Machinal From Clevername Theatre Is a Successful Return to an Earlier Time in Many Ways

Machinal the new production by Clevername Theatre has the style and tone of a silent film. The set and prop designs by Connor McEvoy are a series of wooden furniture pieces that shift and fit together in new configurations like some bizarre jigsaw puzzle from the world of Dr. Caligari. Combined with the stylized performances of the cast the entire production seems based in a world of expressionism rather than reality which I absolutely loved about this show. The opening scene takes place in an office where the sound design by Alexander Gerchak combined with overlapping chatter of the workers creates an environment that is cacophonous. This places the audience in the position to empathize with the main characters state of mind. The play set in the 1920’s tells the story of a young woman who feels stifled by the world and trapped by the limited choices she has in life. In fact, she feels like there are no choices to be made when her boss proposes marriage, she wants to say no, but tells herself that all woman have to get married, and her Mother informs her love doesn’t enter into it. So she agrees, and the only ones more uncomfortable on her wedding night than her might just be the audience. It’s a masterfully performed and directed scene that plays upon our societal and personal experiences to a heartbreaking effect.

Front and center is the at times fragile and other times wondrous performance of Victoria Jones as the young woman. Jones manages to own the stage even as she appears to shrink from the light and tremble and every touch from the characters around her. Director Grace Barnstead has the entire cast on the same tonal discord, their performances don’t hold a mirror up to reality they hold a funhouse mirror up to a dream. Bruce Abas plays the husband as the type of man who assumes his wife only wants to hear about him and his same old jokes and turns of phrase. Kjer Whiting is wonderfully obtuse as the mother, only concerned with the day to day tasks and unable to comprehend or discuss anything emotional. Caulden Parkel is quite amusing playing, among other characters, the Doctor that delivered the young woman’s baby with a aspect of Groucho Marx. Boo Segersin is the nurse, who seems incapable of understanding what the young woman is feeling or to correct or disagree with the Doctor. It’s as if every character in the play were written by a stereotypical man but that of the young woman who is written by a woman who sees the way in which society, particularly in the early part of the twentieth century, stifled woman.

The play was written by Sophie Treadwell and was first produced in 1928 but it’s easy to see why Clevername Theatre chose to produce it. Under Barnstead’s direction in place, similar to their recent Minnesota Fringe Festival productions, in that it views a world we recognize but through a warped and surreal lens. Understand going in that this is a somewhat absurdist approach and you’ll get swept up in the chaos and over stimulation but find your anchor in the beautifully controlled performance of Victoria Jones. Machinal runs through June 2nd at the Center For Performing Arts in South Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://tix.gobo.show/events/event/bgxWGxsJuZKMAa7ScsxB

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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. 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/ . Now you too can be in the know about all the fabulous theater happening in and around the Twin Cities.

Apples in Winter Erases Theater and Creates a Reality at Gremlin Theatre

Angela Timberman Photo by Alyssa Kristine Photography.

A one handed play requires the very best performer to hold an audience’s attention for 90 minutes on their own. Gremlin Theatre is apparently aware of this and thus cast Angela Timberman who not only keeps our attention but keeps us utterly and completely enthralled. Apples in Winter by Jennifer Fawcett tells the story of Miriam who spends her time upon the stage making an apple pie. While preparing and baking the pie in full view of the audience she slowly reveals why she is making the pie. A slice of her apple pie is what her son has requested for his last meal before he is executed for a crime he committed 20 years ago. He was a drug addict, that isn’t an excuse for his actions, this story isn’t about him, it’s about Miriam. He has been incarcerated for 20 years for a crime he committed, what the play shows us is that his mother was essentially serving this sentence with him. It’s one of a parent’s worst nightmares, what do you do when your child has done something that many find unforgivable. We know how to grieve for the families of the victims, but how do we treat the family of the one who has killed someone else’s children? Fawcett’s play builds slowly and steadily from Miriam speaking to us about making pies to slowly revealing the details of where she is and why. It has been twenty years of routines and isolation and as her son approaches the end of his time, she is faced with losing her routines, and the toll his crimes have taken upon her.

Back to Angela Timberman, her performance as Miriam is like a masterclass in acting. Emotionally and technically flawless. There is a moment towards the end when Timberman feels sick and needs to sit down, but there are no chairs and so she finds herself on the floor. Let me be clear, I have seen Timberman perform multiple times, I know her on sight, and I know her to be an accomplished actor. In that moment when she sinks to the floor, I had to actually restrain myself from going to her and putting my arms around her. I wasn’t seeing Angela Timberman anymore, I was seeing Miriam. She is going through all the stages of someone who has loved someone with addiction issues goes through. She was trying to be the caregiver, she was blaming herself, and ultimately she was angry about the lies and deceit and pain she had been put through. And in that moment I wanted to go to her and tell her it wasn’t her fault and hold her for a moment, so she had a minute when she didn’t feel like she had to hold up the world on her own. The kicker is that on top of giving such a convincing and emotional performance, she made a pie, without a recipe! I can’t make a dish I’ve made dozens of times without referring to the recipe a couple of times, let alone monologue a script and give a performance so good that you make an experienced theatergoer forget they are in a theater watching a performance.

The production is well directed by Brian Balcom whose staging allows us to slowly get absorbed into the action, which is small and contained drawing us in. Later moments of explosive emotion are all the more powerful because we were initially drawn into the quiet matter of fact manner of the pie making. The set and lighting design by Carl Schoenborn looks like an institutional kitchen and it is lit that way which really help to remove any sense of theatricality and achieve a sense of realism, that causes reviewers to momentarily forget they are part of an audience. As do the costume and props designed by Sarah Bauer, who choses Timberman’s costume such that we immediately feel we know her type, she is every middle aged mother or young grandmother. Which is a reminder that these horrible things can happen to anyone, anyones child can become an addict. It also helps us to put ourselves in her place and empathize with the impossibility of her position. I also want to mention the sound design by Montana Johnson, which is minimal, but plays a very important role when it comes to Miriam’s recounting of the night her son committed the crime for which he has been condemned. It’s handled extremely effectively signifying the way the sound of rain plays a particularly vivid role in Miriam’s memory of the night, almost the way a smell will sometimes bring back a certain memory.

Apples in Winter runs through April 7th at the Gremlin Theater in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://gremlintheatre.org/apples-in-winter/

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 never has to 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. 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/ . Now you too can be in the know about all the fabulous theater happening in and around the Twin Cities.

A Unique Assignment at History Theatre Humanizes the Past Forging a Greater Understanding of a Dark Period in Our History

Pearce Bunting, Kevin Fanshaw, James A. Williams Photo by Rick Spaulding

Presently we are faced with a great and grave racial problem in our country. It points deep in many directions. I feel that it is essential that we solve this problem, if America is to hold the place among nations that it deserves.

James Meredith in a letter to Lt. Gallagher from A Unique Assignment by Harrison David Rivers

The excerpt from the script of A Unique Assignment by Harrison David Rivers may or may not be based on a real letter, I suspect it is. If so, it was a letter written in either 1962 or 1963, but it feels like it could have been written today. One of the important things about History is to remind of where we were and how far we have come. Sometimes I despair at the state of our country and I wonder how we came to a place where ignorance is so prevalent. Then, I see a play like A Unique Assignment, and I realize we have always been in that place, we just cycle through periods when hatred and small mindedness are emboldened. A period of silent stupidity began to dawn in 1962 when, as noted in the Playbill, President John F. Kennedy had to mobilize: “31,000 American servicemen were required to quell the violence – the largest ever invocation of the Insurrection Act of 1807.” In 2021, at the urging of President Donald Trump, another insurrection completed the journey of the previous four years to a new era of open intolerance and ignorance. The play illuminates an event in history that I was shamefully under informed about, it also contributes to this writers growing perception of the what life was like for a fellow human of a different skin color just 60 years ago. Something I will never be able to fully comprehend, but must continue to strive to increase my understanding. With this work as with so many others before it, History Theatre continues to facilitate that growth through their powerful telling of the stories of those who lived through the dates and places that shaped our world.

The History Theatre’s new play tells the true story of Lt. Henry T. Gallagher who was in charge of security for James Meredith. Meredith was trying to exercise his constitutional right to enroll in and attend the University of Mississippi, his attempt to integrate the Ole Miss resulted in a riot and threats of violence against Meredith and the US Marshals assigned to protect him. The story is told in flashback by Gallagher at the age of 73 played by Pearce Bunting who shares the stage with Kevin Fanshaw playing Gallagher aged 23. James A. Williams plays James Meredith as well as other ensemble characters, the cast is rounded out by Kevin Brown Jr. who plays a multitude of characters. Bunting and Fanshaw do a nice job of creating connection between the versions of Gallagher separated by 50 years. Rivers script allows for moments of humor to create a connection between the character and the audience, he doesn’t shy away from having Gallagher detail his missteps, and even finds a little Minnesotan humor. Bunting is open and able to laugh at his younger self, Fanshaw gives us those moments in a way that allows us to laugh but also relate, which is key to our identifying with the character. Williams as James Meredith in contrast is given little in the way of humor, instead he has a wisdom and gravitas that puts his character at the moral center of the story. Gallagher becomes our stand in, an example of how a cross between how we hope we would respond and how we suspect we would, Meredith is our intellect and our ideals. Williams is excellent as Meredith, he portrays him with a calmness that signifies someone who knows what is right and has accepted the costs associated with doing it. Williams ensemble roles give him the chance at some moments of humor as well, he gets to do a little of everything and he does it all brilliantly. Kevin Brown Jr. plays a lot of different roles and proves a versatile actor, both with serious characters and the more comical. My favorite was his portrayal of a member of the Navy who’s basically kidnapped by Gallagher to help them find their way to the University of Mississippi.

The play is directed by Richard D. Thompson the new Artistic Director of History Theatre. Thompson knows that when you have a memory play with a cast of four, two of whom will be playing multiple characters, that realism takes a backseat to telling a story in a clear and understandable way. He keeps the set design by Ursula K. Bowden simple with angled black flats on which images can be projected to convey visual cues to locations and events. A few rectangular boxes can be shifted around to stand in for counters, desks, bunks, and jeeps. Thompson understands that when you have actors changing characters from one moment to the next that you need to let go of the idea of trying to create realism with sets and costumes, you focus on the story, the characterizations and let simple shapes and images stand in for concrete places and objects. If the play works, which this one most certainly does, less is more, we are happy to accept the same actor in multiple roles when lens we are seeing them through is one of minimalism and suggestion rather than attempted realism and intricate details. There were some nice lighting moments from Lighting Designer Kurt Jung, one involving photographers flashbulbs was a really effective touch.

A Unique Assignment runs through April 7th at History Theatre in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.historytheatre.com/2023-2024/unique-assignment

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 never has to 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. 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/ . Now you too can be in the know about all the fabulous theater happening in and around the Twin Cities.

FETAL, a Brilliant Play That Traffics in Empathy From Frank Theatre

Carolyn Pool, Kate Beahen, Julia Valen, and Elena Yazzie Photo by Tony Nelson

FETAL the play by Trista Baldwin that had its world premiere last fall was such a hit that Frank Theatre is remounting it a mere three months after it closed. I wasn’t able to catch the initial run, m’colleague over at Cherry and Spoon had it on her list of the best plays in 2023, with that and after going gaga over Frank Theatre’s production of Ironbound in January, I was very excited to learn they were remounting FETAL and there was no chance I’d let it slip by a second time. The show runs through March 10th, but already has some sold out performances coming up, don’t let your chance to see this powerful and important work pass you by. Baldwin’s play is set in a clinic in Texas that provides legal abortions to women two days a week. We meet three woman that represent different points on the spectrum of age, situation, and believe systems. While each woman’s story is unique, these characters are not meant to represent all woman, but they are intended to give us a look into the complexities of the issues surrounding a woman’s right to choose and to have power over her body and health. FETAL is what I call an issue play, it’s goal isn’t to simply entertain you, it has a message it wants to relay to you. It’s also the best kind of issue play, it doesn’t simply preach at you, it isn’t trying to win you over with arguments and facts to its point of view. It’s doing what great art does, creates empathy, and it’s doing it in the most effective way there is by reducing it’s beliefs not to an argument, but to a person. If Baldwin simply had her characters tell you that a woman should have the right to say what happens with her body, she would fail in her goal. What she does, and it’s why the play succeeds, she shares her characters stories. It is through the personal that we gain understanding of others not through facts and figures, Data can open our eyes, but stories open our hearts. The other character in the play works at the clinic, she’s not a Nurse or a Doctor but there to do patient intake and go over the state required information that’s intended to scare people out of having an abortion. That’s her job function, but she’s really there to receive their stories, and carry them once they leave so they don’t have too.

The characters have names in the program but they are never used in the play, instead the three woman are given numbers to protect their identities. This may be to mirror the actual procedures on clinics in Texas or it could be to remove one layer between the characters and the audience. Without names they are even easier to see as yourself or others in your life. What has been used at times to stifle individuality in other real and artistic endeavors, here is used to turn the individual into anyone, it’s an effective reversal that like everything in this play works to connect us to the characters. The women are played by Elana Yazzie, Julia Valen, and Carolyn Pool, the clinic employee is played by Kate Beahen. Sometimes after a show on the car ride home we play a game called who was your favorite, sometimes it’s more of the, who gave the best performance variation. Tonight two responses came to mind. Firstly, no one was better than anyone else, they were all perfect for the role they were playing. The favorite? Well, that is about who you identify with the most and that will vary from audience member to audience member. Secondly, not only couldn’t you say anyone was better than the others, but when everyone is this good, and the story is so much about supporting each other, the thought of judging them against each other felt very wrong. They all made each other better, there was a sense that while the characters were supporting each other, so were the performers. It felt honest, it was simply woman supporting women in every way, beautiful.

A script that creates empathy in a way that will make audiences, who are on board with the playwrights beliefs, think about what they have seen. Many people seem to think that the two sides of this argument are people who don’t want women to have abortions and people who want women to have abortions, but that isn’t it at all. The two sides are those who want to control what other people do and those who think everyone has the right to decide for themselves. So those who want to control others and those who want the right to exercise the free will that God gave us. With a script this good and a cast so so so perfect and brilliant, it would be easy to wrap up this review and feel like I’d done my hobby. But I would be forgetting to acknowledge the incredible work of several other key players in this production. Wendy Knox who is becoming one of my favorite local Directors is batting a thousand. The way she utilizes the wonderful lighting design of Tony Stoeri to highlight each character when it is their turn to share their story. The way she has the characters interacting, with themselves arguing their emotions with their reason through the surrogate of Beahen’s character. The set design by Rick Polenek which turns the Frank Theatre’s Studio (basically their rehearsal space) into a very realistic waiting room of a clinic. The sound design by Dan Dukich is perfectly balanced, it doesn’t ever drown out the performers but also never fully lets us forget, that outside the building, are protesters spewing the hateful rhetoric that Jesus wants them to shout at women who are already having a very difficult time. Last, but not least is Kathy Kohl whose costumes fit these characters perfectly and I’m certain were of great use to the performers in finding their characters. Clothes give the audience an idea of who the characters are but they also help the actors to find who they are as well.

FETAL runs through March 10th at the Frank Theatre Studio for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://franktheatre.org/events/fetal-trista-baldwin/

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.

IRONBOUND a Engrossing new Production From Frank Theatre at Gremlin Theatre in St. Paul

Carl Schoenborn, Benjamin Dutcher, Jack Bonko, and Brittany D. Parker     Photo by Tony Nelson

I believe this was my second experience with Frank Theatre, the first was in the nascent day of The Stages of MN with a powerful drama called Convert about British colonialism in South Africa. Here IRONBOUND is another excellent example of thought provoking theater that asks us to witness and gain understanding of the “other”. In this case, a Polish immigrant named Darja whose story we witness over the course of about 20 years. Told as a non-chronological narrative we open and end with her in 2014 in between we make stops at in the mid 1990’s and 2000’s. Through these time jumps we witness what life has dealt Darja and it informs her actions and decisions in the 2014 segments. Darja’s life has taught her to be practical about things because at first we get the impression that life is a transaction to her. As the story plays out, we see the dreams she has slip away and the reality of living in a country with all of the advantages when you are not the one who can take advantage of them. Survival depends on being practical, is something she learned at 20 when a reality came and she made the decision to stop dreaming for what she wanted but instead for what she needed. Now in her early 40’s a relationship has devolved into a transaction rather than love. Something I think that happens to some extent to all of us, the idealism of our youth does give way to an understanding as we get older that we adjust our thinking and our planning to not only include our feelings but also our needs. Needs for comfort, security, companionship, hopefully most of us have the means at that point in our lives so that Darja’s approach seems a little heartbreaking. If it sounds like a downer it isn’t, it’s certainly a little bittersweet, but the script by Martyna Majok is also darkly funny.

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. I don’t mean to short change the rest of the cast who is also very good. Carl Schoenborn, who according to the program spends most of his time backstage instead of in front of the audience, is Darja’s current boyfriend Tommy, who has a problem with fidelity. Schoenborn is wonderfully weak and weasley and brings a rough sloppy charm to a character that could be one note, is anything but. He comes off as utterly flawed, unsure, and completely real. In a black and white world he sucks, but Schoenborn brings all the crayon colors so he’s not the worst thing that could happen to Darja in the real world where we are all doing the best we can. I hope to see Schoenborn getting out from behind the curtains more often, he’s very welcome. Benjamin Dutcher, whom is what my wife refers to as one of her All is Calm boys, takes on his first play. We’ve known him from operas and musicals for years, and I was surprised to learn this is his first straight play, which I assume is a comment on it being non music based not a comment on it’s sexual orientation. He’s wonderful as Darja’s first husband Maks, the give and take between Dutcher and Parker sells the loving relationship and adds to the bittersweet nature of the its fate. Finally, Jack Bonko plays a highschool kid that Darja encounters on a dark night in 2006. The encounter hints at the fact that whomever we are, we have problems, but also highlights the disparity between the 34 year old immigrant who was preparing to sleep on the street and a high school junior who has the means to offer her food and money for a hotel room. Bonko plays the teen with a streetsmart style, he’s funny and tragic, but also offers a glimpse of human kindness that Darja is sorely in need of being reminded exists.

The play is directed by Frank Theatre Founder and Artistic Director Wendy Knox who has made IRONBOUND the first must see production of 2024. I often find myself at a loss after a production to recall much of the lighting and sound design of a production, that is not the case here. Tony Stoeri’s lighting is creative and adds both realism and a dreamlike quality depending on the scene. There are several scenes where headlights come into play and Stoeri’s solution sells the effect completely. Likewise while most of the time jumps happen as a blackout and fade up after some costume changes, there is a moment towards the end when we get a flashback that is actually more like a memory which the lighting is our signal that this one is different, and it’s perfectly clear to us in that moment what is happening thanks to Stoeri’s work. The soundscape created by Dan Dukich envelopes us into the city streets of New Jersey throughout, but there is also fine detail audio work such as car locks and bus sounds. Along with Set Designer Joes Stanley the technical crew has created a world we recognize as our own and which feels authentic and the perfect atmosphere for the story being told.

IRONBOUND runs through February 11th at the Gremlin theatre in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://franktheatre.org/events/ironbound/

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.

The Seagull a New Adaptation of the Chekov Classic at Theatre in the Round Players

Photo by Anya Magnuson

Welcome faithful readers to the first proper play review of 2024. As part of my 2024 New Year’s resolutions I am going to try and streamline my reviews. Hopefully allowing me a better blog/life balance and a more digestible read for yourselves. This will be an ongoing process and I welcome your reactions either in comments or feel free to email me at robdunkelberger@thestagesofmn.com.

Theatre in the Round Players has begun the new year tackling a classic with a new adaptation of Anton Chekov’s The Seagull. Having come to seriously intense theatergoing rather late in life, I always appreciate when a theatre produces classic plays, the ones everyone has heard of but that they maybe haven’t seen. Since Chekov wrote in Russian, every production I’ll ever see will be a translation or adaptation. Craig Johnson who has written and directed this adaptation for Theatre in the Round states that his watchwords during the process were “Faithful and Fresh”. Johnson is enormously successful in accomplishing this goal creating a production that remains true to Chekov’s 138 year old play while still making it relevant to today’s audiences. This does not feel like a dusty old classic but a reflection on the questions we still grapple with today. The desire to create, the talent to create, the need to be loved, and the power love holds over us. Johnson’s direction adheres to chekov’s original intentions in having some of the more sensational moments happen off stage or indeed in one case between acts. The set design by Michael Hoover is another example of the way in which Theatre in the Round has really stepped up their game in recent years. Embracing the arena and allowing design aspects to bleed off the stage and into the seats with Birch tree trunks and a neighboring estate in the distance.

The plot is like a modern soap opera not in quality but in the complexity of the melodrama. Set in the country estate of the sisters Irina Arkadina a successful actress and her ailing sister Petra. The first portion of the play taking place over a short visit by Irina and her lover Trigorin and the second part about two years later. There are ten main characters in the ensemble and nearly everyone of them is in love with someone who is in love with someone else. The unrequited love does not restrict itself to that of the romantic bend but also the familial. Ultimately, it’s a tragic tale, but one told with a surprising amount of humor. Chekov’s gift is his understanding of humanity and insights into the patterns and neurosis that we are subject to. One of the great scenes is the discussion between the successful writer Trigorin and Nina who wants to be an actress in which Trigorian talks about being an artist in a way that modern young artists will find familiar. It speaks to how not so very different we are today than we were over 100 years ago.

Performances are excellant making every character feel as if they have their own lives beyond the part they play in the plot. Colleen Hennen as Irina is a standout, playing the narcissistic actress perfectly and providing a heartbreaking final beat to the play. Berto Borroto as Konstantin shows the greatest change over the arc of the play. Allowing us to see, through his body language, the maturity that has come over the passage of time. Amy Eckberg as Nina gets a wonderful scene in Act IV where she conveys the emotional toll that last two years have had upon her. Kaleb Baker is wonderfully cast as Trigorin, he does a wonderful job describing the conflicts, frustrations, and inspirations of being an artist. I also want to highlight a couple of supporting parts, firstly Matt Wall is Medvedenko is the just happy to be noticed school teacher in love with Masha the daughter of the estate manager. He’s wonderfully comic in the way he seems to apologize for existing. The Assistant Director Rebecca Wickert who due to an illness in the cast had to perform the role of Masha, does an excellent job stepping in and plays Masha in a way that makes her relatable to generations who have grown up with the goth girl template. Finally, in a fairly small role David Coral plays Dr. Dorn who brings a kindness and humanity and understanding amongst a sea of characters that seem at the mercy of their own neurosis. The script calls for him to be encouraging of Konstantin, and sensitive to Irina, but Coral’s performance makes those moments ring of true compassion.

The Seagull runs through February 4th at Theatre in the Round for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatreintheround.org/home/season-placeholder/72nd-season/seagull/

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