“But when you act, you take us away from the squalor of the real world” – From Evita Lyric by Tim Rice
Last Night I did something I rarely get to do, I went to a show for the second time, just to experience and share the joy of it. That show was A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Guthrie Theater, but it could as easily have been a show at Yellow Tree or any of the dozens of actively producing theatre companies in the Twin Cities area. On the ride home after we had dropped off my son and his fiancée and had finished discussing the play, my wife and I got talking about current events. The thought kept coming into my head, this is why we go to the theater, to raise our spirits and take us away from real world for just a few hours. That is one of the many reasons that the theater is so important. Not only does it help us escape, but it has the advantage over streaming at home in that it gets us out of our houses, out into the community, sharing an experience with more than just those on the couch next to us. We are so fortunate here in the Twin Cities to have such a vast and diverse theater community, but it is under attack. If we want to protect that community we have to step up now.
This morning I received an email from Yellow Tree Theatre in Osseo, who has produced some wonderful theater out in the suburbs. Below are some quotes from the email:
Yellow Tree Theatre relies heavily on national and statewide grants to support our mission. Recently, we have been informed that statewide and federal arts funding have dramatically decreased or have been canceled making grant funding even more competitive and affecting our immediate cash flow. This is a drastic decrease like we have never experienced before.
These challenges threaten not only our ability to keep our doors open but also our ongoing core mission:
Providing access to the arts for everyone, including underserved communities in North Minneapolis and the surrounding suburbs.
Championing diverse voices—stories by and for artists of color, women, LGBTQ+ communities, and others historically marginalized in theater.
We believe that theater should reflect the richness of the world around us. That’s why we remain committed to producing bold and inclusive work.
But We Can’t Do It Without You.
If you believe in the power to build bridges, spark conversations, and create change, we ask you to stand with us today.Every dollar makes a difference. Every gift fuels our ability to continue.Donate today to help us sustain our mission, keep our doors open, and continue making Yellow Tree Theatre a home for all.
We are going to see this more and more often going forward. Theaters will close, but let’s not let it happen today, let’s not let it be Yellow Tree. I’ve written before about my belief that these theaters like Yellow Tree and Lyric Arts in Anoka create a valuable link in reaching the goal of creating new theater audiences. That goal is more important now than ever before. We can make the theater community stronger by building that audience. I’m going to ask you to click on the button below and make a donation to Yellow Tree Theatre if you can. I’m also going to ask all of you, faithful readers, to take someone new to a show in the next few weeks. Let’s build that audience up!
Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. 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.
But that’s not all! You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.
Writer-performer Milo Cramer in School Pictures at Theater Latté Da. Photo credit: Dan Norman.
Milo Cramer’s solo show School Pictures Which just won a 2025 Obie Award makes its local premiere at Theater Latté Da. A low tech, low key, delightfully quirky and quick 75 minute show that makes you laugh and think. Cramer wrote the show about a five year period in his life when he tutored students in New York City. Cramer sings with a voice that won’t win him any singing contests. And yet, it’s his slightly high pitched kinda in and out of key quality that gets the audience on his side right from the start. It’s charming and relatable, as are his instrumentations which are simplistic. He’s telling us up front that he’s not a musical theater major who composes songs for full orchestras, he’s just like us, with an ability to carry a tune and learn a few cords on a ukulele. He’s just here to sing us a few silly little comedic songs about some teenage kids he tutored and their sometimes eye rolling attitudes and problems. He lulls you into a sense of comfort and humor and then, there is the big reveal!
As you can see in the photo accompanying this review there are sheets of colored paper with names on them on a bulletin board. Cramer goes through them sequentially, each is a seperate song/story about a student he taught. They are each unique and humorous as little episodes, but the cumulative effect is building to that big reveal. Which is where Cramer takes the audience to school asking us to do a few math problems and giving us facts about the inequity of the New York City school system. The conclusions are eye opening to the uninformed and audiences may find themselves grateful they don’t have kids in that school system. Well, ask an educator at an North Minneapolis Middle School I know of and you will hear stories that will make you furious at the Minneapolis School Board. After the stories I’ve heard from several educators I’m left with the conclusion that like the President they want the public education system to fail. When the students first went back after Covid, the school would repeatedly falsely report there were no covid cases when there were dozens of cases per grade. Guns in the school not being reported by the administration, teachers being told to lie about. Teachers being blamed for getting assaulted. Teachers without text books for students. I have a niece and nephew in South Minneapolis schools which are much better, and have more resources, but that could all easily go away very soon.
The education system in this country has been at a crisis point for a long time now. We need more resources directed at schools, so that we don’t lose dedicated teachers who go unsupported with no resources and no support. But the worst thing is that there is a large segment of a generation of kids that are not being given the opportunity to succeed. Why would anyone want that? Well, you might want that if you wanted a generation of people who didn’t have skills or knowledge to question things. People who haven’t been taught problem solving skills. People like that would be easy to control through fear and misinformation. And if you eliminate independent sources of information, you can control the message and the people. You can continue to keep the wealthy educated and rich, and you can keep the nonwhite and/or poor, in survival mode. These are the thoughts that Cramer’s show stirred up in my mind as I drove home from the show. So cute and funny? Yes, but also with a message of real value and substance.
Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. 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.
But that’s not all! You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.
Tonight, or I suppose technically it was last night, I attended a workshop and stage reading of a new musical in the works from Keith Hovis commissioned by Trademark Theater. I haven’t attended a lot of staged readings, my schedule is usually so full with shows to allow for it. I am so grateful I attended this one. I’m not going to review the show here, this is a work in progress, though to my mind it’s ready now to be fully mounted. But I do have to write something because it’s after midnight and I’m so excited by what I just saw that I’m not going to be able to sleep until I get something out of me. Hovis, who wrote the book, music, and lyrics has created something very special here. It’s the sort of show that’s hard to categorize because it’s more than one thing. First and foremost, it’s hysterically funny. Secondly, it’s a musical without a single dud or time filling song, every single one is memorable. But it’s also social commentary, representation, raunchy as hell, and moving. In short, it’s genius. But more important than what it is, is how it made me feel. I can only describe the feeling of being in the room when this display of creativity, humor , and humanity was happening as feeling fully alive. This is the feeling a theater junkie like me is always chasing. We feel lucky if we feel a quarter of this feeling, it’s so rare to have this strong of a reaction, and this was just a reading. Wow.
The Cast in Rehearsal: Photo courtesy of Trademark Theater (L-R) Kiko Laureano, Armando Ronconi, Neal Beckman, Hope Nordquist, Em Adam Rosenberg
There are two downsides to an evening like this, I can rave all I want about it, but if you weren’t there, you missed it. I do this because I want to share experiences like this with you, faithful readers, and until they stage it I can’t. The second problem, and there are honestly only a handful of times this ever happens, this cast is so good, that any cast other than this will never be able to measure up. I can only think of two examples of other shows that have had that effect on me. The first was one of the shows that led to The Stages of MN’s creation, and that was Hedwig and the Angry Inch featuring Trademark Theater’s Founder and Artistic Director Tyler Michaels King as Hedwig and Jay Owen Eisenberg as Yitzhak. The other was a a musical called Interstate that opened at Mixed Blood in March 2020, only to be closed early due to the Covid pandemic. I saw both of those three times each, and wished I could have seen them more. I went back, bringing new people each time because I know that live theater exists as it’s happening. Once a shows run ends, it’s over. The next production will be something different. I’m so excited by what I just saw and I’m so sad that I cannot bring you with me to see it again tomorrow night or next weekend. I have no doubt that Trademark will mount this and I’d be very surprised if we didn’t see it in their 2025-2026 season. When it comes, I’ll remind you that this is a moment that you don’t want to let slip away. My greatest hope is that this cast returns as I’m going to have a very difficult time picturing anyone else in these roles. Everyone of them is perfectly cast, they brilliantly mine every line for maximum effect, it’s rare to hear an audience laugh out loud so much. It is almost non stop laughter, but there was one particularly moving moment. Towards the end, Em Adam Rosenberg sings a song that is so eloquent so moving and so beautifully sung, that they had not only me in tears, but also some of their fellow cast members. It’s a moment I wish I could have shared with my son George, it would have connected for him. I hope I get a chance to share that moment with him in the future.
Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. 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.
But that’s not all! You can also read some of my reviews syndicated on the MN Playlist website https://minnesotaplaylist.com/ from time to time. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.
Stephanie Anne Bertumen, Clay Man Soo, Keivin Vang Photo by Tony Nelson
Last year Ironbound produced by Frank Theatre and written by Martyna Majok wowed me and my fellow Twin Cities Theater Bloggers receiving five Twin City Theater Blogger Award nominations and winning one. Sanctuary City is this years first offering from the socially minded theater company and is also written by the Pulitzer Prize winning Majok. It’s another thought provoking and challenging play that explores the timely topic of immigration. Uniquely structured, the first act contains dozens of brief moments, memories over a course of a couple of years that establish the close friendship between two teenagers G and B, who live in the US illegally. During these scenes which last anywhere from 10 seconds to a couple of minutes each, we learn that one becomes a citizen and they hatch a plan to marry each other so that the other can legally stay in the country as well. Act two is one scene which explores what happens to that plan when a third person, Henry, enters the pictures as a romantic partner. Every reveal in the second act clarifies the situation while complicating the issue itself. As I sat in the audience I found myself constantly reconsidering what I thought moments earlier.
Majok’s script is brilliantly directed by Wendy Knox who always manages to obscure what should be from the audience while making what we should understand clear. When you see the play you will understand what a complex task that is. Joe Stanley’s set design helps to illustrate the differences between the two Acts of the show and make tangible the idea of the first Act as a series of memories. Act one is performed on a bare stage with a few simple boxes that take the place of a bed or a bench. Act Two is revealed as B’s apartment fully realized indicating that this is happening in real time. Majok’s script further distinguishes this fact by the simplistic, almost black and white aspect of the dialogue and emotions in Act one compared to the intricate and often amorphous reality of the present. Tony Stoeri’s lighting is also intricate to the telling of this story particularly in Act one in which the lights fade down and back up to indicate the jump to a new memory.
Stephanie Anne Bertumen who plays G is stunningly good conveying unspoken backstory and emotion through her performance. We not only get a sense of unexpressed emotions and life details but have a sense of what they are without the script actually dictating any of it. Clay Man Soo who plays B, takes as a cue to his character one of the lines his character says at the beginning of the show, “I don’t know what to do.” I’m not saying Soo doesn’t know what to do, I mean that is the key to portraying this character and Soo picks up on it and uses it. B spends his life in Limbo; as an illegal, his live options if he wants to stay in the US are limited, he can’t get aid for school and he needs to work jobs that don’t enforce certain regulations. Because of the introduction of Henry to the plot, he doesn’t know if he’s still going to be able to escape Limbo with G. If he can’t, should he continue to live this life or return to his birth country? Soo perfectly captures a sense of being lost, unsure what he should do, always looking to others for guidance. Henry is played by Keivin Vang and it’s a difficult, at least initially, unlikeable role. Vang does a good job of conveying the characters conceitedness. He enters the play at a point where a third is unwanted by the audience and first impressions are that he is just going to make everything fall apart. But he softens and as more is revealed, we find something to appreciate in the character for a time. It’s here that Majok’s script kicks into overdrive requiring the performers to manipulate the audience’s allegiances from moment to moment.
Sanctuary City runs around an hour and forty five minutes with no intermission. It is a drama, but also contains humor and while it will leave you with a lot to think about and does not end with a super sunny resolution, it’s creativity and performances will leave you feeling excited and engaged rather than depressed. Sanctuary City runs through February 23rd at Open Eye Theatre in Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://franktheatre.org/events/sanctuary-city/
In the wake of the tragedy that was the closure of the newly relocated HUGE Improv Theater, the Jungle Theater has stepped up and provided a new home for some of HUGE’s resident shows. One such show is Off Book which I experienced last night for the first time, the next performance will be March 3rd. Off Book is unlike the other Improv I’ve reviewed, though to be honest most of the improv I have reviewed has its own unique angle like this does. Off Book divides its performers into two group. Group one is “Off book” which in theater terms means an Actor has learned his lines, so these artists have memorized a scene from a play. Group two is so far off book that they have never even seen the book. Not only do they have no lines memorized, but they don’t even know what play their fellow actors have memorized. The players take the stage together, one scripted, one unscripted and try to perform a scene from a play. Hilarity does indeed ensue. I think this may be the best Improv I’ve ever seen. Actually, Off Book hands down this is the best Improv show I’ve ever seen.
I’m going to list the lineup from the program and those who know some of the local Actors and Improv Performers will see why this was so fantastic.
ACT I The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov Actor: Christina Baldwin Improviser: Alsa Bruno
The Great Nebula in Orion by Lanford Wilson Actor: Emily Grodzik Improviser: Molly Ritchie
Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons Lemons by Sam Steiner Actor: Cheryl Willis Improviser: Tom Reed
ACT II The Motherfucker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis Actor: James Rodriguez Improviser: Chris Rodriguez
The Flick by Annie Baker Actor: Destiny Davison Improviser: Taj Ruler
Stage Kiss by Sarah Ruhl Actor: Michael Rogers Improviser: Jill Bernard
Each scene had the audience howling with laughter and it’s hard to single any out, but if I had to choose a scene that was most likely to make you wet your pants it would be the pairing of Destiny Davidson, who somehow mostly kept it together and didn’t start outright laughing, and the hurricane of hilarity that is Taj Ruler. There’s no point in going into details of what we saw beyond the format because the glorious thing about improv is also the terrible thing about improv, it’s a one time thing! Which is why I’ve decided, now that I’ve found this show, I’m never missing another one. Thank you to The Jungle Theater for giving this show a new home, hopefully a long term home!
Destiny Davison and Taj Ruler Photo by Evelyn Vocu
For more information about Off Book and other Improv at the Jungle shows and to purchase tickets for the March 3rd show and other Jungle events go to https://www.jungletheater.org/improv-at-the-jungle
Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. 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/ from time to time.
But that’s not all! Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.
Bridget Benson, Lydia Rose Prior, Siri Ashley Wright, Natosha Guldan Photo by Molly Weibel
For those who enjoyed I Am Betty at The History Theatre the last two years, which is basically anyone who saw it, Lyric Arts has what plays as the public’s version of that story. A Taste of Things to Come wants to tell us about the lives of the woman who gathered together and cooked from the Betty Crocker Cookbook rather than those who created it. The problem is that A Taste of Things to Come has nothing new to say and isn’t worthy of being talked about as a companion piece to History Theatre’s smash hit. It’s wants to be a Steel Magnolias/Savannah Sipping Society type story and Act I set in 1957 does seem to have something to say about the four woman whose story it is as well about their roles in society at that point in history. There is character details, humor, some surprises, and some drama. Act II leaps forward ten years to 1967 and seems to have nothing to say and nowhere to go. The big reveals in terms of the women’s lives are delivered as if even the characters know none of it means anything. The concept of the show by Hollye Levin along with the musical numbers being done in the style of the 50’s and 60’s had a lot of promise and some of the songs are actually very fun, but the book of the show written by Debra Barsha and Levin wastes a promising concept. We learn more about every theme this show tries to drag out in the second act in a more effective and powerful way in the play Glory, now playing at Theatre in the Round.
Look, there are things to like here, the cast is good, they can’t help that the script has nothing new to say or a fresh way to present it. I actually quite liked maybe every song in the first Act, but really only cared for the final song in the second act. I wish the program listed the songs so I could reflect on them a little more, but it doesn’t. In the performance I saw the understudy Raquel Ponce performed the role of Agnes, I always am in awe of understudies who go on, particularly in the first week of a run. I know they don’t get anywhere near the rehearsal time as the primary cast and Ponce does a nice job. My favorite performer overall was Natosha Guldan who plays Joan. They all had strengths and weaknesses but Guldan was the one who really stood out particularly in her handling of the changes in the character over the 10 years. Bridget Benson played Dottie, the conservative of the group, she’s also the one who struggles with her diet. Benson does everything you can do with the chubby uptight comic relief stereotype, she hits the jokes as well as anyone can. It’s just that the character is so derivative that it’s hard to do anything new when the writing is so uninventive. Lydia Rose Prior plays Connie who in 1957 is days away from her due date of her first child. It’s around this pregnancy that the only interesting plot development occurs. I felt at times that Prior’s voice was the strongest, but she was also victim to one the most off key moments in the show when she sang in duet with Ponce. I’m not sure who was off, but the combination was discordant. Aside from that one moment I felt the cast was the shows strengths, but a good cast can only do so much with this material.
Another strength was the costume designs by Sarah Christenson, they had a great period look to them and contributed to making Guldan’s Joan transformation so effective between the acts. Another strength was also a weakness at the same time and that was the scenic design by Curtis Phillips. It was cute and effective while also being illogical. In the first act we are in Joan’s kitchen and the women have gathered for their weekly cooking club. The set looks very retro modern, the baffling thing is there is a refrigerator, oven, Countertops, but no stovetop, even though theoretically one of the characters boils water for the Jello salad. I noted it and thought that’s weird not to have added that. In Act II, again in Joan’s kitchen, which granted has been remodeled, we now have a stovetop on the counter thats been shifted slightly in the remodel, but is essentially the same counter. Why? But the bafflement in regards to the set doesn’t end there. When we entered the theater after stretching our legs during intermission, a couch, chair and rug had been added. After about five more minutes of no activity on stage, when everyone has come back into the theater and the house lights have been dimmed, then the stage hands come out and move the kitchen set a round while we sit watching them. They move the back side portions of the set half offstage leaving the wall portion with the oven in it half onstage and half off. It felt to us in the audience that the stage hands had forgotten to make all the changes during intermission and then they couldn’t quite get the set all the way off stage. Looking back it seemed to foreshadow the second act as being half assed in general. Now with the back of the set moved away the curtain drops and we get to see the band and they have 60’s style Laugh-In flowers around them, which was a neat touch. But these oddities just added to the sense of an aimless production. The Director is Laura Tahja Johnson whose work I have admired in the past and I know I will again, but I think the material let her down as it did the cast.
A Taste of Things to Come runs through February 9th at Lyric Arts in Anoka. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.lyricarts.org/taste-of-things
Tired of missing reviews from The Stages of MN? Do you find yourself left out when all your friends are talking about that great new play that you didn’t even know about? Never fear, that need never happen again. Now you too can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. No more hoping the algorithm works in your favor and you actually see a post on facebook or Instagram. No relying on so-called friends to tip you to the best shows in town. 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/ from time to time.
But that’s not all! Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I am also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.
As I close the books on 2024 I always like to look back and reflect on the shows I saw and the accomplishments of this site. Before I look at my favorite shows of the year I want to look at The Stages of MN itself. In April of this year I ruptured the bicep of my right (dominant) arm. This made me unable to type out my reviews and forced me to adopt for the short term voice recognition software in order to continue writing. That was a difficult adjustment as verbally is not the way I process what I want to write. It also required a lot of one handed manual corrections. It is not a tool I utilized any longer than I had too. But one good thing did come from that period. Out of necessity the reviews got shorter, and as a result probably more readable. I have for the most part tried to maintain the more reader friendly length of reviews and I think that is ultimately a good thing. I get a little more sleep, readers are more likely to read the entire review. Perhaps the only folks that miss out at times are the technical Theater departments. Theirs are the contributions most often left out or at least shortened, to be honest they are also the areas most difficult to write about meaningfully. When it works I frequently don’t notice, when it’s great I still call it out, when it’s bad I don’t dwell on it. Overall, I think this has been an improvement and I hope you agree.
Reflecting that adjustment to word count, in 2024 I posted 147 blog entries compared to 146 in 2023. The word count in 2024 is 18,000 less words than 2023. Views to The Stages of MN in 2024 grew by 19,000 over the views in 2023. So the site continues to grow steadily which means more people are seeing the reviews which hopefully means more people are getting out to see live theater. Readers can help the site grow by making sure you are following The Stages of MN on Facebook and Instagram. When you see a review you like, like it, when you see one you love share it. Encourage friends to follow as well, the more visibility, the further the reach, the more likely someone who isn’t a regular theatergoer will see a post and hopefully be inspired to check out a show. Creating new audiences for live theater needs to be the objective of anyone in theater or in love with theater. The second objective is to create or promote great theater. Which will hopefully help realize goal three which is to turn occasional theatergoers into regular theatergoers. I’m trying to do my part, I saw more theater this year that any year previous. I saw 190 shows in 2023 compared to 200 in 2024. I wrote reviews of 192 separate productions. I made my first trip to New York City seeing three shows as well as being there for the NYC debut of local Jazz vocalist and actor Leslie Vincent. While I didn’t write reviews of those shows I do feel that the experience benefits you faithful readers as it expands my knowledge and experience of the theater world.
The Best of 2024
Let’s start with Broadway alone because they were all great and if I lumped them in with touring shows as I first planned too, I’d only have 2 slots left for the touring shows.
King Lear (NYC): This was the highlight of my year and the whole reason I finally made it to NYC. Seeing one of my favorite Actor/Director/Writers Kenneth Branagh perform live was a dream come true and he did not disappoint.
The Outsiders: A New Musical (NYC): This was an amazing adaptation of the classic young adult novel. The production design and choreography were unbelievable. I cannot wait for a touring production of this show so I can compare and share with you all.
Suff: The Musical (NYC): This was an incredibly inspirational show that I saw days before the 2024 Presidential election. It was a last blast of optimism and couldn’t have been more timely.
Touring shows, I saw 15 that qualify it that category in 2024 and the below were the top 5 in alphabetical order.
Back to the Future: The Musical (Orpheum Theatre): My favorite film at one time in my life, this one had an uphill battle to justify its existence and avoid negative comparisons. What it lacks in terms of great new songs it more than makes up for in stage magic. The best blending of practical effects and projection I’ve ever seen. I believed a DeLorean could fly.
Come From Away (Ordway Center for Performing Arts): This was my third time seeing Come From Away, it’s a top ten show for me.
Les Misérables (Orpheum Theatre): Third time for this show as well, but this one grows on me more and more. It’s gone from really good in my book to great over the course of my history with the play.
The Lion King (Orpheum Theatre): First time, I know WHAT?!?!?! it’s everything I’d heard it was, beautifully realized adaptation of the Disney film, with amazing production design.
Some Like It Hot (Orpheum Theatre): Maybe the best nonmusical film to musical stage show I’ve ever seen. Wonderful way to adapt a period piece in a way that reflects our modern attitudes. Great choreography, songs, and performances.
Top 5 locally produced musicals in alphabetical order.
McAdo (Gilbert & Sullivan Very Light Opera Company): I loved the design and original materials written for this hilarious updating of The Mikado. Stand out Comedic performance from Robert Brandt as well.
Rent (Artistry): This is a top 5 musical for me and Artistry took a show I know so well and successfully did some new things with it that really worked.
Scotland, PA (Theater Latté Da): Creative adaptation of a cult film adaptation of Macbeth set in a fast food restaurant. Great ensemble cast, that kept dropping like flies but the understudies were brilliant. Great stage magic as well especially the face in the deep fryer moment (now you are wishing you’d seen it aren’t you?).
The Sound of Music (Artistry): A favorite from childhood, this production wonderfully directed by Max Wojtanowicz with a vocally pure performance by Sheena Janson Kelley as Maria.
The Spitfire Grill (Ten Thousand Things): Amazing cast led by Katherine Fried who knocked me out of my seat with the first notes out of her mouth, more on her later. Honorable mention to St. Croix Festival Theatre for their production as well.
Top 5 locally produced Plays in alphabetical order.
Georgiana & Kitty: Christmas at Pemberley (Lyric Arts): I love love love these Christmas at Pemberley plays. Lyric Arts’ production was as good as the Jungle production two years ago. Amazing cast including the yet to make a wrong move Noah Hynick, more on him as well later. First let me say that if you ever see there is a production of one of the three Christmas at Pemberley plays running near you, just go, they are all brilliantly written. Second, let me reiterate my wish that some theater company mount all three plays in Rep some November/December period. It would be a massive undertaking so The Guthrie is probably the best bet, but I don’t see them tackling it, so maybe Park Square, Theater Latté Da, Jungle Theater, or Lyric Arts.
Hamlet (The Great River Shakespeare Festival): This was the best production of Hamlet I’ve ever seen. In a space that doesn’t allow for a lot in the way of production design Director Doug Scholz-Carlson used darkness particularly effectively makeing the supernatural aspects of the play take on a very visceral and chilling feel.
Ironbound (Frank Theatre) Everything about this production floored me but most of all was the performance of Brittany D. Parker in the lead role. It was the best performance I saw all year and I sure hope we see more of her in 2025.
The Lehman Trilogy (Guthrie): This three and a half hour play performed by three actors playing multiple characters across several generations,telling the story of the rise and fall of real life financial company Lehman Brothers had tedious written all over it. And then it was brilliant in every aspect, riveting, educational, funny, tragic, epic.
Stones in His Pockets (Theater Latté Da): A two actor show with Tom Reed and Reed Sigmund each playing a dozen or so characters. Very funny, and a great showcase for two very talented performers.
Every year I add a few performers to my list of “Must See” Actors, Dancers, Singers that I come across throughout the year that I either hadn’t seen before or that really drew my attention that year. They aren’t always new to me, but they did something that made me take notice and say, let’s keep an eye on that one. This year I have four names that I have added to the list that already includes Tyler Michaels King, Max Wojtanowicz, Joy Dolo, Shanan Custer, Daniel Petzold, Em Rosenberg, Jeffrey Nolan, Allison Vincent, and Brendan Nelson Finn to name a few.
First up is Brittany D. Parker whom I believe I’ve only ever seen in one production and that was Ironbound this year from Frank Theatre.
“Brittany D. Parker plays Darja, I hadn’t expected to see someone “new” to me so early in 2024 that blew my socks off through my shoes and up over the audience so that I had to spend 10 minutes after the performance looking around the auditorium for them. If I’ve seen her before and have just forgotten, I apologize. If she just hasn’t been performing much I’d like to know why the hell not? Accent, perfect. Timing, perfect. Emotional openness, I’ll say. There isn’t a moment in the play that Parker doesn’t make what feels like the only possible performance choice and it’s mesmerizing. Never have I seen a performer bring to life a character so strong and in control that you know she can take care of herself, and it makes you want to take care of her. Before I move onto the rest of the cast I just want to welcome Brittany D. Parker onto the list of performers that I will try and see everything they do going forward. I know we just announced the winners of the TCTB Awards last week, but the competition just kicked into high gear for 2024’s best performance and Parker’s is going to be a tough one to top.”
From my review of Ironbound 1/20/2024
Second up is Katherine Fried whose performances in The Spitfire Grill from Ten Thousand Things came out of nowhere and gave me goosebumps. She followed that up with a turn in the wildly creative Scotland, PA at Theater Latté Da.
“When Katherine Fried who plays Percy begins to sing “A Ring Around the Moon” from her prison cell at the opening of the play, you know you’re in for something special. Fried’s voice is stunning as is every aspect of her performance.”
From my review of The Spitfire Grill 5/5/2024
“The leads are Will Dusek who recently played Frankie Valli in Jersey Boys as Mac, and his girlfriend Pat is played by Katherine Fried who absolutely bowled me over last spring as Percy in The Spitfire Grill. They both give their all again here and besides sounding great they bring the desperation and guilt to life quite believably.”
From my review of Scotland, PA 10/4/2024
Third on the list is Grace Hillmyer who I saw in Kinky Boots at Lyric Arts and then again at the end of the year at the Jackdonkey Misfits Cabaret fundraiser.
“If there is a flaw with this show it’s in the script which should have given the character of Lauren, played by Hillmyer, more time. Hillmyer’s portrayal is so adorably quirky, everytime she gets the spotlight she sparkles but not in a flashy way it’s more of a twinkle. It’s hard to say what it is about the performance other than it’s great character work, it’s comedic, and vulnerable and undeniably endearing to the audience.”
From my review of Kinky Boots 7/12/2024
Last but by no means least is Noah Hynick who has been on my radar for a couple of years now, but this feels like the year he broke out. From Radiant Vermin to the same end of year Misfits Cabaret as I saw Miss Hillmyer in Hynick can no longer be ignored.
“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” … “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.”
From my review of Radiant Vermin 3/2/2024
“Hynick, who seems to be a strong component of the majority of Lyric Arts productions over the last few years plays Black Stache, the pirate villain of the piece. Hynick plays into the absurdity of scenes but also knows when to be the one who’s smarter than everyone else and sees how silly everyone is being.”
From my review of Peter and the Starcatcher 9/8/2024
“Noah Hynick, frankly I don’t think I’ve ever seen Hynick be anything but perfect in a role. I’m not sure how Lyric Arts seems to have him under exclusive contract, after a performance like this I ask myself again, why isn’t this guy cast in everything at the Guthrie. He is as gifted in his gestures and reactions as he is in his line reading choices. The first time I can remember coming across Mr. Hynick was in 2022 when he appeared in Miss Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley at Lyric Arts and since it feels like he’s been in most of Lyric Arts productions, his timing is unerring, and it’s time to officially add him to the must see list, though he was already there to be honest.”
From my review of Georgiana & Kitty Christmas at Pemberley 11/23/2024
It was another great year for theater and I’m looking forward to 2025, I hope you are as well. I write about theater and love it but I’m not a extrovert. That said, I do enjoy meeting readers and artists, so if you see me at the theater, please do stop over and say hi. Finally a note on Twin Cities Theater Chat (TCTC), the Twin Cities Theater Blogger (TCTB) podcast. Last spring our Producer got a day job and that put us in hiatus for a bit. It’s unclear at this time whether the podcast will start up again in the future or not. I’d appreciate, if you read this far, if folks would post a comment either here or in Facebook, or email me at robdunkelberger@thestagesofmn.com, or messenger my personal facebook account whether or not you are interested in a podcast on the Twin Cities theater scene. If there is enough of an interest and TCTC doesn’t come back I may explore the idea of creating one for The Stages of MN. Also the TCTB and or The Stages of Mn are always open to partnering Theaters to participate or facilitate pre and post show discussions or events. So if that is of interest reach out as well. Thanks as always for your continued support faithful readers, now in the immortal words of Carol Jackson “Go see a show!”
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