeles at the Ahmanson Theatre. The show runs June 27th – July 30th. Creel, who played the part on Broadway, is joined by many of the production’s Broadway cast including Sebastian Arcelus, Stephanie J. Block, Katy Geraghty, Montego Glover, Kennedy Kanagawa and Nancy Opel.

I recently spoke with Creel who was in San Francisco for the penultimate stop of Into the Woods. In our conversation we talked about Stephen Sondheim, why the cast took this show on the road and about his own show, Walk on Through: Confessions of a Museum Novice, which will have its world premiere in November at MCC Theater in New York. Los Angeles audiences can get a preview of that show when Creel performs at The Hotel Cafe in Hollywood on July 24th.

What follows are excerpts from our conversation that have been edited for length and clarity. To see the full interview, please go to our YouTube channel.

Q: In 2003 you were in Stephen Sondheim’s Bounce [later renamed Road Show] in Chicago and at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. What did you learn from that experience of working on Sondheim’s material that perhaps informs the work you’re now bringing to Into the Woods? 

What comes to mind is that I watched the greatest, at that time, living musical theater composer and arguably the greatest living producer director of our musical theater time: Hal Prince. I watched them in the mud. I got to watch them trying to make the lotus blossom. And if I’m honest, it wasn’t successful. Obviously it wasn’t commercially successful, but it was bumpy. 

I did this very foolish innocently enough thing of deciding that they must come out of the womb formed. These ideas must just be hatched in brilliance. And I was like, Oh yeah, this moment isn’t really that great. Sondheim can write something that’s really not that great. And then Sondheim goes, “This is really not that great. How do I make this great or I can do this here and do this, and then watch it become something that went to the next level.” To see that in front of you is very humbling and an encouraging and freeing experience. 

How would you compare the process of working on a musical with Stephen Sondheim to working on one of his most successful musicals, arguably his most successful musical, without him any longer?

It was sad, I have to say. James Lapine, on the first day of rehearsal, we all circled up and everybody and there was a space next to him. He said, “It’s odd to me that there’s a space. I feel like Steve made a space for himself. This is a bittersweet moment because we’re all here to lift this beautiful piece up and I’m honored that you’re doing this piece that I wrote with Steve, and Steve would be standing next to me.”

This is sounds woo woo, but I think Steve was guiding us from the other side. I still feel a presence. It’s a rock concert response to our show in a way that James is like, I don’t understand what’s happening. It’s crazy. I think that is definitely a testament to the show being so beloved for almost 40 years. But I also think we were guided. I think there was a spirit on the other side. The best spirit of all going, “I’m going to help.” It got into all of our hearts. 

When I saw the show at the St. James in New York in December it looked to me like everybody was having the time of their lives, which is not easy to do as an actor. How much of it is the fact that you are all genuinely having a good time?

It is really hard to fake joy in that way. Even if you’re doing a really good job of it, the audience can sniff it out. I’m personally having the time of my life. I did not expect to be a part of this. I was going to go watch my best friend Sara [Bareilles who was the original Baker’s Wife] in the concert at City Center. And then [director] Lear deBessonet called me and was like, “Hey, would you ever consider coming in?” The first time my ego was like, I don’t want to play that part. I want to be the baker. And then I thought about it. Let’s just do the job. I need the health insurance. I’ll have a good time. I’ll get to hang out with Sara again. We had such a good time doing Waitress for that small amount of time together [in 2019]. Here I am, over a year later, still getting to tell the story across the country. We are literally still having fun and I can’t believe this leg of it is going to be done in six weeks. It’s nuts. We’re very sad to let it go. 

Many of you who appeared in this production on Broadway have come together to continue telling this story. That is very rare these days for so many cast members to take a show on the road. Why do you think the mold was broken for Into the Woods

I think the world has changed since what we went through. The pandemic changed me. Certainly I can speak for myself of just really appreciating what you have in a new way. I just don’t think we were ready to let it go. What a gift! This just dropped in my lap. Personally, I could save money. I could work. I could see the country. I could take a breath from everything that we’ve been through. I think that story sort of whispered through the building. Gavin’s going to go and hey, you think about going on? Let me tell you why I’m going. When does this ever happen? We could actually all go together. Our show was definitely closing [in New York] because New York, New York needed a theater. We had to close, but we didn’t feel ready to be finished. 

I think one of the one of the main things that Sondheim wanted to get across with this particular work, and he said so in an interview around the time of the release of the film, was that the message of Into the Woods is about community responsibility. There’s obviously a sense of community within Broadway. There’s a sense of community within this company. Do you think that this musical offers any insight into how we perhaps can better serve ourselves by coming together as a community in our regular lives? 

Yes. I think it’s two parts, to be honest. The whole thing starts with “I wish, more than anything.” If we can acknowledge that everybody wants something for themselves then we can see the shared community in that fact. How wonderful it would be if we could help each other get what each other wants. And this musical lays that out so beautifully.

The other I was going to say is when you said that about community, no one is alone. On the surface it seems like it means I’m with you. But also I’m with you in helping you get what you want. We can work together to help you achieve your dreams. There’s always a force outside of you that’s greater than you, that is against you in some way. The giant isn’t bad. “Witches can be right. Giants can be good. You decide what’s right. You decide what’s good.” The giant is just trying to do what they can to survive. We can see the community in that statement, which is what I think the show really illuminates. It means more than just you’re not alone, as in you don’t have to be sad and lonely. It means you’re not alone in your desires, your dreams, your wishes, your hopes. I’ve got them, too. So let’s both dream together.

You’ve been working on Confessions of a Museum Novice for a while and you’ve been performing it a concert version off and on in different places. How has the work evolved since you first started sharing this with the world? 

It continues to evolve. Originally I was invited to have a meeting with Limor Tomer and Erin Flannery at the Metropolitan Museum of Art who run the Live Art series. They said, would you like to come to the Met? We’ll give you a membership card at the museum. Look around. And when you find a piece of art or pieces, anything that you’re inspired by within the building, let us know and we’ll help you produce a show for one night at the Met. I’d never been there. I was an imposter syndrome times a million. I’m not a huge fine art person. Museums tend to overwhelm me, but I went for it. 

We ended up doing it in October of 2021 with a fully masked audience for two shows and it was electric. I have to turn this into a musical. I have to expand this a bit, too. I still play Gavin Creel. It’s still about a man who’s having a sort of a midlife meltdown who for some reason called the Metropolitan Museum of Art to try to figure his life out by walking through and figuring out what’s going on. It’s about love and life and art and loneliness and ultimately forgiveness and love again.

What we’re going to do in L.A. is we’re going to do the first 45 minutes of the show to give people a taste. And then we’re going to do some covers, theater and pop covers to give people some stuff they know.

Let’s go back 17 years ago to when your album GoodTimeNation came out. You have a song on there about what Might Still Happen. What has you most optimistic about what might still happen to you personally and professionally?

I wrote that as a kid 20 years ago on the roof of my studio apartment; 250 square feet. Some of the hardest and happiest times I’ve had. One of the best lessons of living in New York in 250 square feet is you have everything you need in that much space. Anything past that is icing. I have a two bedroom apartment, thank God now, but I could live in 200 square feet if you made me. I might sell it all and just chill. My buddy Robbie Roth, who I made my first two records with, we would crawl up to the roof illegally because the fire door didn’t shut. We would sit up there, put a blanket down and pick around with melodies. That song is ultimately about heartbreak, but it’s hope.

The company of “Into the Woods” in the Broadway production of “Into the Woods.” (Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

It was a call to my future self. It makes me emotional to think about the idea of being a young person and feeling really sad but saying there’s good stuff coming, keep going. You can’t know the future, so just sit in the present. Just be. Get yourself a beer, get a friend, get a guitar, get on the roof, look out over the city. There’s possibility everywhere.

Not to bring it back to Into the Woods, but I was really broken before the pandemic, through the pandemic and after. It was just a terrible time in my life. Into the Woods was like this beautiful life raft that not only buoyed me out of storm, but it continued to lift me and set me down on solid ground. I will never forget this time that I’ve had and I just hope that we pack the house at the Ahmanson because I want to go out with a bang.

To see the full interview with Gavin Creel, please go here.

Main Photo: Gavin Creel in the Broadway production of Into the Woods (Photo by Matthew Murphy and Ryan Zimmerman for MurphyMade/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

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12 Hollywood Bowl Concerts Not To Miss This Summer https://culturalattache.co/2024/06/26/12-hollywood-bowl-concerts-not-to-miss-this-summer/ https://culturalattache.co/2024/06/26/12-hollywood-bowl-concerts-not-to-miss-this-summer/#respond Wed, 26 Jun 2024 20:12:17 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=20569 From classical music to jazz to show tunes to film scores - this season has it all

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Usually as the summer gets underway, I post the ten Hollywood Bowl Concerts not to miss. But this is quite a good year for concerts at Los Angeles’ beloved outdoor venue. So this year it is 12 Hollywood Bowl Concerts Not to Miss.

Here are the twelve concerts I think warrant a journey to the Hollywood Bowl this summer:

Harry Connick, Jr. (Photo by Erik Kabik Photography/Courtesy HarryConnickJr.com)

JULY FOURTH FIREWORKS SPECTACULAR WITH HARRY CONNICK, JR. – July 2nd – July 4th

If you’ve never experienced a fireworks show at the Hollywood Bowl, you clearly don’t know what you’re missing. This year’s headliner for the annual July 4th concerts is Harry Connick, Jr.

His most recent album centered on songs of faith, but I would expect this concert to focus more on the material he’s best known for which are jazz standards and songs from the Great American Songbook.

Thomas Wilkins leads the Los Angeles Philharmonic in these three concerts.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

For those not in the Los Angeles area, he’ll be performing at The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park in San Diego on July 6th; Mountain Winery in Saratoga, CA on July 9th and 10th and at Chateau Ste. Michelle in Woodinville, WA on July 12th and 13th. These are the only dates on his schedule right now.

George Gershwin (Courtesy New York Public Library Archives)

ALL- GERSHWIN – July 11th

Who could ask for anything more than pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, opera’s Isabel Leonard and Broadway star Tony Yazbeck in an evening of songs and music by George Gershwin?

The program opens with the Cuban Overture and is then followed by Variations on “I Got Rhythm. Leonard and Yazbeck conclude the first half with selections of Gershwin’s songs.

The second act features Thibaudet playined Rhapsody in Blue and closes with An American In Paris.

Lionel Bringuier conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Hollywood Bowl 2022 (Photo by Craig L. Byrd)

MAESTRO OF THE MOVIES: THE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMS AND MORE – July 12th – July 14th

This annual celebration of all things John Williams will be a little different. Yes, Williams curated the program utilizing his own music and many classic scores he loves from the Golden Age, but he will not be appearing this year.

Williams had to cancel all upcoming appearances due to a health issue “from which he is expected to make a full recovery.” Does that mean light sabers won’t be at the ready for the inevitable selections of music from Star Wars? Of course not. 

David Newman, who regularly conducts the first half of these concerts each year, will be conducting the full program.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Maria Schneider (photo by Kyra Kverno/Courtesy Maria Schneider)

BIG BAND NIGHT – July 17th

If you love large ensemble jazz music, this concert is for you. The evening opens with the Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra (who have made countless appearances at the Hollywood Bowl).

Next up is The Count Basie Orchestra who will feature vocalist Nnenna Freelon. 

The headliner is the Maria Schneider Orchestra which is celebrating its 30th anniversary. Earlier this year Maria Schneider released a 3-lp vinyl box set entitled Decades. You can’t stream that recording, you can only get it here. But you can hear this incredible artist and her musicians live. This is her only US appearance until September.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Kevin John Edusei (Photo by Marco Borggreve)

STRAVINSKY & KHACHATURIAN – July 30th

I’ve written before how Aram Khachaturian’s music isn’t performed often enough. As they did in the Walt Disney Concert Hall this season, the LA Philharmonic is breathing new life into his work in this program that features the composer’s Violin Concerto and the Spartacus Suite No. 2.  Martin Chalifour is the soloist for the concerto.

The concert closes with the 1919 version of Stravinsky’s The Firebird Suite. Kevin John Edusei conducts.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Ryan Bancroft (Photo by B. Ealovega/Courtesy Intermusica)

PROKOFIEV & SHOSTAKOVICH – August 6th

One of my top five piano concerti of the entire repertoire is being performed by Denis Kozhukhin in this concert. It is Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major, Op. 26. (My favorite recording of it is by Martha Argerich.)

The second half of the program is Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10. The work was completed the same year that Joseph Stalin died and is widely interpreted as the composer’s commentary on the brutality of the Soviet government during Stalin’s reign. It’s a big and powerful symphony.

Ryan Bancroft leads the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Head Hunters Album Cover (Courtesy HerbieHancock.com)

HERBIE HANCOCK HEAD HUNTERS 50th – August 14th

Where were you on October 26, 1973? Maybe you remember the release of Herbie Hancock’s Head Hunters which is considered amongst the best jazz-fusion/jazz-funk albums of all time.

Watermelon Man may not be a title recognize, but I guarantee you the music has burrowed its way into your soul. 

This is the ONLY reunion of Hancock with the surviving members of that record:  drummer Harvey Mason; saxophonist Bennie Maupin and percussionist Bill Summers.  Playing bass is Marcus Miller as original bassist Paul Jackson passed away in 2021.

The original four-track album runs less than 45 minutes. Which means there will be a whole lot more music performed by Hancock and his bandmates.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Joshua Bell (Photo ©Richard Ascroft/Courtesy Primo Artists)

THE ELEMENTS WITH JOSHUA BELL – August 15th

Joshua Bell commissioned five composers to write individual movements based on the elements: Earth, Water, Air, Fire and Space.  Those composers are Kevin Puts, Edgar Meyer, Jennifer Higdon, Jake Heggie and Jessie Montgomery.

Bell performs the work with Rodolfo Barráez conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Also on the program are Aaron Copland’s El Salón México, which opens the concert and Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story  which closes the concert.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Sara Bareilles in “Into the Woods” (Photo by Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade)

SARA BAREILLES WITH THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL ORCHESTRA – August 17th

What at one point years ago might have seemed like a pop concert, is now pure heaven for musical theater lovers. Sara Bareilles is a three-time Tony Award nominee having received two nominations for Best Original Score (Waitress in 2016 and SpongeBob SquarePants in 2018) and for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical for the 2023 revival of Into the Woods.

Of course, she’ll perform music from throughout her career and this is her only concert on her schedule until late September.

But wait, there’s more. Tony Award winner Renée Elise Goldsberry (Hamilton) will open the show.

Thomas Wilkins conducts the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Igor Stravinsky (Photo courtesy New York Public Library Archives)

THE RITE OF SPRING – August 22nd

The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky is one of classical music’s most important and enduring works. Hearing this monumental work outside is reason enough to see this concert. But fans of Stravinsky’s music are in for a full evening of his genius.

Teddy Abrams, Music Director of the Louisville Orchestra, conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic in a concert that opens with Stravinsky’s arrangement of The Star-Spangled Banner. His Circus Polka follows and the first half closes with Leila Josefowicz performing his Violin Concerto. Then the main attraction is on tap for the second half of the program.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Dashon Burton (Photo by Hunter Hart/Courtesy Colbert Artists)

DUDAMEL LEADS BEETHOVEN 9th – September 10th

Not sure what else anyone needs to know beyond Gustavo Dudamel, the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9. But here goes:

The soloists for this concert are bass Dashon Burton; mezzo-soprano Samantha Hankey; tenor Anthony León; countertenor Key’mon Murrah and soprano Hera Kyesang Park. The Los Angeles Master Chorale also performs.

The concert opens with Leonard Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Jonas Kaufmann (Photo ©Gregor Hohenberg/Sony Music)

DUDAMEL AND THE STARS OF OPERA – September 12th

I couldn’t tell you the last time tenor Jonas Kaufmann performed in Los Angeles, but I can tell you the next time he will – at this concert where he will be joined by soprano Diana Damrau.

The two will perform selected arias and duets.

The concert opens with Verdi’s Overture to I vespri sicilliani which is followed by the ever-popular Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana by Mascagni. Respighi’s Pines of Rome closes the concert.

Gustavo Dudamel leads the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

For tickets and more information, please go here.

Those are the 12 Hollywood Bowl Concerts Not to Miss in my opinion. What concerts are on the top of your list? Let me know in the comments.

Main Photo: Hollywood Bowl 2023 (Photo by Craig L. Byrd)

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This Weekend’s Culture at Home Best Bets April 10th-12th https://culturalattache.co/2020/04/10/this-weekends-culture-at-home-best-bets-april-10th-12th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/04/10/this-weekends-culture-at-home-best-bets-april-10th-12th/#respond Fri, 10 Apr 2020 15:46:14 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=8584 Jane (Eyre), Jesus (Christ Superstar), Jeremy (Denk) and more to entertain you this weekend

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Regardless of whether you are interested in a Broadway musical, a West End play, a cabaret performance or some classical music, there are some excellent options for you this weekend. Here are This Weekend’s Culture at Home Best Bets for April 10th – April 12th.

The Broad Stage Music Mornings – The Broad Stage Facebook Page – April 12th

This is the third consecutive Music Mornings from The Broad Stage in Santa Monica. The Reverend Shawn Amos, whose jubilant approach to the blues is completely a pleasure to hear, will be joined by bassist Jennifer Leitham and saxophonist Mindi Abair. (One assumes they will perform from their own social-distanced homes.)

Amos is the curator of a series called blackbox which highlights emerging artists in the fields of jazz and blues music. He has an album coming out next week entitled Blue Sky.

Leitham has performed with a veritable who’s who of jazz including Peggy Lee, Woody Herman, Mel Tormé and countless others.

Abair has collaborated with artists ranging from Max Weinberg (of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band), Trombone Shorty, Lalah Hathaway and dozens more.

Jane Eyre – National Theatre Live at Home (available through Thursday, April 16th)

This Old Vic production is part of National Theatre Live’s At Home Series that began last week with the week-long availability of One Man, Two Guvnors.

Sally Cookson directed this 2014 production that garnered rave reviews for its inventive way of telling Charlotte Brontë’s story of a young orphan who suffers years of abuse before becoming a governess for Edward Rochester. She discovers a secret he’s been hiding which propels the final act of the story.

Madeleine Worrall earned rave reviews for her portrayal of the title character. Felix Hayes plays “Rochester.” Expect this production to take an unorthodox approach to telling Jane Eyre.

Jeremy Denk: The Well-Tempered Clavier on YouTube

One of classical music’s finest pianists and best thinkers, Jeremy Denk, takes viewers on a deep dive into Johann Sebastian Bach’s The Well-Tempered Clavier. Direct from his barn in the Catskills, Denk discusses and performs music from Book 1 of Bach’s composition. This event was originally scheduled to be performed live at The Greene Space in New York City, but like many events, it was reconfigured in light of the pandemic.

Jesus Christ Superstar – The Shows Must Go On on YouTube

This is the first of two productions of the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice musical available for you this weekend. This production dates back to 2012 and began its life as a reality show competition to find someone to play the role of Jesus.

In the competition Ben Forster was selected and he co-stars with Tim Minchin (composer of the musicals Matilda and Groundhog Day) as “Judas,” Melanie C as “Mary Magdalene” and Chris Moyles as “King Herod.” This was an arena tour production, so expect it to be big.

This production will only be available for 48 hours Friday at 2 PM EDT/11 AM PDT.

Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert – NBC – April 12th at 7:00 PM EDT/PDT

NBC is re-running their 2018 live production of the musical on Easter Sunday. John Legend stars as “Jesus,” with Brandon Victor Dixon as “Judas,” Sara Bareilles as “Mary Magdalene” and Alice Cooper as “King Herod.”

Live from Feinstein’s/54 Below – Just a reminder that Liz Callaway performs The Beat Goes On starting at 12:30 PM on Friday. This concert will only be available for one day.

If you’d like to see what operas are available for streaming from the Metropolitan Opera this weekend, go here.

If you’d like to see the shows WNET is making available from Great Performances go here.

Main photo: The company of Jane Eyre (Photo by Manuel Harlan/Courtesy of National Theatre Live)

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Waitress https://culturalattache.co/2018/07/30/waitress/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/07/30/waitress/#respond Mon, 30 Jul 2018 19:44:12 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3570 Pantages Theatre

August 2 - August 26

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It’s a sad fact but there aren’t too many women who have had musicals produced on Broadway. Jeanine Tesori, who composed the recent Soft Power and Nell Benjamin, who wrote the music and lyrics for Legally Blonde, are two of the rare exceptions. But finding a musical that was written by women and directed by a woman are exceedingly rare. That’s what makes the musical Waitress so appealing. With music and lyrics by Sara Bareilles, a book by Jessie Nelson and direction by Diane Paulus, this is a very unique musical indeed. The touring production of Waitress starts performances at the Pantages Theatre on Tuesday and continues there through August 26th.

Waitress is based on the 2007 film of the same name that was written and directed by the late Adrienne Shelly. Both tell the story of Jenna, a waitress who is in an incredibly unhappy marriage. She gets pregnant and falls in love with her gynecologist. Jenna is also an expert baker, so a contest in a neighboring town might offer her a ticket out, if only she can muster up the courage to make the changes she wants.

Desi Oakley leads the cast as Jenna in the role originated on Broadway by Jessie Mueller. Director Paulus is best known for the revivals of Pippin and Hair.

Waitress will also play Segerstrom Hall in Costa Mesa in November.

Photo by Joan Marcus

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The Six Shows You Must See: This Weekend in LA (6/8-6/10) https://culturalattache.co/2018/06/08/six-shows-must-see-weekend-la-6-8-6-10/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/06/08/six-shows-must-see-weekend-la-6-8-6-10/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2018 18:05:54 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3156 Shakespeare, O'Neill, Brahms, The Tony Awards, Playboy Jazz Festival and the last weekend for Soft Power

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Here are the six shows you must see: This Weekend in LA (6/8-6/10)

One of the Six Shows You Must See This Weekend in LA (6/8-6/10) Is "Henry IV"
Rondi Reed as Mistress Quickly; Emily Swallow as Doll Tearsheet; Tom Hanks as Falstaff in “Henry IV” (Photo by Craig Schwartz)

Henry IV – The Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles at the Japanese Garden at VA West LA

Now – July 1st

Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson have long been supporters of the Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles. This year Hanks is upping his support by taking on the role of Falstaff in a new version Shakespeare’s Henry IV Parts 1 and 2. Daniel Sullivan directs the production that stars, along with Hanks, Hamish Linklater, Joe Morton, Harry Groener and Rondi Reed. This is an outdoor venue, so if you plan on going, dress warmly. And settle in for a comic tale of fathers and sons that also has its share of drama and pathos.

Composer Johannes Brahms

Brahms Requiem – LA Master Chorale at Walt Disney Concert Hall

June 9-10

There are three requiems that are beloved: Mozart’s, Verdi’s and the Brahms Requiem. The Los Angeles Master Chorale, under the direction of Grant Gershon, will be performing Brahms’ masterpiece in two performances this weekend. Also on the bill are compositions by two Pulitzer Prize-winning composers:  Fly Away I by Caroline Shaw and where you go by David Lang. The Lang composition is having its West Coast Premiere.

"Soft Power" is one of Six Shows You Must See This Weekend in LA (6/8-6/10)
L-R: Francis Jue, Conrad Ricamora, Austin Ku, Raymond J. Lee, Jaygee Macapugay, Billy Bustamante, Alyse Alan Louis (center), Maria-Christina Oliveras, Geena Quintos, Paul HeeSang Miller, Jon Hoche, Kristen Faith Oei, Daniel May and Kendyl Ito in the world premiere of “Soft Power” Photo by Craig Schwartz.

Soft Power – Ahmanson Theatre

Final Weekend

This is your last chance to see one of the most adventurous new musicals to come along in quite some time. Soft Power, which is actually described as a play with a musical, was written by David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly and Yellow Face) with music and additional lyrics by Jeanine Tesori (Fun HomeCaroline Or Change). It begins as a play depicting the night when a Chinese diplomat meets Hillary Clinton. They fall for each other. After a brutal event in the narrative impacting a third character, the play becomes a musical. 50 years later that musical is being celebrated and revived. It is a very unique structure, but the creators were not afraid to be adventurous in finding a new way of telling their story. The show concludes its run in Los Angeles this weekend and will continue in San Francisco starting June 20th. What happens after San Francisco has yet to be determined. If you like theatre that challenges at the same time it entertains, don’t miss Soft Power.

Main photo by Craig Schwartz

Who will win Tony Awards this weekend?
Josh Groban and Sara Bareilles, hosts of THE 72ND ANNUAL TONY AWARDS.
Photo: Cliff Lipson/CBS
©2018 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved

The Tony Awards – CBS or Viewing Parties

June 10

For theatre fans the biggest night of the year is unquestionably the Tony Awards. The annual awards celebration takes place on Sunday. The broadcast is at 8 PM and by the time it runs tape-delayed on the West Coast we will already know who the winners will be. Will Harry Potter and the Cursed Child Parts 1 and 2 win Best New Play? Will The Band’s Visit win Best New Musical? Will Angels in America win Best Revival of a Play? Will My Fair Lady win Best Revival of a Musical? Okay, maybe those are my predictions. We’ll have to watch on Sunday to find out. And if you are looking for opportunities to watch the Tony Awards in a more public setting than your living room, The Actors Fund has their annual Los Angeles Viewing Party on Sunday at the Skirball Center. Tickets may still be available. The honoree this year is Winnie Holzman (book writer for the musical Wicked.) There is also a viewing party at the Segerstrom Center  in Costa Mesa.

Don’t forget:

2018 Playboy Jazz Festival

The Playboy Jazz Festival runs Saturday and Sunday (Legendary jazz saxophonist Charles Lloyd and the Marvels with Lucinda Williams are the highlight on Sunday.)

Jeremy Irons and Lesley Manville star in "Long Day's Journey Into Night"
Lesley Manville in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” (Photo by Hugo Glendinning)

Long Day’s Journey Into Night has two previews Friday & Saturday before officially opening on Sunday at The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts. The production stars Jeremy Irons and Lesley Manville.

The post The Six Shows You Must See: This Weekend in LA (6/8-6/10) appeared first on Cultural Attaché.

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