Stop Kiss an Important and Beautiful Play for Pride Month From Theater Mu

Kelsey Angel Baehrens and Emjoy Gavino Photo by Rich Ryan

Necessity requires that going forward in order to produce a weekly YouTube show and podcast that reviews will become shorter. There are only so many hours in a day but, I have no intention of abandoning the blog version. Faithful readers, you have year after year grown The Stages of MN audience. While I hope you will become viewers or listeners as well, there will always be things here that cannot be found there. This will be the place for longer reviews, though slightly shorter than before, as well as Reviews of more shows than can be covered on the YouTube and Podcast versions. Essentially there will be some overlap, but each format will have unique content.

On to Stop Kiss which is a battle between two conflicting emotions and storylines. The play is broken into two timelines, both following two young women Callie, a long time resident of NYC and Sara, who has just moved to the city from the Midwest. One timeline follows them from their first meeting to their first kiss. The second storyline follows them in the aftermath of the kiss, but it’s not what you think. They are victims of a hate crime which leaves Sara in a coma. The two timelines alternate from scene to scene, so one moment we are watching a friendship blossom and then grow into an unexpected attraction. It is full of anticipation and joy and laughter and longing. The other is filled with tragedy, loss, and heartbreak, but also the growth and love. It’s a brilliant script by Diana Son and the duo timeline structure is anything but a gimmick. The one storyline joyfully heading towards tragedy the second revealing the extent of the damage and the repercussions of the horrible event that forms the nexus of the two timelines. What is miraculous is the way in which the telling of the story doesn’t diminish our giddiness at Callie and Sara’s growing bond in timeline one but it does inform our emotional response to timeline two.

The script does half of the work, but without such engaging and warm performances from the two leads Emjoy Gavino as Callie and Kelsey Angel Baehrens as Sara, the emotional resonance wouldn’t work. It’s that odd thing that we call chemistry, it’s why I tear up when Niles confesses his love for Daphne on Frasier (sorry if that’s a spoiler for anyone), and it’s why we are able to forget what we know is coming in Stop Kiss. We like these characters, we like the way they interact, in fact we forget they are characters. We become invested in their happiness, even though we know something horrible is coming. But to say that the success of the performances is due to some intangible thing called chemistry is not acknowledging the masterful work of Gavino and Baehrens. They are so good that they make it look easy. Make no mistake, it is their skill at crafting the roles, their understanding of what each timeline needs from them and their ability to swap between them from scene to scene that gives the play it’s heart and soul. The production is Directed by Katie Bradley who does an excellent job of staging the show, there are a million scene changes by the occur seamlessly and speedily which is key to keeping us invested.

Stop Kiss runs through June 29th at the Gremlin Theatre in St Paul and honestly I know it sounds like it could be a bit of a downer but I assure you it is ultimately a beautiful and hopeful production. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatermu.org/stop-kiss#gsc.tab=0

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. 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.

I’ve officially launched The Stages of MN YouTube Channel which you can view by clicking on this link. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Check out the intro videos and the weekly episodes. Subscribe to the channel so you’ll always know when a new episode has dropped. Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers.

Be a Part of The Stages of MN, Write the Theme Music For The Stages of MN YouTube Channel!

The launch of The Stages of MN YouTube channel is still over a month away. But I’m hard at work in developing what I hope will be an engaging new way to celebrate live theater. I want this to be a collaborative platform where I can engage with theatergoers and makers. With that in mind I’m sending out this request to you, faithful readers, if you or someone you know has experience writing music or songs I’m looking for something original to use as the Theme music for the show. Watch my latest video on YouTube for an idea of what I’m looking for.

I love the idea of having the show open with the something created by you whether you are a professional music and theater maker or just a novice fan of theater. I’m looking for something between 20 to 60 seconds, that I can use for the opening and closing of each episode. Like I say in the video anything goes, silly or serious, instrumental or with lyrics. I’m open to anything and everything. Send your creations to robdunkelberger@thestagesofmn.com, ideally by May 11th. I’d love to get as many options as possible, if there are multiple great choices I may use some for individual segments. I’m excited for you to be a part of The Stages of MN as it expands into new territory.

Feel free to reach out via email or any of the social media channels if you have any questions. I look forward to listening to your creations.

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. 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.

Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. New things are in the work! Click here to go to The Stages of MN YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Right now there is just a short introductory video, but there will be much more coming this summer. For now, check out the intro video and subscribe to the channel so that when we fully launch you’ll be the first to know!

Lettice and Lovage, Long But Ultimately Saved by Great Performances From its Two Leads at Theatre in the Round

Jean Wolff and Jackie Schluter-Johnson Photo by Aaron Mark Photo Film

Lettice and Lovage is too long. You’ll leave the theater three hours and 10 minutes after the play begins. You will get two 10 minute intermissions so bladder control isn’t an issue plus you’ll have a chance purchase and slam a coffee or a soda if you need it. I did. Act one I found myself doing the head dip and jerk back up. Intermission #1 I was worried about the rest of the night. Not that Act I didn’t have some good stuff in it but I knew if things didn’t pick up, I was in for a tough night. Again, it wasn’t that Act I wasn’t important it is, it introduces us to and develops the main characters, it sets up the rest of the play. Act II, maybe it was the Diet Coke and savory snack I consumed, but the play really came alive after that first intermission. Act III starts a little slow and trades primarily in frustration to build suspense, but about a third of the way through the final act, it came alive again. The key is when you have the two leads Jean Wolff and Jackie Schluter-Johnson playing off each other. My big advice with this one is to see it, for sure, but know yourself, do you get a little drowsy after dinner or are you more of a midday napper? Know which you are and plan to see it when you will be most alert, and don’t forget to take your Adderall or drink a Celsius. The first Act is deliberate, while still providing some chuckles. Also to be clear the author of this play Peter Shaffer is a very famous writer and this isn’t Shakespeare where a theater company can feel free to cut the script down. I could actually tell you how I would shave time off of the the play, but there’s no point as it isn’t something anyone has permission to do and since Shaffer has shuffled off this mortal coil, what we have is what we have.

OK I really do want you to see this show because I think The Director Duck Washington and his cast and crew have staged something very entertaining. Everything that could be improved in this play falls squarely at the feet of Shaffer. The first 15 to 20 minutes of the play we see Lettice Douffet lead four or five separate historical tour groups in the Grand Hall of Fustian House. She tells the same story each time about the grand staircase and Queen Elizabeth. The first time everyone on the tour is bored, the second time she is clearly bored, the third time she begins making things up, and each subsequent time she embellishes the story more and more to ludicrous extremes. This is discovered by Lotte Schoen who is the person in charge of the Preservation Trust Tours. We change the scene now to Miss Schoen’s office where she ends up firing Lettice. That’s the end of Act I, in that office scene there is one other performer Simone Reno who gives a memorable though brief performance as Miss Schoen’s secretary Miss Framer. Before that, during the tours Reno and five other performers play the visitors on the tour. They have a line or two each during the various tour scenes and then with the exception of Reno and one other performer Rick Lamers who will appear in Act III but they’re never seen again until the curtain call. There are five actors who appear in Act I and then are never seen again. What was Shaffer thinking? Hey I’m gonna give you two lines in the first 15 minutes of this play and then I want you to hang around for 2 hours and 45 minutes to take a bow.

Act II We are in Lettice’s basement apartment, this is where the rest of the plays all of Act II and III will take place. Lotte has come to see Lettice, she feels bad for having sacked her and wants to see how she is doing. She has come with a job possibility with a the river tour company one of her neighbors runs. The meeting at first is very contentious but they soon warm to each other and get a bit spiffy on an aperitif of Lettice’s creation, which is an homage to a 16th century libation. From this moment on when Jean Wolff who is spectacularly kooky as Lettice and Jackie Schluter-Johnson as Lotte Schoen really start to riff with each other the play ramps up from pleasant to delightful. Wolff is tremendously gifted at playing this overly dramatic but wildly imaginative misfit. Helping to place that character slightly out of synch with the mainstream are these fantastically stylized costumes by CJ Mantel. If ever a costume helped an actor fully embrace a character it has to be these, they are terrific.Schluter-Johnson plays the more grounded character but is equally good in the role. It’s the combination of the two that is the magic key. You feel like you are watching two people actually becoming friends and bonding right before your eyes. For these moments when they are working together despite everything else, I highly recommend Lettice and Lovage. The majority of the play is the two of them interacting and it is worth a little bit of a slow start. And Honestly nothing is bad or boring, but three plus hour shows are reserved for Musicals, Shakespeare, and truly epic plays like the Lehman Trilogy. A fun little comedy about two women who form an unlikely friendship, a show that is barely more than a two hander, just doesn’t wear that runtime very well.

Lettice and Lovage runs through April 27th at Theatre in the Round Players in Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.theatreintheround.org/lettice-and-lovage/

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. 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.

Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. New things are in the work! Click here to go to The Stages of MN YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Right now there is just a short introductory video, but there will be much more coming this summer. For now, check out the intro video and subscribe to the channel so that when we fully launch you’ll be the first to know!

Fun Home is Dead Brilliant at Theater Latté Da

Eve Scharback (Small Alison), Sara Masterson (Alison), Monty Hays (Medium Alison). Photo Dan Norman

Fun Home the 90 minute no intermission (is there a better theater term than that?) show based on the autobiographical graphic novel by Alison Bechdel gets a fantastic staging at Theater Latté Da. A favorite of mine since I saw a performance of “Ring of Keys” on the 2015 Tony Awards and began listening to the Cast Recording. I saw the tour at the Orpheum Theatre in 2016, and have been anxious for someone to do it in town. The wait was worth it, Theater Latté Da has assembled a stellar cast particularly the trio of actors playing Alison at three different ages. That performance at the Tony’s of “Ring of Keys” that so captivated me that I began listening to the cast recording before even seeing the show, I didn’t think could be matched. But get your baseball gloves ready because Eve Scharback as Small Alison knocks it out of the park! It’s just one of several sublimely perfect moments in the show, but it’s perhaps the most powerful, when Alison clicks with herself. The penny drops and she doesn’t know what it all means yet, but she sees someone, an adult, and she recognizes herself in that stranger. It’s a moment of wonder, joy, and discovery and somehow, a very young actress, conveys all of that in her swagger and her bearing and her just right way of performing the song.

Fun Home is narrated by the Adult Alison who is a cartoonist. She’s turning her memories into a graphic novel and as she explores her past as one of three kids growing up in a house like a museum that is also a funeral home, known in the family as Fun Home. She wrestles with what is real as she doesn’t trust memory. Part of that is because our perspective changes at different ages. Our understanding of what might really have been happening becomes clearer, and new information gained later in life throws a different light on old memories. She states early on “My Dad and I both grew up in the same small Pennsylvania Town, and he was gay, and I was gay, and he killed himself, and I became a lesbian cartoonist”. That sums up what this musical explores, the ways in which two people who are in many ways similar, turn out so different because of the choices they made, and partly because of the times in which they were born it should be acknowledged. Bruce, Alison’s father lived his life in the closet and it ultimately destroyed him. Alison, came out, lived as her authentic self, and it made all the difference. It’s a powerful message in these dark days when we have taken such huge steps backwards as a society. One can see the temptation again to protect yourself by hiding who you are, this speaks to the importance of living your truth.

There are so many moments from this cast that blew the audience away. First up, the three juvenile actors playing Small Alison, Eve Scharback, her brothers Christian and John played by Truman Bednar and Brock Heuring practice a pretend commercial they are writing for the Funeral Home. “Come to the Fun Home” is a song that could go off the rails if any one of the three weren’t up to the task, but the three of them bring the house down, it’s so funny and fabulously choreographed by Katie Rose McLaughlin. Another favorite song is when Monty Hays (who is a The Stages of MN favorite, full stop), playing Medium Alison performs the song “Changing My Major” after their first sexual experience with college girlfriend Joan, played perfectly by the always great Emma Schuld. Lastly, I want to mention a song that has always tugged at my heart which is “Telephone Wire”. It takes place between Adult Alison played by Sara Masterson, who is standing in during this scene that actually took place on a car ride between Medium Alison and her father Bruce, played by Shad Hanley. There is a constant refrain “Say something, talk to him. Say something, Anything.” I think parents and children can both relate to that moment, when you want to be able to say something important to the other person and can’t find the moment or the courage. Adult Alison has stepped in because this is the last night with her Dad and the following lyrics explain why this moment is so important that she has inserted herself into the past to see if she can discover something she missed when she was young.

“Telephone wire, make this not the past.
This car ride, this is where it has to happen.
There must be some other chances.
There’s a moment I’m forgetting, where you tell me you see me?
Say something, talk to me.
Say something, anything.
At the light, at the light.
This can’t be our last-.”

“Telephone wire” Lyrics by Lisa Kron

Masterson is urgent and completely compelling in this heartbreaking moment where she is in the present pleading for a chance at a do over, but it isn’t that kind of show. She can reinterpret and reexamine a memory but she cannot change the past. Hanley is superb as Bruce, there are moments I hated how he behaved, partly because I hated when I behaved that way in my own life. Little parenting moments that every parent has where you didn’t handle things like you would if you were thinking about it rather than just living your life. But a lesson we can take from the show is that we cannot change the past, we have to move forward and move on.

Fun Home runs through May 4th at Theater Latté Da in North Minneapolis. I absolutely loved this production and I’m going to see it a second time if I can. Every aspect of the production is inspired, but I do want to point out specifically the Scenic Designer Eli Sherlock who has crammed every nook and cranny of the stage and under the stage with old furniture. I recommend you get your tickets early I can see this selling out performances and besides, you might want to see it twice as well. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.latteda.org/fun-home

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. 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.

Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. New things are in the work! Click here to go to The Stages of MN YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Right now there is just a short introductory video, but there will be much more coming this summer. For now, check out the intro video and subscribe to the channel so that when we fully launch you’ll be the first to know!

The Tin Woman Is All About the Heart at the Historic Mounds Theatre

Doug Thompson, Elizabeth Efteland, Matt Berdahl, Stephanie Wipf, and Dorian Chalmers Photo by BTE Media Co

100 Percent Human Theatre presents The Tin Woman by Sean Grennan, a title that has multiple meanings in regards to its protagonist Joy, a woman who like the Tin Man of Oz needs a heart. The play is directed by Joy Donley whose 16-year-old son Lewis’s organ donations have benefited 60 individuals. Donley knows first hand the power inherent in such a gift, in the comfort from knowing that something positive can spring from such so unimaginably tragic. She has poured all of that understanding and compassion into this project and it culminates in such a cathartic moment that we leave the theater feeling as if a weight has been lifted from us all. You will cry more than likely but it is not because something is sad, but because something beautiful and healing has occurred. For my money, those are the best tears, they cleanse and renew us, and that’s how I felt leaving the theater tonight.

Joy, the character is the recipient of a heart transplant from Jack who is a son and brother. While Jack’s family mourns, Joy isolates. Her friend Darla tries to get her to re engage with the world, but there was already something broken within Joy before her heart went bad. Grennan’s script reveals multiple metaphorical meanings, the Tin Woman is certainly a reference to the character from The Wizard of Oz but it is more than the fact that Joy physically needs a heart transplant. She not only literally needs a heart but she figuratively does as well. She is isolating and has broken up with her boyfriend. Judging by her reactions to her nurses inquiries about a boyfriend or fiance, and to a man asking for the cinnamon in a flashback scene set pre-heart surgery in a cafe, she isn’t interested in a relationship. We get a hint as to why Joy doesn’t let anyone into her heart from a conversation she has with her friend Darla about her childhood. Jack’s family is grieving, his mother, Alice, and sister, Sammy are trying to move forward and get excited at the prospect of meeting Joy after she has sent them a letter of thanks. His father Hank though has heart issues of his own, as Alice stated at one point, the next time Hank talks about his feelings will also be the first time. Hank doesn’t want to deal with his sons death and he doesn’t want to meet Joy. Present throughout the play, sometimes in flashbacks but mostly as an unseen and unheard presence is Jack. His minimal interactions as the spirit never take on a supernatural aspect, but they do lend an emotional element, Jack’s hands are like the hands of fate causing a person to finally hit the right button to access an image on a digital camera, or the touch that causes someone to finally feel connection and warmth.

At intermission my favorite performance was Greta Grosch who plays the Nurse and Joy’s friend Darla. Grosch is great fun in both roles providing much of the humor. I know that the description so far doesn’t sound like it’s a comedy, and I wouldn’t go so far as to say it is. But, like life itself, it has a lot of funny moments. The feeling on the rest of the cast was that they were good, but that’s because all of the other characters are for the most part shutting down their emotions. By the end of Act II, it would be hard to pick a favorite, everyone built up their characters defences so well that when they finally fall away it’s an emotional release for everyone in the theater. Joy is played by Elizabeth Efteland, Alice by Dorian Chalmers, Sammy by Stephanie Wipf, Hank by Doug Thompson, and Jack is played by Matt Berdahl. Efteland plays the closed off Joy as someone who seems used to having her share of food at the dinner table stolen, wary and unengaging. When she confronts Hank about his behavior it’s like she finally has decided to fight for her share of the food. Chalmers is great as Alice, her matter of fact dealings with the grumpy Hank feel authentic, Thompson’s responses feel a little more like line readings particularly in the first act, but he really comes through once Hank and Joy begin to interact. Wipf, is quite engaging as the free spirited, blog writing, preschool teacher, Sammy. Overly touchy with the hug averse Joy, and likely to begin crying at the drop of a hat, this is mostly played with humor, but our first one on one scene with her shows us a more subtle side as she conducts story time with her preschoolers, we see her getting a little sad, but she covers it well, a tricky thing to show us the emotions the character is feeling but at the same time, concealing.

The Tin Woman runs through April 13th at the Historic Mounds Theater in St. Paul. I was quite moved by this production and in that rare way where you are crying but because something is more beautiful than sad. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://100percenthumantheatre.com/

To learn more about organ donation and to register to become a donor if you are not already go to https://www.life-source.org/

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows, go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity. In short, theaters are being threatened for sharing stories that reflect our countries cultural and racial diversity.

Don’t depend on a Facebook or Instagram algorithm to insure you hear about a great show. You can subscribe and have every post from The Stages of MN sent directly to your email box. It’s the best way to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the theater action. 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.

Think I may have steered you wrong on a show? Well, I’m also a member of the Twin Cities Theater Bloggers (TCTB), where you can read review roundups of shows by m’colleagues and I when you follow us on facebook @TwinCitiesTheaterBloggers. New things are in the work! Click here to go to The Stages of MN YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/@TheStagesofMN. Right now there is just a short introductory video, but there will be much more coming this summer. For now, check out the intro video and subscribe to the channel so that when we fully launch you’ll be the first to know!

Secret Warriors Examines the Sacrifices and Heroism of Japanese Americans in WWII at History Theatre

Erik Ohno Dagoberg, Clay Man Soo, Tony Larkin, Stephanie Anne Bertumen, Kendall Kent Photo by Rick Spaulding

Secret Warriors by R.A. Shiomi reminds us that the ugliness we see around us everyday, especially from our government is not new. It tells a story from a shameful moment in our country’s history, when Americans of Japanese descent were rounded up and imprisoned in camps after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. That is the backdrop upon which this story is told, in the foreground are four soldiers, who despite what was happening to their families volunteered for a secret project that saved thousands of lives during the war. While we follow these four soldiers through their agreement to enroll in the program, the subsequent training, and their ultimate deployment in the Pacific theater, we are constantly aware of internment camps. The set design by Erik Paulson significantly contributes to this by having the back of the set inclosed in tall chain link fences panels with barbed wire along the top. Whenever the scene changes and wherever the action on stage is taking place, that barbed wire fence stands as a reminder of the injustice that is occuring to the characters families back home. Just as this play, masterfully directed by Lily Tung Crystal, should stand as a reminder that we’ve done all of this before and regretted it.

The four soldiers whom we follow throughout the production are played by Erik Ohno Dagoberg, Song Kim, Josh Kwon, and Clay Man Soo. The story really focuses on two of the soldiers, Tamio played by Dagoberg, and Koji played by Clay Man Soo. While they seem to clash when they first meet, Tamio being a cocky and aggressive personality compared to Koji’s more reserved demeanor, they soon become friends. Soo is good, particularly once he enters the war and uses his skills as a translator to get the enemy to surrender or talking officers of the Japanese army into providing information that will save lives on both sides. Dagoberg is electric, from the moment he comes on stage, it’s a role that requires a big personality and he delivers that but without being over the top, he’s subtly charismatic and that draws the audience into him even more. One of the things that bonds the two is they both meet and fall in love with girls at the same USO dance. Stephanie Anne Bertumen reunites with her Sanctuary City costar Soo, as Koji’s girlfriend Natsuko. While Tamio’s eventual fiance Denise Murphy is played by Kendall Kent. Bertumen and Kent’s performances are crucial to the audiences involvement in the show. The idea itself would make an interesting play to be sure. But, the romantic relationships made so heartfelt by Bertumen and Kent are key to raising our emotional involvement in the characters and raising the level of the play from interesting to compelling. Their letters from home help to build the tension and the concern for the characters raising the emotional bar of what is at stake.

Paulson’s set design in effective in Act One, with a backdrop on which Kathy Maxwell’s projections are splashed, giving us virtual locals or context to the scenes. When the audience returns from intermission for Act Two, we are astonished to see the stage transformed. Wooden structures that formed stairways on the sides of the stage have been moved to the center and combined to represent for example, a ship carrying the soldiers to the Pacific theater of the war. But the surprises do not end there, though I think I’ll keep that to myself as I was rather amazed by the transformation that occured next. Meghan Kent has designed period costuming that perfectly captures the era. Behind the scenes rounding out the overall high quality production design are Lighting Designer Wu Chen Khoo, Properties Designer Kenji Shoemaker, and Sound Designer Frederick Kennedy.

Secret Warriors runs through April 19th at History Theatre in St. Paul. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.historytheatre.com/2024-2025/secret-warriors

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, Theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our Theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity.

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.

Transatlantic Love Affair’s Red and the Mother Wild Worthy of Illusion Theater’s 50th Anniversary

front: Amber Bjork, Adelin Phelps rear: Allison Vincent, Derek Lee Miller, Mark Benzel, Peyton McCandless, Jack Bechard photo by Lauren B Photography

Red and the Mother Wild is the latest from the physical Theater company Transatlantic Love Affair. Their shows are created in collaboration, they are developed and performed without the use of set and props. The wonderful thing about them, is that those elements are not missed. Like listening to and old time radio show your mind fills in that which your eyes cannot see. There is no sound design, but the production is filled with sounds. Those of the birds, of the wind, the sounds of the woods, and the animals that inhabit it. All of the sounds are created by the actors live on stage using their voices and bodies. The cast perform the roles of human characters as well as anything else that might aid in creating a picture in the minds eye of the audience. This includes everything from animals, to the walls of Mother Wilds home, and the trees of the forest. The story is grown from the seed of the Little Red Riding Hood fairytale. It tells of a village of people, one of whom is a little girl named Red who has no parents and so the villagers all take turns raising her. Red is inexplicably drawn to the woods, the one place she is told she must never go. When she is older she will venture in and discover the darker side of the world.

Directed with creativity and exacting detail by Isabel Nelson the first and former Artistic Director of Transatlantic Love Affair. There is one element of production design that they do rely upon and that is lighting which was designed by Dante Benjegerdes and really is well done and integral to the story. The entire ensemble is fantastic and the magic of the piece being the way they have managed to create an entire world using only their voices and bodies. They find the perfect way to suggest a fish in a stream, or a way to embody a tree that is being chopped down, in a way that we know exactly what is happening and also earns a laugh. The cast is a seven Actor ensemble comprised of Jack Bechard, Mark Benzel, Amber Bjork, Peyton McCandless, Derek Lee Miller, Adelin Phelps, and Allison Vincent. While a few have bigger roles, it really is an ensemble in the way they all contribute to creating the world of the play. It’s fascinating the details they add like a dripping faucet in a village home or the layering of sounds to capture the aural experience of the forest at night.

I do want to highlight a few performance moments that really connected for me. Phelps as Red is the perfect performer to take us on this journey, she captures Red’s curiosity about the woods beautifully and is equally effective when shutting down after a traumatic event. Allison Vincent in the role of one of the village mothers has again displayed her gift for line readings that are flat out the best possible way to say anything. She and Phelps together create a very special bond, their connection is felt and is one of the strongest in the production. Vincent also knows how to play a tree falling down in such a way that it elicits a big laugh from the audience. Derek Lee Miller is plays Daniel Vincent’s characters husband, a woodsman, he allows Red to come into the woods. When things take a turn, Miller does a nice job of portraying the two sides of this character. Finally, Amber Bjork plays the Mother Wild, a woman who lives in the woods and takes Red in, this character made me think of Dorothy Molter, the Root Beer Lady, if you saw History Theatre’s show this winter you’ll know what I mean. Bjork plays her very no nonsense and practical, with little jabs of humor now and then.

Red and the Mother Wild runs through April 12th at the Center for Performing Arts in South Minneapolis. For more information and to purchase tickets go to https://www.illusiontheater.org/red-and-the-mother-wild

Now more than ever in the wake of the most recent election and the hailstorm of stupidity and hate it has unleashed, Theater companies need you and we need them. Buy tickets to shows go out and support work that reflects diversity and inclusiveness. Donate to your favorite theater companies, don’t wait until they are on the brink of shutting down. We all need to stand up and fight for our Theaters whose funding is under attack for promoting inclusion, equality and diversity.

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.