Showing posts with label Courtney Vonvett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Courtney Vonvett. Show all posts

Friday, August 8, 2025

Minnesota Fringe Festival 2025: "Grief, It's What's For Dinner"

Day:
 7

Show: 22


Category: Comedy / Drama / Puppetry

By: Aethem Theatre

Written by: Kayla Hambek

Location: Open Eye Theatre

Summary: A funny and moving play about caregiving, loss, and finding your way through the difficulties of life with the help of friends.

Highlights: It's not the Minnesota Fringe Festival if I don't cry a few tears, so thanks to Kayla Hambek for letting me cross off that bingo square. She's written a really beautiful autobiographical show (she steps out of character at the end to tell us the real details) that's so relatable to anyone who's experienced loss or caring for an aging parent. She plays a character named Kate who (along with her dad) is caring for her mother who has early onset Alzheimer's, while also dealing with a neurodivergent sister. Her mother is still with them, but the daughters are mourning the mom they knew. She has a therapist and support group to help her through, and maybe even meets a boy. The small ensemble (Danielle Krivinchuk, Emma Paquette, Sher U-F, and Courtney Vonvett) plays everyone in Kate's life, most of them playing multiple very different roles. The use of hand puppets (to represent her inner self as a rainbow puppet, some of the support group members, and silly little musical numbers) adds a whimsy and charm to the story. Like the spoonful of sugar that makes the medicine (a story about grief) go down. Grief is a sweet, funny, relatable, and moving show.

Read all of my Fringe mini-reviews here. 

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Minnesota Fringe Festival 2023: "H.G. Wells' THE INVISIBLE MAN"

Day:
 3

Show: 7


Category: COMEDY / PHYSICAL THEATER / SCI-FI / LITERARY ADAPTATION

By: [Un]Qualified

Created by: Jake Sung-Guk Sullivan

Location: Southern Theater

Summary: An adaptation of the 1897 novel The Invisible Man, in which a scientist becomes invisible, in a playful physical theater style.

Highlights: I don't think it's a coincidence that playwright/director Jake Sung-Guk Sullivan and one of the actors, Brendan Veerman, performed the roles of "the clowns" in Lyric Arts' 2021 production of The 39 Steps. This production uses the same sort of physical theater, clowning, prop work, and fast pace as that show, to great effect. Don't worry if you're not familiar with the source material (which was adapted into a film in 1933), neither was I. The story of the scientist whose experiment goes awry is clearly told in under an hour, as he travels around London trying to resume his work, and running afoul of the law, again. Doni Marinos plays the titular character, either appearing completely clothed and wrapped up, including face and hands, or staying behind the shower curtain under the Southern Theater arch and providing the voice for the unseen man. Brendan Veerman, Courtney Vonvett, and Tucker Brewster Schuster, dressed in trousers with suspenders and a white tank top, play a dizzying number of characters, and probably burn about a thousand calories per show as they run around the stage donning different costumes and accents, one after the other. The physical work, costumes, sound and lighting design, and use of props is so fun, playful, and clever. One particularly delightful recurring gag is going up and down stairs, another highlight is Brendan, a gifted physical comedic actor with a rubber face, in a fight scene with the invisible man, throwing himself all across the stage. This super fun and clever creation is a must-see.


Monday, July 25, 2022

"Something Rotten" at Lyric Arts

Once again, Lyric Arts in Anoka is bringing us the regional premiere of a new(ish) Broadway musical (see also 2018's If/Then and 2019's Bright Star). The 2015 ten-time Tony nominated Something Rotten! is a hilarious musical about musicals, set in Shakespeare's time and featuring The Bard himself as a character. Lyric Arts has assembled a huge, talented, and largely unknown cast to bring this big, bold, wacky story to life on their intimate stage, and it's a hit. If you love musicals, or Shakespeare, or Renn Fest, or broad comedy that's both silly and clever, this is the show for you. Click here for more details and to purchase tickets to the show (continuing through August 14).

Sunday, April 25, 2021

"The Revolutionists" streaming from Lyric Arts

This morning I watched my third streaming Lauren Gunderson play in a week. Last week I watched Steppingstone Theatre's I and You and Jungle Theater's collaboration on Lauren's newest play The Catostrophist (the latter available through May 2, click here for info on both). Today I had the pleasure of watching Lyric Arts's first show since January 2020 - The Revolutionists, recently filmed on their Anoka stage. Like many of Lauren's plays, it tells a fictionalized story of well-known (or should be well-known) women from history with modern language and sensibility, and is funny, smart, poignant, and relevant. If you miss live theater and/or Lyric Arts' popcorn-scented Main Street Stage, don't miss this show (available through May 2 only)!