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WE SAW YOU: Pat Halloran Celebrates the Big 8-0

In addition to being St. Patrick’s Day, March 17th was St. Pat Halloran’s Day. Or make that “Night.”

More than 200 turned out to celebrate Halloran’s 80th birthday that evening at the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts & Education.

Halloran retired as The Orpheum president and CEO on December 31st, 2015.

The Centre was decorated with an Irish theme, which included artificial shamrocks, plastic green derbies, and gold foil-wrapped chocolate candy coins. Some tables featured tall glass votive candles bearing a likeness of Halloran, looking very saintly. 

Pat Halloran votive candles graced tables at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

The buffet included turkey sandwiches and meatballs, which was OK for the Catholic contingent because Bishop David Talley declared a dispensation for St. Patrick’s Day because it fell on a Friday. That meant Catholics could eat meat.

Following cocktails and dinner, guests converged to the auditorium for a video of Halloran’s life and career. This was followed by entertainment from Stax Music Academy performers.

Halloran’s birthday, actually, was on Tuesday, March 7th, but his wife, Anne, said that wasn’t a good night to have a party. “Anne said, ‘None of your friends will come on a Tuesday night ‘cause they don’t drink on Tuesday,” Pat says.

She suggested they hold the party on a weekend. “St. Patrick’s Day just seemed like a perfect date.”

When Anne asked him what he wanted to do for his 80th birthday, Pat says he told her, “First of all, I don’t want a surprise party.

“I just don’t like those. They usually backfire on you. My 50th birthday party was a surprise. And I was dating four or five different women. Nothing serious. Just dating around. The people coordinating the surprise party invited all five of them. And so I’m dodging them all night.”

For his 75th party, Pat and Anne held a private party. “With just our good friends in our condo complex. That was nice. Small.”

This year, when Anne asked him what he wanted to do for his birthday, Pat said, “I don’t think I’m going to get another 80 in. So, I think what I want to do is I want to thank all the people who have helped me since I have been in Memphis.”

Melissa and Patrick Halloran at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Tawanda and Cordell Pirtle at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Dr. Scott and Mary Gilliland Morris at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Eleanor Williams and Shirley Ford at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)

“I’ve had a phenomenal life here. Ran for city council after I lived here four years. Won that city-wide without a runoff. Ran for mayor. Got my butt kicked. But that was a good thing because it opened the door for the Orpheum.

“Before that I was assistant dean of men at University of Miami, Florida from ’65 to ’69. I came to Memphis to run my college fraternity. It was bankrupt. Having trouble. I had that job for 11 years.”

Pat managed the financing and housing for the fraternity — Pi Kappa Alpha — for 11 years, which was during the time he was involved in politics. 

Then, he says, “Lucia Gilliland and her executive committee from the Orpheum Foundation called me. She said, ‘Hey, I want to talk to you about something.’

“I told them I didn’t see me being in a theater for the rest of my life. I just lost the mayor’s race. I said, ‘I’ll try to raise the money you need to save the Orpheum.’”

By “save” he meant “Make sure it’s on solid ground.”

Pat said he’d work for the Orpheum for two years, but he discovered his two-year term kept coming up. And he didn’t leave.

But, he says, “I loved every minute of it. I told Anne I wanted to thank all the people who helped me in the city council race and those that helped me in the mayor’s race. And those tens of thousands of people at the Orpheum.”

That included people who were “sponsoring things, buying tickets, or just supporting the Orpheum. Get as many of them together as I can. And I want to say, ‘Thank you.’ And then I want to walk off the stage.”

Jeff Sanford and Cynthia Ham and Nickie and Chris Coleman at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Leighanne and Jack Soden at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Jeanie Gundlach and Steve Conley at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Bill and Donna Wolf at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Ron Jewell, David Pickler, Ron Olson, and a photo bomber wannabe (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Guests moved to the auditorium after Pat’s birthday party had been going for an hour or so. “They had a little video showing pictures from when I was born with my butt sticking up. And then all the way through my political career and then the Orpheum.”

There was another group of people Pat wanted to thank. After he retired, he started the “Positively Memphis” organization. “Our mission was to raise money to feed hungry children in our community. We raised over $400,000 during our initial campaign. Now we’re in our second phase. It’s just starting now. We also have periodic luncheons where we feature speakers that represent the most positive developments in our city. Crosstown Concourse conversion, the Tom Lee Park project, and so many others like that. I wanted to thank those people who donated the $400,000. And many of them were in the audience.”

Pat says he then took the stage and told the audience, “I just want you to know why you’re here. You all helped me and I want to thank you.  And you made my life fabulous.”

Asked if life was good right now, Pat says, “It’s great. Anne and I are both retired. We’re sitting here collecting our social security checks and cutting out grocery coupons. And we’re loving life. We’re having a good time.”

Orpheum president and CEO Brett Batterson and his wife, Veronica, at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Onterreo and Quiana Harris at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Rockie Reinach and Richard Reinach at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Penny Aviotti and Caroline Williams at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Kevin Adams, Mike and Gay Williams, Dr. James Eason, Sara Adams, Laura Eason, and Terry Lynch at Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Pat Halloran’s 80th birthday party (Credit: Michael Donahue)
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Theater

Alvin Ailey ‘Invites Audience into a Conversation’ Through Dance

When the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater opens its latest touring show at the Orpheum Theatre this Friday, March 3, it’s bringing more than entertainment: it’s a whole way of looking at the world, and our own history. The company’s repertory has always taken on such major themes, and this year’s iteration is no different.

To dig deeper into the programming this time around, the Memphis Flyer reached out to dancer Khalia Campbell, who figures prominently in both the classic Revelations and the more recent In a Sentimental Mood, now enjoying its world premiere on this tour.

Memphis Flyer: How long have you been with Alvin Ailey?

Khalia Campbell: It’s now my fifth season with the company. I’ve been in Memphis with them before, in 2018 when I first joined the company. It was a very memorable experience for me: It was a really great crowd, and it was my first tour, so everything was heightened, the experience. I remember going out with my friends to eat and Memphis really treated us well. It was a really good experience being there, so I’m excited to be back!

It seems there’s special care taken with the music in Ailey productions.

Yeah. We have a new work, a world premiere called Are You In Your Feelings? by Kyle Abraham, an acclaimed choreographer, and it’s really about Black culture and Black music, with a youthful feel to it. It’s like a mixtape. He made a collection of all these amazing songs, R&B songs. From way back in the ’80s all the way to the present day. There’s Jazmine Sullivan, there’s Kendrick Lamar, there’s Maxwell, and so many songs that people know, that we just listen to on a daily basis. It’s just great to be able to dance to good music that you could just listen to on a car ride. So that’s one example of the music playing a great role in this year’s rep.

On the other hand, Revelations is based on Negro Spirituals, and they too really speak to the Black experience, just as Are You In Your Feelings? does. The music we dance to speaks a lot about Black culture, and the importance of faith to us, to persevere through hard times. So Revelations really takes you from tragedy to triumph. It’s like a movie, talking about us as a culture, but also about all human struggle through trials and tribulations. The music speaks to the universal experience.

Regarding Revelations, which first premiered in 1960: is it intimidating to take on this kind of hallowed piece?

It’s not difficult at all. Dancing Revelations does have a weight to it, because it’s about the Black experience, and legends in the dance world have performed it. Like, I do a role that Miss Judith Jamison once performed. So there’s a weight to it, but I’m not intimidated by it. It is a responsibility, and an honor, and a privilege to be able to continue this legacy that Ailey has given us. We’re still on his shoulders, still dancing a work that was created in 1960. And it’s still relevant today. The human experience is still the same, especially for African Americans today. We still are dealing with racism and discrimination. So I can put my own experience into it and still honor the work’s integrity. When I first saw the company and saw this piece, I saw myself. From growing up in the Black church and beyond.

I always wondered about how much it evolved over the years. Has it changed at all since 1960?

When he first created it, there were fewer people. And the steps have evolved a little bit. And the set may have changed a little, too, but the overall heart of the piece is still the same. The music lineup is the same, though a different choir is singing the songs. The old tapes sound different. And the dance has evolved since then. It’s still the same steps, but maybe there’s a higher leg, or there are more turns now. Different subtle changes.

Dance is always dependent on music, but did the late Alvin Ailey, as the company’s founder, bring a special understanding of music to the organization?

Alvin Ailey loved music. He specifically loved Duke Ellington. There are a lot of dances that we perform to Ellington’s music, and there’s a beautiful contrast between the movement and the music, and how they come together. Ailey really played with that.

The piece In a Sentimental Mood must be built around Ellington’s music.

Yes, it is! And Jamar Roberts, the choreographer, and also a former member of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, wanted it to be a modernized version of Blues Suite, which was a work by Mr. Ailey. It’s an intimate scene, of two people coming back to revisit a relationship. And the music plays a big part in setting the mood. I really look forward to performing it in Memphis. It allows me to tap into my experiences, of being in a relationship, or of being in future relationships, and the kinds of conversations I want to have. It allows you to tap into real life experiences. We do that a lot in Ailey’s work, but Jamar’s work has really allowed me to just go there and get lost in that piece.

It uses a lesser known work by Ellington, “The Single Petal of a Rose.”

Yeah it does. Dance is a universal language and when it’s done with music people enjoy, it allows them to engage with the overall experience more. And the works this year feature some fantastic music, and will really allow the audience to engage with the experience with us.

The audience response to Ailey shows here in the past has been really enthusiastic.

Yeah, and that’s what Mr. Ailey always wanted. His most famous quote was, ‘Dance came from the people, it shall always be delivered back to the people.’ He wanted his works to speak to real life experiences, to speak to the soul, to the spirit. And that’s one way that Mr. Ailey really stands out from other modern dancers. It speaks to the soul. Even the music he chose. It helps the audience members come into an experience, instead of just watching for entertainment. More than ‘Oh, that was nice,’ you really feel changed. Like, that was just a whole experience. And I would love more art to be about that. Inviting the audience into a conversation with the performers.

There’s also some really fine jazz showcased on this tour. Wynton Marsalis, Roy Eldridge in a Twyla Tharpe piece, Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln in Survivors. Has the use of really fine jazz been a through-line in Ailey pieces?

Yes. Again, Mr. Ailey loved Duke Ellington. We have Pas de Duke and Night Creatures and other jazz pieces. We’ve had whole programs devoted just to Ailey’s work and Duke Ellington. So there is a through line of Mr. Ailey working with really great music. And for dancers, that’s all you could ask for.

I think Ailey had respect for all genres of music and dance, and that’s why we’re a repertory company, because we do everything, from House music to jazz to Martha Graham-like modern dance music. We’ve done Afro-Centric work, like one called Shelter. Ronald K. Brown is one African-inspired choreographer we’ve worked with. So I think we have so many choreographers, including European choreographers, that we want to pay respect to the art. Ailey appreciated all genres of dance. And it expands our arsenal, our creativity, and artistry. And Ailey wanted his dancers to be very versatile.

It’s definitely challenging, but it keeps me motivated, it keeps me inspired and engaged. And one thing I love about Ailey is, I get to wear different hats every night. I play different roles every night. I tap into different techniques od dance. And that’s what you need to grow. Just doing one thing would lead to complacency. But at Ailey I’ve become a better artist because I’m able to dive into all these different techniques and genres of dance.

The program for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Orpheum engagement includes:

Friday, March 3:
In a Sentimental Mood / For FourAre You in Your Feelings? / Revelations

Saturday, March 4:
Roy’s JoysSurvivors / Revelations

Sunday, March 5 (Matinee):
In a Sentimental Mood / For Four / Are You in Your Feelings? / Revelations

The company will also be engaging in lecture demonstrations for local schools and through a free community dance workshop open to all ages and abilities. Tickets, registration for the lecture demonstrations, and attendee registration for the free community workshop can be found at orpheum-memphis.com.

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Cover Feature News

Bringing It All Back Home

When Tina Turner, retired in Switzerland after many decades as one of the most powerful voices in American pop, soul, and R&B, first heard the idea of rendering her life story as a musical, she knew exactly how she felt about it. “No, I’m not interested. No. No. No.” As she wrote of the experience in Rolling Stone in 2019, “I didn’t feel like talking about that stuff from the past because it gave me bad dreams. I was just settling into retirement, a newlywed, content to be Mrs. Erwin Bach, and the last thing on my mind was working anywhere but in my garden.”

But after meeting with the producers proposing the show, her position softened. She thought about “all the people who tell me that my story gives them hope and is my legacy” and ultimately gave the project her blessing. “Then,” she wrote, “I sat back to watch director Phyllida Lloyd and writer Katori Hall do what they do best.”

Those two names alone must have reassured her. U.K.-based Lloyd already had a stellar track record as director of the stage and cinematic versions of Mamma Mia!, which, in using the songs of ABBA, reaffirmed just how successful the “jukebox musical” genre could be. She’d also proven her skills with more serious material like The Threepenny Opera, La Bohème, an operatic version of The Handmaid’s Tale, and the Tony Award-nominated Mary Stuart.

At the time, native Memphian Katori Hall was less of a known quantity but had made waves with a play she’d begun while studying at The Juilliard School, The Mountaintop, which reimagined Martin Luther King Jr. on the night before his assassination. After opening in London and winning an Olivier Award in 2010, it went on to a successful Broadway run starring Samuel L. Jackson and Angela Bassett. But for Tina Turner, perhaps Hall’s greatest qualification was that she was “a Tennessee girl, just like me.”

Zurin Villanueva performing “I Want to Take You Higher” as Tina Turner with the cast of the North American touring production of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical (Photo: Van Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

Taking over from early drafts by Frank Ketelaar and Kees Prins, Hall crafted a compelling book for the show, titled Tina: The Tina Turner Musical, which opened in London in the spring of 2018 before moving to Broadway the next year. When that production was nominated for a dozen Tony Awards in 2020 and Adrienne Warren won in the category of best leading actress in a musical, Tina Turner’s instincts were vindicated. And when Hall won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for drama for a later play, The Hot Wing King, it reinforced the impression that, despite the reputation of jukebox musicals for superficiality, Tina was cut from a different cloth.

Now the show has hit the road, making its Memphis debut on Valentine’s Day at the Orpheum Theatre and slated to run there through February 19th. While there’s no denying the importance of the show’s success in London and New York, the current production in Memphis may be its most significant staging yet, in terms of its historical and cultural impact — because for both Hall and Turner, bringing the show to Memphis means bringing it all back home.

Tina Turner (Photo: Craig Sugden)

Nutbush City Limits

As anyone who’s seen the 1993 Oscar-nominated film, What’s Love Got to Do with It, knows, Tina Turner was born Anna Mae Bullock in West Tennessee. Following Jackson Avenue some 50 miles to the northeast will bring you to the town of Nutbush, where a young Anna Mae grew up singing in the Spring Hill Baptist Church. Indeed, that may have been the most accurate thing about the film, which goes on to play fast and loose with the facts as it spins a fanciful version of Turner’s life. As Turner told Oprah Winfrey in 2018, “I watched a little bit of it, but I didn’t finish it because that was not how things went. Oprah, I didn’t realize they would change the details so much.”

As the musical was being created, Turner was determined to make it more true to life, and a crucial part of that was working with Hall. Even then, as Turner tells the Memphis Flyer via email, one shouldn’t assume that Memphis figured in her early life simply by virtue of its proximity.

“Memphis seemed another world away when I was growing up in Nutbush,” she writes. “Our town was so small and the access to the records coming out of Memphis was just from the radio. My life in Nutbush was very focused on my family and the church, and I suppose that was the music that I remember and how I started to sing. It wasn’t until I moved to St. Louis that I started to be more aware of the Memphis music through the local R&B scene.”

Nonetheless, Hall’s Memphis upbringing convinced Turner that she was working with someone who really understood her roots. “From the minute I met Katori I felt she was the right person to tell this story,” Turner says. “We talked so much about growing up in Tennessee and our families’ experiences. Katori understood immediately what it took for me to get to where I did, given where I started. The odds I had to overcome time and again.”

Hall feels the same way about their shared experience. “I grew up listening to Tina’s music because my mom was such an avid fan,” she says. “My eldest sister is named after her! So Tina’s influence and impact on my life has been ever-present. I do think, being a Southern gal myself, born of the Tennessee soil, really helped me step into her shoes a bit, in terms of thinking about everything she had gone through. Though we grew up through completely different times and different eras, the seeds of racism, planted so long ago, unfortunately bloom over and over again in that Tennessee soil. So both her lived experiences and mine inspired me to create this character of Tina that is in the show.”

Zurin Villanueva as Tina Turner and Ann Nesby as Gran Georgeanna (Photo: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

We Don’t Need Another Hero

Hall is careful to point out that she took great pains to represent Turner’s character with as much nuance as possible. “The beautiful thing about Tina the person, or Anna Mae Bullock, is that she very much is still Anna Mae,” says Hall. “She has lived her life so bravely, and there’s a fierce transparency to her. I feel as though the character I’ve created based on her and her life is very much closely aligned with the actual Tina. And it’s because we had this icon who was so honest about everything she went through, whether it was her highs or her lows. We have really gone on this journey with her just because of how open she’s been about sharing her story with the world.”

In spite of Turner’s public openness, Hall felt she needed to engage with the star more directly, telling writer Julie Vadnal in 2019 that, in preparing to write the book, she did “several interviews over a few years. I’ve been working on [the musical] for almost five years. And of course, there’s her autobiography — I, Tina — and a movie out there. But for me, it was very important to talk to her again about all the things she had already told the world. Now she had some distance from it and was able to retell it and actually revise parts of our story that had gotten out of her hands.”

Part of that, Hall says, was decentering Turner’s abuse by ex-husband Ike. “Her story characterizes her as a survivor,” says Hall, “like this ultimate survivor, particularly of domestic abuse. And I don’t think people realize that she’s a survivor in other ways. She’s a survivor in terms of her family. She didn’t have the greatest relationship with her mother — in fact, there was quite a toxic relationship there. She was a survivor in terms of the entertainment industry. I think all these dragons combined created an opportunity to really show, yes, there’s a great amount of resilience there when it comes to domestic abuse, but there are other things she had to slay. Whole systems.”

Yet even that broader view of the obstacles Turner faced wasn’t enough, according to Hall. “Oftentimes we don’t allow people who are that powerful and that strong their vulnerability. For me, that was one of the greatest joys of this creative process. I was really allowed inside these complicated feelings she had toward her mother, toward Ike. I’m really grateful she allowed me that opportunity to weave that into her story and into the musical. I think a lot of people are going to be really touched by how cracked-open we get to see Tina be in the musical.”

Naomi Rodgers as Tina Turner (Photo: Matthew Murphy | MurphyMade)

Blow Your Horn, Raymond!

One especially egregious omission in the Hollywood version of Tina Turner’s life was her relationship with a member of Ike Turner’s band long before Ike claimed her hand in marriage. As profiled in the Flyer in 2021, saxophonist Raymond Hill first appears in the history of recorded music when the singer in Ike Turner’s Kings of Rhythm, Jackie Brenston, shouts, “Blow your horn, Raymond! Blow!” on the breakthrough R&B hit, “Rocket 88.” Hill was with Ike’s band in St. Louis when young Anna Mae Bullock joined the group, and Hill and Bullock were involved long before Ike had any romantic inclinations toward his singer.

In the musical, Hill’s role in Tina Turner’s young life is at last being recognized; and that, Turner says, is deeply meaningful to her. “My relationship with Raymond was a very significant relationship in my life, especially because of our son, Craig. Raymond and I met when I was very young, and I had just started working with Ike when our romance began. Raymond had so many years of experience and I feel calling him an unsung hero of Black music is very true. I was very happy that the relationship has found its moment in the musical.”

For Hall, including Turner’s romance with Hill was crucial to the story. “When we talked,” Hall says of her interviews with Turner, “there was still this kind of girlish giddiness about Ray! So many years later! It became super apparent that I would need to not only include him, but also make him part of the narrative structure and drive of the show. Just because of how much he meant to her. As we all know, rock-and-roll is messy. Yet she was able to find love and have a child that she adored. She adored Craig, and it was so heartbreaking when he died in the past few years. So she’s just a woman who, even today, continues to experience so much tragedy.”

Garrett Turner as Ike Turner (Photo: Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman | MurphyMade)

A Second-Hand Emotion

If What’s Love Got to Do with It cuts quickly to Tina Turner’s relationship and troubled marriage to Ike Turner, skipping Raymond Hill altogether, it also arguably oversimplifies Ike’s character. That was also something Hall was determined to correct as part of getting the Tina Turner story right.

“I knew that was going to be a huge task,” says Hall of complexifying what’s perhaps the most famous abusive marriage in history. “Ike’s pretty much the villain in her story. That’s just the truth. However, as we all know, people are people. People make mistakes. People are a balance of bad and good. I did not ever want to excuse Ike’s behavior, but I wanted people to understand. So I felt that giving the psychological, the social context of where he grew up and what made him who he was so important. That to me allowed for the nuance. There’s a scene where they try to get into a hotel and can’t because of the color of their skin. They have to sleep by the side of the road, and so you have this man who created rock-and-roll, and is an icon himself, still feeling like he’s invisible. I felt it was important to show that psychological complication so people could understand why any human being would displace their anger and try to control another person, especially when that other person is flying higher than you are, when you are just as deserving of recognition and credit. That’s something I really felt proud about. Because I don’t think we’ve gotten that in any story, whether it’s journalistic articles or previous tellings of her story. It felt like a necessity, especially knowing that this may be one of the last retellings of Tina’s life, particularly from a musical perspective.”

The actors who portray Tina Turner on alternate nights of the touring show, Zurin Villanueva and Naomi Rodgers, appreciate this nuance as well. “We have to respect every single character in this show,” notes Rodgers. “Katori did such an amazing job of giving Ike a moment of vulnerability in the show. Even though things didn’t change afterwards, there were still moments of vulnerability where you could remind yourself, ‘Wait, maybe this was the moment Tina forgave him for a quick second.’”

Villanueva agrees. “In scene work, you have to find the love. You can’t just hate someone. It’s not where the interest is. Because you stayed with someone for a reason. If there was no love, you’d walk out the door and that would be the end of the story. So it’s always about the duality, the love and the hate.”

“It Breaks You, Then It Builds You Up”

Such a duality shapes the entire musical, especially as it’s appearing on a Memphis stage. As Hall notes, part of relating to Tina’s roots in the Tennessee soil was recognizing the seeds of racism. The show opens here just as Memphis dominates international headlines for the trauma of police-sponsored terrorism, the latest instance in a long history of such trauma. The idea is not lost on the musical’s two lead actors.

“You can never forget watching your people, your community, in pain, especially a wound that’s been reopened multiple times,” says Villanueva. “It’s really difficult, but we are here to uplift and inspire and give strength as we continue to try and get results, and change our policies so this stuff doesn’t happen. We’re just there to give strength.”

Or, as Rodgers puts it, “It breaks you, then it builds you up, and it comforts you, and then it reminds you of who you are. Because that’s what we went through. And it hits! It shows the most important parts of [Tina Turner’s] life; it includes the hard parts and how you get through it. This is a story for such a time as this, especially for Memphis.”

Ultimately, for Hall, that’s both the irony and the power of having one’s own writing debut on the Memphis stage. “It’s a dream come true, as a hometown girl, to have your work grace a Memphis stage. I definitely feel like I’ve checked something off my bucket list. And I’m overjoyed that in this moment of Tina’s life, after she’s struggled for so much, we’re able to be in the room with her in this figurative way. I just hope that Memphians love and enjoy it just as much as we, as a creative team, have loved and enjoyed bringing her story to the world.”

Turner underscores how deeply having the show debut in Memphis has affected her. “So many forms of music have their roots in Memphis, and my life and career have circled the city so many times,” she writes. “To bring my show to Memphis has huge meaning to me. If you had told me all those years ago as a small child picking cotton in Nutbush that this would happen, I definitely wouldn’t have believed you, and thought you were telling me a fairy tale! It does feel almost like a full circle, to be returning home and to be able to tell my story in such an amazing way.”

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Intermission Impossible Theater Theater Feature

Reimagined “My Fair Lady” Brings Feminism to the Fore

When I saw that My Fair Lady would be coming to the Orpheum Theater, I knew right away I wanted to go — andI wanted to bring my friend Kayla Dawson with me. My Fair Lady is a show that Kayla introduced me to when we were teenagers, during her self-described Audrey Hepburn obsession phase. As much as I was looking forward to it, I knew it could be tricky seeing a performance, especially one that is a familiar personal favorite, with a preconceived notion. You can go in unintentionally more critical. After all, there’s an idea in your head for the show to live up to. But The Lincoln Center Theater’s production of My Fair Lady exceeded every expectation I had. This classic musical stands the test of time.

My Fair Lady, based on the 1913 George Bernard Shaw play Pygmalion, became part of the classic film lexicon in 1964. I have to say, I prefer the stage version. Director Bartlett Sher offers up a new take on the familiar romantic musical, or at least, a new take for those unfamiliar with the original source material. Pygmalion is less of a romance and more of a critique on social classism and the subjugation of women. The version of My Fair Lady I saw at The Orpheum Theater on July 26th was clearly a critique on the same. This show could easily be off-putting to modern audiences if the tone missed the appropriate tongue-in-cheek-ness, but instead, it walked the line perfectly between light-hearted Broadway musical and serious social assessment.

Notably — insert large spoiler alert here — the loudest comment on women’s rights happens in the last five seconds of the show. In Sher’s version, Eliza Doolittle walks offstage (“strides” is honestly a more apt description) in response to Professor Henry Higgins’ question, “Where the devil are my slippers?” This ending is true to Pygmalion, but differs from what audiences may be familiar with from the 1964 movie version. In the wake of the “Me Too” movement and the overturning of Roe v. Wade, I personally loved the changed ending. Find your own damn slippers, Henry Higgins! The change completely shifted the dynamic for Eliza’s character, allowing her to be seen as a powerful, independent woman. Having Eliza retain her autonomy makes more sense with what we see from her character throughout the musical, making for a more cohesive ending than what’s become traditional for the show.

Another way in which this production stands out is the diverse ensemble cast. Every group number was superb, from the iconic “Ascot Gavotte” to the raucous “Get Me to the Church on Time.” The extravagant costumes, designed by Catherine Zuber, silhouetted against a light background and coupled with a wonderfully paced, slow entrance of the company makes “Ascot Gavotte” stand out as a musical number saturated with dry humor and ennui. “Get Me to the Church on Time” has never been my favorite My Fair Lady scene, but last night’s performance has moved it considerably up the ranks in my book. The song was a visual feast, featuring dynamic costumes, elaborate choreography, complex set changes, and even pratfalls — all of what audiences love about Broadway can be found in this one number.

Kevin Pariseau (seated) as Colonel Pickering, Laird Mackintosh as Professor Henry Higgins, and Shereen Ahmed as Eliza Doolittle in The Lincoln Center Theater Production of Lerner & Loewe’s My Fair Lady (Photo: © JOAN MARCUS)

Speaking of set changes, the large moving set planned by Michael Yeargan was so intricately woven into the show that it almost felt like another cast member. Professor Higgins’ house rotated turntable-style, giving license to the cast for movement through the set and allowing the audience to see a full depiction of the life within the home. Set pieces are cleverly incorporated into the dance numbers to a point where even the changes are interesting to watch, being fit into the choreography of every scene.

For my friend and I, seeing My Fair Lady was like revisiting a dear companion and finding that they’ve grown and changed for the better. For the couple in the seat next to me, who were seeing their first-ever theatrical production, it was something entirely new. “We love it,” they gushed to me at intermission. My Fair Lady is perfect for anyone wanting to experience all the joys of live entertainment coupled with a feminist message that hits hard in 2022.

The Lincoln Center Theater’s production of My Fair Lady runs through July 31st at the Orpheum Theatre.

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: MATA, an Orpheum Heckler, and the Pyramid

Memphis on the internet.

Worst of the Worst

Memphis topped the list of CityNerd’s top 10 worst transit cities, “where taking the bus or rail may just crush your soul.” (Hat tip to u/Carpet-Early on the Memphis subreddit.)

Channel host Ray Delahanty, a transportation planning and engineering consultant, said the Memphis Area Transportation Authority had to have “the single least legible major-city bus system in the U.S. When I drop into [Google Maps’] street-view I can barely tell where the bus stop is.”

Lucinda and Bonnie

Posted to Twitter by Lucinda Williams

Some “dumb f*ck” heckled Lucinda Williams and Bonnie Raitt during their performances at the Orpheum Saturday, according to Memphis Redditor u/12frets. The heckler allegedly made fun of Lucinda’s speech (she had a stroke last year, says 12frets) and yelled to Bonnie “what’s in that cup” she was drinking from before a song about her struggles with sobriety.

“I know it was very important to you to be as much a part of the show as the people on stage, but you’re neither funny or insightful,” said 12frets. “These artists deserve better.”

Cool Shot

Posted to Twitter by Frasier Seinfeld

“As the sun sets on Memphis like the Serengeti,” said Frasier Seinfeld on Twitter.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Bob Dylan’s Haunted Songs at the Orpheum

Bob Dylan’s appearance at the Orpheum Theatre on Saturday felt momentous even before we arrived. Something about the confluence of our tentative return to public life, his own dogged determination, and the historic upheavals we’re all experiencing lent his appearance a greater significance than ever.

Perhaps that’s why the full house spontaneously rose to a standing ovation as soon as Dylan and his band took the stage. And though Dylan has never varied from a fixed setlist on recent tours, opening with the blues shuffle of “Watching the River Flow” was especially appropriate for a gathering in a classic theater at the foot of Beale Street, just a stone’s throw from the Mississippi.

It was especially moving if one paused to reflect that the Orpheum is still standing because of the efforts of musical auteur Jim Dickinson and other activists, who’s efforts prevented the destruction of the theater in the ’70s. Years later, when Dylan’s Time Out of Mind won a Grammy, he would name check the native Memphian in his acceptance speech. “This is for my brother, Jim Dickinson. He lives in Mississippi.”

Their common roots were highlighted with an opening tune dating back to the early ’70s, and the prominence of piano (Dickinson’s instrument of choice) in Saturday’s performance. Dylan hasn’t touched a guitar onstage for some time now, but hearing him play only piano was a first for this listener. (The last time I saw him was at Mud Island in the ’90s). It seemed entirely appropriate that Dylan’s instrument was neither some digital keyboard nor a grand piano, but a barrelhouse console piano with its back to the audience. Dylan spent the night standing at it with only his head and shoulders visible. But, given that he would occasionally step out stoically from behind it to accept applause, that was enough.

The band, with drummer Charlie Drayton, guitarists Doug Lancio and Bob Britt, multi-instrumentalist Donnie Herron, and longtime bassist Tony Garnier, would often noodle about in the key of each upcoming song, especially on the slower numbers. This sometimes made the quieter pieces seem to emerge from a cloud of notes, as if coalescing out of stardust. It also emphasized the living spontaneity of the performances.

While most of the set was drawn from his 2020 album, Rough and Rowdy Ways, the second song, “Most Likely You Go Your Way and I’ll Go Mine,” also harked back to Dylan’s far past, with a far more ethereal approach, the band tentatively easing into a quieter treatment that was no less powerful for it.

They took quite the opposite approach a few songs in, when Dylan launched another classic track, “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” with a deft blues harp boogie. That, too, benefited from the new arrangement, and suited the proximity of Beale Street to a T.

The songs from his latest album were no less enthusiastically received. The steadfast blues shuffle/march of “False Prophet” was so powerful that the crowd rose to its second standing ovation as the music drew to a close, with Dylan stepping out to receive the adulation. His grim demeanor only served to highlight the gravitas of the lyrics. This singer was clearly in the zone.

“Black Rider,” while not as spare as the album version, showcased the band’s more subtle side, sans drums. And when they kicked off the next tune with a groovy boogie riff, many did not realize it was the 1967 gem, “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight.” The strong riffs underpinning “Gotta Serve Somebody” were similarly disorienting, but once you realized what was happening, the old songs took on added power, and, in the latter case, led to yet another standing ovation.

The one glimmer of joy in Dylan’s demeanor came during the lilting waltz, “I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You.” The tender, reflective tune had a dramatic silence at one point, promptly filled by a fan yelling, as if on cue, “We love you, Bob!” As Dylan resumed singing, he let out an irrepressible laugh.

The songwriter’s Frank Sinatra fascination bubbled to the surface in the form of “Melancholy Mood,” a revelation of sorts in the loose but focused energy brought by the band. And then he brought it close to the heart of Memphis with the quiet “Mother of Muses.” Applause and a shiver of recognition rippled through the crowd as Dylan sang:

Sing of Zhukov and Patton and the battles they fought
Who cleared the path for Presley to sing
Who carved out the path for Martin Luther King
Who did what they did and then went on their way
Man, I could tell their stories all day

After “Goodbye Jimmy Reed,” Dylan introduced the band, name checking Sam Phillips along the way, and then drew the night to a close with the magnificent “Every Grain of Sand.” The crowd tried to rally for an encore, but most knew that the evening was complete. Dylan was done, and so were we, satisfied to have seen one of the 20th Century’s greatest visionaries make his work, both old and new, spark with fresh relevance today.

Setlist from April 9, 2022:
Watching the River Flow
Most Likely You Go Your Way and I’ll Go Mine
I Contain Multitudes
False Prophet
When I Paint My Masterpiece
Black Rider
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight
My Own Version of You
Crossing the Rubicon
To Be Alone With You
Key West (Philosopher Pirate)
Gotta Serve Somebody
I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You
Melancholy Mood (Frank Sinatra cover)
Mother of Muses
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (followed by band introductions)
Every Grain of Sand

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Where it Happened: Hamilton at the Orpheum

Don’t expect this to be your usual theater review. Theater isn’t my first language. More importantly, I broke my live performances fast with a production of the smash hit Hamilton. There aren’t enough superlatives in the newest edition of Merriam-Webster’s dictionary to adequately describe the veritable feast my eyes and ears enjoyed at last night’s performance. 

Were the songs well-written? Well, yeah — Lin-Manuel Miranda wrote them, for crying out loud! Were the costumes pleasing to behold? Yes, it’s freaking Hamilton. Was there an electricity in the packed venue? Yes, the audience was at a Grizzlies-playoff-game level of excitement.

The set design is versatile, and with a little rearranging of furniture and adjusting of lights, a new scene can be conjured. It could have been a black box, though, and I would have been just as entertained. If the cast didn’t bring their “A” game to a chilly Wednesday-night performance in Memphis, I certainly couldn’t tell. The technical skill it takes to pull off some of these songs is impressive, to say the least, but to deliver at that level while also infusing the performance with emotion and hitting all the choreography is another thing entirely.

Paul Oakley Stovall, playing the part of George Washington, was the standout performance for me. Stovall delivered his lines effortlessly, as if he were tossing them to the audience as an afterthought. It takes a lot of work to make something look that easy.

In short, believe the hype. Six years after its world premiere, Hamilton can still capture and hold an audience’s attention. But beware — viewing this production may cause side effects, like humming the refrain from “The Reynolds Pamphlet” long after the final curtain. 

Hamilton is at the Orpheum Theatre through Sunday, January 2nd.

Categories
News News Feature

Shop Local: Downtown

This holiday season, we’re asking readers to support local and consider these and others for their gift-giving needs.

The Broom Closet

For your giftee’s metaphysical needs — gemstones, candles, tarot readings, sage and smudging supplies, and more — visit The Broom Closet. The shop also offers unique trinkets and home decor. We especially love this Astrology Box ($28). Available in-store at 525 S. Main and online at thebroomclosetmemphis.com.

Orpheum Theatre

With a return to live performances, audiences are eager to experience the magic that the Orpheum’s event lineup has to offer. Hamilton, Memphis Jookin’ featuring Lil Buck, and comedian Bert Kreischer are among those gracing the stage this season, and tickets make great gifts! And this 2021 ornament ($25), designed by local artist AnnaMade Designs, would look nice on the holiday tree. Available at orpheum-memphis.com or 225 S. Main.

Hollywood Feed

Don’t forget the furry family members! Hollywood Feed offers more than just quality pet food. Handmade treats from their bakery, toys, cutesy clothes, and more are available for your four-legged friends. Keep them warm with a festive sweater ($11.99)! Available at 2015 Union, other store locations, or hollywoodfeed.com.

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
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Friends of the Orpheum Cookbook Takes the Spotlight



Orpheum Theatre volunteer ushers usually show people to their seats.

But in The Cast Party: A Collection of Recipes by Friends of the Orpheum, they show people how many teaspoons it takes to make “Cast Party Banana Pudding” and other culinary creations.

This is an updated version with additional recipes to the second edition of the book, which was published in 2005. It features recipes for dishes the ushers make for the cast and crew of the touring Broadway shows at a special luncheon held between the matinee and evening performances on a designated day. 

Part of Orpheum communications manager Kristin Bennett’s job is to take actors to their media appointments. It’s not uncommon for them to say something like, “Oh, my gosh. I can’t wait for this meal. I haven’t been to Memphis before, but everybody told me about this meal we’re going to get,” Bennett says.

“So, it’s become kind of legendary on the touring Broadway circuit. It’s just a way for our ushers to provide some Southern hospitality to crews that are traveling and may not get a home-cooked meal like this. It’s unique because traveling, this might be the only home-cooked meal they get on the road. So, it’s become special.”

The 346 volunteer ushers have their own organization, Friends of the Orpheum. A committee lead by Elena Ross put the book together.

As for what dishes are staples at the dinners, which are held either at the Broadway Club at the theater or next door at the Halloran Centre, Bennett says, “It’s everything you’d ever want. Fried chicken and rolls and homemade casseroles.”

Vickie Snider’s banana pudding, which is included in the book, “is the one that cast members who have come through before ask where it is. Definitely, there are some staples that people come to expect.”

Among other popular dishes included in the book are the sweet potato casserole, Ross says. “Anything having to do with sweet potatoes is always a big hit,” she says. “The favorites are the ones with the pecans.”

Ross recalled the time an actor in The Lion King entered the luncheon and said,  “Oh, my. You have four different sweet potato casseroles!”

“She was in her glory. She was so excited. Every time she went around the buffet table, she’d say, ‘Oh, they have this.’ And, ‘Oh, they have that.’”

Other favorites included in the book are Linda Brittingham’s salad with mandarin oranges and Friends volunteer coordinator Cindi Maglothin’s jalapeño corn muffins in the shape of stars. “Of course, everyone’s a star,” Ross says.

Also included is a special section called “Stage Door,” where “friends of the Orpheum restaurants in the area were kind enough to share their recipes.”

And Bear’s Catering, the catering company the Orpheum also uses, is represented in the book, Ross says.

The cookbook also features testimonials from actors who appeared in Orpheum shows.

Edward Staudenmayer, wrote, “But after an actor tours through the town, one knows the No. 1 reason to love a stop in Memphis is for the Phenomenal Ushers Meal … between shows …”

In 2017, the cookbook received an award from The Broadway League, the trade industry that produces the Tony Awards.  

The last cast party meal was March 8th for the touring company of Disney’s Aladdin. “That was the last meal at the Orpheum before COVID.” Bennett says.

The Cast Party: A Collection of Recipes by Friends of the Orpheum is $20 each and is available at orpheumgiftshop.com