Showing posts with label Mixed Precipitation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mixed Precipitation. Show all posts
Thursday, August 28, 2025
"Pickup Truck Opera Volume 5: The Return of King Idomeneo" by Mixed Precipitation at Silverwood Park
It's time for one of my favorite #TCTheater summer traditions - Mixed Precipitation's Pickup Truck Opera! It's exactly what it sounds like - opera that operates out of a pickup truck. Well, sort of. Since the pandemic they've moved away from their "picnic operetta" with passed trays of food into this more portable show, driving all around the state in a 2011 Blue Ford pickup truck loaded with sets and props and instruments, bringing their unique brand of accessible and fun opera / pop music mashups to communities around Minnesota. In this year's Volume 5, they're mashing up Mozart's Idomeneo, about the aftermath of the Trojan War, with pop music from '50s and '60s. And they also modernize the story and make it more modern and relevant. The result is pure joy, and just an absolute delight to experience! As one audience member described it, "it's part opera, part silly play." If that sounds appealing to you, click here to find an outdoor location near you (continuing through September 14).
Thursday, August 29, 2024
""Pickup Truck Opera Volume 4: Faust" by Mixed Precipitation at Silverwood Park
Mixed Precipitation's Pickup Truck Opera is back for the fourth year. Their unique mashing up of a classic opera with a particular genre of pop music, performed outside in parks all around the state of Minnesota, is a delightful #TCTheater summer tradition. They make opera accessible and fun. With a modern adaptation of the story, the opera bits are performed in the original language (in Charles Gounod's Faust - French) with surtitles charmingly displayed on scrolls manually revealed. And the pop songs (here the songs of '80s British band Depeche Mode) are well chosen to fit into the story. It all adds up to a lot of fun, especially when you have a perfect late summer evening. The Pickup Truck Opera (yes, there is an actual pickup truck) continues it's journey around Minnesota through September 15 - click here to find a location near you.
Sunday, July 30, 2023
"Pickup Truck Opera Volume 3: Romeo and Juliet" by Mixed Precipitation at Loppet Trailhead
One of #TCTheater's favorite summer traditions is here! After years of presenting a "picnic operetta," Mixed Precipitation has switched to the "pickup truck opera" format, which is basically the same except for no passed snacks, and there's a pickup truck. A 2011 blue Ford pickup truck to be exact. Previously they've performed in and around the pickup, in addition to using it to haul the show around the Twin Cities and Greater Minnesota, but this year it sits on the sidelines (although it does enter the show at one point). What's consistent through the years of outdoor performances is a fun and accessible production of a classic opera mashed up with pop songs, retold in a playful and modern way. So pack a picnic, grab a lawn chair, and find a performance of Romeo and Juliet (a mashup of Bellini and Fleetwood Mac) close to you! Even if you live in northern MN, the Pickup Truck Opera is coming for you! (Click here for schedule and to make reservations.)
Friday, August 26, 2022
"Pickup Truck Opera Volume 2: The Magic Flute" by Mixed Precipitation at Dodge Nature Center
Mixed Precipitation's "Picnic Operetta" has been a staple of summer outdoor #TCTheater since 2009, combining classic opera, pop music, and passed bites of delicious food. In 2020, rather than letting a global pandemic shut them down entirely, they transitioned to the "Pickup Truck Opera" format, a similar opera/pop music mash-up performed out of a 2011 Ford Pickup that they drove around to local parks. They expanded on this idea in 2021, and return with Volume 2 this year, performed at parks and gardens not just in the Twin Cities but around the state. This year's mash-up features Mozart's The Magic Flute and "groovy beats from the 90s discotheque." As expected from this troupe of traveling artists, this Pickup Truck Opera is a super fun, silly, sweet, and accessible experience of music, theater, and community. You can see it at various locations in the Twin Cities Metro Area, plus Hastings, through September 11 (click here for dates, locations, details, and free reservations).
Sunday, August 29, 2021
"A Pickup Truck Opera; Volume One: The Odyssey" by Mixed Precipitation at Various Outdoor Locations
While Mixed Precipitation's annual tradition of the "picnic operetta" is on hold due to the pandemic, last year they premiered a new fun and accessible opera mash-up experience - the Pickup Truck Opera. Driving a 2011 royal blue Ford pickup to parks around and outside of the Twin Cities, and performing out of the bed of the truck (have opera - will travel), they mash up Monteverdi's 17th Century opera The Return of Ulysses to his Homeland with the songs of Dolly Parton. Last year they teased us with Episode 3, but this year they're presenting the full three-episode saga, and as always with this troupe, it's sheer delight. I caught them near the end of their two-month run in a nearby park, but you can still see them today at Cedar Lake, next weekend in Hastings, or their closing weekend September 11-12 in St. Paul and Minneapolis (see details and schedule here).
Saturday, July 17, 2021
2021 Summer Outdoor #TCTheater and More!
photo taken by me in the BWCA (no filter, it's just that gorgeous) |
I've long believed that one of the best things about a Minnesota summer (besides lakes, like the one at left in the BWCA) is the opportunity for watching outdoor performances. Every summer there are many great options, from music to plays and more. But this year, when outdoors feels like the safest place to be, and we're starved for live in-person entertainment after a year (and counting) of theater closures due to the pandemic, outdoor performances are absolutely necessary to get us through to that joyous day when we can return to the theater indoors. Below is a list of outdoor shows in #TCTheater (and beyond) planned for this spring/summer/fall. I'll continue to update this list as I hear of more, and please let me know via email (cherryandspoon@gmail.com), the comment section below, or social media if there are any I've missed.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
"A Pickup Truck Opera; Volume One: The Odyssey; Episode Three, The Song of Telemaco" by Mixed Precipitation at Various Outdoor Locations
One of my favorite summer #TCTheater traditions is Mixed Precipitation's delightfully playful mash-up of classic opera and pop music, performed outdoors with passed small bites of delicious food. While the "Picnic Operetta" (which I've attended for the last six years) is on hiatus this year due to the pandemic, Mixed Precipitation is still bringing us fun and and accessible outdoor opera in the form of what they're calling "Pickup Truck Opera." In a 2011 royal blue Ford pickup, they've been "popping up" all over the Twin Cities with their 25-minute performance of yet another opera/pop mash-up. I was lucky enough to catch one of their 11 performances, at a little not-park in St. Paul on a perfectly gorgeous fall afternoon. Their final two performances will be as part of Park Square Theatre and Steppingstone Theatre's "Family Day Out" event on October 25.
Monday, August 26, 2019
"The Clemency of Tito's Tennis Club: A Picnic Operetta" by Mixed Precipitation at Tony Schmidt Regional Park
Combine classic opera, pop music, and tasty treats made from freshly harvested veggies, and what do you get? Mixed Precipitation's annual picnic operetta. This year, Artistic Director Scotty Reynolds, with help from Music Director/ Arranger/ Conductor Gary Ruschman, has adapted one of Mozart's last operas La Clemenza di Tito, setting it in a tennis tournament and adding '80s pop songs. A talented cast of professional opera singers and adorably enthusiastic children present this unique creation in about 75 minutes in the great outdoors. Even when some actual precipitation causes an unplanned intermission and move underneath a park pavilion, the experience is a one-of-a-kind delight. This intrepid company travels around the state performing at parks and gardens; click here to find a location near you.
Friday, August 24, 2018
"Dr. Falstaff and the Working Wives of Lake County: A Picnic Operetta" by Mixed Precipitation at the Dodge Nature Center
Cooler weather, back to school sales, and the Minnesota State Fair may signal the end of summer, but one of #TCTheater's summer highlights is in full swing. This is my 5th year attending Mixed Precipitation's annual picnic operetta (now celebrating their 10th anniversary), and if you haven't seen them yet you're missing out on a unique delight. Mixing classic opera, pop music, and Minnesota's bountiful harvest, they perform a charming show outdoors while feeding the audience throughout the show. What's better than that?! For this year's opera, Artistic Director Scotty Reynolds has adapted German composer Otto Nicolai's 1849 opera Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (based on Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor), setting it on the Iron Range in the '70s at the time of the foundation of the EPA, adding in songs by Bruce Springsteen. The result is exactly as weird and wonderful as that sounds. It's playful, fun, outdoors, and did I mention they feed you?! Playing in gardens and parks around the state, from Lake County to Winona (including several locations in the Twin Cities area), you're not going to want to miss this unique theatrical and culinary delight.
Friday, August 18, 2017
"Philemon and Baucis: Planet in Peril" by Mixed Precipitation at Dodge Nature Center
One of my favorite summer #TCTheater traditions is Mixed Precipitation's annual picnic operetta, in which one can enjoy classic opera, pop songs, the great outdoors, and delicious food. For their ninth summer operetta (the fourth I've attended), Mixed Precipitation has chosen Austrian composer Joseph Haydn's Philemon and Baucis, a piece so rare it doesn't even have a Wikipedia page. Written and directed by Scotty Reynolds, this timely treatise on a Planet in Peril is a delightful mash-up of beautiful German-language opera and the songs of Queen, with five delicious courses of small bites passed throughout the 70-minute show. Playing at parks and gardens throughout the Twin Cities and beyond, it's a unique opportunity to enjoy all that late summer in Minnesota has to offer (click here to find a location near you).
Saturday, August 27, 2016
"Donald Giovanni in Cornlandia" by Mixed Precipitation at Loring Park
Opera. Pop music. Delicious food. The beautiful Minnesota summer. What could be better than Mixed Precipitation's annual summer picnic operetta that combines all of these things?! Not much. This year's selection for this wonderful tradition known as the picnic operetta is Donald Giovanni in Cornlandia, a mash-up of Mozart's Don Giovanni, '80s music, and, you guessed it, this bizarre election. A friend recommended that I should read the plot summary of Don Giovanni before the show because it can be hard to follow. But I don't think plot is the point. The point is good music, good food, good fun, and the great outdoors. So head out to the park between now and September 18 (performances in the Twin Cities and outstate Minnesota) and enjoy some delicious food and delicious opera.
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
2016 Summer Theater Preview
It's finally summer in Minnesota, and that means lakes, parks, camping, hiking, and best of all - summer theater! You can't spend every moment of the summer outdoors, because you wouldn't want to get a sunburn, and also sometimes it rains. So take a break from outdoor activities to see some great theater this summer (or watch theater outdoors!). Here are a few of your choices for summer theater playing on stages and in parks around Minneapolis, St. Paul, and the surrounding area (click the link in the title for more information on each show).
Monday, August 24, 2015
"Escape from Alcina's Island" by Mixed Precipitation at Falcon Heights Community Garden
For another installment of summer outdoor theater in Minnesota, we have Mixed Precipitation. Every summer they deliver something they like to call a "picnic operetta," which is just what it sounds like - a little light opera with food. Perhaps the "mixed" in this company's name refers to the mixture of food, music, theater, and the outdoors, perhaps it refers to the mixture of classic operetta with pop music. Either way it's a fun, charming, delightful, and yummy example of the outdoor theater that can be had in Minnesota. And even better - they travel around to area parks and gardens, so you can likely find a performance near you.
Handel's opera Alcina, about a seductive sorceress (Carolyn Cavadini) who lures Ruggiero (Dan Piering) away from his beloved Bradamante (Maggie Lofboom) with the help of her sister Morgana (Lizz Windnagel), has been transformed into a story of truckers on the road (adaptation by Director Scotty Reynolds and Music Director Marya Hart). This allows them to bring in some great old Country-Western road and heartbreak songs like "Six Days on the Road," "Heartaches by the Number," "The Race is On," and the classic George and Tammy duet "We're Gonna Hold On." It's great fun to hear these songs played by the four-piece classical/country orchestra, interspersed with Handel's lovely music sung mostly in Italian (with some surtitles charmingly rolled out by hand on a scroll to the left of the stage).
There's nothing serious about this show, except that this cast can seriously sing. The show is loose and playful, performed with great enthusiasm by the large ensemble which includes several children and teens. Their Western attire adds to the fun and informality of this operetta. The acoustics aren't always great with the wind and the nearby soccer game, but that's part of the charm and spontaneity of outdoor theater.
And then there's the food (created by Nick Schneider and Kimlinh Bui). The five courses are announced by the cast and somehow worked into the plot, usually as Alcina offers her guests hospitality. Each of the courses is a perfect little bite of flavor, all of them vegetarian and some of them vegan (make sure to ask about any dietary needs). Plates are passed among the crowd seated on the ground or in camp chairs as the show continues. So come hungry (but not too hungry, they are small bites).
Mixed Precipitation offers a unique, fun, and summery opportunity to enjoy good food and entertaining music-theater in your neighborhood park. I know it's mid-August, but summer in Minnesota isn't over yet so be sure to get in this last taste of outdoor theater before the snow falls! Performances continue at parks and gardens around the Twin Cities area and beyond - see their website for the full tour schedule.
Handel's opera Alcina, about a seductive sorceress (Carolyn Cavadini) who lures Ruggiero (Dan Piering) away from his beloved Bradamante (Maggie Lofboom) with the help of her sister Morgana (Lizz Windnagel), has been transformed into a story of truckers on the road (adaptation by Director Scotty Reynolds and Music Director Marya Hart). This allows them to bring in some great old Country-Western road and heartbreak songs like "Six Days on the Road," "Heartaches by the Number," "The Race is On," and the classic George and Tammy duet "We're Gonna Hold On." It's great fun to hear these songs played by the four-piece classical/country orchestra, interspersed with Handel's lovely music sung mostly in Italian (with some surtitles charmingly rolled out by hand on a scroll to the left of the stage).
Morgana's Melon Margarita |
Alcina's Antipasti |
Mixed Precipitation offers a unique, fun, and summery opportunity to enjoy good food and entertaining music-theater in your neighborhood park. I know it's mid-August, but summer in Minnesota isn't over yet so be sure to get in this last taste of outdoor theater before the snow falls! Performances continue at parks and gardens around the Twin Cities area and beyond - see their website for the full tour schedule.
the charming scene at the Picnic Operetta - the race is on! |
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Summer 2015 Twin Cities Theater Preview
For some people, summer means baseball, barbecues, boating, and other outdoor activities. For me, summer means more theater (and iced mochas)! Here are a few shows I'm looking forward to this summer. If I missed any, please add in the comments below.
One of the highlights of the summer theater season is always Skylark Opera's Summer Festival, which I've attended for the past four years. They do two shows in repertoire that fall on various locations on the music-theater spectrum. For their 8th festival, they're doing a Sondheim revue (is there anything better?!) called Putting It Together and Puccini's La Rondine. Both shows can be seen at the EM Pearson Theatre on St. Paul's Concordia University campus, just four performances of each between June 12 and 21 (more info here).
This summer the Ordway is producing not one but two local musicals - Damn Yankees (did someone mention baseball?) in June and Pirates of Penzance in August. Their last local musical, A Christmas Story, was delightful, and I expect more of the same with these two shows (more info about Damn Yankees here and Pirates here).
Park Square Theatre has had much success with their summer Sherlock Holmes plays, and this year they are presenting the world premiere of a new one - Sherlock Holmes and the Ice Palace Murders. No, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did not send his famous detective to Minnesota, but author Larry Millett did, and my favorite local playwright Jeffrey Hatcher has adapted this recent novel into a play. A summer mystery featuring the world's most beloved crime-solver and plenty of local flavor, what more could you ask for (playing June 19 through July 19, more info here)?
Over in Uptown, the Jungle's summer selection is the classic comedy You Can't Take It With You, featuring a huge and star-studded cast, including three real-life married couples - Charity Jones and John Middleton, Angela Timberman and Jay Albright (possibly the funniest couple in existence), and Cathleen and Nathaniel Fuller. The family that plays together... (playing June 19 through August 9, more info here).
More often than not, the Guthrie celebrates the summer with a big beautiful musical. They're following up last year's hit, "the hummable and quotable" My Fair Lady, with another American classic - The Music Man, "the toe-tapping musical for the whole family." It's sure to be a luscious extravaganza with lots of familiar faces in the supporting roles and ensemble (playing June 20 through August 23, more info here).
"Summer lovin', had me a blast!" The quintessential summer musical Grease is coming to Lyric Arts in Anoka, July 10 through August 2. It's sure to be a fun time, but Lyric Arts musicals have a tendency to sell out, so get your tickets soon (more info here).
If you're someone who hates to be inside on a lovely summer day, you can still enjoy theater and the outdoors. Check out one of the many options for outdoor theater, including Mill City Summer Opera (presenting Daughter of the Regiment in the picturesque and historic courtyard of the Mill City Museum in July) and Mixed Precipitation (touring Escape from Alcina's Island in area parks in August and September).
If you're heading Up North to the cabin this summer, don't worry, you can still catch some theater. A great thing to do on a rainy day is drive into Bemidji to the Paul Bunyan Playhouse. I have not yet had the pleasure, but I know that many of my favorite Twin Cities artists go up there in the summer to put on some great theater. They've got five shows on the schedule this summer, including one of the best new plays I saw last year, the local true crime caper Prints, and the hilarious musical Spamalot (more info here).
And of course, you can't talk about summer theater in Minnesota without mentioning the Minnesota Fringe Festival. The full schedule of the hundreds of one-hour shows at a dozen venues will be announced in the next month or so. Until then, check out their website for a tentative list of participants, and cancel all other plans between July 30 and August 9.
I hope you enjoy all of the wonderful things that summer in Minnesota has to offer, including the above theater, because winter will be back again before we know it!
This article also appears on Broadway World Minneapolis.
One of the highlights of the summer theater season is always Skylark Opera's Summer Festival, which I've attended for the past four years. They do two shows in repertoire that fall on various locations on the music-theater spectrum. For their 8th festival, they're doing a Sondheim revue (is there anything better?!) called Putting It Together and Puccini's La Rondine. Both shows can be seen at the EM Pearson Theatre on St. Paul's Concordia University campus, just four performances of each between June 12 and 21 (more info here).
This summer the Ordway is producing not one but two local musicals - Damn Yankees (did someone mention baseball?) in June and Pirates of Penzance in August. Their last local musical, A Christmas Story, was delightful, and I expect more of the same with these two shows (more info about Damn Yankees here and Pirates here).
Park Square Theatre has had much success with their summer Sherlock Holmes plays, and this year they are presenting the world premiere of a new one - Sherlock Holmes and the Ice Palace Murders. No, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did not send his famous detective to Minnesota, but author Larry Millett did, and my favorite local playwright Jeffrey Hatcher has adapted this recent novel into a play. A summer mystery featuring the world's most beloved crime-solver and plenty of local flavor, what more could you ask for (playing June 19 through July 19, more info here)?
Over in Uptown, the Jungle's summer selection is the classic comedy You Can't Take It With You, featuring a huge and star-studded cast, including three real-life married couples - Charity Jones and John Middleton, Angela Timberman and Jay Albright (possibly the funniest couple in existence), and Cathleen and Nathaniel Fuller. The family that plays together... (playing June 19 through August 9, more info here).
More often than not, the Guthrie celebrates the summer with a big beautiful musical. They're following up last year's hit, "the hummable and quotable" My Fair Lady, with another American classic - The Music Man, "the toe-tapping musical for the whole family." It's sure to be a luscious extravaganza with lots of familiar faces in the supporting roles and ensemble (playing June 20 through August 23, more info here).
"Summer lovin', had me a blast!" The quintessential summer musical Grease is coming to Lyric Arts in Anoka, July 10 through August 2. It's sure to be a fun time, but Lyric Arts musicals have a tendency to sell out, so get your tickets soon (more info here).
If you're someone who hates to be inside on a lovely summer day, you can still enjoy theater and the outdoors. Check out one of the many options for outdoor theater, including Mill City Summer Opera (presenting Daughter of the Regiment in the picturesque and historic courtyard of the Mill City Museum in July) and Mixed Precipitation (touring Escape from Alcina's Island in area parks in August and September).
If you're heading Up North to the cabin this summer, don't worry, you can still catch some theater. A great thing to do on a rainy day is drive into Bemidji to the Paul Bunyan Playhouse. I have not yet had the pleasure, but I know that many of my favorite Twin Cities artists go up there in the summer to put on some great theater. They've got five shows on the schedule this summer, including one of the best new plays I saw last year, the local true crime caper Prints, and the hilarious musical Spamalot (more info here).
And of course, you can't talk about summer theater in Minnesota without mentioning the Minnesota Fringe Festival. The full schedule of the hundreds of one-hour shows at a dozen venues will be announced in the next month or so. Until then, check out their website for a tentative list of participants, and cancel all other plans between July 30 and August 9.
I hope you enjoy all of the wonderful things that summer in Minnesota has to offer, including the above theater, because winter will be back again before we know it!
This article also appears on Broadway World Minneapolis.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
"King Arthur: A Picnic Operetta" by Mixed Precipitation at Falcon Heights Community Garden
There's a lot of outdoor theater going on around the Twin Cities, if you know where to look for it. I partook of one such opportunity on what turned out to be a rainy day, so it was moved indoors to a warming house. But the spirit was still there. Mixed Precipitation takes classic operettas, condenses them, puts a modern spin on them, performs them in community gardens around the Twin Cities metro area, and also serves great food. What could be better? This year's selection is Henry Purcell's 1684 English Baroque opera King Arthur, with plenty of modern references and some punk rock music thrown in for good measure. It's a fun and delicious way to experience music-theater in an informal setting.
Condensing a full opera down to under 90 minutes creates a bit of a hard to follow jumbled mess, but from what I gathered, King Arthur of Cameloteapolis is building a new jousting stadium that will host the Super Joust, a costly endeavor that faces opposition from the Saxons, who are concerned about things like corporate personhood and minimum wage. Or something like that. There is fighting, jousting, magic, a wedding or two, and much beautiful music. I didn't care for the rock songs as much as the opera songs, which are so beautifully sung and played by this wonderful cast and small orchestra that it doesn't seem necessary to add modern songs (although I do kind of love the idea of a rock cello).
This wonderful cast of adults and children appears to be having a great time playing together, which always makes it more fun for the audience. And they look crazy cool in punk hair, make-up, and costumes. Young Grant Schumann leads the wildly energetic band of Saxons; Wric Larson is dark and mysterious with a commanding deep voice as the demon Grimbald; Elizabeth Windnagel is a delightfully airy imp; Jim Ahrens is our beautiful-haired and slightly out of touch King Arthur; magic is created by JP Fitzgibbons' Merlin and Naomi Karstad's Morgan Le Fay; Maggie Lofbloom's jousting champion Guinevere is a heroine to root for; and Peter Middlecamp is charming as her jousting rival/suitor. And the whole casts sounds fantastic; turns out the warming house has surprisingly good acoustics.
The most unique aspect of this experience is the food. Delicious, interesting, creative, fresh, local food is served in perfect little bites throughout the show, very cleverly worked into the plot and introduced by the characters. I think people should serve me food at the theater all the time! I do wish I had been able to experience this in the great outdoors as intended, but it was still great fun, and they somehow made the last minute change of venue work.
King Arthur continues weekends through September 21. Check the schedule for a garden near you, and then go see some fun and creative music-theater while enjoying delicious food.
Condensing a full opera down to under 90 minutes creates a bit of a hard to follow jumbled mess, but from what I gathered, King Arthur of Cameloteapolis is building a new jousting stadium that will host the Super Joust, a costly endeavor that faces opposition from the Saxons, who are concerned about things like corporate personhood and minimum wage. Or something like that. There is fighting, jousting, magic, a wedding or two, and much beautiful music. I didn't care for the rock songs as much as the opera songs, which are so beautifully sung and played by this wonderful cast and small orchestra that it doesn't seem necessary to add modern songs (although I do kind of love the idea of a rock cello).
Grant Schumann, Peter Middlecamp, and Cassandra McNally |
The most unique aspect of this experience is the food. Delicious, interesting, creative, fresh, local food is served in perfect little bites throughout the show, very cleverly worked into the plot and introduced by the characters. I think people should serve me food at the theater all the time! I do wish I had been able to experience this in the great outdoors as intended, but it was still great fun, and they somehow made the last minute change of venue work.
King Arthur continues weekends through September 21. Check the schedule for a garden near you, and then go see some fun and creative music-theater while enjoying delicious food.
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