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Current Issue: Artvoice v7n47, week of Thursday November 20 » back issues

Theaterweek

EMBODY

In her play, Embody, playwright Lauren Gunderson imagines a period in the life of Leonard da Vinci when he was, as a young man of 24, almost executed for sodomy. Using historical texts and her own imagination, Gunderson fantasizes 15th-century Florence and the web of intrigue surrounding this episode, populating the tale with fascinating characters.

Robert Tucker, a marvelously charismatic actor, plays Leonardo with mercurial energy and youthful charm. He portrays the man as absorbed in his thoughts and the wonders of the material world, but alarmingly disconnected from his serious circumstances.

The hero of Leonardo’s story enters in the person of Caterina, played by Kara Gabrielle McKenney, a lusty courtesan who is “kept” by powerful Bocha della Verità. Caterina fancies the young artist and schemes to save him by proving his heterosexuality—at least in the eyes of the authorities.

Gunderson creates very compelling characters in Leonardo and Caterina. This non-love story, which, in a charming flourish at the play’s conclusion, serves to explain the famed Mona Lisa smile, is quite engaging.

McKenney’s portrayal of Caterina seems a bit modern at first, and evokes early Hollywood sirens rather than Renaissance eroticism. She quickly finds her pace, however, and imbues the character with great humanity and passion. We ultimately find her Caterina to be a woman quick-witted enough and worldly-wise enough to be an appropriate complement for Leonardo—if only mentally. His interest in her palpable sexuality is powerful, but ultimately scientific.

The exploration of this relationship fuels the play and McKenney and Tucker strike a playful chemistry. Caterina determines that while she is saving Leonardo, she is ultimately saving herself. It’s a Renaissance Doll’s House in that regard.

Under the direction of Matthew La Chiusa, the cast handles the material most capably. Michael Votta, Chris Standart and John F. Kennedy give good performances in the contour roles. The logic of the play unfolds clearly and interestingly, and Gunderson is a confident and talented playwright.

"Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme" at Irish Classical Theatre

OBSERVE THE SONS OF

ULSTER MARCHING

TOWARDS THE SOMME

Impressively affecting acting is the centerpiece of the Irish Classical Theatre production of Frank McGuinness’ Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme.

The play follows eight men who volunteer to serve in the 36th (Ulster) Division at the beginning of World War I. Dramatic irony is fueled by our awareness that the men are headed toward certain death in the battle of the Somme, which took the lives of 60,000 soldiers of the British Empire in a single day, July 1, 1916. The date was the actual anniversary of the battle of the Boyne in 1690, at which Protestant King William and Catholic King James faced each other at the River Boyne, a confrontation that ended with a decisive victory for William and the preservation of the Protestant settlement in Ireland.

The Somme, like the Boyne, has come to symbolize loyalty to the Protestant counties of Ulster.

McGuinness uses the painful pointlessness and brutality of World War I as counterpoint to the fears and desires of the young men marching into battle, and builds irony on the crippling self-absorption and provincialism that blinds them to larger truths. The specter of mortality forces certain realizations and blurs previously immutable certainties.

The playwright presents his characters in pairs whose personal needs, insecurities and values meld or play off of each other. Brendan Powers, Michael Providence, Jeffrey Coyle, Tim Eimiller, Guy Balotine, Steven Dawson, Christian Brandjes and Joe Wiens navigate the script with great commitment and power. Jim Mohr plays elderly Kenneth Pyper, the lone survivor, setting the story in motion as a flashback.

Given the excellence of the ensemble, I kept wanting to like the production more than I did. Directed by the more typically astute Derek Campbell, the production loses energy, however, in a flatness of presentation. There is little contrast between the pairs of characters, and the performance trudges along at a monotonous pace.

This becomes most frustratingly apparent in scenes of simultaneous staging in Act Two, performed on the uninspired “set design concept” by Meghan Raham. The dynamism of the arena stage at the Andrews Theatre is inexplicably sacrificed to the foreshortened literal staging of a stylized set. The cumulative result is clutter.

The production becomes heavily sentimental rather than bitingly ironic or insightful; maudlin rather than tragic.

Still, there are flashes of fine acting and isolated scene work to enjoy. Ever reliable Brendan Powers, Michael Providence, Guy Balotine and Christian Brandjes are once again very strong. Jeffrey Coyle adds to a list of memorable performances that have been accumulating quite rapidly over the past year. Steven Dawson and Joe Wiens similarly provide real characters with moments of compelling reality. If only the production as a whole added up to the sum of its parts.

"Tick, Tick...Boom!" at MusicalFare

TICK, TICK…BOOM!

I had never seen Tick, Tick…Boom!, the other musical by Jonathan Larson, author of Rent. I was happily surprised at what a delight it is. The songs are wonderfully cynical and funny. Best of all, the show—about a struggling young composer watching his friends become successful as he approaches his 30th birthday—plays perfectly into the talents of the MusicalFare company.

Louis Colaiacovo, Michele Marie Roberts and Marc Sacco are perfection. Choreography by Kathy Weese is clever and moves the action briskly. Michael Hake’s expert musical direction is fueled by the strong voices of the cast. The direction is among the best Randall Kramer has ever accomplished.

I really loved it.

People should go see it.

WILD WOMEN DON’T GET THE BLUES

The onstage appeal of Mary Craig is magical. She brings a special allure to every performance and dips into a well-honed bag of tricks at will. In Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues, a revue of songs associated with great (mostly) African American singers of the 20th century, she pulls out all the stops.

It’s a whirlwind tour, taking us to Ida Cox (from whom we get the title song), Ella Fitzgerald, Lucille Hegamin, Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, Alberta Hunter, Etta Jones, Eartha Kitt, Carmen McRae, Ma Rainey, Nina Simone, Bessie Smith, Dinah Washington, Ethel Waters…you get the idea. Mary Kate O’Connell has conceived, directed and written the piece—presumably with Craig’s active involvement; the selections are very engaging and suit the singer very well. Craig establishes an easy repartee with her accompanist, Dan Schroeder, who has favorites of his own.

The show is best when the Craig persona is at its most casual and she seems to give actual personal recollections of what the singers mean to her. It drags in burdensome fashion when she reads the Cliff notes of each singer’s career from a memory book, or when her comic bickering with Schroeder feels like forced stage business intended to fill the time.

Craig is a notoriously spontaneous performer, and all of her shows grow in performance. One hopes that she will increasingly abandon the written text and flow with the music. More than the great ladies of the blues, we want to see Mary Craig.


Artvoice Blog Headlines

Who Goes Where When Hillary Goes to State?

posted November 19, 12:04 pm on Artvoice Daily

City Hall News has flow_chart that tracks who might replace who, from Hillary’s Senate seat on down (click to expand or follow the link—it’s an awkward shape):

It’s Robert Rich Sr. All High Stadium

posted November 14, 5:05 pm on Artvoice Daily

These new signs properly label the structure. We’ve been reading recent stories in the Buffalo News about sportswriter Tom Borrelli’s terrible fall last week at the old All High Stadium. He’s currently battling life-threatening injuries... (more)

CWM Fined for Violations

posted November 14, 2:41 pm on Artvoice Daily

This week Chemical Waste Management was fined $175,000 by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for violating its permits and the state’s hazardous waste laws. I don’t have much to say about that, except it doesn’t seem to me like too much money... (more)

Musical Chairs

posted November 14, 12:51 pm on Artvoice Daily

The AP reports that Hillary Clinton met with Barack Obama in Chicago yesterday, adding fuel to speculation that she might be Obama’s choice for secretary of state. If that happens, it has long been rumored that Brian Higgins would be appointed to her Senate seat... (more)

Paint the Town

posted November 14, 11:06 am on Artvoice Daily

Late last night, at the tail end of one of the few weeks in the past year in which we did not publish anything snarky about anybody, someone threw two gallons of paint on our front doors. Seems a waste; we hadn’t even earned it. Nonetheless, we were cleaning up all morning... (more)

Old Editions Book Shop

posted November 13, 1:58 pm on Artvoice Daily

AV videographer Matt Quinn tours Old Editions, an often overlooked treasure at the corner of Oak and Huron Streets downtown: show enclosure (video/x-flv; 21.29 MB)

This Is Not Today’s News

posted November 12, 9:37 am on Artvoice Daily

But it would be nice if it were. Via the Data Stream, by way of Jon Winet.

This Just In…

posted November 11, 3:28 pm on Artvoice Daily

Always in the vanguard, researchers of the University at Buffalo’s Center of Human Capital have reached a bold conclusion, according to a statement disseminated this afternoon: Although no official determination has been made about whether New York State or the U... (more)

Silver Lining: Edwards Remains a Good Guy

posted November 11, 11:17 am on Artvoice Daily

Marshawn Lynch Amid the anguished finger-pointing, plaintive wailing and resigned head-shaking sweeping the region following the Buffalo Bills’ third straight defeat, Season Ticket would like to apportion a minute sliver of credit. Quarterback Trent Edwards, by most quantitative and qualitative standards, failed miserably at New England on Sunday (not coincidentally, this was also his third consecutive regressive outing)... (more)

Mazzariello’s Ristorante & Martini Bar

posted November 7, 4:30 pm on Chew on This

  Photo taken by Rose Mattrey From Antipasti to Primi to Secondi, Mazzariello’s (114 Bloomfield Ave, Lancaster, 206.0561) has conquered the map of Italian cooking. Your palate will be exposed to an array of spices, herbs, and ingredients indigenous to Northern & Southern Italy... (more)

Post Election Bits & Bytes

posted November 7, 12:02 am on Tech Voice

Election ‘08 is now in the history books - so I figured it’s time to take a look backward, and a look forward at some relevant headlines. Hacking Democracy First, we’ll take a look at one of the best kept secrets of the campaign season, from both sides, care of a Newsweek article published just today... (more)

BNMC Open Meeting Tonight

posted November 6, 1:19 pm on Artvoice Daily

Tonight at 6pm in the auditorium of the downtown library, everyone is invited to attend a public hearing on the Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus—North End Projects. Among the projects planned are a 300,000 square foot Medical Office Building to be owned and operated by Ciminelli Development Company, Inc... (more)

That Pigeon Won’t Fly

posted November 6, 10:05 am on Artvoice Daily

Steve Pigeon Here’s another example, this one two years old, of the way Steve Pigeon’s political committees are alleged to steer money to candidates illegally. On September 15, 2006, the Pigeon-controlled PAC Citizens for Fiscal Integrity paid “RUR Strategy Group” $9,000 in consulting fees, according to CFI’s campaign finance disclosure forms... (more)

SeaBar’s Social Calendar

posted November 5, 12:44 pm on Chew on This

SeaBar will host live jazz and sushi nights starting Friday, November 21st at 8 p.m. (5235 Main Street, Wmsvl, 204.5283). A Cave Springs Riesling Tasting Event will take place at SeaBar’s suburban location on Wednesday, November 9th at 7 p.m... (more)

Artvoice TV: Latest Additions » more on AVTV

Twilight

posted November 19, 1:09 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Twilight, in theaters November 21. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

posted November 19, 1:06 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, in theaters now. Click here to read George Sax's review of the film.

Avi Takes Artvoice Shopping for the holidays @ Lexington food Co-op

posted November 19, 11:52 am on channel Food

I met up with Avi of Obviously Avi Catering to learn about classic ways to spruce up some great thanksgiving dishes and some more contemporary ideas for this years holiday season.. Also check out the Co-op this weekend Saturday the 22nd to sample some of the fresh turkeys that u can pick up for your family!

TRAIN DAY! @ the Buffalo Historical Society

posted November 17, 3:07 pm on channel Local Interest

I met with Peter Burakowski from the Buffalo Histroical Society to check out their fantastic train exhibit.. Now I have to be honest I was kinda embarrassed to tell Peter that I Hadn't been to the museum since I was about six years old... But the place looks great and has a lot going on for the holiday season. Check out this clip then head on down to the Buffalo Historical Society!

Mass Appeal: Elmwood Fashion Event

posted November 15, 10:19 pm on channel Events

On Friday night the Elmwood Village Association packed the Lafayette Presbyterian Church with a sold out "Mass Appeal: An Elmwood Fashion Event." The atmosphere was electric in the brightly lit church as models strutted down the catwalk to lively deejay beats.

Buffalo Contemporay Dance

posted November 15, 6:43 pm on channel Events

This weekend we stopped at Alt Theatre, 255 Great Arrow, to check Buffalo Contemporary Dance's 10th Anniversary performance. The little black box theatre in the Great Arrow Industrial Center is exceptionally intimate and provides a that up close experience you won't get at larger venues. Dancers and choreographers Amy Taravella and Leslie Wexler put together a lovely set of dance pieces with a variety of musical styles and an enthusiastic group of dancers...

Old Editions Book Shop

posted November 13, 11:42 am on channel Local Interest

I had a chance to check out the Old Editions Book Shop & Café at 74 East Huron Street, Buffalo.... WOW i was blown away at how any cool things they had on display there....Not just the thousands of books on everything from local authors to rare leather-bounds, but hundreds of maps, prints and other artwork. If you havent been down to the corner of Oak and Huron to check it out i suggest you do!

Off Stage: Conversations with Anthony Chase

posted November 12, 4:50 pm on channel Theater

This week, Artvoice and TAB present Part II of the interview with Road Less Traveled founder, Scott Behrand. This is the second installment of "Off Stage", a series of conversations with the Buffalo theatre community and AV Theatre Editor Anthony Chase.

Happy Go Lucky

posted November 12, 2:08 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Happy Go Lucky, in theaters now. Read M. Faust's review of the film here.

Quantum of Solace

posted November 12, 2:01 pm on channel Movie Trailers

Movie trailer for Quantum of Solace, in theaters November 14th. Read George Sax's review of the film here.

Flash Party at Essex St.

posted November 9, 10:59 am on channel Events

The annual Flash Party-Griffis Sculpture Park fundraiser at the Essex St. art complex was the raucous gathering of music and art it's always been. With live music by the Ifs, plenty of art and free beer what else would you expect?

Lakeview Effect at Nietzsche's

posted November 8, 4:54 pm on channel Music

When Lakeview Effect crowded into the front bar at Nietzsche's with their keyboards, drums, two guitars, bass and percussion, there wasn't much room left. Nevertheless, people space to jam in and groove to the interesting and often unpredictable tunes. Some even found room to dance.

Flatbed at Allen St. Hardware

posted November 8, 2:28 pm on channel Music

We'd been trying to film something at the Hardware Cafe for sometime but everything always came out way too dark. Finally, last Friday, Nov. 7, we just brought in some lights and managed to get footage of Flatbed and their homegrown American sound.

Obama's Night

posted November 6, 3:13 pm on channel Politics

On November 4th, history was in the making; but as we know, history needs to be recorded by someone. ArtvoiceTv.com video crews roamed the election night streets of the city.

Election Day: Douglas County Staging Location One

posted November 6, 10:59 am on channel Election 08

Election Day early morning deliberations on techniques for the placement of door hangers at Douglas County Staging Location One. Note that Station Location One doubles as the home to a family with two small children who were sleeping nearby at the time of the taping. This and the five-thirty a.m. time of day accounts for the whispering.



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