Miller’s Crossing

A couple of years ago, playwright Arthur Miller sounded something of a death knell for commercial theater when he remarked, “The theater culture on Broadway is dead. You can’t expect people to pay forty, fifty, sixty, a hundred dollars to sit down for a straight play.” Ironically, the acerbic dramatist…

Liquid Assets

Back in the late Eighties, when a team of New York producers announced that a stage version of the classic 1952 film Singin’ in the Rain was in the works, two questions crossed the minds of every prospective audience member: “How do you pull off the rain scene in a…

Love Him Tender

As strains of “Can’t Help Falling in Love” waft through the smoke-tinged air of the Mercury Cafe, a young woman haltingly enters the local establishment’s Jungle Room and takes up residence in one of its remote corners. Her oddly vacant eyes darting to and fro, Rootie (Elizabeth Rose) stuffs a…

Bard Games

Scholars and theatergoers will always argue about the legitimacy of setting William Shakespeare’s plays in periods other than Elizabethan England. Employing the well-worn device sometimes yields rich rewards, as evidenced two summers back by the Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s rock-and-roll version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and last season’s Civil War-era…

Going Solo

It’s difficult to imagine anyone other than Christopher Plummer playing the title character in William Luce’s Barrymore. In addition to maintaining his performer’s lock on the role since the play premiered at Canada’s prestigious Stratford Festival in 1996 (a few months later, the production moved to Broadway, where Plummer won…

Bewitched

What happens when a man is forced to choose between the well-being of his children and the sanctity of his good name? Should John Proctor, the main character in Robert Ward’s opera The Crucible, preserve his sons’ inheritance by bending to the stiff-necked morality of Salem’s witch-hunters? Or should the…

Local Vocals

By virtually every account, the 18-to-34 age group is the fastest-growing segment of the opera-going public. Although no one can explain exactly why Baywatching channel-surfers from the MTV generation are hooked on an art form once renowned for its corpulent prima donnas and sleep-inducing histrionics, two local opera companies are…

Unchained Melodrama

In keeping with the melodrama that permeates Giacomo Puccini’s Tosca, Central City Opera’s opening-night performance featured as artist Cavaradossi understudy Chad Shelton, who in the last week of rehearsals replaced a star tenor sidelined by a ruptured blood vessel in one of his vocal cords. (Tenor Adam Klein, who was…

Wooed Awakening

Even though Love’s Labour’s Lost isn’t one of William Shakespeare’s best-known or best-loved plays, the lyrical, ornate story is yet another example of the sentient dramatist’s incomparable ability to capture in verse the timeless truths about life’s great sea changes. And while the Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s visually stunning production of…

TV or Not TV? That’s No Question

Time was when an academic wit such as University of Colorado professor Sean Ryan Kelley wouldn’t have thought twice about how to direct the opening production of the Colorado Shakespeare Festival. Like any other sensible college teacher, Kelley would have begun his creative odyssey by making a dutiful pilgrimage to…

Letter Perfect

The great English actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell was nearly fifty years old when she created the role of Eliza Doolittle in George Bernard Shaw’s most famous play, Pygmalion. And even though Campbell’s acclaimed swan song marked the beginning of her somewhat ignoble decline (upon visiting the grand dame in New…

A Titanic Feat

Hollywood’s neatly packaged lies have been both bane and beacon to playwright Jeffrey Hatcher. Even though Hatcher’s farce about Thirties Tinseltown types, One Foot on the Floor, was given a rousing world-premiere production last year by the Denver Center Theatre Company, the play’s satiric commentary nonetheless failed to resonate with…

Patching a Plot

Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek’s joyous musical about pioneer life on the prairie, Quilters, couldn’t have been mistaken for a Broadway success when it closed in September 1984 after a run of just 24 performances. But like another musical that failed on the Great White Way, a short-lived endeavor based…

Sisterhood Act

Feminism is the main character in Parallel Lives: The Best of the Kathy & Mo Show, now on stage at the Avenue Theatre under the hit-and-miss direction of Michael McGoff. A pared-down version of the off-Broadway hit originally written and performed by actresses Kathy Najimy (best-known as the neurotic, rubber-faced…

The Impossible Dreck

Upon exiting the Space Theatre after a recent performance of the Denver Center Theatre Company’s current production of Don Quixote, a boy no older than twelve turned to his mother and said, “That was even weirder than The Master of Two Servants.” To which his mother haltingly replied, “Servant of…

Crime Still Pays

Alarming as the re-emergence of Seventies clothing and musical styles might be, one of that period’s most influential musicals, Chicago, resonates well with modern audiences. That’s because society has finally fulfilled late director/choreographer/auteur Bob Fosse’s prescient observation that Americans, egged on by an unscrupulous media, deify certain classes of criminals–especially…

Combat Fatigue

The beginning moments of local dramatist M. Scott Merrifield’s play Desert Air are full of promise. As the Changing Scene’s world-premiere production of this Gulf War-era drama begins, the strains of a popular rock song (“Video Killed the Radio Star”) fade out while the stage lights illuminate a drab olive-green…

A Master’s Voice

Though contemporary theatergoers have long favored the narrowly focused view of dramatists such as Arthur Miller (who’s still writing plays that reflect mostly American concerns), a growing number of contemporary directors are gravitating toward old hands such as Spanish playwright Pedro Calderon de la Barca, who crafted dramas that capture…

Mrs. Wizard

Like the mid-life crisis that its central character frequently describes but rarely experiences, local dramatist Coleen Hubbard’s play A Ritual for Returning has all the makings of a cathartic event but never actually becomes one. But though it has yet to realize its dramatic potential, this freewheeling romp through the…

Hell to Pay

Love is pain, pain produces suffering, and suffering is the state of being that leads one to God. But not before one has made the straight and narrow trip to hell, where, according to British playwright Ronald Duncan, no one really suffers anymore–including a handful of romantic writers whose collective…

Bats Out of Hell

Long before professional baseball became an event played between teams of ill-mannered millionaires, America’s pastime served as a metaphor for life’s ups and downs. Of course, that’s when the contests were regularly attended by white-shirted, fedora-wearing spectators with a boyish devotion to the game. And it’s that kind of unbridled…

Insight Unseen

In 1963, Robert Redford made his Broadway debut in, of all plays, Neil Simon’s Barefoot in the Park. On the heels of that triumph, the sandy-haired heartthrob launched a successful movie career and used a portion of his Tinseltown megabucks to jump-start the Sundance Institute, a Utah artists’ colony dedicated…