Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Guthrie brings humor and heartache in "Skeleton Crew"

 

Photo by Dan Norman

In a depressed Detroit, four auto workers try to keep a hold of whatever they can, even as the staff shrinks, pressure never stops, and there are persistent rumors that the plant is going to close.

Dominique Morisseau's Skeleton Crew is exactly what you want from a contemporary drama, with complex, breathing characters inhabiting a very real space. At the Guthrie, the show gets a muscular, vital production that highlights the skills of the talented cast.

As often happens, our workers are a tight-knit group. Faye (Jennifer Fouche, making her Guthrie debut) is closing in on 30 years on the line. Not only does she know the ins and outs of the whole plant, but she is the local union rep, there to keep management honest and the remaining employees working as long as possible.

For Faye, the conflict comes when middle manager Reggie (Darius Dotch, who was in the 2020 production at Yellow Tree, which was cut short by the pandemic) tells her in confidence that the plant is going to close. As the union rep, she has an obligation to her co-workers, but Reggie is also family who has bootstrapped his way from the assembly line to a job with a collar and tie.

We get two representatives of the rank and file. Shanita (Stephanie Everett, another Guthrie debut) is pregnant and working every hour she can, loving the work and hoping to build something for her child. Dez (Mikell Sapp, also in the Yellow Tree production) sees the work as a stepping stone, and dreams of opening his own repair shop.

With the plant closing, a string of burglaries giving management fits, and general distrust, the situation is rife with tension. Yet, beneath the drama there are deep connections among these characters. No one is the "bad" guy; they are just flawed people trying to do what is best for themselves and their families. Morisseau's script is also very funny, which helps to not only release the tension, but add additional, real, dimensions to the characters.

The actors are up to the demands of the script, presenting fully fleshed out characters at every turn. Fouche is especially strong as Faye, who sits at the center of the whole piece. We not only get the character's deep warmth, but also her hurts, desires, and a sense of a secret shame that haunts her.

Opening night's performance was interrupted by a medical emergency, where the audience was asked to clear the theater. After a lengthy delay, the company was able to return to the stage and complete the final few minutes of the show to a well-earned ovation.

Skeleton Crew runs through June 9 at the Guthrie Theater. 


Rasputin


Jungle's "A Jumping-Off Point" looks hard at storytelling and appropriation

Photo by Lauren B. Photography


Who gets to tell stories? Issues of cultural appropriation have bubbled up to the mainstream in recent years, and A Jumping-Off Point gives us an intriguing, complex look at the issue. You will have to move quickly to see it, as it closes this weekend at the Jungle Theater. 

This tight, three-person play centers on Leslie Wallace, a successful playwright who has just gotten her big television break with a series order from HBO. However, a figure from her playwrighting past has come to haunt her in the guise of Andrew. The two studied in the same cohort in college, and white Andrew took a stab at a play about the Mississippi delta.

Leslie found it not just awful, but offensive, so she took it to make her own. Now, Andrew is looking for some credit. From there, the play spirals into the mad world of television production, with Andrew in tow as an unwanted producer. 

Inda Craig-Galvan's play is best when it works under your skin, examining uncomfortable topics, often centered on cultural appropriation and who gets to tell stories. The script hints at the madness of television production, especially around the above topics, but could have benefitted some additional characters to flesh those ideas out. We do get Leslie's best friend, Miriam, who finds herself stuck between the two other characters.

The cast is fantastic and director Sha Cage mines the humor and the menace (especially Gabriel Murphy's creepy Andrew) out of the material.

A Jumping-Off Point runs through May 19 at the Jungle Theater. 

Four Humors brings back Rasputin in all it's gory glory


You may know him from history, stories, or Boney M's disco anthem. Rasputin is a fascinating character with a particularly gory end. Perfect fodder for Four Humors, who have remounted their titular Twin Cites Horror Festival hit for a short run at Open Eye Theater.

The company-written production takes us to the end of December, 1916, in St. Petersburg. If you know your history, that's just before the most tumultuous year in Russian history, with the October Revolution just months away.

To the rich and powerful men gathered at Prince Felix Ysupov's palace, those concerns were far away. They had only one thing in mind -- end the life of the powerful priest who had bedazzled the royal family and turned upper crust Russian society upside down. By the end of the night, they will have poisoned, shot, suffocated, and finally drowned the man.

Joining the prince are Duke Dmitri Pavlovich and Valdimir Purishkevich (noted, in the program and throughout the show, as a "far-right politician"), who have hatched a plot to end Rasputin. 

Or have they? The play is told Rashomon-style, with each conspirator recounting the evening. Not only does this allow for three different perspectives on the events, but allows the company to tell the story in three distinct ways.

The first, from the perspective of the Duke, is a ribald tale, full of dark humor -- Rasputin pulls out a gun and asks the dinner party of they have ever played "Us Roulette" -- and plenty of brutal jokes at the expense of the high-class company at the table. Vladimir's paints the Prince as a pratfalling fool who engages in the murder almost by accident.

And the Prince's tale? Well, there's a reason why this show premiered at the Twin Cities Horror Festival.

The quartet of creators -- Ryan Lear (Felix), Brant Miller (the Duke), Allison Vincent (Validimir), and Matt Spring (Rasputin -- are all gifted comic performers, but they also expertly hit the play's darker notes. That creates an evening that is not just funny, but one that cuts deep, especially as it delves into issues of class, control, and the presence of the devil on Earth.

Rasputin runs through May 18 at Open Eye Theater. Also, Four Humor's vicious take on Lolita (dubbed, a Three Man Show, with Lear, Miller, and Spring as the cast) will be presented Saturday, May 18. Tickets are going fast. Don't sleep on these shows.  

Also, if you think "Rasputin" is a cool tune, but want to hear it with a Celtic punk flair, check out this cover by local legends Boiled in Lead.



Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Ten Thousand Things offers special "Spitfire Grill"

Photo by Tom Wallace

 

The Spitfire Grill is special for me.

The heartfelt, heart-tugging musical has a place deep in my heart, and the current Ten Thousand Things production more than does the material justice. It's certainly the finest production of the material I've seen, as the company's stripped-down production style emphasizes 

The Fred Alley/James Valcq musical was in development at the turn of the century, when I was working in Door County. Alley was co-founder and a creative force with American Folklore Theatre (now Northern Sky Theater), and while Spitfire was in development outside of AFT, it was certainly in the air through 2000 and into 2001, as the creators prepared for a workshop at Playwrights Horizons, in anticipation of an Off-Broadway run. We chatted about his excitement and hopes for the show at his farmhouse in rural Fish Creek in mid-April, the landscape coming to life after a typical long winter. 

Alley died of a heart attack on May 1, 2001, before the workshop began. The work went forward, with composer Valcq taking the lead in preparing the show for its Off-Broadway run in September.

And yes, that September. The musical opened near the epicenter of a national tragedy. It earned solid notices (and even a few best-of-the-year mentions and award nods) but its life has really been away from the big city, where this small-scale musical can really spread its wings.

The Spitfire Grill centers on a small Wisconsin town haunted by the past. It takes a young woman, herself haunted, to be the catalyst for a change. Percy Talbot is fresh out of prison and decides, based only on an autumn landscape photo, to settle in Gilead.

The local sheriff is skeptical, as Gilead is a dying town with few prospects for employment -- or want of a stranger, one who is a convict no less.

Still, he helps Percy out by getting her a place to stay and work at the Spitfire Grill, owned by Hannah, a hard-nosed Gilead lifer. A trio of additional characters fill in for the rest of the town: friendly Shelby, her angry husband Caleb, and the town busybody Effy. 

The plot centers on two things: a raffle dreamt up by Percy and Shelby to raffle off the Grill, which Hannah has been trying to sell since her husband die; and a mysterious stranger who serves as a physical specter for this haunted town.

However, this musical is about the inner lives of the characters much more than the engine of the plot. All of them have flaws -- several are broken when it starts -- and most of them struggle to make themselves, and their town better.

This is brought out through Valcq's folk-infused score and Alley's dynamic lyrics. Merge these, and you have a musical that is a tough test for the actors, not due to any vocal pyrotechnics, but through the depths they need to travel to get the best out of the songs.

TTT is a perfect place for this, with its minimal staging and focus on clarity and depth of performance. Like all company shows, this is presented in the round with the house lights up. Like their characters, the actors can't hide, and they use that to generate terrific performances, led by Katherine Fried as the troubled Percy. That's aided by Michelle Barber as Hannah and Katie Bradley as Shelby. The balance of the cast -- George Keller, Tom Reed, and  Dominic Schiro -- fill in the emotional spaces as needed, and help to bring the whole town to life.

And while I've been talking about the heartache and tough journeys, The Spitfire Grill is also funny and charming, with light hearted songs about bad food at town diners and endless Wisconsin winters helping to keep the mood from getting too dark. (And if you have seen the movie: the musical takes a different path in the end.)

Bright staging helps to make it all work. The show evokes the beauty of a rural, Midwestern town, but has to do that with nary a tree or leaf in sight. Instead, with the aid of movement director Jim Lichtscheidl, the company members become those inanimate objects -- a bus in the opening scene, a hallway and stairs as Hannah walks through her empty house.

It's most impressive in Percy's act two standout, "Shine." Hurt and heart broke, Percy is taken a special autumnal vista. In this case, it's the rest of the cast, waving gently in the breeze, Here, the music (provided by Peter Vitale and Tyson Forbes), staging (co-directed by Marcela Lorca and Michelle O'Neil), and performance all come together for a few minutes of pure theatrical magic.

I'm always going to have a spot for The Spitfire Grill in my heart, but this production is a tremendous interpretation. It runs through June 9 at various venues.