In alphabetical order, my 2012 favorites include (click on the title to read my full thoughts on the show at the time I saw it):
Ash Land, Transatlantic Love Affair: My favorite show of the
fantastic 2012 Minnesota Fringe Festival was also the last one I saw, a Sunday
night audience pick. This very loose retelling of the Cinderella story is a
totally unique creation that moved me in so many ways with its innovative and
simple way of storytelling. The company of actors embodied, in addition to the
human characters, everything in the world of the story, from the waving wheat,
to the water pump, to the long awaited rain. Ash Land is everything theater
should be, or as I said in my original blog post: “Friends, this one really
touched me. And that's all I ask from theater - to move me in some way, whether
it's to laughter or tears, or a different way of thinking about something, or a
different way of seeing something.” It was my first show by TLA (a double Ivey winner this year, for Ballad of the Pale Fisherman and the Emerging Artist
Award for co-founder Isabel Nelson), and I plan to see everything they do from
now on, beginning with a reprise of their 2011 Fringe show Red Resurrected,
playing at Illusion Theater in February.
Buzzer, Pillsbury House Theatre: Pillsbury House Theatre
does not make the kind of theater that’s nice and fun and pleasant. They make
theater that will challenge you, make you think about the world you live in,
and want to do things differently. Whether it's Tarell Alvin McCraney’s
Brother/Sister trilogy, which continued this year with The Brothers Size, or the
new play Buzzer, a story that explores race, gentrification, and the
complicated relationship between three friends. The trio of young actors all
gave powerhouse performances, including an Ivey Award winning performance by
Hugh Kennedy. If you missed this show, you're in luck – the play is being
remounted at the Guthrie's Studio Theater beginning in February with the original cast (which also includes Namir Smallwood and Sara Richardson).
Gruesome Playground Injuries, Peanut Butter Factory: This
funny and surprisingly moving little play about the lifelong relationship
between two childhood friends (beautifully portrayed by Adam Whisner and Leigha
Horton) was perhaps my most surprising and delightful theater find this year.
With very little idea of what I was going to see, I completely loved the
experience. As I wrote at the time, "This is why I do this, friends. To go to
an out of the way, under the radar theater with zero expectations, and be
totally surprised and delighted and touched and moved. It doesn't get much
better than that." It was far from the biggest or splashiest show (produced at
the cozy little Intermedia Arts theater), rather it was quiet, powerful, and transformative.
Into the Woods, Mu Performing Arts: It was a great year for
Sondheim in the Twin Cities. Theater Latte Da staged Company (more on that
later), Bloomington Civic Theater did a beautiful production of Sunday in the Park with George, and Mu tackled Into the Woods, setting the European fairy
tales we're all familiar with in the woods of Asia. As I wrote at the time, "the shift works
beautifully, shedding a slightly different light on these archetypal stories
that are common among many diverse cultures, attempting to make sense of our
shared human experience." With beautifully simple sets and costumes, a fabulous
cast that included Mu favorites Randy Reyes, Sheena Janson, Sarah Ochs, and
Katie Bradley, and that wonderful Sondheim score perfectly executed under
Denise Prosek's music direction, it was both classic Sondheim and something
new.
My Antonia, Illusion Theater: My first Illusion show was a
remount of a successful play from a few years ago, which I regretted missing
the first time around. This beautiful adaptation of Willa Cather's pioneer
novel moved me with its sense of nostalgia for that time in our history when
everything was new, told through Cather’s wonderfully descriptive prose, a
talented cast playing many different characters (led by Joel Leistman, Dustin
Bronson, and Emily Gunyou Halaas), and beautifully evocative music. Its simple beauty unexpectedly brought tears to my eyes.
Next to Normal, Mixed Blood Theatre: Next to Normal, a gut-wrenching
look at the effects of mental illness on one typical American family, is simply
one of the best musicals written in this young century. It's one of my favorite
scores to listen to, and I saw the Broadway production three times (including
once on tour), so needless to say I was thrilled to hear about this local
production. With its simple staging, talented and racially diverse cast, and
excellent execution of the difficult and driving rock score, Mixed Blood did
not disappoint.
Red, Park Square Theatre: It was a good year for Park
Square. They started the year with a spectacular production of another one of
my favorite musicals, Ragtime, about early 20th century
America and the diverse people who inhabit it, with an amazing cast full of
local talent (I'll talk more about a few of them a bit later). But if forced to
choose, I have to say that the intense two-person drama Red was my favorite
Park Square production this year. A career performance by veteran local actor
J.C. Cutler, equally matched by the up-and-coming young actor Steven Lee
Johnson (see also Beautiful Thing), playing a complicated teacher/student,
father/son, mentor/mentee relationship, set in the world of art in 1950s New
York City. A beautifully written play, fantastically acted by two performers
totally in the moment, a lived-in set that included life-size replicas of huge
and famous works of art, in short, "this play is an almost visceral experience,
with art, music, ideas, words, appealing to all of the senses."
Sea Marks, Gremlin Theater: The Gremlin is another fairly
new-to-me theater that I've really come to enjoy, showcasing a wide variety of
work, from the hilarious farce An Absolute Turkey, to the dark comedy A Behanding in Spokane, to my favorite of this year, Sea Marks, a quiet little play about an
Irishman and a working woman from Liverpool who embark on an unlikely romance
through letters. Two of the Twin Cities' best actors Stacia Rice and Peter
Hansen played the couple, about whom I wrote, "to watch them together in this
intense, beautiful, sweet, awkward little dance of a play is a true pleasure."
Spring Awakening, Theater Latte Da: If you've read this blog
before, you know that Theater Latte Da is my favorite theater company,
specializing in what Artistic Director Peter Rothstein calls "intelligent
musical theater." I really loved their fall production of perhaps my favorite
Sondheim musical, Company, which they managed to make modern and relevant
despite it being over 40 years old. But their spring production of Spring
Awakening was, simply put, perfection. Along with Next to Normal, Spring
Awakening is one of the best musicals of this century, in which a 19th
century German play is turned into a rock musical exploring the difficulties of
being a teenager in this world. Latte Da's superb production featured a
super-talented and energetic young cast - Cat Brindisi, David Darrow, Tyler
Michaels (more on him in a bit), and a bunch of the University of Minnesota's
best theater/dance/music students. The choreography by Carl Flink was the best
I saw all year, and took full advantage of the youthful passion and energy of
the cast. It was successful and extremely satisfying on every front – and
deservedly won an Ivey Award for all-around excellence. As one evaluator put
it, "this is the reason the Iveys were created."
Summer and Smoke, Theater in the Round: 2012 was also a
great year for Tennessee Williams, one of my favorite playwrights. The
highlights include a beautifully sad production of The Glass Menagerie at
Yellow Tree Theatre, the intense and bristling Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at the
Guthrie, and Autumn Song, a new piece by local composer George Maurer, in which
the poems of Williams and Rainer Maria Rilke are gorgeously set to music. The
one blight on my year of Tennessee Williams is an unfortunate and
unintentionally comedic Broadway production of A Streetcar Named Desire (I'm
looking forward to seeing Ten Thousand Things' production in May to see how it
should be done). But my favorite Williams experience this year was a show I
almost didn't see, Summer and Smoke at Theatre in the Round. I'd never heard of
this play, and hadn't been to Theatre in the Round in years, so I wasn't quite
sure what to expect. I was blown away by the tragic love story and the
performances of the cast (particularly Joanna Harmon as the tortured Miss Alma)
on this intimate little stage. It was heart-breakingly lovely.
Turn of the Screw, Torch Theater: A perfectly thrilling
ghost story at one of my favorite venues, Minneapolis Theatre Garage, Torch
Theater's production of the Jeffrey Hatcher adaptation of the classic ghost
story was just in time for Halloween. Two excellent performances by Lindsay
Marcy as the governess of two troubled children at a spooky remote English
estate and Craig Johnson as every other character in the story fueled this
tense and tight drama that continued to give me chills even after I left the
theater. Watching the governess fall apart as the events unfolded was
deliciously disturbing, even more so when you realized it might all be happening
inside her head.
Werther and Lotte, The Moving Company: For the second year in
a row, a production by this new-ish theater company founded by Theatre de la
Jeune Lune artists Dominque Serrand and Steven Epp has landed on my list of
favorites. This time it's a lovely and innovative interpretation of a novel by
Goethe. Christina Baldwin (more on her in a moment) and Nathan Keepers brought
their individually unique and specific talents (hers musical, his physical) together to create a piece that
combined music, movement, images, and storytelling in a way that pushes the
boundaries of what theater can be and do. In other words, "it's truly lovely
and a breath of fresh air."
Xanadu, Chanhassen Dinner Theatres: You may have seen ads for the
Chanhassen's summer show that quoted me as saying, "it's the most fun I've ever had at the theater!" While it's true that the Chanhassen puts on the best press
night in town, the fun mostly came from the show. Xanadu was the perfect summer
entertainment (I saw it twice) - light and fun and hilarious, but with some
clever commentary on the state of musical theater that proves it's in on the
joke. It was a bit of a departure for the Chan, which usually does more
traditional, classic musical theater (see their current production of Bye Bye Birdie, or next summer's production of Joseph, the third in six years), and a
very successful one at that (to my eyes). A relatively
small cast allowed each member to shine, from the Olivia Newton John-esque Jodi
Carmelli to Kersten Rodau in a hilarious turn as an "e-evil woman!" And the cheesy 80s music featured in the show became my soundtrack of the summer.
That completes my list of favorite shows of the year. I haven't mentioned any Guthrie Theater shows
yet; in a way I feel like they belong in a class of their own. The Guthrie has
more resources than any other theater in town (not just money but the kind of
talent they're able to attract from around the country), they produce more
theater than any other theater, and I see more shows there (18 this year on their three
stages) than anywhere else. My favorites this year include the delightfully original dance pieces Swimming with My Mother and Trick Boxing in the Studio theater, the luscious summer musical Roman Holiday, the fast and funny Raye Birk/Peter Michael Goetz buddy comedy The Sunshine Boys, the pre-Broadway production of End of the Rainbow featuring a fierce and fearless performance by Tony nominee and Ivey winner Tracie Bennett,
the sobering and intense war and relationship drama Time Stands Still, the hilarious British comedy Hay Fever,
the story of poet Langston Hughes Are You Now or Have You Ever Been (featuring
Gavin Lawrence, who brought Hughes and his poetry to life in one of the best
performances of the year), the tensely claustrophobic study of human nature The Birds, and last but not least, the ridiculously hilarious adaptation of the 18th
century Italian play The Servant of Two Masters (currently playing through January 20).
The Sunshine Boys |
Time Stands Still |
The Birthday Party |
Dieter Bierbrauer (center) with the cast of Company |
Christina Baldwin (right) in In the Next Room |
Tyler Michaels in Spring Awakening |
I apologize for the length of this blog post, and thank you for hanging in there if you're still reading this! I saw an incredible quantity and quality of theater this year, and hopefully this has given you a pretty good summary of the highlights. I'm extremely grateful to be a part of this amazing theater community, and I'm excited to see what 2013 has in store. Happy new year of theater to you all!