Taproot Theatre Opens New Studio Theatre

With the expansion of Taproot Theatre complete, the company will now offer smaller shows in their smaller venue, the Isaac Studio Theatre, located in the company’s new Kendall Center. The 120-seat space will kick off 2014 with a season of six shows performed by Taproot Theatre’s Touring Company. The season, which is currently underway, will give Taproot audiences a delightful variety of improv, drama and comedy.

The inaugural season includes:

boy meets girl…an improved love story
By Danny Walter and Solomon Davis, Feb. 7, 8 and 15.
A love story, where the audience suggests and directs the plot. Improv at its finest.

Pretty Fire
by Charlayne Woodard, March 6-22.
A one-woman show, tracing the life of the famed African-American actress, who has appeared in such movies as “Unbreakable,” “The Crucible” and “The Million Dollar Hotel.”

Mark of Immediacy
Adapted by Nathan Jeffrey, April 11, 12, 17, 18, 19.
With scripture as their script, three actors bring to life the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Trouble in Fairtalezania and Wild Wes
Directed by Nathan Jeffrey and Solomon Davis, May 5 and 17.
Two family-friendly shows. One about a Fairy Godmother losing her powers; the other about a boy from Texas trying to make friends in his new hometown in the Pacific Northwest.

The Amish Project
Written by Jessica Dickey, July 24 – Aug. 9.
One woman channels a kaleidoscope of voices in reaction to a true life mass shooting in an Amish schoolhouse.

Christmas Touring
Dec 1, 3, 8, and 10.
See two shows (still to be determined) for the price of one as holiday cheer makes its merry home in Taproot’s hallowed halls. 

Pacific Northwest Ballet to Retire Beloved ‘Nutcracker’

A Pacific Northwest Ballet tradition since 1983 is coming to an end. 

The beloved PNB version of The Nutcracker, with sets and costumes by famed children’s book author Maurice Sendak and choreography by Kent Stowell, will dance into PNB history after the 2014 holiday season. Beginning in 2015, a new Nutcracker will be staged. It will use George Balanchine’s 1954 choreography with new costumes and sets by Ian Falconer. Falconer is a famed children’s book author in his own right, having created the beloved “Olivia” series.

“We all have a great deal of love and attachment to the (‘Nutcracker’) we have,” Peter Boal, PNB’s Artistic Director told the Seattle Times earlier this week. “Looking at ticket sales over the last decade, and looking at the age of the current production…it was probably time to make a change.”

WIth unanimous backing by the PNB board and a new fundraising campaign, Boal feels bittersweet about the current production’s end, but excited about the future of their Nutcracker. “When the curtain goes up on opening night,” Boal said, “it’s going to be spectacular.”
 

It’s Alive! Behind the Scenes of Book-It’s ‘Frankenstein’

Opening night for Frankenstein, or, The Modern Prometheus is almost upon us, and things at Book-It Repertory Theatre couldn’t be crazier. Putting this classic horror story on stage is very serious business, and inquiring theatrical minds need to know: how are things going backstage? Luckily, director David Quicksall has been capturing some super-solemn behind-the-scenes moments on video, so Book-It fans and friends can join in on this process with the pros.   

Click on above to get a primer from the good doctor himself (as played by Connor Toms) and then click here for more very informative videos. How informative? Well, let’s just say you’ll get an interview with the real star of the show and a candid discussion about very, very comfortable corsets are. By all means, enjoy.

The Two Gentlemen of Walla Walla, Err, Verona

Coriolanus in Cheney, perhaps. Richard II in Richland. Othello in Othello. Maybe one day! Seattle Shakespeare Company and Shakespeare Walla Walla are embarking on a partnership to bring professional classical theatre productions to Eastern Washington.

Starting with Seattle Shakespeare’s production of Richard II, recently discussed here, and continuing on with the company’s coming production of The Importance of Being Earnest, Seattle Shakespeare is proud to return to Eastern Washington. In the summer of 2008, Seattle Shakespeare Company transferred its outdoor production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream to Walla Walla to play at the Fort Walla Walla Ampitheatre and out of that initial effort Shakespeare Walla Walla was created. 

Since then the indoor performing arts venue, Gesa Power House Theatre, was built and opened in Walla Walla, housing all sorts of theatre performances. In addition to the upcoming performances by Seattle Shakespeare, the Walla Walla venue will also soon welcome “Such Sweet Thunder Suite,” Duke Ellington’s 12-part suite inspired by Shakespeare’s works, with the Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra.

Richard II will play February 6-9. The Importance of Being Earnest will be performed April 16-20. “Such Sweet Thunder Suite” performance dates have yet to be determined.

  

 

How You Know ‘Carmina Burana’

There are pieces of classical music so closely entwined with pop culture that, if we hear just a few bars, we know a lot about where we are and what’s happening. “Morning” from Grieg’s Peer Gynt, for example, paints a peaceful, tranquil scene. Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” from the Ring cycle is for someone(s) on the warpath. Then there’s Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana, which has become musical shorthand for “something super scary or incredibly dramatic is about to happen (or be spoofed).”

More specifically, it’s the ‘O Fortuna’ section of Orff’s cantata that has become a cultural touchstone. Below, here are just a very few of this impressive, expressive choral piece being used to its full entertainment potential. Refresh your memory below, and then hear the full, glorious piece performed by the Seattle Symphony, joined by the Seattle Symphony Chorale and Northwest Boychoir, from April 3-6.

It was featured in the 1989 Civil War movie Glory, starring Denzel Washington, Matthew Broderick and Morgan Freedom (and featured even more heavily in the movie’s trailer).

 

Late night host Conan O’Brien often uses the theme when a picture of former Vice President Dick Cheney is shown:

 

And of course, it’s part of that benchmark of class, Jackass the Movie.

Seattle Symphony to Play Free Concerts

From January to May, the Seattle Symphony will perform three FREE community concerts at Seattle neighborhood venues.

On Tuesday, Jan. 21st at 7 p.m., at the Shorecrest Performing Arts Center, the Seattle Symphony will play side-by-side with the Cascade Youth Symphony Orchestra. Works by Liszt, Mendelssohn and Sibelius are included on the bill.

On Friday, Jan. 24th at 12 p.m., at Seattle City Hall, the Seattle Symphony will play even more Mendelssohn, joined by 18-year-old Sarah Hall on violin. They will also perform work by a a composer named Mozart (you may have heard of him). 

On Sunday, May 18th, 2 p.m. at Seattle Center Fisher Pavilion, the Seattle Symphony, with 14-year-old Olivia Marckx on cello, will play side-by-side with the Seattle Youth Symphony Orchestra. The bill includes work by Tchaikovksy and Ravel. 

As Seattle Symphony Executive Director Simon Woods says, “At the Seattle Symphony, we are committed to bringing the joy of music to the widest audience possible, and our free Community Concerts are a fantastic way to do this.” 

Fantastic, indeed.

Brian Yorkey: No Foreigner to the Village Theatre

From the Great White Way in New York City to Front Street in Issaquah, Brian Yorkey returns to Village Theatre to direct The Foreigner

Yorkey, who was raised in Issaquah, started his affiliation with Village Theatre as a KidStage student. Years later he would become associate artistic director, a post he held for six years. He wrote five musicals during his tenure at Village Theatre including Funny Pages, Making Tracks, The Wedding Banquet, Play It By Heart and A Perfect Fall

Then he wrote Next to Normal and his life became anything but. Inspired by electroconvulsive therapy, Next to Normal is a rock musical that grapples with mental illness in a suburban family. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2010. It also won the 2009 Tony Award for Best Original Score. He’s been busy on Broadway ever since. His new musical If/Then, written with his Next to Normal collaborator Tom Kitt, opens on Broadway in March. The Lost Ship, with a score by rock legend Sting, will have an out-of-town tryout in Chicago this June before a planned Broadway opening in the fall of 2014.

As his career has skyrocketed, Yorkey has always returned to the theatre he called home. He’s directed twelve shows and counting at Village Theatre; most recently, he helmed the company’s 2011 production of Jesus Christ Superstar. The Foreigner will be his thirteenth directorial effort. The show, a comedic farce, opened to rave reviews in New York City in 1984 and has been revived countless times across the country (including at the Village Theatre in 1992). The show is about a shy man who goes to a fishing lodge in Georgia looking for peace and quiet. To avoid conversation, he masquerades as a foreigner who can’t speak English. He soon discovers how much strangers share when they think no one can understand them. 

The Foreigner will run in Issaquah from Jan. 23 to March 2 and in Everett from March 7-20.  

Next Up at 5th Avenue’s Tech Tuesdays: ‘Spamalot’

The 5th Avenue Theatre’s Tech Tuesday program returns on January 28, with the company’s current production of Spamalot. These workshops, especially designed for high schoolers with an interest in technical theatre, give these students a first-hand look at the technical side of a professional theatre production. Participating students have the opportunity to tour backstage, observe during technical rehearsals, and meet working theatre professionals and technicians. 

Spamalot is a musical that was “lovingly ripped off from” the 1975 film Monty Python and the Holy Grail by some of the film’s original creators. This particular retelling of the legend of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table features beautiful show girls, cows, killer rabbits, rude French people and cancelled witch burnings (too expensive). This version, self-produced at the 5th Avenue, will feature a cast of local comic talent.

Tech Tuesdays workshops are open to high school students, ages 14-18. Also included in the $25 registration fee are a pizza party and a ticket to a preview performance of the next mainstage production. Interested students can click here to register.  

Is the Soul of American Musical Theater in Seoul?

Korea seems to love American-born Broadway musicals, it seems. In fact, ticket sales to American and European musicals, according to a recent story by Patrick Healy in the New York Times, have grown from $9 million in 2000 to an estimated $300 million this year.

Wicked is huge; Mamma Mia! too. Grease is popular. Guys and Dolls, a New York musical through-and-through, is a big ticket seller in Seoul. Those are all well-known and beloved musicals, of course. But the financial disasters, the critical duds, they’re big, too. Bonnie & Clyde the musical, which ran for less than two months on Broadway in 2011, is a huge South Korean success. Ghost the Musical, a stage adaptation of the Patrick Swayze/Demi Moore tearjerker that didn’t last long on Broadway, is faring similarly well.

As Judy Craymer, the lead producer of Mamma Mia! told Healy, “Seoul has become incredibly important in the lives of many musicals, something none of us would’ve said or predicted a decade ago.” 

Why Seoul? Why now? Broadway musicals tap into an audience of young Korean women, “raised on the bombast of Korean pop and the histrionics of television soap operas,” Healy writes. The typical audience member is a young woman in her 20s or 30s (though musicals are popular with Korean men, as well) who has a good salary and is still living with her parents (they’re not living with a significant other until marriage). This leaves them with a disposable income, which they spend on show tickets that cost roughly the same as tickets in New York City.

Some worry that the musical bubble will burst, as Korean producers scramble to acquire production rights to American musicals faster and faster, and the market becomes more and more saturated. “There is a bubble right now – too many musicals, and people don’t know what to see,” Korean producer Seol Doyun told Healy. “The interesting thing is, in Korea most bubbles don’t really burst.” So for the time being, there is no end in sight to the South Korean appetite for American musicals of all stripes, meaning that no matter how well a show fares (or doesn’t) in the states, it could very well have an enthusiastic audience waiting elsewhere in the world.

So the bubble grows and grows. Perhaps someone will write a musical about staging an American musical in Korea. Young Koreans will flood the booth for tickets.

‘First Date’ Sets Broadway Closing Date

Broadway musical First Date, which began as a co-production between the 5th Avenue Theatre and ACT Theatre in 2012, will end its six-month rialto run on January 5, according to Broadway.com. The show will have played 34 previews and 174 regular performances at the time of its closing.

First Date tells the story of tightly wound Aaron (Zachary Levi), who is set up with serial-dater Casey (Krysta Rodriguez). The pair’s eventful first date, which unfolds in real time, is an evening fraught with Google background checks, fake emergency phone calls, supportive best friends, manipulative exes and protective parents, who sing and dance them through ice-breakers, appetizers and potential conversational land mines.

Kelly Karbacz originated the role of Casey in the Seattle production, while Eric Ankrim originated the role of Aaron. Seattle stage favorite Ankrim went on to understudy the role of Aaron on Broadway. 

First Date was directed by 5th Avenue’s producing director Bill Berry, and features a book by Austin Winsberg, with music and lyrics by Alan Zachary and Michael Weiner, who also composed 5th Avenue’s recent world premiere musical, Secondhand Lions.

Despite its earlier-than-hoped-for shuttering, First Date still has plenty to celebrate. An original cast recording of the musical hit stores in October, and the cast will soon perform in the beloved Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.