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Intermission Impossible Theater

’19-’20: The Orpheum Announces a Hit-Packed Broadway Season

The Play That Goes Wrong

The Orpheum’s 2019-2020 subscription is a solid mix of recent Broadway hits, and classics, with naughty crowd pleasers, family favorites, and a nice twist for those among us who occasionally enjoy a non-musical.

Via The Orpheum:

DEAR EVAN HANSEN
October 8-13, 2019

WINNER OF SIX 2017 TONY® AWARDS INCLUDING BEST MUSICAL AND THE 2018 GRAMMY® AWARD FOR BEST MUSICAL THEATER ALBUM.

A letter that was never meant to be seen, a lie that was never meant to be told, a life he never dreamed he could have. Evan Hansen is about to get the one thing he’s always wanted: a chance to finally fit in. DEAR EVAN HANSEN is the deeply personal and profoundly contemporary musical about life and the way we live it. DEAR EVAN HANSEN has struck a remarkable chord with audiences and critics everywhere, including The Washington Post who says DEAR EVAN HANSEN is “one of the most remarkable shows in musical theatre history.” The New York Times calls it “a gut-punching, breathtaking knockout of a musical.” And NBC Nightly News declares the musical “an anthem resonating on Broadway and beyond.” DEAR EVAN HANSEN features a book by Tony Award winner Steven Levenson, a score by Grammy®, Tony® and Academy Award® winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul (La La Land, The Greatest Showman), and direction by four-time Tony Award nominee Michael Greif (Rent, Next to Normal). The Original Broadway Cast Recording of DEAR EVAN HANSEN, produced by Atlantic Records, made an extraordinary debut at #8 on the Billboard 200– the highest charting debut position for an original cast album since 1961 — and went on to win the 2018 Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album. A Deluxe Album of the Grammy-winning cast recording, with six bonus tracks including “Waving Through a Window” performed by pop star Katy Perry, was released digitally by Atlantic Records on November 2, 2018. A special edition coffee table book authored by Levenson, Pasek and Paul, Dear Evan Hansen: through the window (Grand Central Publishing / Melcher) is now available, offering an in-depth, all-access look at the musical, including never-before-seen production photos and cast portraits, behind-the-scenes stories, and a fully annotated script by the authors.

THE BOOK OF MORMON
November 5-10, 2019
(SEASON OPTION)


The New York Times calls it “the best musical of this century.” The Washington Post says, “It is the kind of evening that restores your faith in musicals.” And Entertainment Weekly says, “Grade A: the funniest musical of all time.” Jimmy Fallon of The Tonight Show calls it “Genius. Brilliant. Phenomenal.” It’s The Book of Mormon, the nine-time Tony Award®-winning Best Musical. Contains explicit language.

HELLO, DOLLY!
December 17-22, 2019


Winner of four Tony Awards including Best Musical Revival, HELLO, DOLLY! is the universally acclaimed smash that NPR calls “the best show of the year!” Winner of four Tony Awards including Best Musical Revival, director Jerry Zaks’ “gorgeous” new production (Vogue) is “making people crazy happy” (The Washington Post) and “a musical comedy dream!” (Rolling Stone).

ROALD DAHL’S CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
January 14-19, 2020


Roald Dahl’s amazing tale is now Memphis’ golden ticket! It’s the perfect recipe for a delectable treat: songs from the original film, including “Pure Imagination,” “The Candy Man,” and “I’ve Got a Golden Ticket,” alongside a toe-tapping and ear-tickling new score from the songwriters of Hairspray. Get ready for Oompa-Loompas, incredible inventions, the great glass elevator, and more, more, more at this everlasting showstopper!

THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG
February 5-9, 2020
(SEASON OPTION)

What would happen if Sherlock Holmes and Monty Python had an illegitimate Broadway baby? You’d get THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG, Broadway & London’s award-winning smash comedy! Called “A GUT-BUSTING HIT” (The New York Times) and “THE FUNNIEST PLAY BROADWAY HAS EVER SEEN” (HuffPost), this classic murder mystery is chock-full of mishaps and madcap mania delivering “A RIOTOUS EXPLOSION OF COMEDY” (Daily Beast) that is “TONS OF FUN FOR ALL AGES” (HuffPost)!

Disney’s ALADDIN
February 26 – March 8, 2020

Discover a whole new world at Disney’s ALADDIN, the hit Broadway musical. From the producer of The Lion King comes the timeless story of ALADDIN, a thrilling new production filled with unforgettable beauty, magic, comedy and breathtaking spectacle. It’s an extraordinary theatrical event where one lamp and three wishes make the possibilities infinite. See why audiences and critics agree, ALADDIN is “Exactly What You Wish For!” (NBC-TV).

A BRONX TALE
April 7 – 12, 2020

Broadway’s hit crowd-pleaser takes you to the stoops of the Bronx in the 1960s- where a young man is caught between the father he loves and the mob boss he’d love to be. Bursting with high-energy dance numbers and original doo-wop tunes from Alan Menken, the songwriter of Beauty and the Beast, A BRONX TALE is an unforgettable story of loyalty and family. Based on Academy Award nominee Chazz Palminteri’s story, this streetwise musical has The New York Times hailing it as “A Critics’ Pick! The kind of tale that makes you laugh and cry.”

COME FROM AWAY
July 21 – 26


2020Broadway’s COME FROM AWAY is a Best Musical winner all across North America! This New York Times Critics’ Pick takes you into the heart of the remarkable true story of 7,000 stranded passengers and the small town in Newfoundland that welcomed them. Cultures clashed and nerves ran high, but uneasiness turned into trust, music soared into the night, and gratitude grew into enduring friendships. Don’t miss this breathtaking new musical written by Tony® nominees Irene Sankoff and David Hein, and helmed by this year’s Tony-winning Best Director, Christopher Ashley. Newsweek cheers, “It takes you to a place you never want to leave!” On 9/11, the world stopped. On 9/12, their stories moved us all.

For more information about shows and ticket availability, here’s your link.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

“Hamilton” is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season.

Orpheum Theatre Group

Spoiler alert: We’ve known Hamilton was going to be part of the Orpheum’s 2018-2019 season for a while now. Now we know the rest of the story — and there are some nice surprises.

From the media release:

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (8)

LOVE NEVER DIES September 4-9, 2018

This story of boundless love, full of passion and drama, follows Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera, one of the most successful musicals of all time, which has now been seen by more than 130 million people worldwide and is the winner of over 50 international awards. The ultimate love story continues in Love Never Dies, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s spellbinding sequel to The Phantom of the Opera.

The year is 1907. It is 10 years after his disappearance from the Paris Opera House and The Phantom has escaped to a new life in New York where he lives amongst the screaming joy rides and freak shows of Coney Island. In this new, electrically charged world, he has finally found a place for his music to soar,

but he has never stopped yearning for his one true love and musical protégée, Christine Daaé.

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (7)

SCHOOL OF ROCK October 9-14, 2018

SCHOOL OF ROCK is a New York Times Critics’ Pick and “AN INSPIRING JOLT OF ENERGY, JOY AND MAD SKILLZ!” (Entertainment Weekly). Based on the hit film, this hilarious new musical follows Dewey Finn, a wannabe rock star posing as a substitute teacher who turns a class of straight-A students into a guitar-shredding, bass-slapping, mind-blowing rock band. This high-octane smash features 14 new songs from ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER, all the original songs from the movie and musical theater’s first-ever kids rock band playing their instruments live on stage. Vanity Fair raves, “FISTS OF ALL AGES SHALL BE PUMPING!”

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (6)

LES MISÉRABLES November 27-December 2, 2018 (SEASON OPTION)

Cameron Mackintosh presents the new production of Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg’s Tony Award-winning musical phenomenon, Les Misérables, direct from an acclaimed two-and-a-half-year return to Broadway. Set against the backdrop of 19th-century France, Les Misérables tells an unforgettable story of heartbreak, passion, and the resilience of the human spirit. Featuring the beloved songs “I Dreamed A Dream,” “On My Own,” “Stars,” “Bring Him Home,” “One Day More,” and many more, this epic and uplifting story has become one of the most celebrated musicals in theatrical history. With its glorious new staging and dazzlingly reimagined scenery inspired by the paintings of Victor Hugo, this breathtaking new production has left both audiences and critics awestruck. “Les Miz is born again!” (NY1).

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (5)

WAITRESS January 15-20, 2019

“THE WOMEN OF WAITRESS ARE CHANGING BROADWAY!” (Time Magazine). Brought to life by a groundbreaking all-female creative team, this irresistible new hit features original music and lyrics by 6-time Grammy® nominee Sara Bareilles (“Brave,” “Love Song”), a book by acclaimed screenwriter Jessie Nelson (I Am Sam), choreography by Lorin Latarro (Les Dangereuse Liasons, Waiting for Godot) and direction by Tony Award® winner Diane Paulus (Hair, Pippin, Finding Neverland). “It’s an empowering musical of the highest order!” raves the Chicago Tribune. Inspired by Adrienne Shelly’s beloved film, WAITRESS tells the story of Jenna – a waitress and expert pie maker, Jenna dreams of a way out of her small town and loveless marriage. A baking contest in a nearby county and the town’s new doctor may offer her a chance at a fresh start, while her fellow waitresses offer their own recipes for happiness. But Jenna must summon the strength and courage to rebuild her own life. “WAITRESS is a little slice of heaven!” says Entertainment Weekly and “a monumental contribution to Broadway!” according to Marie Claire. Don’t miss this uplifting musical celebrating friendship, motherhood, and the magic of a well-made pie. www.WaitressTheMusical.com

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (4)

ON YOUR FEET! February 12-17, 2019

From their humble beginnings in Cuba, Emilio and Gloria Estefan came to America and broke through all barriers to become a crossover sensation at the very top of the pop music world. But just when they thought they had it all, they almost lost everything. ON YOUR FEET! takes you behind the music and inside the real story of this record-making and groundbreaking couple who, in the face of adversity, found a way to end up on their feet. Directed by two-time Tony Award® winner Jerry Mitchell (Kinky Boots), with choreography by Olivier Award winner Sergio Trujillo (Jersey Boys) and an original book by Academy Award® winner Alexander Dinelaris (Birdman), ON YOUR FEET! features some of the most iconic songs of the past quarter-century — and one of the most inspiring stories in music
history.

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (3)

FIDDLER ON THE ROOF March 19-24, 2019 (SEASON OPTION)

“An entirely fresh, funny, and gorgeous new production. A REASON FOR CELEBRATION!” – New York Magazine.

Tony®-winning director Bartlett Sher and the team behind South Pacific, The King and I and 2017 Tony-winning Best Play Oslo, bring a fresh and authentic vision to this beloved theatrical masterpiece from Tony winner Joseph Stein and Pulitzer Prize winners Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick. The original production won ten Tony Awards, including a special Tony for becoming the longest-running Broadway musical of all time. You’ll be there when the sun rises on this new production, with stunning movement and dance from acclaimed Israeli choreographer Hofesh Shechter, based on the original staging by Jerome Robbins. A wonderful cast and a lavish orchestra tell this heartwarming story of fathers and daughters, husbands and wives, and the timeless traditions that define faith and family. Featuring the Broadway classics “Tradition,” “If I Were a Rich Man,” “Sunrise, Sunset,” “Matchmaker, Matchmaker” and “To Life,” FIDDLER ON THE ROOF will introduce a new generation to this uplifting celebration that raises its cup to joy! To love! To life!

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season. (2)

ANASTASIA June 4-9, 2019

Inspired by the beloved films, the romantic and adventure-filled new musical ANASTASIA is on a journey to Memphis at last! From the Tony Award®-winning creators of the Broadway classic Ragtime, this dazzling show transports us from the twilight of the Russian Empire to the euphoria of Paris in the 1920s, as a brave young woman sets out to discover the mystery of her past. Pursued by a ruthless Soviet officer determined to silence her, Anya enlists the aid of a dashing conman and a lovable ex-aristocrat. Together, they embark on an epic adventure to help her find home, love, and family. ANASTASIA features a book by celebrated playwright Terrence McNally, a lush new score by Stephen Flaherty (music) and Lynn Ahrens (lyrics) with direction by Tony Award® winner Darko Tresnjak.

‘Hamilton’ is coming! Orpheum Unveils 2018-19 Broadway Season.

HAMILTON July 9-28, 2019

HAMILTON is the story of America’s Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, an immigrant from the West Indies who became George Washington’s right-hand man during the Revolutionary War and was the new nation’s first Treasury Secretary. Featuring a score that blends hip-hop, jazz, blues, rap, R&B, and Broadway, HAMILTON is the story of America then, as told by America now.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

“Finding Neverland” Star John Davidson Has Some Advice for Actors

Jeremy Daniel

John Davidson

Finding Neverland star John Davidson has an affinity for the double role he plays in the spectacle-laden musical adaptation of Finding Neverland. “As Captain Hook, I give [Peter Pan author J. M.] Barrie the same advice I’d give anybody getting into the business,” he says. “Find the child within yourself, because to find out who you are is the greatest challenge of life. I’m telling Barrie, ‘Don’t write what you been writing. And don’t write what everyone expects you to write. Write your story.’ Then, as Charles Frohman who’s Barrie’s producer, I’m trying to talk him out of writing a play for children. ‘It will be a disaster,’ I tell him. ‘Children don’t have money; they can’t buy tickets!'”

When it comes to the business of show there are worse people to take career advice from than Davidson. The clean cut actor started on Broadway in the 1960s before packing up his Pepsodent smile and taking his act to Hollywood, where he became a ubiquitous game show presence, recorded albums, and landed notable guest spots on popular shows. Davidson hosted That’s Incredible, The New Hollywood Squares, and was a frequent substitute for Tonight Show icon Johnny Carson. But between appearances on The American Style and in made for TV films like Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders II, Davidson continued to work as a song and dance man.

“Until this time, my favorite roles have been Don Quixote in Man of la Mancha and playing Harold Hill in The Music Man. But now this is by far my favorite role,” Davidson says. “I’m at my best when I can chew on the scenery, and each of these roles gives me a chance to do that. It is exhausting and I just love it and I’m so grateful.

“In my mind, I’m the luckiest guy in the world to have this role,” says Davidson who, at 76, describes Finding Neverland‘s Hook/Frohman as, “the role of a lifetime.”

Intermission Impossible: Critics really seem to like you in this role. Even those who don’t love the script seem to love you in this double role as Hook and Frohman

John Davidson: It’s true that it’s not a typical Musical. It is not Sondheim. It’s not Rodgers and Hammerstein. But it’s a magical show with a hit song in every scene. It’s British pop music and very singable. I just love the music. The story will make you laugh. There’s a lot of funny funny pieces. But it’s guaranteed to make you cry. It’s a very moving script. Of course it’s paste on the film where Dustin Hoffman play Charles Frohman and Johnny Depp played J.M. Barrie. But I think the Broadway show. It has incredible special effects. It is a powerful two and a half hours in the theater.

As I read the reviews I wondered if there was some surprise among people who may mostly know you as the host of Hollywood Squares or from That’s Incredible. It’s got to be at least a little gratifying to turn heads: “Wow, he’s really a good actor!”

That is true. My career has been very confusing. I would call it variety. But it is confusing. Is John Davidson just a game show host? Is he just a singer or not an actor? Whatever. I’ve been so many different things, and that’s been the fun of my career, but it’s true that it does surprise people. A lot of people who saw me on That’s Incredible didn’t even know that I sing or act. But I have a Bachelor of Arts in theater and I started out on Broadway as a leading man. That is at the heart of what I do. That kind of storytelling is what I started out doing, and it’s nice to get back to that. But I understand. It is surprising people. And that’s okay, it’s kind of fun to surprise people.

The great thing about being a generalist writer is getting to wake up in a new world every day depending on your subject. So I really appreciate that perspective.

I’m sort of old school. You know, the performers that came on the scene in the 50s and 60s and before always thought of being multifaceted performers. I had an early manager who said, “Don’t be a spear, be a pitchfork.” By that he meant a spear has one prong. But a pitchfork can handle a lot of points of attack. The variety is what’s kept me going all these years. That’s the old-fashioned way of doing it, and that’s my advice to a lot of the kids in our cast. I’m 76, and most of the kids in the cast from their late 20s. When they Google me.

‘Finding Neverland’ Star John Davidson Has Some Advice for Actors (3)

You get Googled!

Oh yes. And they come back the next morning and they’re surprised by all the things I’ve done. And I say to them, “You could do that too. Don’t just think about playing roles in musicals. The greatest role you play is yourself. You got to figure out who you are, Because that will help you play other parts.”

You talk about being old school. But you really have worked with generations of artists. Your first Broadway show was with the Cowardly Lion, Bert Lahr. As a host and panelist on Hollywood Squares you worked with so many people including the great Rose Marie who just passed — best known for The Dick Van Dyke Show, but whose career goes all the way back to Vaudeville and variety when she was Baby Rose Marie. Were there performers like this who inspired you particularly?

I think Bob Hope. I worked on a lot of his specials. He was an early supporter of mine and he was a total performer. I guess he didn’t do any serious roles, but he did Broadway film television. And Betty White. Any person who has a talk show always wants Betty White on because she’s mischievous and funny and she’s a total performer. I was always attracted to people who knew yeah, but to tell a story with a song. To take stage. To master the space. I think that excites me more than just a singer. Robin Williams was an inspiration to me.

I knew you’d been a guest host for Johnny Carson before he retired from The Tonight Show. I honestly can’t think of anything more intimidating than sitting in for an icon like Carson who so completely owns his format.

When you substituted for Carson you always knew it was his desk. It was his desk, it was his chair. His name was on the pencils. His name is on the coffee cup. I couldn’t book my own guests. They were very tight about getting people on. I remember trying to get Kenny Rogers on. I told them, “You understand Kenny Rogers is a major performer, right? He’s a Storyteller he’s a singer, he’s a great talker.” They saw him as just a hit record guy. I finally got him on. I want to have a Jacques Cousteau on because I’m a scuba diver and a big fan. And I couldn’t get him on. Then they finally put him on but in the last 7-minutes of the show so I didn’t have enough time with the great Jacques Cousteau. You realize you’re just a guest there, you’re not the host. You can’t really indulge yourself. But I began to have this realization — I replaced Carson. I replaced Mike Douglas on his daytime talk show. When I got the music man I replaced Robert Preston in his Harold Hill. I came to realize you can’t feel someone else’s shoes. Like in Finding Neverland I’m replacing Kelsey Grammer from Broadway. I began to realize you can’t feel someone else’s shoes. You’ve got to bring your own shoes and try and fill them. That became my motto. Bring your own shoes.

But what kind of shoes do you bring if you want to be a game show host? That’s its own skill set it seems. Where does one train for that? How do you prepare?

It’s a very tough thing. And it’s a very good question. That’s why I talk about with the young actress in Finding Neverland. We talk about it all the time. How do you make that jump from Broadway to television. Because you can play Broadway all your life, and it’s great it’s very fulfilling. But if you want to have some power, and the freedom to pick and choose, and if you want to have producers call you instead of you trying to call them you’ve got to get some television so that you mean something. And fame gives you power. That’s the reason for being famous. But when I first started on Broadway, a television producer named Bob Banner Who had just found Carol Burnett signed me to a five-year contract. And he brought me to television. And he helps me do my Las Vegas act. And he help me find out who John Davidson was. He developed me as a television variety show performer. I was very lucky in that way.

‘Finding Neverland’ Star John Davidson Has Some Advice for Actors (4)


So we’ve talked about how you were a goto replacement guy. But you were also at the leading edge of some things. That’s Incredible is a pretty clear antecedent to reality programming.

That’s Incredible and another show at the same time called Real People.

With Sarah Purcell who you sometimes had as a guest on Hollywood Squares.

Yes. And they were some of the first shows to bring real people to television in that way. It was fun working on That’s incredible with Fran Tarkington and Cathy Lee Crosby. I think that advanced my notoriety, but it didn’t advance my talents as a singer or actor. It gave me the power to say okay now I want to do Man of La Mancha. So I can go to a theater and people would come because they see me on That’s Incredible. That’s Incredible was at its best when we celebrated human triumphs over physical and mental obstacles. We were at our worst when we dealt with ghost stories and psychic phenomena, and some of them really superstitious stuff. Just these pitfalls the imagination can get us into. I think we were at our best when we should real stories, and not people who just wanted to be on TV.

‘Finding Neverland’ Star John Davidson Has Some Advice for Actors

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Nobody’s Banned “Gone With The Wind” in Memphis — Even if the Commercial Appeal Says So

Beefed up security at the Orpheum.

Let’s talk about the B-word. No. Let’s talk about the C-word.

No.

Let’s talk about the fact that there’s an armed guard in front of the Orpheum protecting folks with families who spend their days booking Broadway shows, coordinating the High School Musical Awards, developing concert programs, planning summer camps and curating a popular film series. That’s a dangerous job now, apparently, and media — local and otherwise — only add fuel to the fire by misrepresenting what happened there this week when it was announced that, after a good, 34-year run, the Downtown playhouse would drop Gone With the Wind from its popular Summer film series. No matter what you may have read at The Commercial Appeal’s website this week, nothing has been banned in Memphis. Not Gone With the Wind or anything else. The word “banned” implies a kind of authority the good folks at the Orpheum just don’t have over the distribution and screening of media in Memphis. Any mainstream media that uses that word chooses to pour fuel on a fire that, judging from the presence of the guard out front, may get somebody —probably not the author or editor — burned.

The Orpheum did what every cultural institution in the country does every single day. The staff made a curatorial decision — a decision that would be valid even if Gone With the Wind wasn’t controversial. Why should Gone With the Wind be a tradition and not Selma? Or Bambi or The Big Lebowski for that matter? Why should there always be room for Gone With the Wind and never room for Faulkner’s Intruder in the Dust, which is more regionally appropriate, and tells a different and more vital story of the American South than the blazing, over-the-top romance of Gone With the Wind.

Never heard of Intruder in the Dust you say? This is why we curate. We also curate because culture shifts, what’s relevant now may not be relevant 5-minutes from now. And relevant or not, a 4-hour film like GWTW is ultimately a less valuable  investment for theaters like the Orpheum than a 90-minute flick that also sells out. Mad Max: Fury Road, for example, would save the Orpheum two full hours-worth of overhead on everything from labor to utilities.

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So many popular films have been made since 1939, and there are only so many slots on the Orpheum’s Summer series. While there’s nothing wrong with reviving  popular films, there are too many great films to choose from to guarantee any one a permanent spot on any lineup. Unless, of course, that film somehow speaks  to a community’s identity and has a renewing effect for those who attend. If Gone With the Wind is that film, what does it say about our community?

What fresh bullshit is this?

Let’s also take a minute to talk about propaganda like this article that begins with an admission by the author that, in 2014, he warned everybody that the Left would ban Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles — a paranoid fantasy that hasn’t, and isn’t likely to come to pass anytime soon. His proof: OMG Look what happened to Disney’s Song of the South!

The stat, referenced by Alt-Right-friendly Breitbart, comes from a 75th-Anniversary survey by YouGov.com, a digital polling site described here as, “An online global community of people who like to share their views and opinions on life… marketed more towards individuals who wish to express their opinions about current events and controversial topics.” It’s an “opinions for prizes” shop so we’re looking at a self-selecting sample in a celebratory context, and maybe not an accurate, contextualized example of community opinion.  The money quote:

“If there is one last bastion of racism still accepted in America, it is the racial condescension we always see from the left, this constant treating of minorities, especially blacks, as children who are unable to deal with a statue or a word or a movie.”

The problem here is pretty basic — and ironic. Unlike the practically homogenous Right, fighting to uphold this film and its paternalistic race narratives — the Left is made of minorities as sure as Soylent Green (another slot-worthy film) is made of people.

There’s an even bigger problem with this kind of hysterical, and historically unsupported crankmongering. Let’s forget how easily this rhetoric comes apart by inserting nouns like Watermelon and Fried Chicken in place of Gone With the Wind in the headline, and for the sake of argument, let’s accept Breitbart’s highly questionable stats at face value. Let’s allow that 73% of African-Americans do, in fact, love Gone With the Wind so much they want to marry it and have its babies, whether they know anything about birthing or not. So what? That stat doesn’t mean the film’s cultural value merits a guaranteed slot on any Summer film series any more than any other classic or popular film. It’s a meaningless number used in the service of specious rhetoric.

Did I mention that there’s an armed security guard in front of the Orpheum? Because there is. Because the folks over there made what should be the kind of uncontroversial curatorial decision that is 100% their’s to make. Whether it’s in light of the tragedy in Charlottesville, or just because it’s Tuesday. Now people feel endangered because this vintage playhouse — a true Southern cultural treasure — wants to mix things up, expanding its offerings and its audience in the process. It’s bad enough that propaganda organs like Breitbart have become so influential. But it’s shameful when local media turns up the pressure by reenforcing false narratives with badly chosen language.

UPDATE: To be fair as I can be the CA’s John Beifuss has done great work all around. The CA‘s issues stem from Gannett and a culture defined by consolidation not community.

Nobody’s Banned ‘Gone With The Wind’ in Memphis — Even if the Commercial Appeal Says So

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We Recommend We Recommend

The Matilda Twins

New York Times theater critic Ben Brantley described Broadway’s Matilda as the most “satisfying and subversive musical ever to come out of Britain” and “an exhilarating tale of empowerment, as told from the perspective of the most powerless group of all — little children.” The national tour of the Tony-winning Roald Dahl-inspired musical is much like its New York counterpart. On some nights, because of twin brothers Justin and Geoff Packard, the two shows are almost exactly alike.

Justin and Geoff both play various ensemble roles while understudying the slimy Mr. Wormwood and the tyrannical Miss Trunchbull. Geoff’s on Broadway. Justin’s touring the country and coming to Memphis when Matilda opens at The Orpheum this week. Six weeks ago, they both got the call and found out they’d be performing the same role simultaneously.

“Because this tour started on the West Coast, we weren’t performing at the same time, even when we were doing the same role,” Justin explains. “Then I got back to the East Coast, and he texted me: ‘I guess we’re both Trunchbulls today’ — it was cool.”

Justin and Geoff aren’t identical, but they were once inseparable. Both started out as athletes before transitioning into theater. “We’d go straight from football practice to play rehearsal,” Justin says, remembering high school shows where he’d play the villain to his brother’s hero. “It was always like, ‘Here come the Packard Brothers,’ until Geoff went to the University of Cincinnati, and I went to Ithaca College in upstate New York. Before that, we’d never really had different experiences.”

Matilda tells the story of a pint-sized prankster with self-taught telekinetic powers. It’s even more faithful to the spirit and letter of Dahl’s novel than the acclaimed 1996 film directed by and starring Danny DeVito.

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We Recommend We Recommend

ArcAttack at the Orpheum

Is there anything more awesome than a man in futuristic chain mail, metal rods in each hand, playing a cover of Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man” with man-made lightning drawn down from a pair of gigantic Tesla coils? The answer you’re looking for is, “No.” And that’s exactly what you can expect to see when America’s Got Talent alums ArcAttack roll into the Orpheum this week to rock out while teaching kids about electrical currents, magnetism, and robot drummers.

ArcAttack founder Joe DiPrima likes what he does. “Engineering-type people geek out on solving problems,” he says. “That’s how a lot of these people develop these hobbies. They like to sit down and build these things. For us it’s worked out real well because we build all of the equipment we use onstage except for our guitars.”

Chain mail and Tesla coils

Most musicians dream up new song lyrics and guitar riffs while driving the van from gig to gig. DiPrima does all that too. He also dreams up more effective power supplies. “We don’t necessarily have a background in theater, so we’re always figuring all that out,” DiPprima says. “What’s really taken off for us are our educational shows. And the kids love it. For starters, they get to leave class to see a cool show. And we’re making lightning onstage, which is something you don’t see very often, so I think we’re reaching a lot of these kids too and getting them interested in science.”

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Kinky Boots at the Orpheum

What do you do when your father dies and leaves you a nearly bankrupt shoe factory that specializes in expensive, outdated men’s shoes? If you’re Kinky Boots lead character Charlie Price, you let a fabulous drag queen named Lola convince you turn those boring old wingtips into sparkling high-heeled boots.

That’s the premise for Kinky Boots, the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical that’s currently playing at the Orpheum through May 24th.

Based on the 2005 film of the same name, with music by Cyndi Lauper and a book by Harvey Feinstein, Kinky Boots is a tale about opening closed minds and staying true to oneself.

Kinky Boots

“The overriding message is to just be who you want to be, and you can change the world,” said Kinky Boots swing actor J. Harrison Ghee, who is playing the role of an Angel, one of Lola’s supporting drag queens.

Ghee, who occasionally fills in for Lola’s lead role, has been doing drag for years.

“My years of personal drag have really prepared me for this opportunity to play such a heavy role. Lola is a drag cabaret performer who is outgoing and rambunctious and has an internal struggle of being accepted by her father. You see that played out in the song ‘Not My Father’s Son.’ Her goal is to get everyone to accept others and to love and give love,” Ghee said.

The North Carolina son of a preacher man had a bit of a meta moments when he performed in his home state.

“I got the chance to play Lola in North Carolina for my father. And that was very much an interesting experience, to have to sing ‘Not My Father’s Son’ and he’s in the audience,” Ghee said. “To have our story play out on stage was a real full-circle moment. He texted me after he saw the show and told me he was proud of who and what I am. This show is really changing everyone’s lives.”

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostrander Winners, 2013-14

Barry Fuller and Marques Brown in the multiple Ostrander-winning musical Young Frankenstein

  • Theatre Memphis
  • Barry Fuller and Marques Brown in the multiple Ostrander-winning musical “Young Frankenstein”

It was a great night at the Orpheum honoring the best of the best of what Memphis Theater has to offer. I’d initially planned to open this announcement with a big season wrap up, but sometimes it’s best to give the people what they want. And I think they want winners.

COLLEGE OSTRANDER AWARD WINNERS
2013-2014

SET DESIGN
Brian Ruggaber Chess U of M

COSTUMES

Amie Eoff Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson McCoy Theatre

LIGHTING
Mandy Kay Heath Chess U of M

PROPS

Kathy Haaga Anton in Show Business McCoy Theatre

MAKE-UP/HAIR

Janice Benning Lacek Fabulation, or the Re-Education of Undine U of M

MUSIC DIRECTION

Angelo Rapan Chess U of M

SOUND DESIGN

John McFadden Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M

CHOREOGRAPHY

Tracey Bonner Chess U of M

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL

Léerin Campbell Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson McCoy Theatre

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL

Christopher Calderazzo Chess U of M


LEADING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL
Allison Huber Chess U of M

LEADING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL
Corbin Williams Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson McCoy Theatre

BEST MUSICAL PRODUCTION
Chess U of M

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA
Madison Tallant Anton in Show Business McCoy Theatre

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA
Luke Hefner Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M

LEADING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA
Katie Marburger Anton in Show Business McCoy Theatre

LEADING ACTOR IN A DRAMA
Jon Castro Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M
David Couter Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M


LARGE ENSEMBLE (Cast of 13+)

Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson McCoy Theatre

SMALL ENSEMBLE (Cast of 12 or less)
Anton in Show Business McCoy Theatre

FEATURED/CAMEO ROLE

Willie Derrick Fabulation, or the Re-Education of Undine U of M

SPECIAL AWARD FOR THE 2013-2014 SEASON

Jung Han Kim and The Trajedians Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M

BEST DRAMATIC PRODUCTION

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M

BEST DIRECTION OF A MUSICAL

Jordan Nichols Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson McCoy Theatre


BEST DIRECTION OF A DRAMA

Paul Revaz Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead U of M

COMMUNITY OSTRANDER AWARD NOMINEES AND WINNERS
2013-2014

SET DESIGN

Chris Sterling Haint New Moon Theatre Company

COSTUMES

Paul McCrae As You Like It Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

LIGHTING

Jeremy Allen Fisher Proof Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

PROPS
Ashley Palmer Red The Circuit Playhouse

HAIR/WIGS/MAKE UP
Alexandria Gore, Ellen Inghram and Paul McCrae Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

MUSIC DIRECTION
Renée Kemper Les Misérables Playhouse on the Square

SOUND DESIGN
Zach Badreddine 4,000 Miles POTS@TheWorks

CHOREOGRAPHY

Shorey Walker, Jordan Nichols, and
Travis Bradley Hairspray Playhouse on the Square

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL

Morgan Howard Les Misérables Playhouse on the Square

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL

Rob Hanford Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

LEADING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL

Leigh Eck Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

LEADING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL

Marques W. Brown Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis


DIRECTION OF A MUSICAL

Cecelia Wingate Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

BEST MUSICAL PRODUCTION

Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA

Jillian Barron As You Like It Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA

John Maness Grace The Circuit Playhouse

LEADING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA

Lena Wallace The Miracle Worker Germantown Community Theatre

LEADING ACTOR IN A DRAMA

S.A. Weakley Proof Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

SMALL ENSEMBLE ACTING (Cast of 7 or fewer)

Proof Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

LARGE ENSEMBLE ACTING (Cast of 8 or more)
Hairspray Playhouse on the Square

FEATURED/CAMEO ROLE

Barry Fuller Young Frankenstein Theatre Memphis

BEST PRODUCTION OF AN ORIGINAL SCRIPT

Haint New Moon Theatre Company

DIRECTION OF A DRAMATIC PRODUCTION

Jerry Chipman The Submission Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

BEST DRAMATIC PRODUCTION

Proof Next Stage @ Theatre Memphis

BEHIND THE SCENES AWARD

Cathy and Harold Richardson Theatre Memphis

THE JANIE MCCRARY PUTTING IT TOGETHER AWARD

Debbie Litch

THE LARRY RILEY RISING STAR AWARD

Morgan Howard

THE EUGART YERIAN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

John Rone

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Crosby, Stills, and Nash at the Orpheum

Crosby, Stills, and Nash, the most successul three-quarters of a band in history, are coming to the Orpheum on Wednesday, August 20th. 

Former Hollie Graham Nash will sign his book Wild Tales  at the Booksellers at Laurelwood on Wednesday at 1 p.m. Line tickets are required for the signing and come with the purchase of the book at Booksellers.

Get concert tickets here.   

Hear CSN at their best and get some very sound life advice from David Crosby here.

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Crosby, Stills, and Nash at the Orpheum

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Morrissey: May 27th at the Orpheum

Morrissey announced his tour today, and it includes a May 27th stop in Memphis at the Orpheum. St. Louis singer and keyboardist Kristeen Young will open. The show will mark the first time Morrissey has played in Memphis in his entire career.

Since the 1980s, when Morrissey rose to fame as the vocalist for The Smiths, the indie pop icon has developed a devoted legion of fans that seem to love him as much for his music as for his extreme disdain for authority and his hardcore views on animal rights. He’s been dubbed “one of the most singular figures in Western popular culture from the last twenty years,” according to Pitchfork Media.

After The Smiths broke up in 1987, Morrissey launched his solo career and released nine albums, including the highly successful Viva Hate (“Everyday Is Like Sunday”, “Suedehead”) and Your Arsenal (“We Hate It When Our Friends Become Successful”.)

The upcoming tour dates will fall just after the release of Morrissey’s new album, his first release since 2009’s Years of Refusal.

Tickets go on sale February 21st. Don’t wait, they’ll go fast. To purchase tickets go to: www.greenmachineconcerts.com or www.orpheum-memphis.com.