♩♫♪ Don’t Wanna Be An American Idiot…♬♪♩♪

“One Nation Controlled By The Media”

How are you planning to spend your 4th of July? I am going to return to the Orpheum Theatre and watch American Idiot one more time!

I remember back in the day seeing my first Green Day video (I don’t listen to the radio much) and thinking “what in the world is going on here?”  This was creepy visually, but the song is so catchy, I couldn’t change the channel. The masks that the patients wear are just *shudders*…

 I liked the music and have enjoyed watching them try out new sounds over the years.  I think any artist that doesn’t is not growing.  So when I heard there was a musical coming out featuring songs from their American Idiot and 21st Century Breakdown albums, I thought this should be interesting…*raised eyebrows*

When I heard the original cast recording of American Idiot, I enjoyed it, but it wasn’t the same as hearing the actual band playing.  So I gave it a “its pretty good” on the How Much Do I Like This Show judgement. But then I didn’t bother to listen to it again until maybe the beginning of this year.

I was cycling through my ipod music one day and two songs from AI (Green Day version) came on.  I hardly ever get to hear Green Day when I do this.  Then the next day, I read in an email that AI was coming back to the Bay Area.  So I decided to give it another go.   The difference on this listen was that I chose not to distract myself with anything, except knitting.  I fully focused on hearing and feeling the story.

And something struck me.

This was so much better than I originally thought.  Of course it isn’t going to be the same as the band playing because it was it’s own entity.  I should have acknowledged this from the beginning and stupidly I didn’t.

Everyone has had that moment in life where they’ve felt lost or wanted something better but not sure what.  The main characters in this story are living that out in their various ways.  I think what threw me for a loop on that first listen is that some of the voices sound the same if you aren’t really paying attention.  So it didn’t quite sink in that it’s three male characters that are having this “crisis” not just one.  Oh, I think I should also note that I don’t really like to read the liner notes.  I feel that a really good musical will stand on it’s own through the songs and not need explaining.

Then when I watched the show a few weeks ago, I loved it.  The energy on that stage is amazing!  The set reminded me a little of “Rent” in regards of how little there is on stage and the variety of uses each thing has.  The band is fantastic and it’s fun to be able to see them rock out on stage as well.  The cast is incredible! To have to name everyone that was great in the show would be simply to look at the program.  I do have to make a special mention though.  I saw two understudies and they were both outstanding, so when I learned that on the next visit I would be seeing the other cast members, I thought “how much better can they be than what I just saw?”  But during the little after party, the understudies (Jarran Muse and Vince Oddo) swore that the people who will be playing St. Jimmy and Favorite Son are absolutely amazing.

I think the highlight songs in the show are “Holiday” “Favorite Son” “The Waiting” and “Wake Me Up When September Ends.”  For “Holiday”, it is all about the exuberant excitement of new destinations and adventures that one seeks when they set out on a new path.  The energy just fills the theatre and pulls the audience into the fun.  In “Favorite Son” the character is what makes that number and Vince Oddo had such a commanding stage presence that dancing girls were barely noticeable in their colorful dancewear.  The choreography in “The Waiting” and “Wake Me Up…” was so beautiful that I got choked up watching it.  It wasn’t that the dance itself was technically highly difficult, it was more that it was perfectly able to portray the cold harshness of the military in the first and the disorientation and loss in the latter.

I cannot wait to return to SF tonight and watch the show one more time.  I can’t think of a better way to pay tribute to our country than to see a show that wants us to question “What am I doing?” and “Where am I going?”  Both similar simple questions but not so simple to answer.

And in that spirit, I’d love to challenge you, AMERICA!

What are WE doing? I see us being divided by classism, racism and inequality.

Where are WE going?  I see us allowing ourselves to be further and further divided.

How do WE fix this?

P.S. Just for good measure…

Like the Borealis, The Aurora consistently shines with magic…

Madeline H.D. Brown, Kevin Clark, and Liam Vincent in Mark Jackson’s Salomania at The Aurora Theatre Company in Berkley.

Have you ever seen something and it struck you so unexpectedly, you have to actually let go emotionally before you can continue on?  That’s exactly what happened to me when I saw Aurora Theatre Company’s World Premiere of “Salomania” by Mark Jackson.  I LOVED IT!

In the program’s author’s note, Jackson ends by saying “The mystery as to how so many intelligent, prominent people could say and do so many stunningly outrageous things is indeed the question that grabbed a lasting hold of me…Ultimately, the play is less about its characters than it is about the anxious, hysterical society that shapes them.”

When you learn that this play is based on an actual account in history, one can only shake their head and think how incredibly sad it is that nothing has changed.

The story focuses on San Francisco dancer Maud Allen (Madeline H.D. Brown), who made a career for herself internationally by dancing the title role in Europe in Oscar Wilde’s “Salome” and creating her own dance of Salome.  Editor of The Vigilante newspaper, Noel Pemberton-Billling (Mark Anderson Phillips) has tried to slander many people in Parliament, the Royal Family, and other well-to-do members of the community by saying they are a part of a secret black book which is owned by the German Secret Service.  In this black book, were the names of 47,000 individuals who are deemed “sexual perverts.” After his efforts failed to work on those in the British ruling class, he focuses his intentions on Ms. Allen, who is known to have a fighting spirit.  Maud sues Pemberton-Billing for libel and the case makes the front page of newspapers.

Clark as Judge Darling, Brown as Maud Allen, Phillips as Noel Pemberton-Billing

While Allen is the prosecution, it is she that is victimized and demoralized.  Dredging up horrible scars from her past and accusing her of lesbianism and a German sympathizer, criminalized her in the eyes of “moral” British citizens even though there was no evidence provided.  Pemberton-Billing’s main focus along with his little henchman American Harold S. Spencer (Anthony Nemirovsky) is to “bring to light” that his country is being infiltrated and degenerated by German sympathizers through homosexuality and consequently will lose the war because of this.

There’s a touching side story of a troop of soldiers and their experience on the battlefield, with each other, and how they deal with their situation.  Throughout the play, the troops, after getting air raided upon, argues about which is the best chocolate supplier and why.  They argue over the Allen case.  Its a funny little look into their lives.  How even in this intense environment, they do what they can to remain “normal.”

The script is a fast paced conversation that has funny sprinkled throughout so this particularly heavy situation doesn’t weigh down the audience.  The complex sentences of Jackson’s writing give the actors chances to have fun with the lilt and cadence of his words.  Parts of the play are actually quotes taken from the testimonies and other historical documents.

This play takes the audience on a gamut of emotions.  Unless you’re a robot.  I laughed.  I got angry.  I was horrified.  I was amazed. I was moved.  I laughed because while the subject matter is tough, there are still so many lines and scenes that are hilarious.    A great example is the judge in the case, Judge Darling (Kevin Clarke) [See picture above].  Throughout the hearing and during questioning of Lord Alfred Douglas (Liam Vincent), a former “friend” of Oscar Wilde, his quick side looks and “Don’t you dare” eyes and the quick wit are highly memorable.  Although to be fair, Allen’s quick quips to Pemberton-Billing were funny as well.  What got me angry was that Allen’s case fell apart because of the accusation of lesbianism and that the justice she sought would become her undoing, much like Oscar Wilde.  I was horrified with the death of her brother.  He was hanged because he was found with two dead girls.  In his sad sad speech he declares his innocence and how sorry he was that they couldn’t see that.  Then abruptly he is hanged.  And while the action is insanely simple, the contrast of this beautiful moment cut of by jarring lights and noise get maximum impact.  I’ll talk about amazed in a sec.  I was moved by the beauty in which actor Kevin Clark transitions from Judge Darling to Soldier, to Oscar Wilde in a span of two minutes.  Each change seemed to have it’s own “quirks” but it wasn’t until he became Wilde that the biggest one hit.  I was luckily sitting literally 2 feet away from him and while he had his back toward me, I could tell something was going to happen.

And it was such a small thing at first.  After the Soldier.  He pulled out his comb and slowly combed his hair back.  He wasn’t moving like this in the change from Judge to Soldier.  Then, he reached out

In the trenches. Kevin Clark in focus.

his hand to the chair he was once sitting on. It was trembling.  Wilde died of cerebral meningitis when he was 46.  As he slowly lifted the seat of the chair and took out a white jacket, Clarke began to hunch over slightly and with shaking hands placed his hat on with an artistic tilt.  Next, he slowly made his way to the table that was center stage upon which sat a lone wine glass and bottle.  His shuffling feet were the only noise as the audience sat spellbound.  That alone was one of my favorite moments in the play.  It is not something that can be written.  It is just done.

In the scene that followed, Maud and Oscar talk about their first meeting, the pointlessness of war and how it will always be around and the lack of acceptance of the love of beauty.  It is such a beautiful and well-written scene, I could feel the tears welling up.

I don’t want to give away the ending!!  But…but…

okay, here is what I will say. I thought the end was so symbolically beautiful and so perfect for an Oscar Wilde inspired play that after the show I had to sit in my car and cry for about 10 minutes before I could drive back home.

What made me amazed about this production was how relevant it is.  Criminalization of LGBT people are still things that happen around the world.  In recent years, Cece McDonald, an African American transgender woman and fashion design student, and some friends, while walking down the street in Minneapolis, were attacked by people who were yelling racial and homophobic slurs.  Someone broke a glass in her face and it left a gash that required 11 stitches.  A fight broke out and a man with a swastika tattoo was stabbed and died.  McDonald was charged with 2 counts of murder.  The prosecution says that the hate speech that happened before the fight is irrelevant.  McDonald is currently serving 4 years in a men’s prison even though she identifies as a woman.  Recently, though, she has pled guilty to lowered charges of negligent manslaughter.  Still f-ing ridiculous!

Stories like this happen all the time.  There’s another story about a Mexican-American woman who is facing the death sentence because the lawyers, after telling the jury that because she’s a fiery Mexican and “hard core lesbian” due to the fact that a guy hit on her enraged her so much she had to kill him.  They then brought in 10 people who simply confirmed that she was a lesbian.

My amazement turned into sadness when I thought more about this aspect of the show.  I guess it will never get better.  Let’s only hope that it doesn’t get worse.

If you are interested in reading more about these stories, check out Queer (In)justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People of the United States.

But back to the play…

Can I just say how much I loved the costumes?? Callie Floor is amazing. If you look at the picture at the start of this post, look at Vincent’s pants.  Those are the pants he uses as a Soldier.  Everyone except for Brown has this same costume piece and only switch out the jackets and vests.  However, when you get a look at the whole outfit, I think it is remarkably fashionable.  Maybe it is just me and my penchant for costumes.  I would totally wear that look.   The gowns are lovely and look so elegant, which they should as they are ladies of high society.  I will have to say and I know I shouldn’t, but nothing is ever perfect… On the back of one of Nemirovsky’s striped jacket, the panels aren’t arranged properly.  I was always told that the stripes should always make a “V” when it hits the center seam.  That’s the only thing that’s amiss with the costumes.  Practically nothing.

The set, created by Nina Ball, was multi functional and works so well in the theatre’s small stage area. I loved the scenes with the actor propelled turntable.  It felt like I was watching a movie with the profiles always changing in those scenes like a circling camera shot.

One thing I did want to see more of…When Allen is dancing it is lovely, but what I wanted to see more of was the feeling on her face and was there a difference in the little pieces she did or were they all part of the same single number that made her famous.  Again, just a little nit picky thing. I’ll bet because of my seat, she could have been doing this, but I only saw her back.

The acting was superb even with the two or three words that were stumbled over.  Brown, who looks like she stepped out of the silent era silver screen, is heartbreaking as Allen.  Clarke is stellar as Judge Darling and Oscar Wilde.  Alex Moggridge is completely charming as both Allen’s lawyer, Ellis Williams Hume-Williams and the Soldier who gets leave.  Anthony Nemirovsky played the upbeat, yet dangerous American with a smile that didn’t let you know that there was some crazy stew boiling inside.  The super-talented Mark Anderson Phillips is incredible as he has the hardest job.  His Pemberton-Billing is a despicable character, yet as Allen’s doomed brother Theo Durant, he draws out your compassion almost in the same minute.  Marilee Talkington was a true chameleon.  She had the most characters and all of them were so distinctly different that one could easily see her do well in a one woman show! Liam Vincent, while quiet as a soldier most of Act 1, really packed a wallop as Lord Douglas.  His perfectly timed entrance and his quick stiff jibes at the judge were a wonderful contrast to his moving speech about dredging up one’s past.  Easily one of the most memorable moments of the play.

You will like this play. If it doesn’t move you emotionally (because you are a robot) you will like the thought provoking aspect of it.

The Aurora Theatre Company does it once again!  5 of the biggest happy actors ever!

♫♪ I Love Rock and Roll…♩♬

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And rock and roll is so much fun when you see it in the context of “Rock of Ages!”

I’ve already seen it twice, and I wouldn’t mind seeing it again.  Just sayin’…

The story revolves around Sherrie Christian (Julianne Hough) who heads to 1980’s Hollywood to make it as a singer.  Right off the bat, there’s some laughing to be done as the first verse and chorus of Night Ranger’s “Sister Christian”  plays out.  And that’s when you realize this movie while it’s intended to simply have you enjoy yourself, is really well thought out in terms of splitting the songs into believable-ish dialogue. 

Her first night there, she meets Drew (the cute as a button Diego Boneta) and quickly falls in love.  As “luck” would have it, she begins to work at The Bourbon Room, a seedy rock and roll bar on the main drag owned by Dennis and Lonny (Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand.)  The Bourbon Room is the place that gave Stacee Jaxx (Tom Cruise) his big break and shot him into Rock God status. 

Then, enter Mayor Whitmore (Bryan Cranston) and his wife Patricia (Catherine Zeta-Jones) who vow to rid the town of such evil music and “morals”  by shutting down The Bourbon Room.  

We watch the kids fall in and out of love.  We see the icon question the emptiness of his fame.  We follow the club owners as they realize that rock is as much a part of them as they are of each other.  

I don’t know if this movie would have worked if it was cast any other way.  Everyone sounded great.  Every time I would roll my eyes because Hough’s voice is so annoyingly mousey, she would sing out those rock high notes and it would sound fabulous.  Boneta was perfection! Of course, I was expecting MJB to be amazing and she didn’t dissapoint.   Brand, who I am not a fan of at all, was surprisingly unannoying and actually had a decent voice!  I honestly enjoyed his performance.  I was curious to see how Baldwin and Cruise would fare.  And I didn’t have high hopes for them (but only because I don’t recall either of them singing.) and I was praying they wouldn’t be as bad as Pierce Brosnan in Mamma Mia.  Which by the way, if I ever see him, I am gonna punch him down his face for that role.  It was awful, just awful! 

Anyway… as Dennis, owner of The Bourbon Room, Alec Baldwin is a hoot and a holler.  He reminds me of a rock and roll hippy.  He’s kinda laid back and goofy, but those eyes of his sparkle with edge.  His singing actually seems to mimic his demeanor as well.  Odd choice of words I know.   When he sings, none of the songs really give him a big belting note, so he never displays power.  He carries the tune great, but doesn’t give it any “guts” which is what I mean by laid back.  Yet the natural raspy quality of his voice gives it an edge.  

But enough about Mr. Baldwin.  What really mesmerized me in this movie was Cruise’s performance as Jaxx.  I couldn’t stop smiling with how phenomenal he is in this flick!  While he doesn’t have the best voice (it’s kind of thin when he sings the ballads) its good enough to make the songs listen-worthy, but when you see him rocking out… its frackin’ amazing.  He really truly was a rock star.  There is a scene when he’s to be interviewed for Rolling Stone by reporter Constance Sack (Malin Akerman) and where he’s woken from his nap but behind his sunglasses, his eyes are sharp as a tack.  Every movement reads as exhausted drunk middle aged man struggling to get it together, but his eyes read “I am King in my element.”  I watched closely when he sang his songs and his breathing and energy behind the words matched from soundtrack to video.  It was almost like he was actually singing on the set instead of lip syncing.  There are a few times where other characters miss a breath here or there, but not Cruise.  

While he may not be the main character of the movie, Cruise is so outstanding that you think he is.  

There are some incredible mash-ups like “We Built This City/ We’re Not Gonna Take It” and “Jukebox Hero/I Love Rock and Roll.”  For me, the highlights of the movie are Zeta-Jones’ “Hit Me With Your Best Shot” (Mia Michaels’ choreography is always fabulous, but her wink to 80’s vids like “Beat It” make it funny too), Cruise’s “Pour Some Sugar On Me” “Wanted Dead or Alive” and “I Wanna Know What Love Is” with Akerman, and Blige’s “Any Way You Want It.”

While this movie may have opened with low box office numbers, don’t get the idea that it was because it was a bad movie.  This was made to cater to the theatre lovers and the people of the eighties who loved all those pop rock hair band songs.  It’s a small group of us.  However, if you like a good comedy, if you like 80’s music, if you like cheesy romantics, if you like campy, then this is a wonderful movie to see.  

In a way this movie is kind of like a time capsule.  It’s got a bunch of music from the 80’s but also some other things that aren’t so easy to find anymore.  I mean when’s the last time you saw a Tower Records?   Or records in general?  

Its too much fun to be missed.  

If you don’t have a good time, you can complain to me in the comments section.  How does that sound? Now, go get to the theater!

5 big happy actors for this film. 

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Episode “Tony”-Four!!

This episode features music from past Tony winners for “Best Musical” as well as knitting, auditions, Tony Award predictions, and other rants.
Click the image for Podcast 24!

EPISODE 24!!!

(CLICK THE LINK ABOVE TO PLAY)

This episode features music from past Tony winners for “Best Musical” as well as knitting, auditions, Tony Award predictions, and other rants.

And the elliptical keeps on spinning…

May, oh, May, where did you go??
I merely turned around and found myself stranded on the road with not a vehicle in sight.  
To the left and to the right of the road there were things to do and see, and as I journeyed through these things, I forgot that my destination lies elsewhere.

Throughout the month of May, I felt like I was running here and there to experience things and meet people but I totally forgot to keep my training in the other disciplines in my mind as well.  So while my dancing continues to strengthen, things like vocal and analysis took a back seat to other stuff.

Do I regret it?  No, I can’t say that I do.  Although, I know it reared it’s ugly little head at my last audition.  But, what’s been done is done.  I’m currently gearing up for another podcast, so I shall be talking about it then.

Have you lost track of time and forgot that you wanted to do stuff that you never got to?  How’d you handle it?  Did you rush to get everything done in the last minute?  How do you handle time management?