Looking Back
David Christopher Wells and Liv Rooth. Photo by Lanny Nagler
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, as it
is most years with Connecticut
theater, although the good did outweigh the mediocre and the bad. Some chances
were taken that succeeded beyond expectations, while others sent me out of the
theater shaking my head and looking for the closest watering hole.
Maureen Anderman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson
Joan Didion’s “The Year of Magical Thinking” was, indeed
magical. The Westport Country Playhouse production, starring Maureen Anderman
and directed by Nicholas Martin, was gripping from start to finish, all the
more so since Anderman was able to milk some humor out of what is, in essence,
an exercise in death and denial.
Alexis Molnar, Bobby Steggert, Kate Nowlin and Paul Anthony
Stewart. Photo by T. Charles Ericksom.
The Playhouse’s “Harbor” was a bit uneven, but
it gave Connecticut
audiences the opportunity to see the debut of Alexis Molnar as Lottie – those
who saw her performance will, in years to come, be able to say that they were
there when a star was born.
Charise Castro Smith and Jeanine Serralles in "Tartuffe."
Photo by T. Charles Erickson
Then there was “Tartuffe.” Purists quibbled, but under the
direction of David Kennedy it was of a piece and enjoyable, especially given
Jeanine Serralles’ performance as the saucy maid Dorine. Some found her
performance a bit over the top, but I reveled in it. The Playhouse’s season
ended with “A Raisin in the Sun,” which, quite honestly, left me flat. As
directed by Phylicia Rashad, the production seemed captured in a time warp,
striving to be more relevant than it was. Again, others found it moving, but I
was never engaged.
Engagement was never a problem with Hartford Stage’s “A
Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder.”
What a musical romp! Murder and revenge wrapped up in a frothy
confection that was a treat to the eye and ear, especially given Jefferson Mays’
stellar performance as nine different characters (Mays reappeared on the Yale
Rep’s stage late in the season in “Dear Elizabeth.”)
Erin Scanlon, Liliane Klein and Virginia Bartholomew. Photo by Judy Barbosa.
There was some doubling-up this year, as there always is
given how far in advance theaters have to plan their seasons. There were two
productions of “Romeo and Juliet” that I saw: Shakespeare on the Sound opted to
produce it as a play within a play. The frame didn’t work, but once we got to
the Bard, things took a turn for the better. However, Connecticut Free
Shakespeare’s production was something to wrap yourself up in: fast-moving and
ribald, the tragedy came alive at the Beardsley Zoo, the play no longer a
centuries-old tragedy but something vibrant, alive and of the moment.
Kate Alexander as Golda Meir
I also saw two productions of “Golda’s Balcony,” William
Gibson’s play about Golda Meir. TheatreWorks New Milford’s production was
enjoyable, but lacked the spark and intensity of the production at Playhouse on
Park in West Hartford , where Kate Alexander,
broken foot and all, gave a multi-dimensional performance that held the
audience spellbound. If I might, a word about Playhouse on Park. It’s a little
jewel of a theater that deserves a larger patronage. I saw two other
productions there – “Of Mice and Men” and “Driving Miss Daisy” – and both were
strong, creative and theatrically sound.
Antoinette LaVecchia. Photo by Lanny Negler
Staying in Hartford
for a moment, I have to say the three plays I enjoyed most this season were all
staged at Hartford TheaterWorks. First, there was the one-woman show, “I Loved,
I Lost, I Made Spaghetti,” in which Antoinette LaVecchia played a
love-challenged woman who, while detailing the few ups and many downs of her
love life makes a three-course dinner from scratch on stage and served it to
audience members. You don’t see that every day.
Then there was Mark Shanahan and Andrea Maulella reprising
their roles as a womanizer and a hat store worker in “Tryst.” Those who saw
these two fine actors in the same play at the Westport Country Playhouse
several years ago were in for several surprises, for the two actors, under the
direction of Rob Ruggiero, re-imagined their characters as well as the staging
of several key scenes that made this production not only riveting but shocking
(there were screams from the audience the night I was in attendance, and
Maulella, in a subsequent interview I had with her, said the screams continued
night after night.)
Finally, my favorite, “Venus in Fur” the David Ives exploration of
a casting call that goes horribly wrong, or right, depending on your point of
view. David Christopher Wells gave a strong, multi-dimensional performance as
Thomas, but all the lines are in Vanda’s corner, and Liv Rooth was absolutely
amazing as the foul-mouthed actress who transmogrifies into…well, why spoil the
play for those who haven’t seen it yet?
Juliet Lambert Pratt. Photo by Kerry Long
Ending on a musical note, Goodspeed’s “Carousel” was
creative and engaging, and “The Pirates of Penzance,” as produced by the
Connecticut Repertory Theatre, was, to say the least, vigorous. Equally
engaging was Summer Theatre of New Canaan’s “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat” (saw it twice – once as a reviewer and once escorting my daughter).
However, for sheer intensity, I’d have to go with Westport ’s
MTC Mainstage’s production of “Next to Normal !”
Given the venue’s intimacy, Juliet Lambert Pratt’s Diana was searing – she was
never more than three or four feet away from the audience the entire night, so
her every gesture, every facial expression, registered. It was a bravura,
visceral performance that left the audience (or at least one member of it)
drained.
And so it goes. Long
Wharf gave us an intimate
look at the iconic Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong in “Satchmo at the Waldorf,” then
followed up with “The Killing of Sister George,” with Kathleen Turner directing
and starring. A study in contrasts, the good versus the bad and the ugly, but
that’s what theater is all about, taking chances, interpreting, attempting to
find the soul of characters, using sound and motion, sets and lighting, and
sheer human presence to create a moment that will, hopefully, speak to both
body and soul. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t, but I wouldn’t have it
any other way, because theater is a human endeavor, and we humans fail as often
as we succeed, nowhere more than up there on the stage.