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

Saturday, June 7, 2014

Arsenic and Old Lace

Joseph Kesselring, Directed by Tod Peterson
Commonweal Theater, June 1, 2014

Arsenic and Old Lace is one of those plays that asks the audience to accept a plot driven by coincidences and characters who are over-the-top eccentric. In short, it asks us to suspend what we know of reality to enter into the world the play is creating. While comedy might seem like the most accessible type of theater, both because of our experience with it on television and the seemingly “lightness” of its subject matter, it actually makes great demands upon its audience. By asking us to suspend our sense of reality, to suspend what we know to be true, to suspend how we expect people to act in real life, comedy is asking the ultimate commitment of its audience. In return, a good comedy will reward the audience for accepting happenstance and coincidence for plot. The reward, of course, is the opportunity to laugh, but reward should also include some further engagement, perhaps some insight into the human condition.

A friend of mine once said of a Shakespeare comedy: “it doesn’t seem unreasonable to expect the greatest writer in the English Language to include a plot in a work of drama.” While Arsenic and Old Lace has a plot, contrived as it is, the rewards of the play lie elsewhere. And like much of Shakespeare, the rewards for suspending belief are usually worth the trip.

One of the things that makes the Commonweal’s Arsenic and Old Lace worth the trip is the chance to see some great acting. The elderly sisters at the center of the story provide both the lace and the arsenic. Surrounded by Victorian furnishings, Abby and Martha Brewster (played by Patty Mathews and Catherine Glynn), practice a genteel and gracious hospitality that seems to be from a far better past. Mathews and Glynn ooze sweetness: nothing gives them more joy than serving tea to visitors or bringing soup to an ill neighbor. The two actors move together, sharing common gestures and thought patterns that bespeak a lifetime of intimacy. The slow revelation of the arsenic within the lace is delicious, even to the large number in the audience members who clearly have seen this play performed (and laughed freely at the foreshadowing lines).

The audience’s likely familiarity with a play could be a problem: the play can’t rest on its surprise twists of the plot; a successful commonly performed play has to find other ways to engage its audience. The Commonweal’s production really seems to depend on the quality of the acting to bring the play alive. There is nothing out of the ordinary about the production itself, no attempt to make the play “fresh” or modern. The staging looks pretty much like the description Kesselring provides in the play script. If anything, the set is a little less elaborate and a little less Victorian than the playwright describes. This of course is due to the use of a thrust stage rather than the standard proscenium box Kesselring would have been writing for. The play really does stand on the acting. The cast is relatively large, and as we have come to expect at the Commonweal, there is no drop of talent for the smaller roles. Besides the brilliant performances of the Brewster Sisters, the antics of their nephew Teddy prove both enjoyable and historically edifying. (Teddy is played by Nick Ferrucci.) The disfigurement of Jeremy van Meter’s face (playing the prodigal brother-achieved with make-up and extreme facial acting) even gently (or not-so-gently) pokes fun at our own cultural obsession with looking young and the unnaturally rigid faces of our aging rich and famous population.

While not all plays stand up well to repeated performances, Kesselring’s script has certainly held up to repeated viewings (and readings) over the past 75 years. But the best reason to see this play (or see it again, if you’ve seen it before) is to see these characters in the hands of really fine actors. The Commonweal is really strutting its stuff with Arsenic and Old Lace.

Arsenic and Old Lace plays in repertory through September 8.

Visit the Commonweal for schedules and tickets: Commonweal Theatre (www.commonwealtheatre.org)

Friday, May 9, 2014

Original Shorts this Weekend

Theatre du Mississippi presents staged readings of the Winners of the 2014 New Play Competition

May 9, 7:30 p.m.

The End by Conlan Carter
Return engagement by Kathy Peterson
Fat Actress, Ugly Model, and Other Destructive Labels for Women by Bella Poynton

May 10, 7:30 p.m.

Return engagement by Kathy Peterson
God Always Exists Somewhere by Greg Freier
Fat Actress, Ugly Model, and Other Destructive Labels for Women by Bella Poynton

May 11 2:00 p.m.

The End by Conlan Carter
Return engagement by Kathy Peterson
God Always Exists Somewhere by Greg Freier

$5 Historic Masonic Theater
Winona, Minnesota

TheatreduMississippi.org

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Final Schedule for Ibsen Fest

Here is the latest version of the Ibsen Fest Schedule. Lots of good events, with a special appearance by Jeffery Hatcher’s 11-year-old’s take on Hamlet. And of course, Hatcher’s adaptation of Brand will be featured throughout the weekend.
Ibsen Schedule of Events (PDF)

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Original Shorts

Casting call for Theatre du Mississippi’s Original Shorts

Theater du Mississippi
Theatre du Mississippi is holding open auditions for their upcoming production, Original Shorts—staged readings of four short plays.

Open auditions: April 11 and 12, 7pm - 9pm
Masonic Theater (255 Main Street, Winona)

  • TdM is looking for around 9 males and 6 females in their 20s to 60s.
  • Actors may request to be cast in only one, or as many as all four short plays.
  • Actors will receive a small stipend.

The performance is a staged reading with limited rehearsals beginning March 30th.

Performances May 9-11 at the Masonic Theater.

For questions please email theatredumississippi987@gmail.com

Winners of TdM’s third annual Original Shorts playwriting competition

Staged readings of the four winning plays will be held at the Masonic Theater in Winona on May 9 and 10 at 7:30pm and May 11 at 2:00pm.

Return Engagement by Kathleen Peterson

Fat Actress, Ugly Model, and Other Destructive Labels for Women by Bella Poynton

God Always Exists Somewhere by Greg Freier

The End by Conlan Carter

Honorable Mention submissions:

The Switchblade by Bella Poynton

In the Shadow of the Monste by Jacob Wrich

The Ninth Train by Jane and Jim Jeffries

Soyuz 5 by Rand Higbee

www.theatredumississippi.org

Monday, March 24, 2014

Spring is Here: Ibsen is on the way

Like pitchers and catchers reporting to spring training, news of error-file:tidyout.logspring activity at the Commonweal means that the 2014 theatre season is on its way!

The apprentice Company presents, Tigers be Still by Kim Rosenstock.
The play runs March 20 - March 30. See the trailer below.

And then there is Iben Fest. Here is the Commenoweal's News and Notes announcing the festival:
News & Notes from Commonweal Theatre Company


March 10, 2014
Special Edition

 The Commonweal Theatre in historic Lanesboro, MN is proud to announce the
17th Annual Ibsen Festival 
April 11-13, 2014
a
A weekend of events celebrating Scandinavian theatre, visual arts, music, dance, and food!  Featuring a world premiere adaptation of  Ibsen's rarely produced epic error-file:tidyout.log      
The 

festival line-up features Prof. Mark Sandberg, president of the Ibsen Society of America! Plus...
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Ibsen Adorned -- Part II
Presenting the jewelry and photomontages of international award-winning jewelry designer/goldsmith Liz Bucheit.
Professor  J.P. Rosensweig
The Philosophy Institute:
Bringing Ideas to Life
Prof. Rosensweig will explore some of the philosophical issues in Brand, namely, what leads people to follow seemingly extreme religious leaders, often at the cost of developing their own individual religious identity?
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A Celebration of the Sámi
Featuring a travel photography exhibit, costume and jewelry collection, lecture and class.
Other events include Scandinavian cuisine,  a return of the Spirits of Scandinavia, artist demonstrations, kubb and more!



Join us April 11-13 for the only annual
Ibsen Festival in the United States! 
For more information on all of our Ibsen programming, including details on our 2015 Midwest tour of The Master Builder, visit 
Or call Adrienne Sweeney, Ibsen Festival coordinator, at (507) 467-2905, ext. 208.

For a sneak peek, check out the 
Brand trailer!
Brand -- Trailer

We appreciate your help spreading the word about this exciting academic, cultural and artistic weekend!  If you know someone who may be interested in the Ibsen Festival, please forward this email. And click here for a poster you can download and print.
If you can't make the festival,  Brand runs through June 13.  Thanks for your support!

The Ibsen Festival is  made possible with  the  support of
Sons of Norway,  SEMAC, local  businesses and the
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208 Parkway Ave N, Lanesboro MN 55949
800-657-7025


Commonweal Theatre Company | Lanesboro, Minnesota | (800) 657-7025 | (507) 467-2525
tickets@commonwealtheatre.org

Tigers Be Still

You've gotten to know them on stage and off. The Commonweal could not function without them. And now, they take center stage.

The 2013-14 Apprentice Company is set to open Tigers Be Still by Kim Rosenstock.

All we can tell you is that the play opens with a minor crisis: a tiger has just escaped from a local zoo. That crisis connects four people in a very unexpected way. You'll just have to see for yourself where the action goes from there.

Performance times are Thursdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm and Sundays at 1:30pm, March 20-March 30. Tickets are $20 for adults, $15 for students and Season Pass Holders. Our MDC members are welcome free of charge.  

Visit the Commonweal for schedules and tickets: Commonweal Theatre (www.commonwealtheatre.org)