A Streetcar Named Desire is a Classic Done Right at Yellow Tree Theatre

Nora Targonski-O’Brien and Nathan Keepers. Photo by Tom Wallace

Bless me father for I have sinned, it has been three weeks since my last review. Since then I have watched films and television, had impure thoughts, and binged Stranger Things. But that’s all over for another year, the 2022 – 2023 theater season launched for The Stages of MN last Friday evening at The Yellow Tree Theatre in Osseo MN. On the bill was Tennessee Williams Pulitzer Prize winning classic A Streetcar Named Desire. Headlining the play were Nora Targonski-O’Brien as Blanche and Nathan Keepers as Stanley in what are two of the most powerful and mesmerizing performances of the year. With a supporting cast that plays only slightly less eccentric characters, it’s a production that keeps you engaged from start to finish even though the material is so familiar. Which is the sign that you’ve gotten a classic right. Set in New Orleans during the summer the heat is the match that threatens to set off the bomb that is Stanley Kowalski and shatter Blanche DuBois fragile nerves.

A Streetcar Named Desire made its Broadway debut in 1947, and there’s no denying that gender politics have changed dramatically in the intervening 75 years. The play is about the dynamics between the characters and the roles they play within their relationships. There isn’t a character on the stage that doesn’t seem to have some sort of psychological quirk. Stanley is the king of his castle, which is a tiny two room apartment. He is volatile and uses his masculinity to control everyone and everything around him. When he feels he’s being slighted or laughed at he lashes out due to his fragile sense of self with his manliness. His wife Stella is drawn to his animalistic nature, and seems to feel that the odd slap to keep her in line is part of that charm. When her older sister Blanche arrives for a visit she falls back into the role of caregiver or almost servant to sibling who has always required that, as her fancies or exaggerations that keep her functioning are themselves as fragile as Stanley’s ego. Even Stanley’s friend Mitchell, who becomes Blanches suitor, has some deep seeded mommy issues. The way these dynamics play out over the course of the evening as well as the secrets from Blanche’s past that are revealed are masterfully constructed. It truly is one of the great American plays of the 20th Century and it’s clear that it still has power in the 21st.

Nathan Keepers Stanley Kowalski doesn’t rely on a mimic of Marlon Brando’s famous take on the character. Keepers knows he has a different stage presence and wisely chooses to interpret the character in his own way. We see less of the smoldering sex machine and more of the little man lashing out. But we also see a Stanley that seems more intelligent, we see there is more going on behind his eyes than just a dumb beast reacting to things. Being loud and volatile can be easy and easily overcooked. But playing it in a believable way is a masterful task and Keepers doesn’t have a false moment on stage, he is truly electrifying every second he’s on stage. Whereas playing Stanley can lead a less accomplished actor to an over the top performance, playing Blanche can easily lead to a boring and grating performance droning on and on in a southern accent about absolute rubbish. Thankfully, not so with Nora Targonski-O’Brien’s performance which is nuanced and perfectly balanced. She floats between superiority and false humility with ease, her revelations and confrontations when they come are heartbreaking. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more sympathetic Blanche. Targonski-O’Brien’s portrayal, like Keepers, grounds the character in a reality that allows for empathy and understanding. Rounding out the cast are Kendall Kent as Stella, who has to placate these two extreme characters. She does a nice job of showing us the characters struggle to be who Stanley and Blanche need her to be for them, which are incompatible persona’s. They both need her to be at their beckon call, at the same time. Finally Bradley Hildebrandt’s Mitchell is basically a supporting character to both Stanley and Blanche as well as his off stage mother, though he gets his moment to go a little dark when he confronts Blanche on her birthday.

On the technical side of things praise cannot be piled high enough on Scenic Designer Justin Hooper’s work. The set of the Kowalskis apartment is a true thrust formation leaving just enough room on either side of the sides or the front of the stage for the characters to walk without grazing the audience. It has a depth and dinginess to it that gives it an authentic feel even as it takes liberties for visibilities sake, like the screen door that leads to the porch that doesn’t actually latch to a far side door frame. The reality of the set is enhanced by the work of Lighting Designer Kathy Maxwell and Sound Designer Jeff Bailey. Some of their key contributions come in the form of audio queues for Blanches memories of the husbands death, the repeating of which is a powerful audio motif. The costumes by Samantha Haddow represent the time and place well, but it’s her work with Blanche’s wardrobe that is particularly memorable. As worn by Targonski-O’Brien, they help us to picture Blanche in better, happier days, which makes her current circumstances all the more tragic.

Don’t miss a chance to see this classic of the stage performed by and outstanding cast. A Streetcar Named Desire runs through October 9th at Yellow Tree Theatre. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://yellowtreetheatre.com/streetcar.

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This Show is Cheaper Than Gas – America on Empty at Brave New Workshop

August is traditionally a slow month for theater. Once you’ve seen Wicked and now that Park Square’s summer mystery Holmes & Watson has closed you might be wondering what else is there to do. Well look no further than Brave New Workshop’s latest, This Show is Cheaper Than Gas – America on Empty. Does the state of our country, everything from the price of gas to the supreme court have you feeling sick to your stomach? Well if, as they say, laughter is the best medicine, then Brave New Workshop has what you need to fix what ails you. This Show is Cheaper... is so hysterically funny it just might cure cancer. I’d like to say that you’ll forget we live in a country controlled by rich white men who play lip service to the addle minded and religious extremists in order to ensure they continue to widen the wealth gap. But that isn’t the case, instead they are going to keep reminding you of it, but in the most humorous way possible. It’s a sketch show that skewers everything from musical theater to Clarence Thomas.

This is the companies second show back post covid and after being acquired by The Hennepin Theatre Trust, a move which should allow it to carry on for years to come, maintaining it’s tradition as the longest running comedy theatre in the United States. I was able to review their first show post pandemic as well, and while it was really fun I was left with the disappointment of not seeing Lauren Anderson perform as she was out the night I attended. Artistic Director Caleb McEwen, filled in for her and was great, but Anderson was the cast member whose work I knew from my first months of reviewing, when I saw her at my first Twin Cities Horror Festival as the Leader of a cult called the Oasis in Nissa Nordland Morgan’s Incarnate. This time I got to see Anderson and she did not disappoint. Whether it’s playing a version of herself as the bitter veteran of over 50 consecutive Brave New Workshop shows, or as the owner of a gasoline boutique, she had the audience eating out of her hand. I could gush about her all day really but I want to also acknowledge her costars. First up Denzel Belin, who just did an amazing job directing the MN Fringe show He-Man Is The Devil & Other Satanic Panic Tales, reminds us he’s equally talented on stage as he is backstage. He has several standout characters such as Clarence Thomas, who makes a wonderful transformation thanks to the combined efforts of the other performers as various elements of a woman’s anatomy. Doug Neithercott for me is the master of the reaction, watch him when the others are performing or you are missing half the joke. He’s great as a game show host for, if I remember the title correctly, “If you’re Woke you’re Broke.” Rounding out the cast making her debut is Isabella Dunsieth, who fit right in with her three BNW veterans. She deserves to return, she’s proven herself worthy to tread these hallowed comedy boards. 

I really cannot recommend this show enough, this is a great night out with friends or family. Very funny, very topical, but don’t let that scare you. If you, like many of us, have taken a break from trying to keep up to date on every little bit of news, you’ll be fine. They stick to the proud strokes of what’s been happening, because frankley, that gives them more than enough material. This is a delightful mix of smart and silly, witty and absurd, and like all great sketch comedy it’s being performed by actors who know how to make characters distinct and memorable. For more information and to purchase tickets got to https://bravenewworkshop.org/this-show-is-cheaper-than-gas-america-on-empty/ .

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Minnesota Fringe Festival Day 11 The Final day: Bonny & Read, The Real Black Swann: Confessions of America’s First Black Drag Queen, Bellerophon’s Shadow: Voyage of the Pegasus, and Black Wall Street: Dreamland Theatre (Winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award).

Bonny & Read is a musical about two female pirates written, directed, and starring Kendra Braunger and Carissa Christenson. The music consists of existing pirate songs, you know the type, “Drunken Sailor” “Blow the Man down,” which are all well sung by the cast from Christenson’s arrangements. It’s an interesting story based on two real life women. For the show their tale is told by two historians who narrate from high backed chairs on either side of the stage. Towards the end the narrator angle is abandoned, which proves to be short sighted. The show that flows along nicely up until that point ends up dragging at the end and the final resolution could have been a lot clearer. The show contains some of the best sword fight choreography I’ve seen on stage.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/bonny-read

The Real Black Swann… is the show that, more than any other at the Fringe Festival, gave me a better understanding of what it is like to walk in someone else’s shoes, which is quite an accomplishment at Fringe because there are a lot of shows that do a good job of creating empathy. Les Kurkendaal Barrett shares the story of William Dorsey Swann, a former slave who became the first black Drag Queen in the late 1800’s. He intersperses Swann’s story with details of his own life as a black man in todays America through the storytelling convention of a dream brought on by anesthesia during a surgery. It’s powerful, funny and really effective at helping me, a white middle aged man, understand what everyday life is like for a black man in our times.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/the-real-black-swann-confessions-of-america-s-first-black-drag-queen-

Bellerophon’s Shadow: Voyage of the Pegasus is a puppet show that blends a science fiction story with Greek mythology. The technique of using humans in sight of the audience to not only control the puppet but also to act as the structures, creatures, and elements like the sea, is really effective. This was a show that just happened to fit in a free slot I had in the location I had shows schedule before and after it. It looked interesting and unlike anything else I had seen at Fringe yet. It’s what we call a happy Fringident. I’m so glad I caught this inventive and creative journey into the outer limits of the universe.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/bellerophon-s-shadow-voyage-of-the-pegasus-

My Dance With Lisa is a one woman show about a former architect now working as an overnight security guard in the Louvre who watches over the Mona Lisa. To stay awake and because she needs someone to talk to, she tries to engage the painting in conversation. It’s not a fantasy play, the Mona Lisa does not talk back. But through monologue we learn of the disappointments that have led her to this place. It’s performed well by Gina Sauer, but the script isn’t terribly original or interesting. There’s nothing to her story but a failed marriage and bitterness that comes from not moving on but dwelling on things that didn’t work out as we hoped. It’s tricky because it’s like listening to your Mom’s friend complain about her divorce that happened 10 years ago; you feel bad for her, but you don’t really want to hear about it for an hour. The only thing that saves this from being exactly like that is Sauer’s performance and the fact that they keep the divorce issue under wraps for the first half of the show, so you are kept going out of curiosity of what is up with this woman, what is she down about?

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/my-dance-with-lisa-

Black Wall Street… is The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award winner. This tells the story of a piece of history that I only became aware of when I watched The Watchmen TV series last year. Set in the Dreamland Theatre on the day of the Tulsa Oklahoma race massacre. A screening of a film is interrupted by reports that a young black man, Dick Rowland, who had been arrested mistakenly for attempted assault of a white woman but was going to be released was about to be lynched. The Black patrons of the theatre band together to head over to the jailhouse to make sure that doesn’t happen. There is a discussion between the patrons and their white friends about getting involved. When the black theatergoers leave to try and save Rowland, we see the white friends left alone in the theater. We hear and, via a projected clip from The Watchmen, see the the beginnings of what led to one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in our country. The show makes the audience feel as if we are part of the audience in the theater way back in May of 1921. It’s brilliantly acted in particularly Charla Marie Bailey and Dante Pirtle as Loula and John Williams the theater owners and Camrin King as Emma Gurley, Loula’s best friend. Doc Woods directs from a script by Atlese Robinson. Together they have found the perfect way to tell this story to an audience of all races. Certainly we all felt differently if we were black or white. As a white man I was angered and shocked and unable to understand that world of 1921. If I was a black and sitting in that audience what would I have felt? Maybe a lot of those same feelings, maybe a lot of other feelings as well. They made a point at the end during a talk back of pointing out this is not “black” history it is American history. We all need to know this story and we shouldn’t have to wait until we are 50 years old to learn about it in a TV series adapted from a superhero comic book.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/black-wall-street-dreamland-theatre

Don’t want to miss a single Fringe review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have each post delivered directly to your email. On your computer from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. Also, you can follow me on Facebook, search @thestagesofmn and click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Minnesota Fringe Festival Day 10: Neil Gaiman’s “The Wedding Present”, Happy Endings Church: A Haggardly Tale of Woe & Redemption, Jesus Qhrist (Winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award), The Witchy World of Luna Muse, and Burr: A New Musical.

Neil Gaiman’s “The Wedding Present” is the story a newly married couple who receive a letter as a wedding gift that describes in detail their perfect wedding day. A year later they come across the letter again but it has changed. Now it’s describing their first year of marriage but instead of the happy successful marriage they have, it describes an alternate reality version where tragedy has struck and they are having a difficult time. It’s like a modern day variation on Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray. The letter updates as time goes on reflecting a more and more unhappy outcome to their lives, while in their real lives they seem almost too successful and happy. In this stage adaptation of Gaiman’s short story, the gender was changed from a man and woman to two men. Perhaps a nod to Wilde, who was imprisoned for being homesexual in the less enlightened times in which he lived. It’s a great story idea, though I’ve not read the source material and the script is solid as are the performances. It did feel like the ending didn’t quite come together as clearly as it could, but that may be an issue with the short story.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/neil-gaiman-s-the-wedding-present-

Happy Endings Church… is a musical about a very religious couple who get married and found their own church. One of the guiding principles of their church is that homosexuality is wrong. What their followers and the wife do not realize is that the pastor is gay. There’s a conversion therapy camp and then they see the light and found a new church where it’s OK to be gay. It’s an unoriginal idea, that plays out without anything very interesting happening. Most of the songs are decent and the songwriting is probably it’s strongest element. The cast is obviously having fun and giving it their all, but while several are good singers, no one is a great singer and the musical performances are better written then they are performed. The idea for the musical is just not enough, it’s a concept most of us support but at this level of simplicity it makes a better bumper sticker than a musical.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/happy-endings-church-a-haggardly-tale-of-woe-redemption

Jesus Qhrist is the winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award. A phenomenally funny and politically savvy show. Christopher Kehoe is a very charismatic performer which when you think about it is a perfect fit for Jesus. It’s humorous without being insensitive to any thinking person’s beliefs. It uses the character of Jesus to give the audience a feel for the spirit of his teachings. Then it takes a turn and it uses someone else’s words as a contrast. In doing so, it shows how the words of that second person are not compatible with the character of Jesus we have gotten to know or his teachings. It’s so effective even though it’s obvious to most of us. It seems that even the unthinking should be able to see that you cannot reconcile those words with Jesus and be able to see the truth. But, of course they will not even see the play will they?

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/jesus-qhrist

The Witchy World of Luna Muse appears to be an autobiographical drag show about a boy who always identified with the villians and witches in stories rather than the princesses. Cam Pederson, who has created and stars in the show gives a performance that is witty, energetic, and quite sexy. A Combination of Lip Synching and dancing, both done expertly, and a comic monologue. He has the diva attitude and double entendres down pat. He has a confidence on stage that is well earned. I enjoyed this so very much and will absolutely check out future shows featuring Pederson or his alter ego Luna Muse.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/the-witchy-world-of-luna-muse

Burr: A New Musical Revue is a qualified success. Most of the songs are really strong and many of the performers are good singers. This could have been, or maybe it’s better to say, this can be great. But there are a couple of things that are working against the show. First most of the acting outside of the musical numbers, is not good. It’s almost baffling how they perform the musical numbers really well and then the few moments of dialogue it’s like they have never been on stage before. Not every performer but particularly Marie Finch-Koinuma as Theodosia and Trey Arika as Aaron Burr, seemed like they were acting for the first time. And Finch-Koinuma’s problems carried over to her singing as well. At times she sang beautifully and other times, not. Stand outs in in both acting and singing were Tony Peterson as James Wilkinson and Zack Cambronne as Thomas Jefferson. The second issue was the music track they were performing too at times overpowered them. I thought the actual songs and plot line were very solid, it was in the execution that it was really hit or miss, but mostly hit. I’d love to see this expanded upon.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/burr-a-new-musical

Don’t want to miss a single Fringe review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have each post delivered directly to your email. On your computer from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. Also, you can follow me on Facebook, search @thestagesofmn and click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Minnesota Fringe Festival Day 9: Whoosh! The Civil War Mythology of Michael Hickey and His Perilous Precipitation Over St. Anthony Falls! (Winner of the Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award), The Hysterical Woman, Sunshine, and ShMILF Life.

Don’t forget to vote for your picks for the Golden Lanyard Awards at https://bit.ly/3zVDdMI the polls close at 11:59 PM Saturday 8/13/22.

Whoosh!… is… well first off, it’s The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award Winner. Secondly, wow! What a performance by Andrew Erskine Wheeler. Portraying multiple characters throughout, each is a brilliant characterization, distinct and fully realized. It’s a story that incorporates so many different elements. The Civil War, post war, Artist Douglas Volk, it’s part ghost story, part comedic tale of an Irish immigrant and his survival going over the St. Anthony Falls. It’s so many different things yet it tells a cohesive and well structured tale. Allison Vincent does an amazing job directing the show. The timing and staging of how and when to move, pull props out, refer to visual aids, subtle changes in costume, all done brilliantly. Which brings us again to Wheeler’s performance, It is absolutely the best piece of acting I’ve see at Fringe, a true tour de force and a master class in stage acting. Saturday he has performances back to back, if you haven’t gotten to it, make sure you do. Frankly, I’m staggered by the thought of him performing twice with but 40 minutes between them, it is such a physical and intense performance it hardly seems possible.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/_whoosh-the-civil-war-mythology-of-michael-hickey-and-his-perilous-precipitation-over-st-anthony-falls-#info

The Hysterical Woman is a series of scenes on a theme which is that of the systematic mistreatment and mischaracterization of women throughout history as hysterical i.e unreliable, over sensitive, to be humored and other ridiculous ideas. Pulling from sources as varied as Greek mythology and Emily Dickenson to Anita Hill’s testimony about Clarence Thomas and Britney Spears Conservatory saga. The show uses humor to make the medicine more palatable, but there is a message to be heard here. Filled with examples from the grievously obvious to the subtler types that happen everyday. Showing us the examples that remind us what an historical and pervasive issue this is, but also the ways in which we can all do better.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/the-hysterical-woman

Sunshine is a one woman show written by Adam Szudrich and featuring Lisa Marie Fulton in a strong performance as Ellen, a single woman who is at a point in her life when she is feeling a bit lost. Focusing on her insecurities and self doubts, her relationship with her father and deceased mother, the ex-boyfriend she can’t forget, and as the show opens, the prospect of a first date. A teacher by day, alcohol abuser by night, we learn as much about her character through her relationships as we do from what she tells us directly. I think a lot of women in the audience are going to find a connection with Ellen and her feelings about her looks, her weight, and her interpersonal relationships. It’s a good script that put me in mind of an American Bridget Jones. I’d like to see an extended version of this fully staged with actors playing the roles of the other characters instead of voice overs as this Fringe production utilizes.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/sunshine-by-adam-szudrich

ShMILF Life is a one woman show written and performed by Penny Sterling. Sterling’s show explores, among other things, what it’s like to be trying to date as a transgender woman who transitioned just in time to enter menopause. It’s a self deprecating and revealing show by a very good writer and a natural performer. Sterling worked in the 80’s as a stand up comedian for a time which makes sense as it’s clear that she knows how to write and time a joke. Most readers will know by now that my youngest son is a transgender man and that I gravitate to shows like this that help expand our knowledge and understanding of the transgender experience. Sterling does a fantastic job of sharing her story and putting things in a perspective that helps people empathize with a person whose journey is different than our own. I really enjoyed ShMILF Life, in made me laugh and think, and it gave us a lot to discuss on the car ride home.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/shmilf-life

Don’t want to miss a single Fringe review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have each post delivered directly to your email. On your computer from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. Also, you can follow me on Facebook, search @thestagesofmn and click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Minnesota Fringe Festival Day 8: Dead Mother’s Underwear, Silver Hammer (Co-Winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award), Unbelievable, and Jon Bennett Fire in the Meth Lab (Co-Winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award)

Before I dive into the reviews today I wanted to cover a few things. First off I didn’t want to do any ties when selecting shows for the Fringe of the Day Award, but at the end of the night I really couldn’t decide between the two shows that share the award today. Secondly, in case you’re confused by the “Day 8” in the headline, there was no Day 7 entry, you didn’t miss it. I took a night off for other activities. Thirdly, but probably most importantly, I wanted to highlight the Golden Lanyard Awards. You can go to https://minnesotafringe.org/awards and vote for the shows you think are worthy for awards from this years Minnesota Fringe Festival. For Audience members there are three categories to vote in, and there two categories for artists to vote in as well, along with awards voted on by staff. The voting cut off is Saturday at 11:59 PM so don’t forget to vote for your favorites.

In Dead Mother’s Underwear Jill R. Hildebrandt combines humor and poetry to explore family lineage, alcoholism, mental health, student loan debt, and of course her dead mother’s underwear. It’s an honest and revealing performance that models one of her key takeaways, to not conceal but reveal your pain and struggles. She traces her family tree, focusing on maternal relationships and how the relationships from mother to daughter from each generation to the next informs the one that came after. I think a lot of audience members are going to find familiar aspects which they can relate to within Hildebrandt’s story. It’s a show that doesn’t sugar coat the world, it acknowledges the hardships but does it through humor, which helps the audience to onboard the messages she’s trying to impart.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/dead-mother-s-underwear

Silver Hammer is one of today’s Co-recipients of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Awards. Silver Hammer feels as it begins with text projection that will be a political piece. Then it becomes an interesting spoken word science-fiction story. Then it becomes an autobiographical account of a failed effort at writing a Fringe show and then how during the pandemic it was converted into a salvage show. From there it delves into analysis of a Beatles song, the title of the show should clue you into which one. All of which leads to the uncovering of a conspiracy regarding arson and its relationship to the Politics of disinformation on Russian Propagandist Vladislav Surkov. A one man show created and performed by the very gifted Nick Ryan. It’s thought provoking, very funny, and you are left, as he indicated could happen, wondering what of what proceeded is true.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/silver-hammer#tickets

Unbelievable! is an amusing and clever look at four bible stories told with a modern sensibility. The scenes start strong, but progress with diminishing returns. The first story about Adam and Eve’s decision on whether or not to eat the apple from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil being the best. The scene acknowledges the absurdities and gaps in logic inherent in the creation myth. The second is the story of Abraham who has been tasked by God to take his son Isaac up the mountain and sacrifice him. This scene focuses on Isaacs WTF? response to this situation and enacts the story through the lens of a modern father/son dynamic. What’s interesting about these stories is that it approaches them with the application of logic and intelligence, it talks through the stories and addresses the fallacies within them, but it never actually destroys them. It’s an entertaining show and should be inoffensive to all but the far religious right. If you haven’t contemplated at least some of the questions this raised you simply are not a critical thinker.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/unbelievable-

Jon Bennett: Fire in the Meth Lab is also The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award winner. This was the most interesting title at the location I was already at for a 10:00 PM show. Before the many many reshuffles of my schedule it wasn’t even on my itinerary. Boy, talk about happy accidents. I don’t know what I was expecting besides maybe a comedic take on life in a meth lab or something. What you get at Jon Bennett’s show is an exploration of his brothers life of addictions which culminated in Meth and ended him up in prison. From Australia, Bennett reminds one of a younger fitter Matt Berry. He is instantly engaging and tells of his relationship with his older brother with an openness that is refreshing. He manages to illustrate how his brother is an asshole, was a bully to him his entire childhood, and how he still loves him. That is the crux of many addiction relationships and the paradoxes that exist within them. Extremely funny, at times incredibly moving, Bennett makes a connection with the audience that feels almost one on one. It’s an unexpected stunner and whereas I ended up accidentally seeing it due to a rearranging of my schedule, you should be rearranging your schedule in order to see it.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/jon-bennett-fire-in-the-meth-lab

Don’t want to miss a single Fringe review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have each post delivered directly to your email. On your computer from the home page on the right, enter your email address and click subscribe. On your mobile device scroll to the bottom of the page and do the same. Also, you can follow me on Facebook, search @thestagesofmn and click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn.

Minnesota Fringe Festival Day 6: Stages: A Horror Play, Moonwatchers (Winner of The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award), I Love My Body and It’s Trying to Kill Me, and We Are the Sea.

Stages: A Horror Play is based on an original Short Story by Phillip Andrew Bennett Low. Sometimes a show just doesn’t work for you. I admit I was somewhat lost in this one. I can say that there is a consistent dreamlike quality to the piece. The individual performances, costumes, sound were all well done. By the end, the final action solidified what I think was happening but I suspect that the point is not knowing until the end, so I’ll not spoil that. I think for me it was possibly the source material. This was the second show I’ve seen based on Low’s work and in both cases I felt that the use of horror in the titles, or subtitles, was misleading. I think the real issue is that Low and I are just not on the same wavelength and his style just isn’t going to be my cup of tea.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/stages-a-horror-play

Moonwatchers is today’s The Stages of MN Fringe of the Day Award Winner! It’s a hilarious show about two moonwatchers whose job it is to turn on the moon each night and manage various night sky activities like having the cow jump over the moon and a comet fly by. It’s all pretty routine until one night they discover the moon has been stolen. While one of the moonwatchers subs in for the moon the other goes off in search of the moon rustler who made off with it. Yes, you read that right – they are not just a myth, there really are moon rustlers. This show gives you everything: comedy, music, comets, cows, and if that isn’t enough it gives you the moon as well, literally. It’s the kind of show that sinks or swims on the personalities of it’s two performers. Nigel Berkeley and Corey Quinn Farrell are two very charming moonwatchers.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/moonwatchers

I Love My Body and It’s Trying to Kill Me is not my usual type of show but I’m really glad I chose to see it. Katie Knutson is the type of natural storyteller who can feed you information through a narrative, like a sneaky form of education. The faux game show hook that opens the show and returns throughout is a wonderful way to point out some real absurdities in regards to our rights as citizens, patients and consumers. It also helps the information to stick with you longer because you have a visual cue as well as the audible. The show is more like a speaker’s presentation than a theatrical production, but these are important topics and worth making the shift in gears.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/i-love-my-body-and-it-s-trying-to-kill-me

We Are the Sea is a production by Out of the Mist Celtic Theatre written by Laura Lundgren Smith. It’s a haunting and tragic cross between historical truths and celtic folktales. The reality is that Irish immigrants came over to America in what would come to be called “Coffin Ships.” The Folktale or fantasy aspect is that when the bodies were thrown overboard after death that the sea accepted them and listened to their stories. The show is filled with beautiful celtic music, get there early and hear the band play a few tunes before the show begins. There are strong performances particularly from Sage Hovet, Catherine Hansen, and Katrina Stelk, as three women who are trying to survive their crossing of the Atlantic. John Haynes gives an equally compelling portrayal as the heartless and murderous Sailer. No one is credited with make-up but whoever is responsible, particularly the makeup on Hovet and Stelk, deserves some special recognition, they looked like they were really on the brink of death particularly around the eyes.

https://minnesotafringe.org/2022-show-information/we-are-the-sea

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