garnigal: (Default)
A few weeks ago, my best friend posted to FB that she'd been awake until 3:30am reading. Not that unusual - we both try to avoid it, but sometimes the book sticks you your hand, or your brain won't let it go and you just. have. to. finish.

Then she said it was fanfiction.

You have to understand, she loves TV, movies etc, but she's always been very devoted to canon. So when she started reading fanfiction I was boggled. When she told me it was Draco/Hermione, I started to laugh uproariously. Then I calmed down enough to explain some of the terms we're all so familiar with that she's just encountering now. It's awesome. :)

And on Saturday, we went to Stratford (Ontario) to see Macbeth. Stratford is always excellent, but the staging of Macbeth was some of the best I've ever seen. The witches were phenomenal, the porter totally stole the show. There were some pacing problems, but I'm not sure if that was due to the source, the actors or the direction. Macbeth is an extremely exposition-heavy show, so it could have been the source, especially given how many names there are tossed around. There was a bit of explanation for Derek after the show and during intermission (I'm the theatre and Shakespeare lover in the house, so I'm well-used to providing background knowledge and commentary), but still an excellent show. We don't go back until the end of July to see The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, which should be interesting. We also ran into some friends at the theatre, which was random and awesome. We didn't get dessert or anything afterwards, as we all just wanted to get home, but it was still nice to chat during intermission.

Macbeth in the 2016 playbill. I kept getting distracted because her reminded me of Jax from Sons of Anarchy. And by distracted, I mean hot for the Thane of Cawdor. :)
garnigal: (Default)
Derek surprised me with tickets to American Idiot yesterday. It was a fantastic show, and very well done - without an intermission. The actors must have been exhausted by the end.

That said, during Boulevard of Broken Dreams all I could think of was Spike and Buffy. There really needs to be a vid... :)
garnigal: (Default)
I'm half done my Stratford Festival viewing for 2010. We saw Kiss Me Kate in August, and today Mom and I caught at matinee of King of Thieves.

Kiss Me Kate is a Cole Porter musical. It's a play within a play structure, with a company trying to put on a musical version of Shrew. It was a very bright show in terms of costuming and sets. We were far to the side in the balcony, so that may have influenced my opinion, but... I didn't love it. There were great bits, the music was fantastic, but it was so over the top, so manic, that it was hard to follow despite the very simple story line.

King of Thieves is a brand new musical. It is enjoying its stage debut at Stratford and is taking full advantage of all Stratford has to offer. It's at the Studio Theatre, a small intimate venue with a thrust stage. It has a 4 piece jazz band on stage the whole time, and the narrator, Vinnie, is played by Sean Cullen, who is utterly perfect in this role. It uses The Threepenny Opera as inspiration, and our main characters are Mac and Peachum. It's set in the late 1920's, just before the stock market crash, and definitely speaks to the 2008 crash as well. I can't even describe how wonderful it was. The music, the costumes, the plot and dialogue all blend seamlessly and wonderfully. Nigel Bennett makes his Stratford debut as Agent Brown and is also fantastic, despite a somewhat annoying Southern accent. King of Thieves is only on stage until Sept 18th, so hurry out and get tickets now.

Tomorrow is The Tempest, and I am filled with squee for Christopher Plummer, and then The Winter's Tale on the 19th.
garnigal: (Default)
But they do get to go see Jersey Boys!

We went to the Saturday matinee in Toronto with my parents, because I am a good daughter and got them (and D and I) tickets for Mother's/Father's Days.

The show was absolutely fantastic. The actors were phenomenal - their dynamics, singing and dancing was absolutely spot on. A totally talented group. The staging was awesome. The set was incredibly simply, but used to it's full potential and beyond. I saw some great staging that I'd never seen before and was very impressed. The story itself is fascinating and the way it was presented was enrapturing. I loved that I already knew most of the music, which kind of made it feel personal - like reading a little known interview with a favourite actor, in which they prove they are just great people. They are just great songs!

I bought the CD and I can already think of a number of people who need to be introduced.
garnigal: (Default)
Derek and I went to Stratford Festival Theatre's Midsummer Night's Dream on Saturday night. We were both really impressed with the performance. As D. put it, "I've never been to a Shakespearean play that made me laugh until I cried."

Obviously, it was wonderful. I think it was even better than Guys and Dolls, and I love musicals. Of course, Stratford does Shakespeare better than anything else.

This year, they went with an Amazonian forest and a modern time period for setting. According to the director, Leon Rubin, Midsummer Night's Dream is a play that practically screams for musical accompaniment (after seeing his ideas carried out, I'm not disagreeing), and the Latin-flavoured music they used matched the setting well. Some of those Shakespearean actors have good singing voices; in addition to the orchestra, some of the fairy lines were sung (e.g. when Puck and Oberon apply the love potion and the antidotes). Because of the importance of the music, the fairy gatherings were preceded by large, athletic dance numbers. The choreographer, Donna Feore, was quoted as saying that the Festival stage reminded her of a circus, so she employed some of the circus techniques she'd studied over the course of her career. The dance numbers included tumbling lines, breakfalling, really athletic and interesting stuff. She also put trapezes up in the flys, and had some of the fairies first conversing up there, and then doing a trapeze act and bungee tumbling to fit in with the tumbling on the stage. They had a Cirque du Soleil adviser, so it looked a lot like the aerials I've seen on CBC from Cirque.

There were some real stand out performances:

Jeffrey Wetsch as Lysander. As soon as Lysander came on stage in his hip hop gear (all he was missing was some bling), we knew it was going to be funny. He has a good voice, a good ear for the poetry and for the meaning of the lines, but his greatest skill is in his body language. While Helena and Hermia are fighting, Demetrius and Lysander are onstage, watching, listening. Wetsch played his devotion to Helena to perfection, lying on the stage and kicking his feet as he watched her adoringly, kissing her feet as she came close, and so many more little actions that just screamed "love". All of them were excellent physical actors, but Lysander really stood out for me.

Michelle Giroux as Helena. I liked Helena for the same reasons I liked Lysander - their physicality onstage made the lines so much more accessible. I've studied this play in highschool and university, and seen it performed at least three times, but their performances made it easier to understand than ever before. Helena compares her devotion to Demetrius to that of a spaniel (beat it and it keeps coming back), but she performed those lines on all fours, retrieving Demetrius' dropped map, and other doggy actions (we won't talk about leg-humping).

Thom Marriott as Bottom. He just rocked. He owned the stage whenever he was on it, and that's saying something, because the rest of the mechanicals were excellent as well. He played Bottom with the perfect combo of naivete, greed/lust, and vanity. The costumers did a brilliant job with the ass-head too. The lower jaw moved whenever he spoke, and when he waited, he chewed his cud. It was killer.

Probably the funniest part of the whole play was the Mechanical's performance at the palace. Every time one of them came on to do their prologue, they bowed to the actor/audience, then they broke the fourth wall and stared at the audience/audience. They just looked so terrified, it was hysterical. Our favourite part was the Wall though. Anthony Malarky as Tom Snout as the Wall was brilliant. The Wall was tall and narrow and straw-covered, then, when they needed a chink to talk through, it suddenly expanded, accordian style, with absolutely no warning. Hee. So now, long and low. Then Bottom and Starveling (as Pyremus and Thisbe) got on their knees to talk through it, and Tom slowly raises it on one corner so they can stand up. Then just as the kiss through the chink comes, the Wall falls, and Bottom and Starveling actually kiss, and look so horrified, again, tee hee. But the best part of that is Tom Snout is laughing so hard about the accidental kiss that the wall is shaking for the rest of the scene. It is so freaking funny, and just a random little touch by the director.

Of course, there were some things that weren't so good:

Dana Green as Titania/Hippolyta. Totally highschool Shakespeare. Static presence on stage, typical rhythmic repitition of the lines. Good dancer, though.

Actually, that was my only problem. Everything else was wonderful.

Final kudos go to the costumers, seamstresses, and designers. The overall look of the show was seamless. The costumes were great. I loved the contrast between preppy Demetrius and hip hop Lysander and slutty Hermia and school girl Helena. I also loved the gradual destruction of the costumes as they wandered through the forest. The fairy costumes were pretty and pretty minimal, as usual. As I mentioned above, the stage was utilised fully, with fairies crawling, jumping, bouncing and dancing all over.

This years version of Midsummer Night's Dream can only be described as a spectacle, an extravaganza, words usually reserved for big Broadway musicals. I just wish I could see it again.
garnigal: (Default)
Last night I met my mother in Stratford and went to Guys and Dolls at the Festival Theatre. It was really good, as expected. I've never seen anything at Stratford that I didn't like. However, there were some things I'd do differently, if I were the director.

1. Nathan Detroit (played by Geordie Johnson) sounded a little too Jewish to be a gangster. What was up with that accent?
2. Cynthia Dale (Sarah Brown) drowned out Scott Wentworth (Sky Masterson) when they sang together. They both have fabulous voices, but they don't blend that well together.
3. I've never seen someone so tense as Big Jule (pronounced Julie, played by Grant Linneberg). I don't know if that was intentional, or if Grant Linneberg just isn't very flexible.

There were also some things that were so good they gave me shivers.

1. I just love Nicely Nicely Johnson (played by Bruce Dow). He's well written, and well acted. I'm going to answer "Nicely nicely, thank you" every time someone asks me how I am.
2. Sheila McCarthy as Miss Adelaide cracked me up. Unlike Geordie, her accent and voice were spot on (and her throat must have been killing her at the end of the show, staying so nasal.)

I love musicals. I love music, I love the theatre, I love the big splashy costumes. Usually, when I go to a big show like this, I'm way familiar with the story and music ahead of time. The only song I knew going in was Luck, Be a Lady. When I heard them, some of the others sounded familiar (The Oldest Established, Bushel and a Peck [yes, the children's song], Adelaide's Lament). Mom had to get me to stifle myself with my coat at some of the lyrics in Marry the Man Today (give him your hand today, give him the fist tomorrow - seriously!). I love the guys' dance numbers because they are so athletic and active.

I'm going back to Stratford tonight to see Midsummer Night's Dream (Reid rocks), so I'm going to stop into The Theatre Store and get the cd.

Come back tomorrow or Monday for my review of Midsummer Night's Dream.

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