I've attended a half dozen or so musicals at Bloomington Civic Theater and have always enjoyed what I've seen, but I've never been to their Black Box Theater to see a play. Bloomington is a bit of a drive from my home in the Northeast suburbs, so it took a special play to get me there for a non-musical. That play is Proof, my second favorite math play (the first being Tom Stoppard's Arcadia). Of course it's not really about math; math is the backdrop against which a very real and powerful story about family, identity, and metal illness is told. It's a beautifully written play (by David Auburn), and director Alan Sorenson and his able cast do a good job of bringing it to life. I was wiping away tears at several points during the play, which speaks to the emotions in the written words as well as in the performances.
Proof premiered on Broadway in 2000 and won the Tony for Best Play. I saw it on tour in 2002, which is proof (sorry) of it's popularity since Broadway plays don't go on tour as often as musicals. It tells the story of a young woman named Catherine whose father, a renowned mathematician, has just died. She took care of him in the final years of his life as his mental health deteriorated. In that time he filled 100 notebooks with gibberish, or is it mathematical genius? Similar to the movie A Beautiful Mind (based on the biography of mathematician Jon Nash), he sees patterns and codes everywhere, and it's difficult to decipher the difference between madness and genius. One of his former students, Hal, comes over to the house to go through the journals to see if there's anything of value. At the same time, Catherine's sister arrives from New York and tells her she's sold the house, and wants Catherine to move to New York with her. When Hal discovers one beautiful, complicated, ground-breaking proof, Catherine says that she wrote it. No one believes her since she's had little schooling; she dropped out of college to take care of her father. It's obvious she has inherited her father's mathematical skill, but has she also inherited his mental illness? That's the question that Catherine struggles with as she tries to figure out who she is without her crazy genius father to take care of and define her life.
This is Catherine's story, and Erin Mae Johnson is up to the task of conveying her varying emotions, from devastation at the loss of her father, to excitement at the possibility of new love, to betrayal when those closest to her don't believe in her. Scott Keely is excellent as her father, seen in flashbacks and hallucinations, becoming more and more unraveled as he descends further into his illness. Also good are Bailey Murphy as the businesslike sister who wants to wrap everything up neatly and move on with her life, and Zach Garcia as the enthusiastic math scholar Hal who befriends Catherine as he tries to glean something from what her father left behind.
Proof is a fantastic play, emotional and powerful and funny at times, presented nicely by BCT. You don't have to be a math nerd like me to enjoy it, but if you are, you'll learn some interesting facts about prime numbers and mathematician Sophie Germain, and enjoy a few inside jokes, like the one about a song called i. Proof is playing now through October 6 in BCT's Black Box Theater (discount tickets available at Goldstar.com).
Showing posts with label Erin Mae Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erin Mae Johnson. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
"Hamlet" at the Jungle Theater
I have a season pass to the Jungle Theater this year for the first time. And I have to admit, when I saw Hamlet on the list of shows, I wasn't overly excited as I've seen it a few times. But I've never seen Hamlet like this. It's a truly inventive production that manages to make it feel current without changing any of the language or meaning of the piece.
From the moment you walk into the intimate theater space at the Jungle, you know you're in for a truly unique Shakespeare experience. Modern rock music is playing, and images and words are flashing across the screens onstage. The action opens, not on a castle rooftop, but in the basement surveillance room, with a bored security guard flashing through security camera images of the floors of the castle. It's through these cameras that the king's ghost is seen. Hamlet's friend Horatio and one of the guards hop in the elevator to confront him while the other guard watches, as the action seamlessly moves from the stage to the pre-taped video. It's an ingenious idea and flawlessly executed. The use of images and videos appears in various parts of the play, as Hamlet scrolls through photos on his cell phone and the images are projected on screen, and later, as the queen watches the action of a party on a TV screen. Yes, this is a modern-day Hamlet. In addition to cell phones and TVs, characters also use laptops and iPads. The costumes are modern, ranging from classic and refined (as in the queen's gorgeous wardrobe), to a more youthful and edgy look on Hamlet and his young friends. The set (designed by Bain Boehlke, who also directed) is brilliant. In addition to all of the audio-visual devices, it consists of huge columns that are moved around the stage to represent different areas of the castle. The settings are as varied as a busy airport bar, the dark basement of the castle, and an airy breakfast room. In between scenes, as the set is being changed, the time and setting of the scene are flashed on the screen, guiding the audience through the action. This may sound like a lot of stuff going on that could distract from the story, but I found that it really enhanced it and drew me in.
I've seen Hugh Kennedy in a number of productions at the Guthrie and I've always liked him. He's a very natural actor and has great charisma and stage presence. But I've never seen him in a lead role like this (although I'm not sure there is another lead role like Hamlet). His Hamlet is real and raw, tortured and crazy, lost and vulnerable. You can feel his pain at the loss of his father and the changes it's brought to his life. The words sound so natural coming out of Hugh's mouth, and Shakespearean language does not always sound natural. He really made this play come alive for me. I sometimes have difficulty concentrating on three plus hours of Shakespeare, but Hugh's performance, along with the inventive set design and contemporary setting, made it easy.
Bradley Greenwald (one of my favorite actors from the musical theater world) is deliciously smarmy and evil as Claudius, Hamlet's uncle and his father's murderer. His voice is melodious even when merely speaking. Michelle Barber is regal as Hamlet's newly widowed, newly wed mother Gertrude, who aches for her son and can't understand why he isn't as happy as she is with the new way of things. The scene near the end of the play in which Hamlet visits Gertrude's room is particularly poignant and heartbreaking. It's so nice to see Michelle outside of the Chanhassen (where she's a regular) and see what else she can do. Gary Briggle (who was so wonderful in my favorite Fringe show this year, Twisted Apples) is also excellent as the King's councillor Polonius, and Erin Mae Johnson is a sufficiently crazy Ophelia. I was happy to see Doug Scholz-Carlson from one of my favorite original musical theater pieces this year, Heaven. He plays Ophelia's brother and Polonius' son, and has a wonderful fight/death scene at the end.
Hamlet is playing into October. If you like your Shakespeare contemporary, real, and a little bit shook up, but still true to the original, you should check it out. I probably don't need to warn anyone that it's not a short play; with three acts and two intermissions, it's well over the three hour mark. I wouldn't recommend hanging out at a campfire until the wee hours of the morning a few nights before you see it (although the dollar Dunn Brothers coffee in the lobby helps). Make sure you're well rested, fed, and watered. You'll want to be alert for this one.
From the moment you walk into the intimate theater space at the Jungle, you know you're in for a truly unique Shakespeare experience. Modern rock music is playing, and images and words are flashing across the screens onstage. The action opens, not on a castle rooftop, but in the basement surveillance room, with a bored security guard flashing through security camera images of the floors of the castle. It's through these cameras that the king's ghost is seen. Hamlet's friend Horatio and one of the guards hop in the elevator to confront him while the other guard watches, as the action seamlessly moves from the stage to the pre-taped video. It's an ingenious idea and flawlessly executed. The use of images and videos appears in various parts of the play, as Hamlet scrolls through photos on his cell phone and the images are projected on screen, and later, as the queen watches the action of a party on a TV screen. Yes, this is a modern-day Hamlet. In addition to cell phones and TVs, characters also use laptops and iPads. The costumes are modern, ranging from classic and refined (as in the queen's gorgeous wardrobe), to a more youthful and edgy look on Hamlet and his young friends. The set (designed by Bain Boehlke, who also directed) is brilliant. In addition to all of the audio-visual devices, it consists of huge columns that are moved around the stage to represent different areas of the castle. The settings are as varied as a busy airport bar, the dark basement of the castle, and an airy breakfast room. In between scenes, as the set is being changed, the time and setting of the scene are flashed on the screen, guiding the audience through the action. This may sound like a lot of stuff going on that could distract from the story, but I found that it really enhanced it and drew me in.
I've seen Hugh Kennedy in a number of productions at the Guthrie and I've always liked him. He's a very natural actor and has great charisma and stage presence. But I've never seen him in a lead role like this (although I'm not sure there is another lead role like Hamlet). His Hamlet is real and raw, tortured and crazy, lost and vulnerable. You can feel his pain at the loss of his father and the changes it's brought to his life. The words sound so natural coming out of Hugh's mouth, and Shakespearean language does not always sound natural. He really made this play come alive for me. I sometimes have difficulty concentrating on three plus hours of Shakespeare, but Hugh's performance, along with the inventive set design and contemporary setting, made it easy.
Bradley Greenwald (one of my favorite actors from the musical theater world) is deliciously smarmy and evil as Claudius, Hamlet's uncle and his father's murderer. His voice is melodious even when merely speaking. Michelle Barber is regal as Hamlet's newly widowed, newly wed mother Gertrude, who aches for her son and can't understand why he isn't as happy as she is with the new way of things. The scene near the end of the play in which Hamlet visits Gertrude's room is particularly poignant and heartbreaking. It's so nice to see Michelle outside of the Chanhassen (where she's a regular) and see what else she can do. Gary Briggle (who was so wonderful in my favorite Fringe show this year, Twisted Apples) is also excellent as the King's councillor Polonius, and Erin Mae Johnson is a sufficiently crazy Ophelia. I was happy to see Doug Scholz-Carlson from one of my favorite original musical theater pieces this year, Heaven. He plays Ophelia's brother and Polonius' son, and has a wonderful fight/death scene at the end.
Hamlet is playing into October. If you like your Shakespeare contemporary, real, and a little bit shook up, but still true to the original, you should check it out. I probably don't need to warn anyone that it's not a short play; with three acts and two intermissions, it's well over the three hour mark. I wouldn't recommend hanging out at a campfire until the wee hours of the morning a few nights before you see it (although the dollar Dunn Brothers coffee in the lobby helps). Make sure you're well rested, fed, and watered. You'll want to be alert for this one.
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