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Intermission Impossible Theater

On Stage this Week: “The Wiz,” “Peter and the Starcatcher,” and “The Great Cable Cooking Show Contest.”

If there’s one show people associate with Playhouse on the Square it’s Peter Pan. The boy who wouldn’t grow up has made Christmastime appearances off and on for years. This season he’s back on stage at Circuit Playhouse in a very different kind of show.

Peter & the Starcatcher is a dark-edged and self-aware origin story. It’s all about how Peter Pan became Peter Pan and how a certain pirate lost his hand. It’s a nifty take on the J.M. Barrie classic. 

In this rehearsal footage from the Circuit Playhouse production you’ll note the presence of none other than musical theatre powerhouse David Foster who’s been sidelined for most of this season due to medical issues.

It’s good to have him back. 

On Stage this Week: ‘The Wiz,’ ‘Peter and the Starcatcher,’ and ‘The Great Cable Cooking Show Contest.’

What a piece of work is Hamlet. How evergreen. How ripe for appropriation and parody. Aye, there’s the rub. Will Memphis theater audiences be over Shakespeare’s original man in black when the curtain rises on New Moon Theatre’s February production? That may not be the question, but given all the Hamlet-related shows we’re seeing this season, it’s one worth asking. Or will productions of shows like The Compleat Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) and One Ham Manlet whet appetites for the real, complete thing?

Paul Rudnick’s light comedy I Hate Hamlet is Germantown Community Theatre’s contribution to Hamletpalooza, and it sure is a mixed fardel. Rudnick’s script is a bumpy muddle of real-estate gags, sitcom hijinks, and splendid set pieces about celebrity, passion, immortality, and tight pants. An uncommonly engaging cast pulls it all together and keeps spirits high, even when the writing threatens to let everybody down…
Long story short, it’s a fine production of an uneven play with some great performances that make everything worthwhile. To read the rest of my review, click here

I Hate Hamlet closes at GCT this weekend. 

Also opening this weekend The Great Cable Cooking Show Contest, a new play written and directed by Memphis theater artist Ruby O’Gray.

A synopsis: 

The play is a zany look at chefs from the most unlikely places, who compete in the small town for money and bragging rights for their culinary creations. Five finalists are chosen to prepare their creations for judges and TV land along with storylines that will tickle your funny bone.

The Great Cable Cooking Show Contest is at TheatreWorks through Sunday, June 5, with two shows on Saturday. 

Last but not least… The Wiz.

I’d say, “Get ready to ease on down the road” with this popular favorite. But if you haven’t already purchased tickets, the road may be blocked. The Hattiloo Theatre sold this show out before opening night. That’s good for them, but not so good for those among us who always wait till the last minute to reserve. 

Oh, there may some stray tickets available here and there, but good luck getting one. 

A shot from the Hattiloo”s first production of The Wiz.

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Theater Theater Feature

Some love for I Hate Hamlet.

What a piece of work is Hamlet. How evergreen. How ripe for appropriation and parody. Aye, there’s the rub. Will Memphis theater audiences be over Shakespeare’s original man in black when the curtain rises on New Moon Theatre’s February production? That may not be the question, but given all the Hamlet-related shows we’re seeing this season, it’s one worth asking. Or will productions of shows like The Compleat Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) and One Ham Manlet whet appetites for the real, complete thing?

Paul Rudnick’s light comedy I Hate Hamlet is Germantown Community Theatre’s contribution to Hamletpalooza, and it sure is a mixed fardel. Rudnick’s script is a bumpy muddle of real-estate gags, sitcom hijinks, and splendid set pieces about celebrity, passion, immortality, and tight pants. An uncommonly engaging cast pulls it all together and keeps spirits high, even when the writing threatens to let everybody down.

So, who hates Hamlet? Andrew Rally, that’s who. He’s the smoking-hot hunk star of a recently cancelled TV show called L.A. Medical. He also co-stars with a sock puppet in a heavy-rotation commercial for some sugary breakfast cereal with more calories than lard. But is he an actor?

To answer that question, Rally moves from the Left Coast to a New York brownstone formerly occupied by a famous actor from Hollywood’s golden age. He’s tentatively accepted the title role in a free Shakespeare in the Park production of Hamlet, and boy, does he regret every bit of it. Enter the drunken glory-obsessed ghost of John Barrymore, lush, womanizer, hot mess, and the greatest Hamlet of his generation. What follows is a quirky mashup of Blithe Spirit and My Favorite Year, and watching Rally and Barrymore fence and fuss their way through a mutual identity crisis is great fun. It might be even more fun without all the melodramatic subplots, each one worthy of the trash Barrymore played on Broadway, back when he was a big-time matinee idol.

Enter the stock players. Deirdre is Rally’s girlfriend. She’s a 29-year-old virgin who’s saving herself for both the right man and the right moment. She also has an Ophelia fetish that’s weird and not very believable. Rally’s main super-bro Gary is a self-motivated “writer-producer-director” who thinks Shakespeare’s “like algebra on stage.” He has a big career opportunity in the works because, of course, he always does. Lillian, Rally’s agent, is an elderly German immigrant who lost a hairpin while having an ill-advised fling with Barrymore, back when she was young and he was loaded and lost. Felicia’s the clairvoyant real-estate agent who sets the old-fashioned farce in motion.

Ashley Trevathan is terrific as Felicia. In her own, self-parodying words, she “wins.” She’s not alone, either. Evan McCarley is deliciously shallow and smarmy as Gary. With eyes that bat and roll like a siren of the silent screen, Rae Boller’s Deidre charms her way through the play’s clunkiest lines, while Louise Levin makes Lillian’s last dance — aka the show’s most contrived moment — into something incredibly human and almost sexy. But I Hate Hamlet only ever soars when Gabe Beutel-Gunn and John Moore are on stage together as Rally and Barrymore. It’s their show, and both actors just go for it.

I’ve never seen Moore as alive as he is when he’s inhabiting the drunk, horny, undead corpse of John Barrymore. Moore stumbles across the stage with great determination and bounds through the air, saber in hand, playing to the cheap seats every chance he gets. His character may talk about the value of filling out the tights, but Moore’s performance is a lesson in filling the room. As Rally, Beutel-Gunn plays the straight man and earns his ridiculous bow.

It seems silly to write it down, but tastes have changed quite a bit since John Barrymore’s days on the Great White Way. There’s not much room in the modern theater for the kind of disposable material I Hate Hamlet aspires to. Jokes fall flat. Characters annoy. But just when it feels like the play’s about to devolve into a live action version Three’s Company, Rudnick’s comedy — aided by director John Maness and a terrific ensemble — taps into something genuinely Shakespearian.

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I Hate Hamlet at Germantown Community Theatre

It’s the day of dress rehearsal, and John Moore, who plays the ghost of actor John Barrymore in Paul Rudnick’s comedy I Hate Hamlet, is about to get his tights. “Ah yes, the tights,” he says. “You know, they don’t hide a lot. Like Barrymore says, ‘This is the history of Prince Hamlet. Tight pants. That’s what Hamlet‘s about. A young man full of vigor.”

This year marks the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, and the Bard, whose work is always in heavy rotation, is getting a little extra love. In addition to producing his plays, Memphis companies are also staging works inspired by Shakespeare. As was the case with Theatre Memphis’ very funny production of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged), one doesn’t have to know all that much about Elizabethan theater to get the jokes in I Hate Hamlet, though some familiarity will make for a better experience.

Hamlet — a man in tight pants

“It’s like being in the live studio audience for a sitcom,” Moore says. It’s a good description, too.

I Hate Hamlet tells the story of Hollywood actor Andrew Rally, the popular star of a TV show that’s just been cancelled. The good news, he’s been offered the title role in Shakespeare in the Park’s production of Hamlet. The not-so-good news: He’s not a fan. The weird news: He’s living in John Barrymore’s old apartment, and the actor’s martini-swilling spectre keeps showing up to offer acting and life advice.

“He’s called a ham,” Moore says of Barrymore, who swills, swaggers, staggers, and sword fights his way through the play. “So I’m playing him like he’s always on.”