Categories
Theater Theater Feature

Orpheum Theatre Announces 2024-2025 Broadway Season

The Orpheum Theatre has announced its 2024-2025 Broadway Season of eight shows. On the docket are MJ (September 17-22, 2024), Girl from the North Country (October 8 – 13, 2024), Moulin Rouge! The Musical (October 29 – November 3, 2024), Peter Pan (November 26 – December 1, 2024), Hamilton (February 18 – March 2, 2025), Some Like It Hot (April 8 – 13, 2025), Kimberly Akimbo (June 24-29, 2025), and The Wiz (July 22 – 27, 2025).

“I’m all excited about all of them,” says Brett Batterson, Orpheum president and CEO. “I can give you a reason why I’m excited about each one. I use a formula to basically make sure that I’m covering all my bases when I pick a season. I want to make sure I have a family show — Peter Pan. I want to make sure I have a classic, which is The Wiz this year. I want to make sure I have the newest and the best from Broadway, which we have a lot of this coming year, and then I like to make sure I might bring some shows that the people in Memphis would like to see.”

The Orpheum’s 96th season kicks off with MJ, the new Tony Award-winning musical centered around the making of Michael Jackson’s 1992 Dangerous World Tour. Girl from the North Country, which follows in October, reimagines 20 legendary songs of Bob Dylan to tell the story of a boarding house in Duluth, Minnesota in 1934. Then Moulin Rouge! The Musical will bring the magic of Baz Luhrmann’s film to the stage in a musical mash-up extravaganza. Peter Pan will close out the fall, but with a spin to the well-known musical that has been thrilling audiences of all ages for close to 70 years.

“I’m Flying.” (from left) Micah Turner Lee as John, Reed Epley as Michael, Hawa Kamara as Wendy, Nolan Almeida as Peter Pan in Peter Pan (Photo: Matthew Murphy)

“I’ve always loved the musical Peter Pan, but the portrayal of the Indians was always problematic,” says Batterson. “This particular Peter Pan, they hired a native playwright Larissa FastHorse to rewrite the Indian sections to make it respectful, and so I’m really excited to bring that and to see how that plays out.”

In the spring, Hamilton returns for a third time, to be followed by Some Like It Hot, a Prohibition story of two musicians forced to flee the Windy City after witnessing a mob hit. The 2023 Tony Award Best Musical winner Kimberly Akimbo about growing up and growing old takes the stage in June. Closing out the season is The Wiz, the groundbreaking twist on The Wizard of Oz that changed the face of Broadway.

Kyle Ramar Freeman as Lion, Nichelle Lewis as Dorothy, Phillip Johnson Richardson as Tinman, Avery Wilson as Scarecrow in The Wiz, 2023 (Photo: Jeremy Daniel)

Season ticket packages include seven shows and one optional show (Hamilton) that can be added to any package. Current season ticket holders can renew now. Ticket packages for new season ticket holders will be available starting Thursday, April 18th. New this season, those interested in becoming a season ticket holder can join a special priority list starting now until April 12th to secure access to a 48-hour presale ahead of the public on-sale. For more information about season tickets, visit orpheum-memphis.com/season. The public on-sale for individual shows and group tickets will be announced later.   

Categories
We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: “Les Misérables” Is Anything But

When it comes to me keeping up with new musicals, Les Misérables slipped through the cracks.

I’d never seen the show, which won eight Tony Awards, including “Best Musical.” I’d never seen the 2012 movie. I didn’t know a single song from the musical.

All I knew going into the Orpheum recently to see the musical was that the lead character was Jean Valjean and the show had something to do with a prison. And it was set in France.

I wouldn’t let anybody tell me anything about it because I wanted to be totally surprised by everything.

Since I took Spanish in high school and college (and still can’t read or speak it well), I had to look up the definition of “Les Misérables.” One meaning is “The Wretched.”

Well, this show is anything but that.

This is a stupendous production. I loved everything about it. The cast is great, the scenery is spell bounding, and the music is beautiful.

Hints about two things that astounded me (and won’t spoil anything for anybody): a scene with a bridge and the beautiful “Bring Him Home” song, which I plan to add to my repertoire at my piano gigs. So, now when people ask me to play something from Le Mis, I don’t have to say, “I don’t know anything.” And have to resort to playing “Edelweiss” or some other musical mainstay.

The story from the 1862 Victor Hugo novel is about Valjean, who is released from prison, where he’s been for 19 years. He was locked up for a minor offense. And it traces his life after prison as he’s on the lam after breaking parole and the people he encounters that change his life for the better.

That sounds so simplistic, but I don’t want to say much because I want people who’ve never seen it to be surprised. Like I was.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen the Orpheum so crowded. I ran my usual several flights to the top-floor restroom at intermission only to find that floor jam-packed, too.

Theatergoers following the opening-night performance of Les Misérables at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)

If you want to see Les Miserables before it ends its Orpheum run February 11th, you’d better hurry.

“Very limited tickets are still available,” says Brett Batterson, president and CEO of the Orpheum Theatre Group. “We sold 96 percent of the tickets each performance.”

They might have 30 to 50 tickets left for each of the remaining performances, he says.

“This show has always done well. They advertise it as the world’s most popular musical. I don’t know where they get that basis, but that’s their tagline.”

As for the Orpheum performances past and present, Batterson says, “It’s always done well.”

And, he adds, “It’s always sold like crazy.”

What sets Les Miserables apart from other musicals? “In my opinion, it all starts with the story. The book is a classic. Much loved.”

And, he says, “The music is so engaging that everybody leaves the theater humming one of the songs if not multiple songs.”

Then there’s “the brilliant staging,” Batterson says. “How beautiful it is to see it unfold on the stage.”

People are going to the theater again, Batterson says. Their audiences are returning. “What we’ve see this year looking back, Funny Girl sold really well. Beetlejuice was pretty much sold out. Six was pretty much sold out. Company did well. It didn’t sell out or anything, but it did well.

“I think we’re seeing the audiences are back,” he says. The “fear of Covid is past.” People aren’t reluctant to go to the theater.

And, he says, “I think the shows are really strong. So, people are coming. And on the 26th of February we’re going to announce a really strong season for next year.”

Gary Beard and Joe Lackie were among the first nighters at Les Misérables at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Vickie and Ron Olson were at the opening night of Les Misérables at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
We Saw You

WE SAW YOU: Go See “Funny Girl”

I think this is the first time I’ve ever written this in a story: RUN, DON’T WALK, TO THE ORPHEUM AND SEE FUNNY GIRL.

Like many people, I remember seeing Barbra Streisand on television singing the show’s  big hit, “People.”  She played Fanny Brice in the 1964 Broadway production.

I knew all the songs. I learned how to play “People” by ear on the piano. We didn’t buy the “original soundtrack album,” but I think we rented it at the library — back when you could do that.

I saw the 1968 movie with Streisand delivering her well-deserved Oscar-winning performance, but I’d never seen the show until I attended the opening night performance of Funny Girl October 10th at The Orpheum.

Wow. I was blown away. I was telling people it was “the feel-good musical of the year 1964.” But it’s also the feel good musical of 2023.

The cast was great, but I’m going to single out Katerina McCrimmon, who played Fanny Brice. What a voice. She held the audience mesmerized as she sang on “Don’t Rain on My Parade” and “I’m the Greatest Star,” just to name a couple.

I asked Brett Batterson, Orpheum president and CEO, what he thought about McCrimmon. “This is probably going to be her big break. Doing this tour,” he says. “She’s blowing away all the critics across the country with the power of her voice.”

And, he adds, “I think we’re going to see her doing something big on Broadway, some day, because of this tour.”

Brett Batterson, Kristin Bennett, Steve Conley, Amy Conley at Funny Girl at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Batterson first heard McCrimmon’s voice on a video some friends in Providence, Rhode Island, sent him. “This tour was launched in Providence not too long ago,” he says. “They sent me an email: ‘OMG you are going to love Katrina.” And they just raved about how good she was.”

Batterson hasn’t yet met McCrimmon, but he did meet Melissa Manchester, who plays — to perfection — Brice’s mother. “I’m such a Melissa Manchester fan. I wrote a fan letter in the program to Melissa Manchester.”

Funny Girl will run through Sunday, October 15th. “The show is doing well, says Batterson. “And we’re very early in the tour. Our sales are strong compared to other markets. We’re doing well.”

And the good news for those who haven’t gotten tickets?  “There are still seats available.”

So, let me reiterate: RUN. DON’T WALK.

Thomas Nichols and Jenny Vego at Funny Girl opening night at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Corey and Mary Trotz at Funny Girl opening night at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Melinda Winchester, Terry and Mike McGee, Rebecca Winchester at Funny Girl opening night at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Funny Girl at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
WE SAW YOU
Categories
We Saw You

We Saw You: “Frozen” Is Heartwarming

With temperatures expected to be in the 100s this week, anything with the word “Frozen” in it sounds good.

So, that’s a good reason to go see the musical, Frozen, which runs through July 2nd at The Orpheum.

It’s great.

For some reason, I knew nothing about Frozen except the name and the image of “Elsa,” the main character. And that’s thanks to my great-niece, who has gotten Elsa dolls and, I guess, anything else associated with Frozen, for years as birthday and Christmas presents.

Whenever I confessed my ignorance about Frozen to anybody, I was greeted with, “You haven’t seen the MOVIE?”

They were referring to the Disney animated movie and, I guess, the sequel, Frozen II.

No, I never saw the movies. Again, my mind was frozen as far as learning anything about the musical. This time I just wanted to experience something I knew absolutely nothing about. I closed my ears to spoilers.

I wasn’t disappointed that I waited until I saw it opening night June 22nd.

The musical with its perfect cast at The Orpheum is wonderful. Caroline Bowman is, to me, the embodiment of “Elsa,” which I only previously knew from drawings and dolls. And, speaking of dolls, I still remember the giant Elsa doll I didn’t buy one Christmas for my great-niece. She had no idea I was thinking about buying it for her. I’ll tell her when she reaches her 30th birthday.

I felt better about not buying that doll after her mother bought her Elsa and Anna (Elsa’s sister) dolls, which are on sale during the performances. My great nephew is getting an Olaf doll. That’s the snowman in Frozen.

Elsa and Anna dolls are on sale at Frozen at the Orpheum. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

I asked Orpheum president/CEO Brett Batterson to give me some background on this fabulous show.

“It’s doing very well,” he says. And, for those who don’t have tickets, he says, “We have some tickets left for next weekend ’cause it’s the Fourth of July weekend. Best ticket availability is this weekend.”

Brett Batterson at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)

If you think you’ve seen Frozen previously at the Orpheum, you’re wrong. “This is the first time we’ve had Frozen. It’s the last of the current Disney programs to make an appearance at the Orpheum. Everything Disney has out touring right now we have presented at least once. So, we hope that Disney creates some new shows. And we’ll keep bringing back the old faithfuls like Lion King and Aladdin.”

I had to ask Batterson what percentage of little girls were showing up dressed as Elsa at Orpheum performances. I saw lots of them, including my great-nice, in their flowing, diaphanous gowns gliding through the theater.

“Probably 60 or 70 percent,” Batterson says. “But there’s been a lot of them.”

Libby King, Millie King, Cecile Pacello, Colette Pacello, and Olivia Wilmot at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Tesharri and Nayah Gooch at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
BACK ROW: Liz Smith, Hadley Miller, Meade Carlisle; FRONT ROW: Genevieve Miller, Lottie Smith, Caroline Carlisle at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Three generations: Alice Kerley, Annie Kerley, and Kathy McLallen at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)

By the way, I did notice a movie also called Frozen came out in 2010. A Rotten Tomatoes synopsis I found on Google says, “As a winter storm approaches, three people become stranded on a chairlift high above the ground after a ski resort closes for the night.”

Elsa, apparently, doesn’t have anything to do with this movie. But it does sound like another beat-the-heat movie I might want to check out.

Moth Moth Moth at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Connor Trahan and Abigail Morici at Frozen at the Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
I ran into my old pal, John Beifuss, at Frozen at the Orpheum
We Saw You
Categories
We Recommend We Saw You

We Saw You: “My Fair Lady” Opening Night at The Orpheum

I waited almost 70 years to see the stage version of My Fair Lady. I finally saw the show last night, July 26th, at The Orpheum. 

The legendary Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe musical with Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison came out in 1956 when I was either in kindergarten or the first grade. We bought original soundtrack albums of Broadway shows, but, for some reason, we didn’t buy the one for My Fair Lady. We did get it at the Memphis Public Library, which had a vast collection of 33 rpm records in plastic covers. 

I remember getting one of those albums by orchestras that played selections from Broadway shows. I got it at the old Downtown Goldsmith’s department store on a trip with my mother, brother, and sister in the late ’50s or early ’60s. One side was My Fair Lady and the other, The King and I. It was good, but not the same as the original.

Heck, I even interviewed Julie Andrews, the star of the original, back in the day. Andrews, who was extremely nice as you’d expect Mary Poppins and Maria in The Sound of Music to be, was in Memphis for a fundraising luncheon at The Peabody.

The production at The Orpheum didn’t disappoint. Shereen Ahmed, who played Eliza Doolittle, reminded me so much of Andrews. And I’m never going to forget the excellent “Wouldn’t it be Loverly” number with Ahmed  and chorus. Rousing and great.

I liked Henry Higgins, who was played by Laird Mackintosh. He’s the professor who decides to make a lady out of Eliza, a poor flower girl whose speech is unrefined. Rex Harrison played him on stage.

I also liked Martin Fisher, who played the boisterous Alfred P. Doolittle, Eliza’s dad. Stanley Holloway played him in the original production.

I liked everybody, actually. A super cast.

There’s something about going Downtown to see a stage production or a movie or a concert. The first show I saw was a touring production of Porgy and Bess at the old Auditorium. I was in the famous nosebleed section. I also saw Jimi Hendrix twice at the Auditorium. I think I was on the last row both times. I still remember coming out of those old theaters on Main Street after seeing a movie at night with the family. I always got a syrupy Coke, butter-slathered popcorn, and a thick Charms lollipop during the movie. Cherry, mostly.

I asked Orpheum president/CEO Brett Batterson to tell me a bit about this production of My Fair Lady. “They restaged this in 2018,” he says. “This production was nominated for 10 Tony awards, including Best Musical Revival. This was not the original, at all.

“First off, they’ve tempered Henry Higgins a little bit. So, he’s not quite as misogynistic as he was in 1956. They’ve at least recognized times have changed somewhat. A lot of musicals don’t do that and they get flack for that. They tried to make his attitude toward Eliza based more on speech and less on misogynism. They made him a little more human.

“Then mostly what I like is how big is. It’s a big musical. Lots of scenery. Lots of beautiful costumes. Lots of great action, chorus numbers, classic songs. To me, it’s everything you want a classic musical to be.”

This is the third time My Fair Lady has been shown at The Orpheum, Batterson says. The musical also was presented in 1989 and 2005.

My Fair Lady runs through July 31st at The Orpheum. 

Erica Ferell and Betsy Bush at My Fair Lady at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ben Roberts and Shoshana Cenker at My Fair Lady (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Andrew “Latty” Latimer and Erin Austin at My Fair Lady (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Kayla Dawson and Coco June at My Fair Lady (Credit: Michael Donahue)
My niece, Alice Kerley, and her husband, Patrick Kerley, got to see the stage production of My Fair Lady a lot sooner than I did. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
My Fair Lady opening night at The Orpheum (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Go Behind the Curtain With The Hidden Orpheum

Have you ever wondered what made Memphis’ grande dame theater tick? On April 29 you can find out, while helping to keep the place going.

“The Orpheum Theatre Group is taking a creative, new approach to the virtual fundraiser,” says Orpheum Theatre’s president and CEO Brett Batterson. “The Hidden Orpheum uses the virtual space as an opportunity to showcase parts of the Orpheum people never see when they are visiting the venue in person. This is a fresh, exciting way to welcome Memphis and beyond into the inner workings of our historic building.”

The Hidden Orpheum is a streaming event where you can hear the untold stories of the great old theater at the foot of Beale Street, which has played host to thousands of performers, musicians, Broadway shows, and much more over the years. There will also be opportunities to bid on unique bits of Memphis stage history. Best of all, you can get a cocktail recipe or, with the VIP ticket, you can replicate the swanky Orpheum party experience at home with a custom, locally made charcuterie board and bottle of wine!

Like all the performing arts venues, the Orpheum is struggling to stay afloat until large-scale, in-person events are safe again. This unique, historic event is a great chance to help keep Memphis culture alive. Here’s a link to the announcement video, and a little video tour of the beautiful theater to whet your appetite.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Orpheum Gets a Makeover

Brett Batterson, the new CEO of the Orpheum, got his first taste of the pitfalls of running a century-old theater before he had even officially started the job.

During a performance by Tony Bennett last December, a major blackout hit downtown. “I was new,” said Batterson, who didn’t officially take over for retired long-time CEO Pat Halloran until January. “I was standing in the lobby thinking, ‘Man, there’s no lights in here!’ The emergency generator was from 1982. So we’re replacing that.”

Batterson said the new, state-of-the-art generator is the least glamorous of a program of improvements underway at the historic theater.

“We have four major projects going on right now. We’re renovating the administrative offices, which is a total gutting job; painting the auditorium and the lobbies; replacing the emergency generator, which is nothing exciting, but it is necessary for safety; and then we’re going to start renovating the washrooms in the fall. … The renovation phase we’re in right now began last year, when they removed two rows of seats down on the floor and widened the leg room.”

This is the third major renovation the Orpheum has undergone in the last 30 years, said Facilities Director Richard Reinach. Before the theater’s 1983 rebirth, “the building was in really deplorable condition. The ceiling was coming down, the roof was crumbling, the seats were trashed and broken. The paint was peeling, plaster falling. The carpet was nasty.”

The first renovation re-poured the concrete floors and replaced peeling wallpaper with vinyl paper that still hangs in the auditorium. In 1998, the back wall of the theater was pushed back about 25 feet to create more backstage space.

This time around, the Orpheum brought back Conrad Schmitt Studios, a Wisconsin firm specializing in historic restoration of churches and concert halls that had been involved in the last two renovations, to repaint the ornate detailing in the auditorium.

Now that the scaffolding has come down, the improvements are dramatic. Subtle red highlights call attention to the painstaking detail the original artisans put into the construction of the vaudeville palace in 1928.

“They reapplied all of the gold leaf and applied some silver leaf in more areas to make things pop out more,” Reinach said. “Specifically, people might notice that the lion’s head is now silver, so you can see it a lot better.”

Scaffolding inside the Orpheum as renovation work is underway

Upstairs in the theater’s offices, which once held the headquarters of Malco Theaters, the differences are dramatic.

“The office renovation is something that most people will never see,” Batterson said. “I don’t think they’ve been touched since 1928. People kept adding new rabbit’s nests to try and get more office space, and they painted the walls, but by and large, they were just horrible. There were stains on the carpet that made you think they were attached to body outlines. … There were offices so small you couldn’t open the door without hitting a desk.”

The new office spaces were designed by the Crump Firm. Workmen peeled back layers of plaster, wood, and sheetrock, digging down to the brick bones, where they uncovered a pristine vintage Coca-Cola sign that had been painted onto the wall of a neighboring drug store.

Reinach says it is a major working space improvement. “A lot of the rooms have glass walls. The architect’s idea was to bring a lot more natural light into the offices,” he said.

Plans are in motion to spruce up the lobby next, followed by a major overhaul of the restrooms. “We’re going to be adding more facilities in 2017,” Reinach said. “That’s been one of our biggest complaints — the waiting lines to use the facilities at intermissions. … The women are going to be very thankful.”

Beyond the improvements to the physical facilities, Batterson said he is looking forward to enhancing the Orpheum’s presence in the community with new entertainment and educational programming.

“We’ve got to expand our program to reach audiences we haven’t reached before,” he said. “We want the Orpheum to feel like home to everybody, not just the typical Broadway audience.”

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

A Conversation With New Orpheum CEO Brett Batterson

New Memphian, Brett Batterson

I recently interviewed newly arrived Orpheum Theatre CEO Brett Batterson for Memphis Magazine‘s 901 blog. It was a lively conversation and I wanted to link it here for folks who may have missed it the first time around. 

Brett Batterson leans back in his brand new chair in the brand new Halloran Centre for Performing Arts Education and taps the frame of an old photo— an artifact of his time working for The Nashville Network when TNN’s programing was built around Tennessee’s Country Music industry. “This is The Statler Brothers,” he says. “And this is one of my set designs for The Statler Brothers show. That was the height of Country music and the height of The Nashville Network. I had the good fortune to be in the right place at the right time, which is kind of the story of my life.”

Batterson is the new President and CEO of the Orpheum Theatre, replacing Pat Halloran who retired in 2015 after 35-years at the theater’s helm. Prior to moving to Memphis Batterson served in a similar position at Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre. He’s not from Nashville or Chicago though. Over five decades the plain-spoken Iowan has planted his shiny cowboy boots in ten different states. He’s evolved professionally from performer to scenic artist to theater builder, and finally to arts administrator. Batteson arrives the Orpheum during a major transition, as the opulent antique playhouse on Main at Beale launches its new, state of the art education center.

Memphis magazine: Tell me your story. I’ve done my homework and know all the high points. But I’d like to hear you tell it. I’ll rudely interrupt you with questions along the way.

Brett Batterson: I was born in upstate New York but when I was eleven months old my family moved to Davenport, Iowa. So I was raised in Iowa and claim to be an Iowan but I have a New York birthright, I guess. My parents were puppeteers. My father was a commercial artist and a wood carver, and together they made marionettes and I grew up with a puppet theater in my basement. So all of this has been in my blood since the day I was born.

To read the rest of the 901 interview click here.