Information, reviews, and miscellaneous shorts focusing on professional, nonprofit theater—from a Southeast Minnesota perspective.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Community Theater Productions

If you know of an upcoming production, let me know the pertinent information by e-mailing Minnesota Theatre at rjstuber@gmail.com, or post a comment below.

Glengarry Glen Ross

By David Mamet, directed by Nicholas Dibble
Presented by Theater Du Jour
August 17, 18; 8:00pm
August 19, 2:00 pm
Chateau Theater
3450 E Circle Drive NE
Rochester, Minnesota
www.theaterdujour.com

Sunshine Boys

By Neil Simon, directed by Jeff Thauwald
Presented by Brave Community Theatre
August 15, 16, 17, 18; 7:30 pm
Spring Valley Community Center
Spring Valley, Minnesota

Brave Community Theatre of Spring Valley, Minnesota has produced shows for 34 years, entertaining southeast Minnesota at the Spring Valley Community Center and in area Arts Centers. Visit www.bravecommunitytheatre.org

Fiddler on the Roof

Presented by Pine Island People for the Arts
August 23, 24, 25; 7:30 pm
August 26; 2 pm
Pine Island High School Auditorium
Pine Island, Minnesota
Tickets are $10 for ages 13 and older, $5 for ages 3-12.

The Veggie Villain, or He Had a Steak in It

Presented by Lanesboro Community Theater
August 25; 1 pm and 5 pm
Sylvan Park
Lanesboro, Minnesota
There is no admission charge, but donations are welcome. Bring your own lawn chairs and blankets.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Mercy of a Storm

John Hassler Theater

By Jeff Hatcher, directed by Matt Sciple
Jon Hassler Theater, August 9, 2007

While the door to the pool house gaped open revealing the snow storm beyond, the Minnesota audience squirmed noticeably as they watched the heat rush out into the winter night—even while sitting in an air conditioned theater in August. When George Holmberg finally shut the door, an audible sigh of relief filled the theater. Perhaps this a testament to the effectiveness of the set and lighting design at representing the snowy winter night of New Year’s eve 1945. But it also reflects an audience that knows the danger of winter and understands the cost of heating fuel. It will take much of the play before the audience will care about the storm brewing inside as much as the snow falling outside.

Mercy of a Storm takes place entirely in a pool house, a small building beside the pool of a private club somewhere in industrial Ohio. The pool house provides a secluded location for the illicit meeting of George, played by Phil Kilbourne, and the much younger Zanovia Chestovich, playded by Lindsay Hinman.

Yet things aren’t exactly what they seem. This secret meeting is between an estranged husband and wife who are meeting, against the advice of their lawyers, to arrive at a settlement for their upcoming divorce or, as the play progresses, to take one more attempt to save their marriage.

Mercy of a Storm derives most of it’s charm from the slow unveiling and unraveling of the world that surrounds George and Zanovia. Among these revelations: The couple had been married only one year, she had been the daughter of George and his late first wife’s house keeper, she is working class Polish Catholic, he is Episcopalian and a member of the Country Club set, their romance had been steamy (and continues to be steamy), and they continually battled over their differences of age and class. The revelations are delicious providing a series of “ah ha” moments as the sometimes shocking details of their lives become clear.

George has just returned from a State Department trip designed to show American industrial leaders the results of their work—the defeat of Nazi Germany. He feels an ownership of the success of Ohio’s steel mills and factories’ contributions to the war effort—though Zanovia points out that as an insurance agent, he didn’t actually contribute all that much.

George is particularly taken by what was not destroyed—by the restraint of the Allies once it was clear that Hitler was going to lose. George sees this as evidence of rules of conduct that must be followed, even in warfare—an acknowledgement that war is not forever and people need to be able to pick up their lives once the fighting stops. He’s comforted by the thought of this decorum, particularly in the city of Dresden, where remarkably, many buildings still stand. But Dresden is flawed evidence of restraint in war. It had remained untouched through most of the war only to be fire bombed into rubble by the British and Americans. Some historians argue that this bombing, one of the most destructive in history, came after the outcome of the war was already inevitable.

George has made elaborate preparations for his own all—out war, with the confidence that he can follow an honorable decorum once it’s clear he has achieved his objectives—a “do no more harm than necessary plan.” But Zanovia can’t see the honor of this “restraint.” She sees that a man willing to make the preparations for a total assault might as well be the man that carries through with them.

The challenge for the director and actors of Mercy of a Storm is to make the audience care more about the characters on stage than the valuable warm air escaping through the carelessly left open door. Carelessness could summarize all of what the audience knows about George and Zanovia’s life—and carelessness can rub a Midwest audience the wrong way. In addition, the social stigma of the marriage presents more impediments to the audience caring about the relationship. From the outside, a man married to a woman the same age as his daughter will always look unbalanced. From the outside, a marriage between a man with a cool country club decorum and a working class woman who speaks with a bitingly honest tongue will seem out of place.

On the one hand, it is a credit to Kilbourne and Hinman that they don’t take any short cuts toward winning the audience. For much of the play, Kilbourne is a stiff and detached fifty-eight-year-old man. He offers few clues to what might have attracted Zonovia in the first place. And Hinman’s Zanovia is crass, superficial, and unpredictable. Her youth and beauty seem to be the only magnetism for George.

But on the other hand, the audience spends most of the play like the rest of the country club crowd, watching the lives of their friends unfold with detached fascination and smug civility. Mercy of a Storm holds the audience at arms length for most of the play hoping to win it over by play’s conclusion. While this may work for some, other audience members are still too worried about the snow and cold, about Zanovia entering the snow with high heels, to worry about the possible fire bombing of the couple’s marriage.

Mercy of a Storm plays Thursdays through Sundays until September 2.

Visit the John Hassler Theater for schedules and tickets: Jon Hassler Theater

Monday, August 6, 2007

Community Theater Productions

If you know of an upcoming production, let me know the pertinent information by e-mailing Minnesota Theatre at rjstuber@gmail.com, or post a comment below.

The Music Man

By Meredith Willson
Presented by Wit's End Theatre
August 8, 9, 10
Potter Auditorium
Chatfield, Minnesota

"The Music Man" is the fourth annual production of the Wit's End Theatre. For more information, see Wit's End Theatre page at SEMPAN.

The Sound of Music

Music by Richard Rogers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse
Presented by Rock Solid Youth Center
August 9, 10, 11; 7:30 pm
August 12; 4:00 pm
Rock Solid Youth Center
75 West Third Street
Winona, Minnesota
507-457-2125

Glengarry Glen Ross

By David Mamet, directed by Nicholas Dibble
Presented by Theater Du Jour
August 10, 11; 8:00pm
August 12; 2:00pm
August 17, 18; 8:00pm
August 19, 2:00 pm
Chateau Theater
3450 E Circle Drive NE
Rochester, Minnesota
www.theaterdujour.com

Sunshine Boys

By Neil Simon, directed by Jeff Thauwald
Presented by Brave Community Theatre
August 15, 16, 17, 18; 7:30 pm
Spring Valley Community Center
Spring Valley, Minnesota

Brave Community Theatre of Spring Valley, Minnesota has produced shows for 34 years, entertaining southeast Minnesota at the Spring Valley Community Center and in area Arts Centers. Visit www.bravecommunitytheatre.org

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Jon Hassler Theater opens Mercy of a Storm Friday

John Hassler Theater

The Jon Hassler Theatre will offer a sneak preview of their new offering, Mercy of a Storm, on Friday, August 3. The play opens on Saturday and plays Thursdays through Sundays until September 2.

Written by Minnesotan Jeffery Hatcher and directed by Matt Sciple, Mercy of a Storm is set on New Year’s eve in 1945. Jon Hassler Theater offers a synopsis on their web page. (Click the link and scroll down for the summary.) Peggy Sue Dunigan offers a brief thematic summary in her review of New York’s Next Act Theatre company production of the play:

“Romance vs. love. Cold outside (the winter weather) vs. warm inside (the summer pool house). Wealth vs. working class. Old vs. young. Divorce vs. marriage. This play is a study in contrasts that give the play contemporary meaning in a period setting. Jeffrey Hatcher, an accomplished playwright whose work has previously been produced on Milwaukee stages, subtly captures the conflicts of each contrast, with little resolution, through cleverly and passionately written dialogue. Everything is filtered through the personalities of George and Zanovia, both flawed and hurting, as Hatcher creates characters that he and the audience care about.” Vital Source Magazine.


Phil Kilbourn and Linsay Hinman in Jeffery Hatcher's Mercy of a Storm. (Photo: Jon Hassler Theater)

This two-person play features Lindsay Hinman as Zanovia and Phil Kilbourn as George. Both actors come to the Jon Hassler with extensive acting credits in the Twin Cities and beyond. Hinman has appeared with the Illusion Theater and Jungle Theater in Minneapolis, and she starred in the award winning independent film Firefly. Kilbourne has worked extensively in the Twin Cities as an actor and director, including appearances at the Jungle Theater, Penumbra Theatre, and the Frank Theatre. He was named City Pages “Best of the Twin Cities” Actor in 2005.

Visit the John Hassler Theater for schedules and tickets: Jon Hassler Theater

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Wait Until Dark

By Frederick Knott, Directed by Jamie Horton
Commonweal Theater, July 25, 2007

The Commonweal has inaugurated its new stage with a thriller that takes advantage of the increased staging and improved lighting, ironically, to better portray the dark. Frederick Knott’s tightly constructed story has breathtaking twists and turns of plot and metaphor. Light and dark metaphors become complex as, for example, the on stage photo darkroom turns film negatives into print positives. The Commonweal has meet the challenge of Knott’s play with convincing performances by the entire cast, with a particularly beautiful portrayal of the lead role by Commonweal veteran Adrienne Sweeney.

The play utilizes two thematic arcs. The first follows the sophisticated scam perpetrated on a young blind woman by three con men. Continuing with the light and dark metaphor, these three men begin the play in the light: they see the layout, and they have the advantage of knowing how the swindle will work on the trusting Susy Hendrix. As the play moves toward its climax—which as the title suggests, happens in the dark—the con men’s advantage diminishes and the physical danger increases.

Adriane Sweeney & Milton Papageorge
Adrienne Sweeney is Susy Hendrix and Milton Papageorge plays Harry Roat, Jr. in Commonweal's Wait Until Dark.
(Photo: Commonweal)

Scott Dixon and David Hennessey play petty criminals who are coerced into taking on the “job.” They begin the play as men who think they know the score, yet their flawed displays of criminal bravado early in the play help explain why each has recently been to prison. Their transformation from petty criminals to sophisticated con men is a little harder to explain. The two pull off a complicated scheme by acting as characters with more sophistication than either seem to possess. For example, Dixon moves too easily from the rough thug of the opening scene to the middle-class professional his character portrays in the con. Aside from that small complaint, these two characters make the scam work, and the scam is fascinating to watch unfold. Dixon plays the “concerned friend” seamlessly, persuading Susy that he is there to help and protect her. Hennessey plays “bad cop” with conviction and with a bit of a hint of the petty criminal. While these two are serious about the job, they are not killers. Milton Papageorge is.

In the company conversation after the play, an audience member asked 12-year-old Katie Bowler (who plays the troubled upstairs neighbor Gloria, alternating performances with Addison Cross) if she wasn’t scared to be in this production. Bowler responded, “With all these really nice people [indicating the other actors], how can I be scared?” But the audience was still a bit scared of Papageorge—even out of character. He is the sophisticated criminal that Dixon and Hennessey’s characters imagine themselves: he is smart, calculating, and in control. Yet his cold-blooded ruthlessness rattles even these hardened criminals.

The second arc of the play follows Sweeney’s character Susy, who is on a metaphoric journey from dark to light. She has recently lost her sight, and is still re-learning how to interact with the world as a sightless person. Sweeney moves easily and unaffectedly about her apartment to the point where the audience can forget that she is blind, yet she doesn’t stop to pick up a note that has blown from the phone stand into her line of vision (a sighted character would impulsively and nonchalantly pick up the misplaced prop and return it to its place), and she runs into an out of place chair so hard that the audience winces in sympathy for the impact with her shins. Yet even with this competence, Susy still becomes easily frustrated with the out-of-place chair, the refrigerator door left ajar, and the “lost” wastebasket, and she is wary of the world outside of the apartment. During the course of the play, She grows in confidence, which causes the advantage to shift her way. By embracing “the dark” of her new world, she has, ironically, helped illuminate her desperate situation in the scam and gained the knowledge and confidence to enter the dark promised by the play’s title.

While having lost some of their early advantage to Susy, the con men are still the experts in the world of darkness, and Wait Until Dark makes the audience wait until the very end to find out who will prevail in the dark.

The Commonweal’s Wait Until Dark is a stunning work on many levels: story, character development, theme, action, suspense. It treads on territory usually reserved for suspense novels and movies. To see this type of thriller acted so convincingly by real people 15 or 20 feet away is very unusual, and very powerful. So powerful, the audience has to take a moment to unclench fists and relax tense legs before standing up. And yet it is not suspense for suspense sake. It’s not a simple story about bad guys picking on a blind woman and a little girl. It’s a story of empowerment and discovery—the white knuckles are an extra bonus.

Wait Until Dark plays in repertory with The Mystery of Irma Vep through October.

Visit the Commonweal for schedules and tickets: Commonweal Theatre