Gypsy Sally’s: Music Alive & Well in Georgetown

January 17, 2014

I am a singer-songwriter, and I live in Georgetown. I wrote and performed in Nashville, Tenn., for years, and I now spend a few days there each month. I admit that I am spoiled when it comes to live music. You can only imagine my elation when I got the news that a new music venue, Gypsy Sally’s, would be opening down on the Georgetown waterfront. Back in my early twenties, I was a regular groupie at the legendary music club, the Bayou. When it closed in 1998 I feared that, other than Blues Alley, Georgetown had seen the last of its musical glory days.

Just a few blocks from where many Bayou memories reside for me, a new, Americana-themed, 300-seat music and dinner club, Gypsy Sally’s, has recently opened. The party is not only back in town, but it has changed for the better. It’s no longer about enduring a standing-room-only crowd, developing neck cricks from straining to see the band or bringing peanuts to munch on during the show. Gypsy Sally’s features local, regional and national Americana bands and offers a menu consisting of the foodie generation’s F.L.O.S.S. theme: “Fresh, Local, Organic, Seasonal and Sustainable.” My two favorite menu picks are the sunflower hempseed hummus as well as the kale salad.

The few times I have managed to sneak away after putting the kids down, I’ve been blown away…not only by the talent Gypsy Sally’s has booked (Jim Lauderdale graced the stage opening night), but by the comfort, hip factor and tech savvy of the establishment. There is ample tiered, graduated seating so that everyone can see. Booking online can also ensure a specific table or even barstool. Tim Kidwell of the Birchmere in Alexandria, Va., consulted on the state of the art, incredibly balanced sound system (no ear plugs ever needed). Yet another surprise is the dance floor situated in front of the stage. Finally, a place to dance in Georgetown.

If you feel like you just want to chill and chat with friends, Gypsy Sally’s also boasts a space called the Vinyl Lounge with an entrance off 34th Street. Once inside, you can play your old records (yes, bring them with you, or choose from their amazing collection). Eat from the eclectic, ethnically diverse menu, and relax.

I sat up at the bar in the Vinyl Lounge the other night, hanging out with my girlfriend, Karen Ensor, co-owner of the place with her husband, David. The room was packed, the vinyl spinning. I asked her what the one message about Gypsy Sally’s would be if she could put it out there. She said: “Trust us.”

Karen and David Ensor really know music. David is a singer-songwriter, and Karen went to college at Vanderbilt University in the midst of Nashville’s music heyday. Whether you come to Gypsy Sally’s to enjoy a concert or to hang out in the Vinyl Lounge, you will be pleasantly reminded that the music is still alive and well in Georgetown, and our good friends, the Ensors, promise that there is something for everyone any night of the week. The glory days are back.

Visit www.GypsySallys.com for the music calendar and other information.

Intimate, Emotive ‘Laramie Project’ Moved From Ford’s Theatre


Theater has always been about the stories we tell ourselves and have passed on. Theater is bearing witness to how human beings have lived, live and may live tomorrow. It is history made into characters and stories, poetry and shout-outs and the talk amongst ourselves made into meaning, into thought and emotion, into tragedy and comedy, reality and fiction in front of us.

Sometimes, not often, but sometimes, theater gets caught up and changed in the history of the moment, the historic moment.

That was the case with Ford’s Theatre, and its season-opening production of “The Laramie Project,” a play created by playwright-director Moises Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theatre Project from the raw material of interviews with people in Laramie, Wyo., in the aftermath of the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, a young gay man living in Laramie, as well as from comments by the actors who participated in the project themselves.

“The Laramie Project” became a kind of cause célèbre almost as much as the crime itself. The trial—involving a hate crime—and reaction to it spread throughout the nation with vigils, demonstrations and protests. This latest production was scheduled to have its season-opening premiere on Tuesday, Oct. 1. Instead, Ford’s Theatre became entangled with the biggest story in Washington, the impending partial government shutdown which became a reality at midnight.

As a result, Ford’s and its director Paul Tetreault learned that Ford’s, which operates on a public-private partnership with the National Park Service, would not be allowed to have performances—due to the government shutdown. In fact, all performances of the play at Ford’s Theatre have been cancelled through Oct. 6 because of the shutdown.

“This did not happen in the previous shutdown,” Tetreault said. “This whole thing defies logic. We were not sure exactly what was going to happen in terms of our play, but we still didn’t expect this. It was almost at the last minute. I started making phone calls, and luckily, the people at Woolly Mammoth Theatre were kind enough and could offer us the rehearsal space at their theater. And Tuesday was also a dark night there, with their ‘Detroit’ not being performed, which might have caused confusion. So, we scrambled to put on the play, because I think this is very important. It’s an important story that needs to be heard, because it had such a tremendous effect on our society.”

“The actors had not even been on that stage before,” Tetreault continued. “Obviously, there were no lights, no special sound effects, no set, a few props and costumes. We decided to have a VIP and media presentation because we wanted to have people have the opportunity to see it.”

It was learned yesterday that the Ford’s Theatre Society would present free performances of the play at the nearby First Congregational United Church of Christ on Friday, Oct. 4, and Tuesday, Oct. 8.

In terms of the shutdown, which has affected hundreds of thousands of government workers being furloughed and will cost the District of Columbia millions of dollars in terms of tourist revenue, not to mention of the political fallout throughout the country, the cancellation of a theatre production—even one as powerful as this play is—may be a footnote to some. Nevertheless, it remains an event of major import to the Ford’s Theatre Society, which stands to lose the entire run of the play which was scheduled through Oct. 27.

As it is, a curious and genuinely theatrical, human and historic event occurred when a terrific cast walked on stage at the downstairs Woolly Mammoth Theatre and began to tell the story of Matthew Shepard, his family, the residents and officials in the town of Laramie, Wyo. A deep sense of intimacy was created as they worked, walked, talked, introduced the people under the watchful eyes of an audience seated in five rows and totaling perhaps just under 100 persons.

It’s hard to imagine how this might have worked, what visuals and videos might have been used, how the view from afar in Ford’s Theatre might make you feel differently than being so close, but I suspect there is a difference. I kept thinking of last season’s production of “Our Town” at Ford’s for some reason.

As a theater writer or critic, one might hesitate to comment on the production, given that you’re not seeing the full production. But it’s a needless worry—this group of actors was so good, so in the zone, that there was no question of the play having an emotional impact. In fact, the result all but erased whatever distance normally exists between actors and audience. This cast— often-performing Holly Twyford, Craig Wallace, the always surprising Kimberly Gilbert, Kimberly Schraf, Mitchell Hebert, as well as Katherine Renee Turner, Chris Stezin, Paul Scanlan, Amy McWilliams and Eric M. Messner—bring special gifts as shape and speech shifters taking on many parts, providing introductions for the audience.

There’s not much there, physically, some chairs, a table, coats, caps, uniforms, the rest is all imagined resonance, shifts in voices, walks, gestures, and what the audience brings to the event with the requirements being an open heart, an open mind and perhaps open arms, if only.

Some of those qualities were obviously missing from the citizens of Laramie, a western college town in the middle of the big open space and the big lonely of the West, as they took in what had happened, that two locals had kidnapped, robbed, beaten and tortured a young gay man and left him to die, which he eventually did in the hospital. The reactions vary from shock, disbelief, well-hidden bigotry rising to the fore here and there, empathy, out and out hatred, anguish and grief, and growth and change.

“The Laramie Project” is a very theater piece of theater—here, after all, are actors playing other actors, who are also playing themselves and the pivotal members of the population of a medium-sized American town, caught up in a national fire storm about attitudes, biases, and sweeping change.

The production marks the 15th anniversary of the death of Matthew Shepard, adding poignancy to the event, and whatever else audiences can bring to this play, including the sure knowledge that much has changed in intervening. I thought about the play the day after, sitting at Tryst in Adams Morgan with a friend, watching one of the two male parents of an adopted little boy named Eli sitting on his parents’ lap. They live on the street where I live, seamless as the air we all breathe.

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‘Bell’ at NatGeo: the Inventor Is in Town for a Week


Alexander Graham Bell is back at the National Geographic Society this week, and you have a chance to meet him — as dramatized by Rick Foucheux in “Bell,” presented at National Geographic Live! on 17th Street, NW.

The one-man play, written by Jim Lehrer of the “PBS NewsHour” and directed by Jeremy Skidmore, is the first-ever theater production by the National Geographic and in honor of its 125th anniversary. It begins as Bell awakes from a nap and talks about his beloved wife Mabel Hubbard Bell, daughter of Gardiner Hubbard, who founded the society. Bell (1847-1922) was president of the non-profit exploration and science institution for a few years at the turn of the last century.

The great inventor speaks directly to the audience, moving back and forth between his day and ours. He asks us to hold up our smart phones. Yes, he is responsible for that, known as he is for being “the telephone man,” he tells us. Parts of the device also owe thanks to Thomas Alva Edison with his work on lights bulbs, phonographs and electronics, he adds. Bell mentions his erstwhile colleague Edison quite a few times during the performance.

Two-time Helen Hayes Award winner Foucheux distills the life of the famous Bell with authority and humor for at least 80 minutes through Lehrer’s words to that of a man, just like anyone else, frustrated by events or rivals.

When President James Garfield lay wounded on a white House bed in 1881 after being shot at a downtown Washington, D.C., train station, Bell tried to help find the bullet in the president’s body with a metal detector — to no effect, stymied by metal coils in the mattress, Bell laments.

Even the stage displays Bell’s personality: a desk cluttered devices and designs, a back wall postered with sheets of his drawn-up designs. Indeed, Bell says his definition of genius is the opposite of Edison’s, who said it is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration. Tellingly, for Bell, it is 99 percent inspiration.

We may have known that Bell’s wife was deaf and that he worked in vocal physiology like his father, who also had a house on 35th Street in Georgetown, across the street from the Volta Bureau, the site of one of Bell’s laboratories in D.C. Bell’s bureau and the street, Volta Place, derive their names from the Volta Prize which France awarded to Bell in 1880.

One prize which Bell never got was to be on the cover of the National Geographic Magazine. During the play, he holds up an open, life-size version of the magazine’s famous yellow frame in front of himself as if to right that wrong.

Who knew about Bell’s airplane, the Silver Dart, flying in New York and then in Nova Scotia? How about that he loved ice cream too much and died from diabetes?

There is, of course, more to know about Bell. So, don’t call, don’t text . . . just go. In fact, you have only six evenings to see “Bell.” Take the kids, too. As with anything created by the Geographic, you will learn something new.

“Bell” runs through Sept. 21 at the National Geographic Society’s Grosvenor Auditorium, 1600 M St., NW. Call 202-857-7700, or visit nglive.org/bell.
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Kennedy Center Honors: Arroyo, Hancock, Joel, MacLaine and Santana


Recipients of the 2013 Kennedy Center Honors—given to individuals for their lifetime contributions to American culture through the performing arts—were announced today: opera star Martina Arroyo; jazz pianist, keyboarder, bandleader and composer Herbie Hancock; pop and rock singer and songwriter Billy Joel; actress Shirley MacLaine and rock-and-roll icon Carlos Santana.

The list is notable and conspicuous for the inclusion of Santana and Arroyo, doubling the number of Hispanics in the lists of honorees in this the 36th year of the Kennedy Center honors. It’s significant because of a controversy which erupted in the wake of a contentious debate rising from protests by Hispanic advocacy groups that the honors lacked enough Latinos in its lists.

The controversy resulted in the Kennedy Center creating an artist review panel and inviting recommendations from the public. Kennedy Center Chairman David Rubenstein said, “The Kennedy Center has sought to honor individuals whose accomplishments have affected the cultural life of the United States. This wider range of people involved in the process has resulted in the selections of five distinguished, accomplished and deserving honorees.”

Carlos Santana, a Mexican-American guitarist whom Rolling Stone including in the top tiers of guitarists, and his band Santana became almost instant icons when they performed at Woodstock in 1969, a performance that shot them to stardom as one of the most original forces in rock and roll music, infusing rock with African and Latin rhythms, sounds and instruments. Their version of “Black Magic Woman,” and “Evil Ways” where huge hits, and Santana and the sound enjoyed a resurgence of popularity in the 1990s.

Martina Arroyo was raised in Harlem and was not encouraged to set her sights on an opera career. She was raised by an African-American mother and a Puerto Rican father. She made her Carnegie Hall debut in 1958 and built a rangy opera and singing career with a superb soprano voice. She “has dazzled the world with her glorious soprano voice and continues to share her artistry with a new generation of opera singers,” the Kennedy Center noted.

Billy Joel became the nation’s piano man, a prolific creator of hits for over 40 years including “Uptown Girl,” “New York State of Mind,” “An Innocent Man,” “Just the Way Your Are” and “Movin’ Out,” which became the basis for a Twyla Tharp-conceived Broadway musical of the same name.

Shirley MacLaine is a Hollywood movie star icon with tremendous personal appeal—she had a gamine, pixie-like quality early on which worked well in romantic comedies and dramas both and after numerous nominations won an Oscar for “Terms of Endearment.” She is also the sister of previous Kennedy Center honoree Warren Beatty.

Herbie Hancock played with Miles Davis early in his career but also was a pioneer of funk, embracing rock-and-roll and soul sounds into jazz.

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Posner at Home at Folger


Even though Aaron Posner has directed
many plays in many American
places, and written some, too. It
must seem now as rehearsals get
underway for his next production,
that the Washington theater community has
come to be a major part of his creative and
professional as well as personal life.

Just now, the Folger Theatre, and its small,
intimate, Bard-echoing Elizabethan theatre will
take up a large space in his imagination and
profession, as he directs “Romeo and Juliet”
and embarks on the journey that will take
Posner and his wife Erin Weaver, starring as
Juliet, toward the Oct. 15 opening.

Posner has expended a good part of his directorial
resume at the Folger, a place drenched
and steeped in Shakespearean history, artifacts,
scholarly work and productions of the Bard
canon over decades. Posner sees all that, but he
sees something else, too. The Folger is a place
for risk taking and risk takers, a quality not usually
associated with an institution so squarely
placed in history.

You wouldn’t think so, if you visit the Folger
Shakespeare Library, by the Supreme Court and
the Library of Congress— the centers of political
power in the United States. These are solid,
Greco-Roman buildings as symbols of power
and culture. The small Elizabethan theatre,
with upstairs and downstairs seating looks
like it was transported from the days when
Shakespeare was writing his plays, complete
with daunting pillars that always challenge
directors, designers and actors.
“I know people don’t often think of the
Folger in terms of risk-taking, of edgy work,
and projects that might be difficult to do, that
are fresh and different,” Posner said. “But
that’s exactly what happens here, there’s a
willingness to say ‘All right, go ahead and do
it that way,’ even if the idea sounds outrageous.
There is a history here of saying yes to artists.”
This was true before Posner began working
his directorial magic here, when Joe Banno was
directing some unusual takes on classic material—
several actors including Holly Twyford
performing the role of Hamlet for instance,
and of course a “Romeo and Juliet” for which
Twyford won a Helen Hayes award.
The result for Posner has been an outstanding
run of project and plays, including “A
Conference of Birds”, based on a 12th-century
Sufi poem about a group of birds searching
for God. Posner was inspired by renowned
director Peter Brook and his book “The Empty
Stage”, in terms of how to do a play that was
basically a series of parables.
Even by Posner’s standards “Birds” was a
different sort of play. It wasn’t that far removed
from “Orestes: A Tragic Romp,” or even his
“The Taming of the Shrew” which had frontier
western setting, and won the Helen Hayes
Award for Outstanding Resident Play.
At the Folger, Posner has also directed a
new version of “Cyrano,” which he co-adapted
and won a best director award, “The Comedy of
Errors,” Tom Stoppard’s intellectual whiz-bang
of a play “Arcadia,” “Macbeth,” which he codirected
and co-conceived, “The Tempest” and
“Measure for Measure” (this season being done
at the Washington Shakespeare Company),
which got Posner an outstanding director award
and an outstanding resident production award
for the Folger Theatre, “The Two Gentlemen
of Verona” (another outstanding director
award), and Craig Wright’s “Melissa Arctic”
(based loosely on “A Winter’s Tale”) as well as
“Twelfth Night,” “Othello”and “As You Like
It,” going back to 2001.

“Romeo and Juliet” is probably
Shakespeare’s most popular play, appealing
to classicists and teenagers all at once, and
Folger appears to be counting on that, scheduling
a run through Dec. 1.

“Everybody knows the play, or thinks they
know the play,” Posner said. “Everyone loves
the romance, the passion, the tragedy of the
lovers, and characters like the Friar and the
nurse and Mercutio, it’s the language and
poetry and all of that. But to me there’s something
else. There’s a mystery in this play, and
you have to solve it: how do these two young
people—they’re teenagers, come to such a stark
conclusion—they think and feel that they have
no other choice except to die. That’s central
to the play, you have to try to understand that
decision.”

Posner’s wife Erin Weaver is taking on the
role of Juliet. Posner finds the experience of
directing his wife as essentially a sharing. “We
don’t have a problem there, it’s a good thing in
terms of our marriage, to be able to collaborate
like this and share at a very basic level our
work.”

Both Posner and Weaver worked together at
Signature Theater earlier this year in “Last Five
Years.” Weaver herself worked in “Company”
at Signature, and earlier in “Xanadu” among
many projects. The two have a young daughter
named Maisie.

Birds seems to have been on Posner’s mind
of late—in addition to “The “Conference of
Birds,” his play “Stupid “F—–g Bird,” based
not all that loosely on Anton Chekov’s “The
Seagull,” received a powerful, funny and
intense production at the Woolly Mammoth
Theatre. “There were similar characters, and
similar interest and the play and Chekhov have
always fascinated me.”

In this bird, as opposed to the other birds,
Posner managed the not inconsiderable achievement
of imaging, or re-imagining Chekov’s
characters in our times, how they might have
lived, sounded, and behaved today.

Posner’s gift is original in the sense that he
has a taste for re-imagining, even re-invention.
It shows up in his penchant for adapting literary
works, without damaging them. He might
shine a different light or lamp on the works, but
they shine, and brightly, nonetheless.

DID YOU KNOW?
Raised in Eugene, Oregon;
born in Madison, Wisconsin
Helen Hayes and Barrymore Award-winning
playwright, director and teacher
Previously accomplished director at
Folger Theatre: One best director and
two outstanding director awards
Founder and former Artistic Director of
Philadelphia’s Arden Theatre
Has directed major regional theatres
from coast to coast
Quoted as saying “I can’t direct
Shakespeare without swearing.”

Fall Arts Preview 2013


NOW PLAYING
Miss Saigon—Here’s a way to kick off a 24th-anniversary season: remount and re-imagine a full-blown production of “Miss Saigon,” one of the most iconic big-theme, big-deal Broadway musicals of the “Les Miz,” “Phantom of the Opera,” “Cats” and “Evita” era.

That’s what Signature Theater’s not-shy-of-a-challenge artistic director Eric Schaeffer has done, staging the first production of the Viet War set, but “Madame Butterfly” echo musical in 15 years, running at the MAX Theatre through Sept. 22. Schaeffer, who directs the production, described as “environmental,” says Signature is “pulling out all the stops in this production with a terrific cast, full-size orchestra and a set that engulfs the entire theatre.

It stars Diana Huey as the bar girl Kim, Jason Michael Evans as the American GI Chris and Thom Sesma in the bravura role of The Engineer.

The Beauty Queen of Leelane—Martin McDonagh is back and the Round House Theatre in Bethesda has him, with its production of “The Beauty Queen of Leelane” through Sept. 15, directed by Jerry Skidmore. Irish to the core and contemporary to the core, “Beauty Queen” is about a lonely spinster living with her bigger-than-life, manipulative mother. Featuring Kimberly Gilbert and Sarah Marshall—two of D.C. theater’s finest actresses as daughter and mother.

A Few Good Men—Skidmore also directs the ongoing production of Playwright Aaron Sorkin’s 1989 military courtroom drama “A Few Good Men,” which became the basis for a hit movie, starring Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson. It’s now a Keegan Theatre production through Sept. 7.

Brokeology—Theater Alliance begins its 11th season with playwright Nathan Louis Jackson’s “Brokeology,” a powerful drama about a widower battling his own illness and trying to raise two sons. Now through Sept. 8 at the Anacostia Playhouse.
Shakespeare Free For All—The Shakespeare Theatre Company has been doing Shakespeare Free For All’s for 23 years and continues the tradition with a production of the Bard’s fabulous and popular (the director of “The Avengers” recently filmed it in black and white) comedy “Much Ado About Nothing,” after the original direction of Ethan McSweeny. Jenny Lord directs this comedy which stars Kathryn Meisle as Beatrice and Derek Smith as Benedick, one of the Bard’s most attractive battling couples, right alongside Petruchio and Kate. Now through Sept. 1 at Sidney Harman Hall. Check the STC website for times and how to get free tickets.

SEPTEMBER BRINGS IN THE SHOWS
Donna McKechnie at Olney—Probably not a coincidence, but Donna McKechnie, the sparkling Broadway star who was the original Cassie in “A Chorus Line” appears at the Historic Stage at the Olney Theatre Center in her cabaret show, “Same Place, Another Time,” Sept. 1 at 7 p.m., even as “A Chorus Line” is being performed here.

Wagner and Tristan and Isolde usher in the new Washington Opera Season—Washington National Opera Artistic Director Francesca Zambello celebrates the new WNO season with big works by both Richard Wagner and Guiseppi Verdi, who are having their bicentenaries.

It’s Wagner, with his epic “Tristan and Isolde,” and we do mean epic that starts the season with music Zambello describes as “romantic and hypnotic.” “I chose it,” she said, “as the gateway for us to experience the breadth of Wagner’s styles as we build towards our ‘Ring’ Cycle in the spring of the 2015-2016 season.” (Verdi’s “The Force of Destiny”, with Zambello directing, will follow, beginning Oct. 12.)

The incomparable Deborah Voigt—who starred in “Salome” here returns in the role of Isolde, with Ian Storey as Tristan (Clifton Forbis will perform Tristan Sept. 27.) WNO Conductor Philippe Auguin conducts, Neil Armfield, directs, with sets by Opera Australia, costumes by Jennie Tate. (Sept. 15, 18, 21, 24, 27)

Page-to-Stage New Play Festival—A sure signal that a new performance arts and theatre season is upon us is the arrival of the 12th Annual Page-to-Stage New Play Festival, with more than 40 theaters from all over the D.C. area. Performances are in venues throughout the center, in a series of free readings and open rehearsals of plays and musicals developed by local, regional and national playwrights, librettists and composers. It’s happening Aug. 31 through Sept. 2, and it’s a good chance for theater buffs to check the pulse and look into the future of the area theater scene. And to repeat: it’s free. Check the Kennedy Center website for details.

More Kennedy Center Shows
The boys are back. Yes, it’s Elvis, Jerry Lee, Carl and Johnny, Presley, Lewis, Perkins and Cash, aka the “Million Dollar Quartet,” the hugely popular musical in which the four budding stars get together, bicker, play, sing and fight and play a whole lot of shaking rock and roll and country music at Sam Phillips Sun Records Studio in Memphis in 1956. The musical arrives at the Eisenhower Theater Sept. 24 through Oct. 6.

“Four Little Girls”—The Kennedy Center, Project Voice and Howard University, working with Duke Ellington School of the Arts and African Continuum Theater Company, present a free, staged reading of “Four Little Girls, Birmingham, 1963.” Written by Christina Ham, and directed by Tony Award winning actress and television star of “The Cosby Show,” Phylicia Rashad, takes place Sept. 15, 6 p.m., in the Family Theater in the Kennedy Center. The production commemorates the 50th anniversary of the bombing that took the lives of four young girls at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., only weeks after the 1963 March on Washington.

NSO
With National Symphony Orchestra and Kennedy Center music director maestro Christoph Eschenbach conducting, the NSO begins its 83rd season with the annual Opening Ball Concert Sept. 29 at the Concert Hall. The evening will include legendary cellist Yo-Yo Ma performing Tchaikovsky’s “Rococo Variations,” and Carmen Carpenter, the dynamic young organist playing a finale of Saint-Saen’s “Organ Symphony.”

The NSO Pops Orchestra, directed by Steven Reineke, will kick off with “Cirque de la Symphonie”, Sept. 19 to 22, and then feature superstars Wayne Shorter, Vince Mendoza and the remarkable Esperanza Spalding, Sept. 26 in the Concert Hall.
The Kennedy Center’s dance program will kick off with the highly original company KARAS, which, under founder and choreographer Sburo Teshigawara brings the North American Premiere of “Mirror and Music” Sept. 12 and 13 at the Eisenhower Theater.

FOUR RISING PLAYWRIGHTS
At Arena Stage, Eric Coble’s “The Velocity of Autumn” focuses on 79-year-old Alexandra living with memories and explosives in her Brooklyn townhouse, and getting a visit from a long-lost son. Oscar winner Estelle Parsons and Tony Award winner Stephen Spinella make their Arena debuts, Sept. 6 through Oct. 20, with Molly Smith directing.

At Woolly Mammoth Theater, Lisa D’Amour’s Pulitzer Prize finalist “Detroit” about a collision between neighbors in Motor City gets going Sept. 9 and runs through Oct. 6, directed by John Vreeke for the city’s most consistently cutting-edge theater company.

Critically acclaimed playwright Amy Herzog’s play “After the Revolution,” which focuses on one family’s reaction to the blacklist starts at Theater J Sept. 7 and runs through Oct. 6, directed by Eleanor Holdsridge, and starring Nancy Robinette.
“Agnes Under the Big Top” by Aditi Brennan Kapil, and directed by Michael Dove, starts the Forum Theater’s season Sept.5 to 28, a play in which six lives intersect in what’s described as a “comic adventure about immigrant life in America.” At the Round House in Silver Spring.

The Laramie Project at Ford’s Theatre
Ford’s Theatre kicks off its season with something of a departure, the emotionally powerful “The Laramie Project” by Moises Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theater project. It’s the play about the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, a young gay man and resident of Laramie, Wyo., and the reaction of the community to what was considered a hate crime. Fifteen years later, the murder and Shepard’s story still echoes not only in Wyoming but across the country. The play is the third offering in the multi-year Lincoln Legacy Project, an effort to “generate dialogue around issues of tolerance, equality and acceptance.” Directed by Matthew Gardiner, Sept. 27-Oct.27.

The Embassy Series at 20
It’s hard to believe that the Embassy Series under founder Jerome Barry has been around for 20 years, building cultural bridges, exercising musical diplomacy and giving Washington audiences a chance to hear world class music from around the world in the city’s embassies, ambassador residences and international cultural centers.

The 20th season kicks off at the residence of the Indian Ambassador, with a unique program from international musical star Rudresh Mahanthappa, a composer and alto saxophone player with a sound that hybridizes progressive jazz and South Indian classical music. Mahanthappa is a second generation Indian-American who leads a quartet named Gamak, which features guitarist David “Fuze” Fiuczynski. The concert is set for Sept. 9 at 6:30 p.m.

The In Series’ “Taking Flight” Season Begins
The In Series’ “Taking Flight” begins with a series tradition, a pocket-opera program at the Source Theater, a new and “edgy” adaptation of Mozart’s light and funny “Abduction from the Seraglio”.

Wolf trap
A Dreamgirl and a dream girl of pop, the always original Lyle, doe-a-deer-a-female-deer, and Hobbits and Elves are among the treats awaiting fans of and visitors to the Wolf Trap outdoor summer series as it winds down.

There’s Jennifer Holliday in a four-night stint in “Dreamgirls” Aug. 22 to 25, the pop queen Carly Rae Jepsen with Hot Chelle Rae, Aug. 28, the like-no-other folk-country-beyond-category singer Lyle Lovett and his Large Band, Aug. 29, the Sing-A-Long Sound of Music Aug. 31, STS9 and Umphrey’s McGee Sept. 1, and last, but not least a screening of “The Lord of the Rings” and “The Fellowship of the Ring” with the City Choir of Washington and the World Children’s Choir.

Gala Hispanic
“Cabaret Barroco: Interludes of Spain’s Golden Age”, kicks off the Gala Hispanic, Sept. 12 through Oct. 6, bringing to the stage an example of the interlude, a form and genre that combined cabaret, street performance and carnival during the golden age of Spanish theater. By Calderon de la Barca, Francisco de Quevedo and Bernardo de Quiros, directed by Jose Louis Areliano.

The Rat Pack at the Strathmore Music Center
Strathmore starts off its season with an unusual offering. “Sandy Hackett’s Rat Pack Show” recreates some of the golden, flashy moments from the original Rat Pack, Las Vegas-style, that includes Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., Dean Martin and Joey Bishop. The pack also included at various times Peter Lawford and comedian Buddy Hackett, whose son Sandy has brought the pack back, Sept. 27.

Michael Kahn Directs Harvey Fierstein’s ‘Torch Song Trilogy’ at Studio Theatre
That headline almost sums it up—Kahn, the artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company, lending his directing gifts to a play that has become iconic. Beginning first as a series of one-act plays at La MaMa Etc in New York, it became a full-fledged play, written by and starring Fierstein in 1981. Performances start Sept. 4.

Faction of Fools
Faction of Fools, a newish theater company specializing in old styles, especially Commedia d’ la arte, starts its new season with Moliere’s “Don Juan,” a play which should be right up the company’s stylish alley beginning Sept. 12.

The Shakespeare Theatre Company Measures Up
“Measure for Measure,” a difficult Shakespeare play about love and power, vice and virtue opens the Shakespeare Theatre Company season under the direction of Jonathan Munby, who sets the play in a 1930s fascist state under the evocative hue of a cabaret culture, opens the season, Sept. 12 through Oct. 27. Miriam Silverman stars as Isabella, Scott Parkinson is Angelo and Kurt Rhoads is the powerful Duke. [gallery ids="101432,154573,154579,154556,154561,154565,154568,154577" nav="thumbs"]

WNO’s ‘Tristan and Isolde’: the Overpowering Wagner Is in Charge


Even under normal conditions, the opening of the Washington National Opera season qualifies as an event—it’s an occasion highly anticipated by opera aficionados and music lovers. It’s loaded with anticipation for the season as a whole, a major part of the city’s cultural and social scene.

But by any standard, the opening performance of the WNO’s season-opening production of Richard Wagner’s “Tristan and Isolde,” Sunday afternoon, directed by Neil Arnfield, with WNO Musical Director Philippe Auguin, conducting the WNO orchestra with impassioned fervor, was almost an uber-event.

Consider that this was artistic director Francesca Zambello’s beginning of a first full season in a world, like many others, where first impressions and efforts count for a lot.

Consider that this was after all Wagner, German and European 19th-century romanticism in high dudgeon in one of the most original—and difficult to stage, sing and perform operas ever composed.

For audience and artists alike, this is a night or day at the opera that requires full commitment. If you arrived at the opening a half an hour before curtain time at 1:30 p.m., taken in three acts and two 20-minute or so intermissions and left right at the end before all the applause and cheers commenced in earnest, you will have taken out pretty much a full afternoon of your life, four-and-a-half hours all told — or the length of close to two Sunday afternoon football games, including another dismal Redskins defeat, an afternoon of brunch and two movies, or a good chunk of season three of HBO’s “Game of Thrones.”

Oh, we almost forgot to mention that just a week before “Tristan and Isolde” was scheduled to open, star soprano Deborah Voigt, after consulting with Zambello, withdrew from the role, generally considering an exhausting, punishing role for body, soul and voice. Swedish soprano Irene Theorin, a Wagnerian veteran who had performed Brunnhilde in “Siegfried” at the WNO in 2009 was brought in to take on the role.

Now, that’s an opera opening that’s — well — downright operatic, creating a stir of expectation, and perhaps not a little dread, such feelings often present at openings for Wagner works. The sheer length and size of the production, the effort in time and attention on the part of the audience was daunting. It was, in the end, also entirely worth it, exceeding any expectations one might have held, and demolishing whatever fears might have existed.

To get the most open-ended part of the evening out of the way, Theorin didn’t just hold her own with the part of Isolde, which is frightingly large and taxing, especially in the first section of the opera, she took ownership of the part. In contemporary parlance, she nailed it, showing her particular gifts which included a powerful voicer that can and needs to hold its own with the orchestra, because this is, after all, Wagner. The opera is more than Wagner, with a score that, as Aguin, a Frenchman adept and expert with Wagner’s methods, suggests, “has the music act as a character.” Theorin seemed physically and dramatically comfortable with Wagner’s idea of a woman consumed by love, in stages. With Theorin, who cuts in an imposing and moving figure. We didn’t just hear Isolde. We felt her anguish, her girlish delights, her discovery of love. That was some potion, that potion.

This production is—in a way—Theorin’s and Aguin’s show. “Tristan and Isolde” is an opera where you really listen to the orchestral music because it cues you, it takes over. Often, it’s an illustration of thought, story and feeling, every bit as the voices and the libretto, the words, written by Wagner himself.

The story comes out of Arthurian tales by way of German writer Gottfried von Strassburg. It is about lovers ill met and then totally entranced, enhanced and immolated by love. Tristan is one of the noblest knights of the Cornish king Marke and has been sent to bring the Irish princess Isolde as the king’s bride after a war in which the Irish were crushed. In that war, Tristan killed Isolde’s bethrothed, a fact of which he is unaware, and Isolde also saved his life with her special healing gifts. The embittered Isolde swears revenge and plans to poison Tristan with a potion, but her loyal maid instead gives her a love potion instead.

Drinking the potion, the two fall instantly, dangerously, totally in love to a point where ideas of love and death almost merge. It is a love as everything, sex, heaven and earth, and, most significantly, night and day, life and death. This is Wagner by way of philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer. It dovetails with his ideas about total theater, the opera, in fact, is almost a guileless demonstration of theory as a work of genius-level art. This is the Wagner we know and love, that is, if you do to begin with.

After the lengthy idyll enjoyed by the lovers in the forest, this cannot have good results and portends disaster. Thanks to the treacherous and jealous Melot, they’re discovered by the king. Tristan is severely wounded, and everything goes to hell or somewhere else.

In the end, Tristan lies dying and has to carry the final act, alone with his loyal comrade Kurwenal at his ancestral home, awaiting against hope for Isolde. This is a challenge for tenor Ian Storey as Tristan who has to hold the stage, and be strong enough with his voice to duel with Wagner’s ravishing, challenging music which veers through different styles like a ship battered at sea. Storey does not always succeed. Also at the end, everyone shows up—some to die thankfully like Melot, Isolde too late to heal Tristan, and willing herself to die with him in the famous tear-drawing (lots from many in the audience) “Liebestod” or love death.

There is the certain so-called “Wagnerian” aspect to Wagner’s music—some of loudest, full-orchestra sounds you hear come oddly as no surprise, but the nuanced, quieter parts are delicious and moving in their depth and, surprisingly, in their tenderness.

There’s something else Wagnerian here, too. Opera isn’t known for its “book,” the quality of its librettos as literature. In this case, Wagner also wrote the libretto: after a while, the words, like the chords start to fall down like a sometimes salving, sometimes burning rain. Even in English translation, it’s a very German kind of rain—words and sentences as proclamations, spitting out whole all-embracing ideas, love, death light and darkness, otherness, the sadness of the day. Tristran and Isolde often don’t sing in sentences. It’s all nouns and adjectives: it’s the music that act as verbs, as action, as the heart in total abandon and flight.

Wagner, performed, played, acted and staged this originally. He’s a bully who will not be ignored, chastened, or cut by a minute. And at journey’s end with Tristan and Isolde, even if their boat takes its own sweet time arriving at the shore, it is more than worth it. You don’t have to love opera or like Wagner to be swept up in the waves.
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‘If/Then’: Bright, Talent-Laden Production Not Quite Ready

January 15, 2014

I’m betting that “If/Then,” the new talent-laden musical in a rare pre-Broadway tryout run at the National Theatre through Dec. 8, will be a hit by the time it opens on Broadway in the spring of 2014.

Which is not to say it’s ready for Broadway yet, or that it’s a perfect show, or that it couldn’t stand some heavy cuts here and there or that it sometimes tries too hard to be clever and cutting-edge cool for its own good.

Still, here’s why I think it will attract a big audience: it’s very much a show about the times in which we live. It’s got a great score. It may be the first big Millennial Generation musical to hit the boards, although its characters run to Gen X age-wise. It is thus is in tune with the changing, renovating, liveable urban scene all over the country, including Washington, D.C., but definitely New York City, where it’s headed and for which it’s a kind of visual and musical love song.

Here are other virtues for this head-spinning show: it has Broadway pedigree written all over it. With this much talent involved in the show, whatever fixes are needed ought to be completed by the time it really matters. You can make your way along a path that runs from “Rent” and “Wicked” through the much acclaimed “Next to Normal” and find most of the people involved on stage and backstage in “If/Then.”

Tom Kitt, who wrote the music, and Brian Yorkey, who wrote the books and lyrics, and Michael Greif, who directed, all worked together on “Next to Normal,” as did producer David Stone. Stone also produced the hugely successful “Wicked,” which made a big Broadway star out of Idina Menzel when she played the role of the green-skinned witch Elphaba. Greif also directed the other big smash “Rent,” which got Menzel her first Tony nomination for her portrayal of Maureen. (Menzel won a Tony for “Wicked.”) Co-star Anthony Rapp was also in “Rent” with Menzel. This may account for a certain comfort zone among the performers and the scene on stage, although that connection needs to be established more with the audience as well.

Menzel is another big asset for “If/Then.” She is a genuine Broadway diva star in the best sense of the word. She’s got acting chops—and a voice that ranges all over the planet and is liqueur smooth, powerful as a train which knows where it’s going, emotionally on target. Without Menzel, you haven’t got much of anything. She convinces the audience that all of this is important and makes perfect sense with every musical note and facial expression. It doesn’t hurt, of course, that she’s enormously appealing and beautiful, green witch aside. She plays a character who has the serious romantic attentions of at least three men in the cast—her boss, an old college sweetheart who’s also gay, and a two-deployment veteran (and a doctor, no less) who drops his duffel bag and falls in love the first time he sees her.

This may be the first musical in recorded history that has an urban planner as its heroine. How cool can that be? This is a show about choices, if you haven’t guessed from the title. Elizabeth in her late thirties has come to New York and is fresh from a broken marriage, trying to start over. She has made an instant friend in kindergarten teacher Kate (the high-flying, terrific LaChanze from “The Color Purple”) and re-united with college flame Lucas, a squatter and housing activist. She meets Josh, the returning vet in uniform who stirs her heart. But Beth is a bit of a data nerd, as well as an idealist. So, her choices are: take the hot, urban planning job from potential (but married) mentor Stephen (Jerry Dixon), take up with best friend Lucas, or take a teaching job and marry the stone-cold tender hunk Josh from Nebraska.

Life, Kate tells her, is all about chance meetings and events that come from them—decisions to do this or do that.

What’s a girl to do? Well, the book has her do it all—she slides in and out of two lives, often awkwardly, so that we get to see and hear the results of both choices, an often clumsy process where you don’t always know who’s there. Clarity is not yet a part of the menu here, and that goes for the songs which aren’t always clearly identifiable. When Menzel sings “Here I Go,” you get in one not the exact, long length of the journey. This structure, though—Liz and Beth, in and out—hasn’t been fully worked out to avoid puzzlement by the audience.

I’m not a prude, but it seems to be almost an established sign of cool to work the f-word into any contemporary theatrical proceedings, in titles and dialogue, but now in songs, too. Mamet could do this well. Here, it’s just a kind of cheap laugh which I hope doesn’t make the song an anthem. I understand the sentiment but not the need for its expression musically.

The show has another plus: Mark Wendland’s crisp, sparkling, almost breezy set design, allowing for the instant incarnation of bedrooms, boardrooms, trains and such, as well as a paradise-type park, aided and abetted by a big floating wall-to-wall mirror used inventively.

A pre-Broadway tryout is a rarity in D.C. these days, and you can tell there’s a lot riding on this. There’s been plenty of talk and buzz on Facebook, and in early peek-a-boo mentions, most of which are excitable and favorable, but not all.

A good gauge were comments I heard from two youngish, 30-something women: “We thought it was a little long and ought to be cut, but I think it spoke to our demographics.”

It didn’t speak to my demographics (baby boomer). Nevertheless, I have to admit that the show moved me, almost in spite of myself and itself. That, I think, is due to the really splendid cast—and, for sure, the voice and heart of Idina Menzel, a true Broadway star, still defying gravity.
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‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner’: Still Fresh in Obama’s America

January 6, 2014

Even back in 1967,  “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” a hit movie and social comedy about white liberal parents facing their principles as their beloved daughter comes home with an African-American doctor she plans to marry, seemed a  little retro, out of touch and tune with the turbulent times where anything seemed possible.
              

While entertaining, the movie tackled the subject of race in America with so many layers of kid gloves that you’d think it was morally snowing. Who could get mad at or even want to stand up to Spencer Tracy, entertaining serious doubts about such a marriage? What mother would not want her daughter to marry a black doctor with a United Nations portfolio, especially when he came into the house in the spitting image of Sidney Poitier? Certainly not the mother played by Katharine Hepburn, who after an initial attack of dizziness supported her daughter  As a topical dose of medicine about race and interracial marriage, the movie went down pretty easy and was, in fact, a highly entertaining hit, the kind of movie Hollywood liberals like to pat themselves on the back for (see “In The Heat of the Night”) come Oscar night.

              
Well, it’s almost 2014, and “miscegenation” is a word nobody utters any more at least not in public, nor can interracial couples be prevented from marriage. Himself a product of an interracial marriage, today’s President of the United States is an African-American man, named Barrack Obama, a startling shock to the political culture which has not been fully absorbed, but which the characters in “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” could hardly imagine.  “A secretary of state, maybe,” one of them says in Arena Stage’s deft, powerful, funny and affecting production of Todd Kreidler’s stage version of “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.”

You’d think this play—hewing tightly to the plot line and talk and setting and time of the original film—would be a little old-fashioned, a little uncomfortably creaky around the edges, a period piece that has little to say to us, except perhaps we’ve come a long way, folks. 

Actually, the production is a total winner. Better still, it seems, in terms of the periodic grand debate about race, almost fresh and authentic, in ways that our increasingly economically and culturally separating society rarely manages today. For many reasons, it seems to speak to just about every part of the audience, at least in the performance I saw, which, as somebody pointed out, was a Washington audience. I went to a weekday matinee and sat in the middle of an audience which was full, responsive, diverse,  loud and as much a part of the play as the actors on stage, which is one of those rare and self-evident moments in the theater that you can cherish.  There are fairly obvious reasons for this: this was an audience full of groups of people who  had arrived by bus, many of them older, baby-boomer generation members, black and white, as part of groups, including a group of Washington members of a teachers union. There was also pumped-up high school kids who dove into the material with apparent relish.

There were several occasions—when the doctor’s mother scolded him and men in general and when you could tell exactly who was laughing— you just knew all the black moms in the audiences were laughing while their husbands and/or sons squirmed.  

There was a tremendous amount of energy at this matinee performance. Part of it had a lot to do with the fact that the play—despite the presence of a sackful of cliché moments and characters—struck a chord because the characters were indeed talking about race, haltingly, uncomfortably and at last straight-forwardly,  Today, such discourse only happens, when sensational events rouse the torpid, sometimes angry differences in our society.   Often, it seems to us—in the here and now and who were there back in the day—that we’ve come a long way and brought all our keepsakes and baggage with us.

So, in this case, the audience is a critical part of the production, but the cast and the pacing by director David Esbjornson should get huge dollops of credit.  The situation is rife with cliches, of course: the maid, as a character but not in the timing-perfect performance Lynda Gravatt  is one; the brogue-touched, whiskey-drinking Irish priest and family is another; one of those well-bred social bigots who manages to thrive even in 1967 San Francisco is still another.  But the humanity of all the characters shines through, because—at least partly—they’re not being played by the likes of Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn or Sidney Poitier.

In its mechanics, the play is as old fashioned as a Shaw play, in which George Bernard managed to touch on political, cultural and societal issues, while not forgetting to douse his plots with family secret and surprises. There are several family tragedies and two big surprises:the first when Joanna or the beloved Joey, daughter of the well-off Matt and Christina Drayton, arrives unexpectedly with the man she announces she’ll marry, the highly respectable, gifted, quite a bit older and obviously black Doctor John Prentice.  At first, daddy Matt, a prominent liberal editor, doesn’t get it. “What’s wrong with my daughter, doctor?” he asks, the first of many mistakes he makes.  Mom, played beautifully with great, silky grace by Tess Malis Kincaid, swoons a bit, but adjusts rapidly—love is, after all, the domain of mother and daughter.

But Malcolm-Jamal Warner, who is easily remembered as the son, Theo Huxtable, in “The Cosby Show” gives Prentice down-to-earth rough edges that Poitier never even tried for. He is strong, ardent, patient, a man who knows his worth, and what he wants and intends to get it, and is perfectly aware of what he and Joey are in for.  But he’s also imposed an artificial, even theatrical condition—the parents—hers—must approve, or there’s  no marriage.

Meanwhile, Joey—the delightful Bethany Ann Lind—does whatever she will for her cause, which is her love for John Prentice, to the point where she’s invited his parents for dinner without telling him. “I want it to be a surprise,” she said, surprising everyone.  The parents—a furious, pent-up Eugene Lee as John Prentice, Sr., and a stoic, frustrated Andrea Frye as Mary Prentice—are excellently played so much so that we begin to realize this play isn’t just about race but also about gender and memory.  This cast—because the audience can see themselves in them in ways that you just couldn’t do with, say, Spence,  Sidney and Kate—is so good that you can forgive Matt Drayton’s obtuse panic which challenges his own principles and his love. He can only turn his lips down when his wife reminds him: “We raised her to be exactly what she is.” You forgive because Tom Key is so recognizable as any father, and as any liberal hoisted on his own petard because he knows he’s been hoisted, he knows he’s torn and in pain.

This is a great evening—or better, yet, afternoon—at the theater.  “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner”—quite a few people already have.  It’s playing at Arena Stage’s Mead Center for American Theater’s on the Fichandler Stage through Jan. 5.

Winning Over the Children With Great Theater


Who says kids won’t sit still for an afternoon or evening at the theater?

Well, maybe not entirely still, but “kids”—from adolescents, to pre-teens, to just-out-of-the-stroller-but-some-years-before-kindergarten are getting a couple of great choices at the Kennedy Center this holiday season with an opera and a play geared toward them. “The Lion, the Unicorn and Me,” is a new piece, commissioned by the Washington National Opera. Directed by WNO Artistic Director Francesca Zambello, “The Lion, the Unicorn and Me,” will be on stage this weekend at the Terrace Theater. Performances are Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.
At the Kennedy Center’s Family Theater, “Elephant & Piggie’s We Are in a Play!,” based on the popular “Elephant and Piggie” children’s books by Mo Williams, will have its world premiere. The musical production stars young actors tackling the challenge of being, well, elephant and piggie. Performances run through December 23.

“The Lion, the Unicorn, and Me” (and children’s opera in general) is a specific project and passion for Zambello, who has promised to bring a holiday production for the entire family each holiday season. “Hansel and Gretel” was presented last year.
“The Lion, the Unicorn and Me,” as Zambello noted on opening night, is the first opera composed by a woman—the Tony-Award-nominated Jeanine Tesori—to be presented by the Washington National Opera. Based on the book of the same name by Jeanette Winterson, the story posits the entirely plausible notion that on the eve of the Nativity, Jospeh and Mary were looking for a ride to Bethlehem. A boy angel was in charge of the search committee and all sorts of creatures applied, including a snake slithering down the aisle and a flamingo and a hippo. But it all came down to the lion, the unicorn and me, me being a donkey who was sturdily and patiently perfect for the job. All of which did not prevent the lion—the yeoman of WNO bass Simon Howard—from roaring musically and impressively and the unicorn—who looked a little like a mysterious disco diva, both alluring and fey, as portrayed by Jacqueline Echols—from being dazzling.

All of this, the contest, the journey and the Nativity, was remarkably touching and enjoyable because it reminded me that my inner child was still here. The stage was full of children and young people, including members of the WNO’s Domingo-Cafraitz Young Artists Program and the WNO’s children’s chorus.

The music was perhaps not entirely classically operatic, but it was accessible and varied in voice, tempo and feeling. Tesori is after all a Broadway veteran with “Shrek: The Musical” and “Thoroughly Modern Millie” as well as the score for “Caroline, or Change” to her credit.

Imagination, heart and seeing the world through the eyes of children while playing members of the animal kingdom in a musical is also at work in “Elephant & Piggie’s We Are in a Play!” at the Family Theatre. Veteran theater pros are at work on this musical version of the popular books by six-time Emmy Award winner Mo Willems. It is recommended for ages four and up, but don’t let that stop you.

Willems is adept at finding themes and stories that children are drawn to. He’s worked on the Cartoon Network and Sesame Street. He also wrote “Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical,” also commissioned by the Kennedy Center. The adventures of “Elephant and Piggy” asks such kid-friendly questions as, “Should you share your ice cream cone?” and “How can two friends share a single toy?”

The two leads are in good hands with Evan Casey who plays Elephant Gerald and Lauren Williams who plays Piggie. Both are veterans of children’s theater and performed together in “Snow White, Rose Red (and Fred)” at the Kennedy Center. Williams has been in “The Phantom Tollbooth” and “For the Love of Goldfish.” Casey has performed in “Tales of Custard the Dragon.” Both are regulars on the D.C. theater scene.

Casey, 31, says he, “tends to emulate Rex Harrison” in terms of his singing, while Williams, 30, says she has “a very young voice” for Piggie. “It’s a musical,” Casey says. “But it’s not just about singing. I also think right now, with what the Kennedy Center is doing, with Imagination Stage and Adventure Theater with Michael Bobbitt, children’s or young people’s theater has become a very big thing in the Washington theatre.”

Williams says the two characters are true to size—the elephant is really big, Piggie is small, yet they’re friends. “You tend to make big gestures if you’re playing an elephant,” Casey said, “although my wife saw me in rehearsal and she said I was acting like our dog.”

“Children’s theater is always a challenge, for acting, but you can also let yourself go, be dramatic, emphatic, so that children will understand what you’re doing,” Williams said.

After all, Elephant and Piggie are in a play!