Archive for June, 2011

JD Souther @ Nighttown

Tue 6/28 + Wed 6/29 @ 7PM

Legendary singer/songwriter JD Souther returns to Nighttown on Tue 6/28 and Wed 6/29 in support of his new CD Natural History.

Don’t know much about JD? “One of the principal architects of the Southern California country-rock sound, Souther famously played a key role in the formation of the Eagles and co-wrote their hits ‘Heartache Tonight,’ ‘Victim of Love,’ ‘New Kid In Town,’ and ‘Best of My Love,’ as well as writing Linda Ronstadt’s classics ‘Faithless Love,’ ‘Simple Man, Simple Dream,’ and ‘Prisoner in Disguise.’” He’s all that and more.

Nighttown

http://www.JWPjazz.com

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Gourmets in the Garden @ CBG

Wednesdays @ 6PM

Gourmets in the Garden @ Cleveland Botanical Garden looks pretty tasty: “Cleveland ‘s hottest chefs from the hottest restaurants will be on the Geis Terrace each week to teach you tips and tricks that will have your summer entertaining soaring to new heights. Samples included.”

Event occurs through Wed 8/31. See website for chef schedule. Register beforehand.

Cleveland Botanical Garden

http://CBgarden.org

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Free Summer Family Films @ Capitol Theatre

Films start Sat 6/25 @ 10AM

Take your family into the cool A/C @ the Capitol Theatre for free summer films. Yes, films for FREE. Can’t get better than that.

Schedule:

Sat 6/25: Shrek: The Final Chapter

Sat 7/9: Diary of a Wimpy Kid

Sat 7/23: How to Train Your Dragon

Sat 8/6: Muppets From Space

Capitol Theatre

http://www.ClevelandCinemas.com

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Pop-Up Party @ Battery Park Wine Bar

Fri 6/24 @ 10PM

A party is popping up @ Battery Park Wine Bar. Pop-Up Party #3 features Music by Graydar. Disco x House X Indie. Eat, drink, mingle, dance. Presented by Major Productions, Spot Cleveland, Peter PleasureCruise & MisterBradleyP.

Battery Park Wine Bar – 7524 Father Frascati Ave. – Cle

Info

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Happy Dog featured in Travel + Leisure

Chefs… if you had to pick a favorite U.S. restaurant, what would it be? Travel + Leisure recently compiled a list of Chefs’ Favorite U.S. Restaurants and guess what made the list — Cle’s very own Happy Dog. Of course, it was picked by Cle’s own Michael Symon. Gotta love reppin’ the hometown.

http://www.TravelAndLeisure.com

 

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REVIEW: FIVE COURSE LOVE – A pleasant musical review @ Actors’ Summit

 

FIVE COURSE LOVE – A pleasant musical review @ Actors’ Summit

Neil Thackaberry and MaryJo Alexander, the producers at Actors’ Summit, know their clientele. Mature, somewhat conservative and loyal describes the group. The loyalty has been built on years of the producers picking the right shows to appeal to this demographic. Musical reviews, light comedies, and non-controversial scripts are the norm. Their latest offering, FIVE COURSE LOVE fits the bill well.

In 90 minutes, with no intermission, 3 actors play 15 different characters in 5 different restaurants, on the hunt for true love. Scene 1 takes place in Dean’s Old-Fashioned All-American Down Home Bar-B-Que Texas Eats, where a blind date goes wrong. At the Trattoria Pericolo, a mob wife has a secret rendezvous behind her husband’s back with devastating results. In the scene at Der Schlupfwinkel Speiseplatz, a waiter, a sexy German siren, and her kept man discover that they are all dating each other. Yes, gasp, a ménage à trois. In Ernesto’s Cantina, a Mexican restaurant, a bandit and his rival battle for the hand of the beautiful Rosalinda, a hot salsa-woman. And at the Star-Lite Diner, a romance novel reading waitress pines for her true love and gets a little help from Cupid in making her dreams come true as the jilted blind dater from Scene 1 finally comes full circle to find love. Throughout the evening, “There is trouble in the kitchen.”

FIVE COURSE LOVE is slight summer fun. The little bit of tantalizing double entendre humor brought giggles, the finding of true love resulted in “aws” of glee, and all in attendance seemed to have a good time.

Gregg Coffin’s serviceable score combines pop, light rock, and ethnic musical sounds. None of the songs are well known and have such titles as “Morning Light,” “Risk Love,” “The Ballad of Me,” and “Hey Cupid.” These are names not likely to appear on Billboard’s top ten list.

The show, which is co-directed by Thackaberry and Alexander, moves along quite well, but needed more exaggerated farce to get across the intended ridiculousness of various scenes. This was especially true in “Der Bumsen Kratzentanz” and “If Nicky Knew.”

The three person cast is highlighted by Keith Stevens, whose premiere number is “A Very Single Man,” concerning a lonely geek who really wants to find love. His facial and body reactions on “Nicky Knows” were delightful. The pretty Aubrey Caldwell has a nice voice and was delightful in “I Loved You When I Thought Your Name was Ken.” Stephen Brockway performed several nice duets, but struggled with various characterizations and accents.

Marcia Snavely’s musical execution was well done.

CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: FIVE COURSE LOVE is a musical review which gets an acceptable production at Actors’ Summit. It’s the kind of show that should please their targeted audience.

From Cool Cleveland contributor Roy Berko. Berko’s blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2001 through 2011, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at http://RoyBerko.info. His reviews can also be found on NeOHIOpal and CoolCleveland.com.

Roy Berko, who is a life-long Clevelander, is a Renaissance man. Believing the line in Robert Frost’s poem “Road Not Taken,” each time he comes to a fork in the road, he has taken the path less traveled. He holds degrees, thought the doctorate from Kent State, University of Michigan and The Pennsylvania State University. His present roles, besides husband and grandfather, are professor, crisis counselor, author and entertainment reviewer… Read Roy Berko’s complete bio here

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REVIEW: DR. DOLITTLE @ Mercury Summer Stock

DR. DOLITTLE — long on special effects @ Mercury Summer Stock


What happens to a man — a doctor, in fact — who can’t relate to people? What happens to a person who doesn’t know how to communicate with people — only animals? Of course, he becomes best friends with Polynesia (a parrot), Gub-Gub (a pig), Jip (a dog), Dab-Dab (a duck), Chee-Chee (a monkey), Too-Too (an owl), and the Pushmi-pullyu. Make sense? Well, it’s really not supposed to make sense in the traditional sense, but it does make for a smile-inducing story.

DOCTOR DOLITTLE, now in production at Mercury Summer Stock, tells the tale of a doctor who lives in the small town of Puddleby, England. He finds himself on trial for murder for supposedly throwing a woman over a cliff. As it turns out, the woman is really a seal who told Dolittle that she wants to be set free from the circus where she is performing, and meet up with her seal husband in the North Pole. Dolittle obliges by dressing her up as a woman, sneaks her out of the circus, and thrusts her into the sea. Insisting that he can actually talk to the animals, the doctor defends himself in court by telling the tale with the help of his talking parrot (the finest animal linguist in the world), a devoted friend, Matthew Mugg, a young boy, Tommy, a menagerie of animals, and the judge’s niece. (Of course there has to be a love interest thrown into the mix.) Eventually the entire assemblage goes off in search of the Pink Snail, with delightful results.

Doctor John Dolittle is the central character in a series of beloved children’s books by Hugh Lofting, whose first efforts were illustrated letters to children during World War I. Eventually they were published as a series of books, all set in Victorian England.

The stories found stage life in a British stage production with music and lyrics by Leslie Bricusse (Jekyll & Hyde; Stop the World — I Want to Get Off; The Roar of the Greasepaint — The Smell of the Crowd and Victor/Victoria). It was also transformed into a film staring Rex Harrison and Anthony Newley. A production of the stage version toured Cleveland several years ago with the good doctor being played by Tommy Tune.

Mercury Summer Stock, now in its 13th season, presents three shows a summer. There is a naïve Judy Garland-Mickey Rooney “let’s put on a play” attitude about their productions.

The company is the brainchild of Pierre-Jacques Brault and Brian Marshall who met while students at Baldwin-Wallace College. They thought there was a need for a summer theatre that gave an outlet to the talents of both local professionals and amateurs, with an emphasis on the latter. The theatre is like the wandering minstrels, finding performance spaces where they may. Presently, they are in the Brooks Theatre of the Cleveland Playhouse. What’s next? Who knows, but this tenacious group will find a way, find a place, and present plays to their loyal audiences.

Mercury’s production is delightful on many fronts, wanting on others. Director/choreographer Brault, doesn’t let simple things like a postage-stamp sized stage, a limited budget and moderately experienced performers get in his way. He just goes on presenting mini-extravaganzas. (This season ends with SHOW BOAT.) The present production is no exception. There are grand costumes, more gorgeous puppets than a major theatre would put on stage, big dance numbers and lots of scenery being dropped form the fly space and shoved around the stage.

On many levels DR. DOLITTLE is a delight. Brault not only directs and choreographs, but he plays the lead role. And performs it well. He’s been off the stage for many years and, based on this performance, he deserves to be back where he belongs. He sings, dances and smiles with glee.

His life-partner and stage buddy, Brian Marshall, after a slow start, glows in the second act as Matthew Mugg, an Irish imp. Kelvette Beacham delights as Straight Arrow. Her “Save the Animals” is a fine appeal for animal protectionism. Jennifer Myor has a nice singing voice and makes for a convincing Emma, who finally makes Dolittle realize that people may be as acceptable as animals. Lynette Turner is fun as Polynesia, the smart-mouthed parrot.

All is not perfect with the production. There is some weak acting and character development, some of the dancers aren’t up to Brault’s movements, and the vocal blends don’t always work. The single piano sounds of Ryan Neal, though well played, sound thin as the single musical accompaniment. The first act pacing is slow and performers often cut off applause and laughs by making physical and verbal entrances too early.

Though the show may appear to be ideal for children, some little ones will probably get restless, while adults will be more prone to appreciate the staging devices.

CAPSULE JUDGEMENT: DR. DOLITTLE gets a pleasing but not spectacular production at Mercury Summer Stock. The puppets, hummable music and Pierre-Jacques Brault’s staging and performance all are positive aspects of the production.

 

From Cool Cleveland contributor Roy Berko. Berko’s blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2001 through 2011, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at http://RoyBerko.info. His reviews can also be found on NeOHIOpal and CoolCleveland.com.

Roy Berko, who is a life-long Clevelander, is a Renaissance man. Believing the line in Robert Frost’s poem “Road Not Taken,” each time he comes to a fork in the road, he has taken the path less traveled. He holds degrees, thought the doctorate from Kent State, University of Michigan and The Pennsylvania State University. His present roles, besides husband and grandfather, are professor, crisis counselor, author and entertainment reviewer… Read Roy Berko’s complete bio here

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REVIEW: CHICAGO jazzes it up @ Porthouse

 

CHICAGO jazzes it up @ Porthouse

In a good production, CHICAGO, the musical, sizzles with creative dancing, exciting music and fun characterizations. The Porthouse Theatre production sizzles, and is creative and fun! ‘Nuf said.

In the words of my 15-year-old “kid reviewer” grandson, Alex, “That was great!” The award-winning composer enthused, “The music was not only well-written, but well played. The acting is right on. The singers sang meanings, not just words. The dancing was creative, and except for some unity problems in a couple of the numbers, was well done! The vocal blendings were excellent.” Grandpa totally agreed with him.

CHICAGO, which is set in Prohibition era Chicago, is a satire on the Windy City’s well known police and judicial corruption. The mayhem gave birth to celebrity criminals whose fame came and went as newer and more outlandish crimes and payoffs came forth.

The musical is based on a play of the same name written by Maurine Dallas Watkins, a Chicago Tribune reporter who was assigned to cover the 1924 trials of murderesses Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner.

Annan, who was acquitted of murder through a reported series of payoffs, became the model for the Roxie Hart. Velma is based on Gaertner, a cabaret singer who was also conveniently acquitted of murder. Billy Flynn, the lawyer character, is a composite of the two lawyers in the real cases.

The musical’s path to production started in the 1960s. Superstar Gwen Verdon read the play and asked her husband, the great Broadway choreographer Bob Fosse, about creating a musical adaptation. Fosse approached playwright Watkins numerous times to buy the rights, but Watkins, who had become a born-again Christian, refused as she believed her play glamorized a scandalous way of living. Upon her death the rights were obtained and Fred Ebb began work on the musical score. Ebb and Fosse penned the book and Fosse directed and choreographed. And, as the saying goes, the rest is history.

The original Broadway production ran for 936 performances and starred Chita Rivera as Velma, Gwen Verdon as Roxie and Jerry Orbach as Billy. The script was revived in 1996 and holds the record for the longest-running musical revival on Broadway, now clocking over 6,000 performances. The 2002 film version, which starred Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renee Zellweger, Richard Gere, John C. Reilly and Queen Latifah, won the Academy Award for best picture.

Porthouse’s production, under the direction of Terri Kent, is excellent. The show moves along at a fast pace, building on the vaudeville motif by having musical director Jonathan Swoboda serve not only as the orchestra leader, but as the narrator. It’s a clever technique which adds to the show’s whimsy.

Choregrapher Mary Ann Black has modified the original Fosse choreography to fit the talents of the dancers and the thrust stage venue. Though I would have liked the dancers to get lower to the ground and have more definitive hand and arm gestures, ala Fosse style, the enthusiasm and effect comes through loud and clear.

Swoboda’s band is excellent. The musical sounds don’t drown out the singing and fills the space with the right jazz beat.

Black, who not only choreographed, but plays the cute, conniving Roxie, is terrific in the role. She dances, mugs, feigns innocence and creates a delightful killer. Her solos “Funny Honey” and “Roxie,” were show highlights.

Sandra Emerick, Velma, sings, acts and dances well. Her “All That Jazz” lights up the stage. Her duets with Black, “My Own Best Friend,” “Nowadays” and “I Know a Girl/Me and My Baby” brought gales of applause.

Eric van Baars is fine as Billy. His singing and dancing are solid. He may have added to the role with a little more swagger and arrogance.

Timothy Culver, who portrays Roxie’s nebbish husband, brought down the house with Mister Cellophane.

Dylan Ratell confounds as the cross-dressing Mary Sunshine. He sings with a castrato voice that is outstanding. (Castrato is a male with a singing voice equivalent to that of soprano or mezzo-soprano.) Wow!

Melissa Owens’ Matron Mama Morton lacks the hard edge and commanding presence needed for the role. Her “When You’re Good to Mama” lacked the needed power, presence and conniving tone.

Stick around for the song and dance routine after the closing lines. Black and Emerick delight.

CAPSULE JUDGMENT: CHICAGO, Porthouse style, sizzles and delights. It makes for a perfect summer treat. Go! See! Enjoy!

 

From Cool Cleveland contributor Roy Berko. Berko’s blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2001 through 2011, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at http://RoyBerko.info. His reviews can also be found on NeOHIOpal and CoolCleveland.com.

Roy Berko, who is a life-long Clevelander, is a Renaissance man. Believing the line in Robert Frost’s poem “Road Not Taken,” each time he comes to a fork in the road, he has taken the path less traveled. He holds degrees, thought the doctorate from Kent State, University of Michigan and The Pennsylvania State University. His present roles, besides husband and grandfather, are professor, crisis counselor, author and entertainment reviewer… Read Roy Berko’s complete bio here

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REVIEW: Pop Opera Rocks – Parsons Dance @ Ohio Theatre 6/11/11

Choreographer Finds Groove
Pop Opera Rocks: Parsons Dance @ Ohio Theatre 6/11/11

We went to see Parsons Dance at the Ohio Theatre on Saturday only half sure what to expect. The program was to start with the short but spectacular Caught (1982), a piece we’d seen at least once before. Rounding out the evening was a piece new to us, Remember Me (2009), a collaboration with East Village Opera Company and at 75 minutes Parsons’ first venture into evening-length narrative. Remember Me opened in New York to scathing reviews.

Caught played out much as we remembered. Dancer Miguel Quinones initially appeared standing in a succession of hot overhead spots that exaggerated his ripped, shirtless muscularity. Then the strobe light started, catching the apex of each of his jumps in intense light and concealing his landings in darkness. Quinones appeared to levitate in the air as he bounced up and down in place, bounded around the stage in a circle, and hopped forward and back; elementary choreography, perhaps, but the dancer and the operator of the strobe light were in perfect synch and the audience gasped, murmured, and chuckled during the piece and burst into tumultuous applause at the end.

Apparently Caught makes use of carefully guarded craft secrets for — despite the many uses of strobe light in dance and the loose copyright protections afforded to choreography — no one we know of has achieved comparable effects in a dance performance.

Like Parson’s The Envelope, frequently performed locally by Verb Ballets, we’ve enjoyed Caught every time we’ve seen it, but with a certain reservation. Both dances — by far Parson’s best before Remember Me — succeed despite a one-dimensional quality that reduces much of the rest of his work beneath serious consideration as choreography. We’re not the only ones who felt (past tense) this way about Parsons. (http://NYTimes.com/2009 and http://NYTimes.com/2011.)

East Village Opera Company is a Grammy-nominated cover band for opera’s greatest hits. A fairly traditional rendition of, for instance, the Overture from Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro begins and then rock percussion and electric guitars, recorded for the Ohio Theatre performance but live in many EVOC shows, enter the arrangement in an effort to impart a hip, contemporary vibe. Not everyone likes this kind of thing, but Saturday’s audience at the Ohio Theatre certainly did, expressing enthusiastic acceptance throughout the show and applauding at great length during the choreographed curtain calls at the end.

We felt that the two EVOC vocalists, Ann Marie Milazzo and Michael K. Lee — who were very much live and in person at the Ohio — were particularly successful in bridging the gap between operatic aria and contemporary pop vocals. But Remember Me owes its success to more than the music.

Each of the 12 scenes in Remember Me used music, dance, and background projections to advance the story of a love triangle that ended — remember, this is opera — tragically but then with the transcendent, triumphant reunion of the lovers. The Parsons dancers, projecting glamour and dazzling technical prowess as always, powered through the broadly drawn narrative. Backgrounds (by Production Designer Jason Thompson and Lighting Designer Howell Binkley) projected on the upstage cyclorama put each scene in an evocative setting and allowed lightning scene changes, but seldom distracted from the dancers.

As we said, we were never big Parsons fans before, but Remember Me has forced even Vic to concede that Parsons has either grown as an artist or found — in rock and roll story ballets — a form that he can navigate successfully. The story line of Remember Me was clear despite surprising turns. What seemed at first to be gimmicky props were used in unexpected ways that proved organic to the story. The emotions depicted by the choreography resonated.

After 29 years, David Parsons has grown as a choreographer. Is there nothing we can rely on?

Parsons Dance in collaboration with the East Village Opera Company was presented by Dance Cleveland and Opera Cleveland at the Ohio Theatre on Sat 6/11/11.

 

From Cool Cleveland contributors Elsa Johnson and Victor Lucas. Elsa and Vic are both longtime Clevelanders. Elsa is a landscape designer. She studied ballet as an avocation for 2 decades. Vic has been a dancer and dance teacher for most of his working life, performing in a number of dance companies in NYC and Cleveland. They write about dance as a way to learn more and keep in touch with the dance community. E-mail them at vicnelsaATearthlink.net.

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Shopping opportunities abound in Cle

New shops are popping up all over the place in the 216. First, downtown on E. 4th St., is Dredger’s Union — a shop selling apparel with a focus on locally- (or USA-) sourced goods. Ever been to Room Service? Do you like the looks of Wrath Arcane? Fan of Cleveland in general? This shop’s for you.

Head over to Ohio City and check out Joy Machine Bike Shop catering to everyday cyclists and commuters. Also new-ish in the neighborhood: Salty Not Sweet cool craft shop, and Valerie Mayen’s pop-up Yellowcakeshop at 1836 W. 25th St.

OK, now what new shops are we missing?

 

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