Showing posts with label Colin Lowry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colin Lowry. Show all posts

Saturday, July 20, 2013

One Night with Janis Joplin, Zach Theatre, July 10 - August 28, 2013

ALT review



 
by Michael Meigs

One Night with Janis Joplin Austin TX Zach TheatreThe Zach Theatre has franchised Randy Johnson's concert show, dosing it with lively Joplin imitator Kacee Clanton from LA, top-quality local talent, and a high wall projected full of Colin Lowry's CGI. Clanton and the back-up band deliver some spot-on covers of Pearl's most famous numbers. It's a thumping, thrumming night of thrills, not so cheap, a mostly mindless celebration of the highs delivered to us by that gifted misfit from Port Arthur.

The evening's "crank up the WayBack machine, Sherman!" presentation masquerades as an evening's concert by Janis Joplin, undated but floating in the space-time continuum just days before she died in October, 1970. That's close to 43 years ago, so the baby boomers and curious younger crowds are ripe for a retrospective of the untidy whitegirl blues singer. Unlike the 2001 musical Love, Janis, and the scarcely disguised film biopic with Bette Middler The Rose, this feel-good evening gives you very little about Janis's life. Yes, author Randy Johnson has pasted together a rambling commentary from the star, apparently lifted from interviews and perhaps concert footage, but it's sketchy, sometimes misleading, and, as a concept, outright deceptive.

Joplin was needy, neurotic, a binge alcoholic and a heroin addict who struggled unsuccessfully to get clean. In this evening Clanton swigs dutifully from time to time from a Southern Comfort bottle, but there's not a word about the drug habit that killed Joplin when her dealer provided unexpectedly higher-grade heroin. Johnson gives us, with the blessing of the Joplin estate, only the thrill and the yearning, Joplin's declarations of love to the audience and her declarations that only feeling is important. The shallow and fragmented texts make her sound simple minded, almost infantile.

One Night with Janis Joplin Zach Theatre Austin TX
Tiffany Mann, Kaycee Clanton (photo: Kirk R. Tuck)

With the magic of theatre, Johnson splices into the concert evening a series of musical vignettes to present the blues influences that helped shape Joplin's style and choice of music: Odetta, Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, Motown girl groups, Arethra Franklin and others. These interludes lift the show free of predictable hippie white rock.

Tiffany Mann is the generic 'blues singer' in these flights, and folks, she just blows the white girl away. Her pure voice, power, classical training and blues ability to get down are worth the entire price of the ticket: the pure eerie soprano of 'Summertime' from Gershwin's Porgy and Bess; Nina Simone's stark, still Today I Sing the Blues in which she holds our hearts in the palm of her hand and then tears them apart while Lowry projects the silent passage of a luminous moon through the starry sky; and her Aretha Franklin number that had the energy and charisma to pull down the house. (The joint appearance of Joplin and Franklin may be wishful thinking; Joplin appeared at Madison Square Garden once with Tina Turner. Perhaps Turner wasn't in the mood to license that scene, or perhaps Mann's squared-off, robust figure didn't fit Turner's slim, leggy profile.)


One Night with Janis Joplin Zach Theatre TX
(photo: Kirk R. Tuck)

Some 'disambiguation': One Night with Janis Joplin is indeed scheduled to open on Broadway, at the Lyceum Theatre, with previews from September 20 and the formal run to start on October 10. But that's not this production or this cast. Johnson's patchwork premiered in Portland in summer, 2011, then played in Cleveland in late 2012 (where understudy Mary Bridget Davies replaced the star during previews and won the area award for best performance by an actress in a musical). Davies and the principal company played Pasadena in the spring, Milwaukee in May, and are now rocking the Arena Stage in Washington DC before traveling on to Broadway. The San Jose Rep is running another production this September.

One Night with Janis is fun, even if it takes you to a mythic 1970 that couldn't have existed. That backup band has got the hair, for example, but none of the hungry look; they're chunky Texas beer-drinking buddies. And no 1970 concert could have provided the dazzlement of Lowry's imaginative projections, with their wheeling depicitions of flower-power graphics and shapes borrowed from lava lamps. If you'd like to witness and seat-boogie to Joplin's rock in a squeaky-clean re-edit of her world, you'll enjoy Zach's latest offering in the Topfer, which plays Wednesdays - Sundays to August 18. The theatre has scheduled a second performance on each of the last two Sundays, no doubt expecting that folks here in one of Janis's way-stations almost fifty years ago can still be counted to turn out to support a local talent.

EXTRA
Click to view excerpts from the program for One Night with Janis Joplin

Thursday, March 14, 2013

MAD BEAT HIP & GONE by Steven Dietz, Zach Theatre, April 3 - 28, 2013



ZACH Theatre Austin TX








(Zach Theatre, S. Lamar at Riverside (parking on Riverside and on Toomey Rd, one block south), 

presents the world premiere of


Mad Beat Hip & Gone Steven Dietz Zach Theatre








 A coming-of-age comedy about the beat generation

at ZACH’s Topfer Theatre, S. Lamar at Riverside
April 3-28, 2013, Wednesdays - Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sundays at 2:30 p.m.

Champagne Opening and Press Night is Thursday, April 11 at 7:30 p.m., followed by a reception with the stars of the show. Happy Hour Theatre is April 3 ($28 tickets for patrons under 30, plus a reception beginning at 6:45 p.m. and a post-show party). LGBT Wilde Party with pre-show mixer is Thursday, April 4. Performances continue through April 28, 2013. Four weeks only!

To order tickets call 512-476-0541 ext. 1 or visit www.zachtheatre.org. Tickets range from $25-$65. Student Rush Tickets: $18 one hour before showtime (with valid ID). ZACH’s full bar featuring signature cocktails and hors d’oeuvres opens 90 minutes prior to showtime and remains open for one hour post-show.

Mad Beat Hip & Gone Steven Dietz Zach TheatreFree Balcony Play Festival also begins April 3

ZACH Theatre – Austin’s Theatre and Texas’ longest running theatre, in the first season its new Topfer Theatre, co-commissioned by the University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts, presents The World Premiere of MAD BEAT HIP & GONE written and directed by STEVEN DIETZ (Becky's New Car, Shooting Star)


Steven Dietz, one of the most-produced playwrights in America, who also calls Austin home, created this world premiere specifically for ZACH's first season in the new Topfer Theatre. MAD BEAT HIP &GONE is a coming-of-age comedy that chronicles our rich and elusive dreams, immersing audiences in the cultural phenomena of the beat generation.
In the late ‘40s and early ‘50s, Jack Kerouac and Neal Cassady famously went "on the road." But what about Danny Fergus and Rich Rayburn — the young guys in the car right behind Jack and Neal, the guys whose history never ended up in books? What were these kids searching for in those "mad days" of "gone kids" trying so hard to be hip? Chock-full of smooth live jazz and exuberant theatricality, MAD BEAT HIP &GONE answers these questions and more as it takes audiences on a journey back in time.

ZACH’s Producing Artistic Director Dave Steakley says: “I’m thrilled to produce the world premiere of Steven Dietz’s new coming-of-age comedy MAD BEAT HIP & GONE, which was commissioned by the University of Texas College of Fine Arts. Steven teaches playwriting at UT, and it’s no secret we are big fans of his work, having produced his plays Shooting Star, Fiction, and Becky’s New Car. I’m in love with his new play, which sings with the beat poetry style made famous by Jack Kerouac and possesses Steven’s sly sense of humor and gift for a turn of phrase. The play also involves a live saxophone player on stage who interacts with the actors, punctuating the comedy with jazz riffs in a clever call and response.”

Of his long-time relationship with ZACH, Steven Dietz says: “I need ZACH Theatre – it is because of their bold and populist artistic aesthetic that I was inspired to create this story.”

ZACH’s production of MAD BEAT HIP & GONE features an all-star cast including: JACOB TRUSSEL as Danny, JON COOK as Rich, ERIN BARLOW as Honey, BABS GEORGE as Mrs. Fergus and RICK ROEMER as The Alberts.

Scenic Design by MICHAEL RAIFORD · Lighting Design by MICHELLE HABECK · Costume Design by SUSAN MICKEY · Sound Design by CRAIG BROCK · Video Design by COLIN LOWRY · Properties Design by JUSTIN COX · Stage Management by CATE TUCKER·

MAD BEAT HIP & GONE Previews April 3-10.


ZACH’s production of MAD BEAT HIP & GONE is presented by 3M and supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

NEW BALCONY PLAY FESTIVAL

In conjunction with MAD BEAT HIP & GONE, ZACH will launch the Balcony Play Festival – consisting of a series of 10-30 minute plays performed free for the public prior to mainstage productions. Drawing inspiration from the Juliet-style balcony overlooking the main entrance of ZACH’s new Topfer Theatre and from famous balcony scenes from plays and musicals, these new plays will invite a diverse audience of patrons and pedestrians alike to gather on ZACH’s People’s Plaza to enjoy this original, site-specific work. ZACH Associate Artistic Director Sarah Rasmussen (Head of MFA Directing Program, UT Austin and Associate Director, Black Swan Lab, Oregon Shakespeare Festival), will build on ZACH’s partnership with UT, involving MFA students in both the design and direction of the plays.


About ZACH Theatre ZACH Theatre is Austin’s leading professional producing theatre, employing more than 600 actors, musicians, and designers annually. Founded in 1932, ZACH is the longest running theatre company in Texas, serving 95,000 adults and youth annually. ZACH creates its own nationally recognized plays and musicals that ignite the imagination, lift the spirit, and engage the community under the proven leadership of Producing Artistic Director Dave Steakley and Managing Director Elisbeth Challener. Now in its 80th year, ZACH continues to expand and engage with Austin, adding the new 420-seat, 32,000-square-foot Topfer Theatre to its performing arts campus, nearly doubling ZACH’s capacity while retaining its hallmark intimate theatre-going experience. Visit www.zachtheatre.org for more information.



For real-time updates on ZACH Theatre news, events and happenings, visit http://www.zachtheatre.org/blog, like ZACH on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/zachtheatre, and follow ZACH on Twitter @zachtheatre http://www.twitter.com/zachtheatre.

ZACH Theatre is sponsored in part, by Applied Materials, Austin Catering, Four Hands Home, Holiday Inn-Lady Bird Lake, Kirk Tuck Photography, Marquee Event Group, OnRamp, Austin American-Statesman, KXAN TV 36, and Time Warner Cable; and by grants from Junior League of Austin, The Shubert Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts, Texas Commission on the Arts, and the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division, which believes an investment in the arts is an investment in Austin’s future. Visit Austin at NowPlayingAustin.com.



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