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Theater We Recommend We Recommend

Who’s Holiday

Every Who down in Who-ville loved Christmas a lot. But Cindy-Lou, who lives on the south side, has been through a LOT. Now living in a trailer park, she is ready to share her turbulent story, so stop by Playhouse on the Square and see Cindy, as played by Courtney Oliver, in her full glory.

“I cannot stress enough that this is not a kids show,” says director Marcus Cox. Put simply, Cindy-Lou with her unexpected past is quite unorthodox. “She asks audience members questions. There’s some food handed out. But it’s not like Rocky Horror where you can scream and shout.”

For Cox, this show marks his Playhouse directorial debut, and he’s the one who introduced the play to the crew. Before this, he’s mostly dabbled in children’s theater, but as said before, this is strictly an adults-only feature.

Courtney Oliver as Cindy-Lou Who (Photo: Playhouse on the Square)

But, fear not, Playhouse has kid-friendly productions going on this month, too: The Wizard of Oz and Junie B’s Essential Survival Guide to School are sure to woo. “We tell the stories of our full community, young and old,” says Cox. “We tell the stories of our community’s minds, hearts, and souls.”

As the regional theater for the entire Mid-South, Playhouse has to cover a large swath of land. “That requires us to do more shows, but we are proud that we have a team that can.

“People know Playhouse for edgy shows that make people cry and make people think, and all of that is vital and extremely distinct,” says Cox. “But it’s also good just to be able to relax and enjoy live theater with your family and with your friends. For Who’s Holiday, in particular, the fun never ends.”

But will your heart grow three sizes after the play? Well, only you can say, but on Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7 p.m., you can catch Who’s Holiday, opening this Friday. To purchase tickets to this production, The Wizard of Oz, and Junie B, visit playhouseonthesquare.com or call 937-6496.

Who’s Holiday, The Memphian Room at The Circuit Playhouse, Friday, November 25-December 22, $20-$45.

Junie B’s Essential Survival Guide to School, The Circuit Playhouse, performances through December 22, $10-$35.

The Wizard of Oz, Playhouse on the Square, performances through December 22, $15-$45.

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We Recommend We Recommend

“Carrie: The Musical” at Circuit Playhouse

Carrie: the Musical director Courtney Oliver thinks she knows why some critics have described earlier productions of the Stephen King-inspired musical as being anticlimactic. It’s the blood.

“When people think of Carrie, that’s what they think of,” Oliver says. “They think of Sissy Spacek at the prom. They think of the big eyes. Or they think of the shower scene. Either way, it’s a bloody Carrie.” There are good reasons why theaters tend to suggest blood with lighting and other effects. Dumping a bucket of stage blood means somebody has to get it off the set and out of the costumes. Somebody has to clean wigs and reset them. And then there’s the question of wireless microphones that are seldom waterproof. Fake blood is a real mess.

Splatter zones!

“I can’t promise,” Oliver says, acknowledging that things may not go her way. “But we’re going to dump blood on Carrie. It’s going to splatter. If it works out, we’ll need to warn the audience in the first two or three rows that they might be in a splatter zone.”

Oliver was 6 years old when her mom read King’s novel about teenage bullies, broken families, and a girl with special powers. She was forbidden to read the book, but her mom shared bits and pieces. “She really enjoyed telling me the bedtime story about people who were mean to this girl, and how the girl would retaliate by moving things with her mind.” A few years later Oliver snuck the book out of her house and read it cover to cover. She’s read every novel King’s written since and can quote chapter and verse.

Carrie‘s opening line is one of my favorites,” Oliver says. “‘Deep down we all knew this would happen, down in the parts of our hearts where savage things grow.’ It’s all about how much you can take.”

Oliver hopes to highlight Carrie‘s similarities to the Cinderella story, and thinks University of Memphis grad Maggie Robinson has what it takes to turn lyrics about distant thunder into a Disney princess song. “Maggie’s got this beautiful smile and these dimples,” Oliver says. “It’s hard not to love her. Because of that we have a tragedy.”

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Theater Theater Feature

Let’s Dance: “Hairspray” at Playhouse on the Square

Playhouse on the Square’s fantastic revival of Hairspray couldn’t have been more perfectly timed. John Waters’ trashy ’60s-era love letter to big women, bigger hair, and rhythm and blues, tells the story of accidental integrationist Tracy Turnblad, a plus-sized white girl who wants every day to be “Negro Day,” on the Corny Collins Show, a Baltimore-based dance program for teenagers, similar to American Bandstand. The musical is classic Waters, but the message about being the change you want to see in the world is pure Broadway, and all too relevant in Memphis, where race continues to play such a strong role in our civic narrative. I was especially happy to catch Hairspray on the night of the Hattiloo Theatre’s grand opening party, welcoming all of Memphis out to visit the city’s first public arts institution built from the ground up to showcase African-American artists. The Hattiloo is just across the street from Playhouse and next door to Circuit and TheatreWorks in the very heart of a rapidly expanding theater and entertainment district.

After the curtain calls ended, I left Playhouse with three African-American ladies who were exuberant and trying to place Hairspray‘s trashed up cast members from other shows they’d seen at Playhouse. When they told me they were on their way to check out the Hattiloo, I told them I’d been by already and voiced my approval. And in that moment I was also reminded of the many times Ekundayo Bandele, the Hattiloo’s founding director, has been asked to explain the need for a strong black theater company in what is clearly an increasingly diverse performing arts scene. Bandele usually answered that in a majority black city like Memphis, Afrocentric content should be available to performers and audiences year-round. He could just as easily have compared the rest of Memphis to the Corny Collins Show, where improved diversity — a once-a-month “Negro Day” for Corny — says less about how far we’ve come than how far we’ve still got to go. Although it’s set in Baltimore, Hairspray is way more Memphis than the similarly themed Memphis the Musical, and the energetic musical, with fantastic choreography by Travis Bradley and Jordan Nichols, makes for a loving “welcome to the neighborhood.”

Hairspray, was a huge hit for Playhouse in 2010. The show marked the company’s artistic arrival in its new facility and could have run for another month if scheduling allowed. The fact that the current revival is already mostly sold out suggests that it’s still in demand.

Several members of the original Playhouse cast have returned, and their performances are even better this time around. Courtney Oliver is a radiant powerhouse as Tracy, the full-figured rebel who loves to shimmy to the hits and thinks segregation is dumb. Oliver lost her voice early in the run and was still hoarse on Saturday night but in good form.

Nichols returns as Tracy’s love interest Link Larkin, a would-be teen idol and featured dancer on the Corny Collins Show. Hip and confident, David Foster is a perfect fit for Collins, the Dick Clark of Baltimore, and Mike Detroit fully transforms himself into the nerdy Wilbur Turnblad. The duet Detroit’s Turnblad sings with his ample wife (a divine Ken Zimmerman in drag) is the show’s sweetest — and possibly most subversive — moment.

Napoleon Douglas and Caroline Simpson are as adorable as they are funny as Seaweed and Penny, whose blossoming interracial romance sends Kim Sanders’ female authority figure into apoplectic fits.

Tickets for the remainder of the run are scarce. If you want to dance the Madison with Tracy and the cool kids and haven’t already reserved tickets, you may be too late.

At Playhouse on the Square through July 13th.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Girls will be boys at THE CLUB

The Club at TheatreWorks

  • The Club at TheatreWorks

“A gentleman is any man who wouldn’t hit a woman… with his hat on.”— From The Club‎

Ann Marie Hall doesn’t mince words.

“We’re not just sexist, we’re racist too,” she says archly doting on her production of The Club, a slyly insightful if somewhat obscure musical review compiled by poet Eve Merriam with choreography by Courtney Oliver and Jackie Nichols. The title of the show refers literally to Gentlemen’s clubs at the turn of the 20th-Century where certain privileged males of Anglo extraction could escape family obligations to gamble, drink, and conduct private business. More broadly it also alludes to the white male privilege exemplified in period songs like, “String of Pearls,” “The Juice of the Grape,” and “Following in Father’s Footsteps.”


Sights and sounds from The Club, 2012

This isn’t Hall’s first encounter with The Club, which showcases an ensemble of female performers impersonating men of means. In 1980 she played Freddy in the show’s regional premier at Circuit Playhouse and revived the role a year later for Playhouse on the Square.

Ann Marie Hall directing The Club, 2012

  • Ann Marie Hall directing The Club, 2012

Hall sings Miranda in The Club, 1980

  • Hall sings “Miranda” in The Club, 1980

“It was very popular,” she says.