THEATRE PREVIEW
END OF YEAR WRAP
Published in KPBS On
Air Magazine January 2005
It’s
long been known that terrible times engender exciting art. And it was a less
than stellar year for
We
had a raft of political plays to get and keep us thinking: Continental
Divide at La Jolla Playhouse, Laterthanever
productions’ Mrs. Farnsworth, Stone Soup Theatre’s Two Rooms, Mo’olelo’s debut production, Remains, the reprise of
the Playwrights Project’s Patté Award-winning Forty Miles from Tel Aviv and
provocative readings of A Girl’s War (Carlsbad Playreaders)
and a splendid, four-night series of fresh, topical plays produced under the
banner of Artists for Intelligent Politics, which included David Hare’s Stuff
Happens and the Riot Group’s Pugilist Specialist, both of which
recently made waves abroad and in New York. It was an excellent year for
contemplating the role of science in our everyday lives, via three superb
productions: Backyard’s Experiment with an Airpump,
the Globe’s Intelligent Design of Jenny Chow, and Sledgehammer’s Kid-Simple.
Of
course, we got a surfeit of Shakespeare – particularly with the Old Globe’s
revival of its summer Shakespeare Festival, which, under the expert artistic
direction of Darko Tresjnak, performed three plays in
repertory: Antony and Cleopatra, Two Noble Kinsmen and As You Like
It. There was plenty of Shakespeare at smaller venues as well: UCSD mounted
a magnificent Richard III, Sledgehammer tackled Macbeth, while
Lamb’s wrestled with Hamlet; there was a Twelfth Night courtesy
of New Village Arts and Poor Players, who did one muscular, timely production
after another, under the artistic direction of its consummate lead actor,
Richard Baird, especially succulent in Henry IV, Measure for Measure and
Macbeth.
When
times are tough, some people prefer The Great Escape. Well, it was a banner
year for musicals and comedies, three of which – each a stunner -- made their
way to Broadway. In the spring, we were treated to the La Jolla Playhouse’s
Page to Stage work-in-progress, Billy Crystal’s 700 Sundays, a hilarious
and heartbreaking memoir. In the fall, the Playhouse brought us a world
premiere musical,
In
2004, the Old Globe gave the world a musical version of Dirty Rotten
Scoundrels, that movie-first comedy about two charmingly unsavory con
artists who seduce and scam wealthy, unsuspecting women. Directed by Jack
O’Brien and created by his award-winning Full Monty team, the show
featured John Lithgow and the irresistible triple-threat (fresh from his big
success in Wicked), Norbert Leo Butz. Great
fun!
Our
highest profile resident directors, Jack O’Brien and Des McAnuff, both had a
busy year…. though they didn’t spend that much of it in
Meanwhile,
here at home, the musicals were hot (most notably, San Diego Rep’s Crowns,
Cygnet’s unique and outstanding Bed and Sofa, Starlight’s Sweeney
Todd and Moonlight’s Cabaret). And the dark comedies were especially
delicious: the Rep’s Women Who Steal, Renaissance Theatre’s Gingerbread
Lady, 6th @ Penn and Moxie Theatre’s Kimberly Akimbo, and
Lamb’s Players Art. For sheer comic diversion, there was Cygnet’s Fully
Committed, Renaissance Theatre’s Shirley Valentine and North Coast
Rep’s Breaking Legs.
Onstage
and off, there was no lack of drama -- from the Grassroote
Greeks monthly readings, to 6th @ Penn’s Kiss of the Spider
Woman, The Maids, The Road to Mecca and A Lesson from Aloes; two
outstanding collaborative productions from Theatre and Common Ground Theatre
-- Saturday Night at the Palace and
A Raisin in the Sun, New Village Art’s Still Life and A
Lie of the Mind, Sledgehammer’s A Dream Play, Cygnet’s Las Meninas, UCSD’s Streetcar Named Desire and North
Coast Rep’s The Chosen.
Exciting
premieres of new plays by local writers included Mat Smart’s
The Hopper Collection, Seema Sueko’s Remains,
Cool as We Fly by Ruff Yaeger, Joan Beber’s Ethel
Sings and Jim Caputo’s Maternal Spirits. Plus, we were graced with
the latest works of Arthur Miller (Resurrection Blues at the Globe) and
Luis Valdez (Earthquake Sun at San Diego Rep).
What
a year! It may not have been politically satisfying for all, but it sure was
theatrically rewarding. Killer comedy, drama and world premiere musicals – a
frontal assault on a theater near you.
©2005
Patté Productions Inc.