Hairspray is a Blast From the Past and One Hair of a Good Time at the Ordway in St. Paul

Deidre Lang (center) as Motormouth Maybelle Photo by Jeremy Daniel

It was just over a year ago that the Hairspray National tour came through town running at the Orpheum in January 2023. Due to the opening night of this run, at the Ordway Center for Performing Arts this time, being cancelled thus shortening the run, I am reusing some elements from my previous review, particularly the plot synopsis. I had a blast last winter and I had an equally great time this… shall we call it spring? The show packs an important message about acceptance on multiple fronts utilizing the techniques pioneered by Mary Poppins they add some sugar to make the lesson seem like fun. This is such a big hearted show, the ignorant and hateful characters are very blunt, but they are the minority, the majority just don’t seem to see with eyes of hate. Is that realistic for Baltimore in 1962 where and when the musical takes place? No. But the characters also break into song and dance around a lot so I’m guessing it’s meant to be a bit of a fantasy. This is a show that is meant to entertain you with toe tappin’ music, some fabulous footwork, and a whole lot of humor and on those terms it is wildly successful. If they sneak a little reminder in there that it doesn’t matter what we look like on the outside it’s what’s on the inside that counts, well good for them. I can’t think of a simpler or more important message to send out into the world. I just wonder at a world, that needs to be told that.

Hairspray follows Tracy Turnblad who dreams of being one of the dancers on the Corny Collins Show, a local TV program that features kids dancing to the latest pop chart songs. When an opening on the show becomes available, Tracy skips school with her friend Penny in order to audition, against her mother Edna’s wishes. The resident Teen Diva Amber Von Tussle who is the daughter of the shows producer Velma Von Tussle, ridicules Tracy over her weight and she’s refused the chance to audition. Back in school during detention she strikes up a friendship with Seaweed, a black student and son of Motormouth Maybelle who hosts the “Negro Day” on The Corny Collins Show and bond over dance moves. When Corny Collins comes to their high school for the Sophomore Hop, Tracy wows him with the dance moves she’s learned from Seaweed and he awards her a spot on his show. After her first broadcast, not only has she fallen in love with Link Larkin the resident teen heartthrob, and Amber’s boyfriend, but she becomes a local celebrity. Tracy’s dream was to become a dancer on the show but she also wants to integrate the broadcast so that the black and white kids can all dance together. Her success leads her mother to reassess whether or not there’s a place for people of her and Tracy’s size out in the world. They deal with some fairly heavy issues, race, being marginalized due to weight, self esteem, corruption, hell nearly every woman in it winds up behind bars at one point, but they do it with humor and optimism. It’s Tracy’s heart that never stops fighting for what is right that changes everyone around her.

Caroline Eiseman makes a great Tracy, her vocals get drowned out by a slightly off balance sound mix, which did seem to improve as the night progressed. One thing that couldn’t be drowned out were her dance moves and her infectious can do attitude, both of which win over her fellow characters as well as the audience. As Tracy’s mother Edna we have Greg Kalafatas following in the long tradition of the character being played by a man in drag. This dates back to Hairspray’s roots the 1988 John Waters film in which the role was played by the Divine (Harris Glen Milstead) who sadly passed away less than two weeks after that films release. It’s a character full of insecurities who grows in her own confidence as she watches her daughter carry on in the face of ignorance. The character is used for comic relief, but she also contains a lot of what is beautiful about the entire show. A willingness to change and a capacity to love. Kalafatas handles both aspects wonderfully, know when to be funny and knowing when to show a little bit of vulnerability. You may have noticed that the photo I chose doesn’t highlight Tracy, that’s not because she isn’t the focus of the show, she is . But I wanted to highlight Deidre Lang because her performance as Motormouth Maybelle, though supporting, was exceptional. Her rallying of the kids to not give up after their first setback which ends with her song “I Know Where I’ve Been” is a show stopper. Her vocals are simply incredible, and you suddenly wish she had three other solo songs in the show. Another favorite in a show full of great dances, choreographed by Robbie Roby, was Josiah Rogers as Seaweed, that man has some moves. His love interest Penny was also a favorite character thanks to the performance by Scarlett Jacques, whose got fantastic comic timing.

Hairspray runs through March 17th at the Ordway Center For Performing Arts in St Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://ordway.org/events/hairspray/ . Due to the cancellation of the planned opening night performance the remainder of the run has limited availability. I urge you not to wait to get tickets, it could very well sell out.

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

Beautiful: The Carole King Musical is “Some Kind of Wonderful” at Chanhassen Dinner Theatres

Shad Hanley and Monet Sabel Photo by Dan Norman

This isn’t my first production of Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, I saw the touring production that came through Minneapolis about five or six years ago, but it is undoubtedly the best. The production has an intimacy and organic flow to the narrative that alluded the national touring Company. Certainly it’s filled with the same great music and I’m sure that previous cast was good, but it’s hard to imagine a better Carole King than Monet Sabel. I remember feeling as if the previous production was simply hitting bullet points on a plot outline. The Co-Directors, father and daughter team of Michael and Cat Brindisi, have wiped away all the disjointed story telling I sensed before and have staged a production that lives and breathes. The smooth and thoughtful handling of transitions and the passages of time create a sense of life moving fluidly forward and of a story unfolding like the images on a tapestry rather than simply taking us from A to B on a road map. The show hits right in my pop music sweet spot, while my friends were moshing to Pearl Jam in high school I was listening to my Buddy Holly, The Beatles, and Billboard Top Rock’n’Roll Hits for the years 1957-1961 CD’s. This music is part of my DNA so I was bound to love that aspect of the show particularly knowing the musical side of things would be handled by Chanhassen’s wonderful orchestra under the musical direction of Andy Kust. They sound suburb as always.

But the show is better than the music, it sidesteps the typical criticisms one levels at the Jukebox musical, it tells a story that features music rather than a story that has a million popular songs awkwardly shoehorned in. Sabel’s performance mirrors that sentiment, it is a natural lived in performance that incorporates singing in it’s exploration of the character. The songs work so well because King wrote about her life in her songs, even the early teen targeted songs, spoke to her life, whether she was always conscious of it or not. “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” speaks to all of us in a way but it is a specific reflection of her own insecurities, particularly in her relationship with her husband Gerry Goffin, played here by an excellent Shad Hanley. Hanley’s speaking voice sounded a little overtaxed, but thankfully his singing didn’t and his character work was solid. Other standouts in the cast were Shinah Hey and Alan Bach as Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann, fellow songwriters and Carole and Gerry’s best friends. They provided perfect little moments of humor without becoming the comic relief, they had their own arc and their relationships with each other and Carole and Gerry felt substantial. The cast members who collectively played The Drifters and The Shirelles were absolutely fantastic and really showed off some nice choreography by Tamara Kangas Erickson. The leads of both groups, John Jamison II for The Drifters and Quinn Lorez for The Shirelles, are hair on the back of the neck raisingly good.

Part of why the show flows so well is how the Directors handle the transitions. There are a lot of scene changes and in many productions it means deadstage time as set pieces are moved on and off. What the Brindisi’s do for many changes is have the lighting change the character move out of one area of the set continuing on with their scene as the set changes behind them. Eliminating the grind to a halt, blacked out stage, with nothing happening while changes are made that can suck the energy from a shows momentum. Other times the set change is as simple and swift as rotating a piano to a different angle, all of these techniques keep the show moving quickly, sweeping us along rather than leaving us waiting in the dark. One of the key things a Director, or two, needs to do to ensure their production feels fluid is to get the scene changes and transitions right and this is one of the best examples I’ve ever seen of doing just that. Part of that success surely goes to Nayna Ramey whose scenic design helped to make those transitions and changes work. I also admired the lighting design by Sue Ellen Berger, which played a role in scene transitions but also contained some fun cues like the starlights that came on over the audience during the song “Up on the Roof”, it was a magical little touch. I also absolutely adored the period costumes from Barbara Portinga including a superfast and crowd pleasing costume change done by Katemarie Andrews as Little Eva as she begins to sing “Locomotion”.

Whether you think you are a Carole King fan or not, I promise you that you are. You will not want to miss catching this show, you’ll be surprised how many songs you know from Goffin and King and their friends Mann & Weil. One of the things that makes Chanhassen unique is the “Dinner” part of the Theatre. It’s not just the famous Chanhassen Chicken, there are many wonderful options and a great selection of beverages including ice cream drinks and delicious desserts. Sometimes dinner theater means a mediocre meal, that is not the case at Chanhassen, the food is as good as the shows, which are terrific. Beautiful: The Carole King Musical runs through September 28th at Chanhassen Dinner Theatres in Chanhassen MN. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://chanhassendt.com/beautiful/ and don’t forget they also have two other stages The Fireside theatre which hosts their concert series and Stevie Ray’s Comedy Cabaret.

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

Radiant Vermin a Darkly Comic Play at Lyric Arts

Callie Baack and Noah Hynick Photo by Molly Weibel

Radiant Vermin by Philip Ridley is a dark and twisted tale about the evils of consumerism taken to the extreme. A struggling couple who are expecting their first child are given the chance to to move into a home of their own at no charge to themselves. It’s their house lock stock and barrel, the only thing they will have to do themselves are the renovations. It’s a fixer upper you see, but Ollie played by Noah Hynick is handy and his wife Jill, played by Callie Baack, has taste which makes them in the eyes of Miss Dee, played by Danielle Krivinchuk, the perfect couple for the house. Miss Dee is said to represent a new government program whose aim appears to be the gentrification of undesirable neighborhoods. The plan is that Ollie and Jill will fix up their house and that will attract others to the area, and it’s a plan that comes along like a house on fire. The story is told directly to the audience by Ollie and Jill after a disastrous garden party for their sons first birthday. They want to explain to us how they came to live in their dream house. All of which is a faithful set up for the play but at the same time doesn’t prepare you for what you are about to witness. This is the blackest of comedies and it takes the idea of the lack of morality in consumer culture to a whole new level. The script is extremely well written and tackles issues of class, religion, and privilege while being enormously entertaining.

Hynick and Baack give fantastic performances and hats off to the dialect coach Gillian Constable, because they sound authentically British with Hynick having a distinctly early Hugh Grant quality minus the poshness. Their performances really shine in the reenactment of the garden party in which they each play along with Ollie and Jill at least four other characters, it’s a scene that reminded me of the terrific Stones in His Pockets which closed last week at Theater Latte Da. If you caught that show you’ll know what I’m talking about and if you loved it this is another show you should check. I’m not sure if Lyric Arts has Hynick under exclusive contract or what, I don’t think I’ve ever seen him on stage anywhere else, but everything he’s been in at Lyric he has impressed the hell out of me. Krivinchuk along with playing the devilishly well informed Miss Dee also has a scene as Kay, a homeless girl whom Ollie brings home to help renovate the house. The roll is a complete 180 from Miss Dee who is all knowing winks and wicked manipulation, while her performance as Kay is surprisingly moving and subtle in comparison.

The set design by Cory Skold is impressive, it looks like a multistoried construction site, with painters plastic hanging all over and walls exposed down to their studs. The whole thing is pulled together by the lighting and sound design by Shannon Elliott, there are some cues that really help to sell the story as it unfolds. The production is directed by Callie Aho who also services as the Intimacy Director. Aho’s handling of that garden party scene shows a talent for making the fast paced and chaotic still surprisingly clear in terms of who’s who when there are literally 11 characters speaking at once being played by two actors. Radiant Vermin runs through March 24th at Lyric Arts in Anoka, don’t let the drive stop you it’s really not that far and this show is so very worth your time. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.lyricarts.org/radiant-vermin

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

In the Green at Elision Playhouse

Photo by Jolie Morehouse Olson

In the Green by Grace McLean began a three week run last night at Elision Playhouse in Crystal MN. The Elision website summarizes the plot as:

“As a young girl, medieval saint, healer, visionary, exorcist, and composer Hildegard von Bingen was locked in a cloister’s cell after demonstrating a preternatural sensitivity to the world around her. Sequestered with Hildegard is Jutta, a woman who has spent her life secluded in an effort to recover a whole self after the deepest of trauma. Under Jutta’s guidance, Hildegard attempts to reassemble her own fragmented self while her mentor proselytizes a rejection of brokenness.”

Elision Theatre Website

So that tells you the outline but what it doesn’t prepare you for is how it tells that story. Hildegard is played by three different actors simultaneously each playing one of the pieces of Hildegard’s splintered self. Abilene Olson is Hand, Annie Schiferl is Eye, and Deidre Cochran is Mouth, it’s an astonishing collaborative performance, even when one part take center stage you feel as if the others are still a part of what is happening. The performances are highlighted by the exactness of their vocal synchronization, their voices sound hauntingly beautiful together and it is the music that makes this production worth checking out. Like Hildegard the character of Jutta is also played by two performers, Christine Wade plays the present Jutta while Emily Hensley plays the younger Jutta, listed in the program as Shadow, she is the darkness that Jutta has buried in her cell. Both also have incredible vocals, Wade has the added challenge of performing while operating a Looper board. This is a wonderful device that allows for the recording of a sound, vocal or otherwise, that can then be played in a loop while the same performers sing another part, allowing for the layering of sounds in unique ways. It’s also for me, as an audience member, a stressful tool as I worry about the tightrope act that operating the machine during a live performance. Hitting the wrong button could throw everyone off and ruin the flow and mood of the music.

When it comes to music “it had a nice beat and I could dance to it” is about the extent of my expertise so I’ll direct those interested in a more nuanced discussion of the musical elements to my fellow Twin Cities Theater Blogger Keith at Life in Revue https://lifeinrevue.blogspot.com/?m=1. What I can say is that It didn’t have a nice beat and you can’t dance to it, but it was amazingly complex and I found myself in awe of every aspect of the music. Harrison Wade’s musical direction and Christine Wade’s vocal direction are the high calibre one has come to expect from Theatre Elision. The Looper board adds a layer that could be used to make things easier on the music department but they use it to add complexity. The staging and design by Director/Designer Lindsay Fitzgerald is at once minimal but like the soundscape surprisingly complex. Using screens and projection in concert with Laina Grendle’s lighting design to accomplish visual what the Looper was doing aurally. Madeline Wall is the Movement Coordinator whose work seems to tie everything we see and hear together, making the complicated premise of three Actors simultaneously playing the same person work. This is a production you go to to see how talented people all collaborate to create a piece that feels cohesive in every possible way, nothing detracts from the atmosphere of the piece. Is it fun? No, there are a couple of line readings that get a chuckle, they are well placed, and lighten the mood when needed. At 90 minutes it’s the perfect length for something that is more to be appreciated than entertaining. It’s thoughtful and very impressive, and I enjoy something that’s a little more moody and serious sometimes.

In the Green runs through March 9th at the Elision Playhouse for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.elisionproductions.com/in-the-green

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

Mood Swings At The Hive Collaborative Explores Two of Sinatra’s “Concept” Albums

The newly opened The Hive Collaborative is doing a lot of interesting things, if you haven’t stopped over to check them out yet I highly recommend it. So far I’ve been to 16 bar Bingo, which they host the final Monday of every month and now Mood Swings. The Hive Collaborative is located in what used to be Dreamland Arts, it was recently purchased by local theater professionals Laura Rudolph Morris and Eric Morris, you can learn more about their dreams for the space on a recent episode of Twin Cities Theater Chat here. To find out what’s on their schedule and to purchase tickets to upcoming events you can go to https://www.thehivecollaborativemn.com/ Mood Swings in running through Monday February 19th, so there’s still a chance to see it, but don’t think about it too long.

Billed as an Exploration of the Concept Albums of Frank Sinatra. The show is conceived and performed by Eric Morris along with Music Director Luke Aaron Davidson who accompanies him on piano and adds vocals in a couple of instances. Morris has taken two Sinatra albums In the Wee Small Hours and Songs For Swinging Lovers! It’s not an impersonation of Sinatra, it’s not a run through of the albums in order, there isn’t really any dialogue but there is story. The albums themselves were considered as the first “Concept” Albums, In the Wee Small Hours was melancholy with the mood of failed love, lost love, and other more introspective aspects of romance. Songs For Swinging Lovers! was the upbeat jazzier album focused on celebrating love. What Morris has done is mixed the songs together contrasting the downbeat and the upbeat. The unspoken setup is of a man on a psychiatrist’s couch who may be bipolar. Thus the mood swings, and the title of the show. When I say there is a story, it’s really what we the audience decide to imprint on it. You can see each song as it’s only little narrative or choose, as I did, to see it as one man’s attempt to recount and work through his relationship issues. Either way, you’ll be swept along by Morris’s rich vocalization the clever bit of humor devised by Morris and show Director Joey Miller. For a show that runs about an hour in length and set in one location, a lot of thought has gone into the lighting design by Tracy V. Joe and the costumes by Sarah Christenson.

I really like this idea of taking the work of a popular entertainer and then exploring it further and look forward to other upcoming events along these lines. I highly recommend getting on The Hive Collaboratives mailing list so you’ll get the latest on what they are up to. Looking ahead the schedule is eclectic and unique, making it a great addition to the Twin Cities Theater scene.

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

Bosom Buddies a Paired Down Drag Show That Goes the Sweet Rather Than Sour Route

Gillian Gauntt and Timothy Kelly

I don’t have a lot of experience with Drag shows, but the ones I have seen have trended to the risque and/or Diva end of the spectrum. For this performance Timothy Kelly, co-founder and Managing Director of Fringe favorites Melancholics Anonymous and local operatic soprano, Gillian Gauntt make their Drag debuts to promising results. I’m really shockingly uninformed on drag culture so apologies if I misunderstand or mistate anything, please feel free to correct me in the comments as I do endeavor to get these things right and learn. This show contains a bit of a narrative, albeit underwritten about two performers a Drag King and a Drag Queen who are accidently booked to perform at the same time. After a little sass they decide to take turns performing sets. Antagonistic at the outset, by the end they are becoming friends, though their duet “Bosom Buddies” show they still have a little sting in them. Rather than battle it out between songs throughout the evening they pretty much take turns doing a few songs with a little genial interaction at the changeovers. It’s just the two of them and Nick Love doing a fabulous job tickling the ivories, I’m not even sure there was anyone in the tech booth. This is not that supper polished 5 Drag Queens with 17 1/2 costume changes each, disco balls, and glitter & tinsel in dizzying amounts. Kelly has a costume change during intermission, and Gauntt loosens their tie, the lights just sort of stay on at an appropriate level. My feeling, this is a first stab to see if it’s worth developing, and I for one think it is.

Gauntt is dressed as a man with beard stubble applied with makeup. They dress as male but sings songs in the range of a female, what’s a soprano to do? Kelly dresses as female and sings like a female in a somewhat smokey voice that reminded me of Lauren Bacall. If the point is to attempt to plausibly perform as the gender that fits the costume and character name, Kelly triumphs. The wig, the voice, the vocal quality, and indeed the character. I suspect that singing is Gauntt’s specialty and that acting is not their first love. The performance is fine it’s just missing that little something that a born actor like Kelly can’t help but bring to any role. I didn’t allow myself to get to hung up on the rules of gender transformation if there are any, instead I sat back and enjoyed the two performers voices which are both exceptionally good. Their song choices frequently fit into the slight narrative of the show about half or two thirds of them I knew, which I appreciate. I hope they continue to develop these characters and flesh out the show, I’d definitely be in for the next incarnation. It’s a little, not rough, but not polished, but it’s also really kinda sweet where it ends up and there are a couple of really fun songs and some beautiful ones. I’m glad I stopped over to the Phoenix Theater to check it out. Tickets are on a sliding scale from $10 to $40 the show runs this weekend only for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://tix.gobo.show/events/event/kOTpBfuSZmpxTz4yVqcc

Don’t want to miss a single review from The Stages of MN? You can subscribe and have every post sent directly to your email. To subscribe 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. You can also follow me on Facebook, @thestagesofmn click follow and on Instagram thestagesofmn. You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/

I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by my colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. We also produce the podcast Twin Cities Theater Chat!! which you can access through this link or wherever you enjoy podcasts https://twincitiestheaterchat.buzzsprout.com/ . We post biweekly longer form episodes that will focus on interviews and discussions around theater topics. There is also shorter episodes in which we Bloggers tell you what we think you should get out and see as well as what we have on our schedules that we are most looking forward too.

Take a Chance on Mamma Mia at the Orpheum Theatre It’s worth the “Money Money Money”

Jalynn Steele, Christine Sherrill, and Carly Sakolove              Photo by Joan Marcus

Mamma Mia! the musical premiered in April of 1999 in London, almost 25 years ago now, in fact this current tour is the 25th Anniversary tour. I suspect it has more or less been playing in one of the major cities or on tour nonstop for those 25 years. There is a reason for that, it’s “Super Trouper” fun. But for all the fun it provides it also has a cross to bear. While Jukebox musicals existed before Mamma Mia! it’s phenomenal success is credited or blamed for the surge the genre has experienced in the last quarter of a century. While it may not be fair to blame Mamma Mia! for something as ridiculous as The Bodyguard it just takes a quick glance through the wikipedia listing of Jukebox Musicals to see the explosion that followed Mamma Mia! The 8th longest running musical in Broadway history it’s popularity is undeniable, but is it for everyone? Of course not, nothing is, if you don’t like the music of Abba for instance this probably isn’t the ticket for you. But if you do enjoy a little bit of “Dancing Queen” in your life and enjoy a good laugh then say “I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do” to a seat as close to the stage as you can manage. For those just rescued from a desert island the story centers around the wedding of Sophie and Sky. Sophie, after reading her Mother’s Diary for the year of her birth has discovered that her Father, of whom she knows nothing, is one of three men her mother had relationships with the summer she was conceived. She has sent invitations to her wedding in her mother Donna’s name to all three of the men, Sam, Harry, and Bill, without Donna’s knowledge. While Sophie tries to figure out which of the three men is her father, Donna is trying to prepare for the wedding, run her Greek Island hotel, and face three men from her past that she never thought she’d see again. There to support Donna are her two best friends and former singing partners Rosie and Tanya. All of this sung to the legendary music of Swedish super band ABBA.

Two things to know going into this production it’s loud, near rock concert levels, those with sensitive ears might want to invest in some earplugs. the second thing is that the loudness is part of what makes it such a memorable night, precisely because it feels like a rock concert! Nowhere more so than the curtain call which plays like an encore and a welcome excuse to revisit the songs “Mamma Mia” and “Dancing Queen” as well as the song that launched ABBA to stardom in 1974 but could not conceivably be shoehorned into the plot “Waterloo“. If you are one of those curmudgeons who sneak out during the curtain call to beat the line out of the parking ramp, you’ll miss some great stuff. Also, shame on you, these people just spent two and a half hours dancing and singing their hearts out, show your appreciation to them for sharing their talent with you and clap for God’s sake. The show moves along quickly the set design by Mark thompson is very simply but does everything you need from it. It’s nice to see a production that wows us with people rather than spectacle. Choreographer Anthony Van Laast puts together some nice scenes, I really enjoyed his work durning the song “Lay All Your Love On Me” which ends with Sky and his friends in wetsuits and flippers doing a variation on a chorus line. The encore also features some really nice dance moves, so there’s another reason to stick around.

The standouts in the cast are not necessarily who you’d expect, far and away my two favorites are Jalynn Steele and Carly Sakolove as Donna’s besties Tanya and Rosie. Confession time, I’ve only seen the film once when it came out in 2008 and hated it, primarily because I found the performances of these two characters and that of Donna’s to be shrill and one prolonged two hour screech. I do plan to revisit to see if my opinion has changed, because it’s all that stuff with Tanya and Rosie that I absolutely adored in the stage production. Steele and Sakolove are gifted at making their routines feel like they are happening for the first time, if physical humor can be called witty, this is it. Their song sung to Donna while trying to cheer her up “Chiquitita” is one I’d pay to see again. It doesn’t hurt that that scene flows right into Dancing queen and in both songs they demonstrate, that as good as everyone else is on the stage, those two are packing the best voices in the show. Sakolove also gets a riotous song with Jim Newman’s Bill “Take a Chance on Me“, that brings the house down. A close second is Victor Wallace as Sam, the possible father who is the one who really broke Donna’s heart and the one she’s not even a little happy to see. He doesn’t really get a chance to show off his voice until the second act when he gets two songs in close proximity “SOS” and “Knowing Me, Knowing You“. The richness of his voice catches you a little of guard as nothing up until that point led you to believe he could sing any better than Pierce Brosnan. Christine Sherrill who plays Donna had a slightly off first act, one of my colleagues who is more musically astute than I am felt like she was a little behind and that led to a sense that her voice wasn’t as strong as the others. Whatever the issue was it seemed to have evaporated during the intermission as she finished the show quite strong with “The Winner Takes it All” being a powerhouse of a performance.

Mamma Mia runs through February 11th at the Hennepin Theatre Trust’s Orpheum Theatre in Downtown Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://hennepintheatretrust.org/events/mamma-mia-orpheum-theatre-minneapolis-mn-2024/ . Side note, am I the only person who can’t hear “Knowing Me, Knowing You” without thinking of Steve Coogan’s Alan Partridge character?

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