The Turn of the Screw Prolongs That Halloween Atmosphere at Gremlin Theatre

Peter Christian Hansen and Julia Valen Photo by Alyssa Kristine

The Turn of the Screw by Henry James is one of the great classic ghost stories, it was most famously adapted into the film The Innocents (1961) starring Deborah Kerr and most recently as the second season of Mike Flanagan’s Netflix horror anthology as The Haunting of Bly Manor. Jeffrey Hatcher who seems to have a play being produced at every theater in town this year, has fairly faithfully adapted the story into a play for two actors. Julia Valen plays The Woman while Gremlin Theatre Artistic Director Peter Christian Hansen plays The Man. Following the plot of James’ story, Valen primarily plays the role of narrator and Governess of two children Flora and Miles at Bly Manor. She has been hired by the children’s Uncle and guardian to take charge of them and under the strictest instructions never ever to bother him for anything. Hansen plays the Uncle and then every other character that comes into the play, mainly the housekeeper Mrs. Grose and Miles. Flora in this play is very timid and completely silent. Not long after assuming her post at Bly Manor, she begins to see what she comes to believe are the Ghosts of the former Governess and the Caretaker. She believes these ghosts are attempting to influence the children and that she must do everything in her power to severe any connection between the ghosts and her charges.

Carl Schoenborn is listed as both the Set and Lighting Designer which makes perfect sense as the lighting seems to act as part of the set. What does exist in a physical sense is a staircase towards the back of the stage, there are no other elements aside from the performers and the lighting and sound designs. This minimalist approach works well when you have two actors playing all of the characters but are not going the comedic route. We are already suspending our disbelief to the extent of accepting Hansen as multiple characters of different genders and ages the idea of a detailed set that tries to emulate some semblance of reality feels out of place. This lies somewhere between physical theater and theater of the mind and the design perfectly reflects that. I responded strongly to this shadowy production, which builds mystery and tension throughout and ends with an unexpected revelation, that works really well within the framework of James’ story. Both Valen and Hansen are well cast, with Hansen successfully navigating the difficult task of performing as a 10 year old boy without being childish or annoying.

I love a good ghost story and Gremlin Theatre’s production is a great way to extend Monster Month. The Turn of the Screw runs through December 1st at Gremlin Theatre for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://gremlintheatre.org/

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Mauritius a Tense Edge of Your Seat Production From Stage North of Minneapolis

Sarah Dickson and Peter Moore Photo by Toni Solie

The best way I can think of to describe Mauritius is to say if the Coen Brothers wrote a pla, this is likely what it would be. A great script by Theresa Rebeck that ratchets up the suspense scene after scene. Filled with characters of questionable morals, the audience is kept off balance as you are never sure who can be trusted or what they are capable of. Not a comedy by any means despite an opening that feels like it could go that way, it does contain a dark vein of black comedy running through it. In fact, this script is so good and it’s relatively simple to stage that I’m amazed I hadn’t heard of it before and that it isn’t performed more frequently. Peter Moore, who directs as well as performs in Mauritius, has staged the show in the round with minimal set. For those familiar with Ten Thousand Things productions, it very much has that feel. Moore uses the space very effectively and the minimal set and proximity of the audience to the performance space allows us to really focus in on the performances which are outstanding. I attended a matinee performance on opening weekend which was at best 1/4 full. It reminded me of one of the reasons I write this blog, to try and shine a light on shows that the average theatergoer hasn’t even heard of. This is one of those shows that should be playing to sold out houses, you couldn’t ask for a more rewarding and entertaining thriller to attend.

The play opens when Jackie, a young woman whose mother has just died, enters a stamp collecting store to ask the owner Phil to look over a stamp collection given to her by her mother who thought it might be worth something. This innocent inquiry puts her into contact with Dennis who hangs out in the store as a lookout for a wealthy but dangerous collector named Sterling. It turns out she has a couple of stamps that are quite valuable and she needs the money. But the ownership of the stamps is disputed by her half-sister Mary, who despite not having been around for decades wants to claim ownership as they came from her Grandfather on her father’s side which is of no relation to Jackie. The tension arises and builds as we watch to see if the stamps are genuine, how much they are worth, whether Jackie will be able to sell them, if she’ll get fair value, or if she will even survive to the end of the play.

Sarah Dickson leads the superb cast as Jackie bringing an intelligence to the role that believably cracks into damaged desperation at times. It’s raw and genuine and generates an empathy for the character that leads to real concern for her characters well being. Peter Moore, is chilling as Sterling, who in one scene takes off his suit jacket revealing a shoulder holster. He never pulls the gun out or even mentions it in the scene but, the audiences awareness of its existence ratchets up the feeling that things could go horribly wrong at any moment. Corey DiNardo as Dennis is charming as any conman and one is never sure where he stands and how far he is willing to go. Bill Schoppert is Phil the stamp expert, whose dry and sarcastic responses to Jackie’s initial inquiries makes the first five minutes of the play worth the price of the ticket. Mary, who could easily have been named “Karen” is played with the perfect air of entitlement by Bonni Allen. This whole cast is just perfect and brings this brilliant play into sharp focus, and is one not to be missed!

Mauritius runs through November 17th at 480 arts in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mauritius-tickets-1007942421917

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Twin Cities Horror Festival XIII Day 4 Reviews: Gh0stChaser04, The Regular, Campfire Stories

This will be my last batch of reviews until I see the final show Keith Hovis’ Schaulust on 10/30. As I prep this I’m told there is a single ticket left for the final performance of Let’s Summon a Demon at Debbie’s, it’s not to be missed so snatch it up if it’s still available. To read more about all the shows and to purchase tickets goo to https://www.tchorrorfestival.com/tchf-xiii-schedule.html Now without further ado here are my reviews for the three shows I saw on Day 4 of the festival.

Gh0stChaser04 plays like an old episode of the Twilight Zone crossed with Scooby-Doo, yet taken almost entirely seriously. It’s another in the increasingly rare shows that attempts some actual scares and creepiness and for that it is very welcome. This one has a great cast including a couple a favorite comedic performers Rita Boersma and Heather Meyer. The script by Rachel Teagle is clear and witty, particularly in the opening dialogue between the three ghost chasers. Jenny Moeller pulls off a tricky directing job, keeping it mostly grounded but also giving in to the more absurd aspects of the script, the Scooby-Doo aspects if you will. It’s hard to change tone from the realistic to the absurd and then come back to a reality established in the opening, but Moeller makes it work. The plot follows three ghost chasers in the late 1990s and simultaneously a journalist and a spiritualist from the early 1900s. How the two intersect and the surprises in store I’ll leave you to discover in wherever it is that signpost up ahead reads as the next stop.

The Regular is best explained as an episode of Cheers, which it openly acknowledges as an inspiration, gone horribly horribly wrong. Wait, let me amend that, it’s like the funniest fucking episode of Cheers getting hijacked by Kevin Spacey’s character in Seven. Josh Carson writes and directs the show and I’m not sure why he isn’t writing his own number one sitcom, or maybe that’s in the works. I thought the script was brilliant as was the staging including some great fight choreography by Annie Enneking. Filled with clever music cues that add repeated laughs throughout the show. Set in a bar an hour before closing the brilliant Sam Landman plays Charlie who sees himself as the loveable Norm character of the local bar. He banters with the bar staff, the bartender Teddy played by Claire Chenoweth, and the server Wes played by Lukas Ramsey, who humor him. Things take an odd turn though when a stranger arrives played by Jay Melchior who once left alone with Charlie informs him that he’s going to kill him when they leave the bar. Charlie doesn’t know why or what to do with this information or whether the stranger is being serious or not. The four person cast is top notch they make Carson’s jokes feel fresh and spontaneous like the best comedy. Special spotlight though on Landman and Chenoweth, they have the meatiest roles to be sure, but both have that something extra that makes it impossible not to believe their performances. This is a genre mashup of sitcom, thriller, horror, not the most naturalistic performance styles generally, and yet, for an hour they were Charlie and Teddy. This is so far, the best show the Festival.

Campfire Stories like Rev. Matt’s performances will be different every night. The line up changes but the structure is the same. Each night a group of four to five storytellers will take their turn at the microphone and tell true ghost stories. If the opening night is any indication they will run the gamut from funny, to moving, and even genuinely spooky. The show is accompanied musically by its curator and storyteller at each performance Nissa Nordland along with the multi talented Sam Landman. Here is the lineups for the remaining performances:

Monday, October 28th at 6:00 PM

Lauren Anderson

Jex Arzayus

Nissa Nordland

Shannon Twohy

*

Wednesday, October 30th at 9:00 PM

Lauren Anderson

Shanan Custer

Matthew Kessen

Heather Meyer

Nissa Nordland

*

Friday, November 1st at 7:30 PM**

Jex Arzayus

Nissa Nordland

Shannon Twohy

Derek “Duck” Washington

ASL Night

*

Saturday, November 2nd at 10:30 PM

Shanan Custer

Matthew Kessen

Heather Meyer

Nissa Nordland

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Drawing Lessons Explores the Power of Finding yourself Through Art at Children’s Theatre Company

Jim Lichtscheidl and Olivia Lampert Photo by Kaitlin Randolph

Drawing Lessons which runs for a couple more weeks at Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis caught me a bit off guard. I was hoping to enjoy it, but I wasn’t expecting to be moved by it the way I was. My favorite audiobook of all time is On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King. Stay with me here, it’s going to make sense. My favorite part of the book is when he sells the paperback rights to first novel Carrie, I cry everytime and I’ve listened to it four times at least. It’s not because now he will be rich and famous, it’s because of the difference it will make in his life to succeed at his art. The fact that now he will be able to more than scrape along an existence for he and his family. That he wont have to hope a short story sells and brings in that extra little bit of cash before one of the kids get sick and needs a bottle of the pink stuff. Drawing Lessons has a moment that felt similar emotionally, and it had the same effect on me as listening to Stephen King recount that moment that freed him from a world of simply existing into one in which he could let go of those concerns and devote his life to creating, the thing he was born to do.

Drawing lessons tells us the story of Kate, a twelve year old Korean American girl who has moved from St. Paul to Minneapolis, is starting a new school and is terribly shy, to the point of not even being able to speak in class. The one thing she has is her drawing. After school she walks to her father’s music studio where he gives music lessons, and through those she slowly makes friends with two classmates over the course of the play. But the person she meets that has the greatest impact on her is Paul who owns a local art supply store and draws a Sunday cartoon for the Star Tribune. Paul’s partner Matt encourages Paul to give Kate drawing lessons, which he is reluctant to do, though she wears him down over time. These lessons not only teach Kate how to grow as an artist but actually teaches the audience something about the artform of cartooning. It’s handled extremely well with video projections on the flats of the stage sometimes even showing us what the actors are drawing live. Kate’s school work is suffering particularly in Social Studies where the teacher threatens to fail her unless she can stop drawing, talk in class, and the worst, give a 5 to 7 minute speech about a cultural topic. Her father forbids her to go to Paul’s store and to stop drawing and focus on school and making friends. Kate’s Gomo (Great Auntie), comes to visit for her Dad’s birthday, and decides to stay as Kate and her father are no longer speaking. During her time there she at first seems like she will be strict and pull Kate further away from her passion but to Kate and our surprise, she encourages her and even teaches her about Manhwa, the South Korean comic form similar to Japan’s Manga’s. When she learns of a drawing contest for which first price is to have your comic book published on the internet and $250 she decides to go for it.

I loved the way this story took the time to also teach us about the techniques and concepts of cartoon drawing. I loved the Scenic Design by Junghyun Georgia Lee and the Projection design Elizabeth Barrett. I loved all of the illustrations by Blue Delliquanti that bring Drawing Lessons to life. I loved the cast with particular kudos to the performances of Olivia Lampert as Kate, Jim Lichtscheidl as Paul, De’Anthony Jackson as Kate’s friend Omar, and Katie Bradley as Kate’s Gomo. I loved that the show opened with the song Wonderwall, which as a Minnesota United fan is very dear to my heart. Most of all I loved the script by Michi Barall which feels authentic, grounded, and uplifting without being corny. I love the fact that Paul and Matt are casually presented as a couple and that the teacher is allowed to be a bitch. I loved the direction by Jack Tamburri, which gives us such creative staging that at times mirrors the lessons that Paul is giving Kate. We see scenes from four different perspectives, we see transitions where we have the actors in poses like different panels in a comic strip that seems to say meanwhile in various location…it all works perfectly

Drawing Lessons runs through 11/10/24 at Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://childrenstheatre.org/whats-on/drawing-lessons/

All the Devils Are Here is a Masterclass in Shakespeare’s Villains at the Guthrie Theater

Patrick Page Photo by Julieta Cervantes

The Guthrie Theater opens it’s McGuire Proscenium Stage as the first stop for Octopus Theatricals national tour of Patrick Page’s All the Devils Are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain. Created and performed by the award winning actor of stage and screen Patrick Page who walks us through Shakespeare’s plays taking a look at nine of his villains, and how the role of the villain changed over the course of his career. Page is a mesmerizing performer who commands the stage from the moment the lights go up. Open and engaging warmly with the audience as he discusses his experiences with these roles, he slips easily into masterful performances from the plays and shows himself to be an excellent Shakespearean actor. Setting up each performance with a discussion of how each role added to the complexities of the archetype and showed Shakespeare’s maturation. For any fan of Shakespeare this is an essential production on the journey of understanding the artist and his works.

For a one person show that contains very few props or set pieces I must say this is a very well designed production. Everything is elegantly presented and the lighting design by Stacey Derosier is especially effective. Sound Designer Darron L West also adds some excellent little touches like the manipulation of Page’s voice as the three witches in Macbeth. My favorite story Page tells of his own experiences with Shakespeare’s plays revolves around Macbeth, which touches on the curse of the Scottish play. As many of you know our local production of Scotland, PA has been dealing with some injuries which may or may not have to do with the curse. In his performance of shakespeare characters, my favorites were Iago from Othello and Shylock from the Merchant of Venice. I appreciated Page’s explanation of the prejudices and other societal views from Shakespeare’s day. Explaining how things were so we can look at the characters through the lense of the time, but also pointing out that thankfully we know better now.

All the Devils Are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain runs through November 17th at the Guthrie Theater in Downtown Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.guthrietheater.org/shows-and-tickets/2024-2025-season/all-the-devils-are-here/

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.

Over the River and Through the Woods a Great Script With Fantastic Cast Creates Pure Gold

Mark Rosenwinkle, Melinda Kordich, Julia Ennen, Armando Harlow Ronconi, Kirby Bennett and Gabriele Angieri Photo by Brian Pierce


This was my third time out to Sidekick Theatre in South West Bloomington and my second time enjoying a meal before the show. I know that for some of my colleagues it seems like a bit of a trek for a show, but I’m to the West of the cities and for me this is much closer than going to St. Paul for a show, which I do on a nearly weekly basis. But honestly the reason I’ve come back for the second and third time is not proximity, it’s because I have been thoroughly entertained and indeed impressed with Sidekick Theatre’s offerings. Over the River and Through the Woods is the best show so far and deserves to be seen by everyone. Laugh out loud funny but also touched with moments of sweetness and truth. Characters and situations that everyone can identify with. The humor flows from life not simply one liners and it works it’s way into our hearts because of it.

The script by Joe DiPietro centers on Nick, an unmarried young man who works in the City in marketing, but comes out every Sunday to Hoboken, New Jersey to have dinner with his maternal and paternal grandparents. As the play opens Nick has uncharacteristically come out on a Thursday because he has something to tell the grandparents. We must be 15 minutes into the play before Nick can get out his announcement, though he’s trying to do so from the moment he walks into the house. The announcement that he has been offered a promotion at work comes with the catch that if he accepts it he will need to move to Seattle. Why does it take so long, because none of them listen to him, his Grandma Aida tries to push food on him non stop throughout the entire run of the play, when Grandma Emma and Grandpa Nunzio arrive he informs the audience that they are the two loudest people he has ever known. Throughout the play the characters break the fourth wall and address the audience directly. Much of the humor, and of humor there is much, comes from Nick’s frustrations in dealing with his Grandparents, whether it’s trying to share news or playing Trivial Pursuit. The humor is character based, the best kind, the type that builds and provides avenues for call backs. It is also full of universal beats that ring true to the audience.

The script is well written to be sure but the cast really make it feel authentic. It’s about growing up and growing older, it’s about family that drives you crazy but that you also love dearly. It is a comedy, but a comedy about characters that you laugh at but also grow to connect and even love. And so it isn’t just about laughs, it also contains moments of sweetness and melancholy. And those only come because we have grown to love these characters and that is thanks to the amazing cast. Armando Harlow Ronconi plays Nick and his performance is built as much on his reactions to the other performers as on what he says and how. He has a gift for portraying frustration and incredulity without every overdoing it, every reaction is perfectly calibrated to find the balance between comic effect and keeping the character grounded in a reality. Kirby Bennett as Grandma Aida finds ways of pushing food on Nick constantly without it ever falling into a repetitive comedic routine. Instead, she finds a way to internalized this repeated action into the core of her character. Mark Rosenwinkel as Grandpa Frank, Gabriele Angieri as Grandpa Nunzio, and Melinda Kordich as Grandma Emma all work together so organically that you feel as if they really have lived next to each other for 50 years. They are remarkably gifted at talking over each other, creating a cacophony of voices through which Nick has to try and navigate and yet which the audience is able to follow word for word. Finally Julia Ennen plays Caitlin, the young woman the Grandparents invite to dinner without telling Nick, hoping he’ll fall in love with her and decide not to move away.

Over the River and Through the Woods runs through November 3rd at Sidekick Theatre in Bloomington for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://sidekicktheatre.com/about-the-show-over-river I highly recommend purchasing the optional meal before the show, I’ve found both the weekend brunch and the weekday lunch options to be delicious. It’s always nice when there is something extra like that to make a trip to the theater a little extra special.

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.

Heck is Enjoyably Funny But Less Than the Sum of its Parts at St. Croix Festival Theatre

Jesse March and Kathryn Cesarz Photo by Dan Norman

I journeyed up to St. Croix Falls for the world premiere of Heck, billed as a new musical comedy by the stars of the show and co-directors Kathryn Cesarz and Jesse March. We made a day of it, doing some hiking across the river in Taylors Falls, enjoying an old fashioned ice cream soda on main street, dinner at supper club and a little shopping. And if you are traveling from the cities to see the show, that’s what I recommend you do as well as I’m not sure the show itself justifies the two and a half plus hour round trip drive. But it is amusing enough as the capper to a days adventure. It feels less like a musical comedy and more like a comedy with a few songs as it felt like there were about five or six songs, three of which really seemed to add something to the show. To be sure, one of them was really a showstopper performed by Kathryn Cesarz and Alexandria Neyhart playing Madam Satan and Gabby (The Archangel Gabriel). What works best and ultimately swings this show into the positive column is the comedy. The individual bits and characters are very funny, though there are a too many storylines that seem poorly defined and in the end, don’t really seem to add up to anything. It isn’t that there isn’t a plot, it’s just that the show seems relatively unconcerned with it and as such, it isn’t very clearly defined. You get to the end and most of the characters are right where they were at the start, and you feel like every storyline was resolved, but you’re not really sure what they all were about anyway.

The positives are much easier to define and really do make the experience enjoyable. First off, is Jesse March’s turn as Satan’s emotional support demon Belpho. March is a truly gifted clown, interacting with the audience in an easy going manner, and always finding the perfect line reading to achieve the largest laughs possible. Cesarz’s Madam Satan, is less concerned with being funny, but she has the character’s air of cold aloofness, superiority, and a touch of the dominatrix down perfectly. Evan Grande gives voice and brings to life the puppet demon Squee, assisted by Mary Margaret Hughes, and Lindsey Fry. Squee is a very successful creation, the three performers work in collaboration in full view of the audience to bring him to life, but very quickly you stop looking at the puppeteers and only see the puppet as a character. The puppet created by Michael Pettit is really an exceptional creation. Final performance note Theater Blogger Alex Lauer of https://onefanshow.com/ gave an award worthy performance as audience member pulled on stage to have their mind read.

For more information and to purchase tickets to Heck which runs through October 27th in St. Croix Falls WI go to https://www.festivaltheatre.org/

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.