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Fall Arts Guide 2024

As the temperatures are cooling down, the Memphis arts scene is heating up — with exhibitions, performances, and unique experiences. See for yourself in our Fall Arts Guide.

ON DISPLAY

“ABZ2: Artists’ Books, Prints, and Zines”
Corkey Sinks’ collection spotlights contemporary approaches to print media.
Beverly + Sam Ross Gallery, through Oct. 4

“Dear Grandmother”
Heather Howle explores themes of nostalgia and familial connection.
ANF Architects, through Oct. 17 

“Troubling the Line: New Dimensions in Drawing”
The works of Melissa Dunn, Terri Jones, Paula Kovarik, Mary Reid Kelley, and Patrick Kelley complicate the idea of drawing.
Clough-Hanson Gallery, through Nov. 9

“All Rise: Memphis Bar Association at 150”
Through arresting objects and powerful images, the exhibition showcases the Memphis Bar Association’s historical significance and continuing relevance.
Museum of Science & History, through Nov. 10

“Bracelets, Bangles, & Cuffs”
This collection of contemporary bracelets reveals the wide-ranging creativity of artists working in the jewelry form between 1948 and today. 
Metal Museum, through Nov. 17

“The 6 Points Artists”
This exhibition features Sharon Havelka, Mary Jo Karimnia, Paula Kovarik, Carrol McTyre, Jennifer Sargent, and Mary K VanGieson.
Bornblum Library, Southwest Tennessee Community College, through Nov. 27

“Beyond the Surface: The Art of Handmade Paper”
Handmade paper creations explore the shape-shifting quality of paper. 
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, through Dec. 15

“Andrea Morales: Roll Down Like Water”
Andrea Morales’ first solo museum show features 65 photographs spanning her decade of photojournalism in Memphis and the Mid-South. 
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, through January

“A Hidden Culture”
Master Metalsmith Preston Jackson who gives voice to those overlooked in the history books. 
Metal Museum, through Jan. 26

Lester Merriweather, “ANA•LOG” (Photo: Courtesy Crosstown Arts)

“ANA•LOG”
Lester Merriweather examines the concept of agency over Black visualization within American popular culture.
Crosstown Arts, fall

Alex Paulus, “Size Matters” (Photo: Crosstown Arts)

“Size Matters”
Alex Paulus’ current series focuses on the juxtaposition of small figures within expansive landscapes.
Crosstown Arts, fall

“Still”
Michelle Fair’s latest works delve into the process of painting.
Crosstown Arts, fall

“Chromatic”
This exhibit merges explores the two worlds of sounds and color in a synergistic full-bodied experience.
Arrow Creative, October 3, 5:30-7:30 p.m.

“Two Rivers”
Huger Foote captures the moments when day slowly turns to night from Memphis and the Mississippi Delta to the Hudson River Valley.
David Lusk Gallery, Oct. 8-Nov. 16

“I Saw the Light in Your Eyes”
Ceramic sculptors Renata Cassiano Alvarez and Anthony Sonnenberg work through complex ideas of identity through abstraction.
Sheet Cake Gallery, Oct. 12-Nov. 23

“Our Love Is a Shady Garden”
Yanira Vissepó studies the ecosystems between her birthplace in Puerto Rico and adopted home in Tennessee.
Sheet Cake Gallery, Oct. 12-Nov. 23

MadameFraankie
Works by MadameFraankie.
Beverly + Sam Ross Gallery, October 21-December 8

“2024 Accessions to the Permanent Collection”
This exhibition celebrations the more than 170 pieces added to the Metal Museum’s permanent collection.
Metal Museum, November 27-November 2, 2025

ON STAGE

Concerts in the Grove
GPAC presents some of the best musicians in the area in a park-like setting. 
The Grove at Germantown Performing Arts Center, select Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.

Sounds of Memphis
Each week, a new Memphis powerhouse presents a unique concert — from the Handorf Company Arts of Opera Memphis to YOBREEZYE.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Thursdays, 6 p.m.

The 8th Annual Free Shout-Out Shakespeare Series: The Comedy of Errors
This 90-minute, madcap romp is performed outdoors throughout Memphis.
Various locations and dates, through Oct. 20

De Aquí y de Allá
Accompany the courageous Don Quixote of La Mancha and his trusty sidekick, Sancho Panza, on an adventure full of fun, music, dance, culture and more. 
Orpheum Theatre, October 4-5

Paradise Blue
This dynamic and musically infused drama shines light on the challenges of building a better future on the foundation of what our predecessors have left us.
Hattiloo Theatre, through October 6

Girl from the North Country
The Tony Award-winning musical reimagines Bob Dylan’s songs into a story about a group of wayward travelers.
Orpheum Theatre, Oct.8-13

The Mousetrap
Theatre Memphis presents this murder mystery. 
Theatre Memphis, Oct. 11-27

Lizzie: The Lizzie Borden Musical
New Moon Theatre’s Lizzie is American mythology set to a blistering rock score.
TheatreWorks@The Square, October 18-November 3

The Smell of the Kill
This tantalizing dark comedy has malicious housewives and miserable husbands.
Germantown Community Theatre, Oct. 18-Nov. 3

Amadeus: The Music and the Myth
Opera Memphis explores Mozart through the lens of music from the award-winning movie Amadeus
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, Oct. 19, 7:30 p.m.

Michael Feinstein featuring the Carnegie Hall Ensemble
Michael Feinstein pays a heartfelt tribute to the legendary Tony Bennett.
Germantown Performing Arts Center, Oct. 19, 8 p.m.

Dracula
Ballet Memphis’ original production builds from Bram Stoker’s novel.  
Orpheum Theatre, Oct. 25-27

Firebird (Photo: Courtesy Collage Dance Collective)  

Firebird
Kevin Thomas boldly reimagines The Firebird.
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, Oct. 25-27

(Pilobolus re:Creation Photo: Courtesy Grant Halverson)

Pilobolus re:Creation
Imagination knows no limits with this experimental dance company.
Germantown Performing Arts Center, Oct. 26, 8 p.m.

Variations on a Theme: The Tell-Tale Heart & Other Tales to Terrify 
Opera Memphis, in collaboration with Iris Collective, presents these evenings of music and one-act operas.
Opera Memphis Headquarters, Oct. 26, 7:30 p.m. | Oct. 27, 3 p.m.

Rumpelstiltskin
A young girl is locked away until she spins straw into gold.
Bartlett Performing Arts & Conference Center, Oct. 26, 2 p.m.

Moulin Rouge! The Musical 
Baz Luhrmann’s revolutionary film comes to life. 
Orpheum Theatre, Oct. 29-Nov.3

The Three Bs: Bach, Brahms, and Beethoven
Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents.
Crosstown Theater, Nov. 1, 6:30 p.m. | Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, Nov. 3, 2:30 p.m.

Iris Collective Orchestra: Transformations
Memphis-native Randall Goosby and conductor and Iris founder Michael Stern will be joined by the Germantown Youth Symphony.
Germantown Performing Arts Center, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m.

Taikoproject
Taikoproject traces the history and lore of the ancient Japanese drums. 
Buckman Performing Arts Center, Nov. 7, 7 p.m.

The Orchestra Unplugged: Leonard Bernstein
Music director Robert Moody of the Memphis Symphony Orchestra guides audiences through the life and legacy of the American Maestro. 
Halloran Centre, Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m.

Junie B. Jones: Toothless Wonder
This family-friendly show takes audiences on a humorous journey of growing up with Junie B. Jones.
The Circuit Playhouse, Nov. 8-Dec. 22

Parallel Lives
Two actresses play men and women struggling through the common rituals of modernity.
Theatre Memphis, Nov. 8-23

The Wizard of Oz
Dorothy isn’t in Kansas anymore.
Playhouse on the Square, Nov. 15-Dec. 22

The Rake’s Progress
Opera Memphis presents Igor Stravinsky’s neoclassical opera.
Scheidt Family Performing Arts Center, Nov. 22, 7:30 p.m. | Nov. 24, 3 p.m.

NutRemix
New Ballet Ensemble sets The Nutcracker on Memphis’ iconic Beale Street. 
Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, Nov. 23-24

Peter Pan
This high-flying musical comes to Memphis.
Orpheum Theatre, Nov. 26-Dec. 1

Who’s Holiday
Cindy Lou Who returns in this riotously funny and heartwarming adults-only comedy.
Circuit Playhouse, Nov. 22-Dec. 22

A Motown Christmas
Celebrate the holiday season with this musical of all your favorite Motown tunes.
Hattiloo Theatre, Nov. 22-Dec. 22 

Twelfth Night
Shakespeare’s most charming comedy finds itself on the Tabor Stage.
Tennessee Shakespeare Company, Dec. 6-22

A Christmas Carol ’24
Theatre Memphis presents this holiday classic.
Theatre Memphis, December 6-23

Bright Star
Steve Martin and Edie Brickell’s bluegrass musical tells a story of love and redemption in 1920s and ’40s North Carolina.
Bartlett Performing Arts & Conference Center, Dec. 6-8

Tía Pancha
Tía Pancha is Cazateatro’s bilingual adaptation of the classic A Christmas Carol but with a Latin and female twist.
TheatreWorks@The Evergreen, Dec. 6-14

A Charlie Brown Christmas: Live on Stage
The whole family can enjoy this adaptation of Charles M. Schulz’s timeless story.
Orpheum Theatre, Dec. 7, 2 p.m., 5 p.m., 7:30 p.m.

The Nutcracker
Ballet Memphis’ production of this holiday classic returns.
Orpheum Theatre, Dec. 13-15

AROUND TOWN

Art Club
The Brooks’ Art Club with Mallory Sharp gives participants an in-depth look at a different work of art each month.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, monthly

Appetite for the Arts
Enjoy a picnic and/or food truck fare while feasting your eyes on music and dance films. 
The Grove at Germantown Performing Arts Center, Wednesdays in October, 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.

Super Saturdays
Enjoy free drop-in art making workshops for families and free admission to the Brooks.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Saturdays, 10:30 a.m.-noon

Free Family Day
On the second Saturday of the month, the Stax has live music, outdoors, food trucks, games and activities, arts and crafts for children, and free admission to the entire museum.
Stax Museum of American Soul Music, second Saturdays of the month, 1-5 p.m.

Artoberfest
Off the Walls Arts showcases Memphis artists and musicians for a day of music, vendors, a costume contest, activities, and fun.
Off the Walls Arts, Oct. 5, 2-10 p.m.

V&E Greenline Artwalk 2024
Meet and shop from local artists, and enjoy music, entertainment, children’s activities, and artist demonstrations. 
V&E Greenline, Oct. 7, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Paint Memphis
A hundred or so artists will be painting murals all day long and it’s a spectacle to behold.
Willet and Lamar, October 12, noon-7 p.m.

Come as Thou Art
Guests will don their most imaginative attire, either inspired by the night’s theme — the world of Tim Burton — or the spirit of a designer. The evening will be capped off with a fashion show by Sonin Lee.
Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Oct. 18, 8 p.m.

Art on Fire
Enjoy tastings from local restaurants, live music, thrilling fire dancers, and a vibrant art sale — all set around a roaring bonfire.
Dixon Gallery & Gardens, Oct. 19, 7-11 p.m.

Dracula Party
Celebrate Ballet Memphis’ reprise of Dracula and help raise critical funds to support its mission with a Halloween party where you can party like a vampire.
Mollie Fontaine Lounge, October 19, 7:30-10:30 p.m.

Repair Days
Bring your metal items to have them restored their former glory at the Metal Museum’s largest fundraiser, which also includes the Dinner + Auction and Family Fun Day, where visitors can participate in hands-on activities, explore the galleries, and watch metalsmith demonstrations.
Metal Museum, Oct. 17-20

RiverArtsFest
The region’s largest and longest running fine arts festival showcasing works from 200+ participating local and national artists returns with an artist market, artists-at-work demonstration station, hands-on artist station, performances, and plenty of food and beverages.
Riverside Drive, Oct. 20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

28th Annual Quilt & Fiber Arts Show and Sale
View around 100 antique, vintage, and modern quilts, plus meet with vendors and demonstrators and see a new special exhibit. 
Davies Manor Historic Site, November 1-3, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.

The Orpheum Soiree
Enjoy an evening including glittering entertainment, live auction, specialty cocktails, exciting eats, and fun surprises.
Orpheum Theatre, November 15, 7 p.m.

ARTSassist

In August, ARTSmemphis announced the inaugural distribution of ARTSassist grants to 22 individual artists, providing these artists in dance and visual arts an unrestricted $5,000. This makes it the only unrestricted grant program supporting individual artists in Shelby County.

The program comes as an expansion of a pre-pandemic grant program for visual artists, known as ArtsAccelerator. As ARTSmemphis CEO and president Elizabeth Rouse says, “About 10 years ago, thanks to some local artists in the community who asked questions of us, we began a grant program to support visual artists. … We started with visual artists because at the time, they had fewer other networks of support and fewer other opportunities to be hired. 

(top) Dorian Rhea; (below) Therrious Davis (Photos: Courtesy ARTSmemphis)

“But that really, thankfully, put us in a position to launch an artist emergency fund for individual artists in 2020 as artists of all different types immediately lost work during the pandemic. And we supported about 800 artists during the pandemic with emergency funding totaling almost a million, right around $900,000. From 2020 through 2023, we focused on emergency and recovery funding, so coming out of 2023 we wanted to reintroduce an unrestricted grant for artists and expand it rather extensively.”

That meant bringing on an artist advisory committee made up of Memphis artists to make sure artists’ needs were met, and out-of-town jurors to select the grantees without local bias. That also meant, in addition to supporting the 22 selected grantees, partnering with Indie Memphis to support a filmmaker through Indie Memphis’ Black Creators Forum and partnering with Music Export Memphis (MEM) to support three musicians through its Ambassador Access program. “It was a way for us to be efficient and not create something new, but to support and complement,” Rouse says. “We hope, long-term, to be supporting even more types of artists. But it makes sense, just based on the makeup of artists in our community, that we start out with visual, dance, music, and film.”

This first cohort will use their grants for a variety of reasons, Rouse says. Therrious Davis, an illustrator, comic book artist, and occasional muralist, has used his grant money to buy a new computer and tablet. “I had this laptop for close to 10 years now,” Davis says. “It was starting to show signs of its age.”

Davis has been developing a comic project called Exodus of Love, premised on the question, ‘What if Cupid didn’t know what love was?’ But not having reliable or capable equipment has been holding him back from making headway. “The goal will be to make more videos following the development of the comic book project and to give people a chance to follow it from the ground up.” (You can follow Davis’ progress on Instagram @therrothekid.)

Meanwhile, choreographer Dorian Rhea plans to use his grant to fund future movement-based programming at the Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library. “It’s going to be jazz. It’s going to be social dance, known as hip-hop styles, accompanied by excerpts and texts to contextualize the history,” Rhea says. The classes will be for young kids and their parents, an experience that Rhea, as a new dad himself, hopes will “sow the seeds for much more later down the road.” 

Rhea will also use his grant to attain a technique certification in Giordano dance, a style of jazz that originated in Chicago. “I’m hoping that with bringing that style to Memphis, we elevate the cultural exchange that I think is already taking place [between Chicago and Memphis],” he says. “Knowledge is power. Art is all about telling a story and communicating the narrative, sharing an experience, and so as someone who believes in art activism — using arts as a vehicle for creating change and sparking the catalyst for evolution, growth, progress — the more grounded my work is in the history of those who’ve come before, the richer I can articulate lessons.”

No matter their personal goal, Rouse says, “We know how important it is to have a strong community of artists and to be a city that is a city of choice for artists. They’re just so critical to our culture and our economy, so … we intend for this to be an annual grant.”

On Monday, in alignment with this goal, ARTSmemphis, in partnership with Music Export Memphis, also announced a new, first-ever Artist Emergency Fund for local artists, which will support artists in times of unexpected and catastrophic emergency. For more information on both of these grants, visit artsmemphis.org.

Andrea Morales: “Roll Down Like Water”

Andrea Morales has been making photographs since she was a child, and yes, “making photographs” is the right phrase here. Not taking photographs, capturing, or shooting. For Morales, these words are too aggressive to describe a process that is about building trust and intimacy between the photographer and the photographed individuals, or, as Morales calls them, her collaborators. 

She’s been working in Memphis as a photojournalist for a decade now, making photographs of the community. You probably recognize her name from her work as the visuals director at MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, but she’s also been featured in The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal, Rolling Stone, and TIME Magazine, among many others. Now, to add to her impressive resume, the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art has opened an exhibit of 65 of her photographs of Memphis and the surrounding region, titled “Roll Down Like Water.” 

Andrea Morales, Southern Heritage, 2017 (Photo: Courtesy Andrea Morales)

Taking its name from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s final speech in Memphis, in which he said, “Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream,” the exhibit, says its curator Rosamund Garrett, is “a portrait of America through Memphis.”

“There are some tremendously famous photographers from this area,” Garrett says, “but I really feel that Andrea looks at things through a very fresh lens, and she looks at this region very directly, very earnestly, in a way that still allows the magic of this place to come through.”

But in this exhibit, not appearing in a publication with someone else’s byline, a headline she didn’t choose, or quotes she didn’t pull, the photos can stand alone. “It does feel like something’s being restored, I guess,” Morales says. “I’m struggling with identifying exactly what, but it feels like something’s restored. It’s like back to that feeling of the moment [of making the photo] because you have that moment and then you kind of have to tuck it away because this photo has to exist in this one context [of an article]. But this is all existing in the context of me and Memphis right now.” 

“Roll Down Like Water,” Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, on display through January 2025.

We All We Got

Binghampton is putting on a play. The actors are young and old, some seasoned and many freshly-minted to the spotlight. Kids at Carpenter Art Garden are building scenic elements, and community members are tuning their instruments for a show their stories helped create.

It all started over a year ago when the Orpheum Theatre Group launched its Neighborhood Play Program. After working with the Refugee Empowerment Program in Binghampton, making original plays out of participants’ stories, Orpheum staff “realized one of their favorite moments in it was when they got to step out of their story and play the characters that were in other people’s stories,” says Taylor St. John, Orpheum’s director of education and engagement. “There’s something powerful about telling your own story, but there’s also something powerful about participating as a community in a fictional story.”

Ann Perry Wallace (Photo: Courtesy Orpheum Theatre)

So came the Neighborhood Play Program, through which the Orpheum partnered with various organizations and formed “story circles” to create a neighborhood play. “For six months or so, we got people in a circle and asked them questions about their community, things that they found beautiful, things that they found challenging,” St. John says.

These stories, in turn, would be the inspiration for the fictional story that playwright Ann Perry Wallace, author of the one-woman play Live Rich Die Poor, would weave. They then presented this fictional story in another round of story circles for feedback. 

“I felt like I had a lot of responsibility to deliver something that was representative of what I had heard,” Wallace says. “You are responsible for these stories that have been told, you are responsible for putting out this image of the people, and so that is a weight that I carry with honor and take seriously. There’s nuance. And so I’m having to hold all of that in a way that gives dignity where dignity is due and have to show the complex struggles where they are present. It is a dynamic place, and I hope for people to see the intricacies, or just a snapshot of those intricacies come out.”

As for the plot of the play, titled We All We Got, St. John says, “The story itself centers on two young Black girls living in the neighborhood, one from a generational home and one living in the apartments who’s a refugee, and how they navigate the world and encounter all of the various characters of Binghampton.”

The hope, both St. John and Wallace point out, is to highlight the different experiences within Binghampton. “It’s one of the most diverse neighborhoods in Memphis,” St. John says. “There’s over 20 languages spoken there, and so we really tried to honor the stories that do not otherwise get highlighted.”

With all those differences, St. John adds, “It’s been exciting, in the last couple weeks, to see all those people from all those different groups that do different things and have very different beliefs and sometimes cultures now all be in the same room, and we’re all working on this thing together, and it just feels like a great exercise in community.

“We think it’s so important that the people in Binghampton can hopefully see themselves in this play, or see reflections of their ideas and other stories in this play. But it’s also really important that as a city, we’re able to come together [by seeing the play].”

The play is set to premiere in November, with community members acting both in the scenes and behind the scenes. Already, just watching rehearsals has Wallace “thrilled.” “You are seeing people who have pride in the neighborhood come out to be a part of it and really stretch themselves in creative and artistic ways,” she says. “Not all of them are normally doing this in their day-to-day life, and then we do have some actors who are in it, but particularly the community members, them showing up and performing best, to me, that’s pride, and that’s dedication, and that’s belief in their community.”

All three performances, which will take place at First Baptist Broad Church in Binghampton, will be free to attend, and Backbeat Tours will provide free transportation at designated locations. 

We All We Got: A Binghampton Play, First Baptist Broad Church, Friday, November 1, 7 p.m. | Saturday, November 2, 1 p.m. | Sunday, November 3, 2 p.m.

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WE SAW YOU: Memphis Ostrander Awards

The play’s the thing. And so is the award for the play.

About 600 attended the 40th annual Memphis Ostrander Awards show, which was held August 26th at the Orpheum Theatre.

Jeff Hulett, who managed publicity for the event, says the local gala celebrates excellence in theater in the Greater Memphis area. 

More than 30 awards were given during the ceremony, which included performances by nominees. “Think the Oscars for theater,” Hulett says.

In addition to awards for acting, awards were given for everything from costume design and lighting to best original script, directors, and productions.

Fourteen organizations participated in the Ostranders, which were named in honor of the late actor Jim Ostrander. It began 40 years ago as the Memphis Theater Awards. The name was changed to “Ostrander” in 2001, Hulett says. 

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James D. Gish Is Wickedly Talented

There’s something about James D. Gish that evokes Elvis.

He gets that from people. But especially since he began playing the dashing love interest, Fiyero, in Wicked on Broadway. “I’ll slick my hair for this show,” says Gish, 28, who is appearing in the musical through April 21st at the Orpheum Theatre.

Offstage, Gish’s hair has resembled the pompadour Elvis sported in his early movies. “Not on purpose. It’s sort of the way my hair sits.”

He isn’t trying to emulate The King on or offstage. But, ironically, ever since Gish was a child, Elvis was part of his life. “My family are such obsessive Elvis fans. When I was growing up, I had a dog named Elvis. And after he passed away I had a dog named Presley.”

And, Gish says, “Let’s just say, the garage was full — every wall — [of] Elvis memorabilia that my parents, especially my father, collected over the years.”

His family still watches Elvis movies and “Elvis CDs are playing throughout the house.”

Images of Gish also are included at their home. If his face appears on a poster at a venue or if his name is printed anywhere, his dad wants it. It then gets added to the “Elvis and James D. Gish Shrine.”

His dad still calls him “Presley” or “Elvis.” As in “I’ll see you later, Elvis,” Gish says. Or “Oh, have a great night, Elvis.”

That actually translates to “rock star,” Gish says. “He’s very proud. And I’m very fortunate that he’s proud.”

Born in Las Vegas, Gish was raised in Bullhead City, Arizona. His family is related to the famous silent screen actresses Dorothy and Lillian Gish, he says. “I know that my grandmother knew Lillian quite well. She said she would always attend the family reunion. She passed away before I was born.”

But, for Gish, it was singing “as a very young kid” before acting, Gish says.

He reluctantly joined the choir in high school. Then the guy who was playing the Beast in the school production of Beauty and the Beast had to drop out. “He had issues with family, school, or something. And they asked me to do it. And I ended up falling in love with it.”

Gish’s first Memphis visit was with his parents when he was 20 to participate in the United Professional Theatre Auditions. “Of course, we toured Graceland and went to Sun Studio.”

Like other tourists, Gish’s dad paid to have his son make a little recording at Sun Studio. “Most people sing ‘Hound Dog’ or ‘Viva Las Vegas.’ And I, of course, sang ‘Music of the Night.’”

Gish remembers looking at his proud father. “You just see him crying. With his son singing show tunes at Sun Studio.”

In 2017, Gish recorded an EP, So in Love, which rose to number six on the iTunes Classical Chart. It was “sort of a mishmash of a few different genres.”

The EP included an Italian aria as well as “soaring symphonic arrangements” of show tunes. And, he says, “We took Elvis’ ‘Can’t Help Falling in Love’ and adapted it into an up-tempo swing jazz number like a big band.”

Gish toured with the EP off and on for about a year before focusing on acting. “I missed having a full cast around me.”

He majored in business at Arizona State University, but at night he would audition for the Phoenix Theatre Company. “I just kind of took to it like a fish to water. It just felt right.”

Gish eventually moved to New York. “There’s no book on how to become an actor in New York City.” It’s just “falling on your face until you start to crawl and then walk and then run.”

From a small role in Les Misérables, Gish went on to appear in leading roles in plays, including one of his best known — Fabrizio in The Light in the Piazza.

Gish landed the role of Fiyero in Wicked on Broadway. “I love Fiyero because you get to play two very different people in one night, which is really cool. It’s fun to come on stage and get to be a ‘big shot’ — this cocky little punk who thinks he’s God’s gift.”

Then, in the second act, Fiyero’s character changes and he becomes more human. “He comes to know empathy, sympathy, and caring for other people.”

As for roles he’d like to play some day, Gish says, “I would really like to play a very quirky awkward character who lacks all self-confidence. I think I would do a character like that justice. I never get the opportunity. I sort of just get typecast as a Fiyero. A lot of cocky jerks or leading man types.”

When he’s not on stage, Gish likes to write young adult fiction books. He hasn’t tried to publish any yet, but, he says he’s currently working on a “young adult fantasy novel” that is “almost a historical allegory with fantastical elements.”

For now, Gish is taking care of business pursuing his work in the theater. He’s happy “the cards have fallen the way they have.”

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Golden Girls: The Laughs Continue

Picture it: Miami. 2024. The Golden Girls are still up and at ’em. Sophia’s out on bail, naturally. The DEA busted her for running a drug ring for retirees. Meanwhile, Blanche and Rose have founded a dating app for seniors that’s doing quite well (of course); it’s even landed Dorothy her current beau, who just so happens to be Sophia’s prosecuting attorney. Sounds about right, doesn’t it? The cast of Golden Girls: The Laughs Continue seem to think so.

The parody show, done completely in drag, will take over the Orpheum’s stage on Thursday, March 28th. “I like to say it’s like meeting an old friend in a new place, with all the ingredients you know,” says Vince Kelley, who plays Blanche. “We got the taglines, we got the ‘picture its,’ but we’re talking about cell phones and apps and all this stuff from today.

“So it’s fun because the show was so in its time,” Kelley continues. “They were so quick on the references; something would happen in the news and they’d be talking about it on the show in the next two weeks. We like to embrace that as well. The show is never the same twice; if there’s something going on in the world, we’re going to find a way to bring it into the world of The Golden Girls for that night.”

Vince Kelley as Blanche (Photo: Courtesy Golden Girls: The Laughs Continue)

Kelley says The Golden Girls was a fixture in his household growing up. “I remember being like 5, 6, 7, and my grandma would watch it all the time and I used to call it the ‘old lady show.’ ‘Oh, are we gonna watch the old lady show?’ And then when Nick at Nite was big and they started putting them in syndication, I was just obsessed, watched every episode. … [But] you can only watch every episode so many times, so [this show] is like getting to experience something new.”

For Kelley, choosing to play Blanche was a no-brainer. “She doesn’t take herself too seriously at all. She doesn’t mind being a bit of a joke and she had the best clothes, so that was a big draw for me,” he says. “If I had to pick a second it would be Sophia just because she doesn’t filter. I’m not quite there yet. When I’m old enough to play Blanche, then I can finally play Sophia.”

Kelley goes on to say, “You find different times in your life that you’ll relate to different characters. It’s part of the reason that people in the LGBTQ community are so drawn to them. They’re just these four big over-the-top, powerhouse comedians.”

While this show might not be the cable-friendly Golden Girls (“It’s like The Golden Girls if they moved to HBO,” Kelley says), the cast have strived to stay true to their characters. “When we come on stage, we’re just here to have a good time,” Kelley says. “And I think the spirit of the Golden Girls helps us through that every night. … We know that they would be like 100 percent on board with what we’ve come up with.”

Golden Girls: The Laughs Continue, Orpheum Theatre, 203 S. Main, Thursday, March 28, 7:30 p.m., $44-$69, 18+.

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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.   

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The Orpheum Puts on Wurlitzer Wonderland Concert

The Orpheum’s Mighty Wurlitzer Organ has been a treasure to many a Memphis musician. “Everybody that has any dealings with this organ falls in love with it,” says Tony Thomas, who fell in love with the instrument the moment his fingers touched the keys. “This is not common anymore. We’re one of 12 theaters with a theater organ where the organ is in exactly the same place as it always was. … This organ has always been in the Orpheum Theatre, since its first time it ever was ever played [in 1928].”

Even as the organ celebrates its 95th birthday, it still has room for “firsts.” A few years ago it underwent its first rebuild, and this year, the organ was recorded commercially for the first time for the vinyl A Very Mighty Christmas, on which Thomas plays arrangements of beloved holiday classics, from the modern sensation “All I Want for Christmas Is You” to “Sleigh Ride” to Peanuts classics “Christmas Time Is Here” and “Skating” and many more. The album is produced by Orpheum Theatre Group COO Dacquiri Baptiste, Orpheum’s public relations director Kristin Bennett, Christopher Blank of WKNO-FM, and Matt Ross-Spang of Southern Grooves.

“You feel like you’re in the room when you listen to it on a good stereo system,” Thomas says of the vinyl. “It’s really hard to put in words what the effect is on the organ and the sound, and part of the sound is the room.”

To celebrate the album, which is available for purchase at orpheumgiftshop.com, the Orpheum is hosting a Wurlitzer Wonderland concert. Thomas, the resident Orpheum house organist, will play songs from A Very Mighty Christmas with special guests Curtis Jones and Jay Cox. Tickets for the Thursday concert will be sold at the door.

“I’ll just say that music in general, for me, should be an emotional experience,” Thomas says. “Somebody who is not really a musician should still get a feeling from hearing whatever the music they’re listening to. It doesn’t matter if it’s classical, or anything between that and rap. But, as an emotional experience, it is hard to top the range of expression that the theater organ provides a listener as opposed to any other kind of instrument that you can play singly … the tones and the combinations of sounds and the expression of the instrument. The loud and soft are so dramatic. It’s a technicolor musical experience, is what it is. And I would just want someone to come away from listening to this record, having been moved in some way and had the music not just be, Oh, there’s ‘It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year,’ but feel a lift in the music that makes them that gives them some joy.”

Wurlitzer Wonderland, Orpheum Theatre, 203 S. Main, Thursday, December 21, 7 p.m., $10.

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Theater Theater Feature

Beetlejuice: The Musical

It’s easy to be queasy about the IP era. The obsession with pre-existing intellectual properties that has enthralled the American film industry for most of this century has metastasized through more of the arts. The appeal to producers is obvious. Somebody else already did the hard work to lodge the idea of Barbie into your head, and imbue it with positive associations. That makes you more likely to get up off your couch and go see a movie with Barbie in it. 

It’s easy to say “In the good old days, they made original films with original stories. Now, all they do is IP adaptations.” and you’re not wrong. The flood of IP has crowded out original ideas, and made it more difficult for original films and theater works to break through. But any appeal to “the good old days” is always suspect. Believing that producers were more original in the “good old days” vastly overestimates the creativity of the ordinary working producer and playwright throughout history. Shakespeare based Romeo and Juliet on an existing story by Italian writer Matteo Bandello. Gone With The Wind was an adaptation of an existing IP. Stories evolve and mutate through different media. That’s just how stories work. The problem with the current IP era is that the film studios and Broadway producers are too risk-averse to give virtually any new ideas the kind of resources they need to thrive. 

But the cowardice of capital is not the problem of the producers of or audience for Beetlejuice: The Musical. With music and lyrics by Australian musical comedian Eddie Perfect and book by Scott Brown and Anthony King, this version of the 1988 Tim Burton masterpiece leans heavily on nostalgia. I am familiar with every beat in Beetlejuice, from Michael Keaton’s big-swing take on a malevolent demon as coke-fueled party guest from hell to Winona Ryder’s pitch perfect turn as the OG goth girl who’s not sure if she listens to Siouxsie and the Banshees because she’s sad, or if she’s sad because she listens to Siouxsie and the Banshees. 

In retrospect, Beetlejuice was a harbinger of “cozy” horror, and this production leans into it. This being Broadway, Lydia’s mother is now fridged instead of just divorced. The teenager’s pining for her dead mother sands a little bit of the Gen X cynicism off of Lydia’s angst. Beetlejuice, however, remains the crass pervert from the afterlife that never met a fourth wall he didn’t break. I occasionally wondered if the manic proceedings onstage would make any sense at all to someone who has no fond memories of a possessed Catherine O’Hara singing calypso. 

But really, it didn’t matter. Because the real point of the Broadway musical is watching a talented, road-hard ensemble go to town for two hours. The twin leads of Beetlejuice: The Musical, Justin Collette and Isabella Esler, are more than up to the challenges of this super technical production. Collette brings out the carnival barker in Michael Keaton’s characterization, taking control of the crowd from the opening curtain. Esler’s Lydia leans more toward Jenna Ortega’s playfully wicked Wednesday than Ryder’s existentially wounded romantic. But could Winona’s Lydia have sung with such verve and power? Only if it was calypso, and only if it was authentic. 

What makes this such a difficult show and precise show for the cast, which includes a punishingly physical turn as Delia by Kate Marilley, is the intricate production design. Burton’s Beetlejuice is an ADHD whirlwind of psychedelic images, impossible to recreate on the stage. But director Alex Timbers gives it the old college try with the help of an elaborate and seemingly infinitely flexible set. Projection mapping, the combination of technologies familiar to Memphians who experienced Christopher Reyes’ Exploratorium of Baron Von Opperbean installation in 2020, enables lightning fast scenic mood swings. Also, there’s a giant sandworm puppet that eats people. 

The moments in Beetlejuice: The Musical where the needs of Big Musical Theater bumps up against idiosyncrasies of the source material are offset by the performers’ talent and energy. Tim Burton’s boldest vision is having quite a nice afterlife.

Beetlejuice: The Musical runs through Nov. 5 at the Orpheum Theatre.

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Art Art Feature We Recommend We Recommend

Little Amal Comes to Memphis

This Wednesday, Memphis is welcoming a very special 10-year-old Syrian refugee as she makes her way across the United States. Little Amal, as she is called, is a 12-foot-tall puppet, who has traveled over 6,000 miles to 15 countries since July 2021, searching for family and friends, as part of one of the world’s largest free public art engagements. And now, Amal is coming to Memphis for a parade around Downtown, stopping at the historic Clayborn Temple, the Orpheum Theatre, and Tom Lee Park, with Memphis youth joining along the way and carrying puppets made in their own image. 

The goal of Amal’s journey is to spark conversations about who we are and where we come from, says Anasa Troutman, executive director of Historic Clayborn Temple, who organized Amal’s stint in Memphis. And to make her stay even more poignant, Troutman adds, “We brought in Jeghetto, a United States-based puppeteer, who also makes oversized puppets, and he is making a second puppet, so there’ll be the Syrian girl and a large-scale puppet of a little Black girl.”

Memphis Girl stands at eight feet tall and will join Amal in the parade, which kicks off at Clayborn Temple, where attendees will learn about the history of Clayborn Temple and walk around the I Am A Man Plaza. “Then they’ll proceed together with a whole bunch of kids from all over Memphis,” Troutman says. After Clayborn Temple, the parade will proceed to the Orpheum Theatre, chosen for its connection to storytelling, and students from the Refugee Empowerment Program will welcome her with personal messages. 

Little Amal towers over the crowd in Manchester, England. (Credit: The Walk Productions)

For the final stop, the group will take the walking celebration to Tom Lee Park. “I would never have Amal come here and not take her to the river,” Troutman says. “The city is built on the river, the history of the city begins on that river. … Also because of all the work that’s been done there, it is the premier location of the city to be able to take people to experience that part of our culture and our infrastructure.”

At Tom Lee Park, Amal will receive a “Culture of Love” quilt as a parting gift. “Culture of Love,” Troutman says, has been the guiding theme for Amal’s stay in Memphis. In preparation for the big day, Clayborn Temple collaborated with a number of organizations — from BRIDGES USA, to Shelby County Schools, to Memphis Youth Arts Initiative — to facilitate workshops for kids to create the puppets that’ll be used in the parade. 

“Our goal was to be able to reach 1,000 children,” Troutman says. “Instead of trying to go and recruit all these young people to our organization, it felt really juicy and exciting to go to places where children already were because we want to support organizations that are already supporting young people, and we want to become part of their community and have them become part of our community. So the message of our local work has amounted to building a culture of love. This project has really brought us closer to the Memphis community and I love that.”

Little Amal takes part in the Luminato Festival in Toronto. (Credit: The Walk Productions/Taku Kumabe)

In addition to love shared among community members, Troutman hopes to instill self-love into the individual youths participating. “We talk all the time about the future,” she says. “The young people of this city deserve an opportunity to become the possibility of the future. The story of Amal is that refugee children bring possibilities, not problems. We’re saying the same thing. In a time when there’s a lot of conversation about crime, about poverty, these children in Memphis bring possibilities, not problems. If they’re engaged in the creative process, it allows them to open their minds and imagine what their future could be, what the future of the city could be.” 

She continues, “There’ll be 1,000 children from all over Memphis who are getting to make puppets in their own image to be able to say things like, ‘I am beautiful, I am worthy, I am the future, and I am going to show that by creating this puppet, that’s going to show everybody what who I am.’ That is a powerful exercise to be able to create something in your own image, to be able to then put it on display in such a public way is very empowering and very healing.” 

Walk with Amal begins at 4 p.m., and all — those young and young at heart — are welcome to join in at any of the three stops. You can support this project by donating here

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News News Blog News Feature

NCRM Announces 32nd Freedom Award Honorees

On Tuesday, the National Civil Rights Museum (NCRM) announced the honorees for its 32nd Freedom Award. Each year, the museum strives to honor those who have made “exceptional contributions to civil and human rights,” with previous winners including Coretta Scott King, Oprah, Nelson Mandela, and Bono.

This year, three winners have been selected:

  • Kerry Kennedy: President of Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, a renowned human rights activist, and lawyer, Kennedy’s tireless efforts span over four decades, championing various causes such as child labor, women’s rights, environmental justice, and more.
  • Dr. Clayborne Carson: Martin Luther King Jr. Centennial Professor of History, emeritus, at Stanford University, Dr. Carson’s profound work centers on the study of Martin Luther King Jr. and the human rights movements that his legacy has inspired.
  • Stacey Abrams: A bestselling author, civil rights activist, and political leader, Abrams is a trailblazer, becoming the first Black woman to be the gubernatorial nominee for a major party in United States history. She has founded multiple nonprofit organizations dedicated to voting rights and addressing social and economic issues.

The NCRM will host its award ceremony, hosted by actor and philanthropist Tobias Truvillion, on Thursday, October 19th, at the Orpheum Theatre at 7 p.m., and will feature entertainment including poet J. Ivy and Let It Happen. A pre-gala event will take place at 5:30 p.m. next door at the Halloran Centre.

In addition, the NCRM will hold a student forum at 10 a.m. the same day, which “aims to empower middle and high school students to take action and create positive change within their communities,” per the museum.

Tickets for the event will go on sale starting August 1st. For more information about the event, visit freedomaward.org.

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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