Update (Scattered Mind Edition)

Yeesh.

It’s been nearly a week since my last post. Has anything exciting been going on? Hmmmm … maybe!

Rehearsals for “The Producers” are now in full swing. We had the read-through and two music rehearsals last week. This week will be full up with music and then we go right into the dancing. In a scary bit of news, my tap shoes arrived yesterday! I can’t even begin to tell you how much terror and anxiety the idea of tap dancing in front of people fills me with. I’ll know after June 1st just how stupid I am gonna look.

Work is rocking along and keeping me busy as well … both my regular job and the freelance stuff. The theater’s season is in full swing which means lots of posters, programs, newsletters and ads.

Summer seems to be in full swing here in the mountains. Yard work is now a weekly occurrence.

There’s a couple of other things I want to post about just to type them down and get ’em off my mind … but I think I am gonna process some more before I “tell the world.”

Update (Scattered Mind Edition)

Off And Running ….

We had the first meeting of the cast that will be presenting “The Producers” this summer. Wow. Looks like a great group of fun and funny folks. My fears were confirmed this evening though. Tap shoes have been ordered … so, look for me to be hoofing my stuff on stage in July!

Off And Running ….

Update …

So, yeah … “Honk!” ends and I get sick. I have spent the last fews days trying to take it easy and rest up.

Tomorrow night, I am off with Franke (Jonesy will be there too!) to see”The Who’s Tommy: The Musical” over in Asheville. Quite a few friends are in it.

We start “The Producers” next week with a read through on Monday. Fun!

Update …

Off One. On To Another?

The opening weekend of “Honk!” went pretty well. It’s been a fun show to perform … but I swear that the air conditioning in the theater must be on the fritz. It’s a sweatfest every performance. I have ended up sweating through all the layers of my costume every single time. Ugh. Yesterday was particularly uncomfortable. I have two more nights off and then we hit the final four performances.

Last night I auditioned for the next HART musical, “The Producers” … and yeah … the Mel Brooks one! I went back tonight to check out the competition. It looked pretty stiff for the plum roles. I have my fingers crossed for the part I want … but I can honestly say that I won’t be completely devastated if I don’t get cast.

Off One. On To Another?

Post Full of Whine

So, it’s downtime for me here at the theater. Yup … backstage blogging.

OMG! Could the costume for Drake be any hotter? They finally kicked on the air conditioning after I sweated through my shirt and sweater. Hooray for air conditioning!

I have had a headache all damn day. It just doesn’t seem to want to go away. Oh well. At least it’s not The Swine.

Time to go waddle through Act II … and then home for some tasty Sugar Buzz !! Carrot Cake.

Post Full of Whine

Some Random Things

Yeah. I am bad about posting. I know. I keep saying that.

“Rabbit Hole” has now finished. It was lightly attended but I guess I should have expected that given the show’s subject matter. The cast was awesome and I am blown away by the great work they did.

And now I am in rehearsals for “HONK!” and scheming to get “Bug” up and rolling for the Studio Season next year.

Work has started on a business endeavor for the web … but I want to wait and reveal more on that when I actually have something to “show” instead of just “tell.”

I love being able to oder things from England! I now can start getting all the series sets of one of my favorite shows, “Most Haunted

It’s April now which doesn’t necessarily mean warm weather. It’s cold and snowing outside.

Some Random Things

Back At It

Wow …

Last week was quite possibly the most stressful week EVER.

Work (for some reason) was totally crazy with lots of “Now, Now, Now” projects. A wee family crisis dropped in to my lap and that stressed me out completely. Plus, “Rabbit Hole” was in rehearsal every night and wasn’t looking so good early in the week.

But everything worked out on all fronts and I was feeling much calmer by Saturday.

So … my next post will definitely be those hiking pics I promised.

Back At It

Bad Blogger

Hey blog …

This is another letter to you.

I have been neglecting you lately. And it’s not like there hasn’t been anything to write about. Some things I have put down in writing … but most I have not.

Am I lazy? Yeah.
Suffering from the Winter Blahs. Yeah.

Like … I haven’t posted pictures from that hike I went on with PT and MGW last weekend. I need to do that. I also haven’t posted the pictures of an art print that I have been working on. I need to do that too. Plus, I haven’t even mentioned that I am directing David Lindsay-Abaire’s Pulitzer Prize winning play “Rabbit Hole” in the Studio space at HART. We been rehearsing for a few weeks and open this coming Friday. Nor have I mentioned that I have been cast as Drake (the father duck) in the musical “Honk!” Plus I have been catching up on BSG via Netflix and staying current with “Lost” via the internet. And I have a few home improvement projects I want to get cranking on.

So, there is the update.

I promise to be better!

Bad Blogger

Another Review!!!

HART’s “Floyd Collins” is deep and dark

Each October the highly successful Haywood County theatrical troupe, Haywood Arts Regional Theatre, gives us something unusual. Sometimes it’s daring in concept and content and it’s almost always dark and brooding. It was never more so than in the current musical enterprise “Floyd Collins.”

“Floyd Collins” is based on a real-life event from the 1920s when a young Kentucky man was trapped in a deep, dark, damp cavern and the journalism of the day made a veritable circus of his plight. The discovery and commercialization of Mammoth Cave in central Kentucky inspired many an ambitious land owner to want to capitalize on the appeal of mysterious caverns. The county fair/carnival atmosphere of the region was only exacerbated by this media attraction. The production is as deep and dark as the cavern. Not a feel-good show, for sure,

Composer Adam Guettel, is the grandson of Richard Rodgers, one of the 20th century’s most prolific and successful musical theater composers. But his current work much more resembles that of Stephen Sondheim than it does those famed Rodgers and Hammerstein melodies.

From the opening tones of the pit orchestra, ably conducted by Chuck Taft, it’s clear this is not typical theater music. The musical ensemble has no brass or woodwinds. It’s all strings, and percussion. It is a lovely experience to hear this capable ensemble melding period Kentucky folk music with modern theater sounds. The music is demanding and the vocal demands exceed that of the instrumentalists.

Fortunately, HART was able to cast several highly trained singers in key roles. The title role of Floyd is a challenge for any singer. Much of Floyd’s best singing is done while he is trapped on his back, and actor Rod Leigh sings quite effectively with limited diaphragm control. He’s a treasure, for sure. His brother, Homer, is done compellingly by Mark Jones, last seen as the Emcee in last October’s quite dark version of the musical “Cabaret.”

Frances Davis and Adrienne Mollette deliver the female tunes with great effectiveness. While Rick Sibley, Preston Tinsley, Roger Williams, Joanthan Milner and Cord Scott don’t have to tackle the most difficult melodies, they are credible actors, as are Ricky Sanford, Strother Stingley, Andrew Greene and Roger Magendie. It’s not a huge cast but director Charles Mills found some significant talent for this show.

Much of the plot line is delivered as recitative, and often the words just don’t make it past the pit. It is hard to capture all the libretto, which is a pity given the nature of a complex script. Yet, much of the emotion and meaning is transparent and not dependent on spoken word. Despite the dark theme, there are moments of occasional lightness to carry us beyond the depressing dialogue between tragedy and hope.

The operatic quality of the vocal work is impressive, and the more surprising being set in such a non-traditional locale. Central Kentucky, much of it underground, dark, deep and damp. A good pre-Halloween show is this one.

– Jim Cavener reviews theater for take5.

Another Review!!!