Saturday, July 27, 2024

Design for Living by Noël Coward

L - R Garikayi Mutambirwa, Brooke Bundy, Kyle T. Hester - Photos by Cooper Bates

 

By Joe Straw

“It should be easy, you know.  The actual facts are so simple.  I love you.  You love me.  You love Otto. I love Otto. Otto loves you.  Otto loves me.  There now! Start to unravel from there.” - Leo

Unravel indeed.

She is adorned, in the early morning wearing a tan sleeping gown and nicely layered robe. Gilda (Brooke Bundy), youthful, desirable, possibly whimsical, filled with life’s experience, walks alone with just her thoughts in her lover’s Paris apartment.

Odyssey Theatre Ensemble presents Design For Living written by Noël Coward and directed by Bart DeLorenzo and produced by Beth Hogan and Ron Sossi at the Odyssey through August 25, 2024.

Yes, there’s something on her mind as she stares wistfully out her window.   A ladder visible beyond the window stands with no one on their way up possibly waiting for a man - handy to use it - for some job or another and upwardly mobile.

If only there was a man out there. That would have piqued Gilda’s interest for a moment or two, but one more man is not on her agenda today.  She has other men in her life to think about especially the one man sleeping off that high-spirited evening in her tiny corner bedroom.

What was that? A passionate night or falderal? Was it love with a capital L, or a dalliance? All those thoughts will be categorized, mentally boxed, and pushed to the side for another day. She was always attached to accomplished men that aspired to great things.  

Gilda’s joie de vivre has her men living on the edge as they take up space in her mind and she takes up space in an artist loft.  It’s Otto’s (Garikayi Mutambirwa) apartment. She lives with him in living color and his unfinished works of art, are scattered, without purpose, against whatever darkened space was available. Her decorating skills - diminished upon reflection and somewhat a skewed - but for now she calls it, home?

There is a sudden knock at the door, a familiar knock to her, but she must remove the articles of men’s clothing that litter her surroundings. Incriminating evidence at that and that’s an issue, and a dissembled topic of conversation she just does not want to have once she decides to open the door.

Luckily, it is Ernest Friedman (Andrew Elvis Miller), a family friend, wise beyond his aging years, a perfectly attired, penciled mustached nebbish sort of being that is bringing in a mystery painting à son entrée.  Something that he’s bought, a Matisse, as a personal investment ready to cash in when the time is right and the market sweet.

Ernest tells Gilda to wake up Otto so that he can see it, but Gilda says she doesn’t want to disturb him, that he has a temporary disfiguring disease, neuralgia.

Hmmm.

Andrew Elvis Miller and Brooke Bundy

 

Odd, Ernest, as long as he has known her, hasn’t quite figured Gilda out.   He’s extremely uncomfortable with her wandering hands over his body. And flatly he doesn’t think much of her decorating skills either. He likens her to a jaguar and an ox because of her strength in getting her way.  Jealousy takes over especially when he criticizes Otto’s artwork of her (now unseen) being “so tranquil”.

Ernest playfully confesses that he is fond of Gilda, he says so sedulously, in his own special way, their long ties with her and her mother, now deceased.  But Gilda confesses that she loves Otto and says it loudly into the bedroom so that he will hear it.

Also, Gilda confesses that Leo (Kyle T. Hester), now a rich and famous playwright, is back and is staying at the Hotel George V. And Ernest, surprised, and suspects something that Leo, by now, would have found his way quickly to her apartment. What a nice time to interrupt!

Double hmmm.  

Otto, who was previously perceived to be in the bedroom, comes in through the front door with his suitcase having just arrived in Paris.   After a brief discussion, Gilda hustles both Ernest (who is wised by now) and Otto to visit their friend Leo at Hotel George V.

And after they leave, Leo steps out of the bedroom.

Style, panache, and a sincere openness permeate this production as though one were stepping back in time to 1933 and flipping through a Vogue magazine with static shots of people lounging a normal Vogue lifestyle.  Design For Living is a colorful and character driven play that played well on this night to a perfectly sensible audience.  

Having arrived on opening night there is still more to be had in this production, moments that didn’t quite gel, changes in the relationships that moves a character from one position to another, and a second act with new characters that adds little to the dilemma facing the main characters.

Still, there’s a lot to enjoy in this production directed by Bart DeLorenzo a comfortable flow of characters and witticisms that permeates throughout. Settle down and take it all in and for the most part this is a joyful ride throughout the night.

But can comedy win the night without the pain of tormented love? No character, in this production, seems the least bit upset that Gilda is not interested in them, nor are they upset that she leaves at the drop of a hat. They all tirelessly work to win her love, but when she leaves it’s as though she never left the room, and the two men shrug and find love at their fingertips, with each other.

This slightly truncated Noël Coward’s comedy is ambivalent enough to be played many ways. DeLorenzo prefers to highlight the feeling of love throughout without the heated passion of love’s injustices. They all are, by some accounts, dastardly in the way they secure love.  These educated men find ways to win Gilda and they do it in remarkable and devious ways. Ernest finds Gilda in the arms of the man she is not supposed to be with, twice – each time making a play for himself.  Otto and Leo wait until the other is out of town to make their move.   

Comedy works better when there is more at stake especially when possession is nine tenths of the law and the ultimate prize.   

Act I, scene I, somehow needs to show this is Otto’s apartment, however that can visually manifest itself.  A darkened space, a furniture wrap, some paint splattered against the wrap does not give possession to an unseen character.  We know there’s a man there via the men’s clothing in the apartment, we’re just not sure who it is. Gilda is expected to be there because she is Otto’s girlfriend, and it is his studio.  

Ernest is expecting to see Otto. He’s been there before but makes no move to go to the bedroom to show Otto the Matisse painting. A man is in the bedroom. He knows Gilda is up to something but there’s never a back and forth, two steps forward, one step back until Ernest gives up. All references to Otto should playout as though he were in the bedroom.

Also, in that same scene, when Otto enters his apartment, he treats it as though it were not his own home.  It’s a moment that is visually confusing.  He never comes close to placing the suitcase in his bedroom, or someplace suitable in his apartment, nor does he see the Matisse that is near his bedroom door, take note of it, and or compare it to his own work of art against his rival’s taste in art.

There is a huge predicament in that first scene that Gilda needs to overcome while Ernest is both curious and excited to see how her situation was going to play out. And that predicament needs another level to make it both funny and truthful. 

These are only minor things in a show that is otherwise exceptional and can get better, and funnier as the performances gel.      

Brooke Bundy as Gilda is exciting to watch simply because she thinks on stage, and she is completely unpredictable.  Moving from one man to the next, we rarely see the definitive moment when she decides to change course, turn in her exit keys, and walks off with another lover.  It just seems to happen. Not wanting marriage, she is content to be happy, but doesn’t know what that looks like.  A terrific performance.

Andrew Elvis Miller is outstanding as Ernest Friedman. The character work is first rate and the manner to get what he wants works on a very subtle level.  The Matisse is used as a tool of seduction. It's very subtle though. The tie he picks up in the first scene gets lost behind other actors for a purpose that is not fully conveyed and what he does with that tie is also lost. Ernest always finds the suitable time to interrupt to show that he is the man, always throwing out a subtle love song to get what he wants. And the work is incredible.

Garikayi Mutambirwa work as Otto Sylvus is also incredible.  His mannerism in the drinking scene is something never witnessed before and almost brings the house down with laughter. The first scene needs work especially when taking control of his apartment. Also, being prim and proper, no one in this production ever goes overboard hurt with emotions.

Kyle St. Hester and Sheelagh Cullen

 

Kyle T. Hester is very good as Leo Mercuré a playwright who has suddenly found fame and fortune. And as such, he feels he has carte blanche, willing to take over when his friend is out of town. He must feel somewhat guilty because he doesn’t come out of the bedroom when polite company abounds outside his door.  One is not sure why he ignored the Matisse the moment he comes out – a choice to ignore that doesn’t ring true.

Sheelagh Cullen has dual roles but comes off best as Miss Hodge, the maid always running to answer the phone, doing her best to keep the rich folks happy, and not so opinionated to keep all her thoughts to herself. She also plays Grace Torrence and although successful in character one could not understand anything about her part in that scene.

The same holds true with Max Pescherine as Henry Carver and Shireen Heidari as Helen Carver in the second act – a scene which moves the action forward and gives the moment a definitive mark.

Costume Designer Denise Blasor’s work is first rate and visually very stunning.

John Zalewski, Sound Designer, always excels in his craft.

Other members of the crew are as follows:

Frederica Nasciemento – Scenic Designer

Leigh Allen – Lighting Designer

Jennifer Palumbo – Stage Manager

Nicole Arbusto – Casting Director

Michael Lanham and Samantha Occhino – Assistant Directors

The show produced by Beth Hogan and Ron Sossi is exceptional, with incomparable performances, and another feather in The Odyssey’s cap. This show is just one more reason that everyone should go out and support the smaller theatres in Los Angeles.

Tickets: https://odysseytheatre.com/whats-on/

 The Odyssey Theatre

2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd. 

Los Angeles, CA. 90025 

Parking is free!!!

Saturday, July 13, 2024

Footloose The Musical – Stage Adaptation by Dean Pitchford and Walter Bobbie based on the original screenplay by Dean Pitchford

L-R Amanda Rodas, Chase Klein, Devyn Kontur, Michael Inatsugu, Brenton Holbeck, Trae Adair, Nico Fisher, Carter Santos, Adam Derbigny, Sterling Inatsugu, Charli Austin, Maia Goldberg, Eadric Einbinder, and Terrence Robinson

 

By Joe Straw

Ren McCormack (Carter Santos) is a fun-loving guy with the ability to trade quips at the drop of a toe tap, dancing up a storm in his native Chicago hometown but suddenly there is a turn for the worse in his family life.  His mother Ethel McCormack (Lauren Magness) has come upon hard times, the product of a failed marriage, and they must move to Bomont (an undisclosed southwestern town in an unspecific time of late 1990 to 2000s) to live with Ethel’s sister Lulu Warnicker (Aryn Neimiroff) and her over commandeering husband Wes Warnicker (Steve Weber).

Footloose The Musical Stage Adaptation by Dean Pitchford and Walter Bobbie, based on the original screenplay by Dean Pitchford, Music by Tom Snow, Lyrics by Dean Pitchford, additional music by Eric Carmen, Sammy Hagar, Kenny Loggins and Jim Steinman, directed and choreographed by Niko Montelibano, and produced by Philip McBride is now playing at the Morgan-Wixon Theatre through July 28th, 2024.

Getting acclimated to his surroundings Ren visits a church and listens to Reverend Shaw Moore (Steven Didrick) preach his message of love and control predating the sign of the current times of how to act, what to read, what God to worship, and how not to express your individuality.

Ren catches Ariel’s eyes (Nico Fisher), the preacher’s daughter, who seems unfazed by her father’s message, but she doesn’t want to hang with Ren and runs off to join her controlling boyfriend at the garage Chuck Cranston (Luc Clopton) and his cronies Travis (Joaquin Hosfeld) and Lyle (Adam Derbigny) two little sleezy compadres that joins Chuck in a song “The Girl Gets Around” a song that shows little regard for an independent and creative young woman.   

Meanwhile Ren has other ideas on shaking the mud off these inhabitant’s feet.   On his first day of school, he meets Willard (Trae Adair), a coverall wearing, clod hopping hick from the sticks.  After a brief acrimonious encounter, they strike up a friendship especially after Willard saves Ren from Principal Clark’s (Hannah Willmore) expository clutches for dancing in the hallways.   

Ren is not the devil but likes to open Pandora’s box just a tad to let out what it means to dance freely.  But he must overcome many obstacles especially the ones that are deeply ingrained within the occupants of this tiny town of Bomont.

Up Front: Trae Adair

 

 

There’s a lot of fun to be had in this musical version of Footloose by Dean Pitchford and Walter Bobbie based on the original screenplay by Dean Pitchford. The film worked on several fronts with nice performances but this musical has a little more work to do.  Finding a way for this to work requires a better book, one that establishes stronger characters managing their way through a chaotic high school life while battling the adults in their lives.

Niko Montelibano, the director has his hands full directing and as the choreographer for this cast of thirty maybe taking on a little too much to get this show up and running in the allotted time. Character work is  needed to define relationships, to capture the significant moments in this musical, and capture the truth in characters, which has only scratched the surface of this production. We move from a dance crazed Chicago to the town of Bomont where kids may not know how to dance in public and have been banned from doing so for five years.   (We don’t see any of that.) We also don’t see students shocked or elated that someone, defying rules and laws, is now dancing in their halls and we don't see the progression of dance as it relates to the community and the students. In this musical the wanting to dance (within the kids minds and appearance) should permeate the production in several magical ways including the city council meeting.  Also, for the most part, all the singers were without mics, and some could have used them. The story is based on a true incident in Oklahoma culminating in banning dancing and the community falling in lockstep with that law.  One might as well ban breathing and see how that goes over without some kind of uprising.

Carter Santos does well as Ren McCormack and has a nice singing voice. More could be made of his transition from big town to small town without being overly omnipotent. He has a view but must make more of the conflict that he has to overcome to reach his objective.

Lauren Magness is stunning as Ethel McCormack especially when she is dressed up. There may be more to add to the character (besides supporting and protecting her son) and that may be keeping her eyes open for any prospective partner.  

Nico Fisher has a grand presence as Ariel Moore, sings, and dances well.  The black eye needs to find a way to work or eliminate it all together because nothing comes of it. The ex-boyfriend isn’t sorry, he doesn’t get any kind of comeuppance, the new friend is slightly concerned but does nothing, and her father doesn’t take the time with his daughter to notice it at all.

Trae Adair plays Willard with a strong deep southern accent (Texan?) that no one else has and may be believable if he had just moved there but, he seems to be a fixture in the school. Also, in this ultra-conservative town he has a ring in his nose and his coveralls are kind of flashy and not the dress of his farmland surroundings. Ultimately, Willard Hewitt’s costumes must work to give the character, someone who has nothing, to someone who has everything because now he can dance.  That aside, Adair has a fine voice, a nice presence, and a very nice physical life on stage.

Luc Clopton plays the bad guy Chuck Cranston.  There’s not a lot to like from this character, which includes, physical violence, and a song that is entirely disrespectful “The Girl Gets Around”. The writer of this character has left off the redeeming attributes to give this man somewhere to go so that he can move his life forward.

Steven Didrick does well as Reverend Shaw Moore. There’s more to be had from this character, a catharsis moving from one way of thinking to another. Singing and playing to the fourth wall does not give the character justice. Love requires searching and discovering everything about his daughter especially when she has a huge bruise below her eye. Also, is it a good choice to ignore the bruise and does it work?

Up front L - R Sarah Marie, Lauren Magness, Aryn Nemiroff, and Steve Weber

 

 

Sarah Marie as Vi Moore looks nothing like her photograph in the program. That aside, her voice is near pitch perfect, and her performance as the loving wife and mother is just marvelous presenting us with her ability to ensure that everyone to take a step back, breath, and think about solving life’s problems. Wonderful work! 

Brenton Holbeck lights up the stage as Coach Dunbar.  Brenton shows a tremendous presence and an exciting sensitivity that will work well in front on the camera. This is an actor to watch and given the luck of the draw shows promising potential for both film and television.

Aryn Nemiroff plays Lulu Warnicker, and this is another roll that requires another level of characterization especially with her sister, one that defines that relationship. Also, she needs to look after her nephew and control her demanding husband in her way and fashion. These are the little things to complete the character and fill in the gaps.  

Steve Weber is another heavy in the Wes Warnicker role.  The role, whether it’s written or not, requires him to hit his nephew without finding out the solution to his problem. The character must find a way for forgiveness. Weber also has a nice turn as Cowboy Bob a man who needs an overexaggerating West Texan accent that celebrates the dance.

Hannah Willmore as Principal Clark must have misgivings about enforcing a law that violates the First Amendment and yet she’s been doing it for 5 years. In the end Principal Clark must find a way to celebrate the change in the rules. Still, Willmore has some very good moments on stage.

Devyn Kontur (Rusty) has a powerful voice when the musical requires it.  Chase Klein (Urleen) has a very pleasant and unusual voice that blends melodically with her friends.  Amanda Rodas (Wendy Jo) has some very nice moments.

Other standouts are Luke Arthur Smith (Bickle), Charli Austin (Ensemble) and Michael Inastsugu who has a very strong presence on stage. Eadric Einbinder (Jeter) also has some very fine moments on stage.

Other cast members who put their heart and soul into this production are Maia Goldberg, Samuel Goldman, Sterling Inatsugu, Lillian Kautz, Amanda Meade-Tatum, Ysabella Padua, Terrence Robinson, Brennan Schmidt, and Tiffany To.

Member of this delightful crew are as follows:

Abby Carlson – Vocal Director

Emily Jolynn Ellis – Production Stage Manager

Kyle Lukas – Assistant Stage Manager

Samantha Jo Jaffray – Costumer

Justin Kelley-Cahill – Scenic Designer

Cici Mao – Lighting Designer

Brandon John – Master Electrician

Ariella Salinas Fiore – Intimacy Director

Shea Glenn – Assistant to the Director/Choreographer

Nico Fisher and Ysabella Padua – Social Media

Devyn Kontur – Vocal Captain

The Morgan-Wixson is a wonderful theatre, parking is plentiful, and is rich in diversity in its casting.

Morgan-Wixson Theatre

2627 Pico Blvd.

Santa Monica, CA. 90404

For Reservations: https://www.morgan-wixson.org