ceebeegee: (Sweet Briar)
[singsong]♫ I just got a Macbook ♪[/singsong]

Eeeeh! It's an itty-bitty dainty lil' Macbook Air--can't wait to play with it! Naturally tonight is the night I HAVE to do laundry--no play until later. I was verrrrry tempted to get an iPad but ultimately went with the Air.

Anya cracks me up--she really "gets" Tibby's voice, his whiney, "poor pathetic me" inner monologue. (As Tesse would put it, "I've never been fed. Ever.") The other night she started singing songs from Hair in his voice--"Easy to Be Hard," and the opening of "The Flesh Failures" ("We starve...") are especially appropriate.

Still plowing through Medieval Warfare: A History--I'm trying to get way ahead on the readings for the second half of the semester. Just finished a chapter on naval warfare.

Ryan and I did what Duncan and I did last year (Duncan had rehearsal last night) and talked to students from my alma mater--we met them at the Gershwin Hotel last night. Had a BALL, the students were thrilled to talk to us, even though most of them were not theater students! (The trip is for arts students in general.) They asked us all sorts of questions, so thoughtful too! They were very excited to hear my production company is named Holla Holla Productions--that's a Sweet Briar cheer! ("Here's to ya, Sweet Briar, Holla Holla Holla, nothin' that you cannot do..."). I didn't get a chance to talk to Christian about the Thyme project afterward (she had to run out) but from what little she said about it, it seems she's still working on it.

Tim's party overlooking the parade route is tomorrow! Can't wait!
ceebeegee: (Midsummer)
So I scored a ticket to the opening of Hair at the Delacorte last night. They couldn't have picked a better night for the opening--it was absolutely beautiful when I walked up at about 7:30 to get the ticket. My seat was Section L, Row T, waaaaaaay back but center--and bonus, there was no one next to me! I had a place to put my purse.

This was one of the few times I've been able to see a production of this caliber more than once--this time I was able to pay a lot more attention to the direction and choreography, and appreciate both better. I especially like the staging of the Be-In--there's this sort of tryptich thing going on there with whirling dervishes and whatnot that I think looks really cool. I noticed that Sheila is completely alone onstage during "Easy to be Hard" which...hmmm. Okay, I guess I can see that, my problem is that isn't Berger supposed to hear her, since he tacitly apologizes right after the song? I also think there's a danger of the song then turning into a solo show piece, as opposed to a dramatically motivated plea. I did notice that some of the performances had evolved maybe a little bit too much--there was definite milking going on! I had some ideas about how I'd like to stage it and was waiting until intermission so I could jot them down.

Which....looks less likely at this point, since the show is getting a-ma-zing reviews! I imagine they are considering it for a transfer to Broadway--although I think this production (and this cast) deserve it, I also think some of the magic may evaporate when it is no longer under the stars.

Addendum:

Forgot to add that just as the cast was finishing up "Let the Sun Shine In"--I mean, JUST as they'd stopped--the rain poured in. It was an instant deluge, and very cool to clap for all of them and witness on the onstage dancefest in the pouring rain. I got soaked, obviously, but it was a blast, and the energy in the place went crazy. IA fitting metaphor for the underlying sadness in this piece.
ceebeegee: (Mercutio)
I'm seeing Hair again tonight!

I scored a ticket--just one, or I would've asked someone along again.

Yay!

Busybusy

Aug. 6th, 2008 05:35 pm
ceebeegee: (Mercutio)
I had a great meeting with Dave Z. today. We talked about the next couple of seasons--I started off by pitching, hard, Hair, a show that I really want to do right now and have been thinking about for the past couple of weeks. I have most of it blocked in my head already! In particular I know exactly how I want to do the finales of both acts. I can already hear myself doing over the history with the cast. "Okay, this play takes place in late 1967. What just happened? [The Summer of Love] What's about to happen? [The Tet Offensive] What will happen next spring? [The assassinations of MLK and RFK] Remember, Woodstock and the Manson murders--the high and low points of the counterculture--haven't happened either--this lifestyle is very new to most of these kids." We discussed the pros and cons--he can't do it this season, obviously, and he already has strong ideas for next, but the one after that is a possibility.

We also talked about Duncan's one-act for the Hudson County One-Act Festival, "Patrick and Lisa's Wedding." Thankfully it will not be terribly difficult to block. But I'm worried about when to find ANY time to rehearse. Did I mention it goes up in mid-September? Yeah. Gonna have to cast ASAP and make time before the R&J tech week hits the fan. Thank God Mercutio dies early, all I can say.

I gave him what I have so far of the Christmas Carol script. I'm not done with it yet, I'm about 2/3 of the way. I added a half-scene here and there (Dick & Caroline, Child Scrooge reading to himself) and I'm still fiddling with the concept of the Readers, and the Ghost of the Future. I sent an excerpt to Dave a few weeks ago and what he's read, he said he really liked, said it flowed better.

And we talked about The Secret Garden for which I would looooove to audition, but it's a question of time. So far in September I have to perform in and produce R&J, and direct Patrick and Lisa. And in October I have to audition A Christmas Carol, start directing it, and MOVE.
ceebeegee: (The Opposite of War Isn't Peace)
So I scored two tickets for Hair at the Delacorte last night and took Paula. She'd never seen anything at that space (although she certainly identified most if not all of the productions on a collage poster outside the Box Office). I was so so soooooo excited to see the show--I kept burbling "WE got tickets to Ha-air, WE'RE gonna see Hair tonight..."

The production, like the show itself, is not perfect, and I would've done some things differently as a director. But it works. Oh, does it work. Jonathan Groff is very strong as Claude, achingingly vulnerable and sweet. (Er, though I must point out, he has a slight tendency to go a very little bit sharp. It's possible his vibrato pulls sharp at times--he was maybe a 1/4 tone sharp, if that. Not much.) The Sheila was interesting. It took me a little bit to warm up to her character because she plays it *very* differently from how Tracie and I played it--she's noticeably more serious, more earnest, more mature than the rest of the Tribe. She has a killer voice. There are some script emendations that help this characterization--she says at one point "when are you going to grow up?" They also rewrote the yellow shirt scene slightly--Spoiler )

The crowd seemed very subdued--I was bopping in my seat to the music and then I would try to pull back, not wanting to be that annoying audience member. But then I though "It's fucking Hair! Why isn't this crowd rowdier?"

Berger was terrific--he played him as kind of an ADD guy and really brought out how annoying Berger can be sometimes. But in keeping with other Bergers I've seen, he doesn't look any 18 years old. That makes no sense--as great a song as "Going Down" is, Berger's character, his sway and influence over the rest of the Tribe and his sexual experience, doesn't really jibe with his being so young. Whatevs. The actor was great and that's what matters. As I said to Paula, Hair, like In the Heights, is not a perfect show--the book is sloppy and some of the characterization is weak or off. But it's a magnificent show when done right.* And you have to avoid making it *too* sentimental. Berger *is* annoying and self-centered, the Tribe are all still kids who are not nearly as individualistic and actualized as they imagine--their groupthink (whatever Berger proposes, they ALL immediately do) is daunting. And yet for all that, they're luminous, touching, and their vision for the future is a pure one.

*Hair, like Godspell, is so damn fun for the cast, the danger is that they will have more fun than the audience, that it will turn into a bunch of giggly insider humor and games onstage and the audience will be left out.

Dionne was terrific, amazing voice. Jeannie and Woof were also great.

That last sequence, starting with the Tribe at the Induction center, just kills me--it's so well-constructed, with the chanting going into "Yipyipyipyipyipyipyipppee! Yipyipyipyipyipyipyipppee!" And then Berger and Sheila and the Tribe calling out for Claude who appears--and he's invisible. And you just know what that means. Oh, it breaks my heart.

I remember learning the music for that sequence and hearing the guitar riff that starts off "The Flesh Failures" and realzing it was a dirge. A rock dirge. "We starve, look/At one another, short of breath/Walking proudly in our winter coats/Wearing smells from laboratories/Facing a dying nation/of moving paper fantasies/Listening to the new-told lies/With supreme visions of loneliness." And the tribe joining in mournfully--"Eyes, look your last/Arms, take your last embrace/And lips, o you, the doors of breath/Seal with a righteous kiss/Seal with a righteous kiss/The rest is silence...the rest is silence...the rest is silence..."

And then that dirge gradually, slowly transforms into "Let the Sun Shine" which, it should be noted, is also in a minor key--it is not necessarily a happygoodtimes song, just because it's about the sun. It's about "don't let this tragedy cripple you--don't let them steal your soul. Life is around you and in you." It's a plea.

Spoilers ) It was quite powerful.

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