Showing posts with label Elena Giannetti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elena Giannetti. Show all posts
Saturday, November 26, 2022
"Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley" at Lyric Arts
This holiday* #TCTheater season, we are blessed with not one but two productions of Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon's Pride and Prejudice fan fiction series Christmas at Pemberley. The first play in the trilogy, Miss Bennet, was first seen on local stages at the Jungle Theater five years ago, after which they co-commissioned two more plays, the latest of which, Georgiana and Kitty, is currently premiering at the Jungle. But you can also see where the story all began in Miss Bennet in a new production at Lyric Arts in Anoka. All of these plays are gems, perfectly marrying Jane Austen's legacy of female-centered stories in a man's world of property, marriage, and inheritance with modern feminist sensibilities. It's lovely to see a different take on these stories at Lyric Arts, but just as charming, funny, and heart-warming. You can visit Pemberley via Anoka Thursdays through Sundays until December 18.
Saturday, June 4, 2022
"Little Women" at Lyric Arts
NYC-based playwright and actor Kate Hamill is known for her modern, feminist adaptations of classics, several of which have been seen on #TCTheater stages in recent years. The Guthrie will premiere her adaptation of Jane Austen's Emma later this month, but first: Lyric Arts' production of her adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's beloved novel Little Women, commissioned by the Jungle Theater a few years ago. This quote from Kate's website very much applies to this play: "She is deeply passionate about creating new feminist, female-centered classics, both in new plays and in adaptation: stories that center around complicated women. Her work as a playwright celebrates theatricality, often features absurdity, and closely examines social and gender issues - as well as the timeless struggle to reconcile conscience / identity with social pressures." This, as they say, is not your grandmother's Little Women. While staying fairly true to the events of the novel, the play sees the characters and situations through a modern lens, and veers more towards comedy, at times broad and absurd, than the quiet drama of the original. But at its heart, it's still about the love between four very different sisters, each finding her own identity and path through life (click here for info and tickets).
Saturday, January 11, 2020
"Bloomsday" at Lyric Arts
A character in Steven Dietz's play Bloomsday says something like, "a sunny day is nice, but on a rainy day the ache for the sun is nicer." This distinctly Irish sentiment is a good description of this bittersweet story of a pair of star-crossed lovers meeting across space and time. It may not be a happy ending, but the ache for these two characters to find happiness is grand. Lyric Arts' new production features a strong four-person cast and lovely design that bring us right into this charming and unconventional love story.
Saturday, April 27, 2019
"Marjorie Prime" by Prime Productions at Park Square Theatre
New #TCTheater company Prime Productions "seeks to explore, illuminate and support women over fifty and their stories through the creative voice of performance." Hooray! Their third full production just opened at Park Square Theatre, and it's another high quality thought-provoking play featuring women in their prime. The regional premiere of the new play Marjorie Prime by playwright Jordan Harrison is, like his play Maple and Vine, a little trippy and creepy. But instead of a scary Stepford society, it deals with artificial intelligence and the benefits and possibly scary consequences of technology. But it also deals with very human issues of aging, death, grief, and complicated family relationships.
Friday, September 7, 2018
"If/Then" at Lyric Arts
2014 saw the Broadway premiere of a new original musical written by the creators of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Next to Normal (Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt) for two of the original stars of the Pulitzer Prize-winning RENT (Idina Menzel and Anthony Rapp). I went to see If/Then with super high expectations, which is probably why I was underwhelmed. It's not going to win a Pulitzer (few musicals do, only nine if you want to get nerdy about it), in fact it didn't even win a Tony. But the more I listen to the score and see the show (I also saw the national tour a few years ago), the more I like it. It may not be a brilliant musical, but it's a good one, and it's original, fresh, and modern, which is hard to come by these days. Lyric Arts in Anoka was lucky/smart enough to snag the regional premiere, and I'm quite impressed by what this little community(ish) theater in the 'burbs was able to do with this complex show. A solid cast (and one outright superstar in Kate Beahen), a clever design that captures the spirit of NYC, clear direction by Elena Giannetti, and interesting movement around the small stage bring out the best in this smart, funny, moving, and thought-provoking new original modern musical. I can't ask for much more than that.
Thursday, January 18, 2018
"The Last Five Years" at Artistry
If you're a musical theater nerd, I don't need to tell you what an ingenious piece Jason Robert Brown's The Last Five Years is. A simple story of a relationship told from both sides, one chronologically forwards, one chronologically backwards. Premiering in Chicago and Off-Broadway in the early aughts, L5Y received a bit of a resurgence recently due to the recent movie adaptation; Artistry's nearly sold-out show is the fourth local production I've seen in (sorry) the last five years. And I have to say, I enjoy it a little more each time I see it. In fact I very much enjoyed this production, partly because of my familiarity with the complexities of the piece, and partly because it's really well done. The Black Box space is small enough to provide the intimacy the piece needs, with just a sparse two-person band, and a truly fantastic young cast in Aly Westberg O'Keeffe and Ryan London Levin. The run is nearly sold out, so call the box office if you want to get into this one (continuing through February 11, more info here).
Monday, November 20, 2017
"Coney Island Christmas" at Lyric Arts
Next up on the #TCTheater Holiday Tour* is Lyric Arts' lovely little gem of a play, Coney Island Christmas. Clocking in at just 80 minutes, Coney Island Christmas manages to create that warm and wistful feeling of nostalgia, while making a plea for all of us to respect each other's traditions, even (or especially) if they're different from ours. A highly entertaining cast of children and grown-ups, a heart-warming message of community, and some of the best worst carol singing you've ever heard make this a lovely addition to the holiday theater season.
Monday, January 14, 2013
"Rabbit Hole" at Theatre in the Round

The story begins eight months after the death of 4-year-old Danny. Grieving parents Becca (Elena Gianetti) and Howie (Ron Ravensborg) are dealing with the tragedy in different ways (she wants to move out of the house to avoid reminders, he repeatedly watches videos of their son), and are having a hard time meeting in the middle. Becca's sister Izzy (Rachel Finch, the standout in the cast with her completely natural acting) is her polar opposite and tries to distract everyone with her colorful life. Adding some much need comic relief is their mother Nat (Linda Sue Anderson, who's a hoot), with her crazy theories about "the Kennedy curse" and other rants. The delicate family balance is disturbed when the young man responsible for the accident appears (the appealing Kenny Martin II). This feels like a very real family dealing with a very real problem, struggling, sometimes failing, but continuing to be there for each other.
The "in the round" stage looks like a real (but very neat, which is understandable given who lives there) contemporary home, complete with kitchen, dining room, living room, and a child's bedroom that looks as if he never left (set design by Peter W. Mitchell). I have a strange fascination with watching people perform real-life mundane tasks on stage, like folding laundry and washing dishes, and there's plenty of that here in this lifelike home. One of the things I love about Theatre in the Round is that you get to walk right through the set to get to your seats, which makes it seem even more real. The nature of an "in the round" theater provides an interesting staging problem, but thanks to the direction by David Coral, I never felt like I was missing out on anything, even if a character's back was to me. During the effective scene transitions, the lights dim but don't go out, as evocative and appropriate music plays. We see the characters progress from one room/scene to another, in what are not throwaway moments but rather add to building the characters.
Rabbit Hole is playing weekends now through February 3. If you haven't seen any of the previous 499 productions at Theatre in the Round, number 500 is a good place to start.
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Elena Gianetti and Ron Ravensborg as grieving parents Becca and Howie |
Monday, November 7, 2011
"Our Class" by the Minnesota Jewish Theatre Company at the Hillcrest Center Theater
The Minnesota Jewish Theatre Company's Our Class is not an easy play to see. It's not the kind of show you go to for a light escape from reality for a few hours. You walk out of the theater with lots to think about, and none of it very happy. But it's important to remember our past and attempt to make sense of it, although I'm not sure one can make sense of the atrocities committed against friends, neighbors, classmates as in this play. But at least we can bear witness to it.
Our Class was written by Polish playwright Tadeusz Slobodzianek based on true events in a small Polish town during WWII. The 2001 controversial book Neighbors argues that the majority of the Jews in the town of Jedwabne were murdered by the Polish residents of the town, their friends and neighbors, not the Nazis. The play explores this idea and examines how children who once played, laughed, and learned together can grow up to betray and murder each other.
The play begins with ten young classmates, played by actors of various ages (corresponding approximately to the age of their character at the time of death). They're normal school-children, laughing, playing, teasing, fighting. As they grow older a division begins to be apparent between the five Jewish children and the five Catholic children. The division grows as the war progresses and Poland is invaded first by the Soviets and then by the Nazis (to simplify the incredibly complicated history). Classmates turn on each other, betray each other, beat each other, but some choose to shelter and save each other. Act I culminates in the burning of a barn containing hundreds of Jews. Some of our class are the perpetrators, some are the victims. In Act II, those that are still alive try to move on and make a life for themselves. Some feel remorse for what they've done, others feel justified in their actions or are in denial of them. Either way, the events of that day remain with them forever. As each character dies (the play follows each character to the end of his or her life, whether young or old, in Poland or elsewhere), one signature article of clothing is replaced with a version in red - a belt, hat, ribbon, vest. And they remain on stage; ghosts haunting the lives of those left behind.
An interesting feature of this play is that characters describe their actions as they're doing them (which reminded me of the style of In the Red and Brown Water). This gives the audience deeper insight into each character's thoughts and feelings. Some of the characters are based on real people, and all of them are fully defined. We get to know specific details of each character's life, some that don't even really relate to the plot, but all of which help to create a sense that these are real people. The cast is so talented in bringing these characters to life that I hesitate to call any of them out because there are so many powerful performances. But I will. :) Elena Giannetti is the young wife and mother Dora; strong and heart-breaking, she's the center of the two most painful scenes of the play. Caleb Carlson (graduate of the U of M/Guthrie training program) is the militant Rysiek who commits some pretty atrocious acts, but Caleb manages to convey Rysiek's inner torment that makes him almost sympathetic. As opposed to the completely unlikable Zygmunt (Michael Jurenek), who betrays both "friends" and "enemies" alike depending on what best serves his own self-interest. Candace Barrett Birk is the Jewish girl Rachelka who becomes the Catholic woman Marianna in order to survive, and lives out her life resigned to her fate. Maggie Bearmon Pistner (who was so funny and over-the-top in Next Fall at the Jungle earlier this year) is Zocha, one of the "heroic" Poles who harbored and saved a Jew, which comes with its own complications. One of the wonderful things about this play is that each character reacts differently to the situation they find themselves in, showcasing a wide variety of what people did to survive, some admirable, some not so.
I wanted to see this play for several reasons. I am of mostly German descent, except for my one Polish great-grandmother, and was raised Catholic, so I feel like it's part of my cultural history that I need to be aware of and deal with, as difficult as that is. I have traveled in Germany and Poland and visited the concentration camp at Auschwitz. To say it's a sobering experience is an understatement. Seeing this play is a little like visiting Auschwitz (without the very visceral sense of being in that place), difficult but somehow necessary. At intermission I overheard several conversations about people's personal stories about the holocaust or what their parents told them about it. This play gets people talking and thinking about difficult issues, which is what theater at its best is all about.
Our Class was written by Polish playwright Tadeusz Slobodzianek based on true events in a small Polish town during WWII. The 2001 controversial book Neighbors argues that the majority of the Jews in the town of Jedwabne were murdered by the Polish residents of the town, their friends and neighbors, not the Nazis. The play explores this idea and examines how children who once played, laughed, and learned together can grow up to betray and murder each other.
The play begins with ten young classmates, played by actors of various ages (corresponding approximately to the age of their character at the time of death). They're normal school-children, laughing, playing, teasing, fighting. As they grow older a division begins to be apparent between the five Jewish children and the five Catholic children. The division grows as the war progresses and Poland is invaded first by the Soviets and then by the Nazis (to simplify the incredibly complicated history). Classmates turn on each other, betray each other, beat each other, but some choose to shelter and save each other. Act I culminates in the burning of a barn containing hundreds of Jews. Some of our class are the perpetrators, some are the victims. In Act II, those that are still alive try to move on and make a life for themselves. Some feel remorse for what they've done, others feel justified in their actions or are in denial of them. Either way, the events of that day remain with them forever. As each character dies (the play follows each character to the end of his or her life, whether young or old, in Poland or elsewhere), one signature article of clothing is replaced with a version in red - a belt, hat, ribbon, vest. And they remain on stage; ghosts haunting the lives of those left behind.
An interesting feature of this play is that characters describe their actions as they're doing them (which reminded me of the style of In the Red and Brown Water). This gives the audience deeper insight into each character's thoughts and feelings. Some of the characters are based on real people, and all of them are fully defined. We get to know specific details of each character's life, some that don't even really relate to the plot, but all of which help to create a sense that these are real people. The cast is so talented in bringing these characters to life that I hesitate to call any of them out because there are so many powerful performances. But I will. :) Elena Giannetti is the young wife and mother Dora; strong and heart-breaking, she's the center of the two most painful scenes of the play. Caleb Carlson (graduate of the U of M/Guthrie training program) is the militant Rysiek who commits some pretty atrocious acts, but Caleb manages to convey Rysiek's inner torment that makes him almost sympathetic. As opposed to the completely unlikable Zygmunt (Michael Jurenek), who betrays both "friends" and "enemies" alike depending on what best serves his own self-interest. Candace Barrett Birk is the Jewish girl Rachelka who becomes the Catholic woman Marianna in order to survive, and lives out her life resigned to her fate. Maggie Bearmon Pistner (who was so funny and over-the-top in Next Fall at the Jungle earlier this year) is Zocha, one of the "heroic" Poles who harbored and saved a Jew, which comes with its own complications. One of the wonderful things about this play is that each character reacts differently to the situation they find themselves in, showcasing a wide variety of what people did to survive, some admirable, some not so.
I wanted to see this play for several reasons. I am of mostly German descent, except for my one Polish great-grandmother, and was raised Catholic, so I feel like it's part of my cultural history that I need to be aware of and deal with, as difficult as that is. I have traveled in Germany and Poland and visited the concentration camp at Auschwitz. To say it's a sobering experience is an understatement. Seeing this play is a little like visiting Auschwitz (without the very visceral sense of being in that place), difficult but somehow necessary. At intermission I overheard several conversations about people's personal stories about the holocaust or what their parents told them about it. This play gets people talking and thinking about difficult issues, which is what theater at its best is all about.
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