Archive for September, 2008

September 30th, 2008 | No Comments »

STOMP returns to Dayton for three shows at the Victoria Theatre, October 18 & 19.

The return of the percussive hit also brings some new surprises, with some sections of the show now updated and restructured and the addition of two new full-scale routines, utilizing props like tractor tire inner tubes and paint cans.

“After creating new routines for STOMP OUT LOUD in Vegas, (co-creator) Luke Cresswell and I decided it was time to rework elements of our main production, STOMP,” said co-creator Steve McNicholas. “STOMP has evolved a great deal ever since its first incarnation at the Edinburgh Festival. Every reworking has involved losing some pieces and gaining new ones but has always stayed true to the original premise of the show: To create rhythmic music with instantly recognizable objects, and do it with an eccentric sense of character and humor.”

The changes that can now be seen in the tour of STOMP are the biggest since the late 1990s. A new piece “Paint Cans” evolved out of the “Boxes” routine in the Las Vegas show, and “Donuts” is a piece that implements huge tractor tire inner tubes, worn around the waist on a bungee cord. For many years, the creators had looked for a STOMP equivalent of the Latin percussion instrument the guiro, a gourd-shaped, open-ended instrument with ridges along the side that are rubbed by a wooden stick to create its sound. The climactic trashcan sequence “Bins” has been restructured to include a guiro-like new found instrument: Strip-lighting recycling containers.

Watch: Interview with Luke Cresswell

September 30th, 2008 | No Comments »

Lou Mason, chair of the Board of Trustees for Victoria Theatre Association and the Arts Center Foundation, has announced that Victoria Theatre Association President & CEO Dione Kennedy will be leaving the company she has served for 18 years to take the position of President & CEO of Performing Arts Fort Worth, the Fort Worth area’s premier performing arts presenter and manager of the acclaimed Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass Performance Hall.

“Dione has been an exceptional leader during a time of transition and growth for Victoria Theatre Association and the Arts Center Foundation, as we merged the two companies into one seamless operation to better serve the Miami Valley arts community,” Lou Mason said.  “She has built an excellent team who will be able to continue the stewardship of this very important part of why the Dayton area is such a great place to live.  She will be sorely missed by staff, volunteers, board, and the community at large, and we all wish her well and congratulate her on her new position.”

“This was a very difficult decision,” says Dione. “Dayton has been my home for more than 18 years and my work with Victoria Theatre Association provided me with tremendous opportunities in this industry. I was not searching, but when this position was presented to me something clicked. While Dayton and Victoria Theatre Association will always hold a special place in my heart, there comes a point in everyone’s career when it is time to explore new challenges, and for me, that next challenge is in Fort Worth. I’m pleased that I was able to make this decision with complete confidence in the ongoing success of this organization. This transition is occurring while we are entering a very strong season for programming and our lineup for next season is incredible, including the mega-hit Wicked and a return engagement of The Phantom of the Opera.” 
 
Dione will finish out her time as President and CEO of the $12 million non-profit organization in the next two months and will step down from the position at the end of November 2008. She will begin this new chapter in her career in Fort Worth in January 2009.

“Victoria Theatre Association is an incredibly strong, diversified organization with a deep foundation of community involvement,” Dione added. “The staff has many years experience and the Board is committed and dedicated. Over the past few years the Board’s knowledge of the operation has increased by implementing a Governance model geared toward transparency in the operations of the company.”

Lou Mason and the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees have enlisted board member and retired Reynolds & Reynolds CFO Dale Medford to head a search committee for a replacement. They have also selected Bill Bloebaum, a former President of the Victoria Theatre Association Board, to serve as Interim President of Victoria Theatre Association and the Arts Center Foundation. Bloebaum retired in 2001 as President of Mead Pulp Sales and previously served as Corporate Treasurer of Mead.

“We are thrilled to welcome Dione aboard as President and CEO of Performing Arts Fort Worth,” commented Edward P. Bass, Chairman of Performing Arts Fort Worth.  “She is a dynamic leader who will quickly become an integral member of the Fort Worth arts community.  Her 18 years of experience managing all facets of a performance hall of similar size is an extraordinary plus for everyone involved.  In addition, she comes to us at just the right time.  With an excellent first decade now behind us, there is no better person to help navigate Bass Hall through the challenging times all performing arts organizations will face in the next decade and beyond.”

Performing Arts Fort Worth is the non-profit organization formed to fund, design, build and operate the world-class multipurpose Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass Performance Hall complex.  The complex, which includes the Maddox-Muse Center, the McDavid Studio and the Van Cliburn Recital Hall, is the crown jewel of a city that boasts the nation’s third largest cultural district. Built entirely with private funds, Bass Performance Hall is permanent home to the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, Texas Ballet Theater, Fort Worth Opera, and the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition and Cliburn Concerts. It also hosts special productions of Casa Mañana Musicals, and presents Performing Arts Fort Worth’s “Hall Series.”

September 25th, 2008 | No Comments »

The Broadway production of Legally Blonde The Musical announced it will close on October 19. The production will have played 595 regular performances and 30 previews when it concludes Oct. 19. 

Read the full story a Playbill.com …

In other news, the National Tour of Legally Blonde The Musical kicked off in Providence, Rhode Island, this week, and audiences and critics are loving it. Check out this review from the Providence Journal:

The verdict is in: Legally Blonde is a winner
Thursday, September 25, 2008
By Channing Gray
Providence Journal Arts Writer

Legally Blonde The Musical is ready for the road.

The show, which opened its national tour this week at the Providence Performing Arts Center, is an entertaining romp with a jazzy score and a fine cast who gave it their all at Tuesday’s opening. It’s the kind of show that’s sure to have a life way beyond Providence.

Sure, Legally Blonde is light, the sort of silly stuff that Broadway has a knack for dishing out. But it’s also fast-paced with a lot of clever banter and a feel-good message: be true to yourself. It’s even got a fetching Greek chorus.

Suffice it to say if you liked Reese Witherspoon as Elle Woods in the film version of Legally Blonde, you’re going to love look-alike Becky Gulsvig as Elle in this upbeat tour.

Gulsvig is a petite 26-year-old from Minnesota, and as a package she’s got it all. She can belt, dance and summon a troubled expression when it looks like her hopes of becoming a lawyer are dashed.

Actually, the show sticks pretty close to the movie, except for the scene when Elle tries to get into Harvard Law School, one of the more improbable moments in this story of self-discovery. Rather than send a video of herself in a bikini in the family pool as Witherspoon does, the Elle of the musical shows up at the Harvard admissions office with a troupe of cheerleaders and prances around in a sparkling pink (pink being her favorite color) majorette’s costume. That, and a confession that she is trying out for law school for the sake of love, was enough to earn her one of the coveted spots in the class.

But otherwise, this is the now familiar story of a fashion-conscious sorority queen who enrolls in law school to win back the boyfriend who has dumped her for someone more “serious.”

Again, the whole premise is a little implausible. Elle is a fashion major at at the University of California at Los Angeles when she decides to head to Harvard Law to impress stuck-up Warner Huntington III, played by dashing Jeff McLean. Forget case law, Elle is more interested in having her nails done.

For the first act, Elle, the quintessential Valley Girl, seems incredibly shallow, just interested in boys and the latest beauty tips from Vogue. What does this musical say about women? Elle never quite gives up her fondness for fashion. She actually wins a crucial case based on her knowledge of cosmetics and her membership in sorority.

But she does come into her own by the end of the show, and learns that she doesn’t have to cling to a guy to be happy. She even seems to develop a fondness for the law.

And she gets the eventual backing of her chief rival, Vivienne Kensington, who was Warner’s squeeze for a while. That’s a nice touch.

In the end, the men in the cast come off looking rather shabby, at least that’s the case with Warner and lecherous Professor Callahan, who is played by a chilly Ken Land.

Only Emmett Forrest, who stands by Elle when she is down and out, comes across as a respectable soul. He’s a sort of mild-mannered, self-effacing sort played by D.B. Bonds, who was the Freddy in last year’s tour of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.

It’s Bonds and Gulsvig who pretty much carry the show. They’ve got charm and fresh-faced appeal, along with solid singing voices, even though Gulsvig could sound a little strident in the more challenging vocal numbers. But in sweet ballads like “Legally Blonde,” she shines.

Still, it was some of the lesser roles that were the more engaging, like Kyle, the hunky UPS guy, and Natalie Joy Johnson’s Paulette, the down-to-earth beautician who doubles as Elle’s therapist. Ven Daniel nailed the part of Kyle, strutting about the set in shorts, flexing his buff bod, while Johnson summoned some impressive vocal firepower for the tune “Ireland.”

And don’t forget the dogs: Elle’s perky Chihuahua Bruiser, who carried off his tricks without a hitch, and Paulette’s loveable bull dog Rufus, who Elle rescues from Paulette’s nasty ex-boyfriend.

There are few if any memorable tunes in the score by Laurence O’Keefe and Nell Benjamin. Many of the songs, particularly those for Land, the law professor, were sort of half spoken. Others were of a jazzy ilk. But nothing that grabbed you.

But the sets, with their towering Ivy-league columns and a funky beauty salon, were impressive by touring standards.

Again, don’t go looking for much in the way of substance when it comes to Legally Blonde. But if you’re looking for a fun night out, for a tight high-energy evening of theater, then this is a show worth catching.

September 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Xanadu, the Tony-nominated musical based on the infamous flop film of the same name, will end its run two weeks earlier than recently announced.

The producers of the musical had announced Sept. 16 that the musical comedy at the Helen Hayes Theatre would end its run Oct. 12. A new closing date was announced yesterday: Xanadu will now play its final Broadway performance this weekend: Sept. 28 at 3 p.m.

Read the full story at Playbill.com …

September 16th, 2008 | No Comments »

Click Here for an interesting blog entry by The Columbus Dispatch’s Michael Grossberg about John Kenley, the retired impresario of Kenley Players, which brought TV and film stars to Dayton, Columbus and other Ohio cities throughout the 1960s and 1970s to perform in summer-stock musicals and comedies. For many years, Kenley’s name was practically synonymous with theatre in Dayton!

September 10th, 2008 | No Comments »

The big downtown Dayton Urban Nights event is this Friday, and of course our Open House & Arts Market at the Schuster Center and Victoria Theatre will be taking place during Urban Nights.

As we mentioned in a prior post, one part of Open House & Arts Market will be a “blind auction.” So just what is a blind auction? Unlike a silent auction, you’re not actively bidding against others. You select a maximum bid you’re willing to pay, put it in a box, and walk away! The person who submitted the highest bid wins.

There will be a number of different items offered in the blind auction, among them autographed show posters (George Benson, Frankie Valli, The Ten Tenors, Ted Neeley from Jesus Christ Superstar, Sinbad and the cast of Mamma Mia! among them), A DCDC gift basket, and a walk-on role in a Human Race Theatre production, to name just a few!

And then there’s the fridge mentioned in the headline. This is no ordinary refrigerator – it’s been autographed by many of the performers who have passed through our venues over the past few years. Here’s a short list:

Bill Cosby
Jerry Lewis
Regis Philbin
Jerry Seinfeld
Joan Rivers
Danny Glover
Gerry Faust
Scott Hamilton
Shirley Jones
Larry Gatlin
Yo Yo Ma
Jack Hanna
Peggy Fleming
Charles Osgood
Rita Moreno

Stop by the Open House & Arts Market between 5 & 9 p.m. Friday to check out this utterly unique conversation piece! For more information about Urban Nights, visit the Downtown Dayton Partnership website.

Download: Urban Nights Event Map & Program (PDF)
Download: Urban Nights Entertainment Schedule (PDF)

September 10th, 2008 | No Comments »

Click Here to read Playbill.com’s preview of the upcoming Broadway season in New York City. Many interesting things are on the horizon. And check back here often for more news on Dayton’s upcoming theatre season, where many interesting things are also on the horizon!

September 5th, 2008 | No Comments »

Streets of Gold Productions will present the gospel play Grandma’s Hands tonight and tomorrow (September 5 & 6) in the Mathile Theatre at the Schuster Center, as part of our IMPACT program. The show tells the story of Eloise “Grandma” Carter, who is at a time in her life when quiet reflection should be the reward for someone who has spent her entire lives giving, sacrificing and surrendering her desires for the sake of others. But instead, she receives an urgent message from her estranged daughter, Ladoris, who now needs her help more than ever.

Read More about the Show
Buy Tickets Online