The Fight Has Begun. Support Yellow Tree Theatre

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!

https://ci.ovationtix.com/35626/store/donations/39012

Need ideas of what to see?

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.

Hadestown Heats up The Orpheum Theatre Again!

Megan Colton (Eurydice), Jaylon C. Crump (Hermes), Bryan Munar (Orpheus), and Hadestown North American Touring Company, 2024. Photo by: Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade.

Hadestown takes a couple of ancient mythological tales from over 2,000 years ago and creates a wholly original piece of musical theatre. It’s easy to see why it took home eight Tony Awards in 2019 including Best New Musical. It’s one of those shows that feels like it’s doing something new and that’s always exciting. The songs are a mixture of blues and folk with hints of industrial opera and musical theatre as channelled through the early 20th century. It sounds completely unique without sounding alien. The music, lyrics, and book are all by Anais Mitchell who has found a sound that perfectly matches the story and design of the production. If you didn’t catch Hadestown when it came through in 2022, I hope you have tickets already, if not get them while there are still a few left. It’s a stunner of a show with a lived in look that dazzles with the change of a lighting cue.

Hadestown is a story that is told by Hermes, a story he has told before and a story he will tell again. It starts with Orpheus, a poor boy, but he has a gift to give. A song that will make you see the world as it could be, rather than as it is. It’s about a girl, Eurydice, who comes to town and has nothing but falls in love with the boy. It’s also about the God Hades and his wife Persephone, who spends half her time in Hadestown and half in the upper world where she came from. Hades rules the underworld represented as an industrial factory where they build “the wall”. After Hades and Persephone have a fight, he heads to the above world and finds Eurydice, who is cold and hungry, and asks her to come to Hadestown where she will be warm and fed. Egged on by the Fates, she falls for it and gets a ticket on the train to hell. When Orpheus learns that Eurydice has gone to Hadestown, he goes there to find her to bring her home. But Hades is not in the habit of letting people go once they have signed a contract with him.

The roles of Orpheus and Eurydice were performed by Bryan Munar and Megan Colton and unfortunately they are not evenly matched. Colton is fantastic as Eurydice soulful and compelling in songs like “All I’ve Ever Known“. The role of Orpheus I noted in my previous review requires someone with the range of Frankie Valli, unfortunately Munar doesn’t quite have the range, when he goes to the upper registers there’s no power behind it. Munar’s vocals are impressive when it gets down into his comfort zone, but his acting is flat and even his body movements seem devoid of any emotion or tension. In the role of our narrator Hermes is Jaylon C. Crump who has style and sass and everything you want in the role, he was a crowd favorite. Nickolaus Colon and Namisa Mdlalose Bizana play Hades and Persephone, Colon’s deep rich voice is thrilling as the King of the Underworld. Bizana seemed a little flat in the first Act but after intermission she turned the tables and the dance she and Colon do to Orpheus’ song is enchanting. Several big moments to shine, both are top notch vocalists. Scenic Design by Rachel Nauck, Costume Design by Michael Krass and Lighting Design by Bradley King all play crucial roles. The production itself is really well done with all the departments clicking to create a unified whole.

I was talking with M’Colleague Jill, from Cherry and Spoon (if you don’t follow her for her reviews you should http://www.cherryandspoon.com/) and we were commenting on how it feels like everything we see lately seems to reflect the world we find ourselves in no matter when it was written. Hadestown began its theatrical life back in 2006 but check out these lyrics from the song “Why We Build the Wall” sung by Hades the greek, equivalent you might say of Satan.

Because we have and they have not
Because they want what we have got
The enemy is poverty
And the wall keeps out the enemy
And we build the wall to keep us free
That’s why we build the wall
We build the wall to keep us free

“Why We Build the Wall” by Anaïs Mitchell

It’s hard not to view Hades as a certain political figure with his wall meant to distract preying on the unfortunate using fear to get them to act against their own best interests. Hadestown runs through February 16th at the Orpheum Theatre in Minneapolis for more information and to purchase any remaining tickets go to. https://hennepinarts.org/events/hadestown-2025

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.

The Ostentatious Outlaws of Neehai Valley or Why I Love Theater so Damn Much

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.

Grease is the Joyous Final Word of Michael Brindisi at Chanhassen Dinner Theatres

Kasano Mwanza (Teen Angel) Katemarie Andrews (Frenchie) Ensemble Photo by Dan Norman 2025

Grease is a musical I’ve seemingly known all my life. I saw the famous film adaptation in the theater at age six, and watched it constantly on cable and VHS over the next decade. I was even in my high school production as a member of the ensemble. Grease and a healthy dose of being my father’s son contributed to my love of the sounds of the 1950’s and 60’s. Grease in the original nostalgia musical, on the surface it’s a love story between Danny and Sandy but it’s really a love story between the audience and the 1950’s. This isn’t Shakespeare in fact if I wasn’t so familiar with the plot I might be confused as to whether there really is a love story between Danny and Sandy. But you know what? That doesn’t matter, it’s all just an excuse to perform a bunch of 1950’s song pastiches. You had me at 1950’s songs. Grease is pure fun distilled into a idealized version of a simpler time. It’s the escapist entertainment that we all need right now. Do yourself a favor and take a trip to the past for a rockin’ good time.

Grease is jam packed with great songs, a couple of which are favorites that never made it to the film “Freddy My Love”, which I still find myself singing from time to time and “Mooning” which gets a great performance in this production. It also wisely imports three of the songs that were unique to the film version “Hopelessly Devoted to You“, “You’re the One That I Want“, and “Grease is the Word“. The latter is used as an encore after the cast has taken their bows and features Kasano Mwanza who plays Teen Angel. When asked who was their favorite, everyone in the theater would likely say Kasano Mwanza. His performance Of “Beauty School Dropout” is the showstopper! Mwanza holds the entire theater captive to his entrancing voice and magnetic stage presence. Always amazes me when five years in, I’m still coming across talents like this that have been around “but I never heard them singing” (The Music Man was another childhood favorite). The entire cast is solid, Sam Stoll makes a great Danny, but isn’t quite matched by Dayle Theisen’s Sandy. There are some real standouts in the Pink Ladies and the Burger Palace Boys. Anna Hashizume is spectacular in the role of Rizzo, she steals the spotlight in every scene she’s in, She plays Rizzo with a tough exterior taking no crap from anyone, making her vulnerability during “There Are Worse Things I could Do“, all the more effecting. She also has one of the best voices in the company. The last actor I want to single out is Evan Tyler Wilson, not just because he’s a magnificent singer and his performance as Roger, particularly in “Mooning” is a lot of fun. But also because my wife would kill me if I didn’t, she loooooves him!

As always the case at Chanhassen, the band sounds great under the direction of Andy Kust. Nayna Ramey’s set design feels like a 50’s inspired animation background and set the tone for this trip down memory lane. They even have a working Greased Lightning car that drives on and off stage a few times. Sue Ellen Berger’s lighting design deserves a shout out as there are several queues that help focus the audience where they need to be looking when there is a stage full of activity. Rich Hamson’s costumes perfectly represent the time period without solely relying of the standard jeans, white t-shirt, and leather jacket. His Teen Angel outfit is fantastic and works beautifully with the choruses pink outfits. Highest praise goes to Tamara Kangas Erickson’s choreography. Wow moments occur throughout, but especially during “Greased Lightnin“, “We Go Together“, and “Born to Hand-Jive“. Including a nice variation on the traditional kickline.

It wouldn’t feel right to end my review without noting the untimely loss of longtime Chanhassen Dinner Theatres Artistic Director and co-owner Michael Brindisi who passed away suddenly on February 5th. I had the honor to conduct a talkback with Michael and members of the cast after a production of The Prom in 2023. It was, and will always be a highlight of my life as a Theater Blogger. Before a production either of Jersey Boys or Beautiful, I stopped by Michaels table and we reminicesed about that event and I was touched to hear that it was a special memory for him as well. Michael has left us one final gift with his direction of Grease. It was a show that meant a lot to him, and that comes through in the pure fun and joy of this production. Michael didn’t know this would be his last show, but it seems like an appropriate bookend to his long and influental career. You’d be hard pressed to find anyone who’s been in the Twin Cities Theater Community for long who hasn’t felt the impact of Michael Brindisi. To many of us, Michael was synonymous with Chanhassen Dinner Theatres. Michael is gone, but his presence will be felt for years to come in the continued work at CDT and in the performances of the artists he directed and cheered for.

Grease runs through October fourth at Chanhassen Dinner Theatres. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://chanhassendt.com/grease/

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.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is Wildly Entertaining at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis

Justin Withers (Demetrius), John Catron (Oberon), Royer Bockus (Helena), Jimmy Kieffer
(Puck), Jonathan Luke Stevens (Lysander). Photo by Dan Norman

Faithful readers will know that I’m very much a Shakespeare enthusiast. How then to explain that I’ve never seen a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream? I can make no sense of it and am grateful to have finally corrected that shameful omittance. I saw the 1999 film version starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Kevin Kline, but to be honest, it made little impression as nearly everything that happened on stage opening night was a revelation to me. Of course everything about this production is a revelation thanks to an incredible cast and Joseph Haj’s brilliant direction. The contributions of Composer/Musician Jack Herrick, who performs onstage during the production, cannot be overstated. Herrick and Haj have transformed the play into something approaching a musical, the music is so integral to the show. It’s a production that is spectacularly creative and endlessly surprising. I feel like I can count on the fingers of my two hands the number of shows that I have found myself laughing out loud to for extended periods, this one goes on the list. It’s a perfect first Shakespeare play for the uninitiated or those who may have never found a production of the Bard’s work that connected with them. It’s universal in its appeal as laughter, love, and music speak to all of us. While nothing is likely to surpass the extraordinary experience that was The History plays last season, this is the best single Shakespeare production I’ve seen at the Guthrie, and perhaps ever.

Haj opens the play with Royer Bockus, who plays Helena, singing a little and then interacting directly with the audience. At first this seemed a little cute but unnecessary given the two and a half hour runtime, but as with everything in the show it proved to have been worth it in the end (there’s a double meaning in that). In some ways A Midsummer Night’s Dream is like many of Shakespeare’s comedies with lovers loving those who don’t love them, and a trick by which lovers are deceived. But no twins or shipwrecks this time. Theseus, a Duke of Athens, and Hippolyta, the Queen of the Amazons, are to be married in four days but the action of the play revolves mostly around other characters. As if the play itself is like the dream by which Hippolyta says the time will pass. Hermia is in love with Lysander, but Hermia’s Father demands she marry Demetrius whom she doesn’t love, but loves her. Helena, Hermia’s friend, loves Demetrius, but he doesn’t love her. It’s decreed by Athens law that if Hermia refuses to marry, per her father’s wishes, she must be either put to death or live a celibate life as a nun. Lysander and Hermia plan to meet in the forest and elope together, a plan they share with Helena. Helena tells Demetrius, hoping to gain his love. But as they search the forest for the lovers, he states over and over again that he does not and will not ever love her. This is overheard by Oberon, the King of the fairies, who looking to punish his queen Titania has concocted a juice which when applied to the eyelids of someone will make them fall in love with the first person they see. Oberon applies it to Titania and when she awakens she falls in love with Bottom, one of the Mechanicals, a group craftspeople who are rehearsing to perform a play for Theseus and Hippolyta’s wedding reception. Bottom has been transformed by Oberon’s sprite Puck into a donkeyman which frightens away his fellow performers and perfectly achieves the punishment Oberon intended for Titania. Oberon instructs Puck to apply the juice to the eyelids of Demetrius so that he will return Helena’s love. Puck mistakes Lysander for Demetrius and applies the juice to him causing him to fall in love with Helena. Oberon discovering the mistake doses Demetrius causing him to fall in love with Helena as well. Helena never having been loved by anyone, mistakes the sudden change of adoration as mockery. Will all be set right and lovers paired off by stories end? Of course they will, it’s not the destination but the journey that matters.

The Mechanicals cast of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Photo by Dan Norman

The test of a great Shakespeare production is the Actors. The scripts are going to be good (it’s Shakespeare) but even with the best direction and production design in the world, if your Actors cannot convey the language to the audience in a way they can understand it, all is lost. This cast is amazing, every single member of the cast gets a moment to shine. At Intermission I was loving the show but was thinking to myself, not knowing the play, that it seemed like a phenomenally talented cast who were portraying the Mechanicals were being wasted on roles with very little to do. Well, the play closes out with a play within the play that illustrates the need to have cast Actors of their caliber. Aimee K. Bryant cracks everyone up with her portrayal of a wall and then wows us with a song. Dustin Bronson solution to reassuring his audience that he isn’t really a lion, just a man in costume and Kimberly Richardson’s performance as the moon, a branch, and a dog are played with as much physical humor as vocal, and it’s hard to imagine anyone else in either of those roles. Will Sturdivant’s Peter Quince, the Director of the Mechanicals decision to try and gesture the meaning behind every line of his prologue to the play should not be experienced while drinking liquids as it will result in you spraying the person in front of you with a mouthful of your beverage. Max Wojtanowicz’s character Flute, playing the female love interest in the play is at first brilliantly subtle in his self consciousness, then on a dime takes the play from a hilarious takedown of amatuer theatrics to a moment of esquisite beauty. Unleashing his none too secret weapon of an angelic voice and a moment of genuine grieve, that left most of the audience truly moved and a few unsure how to react and nervously tittering. Remy Auberjonois gets the meatiest role, that of Bottom, his comedic hamminess is perfectly played and sure to be an audience favorite.

The interplay between the four young lovers is joyously hilarious. Jonathan Luke Stevens as Lysander carries a guitar with him and once enchanted, tries to woo Helena musically. Just when Justin Withers as Demetrius enters also with Helena infatuated, things become more and more energetic. When Hermia, played by Ari Derambakhsh joins the fray, she’s angry with Helena for stealing Lysander’s love and Helena assumes she’s in on it with the men, and is mocking her. The scene plays out and when we return from intermission, they recap the last scene as if it were a silent film including a nice sound effect of a film projector from Sound Designer Darron L West. It’s an inspired choice by Director Haj and the cast are spot on in their parody of silent film acting raising the franticness of the scene even higher. John Catron and Regina Marie Williams have dual roles playing the two couples of Theseus and Hippolyta as well as Oberon and Titania. These are the grounded roles, despite one of the couples being fairies. They are the calm center around which the chaos swirls. Catron and Williams bring with them a presence that grounds the play in a tenuous but necessary reality. They don’t get to play up the humor or go big with their performances but I assure you the play would not work as it does if you didn’t have two performers of their abilities in those roles holding the center so the play doesn’t lose it’s form. Everyone else can shoot around like ludicrous satellites because they act as a gravitational force that ensures no one flies out of orbit. Finally, we come to Jimmy Kieffer who as Puck brings a sarcastic edge to the role that plays very well to a modern audience. From what I think I know of the part, it feels like he plays it less playfully and more relatable than the usual interpretation, and I think it works beautifully.

The Fairies Cast of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Photo by Dan Norman

In the last year I’ve striven to write shorter more readable reviews mentioning a few key performers and the technical aspects that really stand out. And then you bump up against a play like this that you cannot help but mention every single one of the performers because they are all staggeringly good. Likewise, every member of the creative team does excellent work that needs to be at least touched on. Pulling double duty as Scenic and Costume Designer is Lex Liang whose set is magical and whose costumes clearly separate and distinguish between the fairies and the humans. Isabella Byrd’s lighting design adds to the magic of the forest and she creates an added flicker to silent film moment at the opening of the second half of the show that help sell the concept. Emily Michaels King’s movement direction and Annie Enneking’s Fight and Intimacy Direction enhance the performances with nice little touches throughout.

A show that succeeds on every level to the highest level imaginable. For Shakespeare fans and novices alike, I don’t know how anyone could not be completely enchanted by this production. One of the down sides of seeing so much theater and living in a city with so much theater is that one rarely has the time to take in a production more than once. This will be one of the exceptions to that rule, I’ll definitely be back for a second dream. A Midsummer Night’s Dream runs through March 23rd at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. For More information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.guthrietheater.org/shows-and-tickets/2024-2025-season/a-midsummer-nights-dream/

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.

Sanctuary City a Complex and Thought Provoking Drama From Frank Theatre at Open Eye Theatre

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/

Improv at the Jungle: Off Book is Improv Gold!

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

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