BORN WITH TEETH

Words Matter

A Theater Review of an East Coast Premiere by Julinda D. Lewis

By: Richmond Shakespeare

At: Gottwald Playhouse at Dominion Energy Center, 600 E. Grace St., Richmond, VA 23219

Performances: January 25 – February 11, 2024

Ticket Prices: $20 – $45

Info: (804) 340-0115 or http://www.richmondshakespeare.org

Death and life are in the power of the tongue…  – Proverbs 18:21

The time is the late 1590s. The place is a private room in a London tavern. The political climate is volatile – an authoritarian regime is in charge, freedom of speech does not exist, heretics and atheists – and apparently Catholics – are tortured and killed. A plague was ravaging society – the Black Death – a pandemic that killed thousands, causing the collapse of what little social structure remained after the political purge, leaving fields unplowed, and little to eat.

There are more spies than crimes to spy out. – BWT

This is where playwright Liz Duffy Adams saw fit to open up a voyeuristic window into the world of two writers – the well-established Christopher “Kit” Marlowe (Avery Michael Johnson) and the upstart William Shakespeare (James Murphy) – as they meet in the private back room of a pub to collaborate on a series of historic plays. But this collaboration is a contentious literary partnership, rife with jealousy, political unrest, and rumors of espionage, religious persecution, and sexual tension. This collaboration is Born With Teeth.

We are subjects, not citizens. – BWT

The flexible space of the Gottwald Theatre has been transformed for this occasion. A long (perhaps 12’?) table dominates the room, slashing diagonally through the space. It is placed on a sturdy parquet floor, and surrounded by 10 leather topped rectangular stools. The audience is seated on either side of the table, close enough for the first row to be showered by scattered sheets of paper during the two playwrights’ scuffles. This awesome set was designed and constructed by W. Reed West III.

You are so much stupider than you look; how is that possible? – BWT

William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe did indeed collaborate on the Henry VI trilogy, Parts I, II, and III, Marlow was stabbed to death in the summer of 1593. But much of the relationship between Shakespeare and Marlowe – both their authorship and personal  – is a matter of speculation and mystery. So that raises the question, how much of Born With Teeth is historical clarification, and how much is pure fantasy? And given the truths expressed and exposed of human interaction – oppression, suppression, persecution, ego, love – does the former question matter?

Worse than nowhere is somewhere you don’t want to be. – BWT

Avery Michael Johnson and James Murphy literally burst onstage, and give us a solid 90 minutes of drama, melodrama, angst, bravado, fear, backstabbing, lust, equivocation, love, revelation, caution, optimism, conciliation, espionage, and more. Born With Teeth is loud, frightening, and funny – sometimes all at once. Marlowe denigrates the upstart Shakespeare, until he reads a page or two of the play they’re working on and realizes that Shakespeare can, indeed, write. But at a time when there is not such thing as freedom of speech or religion, words can cut more sharply that a sword, and speech can be the currency of life or death.

I don’t deny God, I just don’t like him very much. – BWT

Murphy plays the role of Shakespeare with a bit of caution, much more reserved than his more outgoing and outrageous counterpart who may, in turn, be overly confident in the sovereignty of his benefactor. Johnson’s Marlowe never walks but strides. He stomps about in his tall boots – there’s a knife strapped into the right one – he leaps from the floor to the top of the table and lands on the tabletop, the floor, or Shakespeare like a cross between a  pouncing panther and a WWE wrestler. Sitting in the front row, I could see each bead of sweat on Johnson’s brow and distinctly hear the intake of breath when he rapaciously sniffed Murphy. Born With Teeth is a physically demanding play, fueled by quick dialogue that is alternately witty, cutting, and always demanding. It isn’t Shakespeare, but it is the essence of Shakespeare. It isn’t classical, but it is archetypal. It isn’t orthodox, but it does all the things you want live theatre to do.

—–

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County. When not writing about theater, she teaches dance history at VCU and low impact dance fitness classes to seasoned movers like herself, and occasionally performs.

—–

BORN WITH TEETH

by Liz Duffy Adams

Directed by Andrew Gall

Cast

Kit                   ……………    Avery Michael Johnson

Will                 ……………    James Murphy

Production & Design Team

Artistic Director          …….   James Ricks

Managing Director    …….   Jase Smith Sullivan

Playwright                   …….   Liz Duffy Adams

Director                       …….   Andrew Gall

Stage Manager            …….   MariaElisa Costa

Assistant Stage Manager …   Kiari Hicks

Costume Design          …….   Anna Bialkowski

Intimacy Choreographer  …   Lucinda McDermott

Lighting Design          …….   Tristan Ketcham

Set Design                   …….   W. Reed West III

Sound Design              …….   James Ricks

Run Time: About 90 minutes; no intermission

Content Disclosure: This production contains mature themes, strong language, & sexual/suggestive content.

———-

Photo Credits: Promotional Video by Eric Hackler & Photos from Richmond Shakespeare Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1088997112419759

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LONELY PLANET

LONELY PLANET

Sorry, We’re Closed

5th Wall Theatre in Collaboration with the Firehouse Theatre

A Theater Review by Julinda D. Lewis

At: The Firehouse, 1609 West Broad St., Richmond, RVA 23220

Performances: November 10-26, 2023

Ticket Prices: $1 – $35

Info: (804) 355-2001 or firehousetheatre.org or https://www.5thwalltheatre.org/

NOTE: It’s just about impossible to talk about this play without giving away some of the best parts. If you haven’t seen it yet and wasn’t to be surprised, you might want to wait until after you’ve seen it to read this. But yes – do see it – and then comment if you like. I’d love to hear what you think. -JDL

Steven Dietz’ two-person play, Lonely Planet (1993) borrows freely from (as in pays homage to) Eugène Ionesco’s absurdist play, The Chairs (1952), but while there are elements of the absurd and quite a bit of humor in Dietz’ play, it is at heart neither absurd nor a comedy – it is a play about manifested grief.

Set in an unnamed American city during the 1980s, Lonely Planet tells the story of two friends, Jody and Carl, who are each in his own way handicapped by the AIDS epidemic that is raging outside the doors of Jody’s quiet little map store.

Jody copes by withdrawing into the safety of his store, where the distortions of the Mercator map become a metaphor for the distortions of the world around him. At one point Carl quotes some frighteningly high number of deaths among people they know. Where Jody withdraws, Carl feels compelled to do something.

One day a single chair appears in Jody’s shop. Then another and another, until his safe haven is cluttered with chairs – each representing a dead friend. Carl’s place is too small to hold these monuments. He describes his apartment as so small that he has only one chair – a silver kitchen chair with a turquoise seat. In the final scene, Jody – who has finally found the strength to venture back outside – arrives at his shop to find Carl’s chair in the center of the space.

An impossibly balanced jumble of chairs greets the audience on entering the space, and Daniel Allen’s set filled with racks of rolled maps and map tables and all things cartographic is stunning and immersive. Todd LaBelle’s sound design likewise lulls us willingly and unsuspectingly into Jody and Carl’s world – before we realize that this world’s foundation is grief, loss, and tragedy.

Eddie Webster brings a gentleness and vulnerability to Jody that is both endearing and authentic. Adam Turck infuses Carl with an intensity that at times leaves us breathless. The two characters appear to be polar opposites, and yet they are long-time friends. More than that, they each understand things about the other that they cannot share with anyone else. Add to that Carl’s propensity to lie about his true profession and Turck’s character takes on mythic proportions.

Carl’s manufactured occupations are just as metaphorical as the chairs. He says he restores paintings, but appears to know nothing about art. His art restoration represents a way to commemorate the memories of his friends. He says he works for an auto glass repair shop, but what he is really trying to repair are the shattered pieces of broken lives. He says he writes for a tabloid newspaper, but what he really wants to do is preserve the stories of his friend’s lives.

Just as the Mercator projection was designed to help improve navigation, at the expense of distorted shapes and sizes of all but the local or most immediate locations, these two friends have found ways to navigate through the deadly waters of the AIDS epidemic by distorting the world around them. It’s amazing that Turck and Webster, director Nathaniel Shaw, and the author have been able to pull this off and still maintain a sense of humor and humanity.

Along the way to its crashing conclusion the play is grounded by the mundane details of daily life: the yellow pages, a standard black desk phone, self-adhesive stamps, a cell phone (?) In the final scene, Jody – who has finally found the strength to venture back outside – arrives at his shop to find a silver legged kitchen chair with a turquoise seat in the center of the space.

Lonely Planet is a play that will linger long after the two actors take their final bows.

———-

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

———-

LONELY PLANET

By Steven Dietz

Directed by Nathaniel Shaw

November 10 – 26, 2023

CAST

Carl                ……….           Adam Turck

Jody               ……….           Eddie Webster

u/s                   ……….           Alex Harris and William Vaughn

PRODUCTION TEAM

Director                     ……….           Nathaniel Shaw

Scenic Design           ……….           Daniel Allen

Costume Design      ……….           Colin Lowrey, II

Lighting & Sund Design ….           Todd LaBelle, Jr

Dramaturgy              ……….           Kendall Walker

Stage Management ……….           Emily Vial

Production Consultant  …..           Michael Hawke

Performance Schedule:

● Opening Night – November 10, 2023 at 7:30 PM

● Running Thursday – Friday – Saturday at 7:30 PM through November 25, 2023

● Running Sundays at 2:00 PM through November 26, 2023

● Pay-What-You-Will shows on November 12 at 2:00 PM and November 16 at 7:30 PM

● Post-Show Talkback on November 19 after the 2:00 PM performance

Tickets:

$1 – $35

Run time:

About 2 hours, with one intermission

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HAMLET

A Theater Review [with post-credit cookies] by Julinda D. Lewis

By: Richmond Shakespeare

At: Gottwald Playhouse at Dominion Energy Center, 600 E. Grace St., Richmond, VA 23219

Performances: October 19 – November 12, 2023 | EXTENDED to November 17

Ticket Prices: $20 – $45

Info: (804) 340-0115 or quilltheatre.org

Everyone has heard of Hamlet. Some of us read it in high school. Some have seen productions on stage or film. Others have avoided it like the plague. Wherever you sit along this spectrum, Richmond Shakespeare’s Hamlet will bring out a new-found love and admiration for Shakespeare’s most well-known drama. Seriously. I personally know people who either knew little to nothing about Hamlet or had an aversion to Shakespeare in general, who raved about this production after seeing it.              

Hamlet is a play about loss, unbearable grief, betrayal, revenge. . .and a ghost. When Prince Hamlet’s father, the King of Denmark, dies suddenly – under suspicious circumstances – Hamlet’s mother marries his uncle Claudius. Hamlet and members of the king’s guard experience a visitation from a ghost who appears to be the spirit of Hamlet’s father, and set the stage for a revenge plot.

Joshua Carter is an engaging and intense Hamlet, who cunningly slips in and out of madness. His grief appears authentic and his unhinged rants convincing. Physically he is controlled and seems always on the verge of erupting like a human volcano. His voice is beautifully resonant, well-modulated, and his gestures are tight and just eccentric enough to place him outside of our time. This is significant because this Hamlet is clothed in contemporary garments.

At the celebration of the new King’s court, the attendees wear tuxedos and most of the women wear semi-formal or business attire. Interestingly, Ophelia, Hamlet’s sometime love interest, favors cowboy boots – glittery ones for special occasions.

Joseph Yeargain, as Claudius, is suave and slimy at the same time, and it’s never clear whether Hamlet’s mother, Gertrude (Lucretia Marie) is involved in the murder and power plots or if she just goes along with whatever the men in her life tell her to do. Neither scenario is enough to stir any real sympathy for her.

The same cannot be said for Ophelia. Rosemary Richards tugs on our heartstrings as she plays her heart out, from the heights of love to the depths of despair, from beautiful fair maiden to a wretched shell of herself.

All is not doom and gloom. Avery Michael Johnson gives new meaning to the word “loyalty” as Hamlet’s friend, Horatio, and someone made an absolutely brilliant and hilarious decision to cast Toby O’Brien and Rachel Garmon-Williams as Hamlet’s friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Did I remember to say Hamlet’s stoner friends?

The entire ensemble, including Jody Ashworth as the Ghost of Hamlet’s father, MaryBeth Adams as the king’s counselor, Polonius, Robbie Winston as Laertes (son of Polonius and brother to Ophelia), John Moon as an unintentionally witty gravedigger are deserving of recognition, individually and as a collective. James Ricks’ direction is intuitive and when the play is over it comes as a shock to discover that nearly three hours have passed.

Don’t get thee to a nunnery, but do get thee to the Gottwald Theatre to see this marvelous production. Oh, and I sat with my husband and a friend in the front row of a bank of seats that is practically on the stage. My heart was in my mouth during the sword fight, and from my vantage point I also got to see the expressions of other audience members. Be daring – sit there! You can always change your seat after intermission if you chicken out. Your estimation of William Shakespeare, Hamlet, and Richmond Shakespeare will be forever elevated.

—–

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County. When not writing about theater, she teaches dance history at VCU and low impact dance fitness classes to seasoned movers.

—–

Hamlet

by William Shakespeare

Directed by James Ricks

Cast

Hamlet             ……………    Joshua Carter

Claudius          ……………    Joseph Yeargain

Gertrude          ……………    Lucretia Marie

Ghost/Player King  ………    Jody Ashworth

Horatio            ……………    Avery Michael Johnson

Polonius          ……………    MaryBeth Adams

Ophelia            ……………    Rosemary Richards

Laertes            .……………    Robbie Winston

Guildenstern/Francisco/Player

Queen/Priest ………   Rachel Garmon-Williams

Rosencrantz/Fortinbras/

Bernardo …………   Toby O’Brien

Gravedigger/Marcellus/

Player  ……………  John Moon

Voltimand/Osric/

            Player  …………….  Keegan Ferrell

Ensemble         ……………..  Kenjae Lundy, Milind Murthy

Production & Design Team

Artistic Director          …….   James Ricks

Managing Director    …….   Jase Smith Sullivan

Costume Design          …….   Keith Walker

Lighting Design          …….   Gretta Daughtrey

Set Design                   …….   Frank Foster

Sound Design              …….   Kate Statelman

Production Manager  …….   Melissa Johnston-Price

Stage Manager            …….   MariaElisa Costa

Fight Choreography   …….   Aaron Orensky

Assistant Stage Manager …   Diandra Chiaffino-Butts

Properties                    …….   Jordan Dively

Run Time: About 3 hours including one intermission

———-

Photo Credits: David Parrish Photography

HAMLET ON NBC “12 ABOUT TOWN”

https://www.nbc12.com/video/2023/11/03/hamlet-continues-through-nov-17/

AN OBSERVATION

In Act I Hamlet is seen reading – and eating the pages of – a book, Holy Blood, Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, and Henry Lincoln. The authors propose that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had children with her whose descendants later emigrated to southern France where they became part of a secret society called the Priory of Sion. The authors further concluded that the Holy Grail of legend is both the womb of Mary Magdalene and the sacred royal bloodlines she birthed.

AN ANALOGY

Hamlet:Claudius as David:Saul

Just as the biblical David had a chance to kill the treasonous King Saul while hiding in a cave, but he chose not to, Prince Hamlet had a chance to kill his uncle, the treasonous King Claudius, as he prayed, but he chose not to.

YOU DO SPEAK SHAKESPEARE!: Phrases We Got From Hamlet

To thine own self be true.

Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.

Murder most foul.

Pernicious woman!

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, that are dreamt of in your philosophy.

The time is out of joint.

Although this be madness, there’s method in it. [i.e., a method to one’s madness]

There is nothing good or bad but thinking makes it so.

What a piece of work is a man.

I know a hawk from a handsaw.

The play’s the thing!

To be or not to be…

Conscience makes cowards of us all.

Get thee to a nunnery!

Oh, woe is me!

Madness in great ones must not unwatched go.

Suit the action to the word.

The lady doth protest too much!

Act your age!

Sweets to the sweet.

The dog will have his day.

The grinding of the ax.

Good night, sweet prince.

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MARTHA MITCHELL CALLING

“If it hadn’t been for Martha Mitchell, there’d have been no Watergate.” – Richard Nixon

A Theater Review by Julinda D. Lewis

At: Hanover Tavern, 13181 Hanover  Courthouse Rd, Hanover, VA 2309

Performances: September 29 – October 29, 2023

Ticket Prices: $52

Info: (804) 282-2620 or www.virginiarep.org

Some plays are notable not because they are entertaining but because they are revelatory. Martha Mitchell Calling is that type of play. It is more than an historic docu-drama based on the real life story of the wife of former U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell, a key figure in the Watergate Scandal (1972-1974). Martha Mitchell Calling fills in some important parts of U.S. history that have been ignored or re-written – all because a key figure in the story was a woman.

Debra Wagoner has stepped into Martha Mitchell’s designer shoes to spill all the tea, right the wrongs, fill in the blanks, and teach us all a thing or two – while simultaneously making us laugh and acknowledge her considerable skills as an actor. Wagoner embraces the title role while her real-life husband, Joe Pabst, steps into character as her John Mitchell. Pabst literally steps into the role, as he starts most scenes as a portrait on the wall and steps out of the frame to join his wife in increasingly contentious interactions.

I was finishing high school and beginning college during the Watergate Scandal, certainly old enough to be aware of what was happening. But I don’t recall anything about Martha Mitchell – and that’s the whole point of this play. It starts out as a love story, but before our very eyes Mrs. Mitchell transforms from a traditional, if somewhat flamboyant, stand-by-your-man southern belle to a political pariah. She converted her husband from Democrat to Republican and introduced him to Richard Nixon. But then there was Watergate – when the Nixon administration broke in to the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., at the Watergate Office Building on June 17, 1972. Martha Mitchell Calling fills in some of the missing details, including an alleged kidnapping, a suspected drugging disguised as a mental breakdown, a missing weekend, and many other unanswered questions.

This is a two-person show, but Wagoner is undeniably the star of this show. She portrays Mrs. Mitchell as a mover and shaker, a bit unsteady on her feet from her close relationship with her ever-present gin bottle, princess phone close at hand and ready to be wielded like a cowboy’s pistol. We feel the toll taken by the series remarkable events that started with Mrs. Mitchell calling her favorite journalist with gossip in support of her husband and the Republican party to the heart-wrenching decision to stand up for truth and expose the corruption that had consumed her beloved GOP and her adored husband.

These events even gave rise to a condition known as Martha Mitchell Syndrome, which is what occurs when a medical professional labels a patient’s accurate perception of real events as delusional, resulting in an intentional misdiagnosis. Mrs. Mitchell’s commitment to the truth led to the loss of her husband, her daughter, and her health. She died alone and in disgrace.

This role is no small feat and Wagoner does a star turn as the ostracized socialite. Pabst is no slouch either. He admirably balances the seemingly contradictory role of loving husband and father with that of political villain, carrying loyalty to a fault and beyond.

Is it coincidence that Virginia Rep produced two female-led political productions at the start of their new season (POTUS at the November Theatre and Martha Mitchell Calling at Hanover)? Hmm. Whatever the explanation, both productions have contributed to an intriguing and provocative start to the local theater season.

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

MARTHA MITCHELL CALLING

by Jodi Rothe

Directed by Rick Hammerly

Cast

Martha Mitchell                      Debra Wagoner

John Mitchell                          Joe Pabst

Direction & Design

Direction                                Rick Hammerly

Scenic & Production Design    Dasia Gregg

Costume Design                      Sue Griffin

Lighting Design                        Matthew Landwehr

Sound Design                          Kelsey Cordrey

Stage Management                 Crimson Piazza

Ticket Information

Tickets: $52

Discounted Group Rates and Rush tickets available.

Box Office: 804-282-2620 or www.virginiarep.org

Run Time: 2 hours including a 15 minute intermission

Photo Credits: Aaron Sutten

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BERTA, BERTA

The New Theatre at Firehouse in Collaboration with the Conciliation Project Presents the Virginia Premiere of a Play by Angelica Chéri

A Theater Review by Julinda D. Lewis

At: The Firehouse 1609 West Broad St., Richmond, RVA 23220

Performances: September 27 – October 15, 2023

Ticket Prices: $15-$35

Info: (804) 355-2001 or firehousetheatre.org.

O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal oh-ah
O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal well now
Go ‘head marry don’t you wait on me oh-ah
Go ‘head marry don’t you wait on me well now

Inspired by a prison chain-gang song that originated on the euphemistically named Parchman Farm – a Mississippi State Penitentiary –  BERTA, BERTA is a love story, an allegory, a tale of historical fiction, a memory, and an inheritance. Chéri found inspiration in August Wilson’s The Piano Lesson (1987) in which the song is featured. But that’s not all.

In many ways, the couple in Angelica Chéri’s play, which premiered in the 2018 Contemporary American Film Theatre Festival (CATF) reminded me of the 2019 American Film Institute (AFI Fest) debut of the film, Queen and Slim. I rooted for Berta and Leroy just as I rooted for Queen and Slim, against all the odds, against the inevitable, against the evidence – because we have to have hope, we have to have love.

Might not want you when I go free oh-ah
Might not want you when I go free well now
Don’t know the difference when the sun go down oh-ah
Don’t know the difference when the sun go down well now

Katrinah Carol Lewis and Jerold E. Solomon were cast as Chéri’s reunited and doomed lovers, Berta and Leroy. But there is more to each of these characters than just that bare-bones description. Both Berta and Leroy are burdened with the sins of post-slavery America, the unwanted weight of the segregated south, and the crimes of being born Black in America. Both are people that we might meet, once knew, know of, or are related to.

Berta in Meridian and she living at ease oh-ah
Berta in Meridian and she living at ease well now
O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal oh-ah
O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal well now
I’m on old Parchman, got to work or leave oh-ah
I’m on old Parchman, got to work or leave well now

Leroy has spent time at Parchman Farm, and on his way to reunite with his former lover after his release, he commits yet another crime that seals his fate. Berta, who tired of waiting three years for Leroy – her one true love and soulmate – married a well-meaning but boring farmer who loved her, but he died, leaving her a widow with a ramshackle farmhouse in a small country town. On top of all that, she lost her only child who was stillborn. Both Berta and Leroy are waiting on a miracle – the miracle of the cicadas – to fulfill their deferred dreams.

That’s a lot of weight for two characters, two actors to carry. Both Lewis and Solomon are more than capable of bearing the load. Lewis is well known for authentic, riveting portrayals, from real-life Billie Holiday to fictitious Nora in A Doll’s House or even an entire cast as she did in Anna Deavere Smith’s one-woman play, Twilight Los Angeles 1992. Berta must be added to Lewis’ list of unforgettable characters. It is the kind of role that leaves the audience speechless, so I can only imagine how much it requires of Lewis to step into Berta’s worn slippers night after night.

Solomon is also a larger-than-life figure, and it could be easy to overact this role, but Solomon presents a well-rounded, sympathetic picture of this well-meaning Black man whose dreams have been dashed before he could even verbalize them. The hand of director Dr. Tawnya Pettiford-Wates is clearly imprinted on this stunning work, yet there is a softness that seems to have been previously – perhaps intentionally – untapped.

Berta, Berta is one of those magnificent works that reflects an immersive relationship between author, director, actors, lighting, scenic design, and sound. Chris Raintree’s roughshod wooden planks, wood stove, porch pump, and vines – so many vines – perfectly capture Berta’s rural home, the southern geography, the era, the mood. Kyle Epps feeds in the sounds of a harmonica, the cicadas and other ambient sounds in a way that is both natural magical. The same can be said of Andrew Bonniwell’s lighting that frames the stage from the top, the bottom, the back, and even from under the floorboards. The total effect is both heartwarming and heartrending; it reveals how tenuous are the lines between dreams and nightmares, the softness of a lover’s touch, and the kick of the moonshine Berta shares with Leroy.

This is, quite simply, a magnificent theatrical experience that cannot be described; it must be experienced.

O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal oh-ah
O Lord Berta Berta O Lord gal well now

———-

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

———-

BERTA, BERTA

By Angelica Chéri

Directed by Dr. Tawnya Pettiford-Wates

September 27 – October 15, 2023

CAST

Berta             ……….           Katrinah Carol Lewis

Leroy              ……….           Jerold E. Solomon

U/S                  ……….           Shalandis Wheeler Smith & Delvin Young

PRODUCTION TEAM

Scenic Designer       ……….           Chris Raintree

Lighting Designer    ……….           Andrew Bonniwell

Sound Designer       ……….           Kyle Epps

Costume Designer ……….           Nia Safarr Banks

Intimacy Director     ……….           Stephanie Tippi Hart

Asst. Intimacy Dir.    ……….           Dorothy Dee D. Miller

Assistant Director    ……….           Jeremy Morris

Research Intern        ……….           Sarah Young

Stage Manager        ……….           Grace LaBelle

Lobby Display          ……….           The Conciliation Project

Original rendition of Berta, Berta chain-gang song by Andrew Alli

Performance Schedule:

● Opening Night – September 29 at 7:30pm

● Running Thursday – Sunday through Oct. 15, 2023

● Pay-What-You-Will previews on September 27th and 28th at 7:30pm

● Pay-What You-Will performance on October 8th at 2pm

Tickets: $15-$35

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CARMINA BURANA

Richmond Ballet Opens New Season With a John Butler Classic & a Work by Associate Artistic Director Ma Cong

A Dance Review

By: The Richmond Ballet with the Richmond Symphony/Richmond Symphony Chorus and The City Choir of Washington

At: Dominion Energy Center’s Carpenter Theatre, 600 E. Grace St., RVA 23219

Performances: September 22-24, 2023

Ticket Prices: $25 – $130

Info: (804) 344-0906, etix.com, or richmondballet.com

THE PROGRAM

Thrive

Choreography by Ma Cong

Music by Oliver Davis

Costume Design by Monica Guerra

Lighting Design by Trad A. Burns

Lighting Supervision by Joseph R. Wall

World Premiere: September 20, 2022, Richmond Ballet, Richmond Ballet Studio Theatre, Richmond, VA

CARMINA BURANA

Conceived and Choreographed by John Butler

Music and Latin Text by Carl Orff

Staging by Igor Antonov and Lauren Fagone

Costume Design by John Butler

Lighting Design by Catherine Girardi after

Original Lighting Design by Richard Moore

World Premiere: September 24, 1959, New York City Opera, City Center, New  York

Richmond Ballet Premiere: October 15, 1987, Carpenter Theatre, Richmond, VA

If there’s anything better than live dance, it’s live dance performed to live music. After a debut performance at Wolf Trap in August, the Richmond Ballet opened their new season with an exciting program of neoclassical ballet and ballet theatre. The program opened with Thrive, the most recent work of Associate Artistic Director Ma Cong, and concluded with John Butler’s highly immersive Carmina Burana. (Note: Founding Artistic Director Stoner Winslett will be stepping down at the end of the season and moving into an advisory role, and Ma Cong will step into the role of Artistic Director.)

First performed as the 2022 season opener of the Richmond Ballet’s Studio Series, Ma Cong’s Thrive, a classical ballet in 7 movements, and his ninth work for Richmond Ballet, had the full expanse of the Carpenter Theatre stage and the pleasure of hearing British composer Oliver Davis’s layered score performed live by a full orchestra.

An ambitious display of contemporary classical ballet that spans the gamut from the humorous or playful to the somber and romantic, the work was inspired partly by the choreographer’s interactions with Richmond’s LGBTQ+ and Asian-American communities.

Onstage, Thrive manifests as clean, neo-classical movement accompanied by classical strings, interspersed with riotous pairings accompanied by more humorous music – some instrumental and some choral. The lighting matched the music and movement, with shades of red for the lighter moments and blues and purples for the more somber sections.

Carmina Burana raises the drama to a whole new level. A full orchestra in the pit, choral groups spilling out on both sides of the stage, soloists downstage left and right, frame dancers in monks robes who process in, pausing occasionally to genuflect. The robes soon give way to the barest of body coverings, reminiscent of Adam and Eve, while Eri Nishihara later appears in flowing white. Light colored body suite for the women and tights with collars over bare chests for the men emphasize the stylized movement that sometimes appears to have been lifted from an ancient print or vase.

A wheel of fortune projected in the background reminds us that life is uncertain, that we are all subject to the ups and downs, the wins and losses. The mostly Latin lyrics and poetry just add to the drama – sometimes more like an opera than a ballet – bookending the entire experience with the “O Fortuna” Prologue and Epilogue.

There is discipline and structure, seductive moments, energetic and tortured movement – some of all that life has to offer.  The very characters that bow in prayer later appear literally half-dressed (hats off to costume designer Monica Guerra) and become part of romantic triangles or what some call “entanglements.” Cody Beaton and Ira White, and Eri Nishihara with Khaiyom Khojaev guide the ensemble through the changes of luck and fate, bringing a relatable sense of emotion and sensuality to what might otherwise appear to be an obscure spectacle.

All in all, this proved to be a full-blast, magnificent evening of dance theater and certainly raises the bar for high expectations for the rest of this season.

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

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ONE IN TWO

This is the play that has no end. . .

A Theater Review by Julinda D. Lewis

At: Richmond Triangle Players at the Robert B. Moss Theatre | Carpenter Foundation Stage, 1300 Altamont Ave, RVA 23230

Performances: September 20 – October 14, 2023

Ticket Prices: $10 – $40

Info: (804) 346-8113 or rtriangle.org

———-

After seeing Donja R. Love’s phenomenal Sugar in Our Wounds, produced at Richmond Triangle Players (RTP) during April-May 2022, I was excited to see One in Two (2019) and I was not disappointed. One in Two is a three-person drama set in a waiting room, in the crossroads of “Now, until; Everywhere, nowhere.”

I was very intentional in my use of the word “crossroads.” While the literal meaning of a crossroads is an intersection, a place where two roads meet, it is commonly used figuratively and spiritually to refer to life-changing situations that require special attention, a decision, and are often marked by rituals of protection or transition.

One in Two is a masterful example of storytelling, but not the kind of story that is meant to entertain. This story is autobiographical – written by the playwright around the tenth anniversary of his own HIV positive diagnosis. It is not an entertainment, but rather a call to action, the urgency of which is suggested by the knowledge that Love began writing this play on the Notes app of his phone, from his bed. Presumably he, like the character Number One, was struggling with the need to define himself aside from a diagnosis that many considered a death sentence.

There is an experimental and inclusive nature to this work as well. Audience members are asked to take a number from a ticket machine as we enter. While the purpose is never explained, it eventually becomes clear that each ticket has been re-designated as either a “1,” a “2,” or a “3.” The three actors do not know, at the start of the show each night, which of them will be playing the role of “1,” “2,” or “3” until the audience chooses, by applause. [I applauded equally loudly for each because I know and admire Keaton Hillman and Tedarryl Perry as actors and was immediately drawn to Garrett D. Reese’s “extra-ness.”]

The actors begin to drift onto the stage one by one, about ten minutes before the show starts. They stand, stretch, linger. The action begins with a scream. On Friday, opening night, Perry was chosen to be Number One, and soon after a “safe word” was established. Overkill? No. It is, indeed, that intense.

One in Two is not lacking in humor. The three romp in a recreated memory of their youth. Perry progressed through the role of Dante from a carefree little boy to a young man exploring his sexuality until stumbling at the crossroads of an HIV positive diagnosis. Hillman played a number of roles, from bossy, king-of-the-hill kid to bartender to supportive [female] nurse, and even a member of an HIV support group – whose marriage was surrounded by secrecy and the unwillingness of his in-laws to accept their son’s marriage to another man. Reese also took on various roles, from the playground mediator to a streetwise booty call or, to put it more graphically,  trade, to Dante’s warm but worried mother.

Director Shanea N. Taylor pulls us into this world that unfolds in a non-linear, sometimes dream-like format that carries the audience from laughter to the point of tears in a matter of seconds. The stark white background, with a nurse’s station, a bathtub, and a bar hidden behind convenient cabinet doors, supports this fragile paradox – there’s nowhere to hide, while hidden in plain sight.

While it is impossible to know exactly how someone feels in this situation, One in Two takes us as close as humanly possible with a roller coaster of emotion including shock, shame, anger, depression and despair, compassion, fear, and more. The trauma is real. The acting, the play, is just an effective delivery vehicle.

Oh. That title? At the time this play was written, according to the CDC statistics: One in fourteen gay white men will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime. One I four gay Hispanic men will be diagnosed HIV positive. And one in two gay Black men will be diagnosed with HIV. That is why, at the end of this play, there is no bow. There is no applause. There is no end. Yet.

FROM THE PLAYWRIGHT: “There is still trauma that’s hard to write, there are still remnants of fear that tremble the voice found in my writing. I’ve gotten to a point where there are no words, characters, dialogue, or subtext to hide behind anymore. Fear can no longer overshadow truth.”

Bravo to this cast and creative team and to Richmond Triangle Players for moving past fear and presenting us with the cold, harsh truth.

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

———-

ONE IN TWO

Written by Donja R. Love

Directed by Shanea N. Taylor

CAST:

Keaton Hillman – Person on the Left

Tedarryl Perry – Person in the Middle

Garrett D. Reese – Perso on the Right

Understudies: Da’Rek Early Bennett and Larry Lewis, Jr.

CREATIVE TEAM:

Scenic Design – Dasia Gregg

Lighting Design – Michael Jarett

Sound Design – Nicholas Seaver

Projection Design – Lucian Restivo

Costume, Hair & Makeup Design – Margarette Joyner

Props Design – Tim Moehring

Production State Management – Lauren Langston

Assistant Direction – Dwight Merritt

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METEOR SHOWER

A Comedy by Steve Martin

A Theater Review by Julinda D. Lewis

Presented by CAT – Chamberlayne Actor’s Theatre

At: The Lynn Theatre at Brightpoint Community College, 800 Charter Colony Pkwy, T Building, Room T112, Midlothian, VA 23114

Performances: September 16-29, 2023

Ticket Prices: $24.00 General Admission. $22.00 Seniors

Info: http://www.cattheatre.com

Steve Martin’s comedic play METEOR SHOWER is probably one of those shows you will either love or hate. Either way, you will laugh. A lot.

For some, knowing that the author is THE Steve Martin may be all you need to know to decide whether to go or not, whether you will like it or not, and most importantly, whether or not you will ever again speak to the person who invited you.

The plot is simple (in more than one sense of the word): In 1993 a meteor shower occurs in Ojai, CA, where Corky lives with her husband Norm. The two are a solidly united loving couple who have obviously attended one too many couples’ therapy sessions. Corky and Norm decide to invite another couple over to have dinner and watch the meteor shower, only to find that Laura and Gerald are not who they appear to be or what Corky and Norm expected.

Over the course of the evening, the plot twists and turns, the story stops and restarts. Remember when you were a kid and things went wrong and you wanted a do-over? Well, METEOR SHOWER is the repository of all your childhood do-overs.

There is a minimalist set of  “a modern home in Ojai, California,” and a backyard dominated by two of the most uncomfortable looking lawn chaises I have ever seen. These chairs, however, play a key part in the evening’s events. A privacy fence cleverly disguises a walkway that leads to the house. And the audience is treated to a soothing, looping projection of a meteor shower. There is also a pre-show audio recording that is quite amusing – the first time we hear it…

Before the evening is over, you will experience a tale of cannibalism, learn about “bug flux” and exploding head syndrome, and find out what happens when one gets hit by a meteor.

The cast, all making their CAT debut, consists of Paul James and Jennipher Murphy as the host couple, Norm and Corky, and Skye Whitcomb and Constance Moreau and Skye Whitcomb as the guest couple, Gerald and Laura. Moreau and Whitcomb successfully juggled multiple plot twists fueled alternately by sexual innuendo, explosive outbursts, and intentionally dysfunctional exchanges. James maintained a mostly stable personality as a super sweet, super nice guy. As annoying as Norm could be, he actually started to grow on me – but then, the alternative was soooooo much worse. But it was Murphy who had the most complex, amusing, and devious character development and plot twists.

As a play, as a story, METEOR SHOWER has very little substance. It exposes the strengths and weaknesses of marriage and relationships, but doesn’t really have anything to say about any of it. It makes us laugh at things we would ordinarily be embarrassed to admit we watched, much less laughed at. If you need a night of senseless laughter, no strigs attached, this show might be meant for you. Go. Laugh. Enjoy. As for me – it was definitely not my cup of tea.

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

METEOR SHOWER

Written by Steve Martin

Directed by Kerrigan Sullivan

Cast

Jennipher Murphy as Corky

Paul James as Norm

Skye Whitcomb as Gerald

Constance Moreau as Laura

Creative Design Team

CAT Producer – Kerrigan Sullivan

Lynn Theatre Production Manager – Alleigh Scantling

Director – Kerrigan Sullivan

Stage Manager – Ari Silva

Lighting & Projection Design – Alleigh Scantling

Scenic & Properties Design – Hailey Bean

Costume Design – Lindsey Ladnier

Sound Design – Kerrigan Sullivan

Dates

September 16 – 29, 2023

Ticket Information

www.cattheatre.com

Ticket prices: $24.00 General Admission, $22.00 Seniors.

Run Time

80 minutes, with no intermission

Photo Credits: Daryll Morgan Studios

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TICK, TICK…BOOM!

A Musical About Musicals

At: The Swift Creek Mill Theatre, 17401 U.S. Route One, Chesterfield, VA 23834

Performances: September 9 – 30, 2023

Ticket Prices: $49. Discounts available for students, seniors, and veterans.

Info: (804) 748-5203 or https://www.swiftcreekmill.com

Set in New York City in 1990, Tick, Tick…BOOM! draws many parallels to the current post-pandemic times. In 1990, AIDS was the great pandemic; 30 years later we had COVID-19. Both brought death and panic – and isolation. How ironic that 30 years proves to be. In Tick, Tick…BOOM! the author, Jonathan Larsen, is about facing his 30th birthday with fear and dread. Should he give up his dream of being an artist, a composer of rock musicals? Is it too late? Has time passed him by?

Tick, Tick…BOOM! is an autobiographical musical. So, this isn’t exactly a spoiler alert, but if you don’t like autobiographical plays or musicals, this may not be the show for you. Tick, Tick…BOOM! also seems to be somewhat of a departure for Swift Creek Mill Theatre. Producing Artistic Director Tom Width did not direct or even design anything. He invited Dr. Jan Powell to be guest director. Musical Director Sandy Dacus, Scenic Designer W. Reed West III, Lighting Designer Michael Jarett, and Choreographer Kayla Xavier all brought a new aesthetic to the Mill stage. For the first time, the brick walls were exposed, the band was in the open, and the set was minimalist. Jarett, who has lit many Richmond stages, and often designs lighting for dance companies, designed lighting that had the kind of movement one usually expects on a dance stage; it perfectly suited the stark and multi-purpose stage pieces. A piano, for instance, separated into two separate pieces, one of which doubled as a BMW, among other duties.

Larson wrote the book, music, and lyrics for what was originally a monologue, and later became a three-person show – the version we see today. Caleb Wade – who looks much more cheerful on the program cover than he ever looks during the show – plays the lead character, the author, Jon. Malcolm Holmes, making his professional debut, takes on the role of Jon’s best friend and roommate, Michael. Rachel Rose Gilmour shares the role of Jon’s girlfriend, Susan, with Mikaela Craft. We saw Gilmour on opening night. Holmes and Gilmour/Craft play multiple roles: an actor, Jon’s father, Jon’s elusive agent, and other minor characters. One significant character who never appears onstage is Jon’s musical theatre idol, Stephen Sondheim, whose name is only ever spoken in a hushed whisper, reminiscent of the custom of showing reverence by writing G_d…

How does one turn one’s own life into a work of art?

That was the dilemma facing me.

30/90.

– Jonathan Larson

Wade, Holmes, and Gilmour appear to work well together and seem to have good chemistry. The singing is excellent, although the sound seem muffled in some scenes, especially at the beginning on opening night. The crises are genuine: making enough money, holding a day job as a waiter, living in an apartment that is “quaint” rather than modern or luxurious, stay in New York or move somewhere less hectic where it might be easier to raise a family. All this and more occupy Jon’s mind and affect his relationships. Michael turns in his scripts for a management job, that comes with a BMW and a luxury apartment uptown. Michael’s revelation of his own health issues prophetically foreshadows Larson’s own untimely death. You see, Larson emerged from this period of angst and uncertainty and less than six years later produced the dynamic rock musical Rent only to die suddenly the day before the show’s off-Broadway opening – at the age of 35.

In Tick, Tick…BOOM! I noted with some concern that Jon also belittled Susan’s job as a dance teacher, saying something to the effect that she teaches ballet to rich and untalented children, yet she demonstrates admirable strength, maturity, and empathy. At Jon’s birthday party, she presents him with a gift – 1,000 pages of blank sheet music paper – that represents her faith in him, even as she moves on, going on tour with a dance company and taking a new job in the Berkshires. It is not clear if they ever tried to get back together.

There is so much going on in this show that runs just 90 minutes with no intermission – brief for a musical. It is a challenge for the talented cast as well as the creative team. Xavier enhanced the movement and Powell’s seamless direction with perhaps more choreography than prior versions may have called for, and Jarett’s lighting seemed to be part of the choreography. In some ways, it was a challenge for the audience as well, because this is someone’s life, not just a story and there is no guarantee of a happy ending. Yes, quite a departure from the same-old, same-old, and an interesting choice for the opening show of the Mill’s new season.

Oh, and what about that title? Life is truly stranger than fiction. Tick, Tick…BOOM! refers to the “twin ticking clocks of his potential and his friend’s life, both of which he feared might be about to run out.” How could Jon the character have known that just ten days before his 36th birthday – tick, tick – Larson would suddenly die of a misdiagnosed aortic dissection – something more commonly found in men in their 60s or older. And 30/90? Turning 30 in 1990. BOOM!


Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who was born in Brooklyn, NY and now lives in Eastern Henrico County.

———-

TICK, TICK…BOOM!

Book, Music, and Lyrics by Jonathan Larson

Script Consulting by David Auburn

Vocal Arrangements and Orchestrations by Stephen Oremus

CAST

Jon ………..……………….. Caleb Wade

Michael, et al. ………… Malcolm Holmes

Susan, et al. …….…….. Rachel Rose Gilmour or Mikaela Craft

ORCHESTRA

Keyboard/Conductor ….. Sandy Dacus or Travis West

Guitar     ……………….………. John White or Ed Drake

Bass     ……………………..…… Alex Kehayas

Drums     ………………………. Bentley Cobb

CREATIVE TEAM

Directed by Dr. Jan Powell

Musical Director  – Sandy Dacus

Scenic Designer – W. Reed West III

Lighting Designer – Michael Jarett

Choreographer – Kayla Xavier

Costume Designer – Maura Lynch Cravey

Technical Director – Liz Allmon

Run Time:

About 90 minutes without intermission

Tickets:

Regular $49. Discounts for Seniors, Military & Veterans

Photos: Louise Keeton

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POTUS

Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive

A Regional Premiere

By: Virginia Repertory Theatre (Virginia Rep)

At: The Sara Belle and Neil November Theatre | Marjorie Arenstein Stage

When: September 1 – October 1, 2023

Ticket Prices: $39-$59. (Discounted group rates and rush tickets available)

Info: (804) 282-2620 or www.virginiarep.org

It’s been a long time since I’ve laughed this much, this long, this loud. Selina Fillinger’s POTUS is the best kind of comedy: physical, political, slapstick, irreverent, giddy, bawdy, inclusive. I could go on but I think using more than seven adjectives in one sentence is breaking some kind of law.

If the subtitle didn’t clue you in, it only gets worse from there (and by worse I mean better). If you’re the type to clutch your pearls, you’d better leave them at home because by the end of POTUS they’ll be rolling down the aisles.

Oh, and one more thing about that subtitle. Yes, there are seven women working together – despite their diverse agendas – but that part about whether they are trying to keep the POTUS alive does come into question. That’s all I can say about that without giving away too much.

What I can say is that Fillinger has written a witty and timely play and it was performed by a superb and diverse ensemble – some familiar and some not – consisting of Elizabeth Byland, Liv Clayton, Sonja Durant, Anne Michelle Forbes, Bree Ogaldez, Catherine Shaffner, and Denise Simone. Looking at the understudies (see below) I would love to see the show again with the understudies in the key roles – there are some powerful, familiar names in that list, as well.

Loosely, the plot of POTUS involves the women of the President’s inner circle coming together to patch up his most recent political gaffe. Crudely referring to his wife during a press conference as having a “c**ty day,” the POTUS sets in motion an international disaster with potentially deadly consequences.

There truly are no leading roles in POTUS, but for me, Elizabeth Byland, in the role of Stephanie, the President’s Secretary, stood out for her physical comedy and her comedic timing. The role of the meek secretary who is obviously in over her head could be a recipe for disaster, but in Byland’s expert hands it is pure comedic genius. Loved her. According to her bio, she is the Head Professor of Improv at VCU. What a treat her classes must be! Loved her – yes, I said it twice and I meant it!

I also adored Catherine Shaffner as Bernadette, the President’s sister. Big, loud, and brash, Bernadette appears fresh out of prison on a felony charge, still wearing her ankle monitor, and carrying a duffle bag filled with “pharmaceuticals” and other tools that will come in handy during the course of the day. Shaffner guides her character through a perfect combination of unfettered chaos and much needed life skills that usually are not acquired in a liberal arts undergraduate program.

Sonja Durant was something of a beautiful enigma as Margaret, the First Lady. Durant’s tall slender frame was always draped in red – first a classy business pant suit, and later a fancy dress – but throughout she wore white Crocs on her feet to make herself appear “earthy.” Smart, composed, and apparently in command of the ability to icily detach herself from her emotions at will, Durant’s First Lady seemed very much authentic.

As the President’s press secretary, Jean, Anne Michelle Forbes skillfully navigated the insanity of the White House shenanigans, juggling professional interactions and personal relationships with the President’s sister (I didn’t see that coming!) and a beleaguered female White House reporter, Chris (played by Bree Ogaldez, seen recently in The Carole King Musical), a new mother who was constantly seeking opportunities to pump her overflowing breasts. A familiar face on local stages, this was Forbes’ November Theatre debut.

As Harriet, the President’s Chief of Staff, Denise Simone’s role seemed a bit more subdued than the others. At times she appeared to be the “straight man” who enhances the comedic projections of those around her. Simone returns to Virginia Rep after a turn contributing to the  theatre community in Idaho. And last but not least, newcomer Liv Clayton made her professional debut in the role of Dusty, the President’s young girlfriend who has been invited to the White House to apply for a “position.” I am sure Clayton is really good at her role, but I just found Dusty so annoying with her cheerleader moves that I almost overlooked the character’s innate kindness and corn-fed street smarts.

Set in the White House, a series of functional and somewhat minimalist sliding sets (credit Chris Raintree for the scenic design and Steve Koehler for the lighting) keeps the focus on the actors. The only time the set seemed to intrude into my consciousness was during a madcap chase scene when the set seemed too small to allow the actors full range. Kudos to director Dorothy Holland and the dynamic ensemble for keeping it moving. There was not a dull moment in either act.

Julinda D. Lewis is a dancer, teacher, and writer who recently had both knees replaced due to a manufacturer’s recall. Born in Brooklyn, NY, she now lives in Eastern Henrico County where she can be found kicking up her heels as best she can any day of the week.

POTUS

Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive

By Selina Fillinger

Directed by Dorothy Holland

Cast

Stephanie ……………………………      Elizabeth Byland*

Dusty ………………………………….       Liv Clayton

Margaret …………………………….      Sonja Durant

Jean ……………………………………       Anne Michelle Forbes

Chris …………………………………..       Bree Ogaldez

Bernadette …………………………       Catherine Shaffner*

Harriet ……………………………….       Denise Simone*

Stephanie u/s …………………….       Juliette Aaslestad

Jean u/s ……………………………..       Juliana Caycedo

Bernadette u/s ………………..…       Kelsey Cordrey

Dusty u/s ……………………………       Emily Dandridge

Margaret u/s ………………………      Jianna Hurt

Chris u/s ………………………………     MacKenzie Sheppard

*Member of Actors’ Equity Association

+Member of USA, United Scenic Artists

^Member of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society

Direction & Design

Direction ………………………………  Dorothy Holland

Scenic Design ……………………… Chris Raintree

Costume Design …………………   Elizabeth Weiss Hopper

Lighting Design …………..………   Steve Koehler

Sound Design ……………………..   Tosin Olufolabi

Stage Management …………..   Donna Warfield*

Ticket Information

Box Office: (804) 282-2620

www.virginiarep.org

Tickets range from $39 – $59

Discounted Group Rates and Rush tickets are available.

Run Time

The play runs for 1 hour 30 minutes, plus one 15-minute intermission.

Photo Credits: Aaron Sutten

VA-REP Covid Safety Statement

Virginia Rep encourages wearing masks for our patrons’ safety, but we do not require that you wear a mask in our lobbies or within the theatres. They are now optional. We continue to follow CDC guidelines and local risk levels. All Virginia Rep staff will continue to wear masks while serving you.

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