Tag Archives: Stuart Landon

Burg Review: Savor a song and a meat pie at Open Stage’s darkly comedic, skillful “Sweeney Todd”

Open Stage’s rendition of the wickedly hysterical tragicomedy, “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” is peppered with darkly comedic spots, infused with intense suspense, and splashed with just a little taste of gristly gore.

Directed by Stuart Landon and Music Director Nicholas Werner, Open Stage adheres to their Season 38 theme, “Out of the Darkness,” to deliver the classic, multiple award-winning, oft-adapted, horror musical featuring victim-cum-villain Sweeney Todd (Brad Barkdoll). The penny dreadful tale is told mostly through operatic song in a dismal, Victorian-era setting, appropriately reminiscent of the inside of a slaughterhouse.

Barkdoll plays Sweeney Todd as a misunderstood murderer, a sort of vulnerable anti-hero ruffian. Singing about his bloodthirsty need for revenge, he takes on his character’s crazy eyes, under a homicidal trance. When he lunged toward the audience and swung his razor, I felt unsafe for an instant, until I remembered that I’m at the theater and it’s all just pretend. But in that moment, I recoiled and wished for a seat just a little farther back. Barkdoll is scary good, with vocals most impressive when he’s singing tongue twisters in “The Barber and His Wife” and “Epiphany,” and in his duets with Mrs. Lovett (Rachel Landon).

As Sweeney Todd’s literal partner in crime, Landon serves up a warm, funny baker with deliciously sinister undertones. Barkdoll and Landon show evident chemistry, especially during the hilarious and rollicking, “A Little Priest,” as the pair drink to their evil arrangement, and while singing to Sweeney Todd’s razor during the creepy ballad, “My Friends.” Landon adds a dash of humor to her solo, “The Worst Pies in London,” and a pinch of nurturing during “Wait.” Extra points to Landon for not missing a beat while handling kitchen props, especially her knife-tossing skills.

Slathering her maternal nature like butter on a crust, Landon sings a beautiful duet with orphan Tobias Ragg (Gabrielle Dina) in “Not While I’m Around.” Playing a cute and plucky boy, Dina’s chirpy voice rings out during the irresistible sales pitch, “Pirelli’s Miracle Elixir.”

Playing Sweeney Todd’s long-lost daughter, Johanna, Jasmine Graham hits those impossibly high notes perched several lines above a five-line staff on sheet music. In Graham’s solo, “Green Finch and Linnet Bird,” when her voice combines with Werner’s piano, it sounds like someone left an old-fashioned music box open on a forgotten dresser. Together with her suitor, Anthony Hope (Tyler Shadle), their voices mesh well together in that pleasant, unjaded, easy-on-the-ears way that young love does, especially during their duet, “Kiss Me.”

Also remarkably hitting and sustaining high notes typically outside the traditional range: TJ Creedon and Josh Dorsheimer. Further, both actors bring to life farcically comical characters (Pirelli and Beadle, respectively) who make the audience laugh out loud.

Marinated in an outpouring of talent, the entire cast blends together solid, skilled vocalists and musicians, with standout songs, “God, That’s Good!” perfectly setting the mood, and “The Ballad of Sweeney Todd” dramatically sandwiching the musical score.

If you and your guests (over 17 years old recommended) happen to visit the snack bar at intermission, be careful what you order. Although there is no audience participation, best to check for missing audience members, just in case. And if you find something tasty, may you enjoy it as much as the ensemble cast shamelessly enjoyed Mrs. Lovett’s succulent meat pies.

“Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” will run February 24 through March 16 at Open Stage, 25 Court Street, Harrisburg. For more information, check their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/show/sweeney.

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Baked to Perfection: Savor a song and a meat pie at Open Stage’s “Sweeney Todd”

Brad Barkdoll as Sweeney Todd. Photo by Anela Selkowitz.

Sondheim returns to Open Stage this month with a melodramatic musical horror dealing with class structure, a corrupt sense of justice and bloodshed.

Sweeney Todd began as a character in a “penny dreadful” (horror pulp fiction) in the 1800s, and has, delightedly, haunted us ever since.

Stephen Sondheim adapted the musical from a theatrical version of the story in 1979, captivating the musical theater crowd, and a film was adapted by Tim Burton in 2007, further introducing “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” to the masses. It seems the story has never gone out of style.

So, what is “Sweeney Todd” about?

“It’s about murder and revenge and making things equal in the eyes of those who have done wrong,” says Brad Barkdoll, who plays the titular character in Open Stage’s adaptation, directed by Producing Artistic Director Stuart Landon.

And that is about all you really should know going into it, according to Rachel Landon, who plays Mrs. Lovett, Todd’s partner in crime.

“If you’ve never seen the play or the film, I highly recommend going into it blind,” she said.

I’ll quickly add that this musical is not for the faint of heart. Its twists are gruesome, and its turns involve a heck of a lot of blood. As the saying goes, “revenge is a dish best served cold,” but the meat pies that Sweeney Todd and Mrs. Lovett conjure up are best served hot—and to music.

Rachel Landon and Barkdoll have performed in many of the same productions at Open Stage, but never side by side—a key factor that both are excited to experience.

Barkdoll, a tenor who is stretching his vocal cords for a bass/baritone role, is excited to discover such a different character from the roles he’s played previously, and while he doesn’t necessarily feel a common bond with Sweeney Todd—thank goodness—there is something about the play that strikes a chord. Landon agrees.

“The plot has themes that modern society altogether finds too relatable,” she said, from criminal injustice to the seeming inevitability of violence in today’s society.

“Sweeney Todd” runs Feb. 24 to March 17 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS 

At Open Stage
www.openstagehbg.com
717-232-6736

Harrisburg Asian American Pacific Islander presents
Lunar New Year
Saturday, Feb. 10 at 7:30 p.m.

EFF Live!
A night of naughty fan fic readings
Friday, Feb 23 at 7:30 pm

Black NewsBeat with Dr. Kimeka Campbell
Join the live studio audience!
Wednesday, Feb. 14 & 28 at 7:30 p.m.

“Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street”
The Sondheim musical thriller
Feb. 24 to March 16

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Burg Review: Open Stage’s “The Exorcist” will grip, possess you

A scene from “The Exorcist” at Open Stage

I wish I could share with you some of my imitations of the hellish noises I heard during “The Exorcist.” I would snarl a demonic throat whisper so chilling it would make your scalp shiver the way mine did. Or I would crack my neck as I tried to spin it all the way around.

But I must leave unsettling sound effects to the professionals. Open Stage ratchets up the tension to create a disturbing and fearful experience that grabs you, possesses you.

William Peter Blatty’s award-winning novel, based on a true story, adapted for the stage by John Pielmeier and directed by Open Stage’s Stuart Landon, “The Exorcist” isn’t just a play to watch. The cast presents the audience with a sensory experience overladen with gore and terror. You smell the air blowing through the rusty casement window. You feel the vibrations from the quaking bed. You sense a presence skulking just offstage, somewhere in the shadows. The stage has an energy around it, like a foggy force-field serving as an imaginary barrier of safety. Then when you hear thunder clap or footsteps behind you, that safety melts away. The special effects surround you, penetrate your sensibilities, make you grab onto the arm of your plus-one for comfort.

In perfect keeping with Open Stage’s “Out of the Darkness” theme for its 38th season comes a story that preys on the blackest parts of the dark arts – in the struggle of good and evil, of things holy and unholy, where children don’t belong. Yet our 12-year-old main character, Regan MacNeil (Emily Reusswig), finds herself shackled to her bed, possessed by a demon that will only leave if he takes someone back to hell with him.

Reusswig delivers an impressive performance that showcases extremes in her range. She gives her voice a pining quality to evoke the audience’s sympathy for a lonely little girl. She swivel-chairs between that helpless and naïve sweetheart to a gnarled, revolting, belligerent beast. Tommy Dougherty plays The Demon, complete with threatening voice and aggressive presence.

Regan’s mother, movie star Chris MacNeil (Tara Herweg), plays a tired single mother who doesn’t believe in God. When her daughter’s soul is overtaken, Herweg transforms her character into a passionate fighter, believing in whatever she has to believe in to save her daughter, bringing the audience along to feel the depth of her desperation.

MacNeil’s director, Burke Dennings (Josh Dorsheimer), provides a touch of comic relief to this play, even adding a few contemporary jokes. The humor isn’t enough to lighten the play overall, but it does add a few smiling moments. Dorsheimer seems to naturally generate chemistry and rapport with the other actors.

Representing the pope, Father Damien Karras (Jeff Luttermoser) and Father Lancaster Merrin (Ted Hanson) both play the main priests exorcising the demonic spirit from Regan. Luttermoser delivers the audience a convincingly tortured and guilty man, shaky in his own beliefs, dealing with grief over his mother’s recent death. In contrast, Hanson’s onstage presence serves as a disruptor to the other characters, carrying a concrete and credible presence. (The feeling zaps me right back to Catholic school when a nun or priest would walk in, and all the students would immediately start behaving. Hanson was in charge.) Both priests say enough Latin and portions of the Mass during the actual exorcism that I feel like I’ve checked my box for the weekly attendance requirement dictated by the Catechism.

I must also praise the evil geniuses who set off every disgust-ometer in downtown Harrisburg with the play’s sinister special effects (Karen Ruch, John Kern, Chris Gibson, Jen Kilander, and Sammi Leigh Melville), frightening lighting design (Tristan Stasiulis), scary sound design (Josh Rhodes), petrifying property design (Becky Arney), and spine-chilling production stage management (Stacy Reck). Together this crew make the setting become its own terrifying character in its own right.

After the house lights come back on, you have to make your way through dim city corridors to find your way home in the dark (unless you attend one of the play’s two matinee showings.)

As with any art form, there’s always the opportunity for artists to offend even the sturdiest of viewers. To honor all that is decent within you, may the power of Christ compel you to leave your minor children at home for this play. And whoever your plus-one is, consider that you have to make eye contact with them at intermission after experiencing some severely lascivious material together. Or you could avert your gaze and spin your head all the way around.


“The Exorcist” runs Oct. 7 to 31 at Open Stage, 25 Court St., Harrisburg. For more information, check their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/show/exorcist.

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Deal with the Devil: This month, “The Exorcist” haunts Harrisburg

Photo by Anela Bence-Selkowitz

For over half a century, William Peter Blatty’s novel, “The Exorcist,” and its subsequent film progeny have frightened and inspired horror lovers.

Now, during the 50th anniversary of the original movie release, the most infamous story of faith and fear comes to Harrisburg to thrill audiences in a brand new stage production.

This new adaptation, set to have its East Coast premiere at Open Stage this month, was penned by John Pielmeier, who is best known for the award-winning play and movie, “Agnes of God.” Producing artistic director Stuart Landon directs the production at Open Stage.

The story of “The Exorcist” follows Regan MacNeil (portrayed by Emily Reusswig in the Open Stage production), a young girl who begins to display unexplainable ailments and violent outbursts, which mystify her doctors. When modern medicine fails, the unexplainable can only be explained by one thing: demonic possession.

Regan’s desperate mother, movie star Chris MacNeil (Tara Herwig), seeks aid from a local priest, Damian Kerras (Jeff Luttermoser). Kerras faces a crisis of faith as he is haunted by the demon residing in Regan along with his own quiet and personal traumas. Together with exorcist Father Merrin (Ted Hanson), they face a relentless battle against a powerful, ancient evil.

In 1973, William Friedkin’s film adaptation of “The Exorcist” shook the world, earning two Academy Awards and the title of “the scariest movie ever made.” It amassed a staggering $193 million at the box office (equivalent to nearly $894 million in 2023) and remains one of the most successful horror films in history with a global franchise worth $1.1 billion. A new sequel, “The Exorcist: Believer,” starring Ellen Burstyn, reprising her role from the original film, arrives this month, serving as a direct sequel to the first film.

“We’re unleashing something truly extraordinary onto the stage,” said Landon. “This is not just a copycat of the movie—it’s a unique theatrical experience based on the original novel. The playwright has made some significant deviations from the film—driven by the practicality of stage design and performance—but audiences will find it just as beautiful and terrifying. I think this production will be unlike anything Harrisburg has seen before.”

Some of the most heart-stopping moments are crafted through sound, lighting and special effects, ensuring a visceral experience for the audience, which can expect to see the iconic and bloody visuals that earned “The Exorcist” its reputation. For those of you who have seen the movie: yes, even that one.

The cast also includes Tommy Dougherty, Brennen Dickerson, Josh Dorsheimer, Brian Schreffler, Chris Krahulec and Joellen Terranova. The production boasts special effects by Karen Ruch, Jen Kilander and Sammi Leigh Melville, with set and costume design by Landon, lighting design by Tristan Stasiulis, sound design by Josh Rhodes, and property design by Becky Arney, with Stacy Reck serving as production stage manager.

“The Exorcist” transcends modern horror, challenging audiences’ deepest beliefs and fears. Friedkin and Blatty’s goal with the original film was far more ambitious than making a scary movie. They aimed to make people “think about the concept of good and evil.”

Don’t miss your chance to experience “The Exorcist” live on stage this month, but be warned. This spine-chilling journey contains material that may shock and offend, so it’s not recommended for those under 18.

“The Exorcist” runs Oct. 7 to 31 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit www.openstagehbg.com or call 717-232-6736.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

At Open Stage
www.openstagehbg.com
717-232-6736

 

“The Exorcist”

The horror classic live on stage
Oct. 7 to 31

 

EFF Live!

Naughty readings of fanfics
Sunday, Oct. 8 at 7:30 p.m.

 

Black NewsBeat with Dr. Kimeka Campbell

Join us in the studio audience for an episode taping!
Oct 11 & 25 at 7:30 p.m.

 

“The Masque of the Red Death”

A horror rock concept experience
Oct. 19 to 22

 

Court Street Cabaret
Halloween Edition

Spooky songs from Broadway and beyond
Thursday, Oct. 26 at 7:30 p.m.

 

Mrs. Kasha Davis
“There’s Always Room for a Cocktail”

The “RuPaul’s Drag Race” all-star comes to Harrisburg
Saturday, Nov. 4 at 7:30 p.m.

 

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Burg Review: Take your protein pill and jam out to Open Stage’s “Space Oddity”

Ground control to Harrisburg…

Open Stage’s musical revue, “Space Oddity: A Celebration of David Bowie,” pays tribute to an iconic artist who simultaneously trail-blazed through six decades while also standing off to the side stylistically–a space invader of entertainment perpetually reinventing himself with glam and glitter.

Who else but Ziggy Stardust could make androgyny and heterochromia cool amongst all the young dudes?

Director/Producer Wayne Landon (rather, “Dad” to Open Stage’s Executive Director Stuart and Education Coordinator Rachel) and Music Arranger/Band Director Anthony Pieruccini blow the dust off their old vinyl collections to bring us the most memorable songs of Bowie’s career, plus a few later songs that haven’t yet reached legendary status. The concert format allows for song after song in a rapid wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am succession.

It’s Bowie’s intelligent and serious bravura driving the lyrics of the production’s set list, and his evolving signature fashion inspiring the costumes (Jack Weitzel). Both resemble a chameleon meandering through a lava lamp. Each cast member wears something as a nod to one of Bowie’s personas: a neckerchief, suspenders, one dangling earring, a silky pantsuit, a brazenly colored unitard.

Each lyricist owns their own Bowie interpretation in their individual vocal and stylistic approaches, showcasing their distinctive ranges and styles, with lots of ch-ch-ch-ch-changes to original arrangements. Playing over two dozen of Bowie’s greatest hits, here are the highlights:

Although this show is not meant to be a tribute band in which the performers impersonate the artist note for note, TJ Creedon’s vocals sound truest to form in pacing and tonality, complete with a hint of South London accent. With passionate energy, Creedon pours himself into rollicking solos “Five Years,” “All the Young Dudes,” “Golden Years,” and the wistfully delivered, “Heroes.” Then he duets with Maggie Haynes and Sabrina Williams to deliver solid power ballads fueled with rhythmic, pulsating sensuality. And just like my old CDs of yore, one of the duets is a secret song.

Haynes brings a little rebel rebel to her Bowie rendition, her voice alto and angry, and dancing wild enough to proclaim stage ownership. She especially blazes fire during “Fashion,” as if to channel Mick Jagger. (Note that the Bowie/Jagger collaboration/debacle “Dancing in the Street” did not appear on the set list. Good call, Landon and Pieruccini. Sometimes it’s what we don’t do that speaks louder.) Especially impressive was Haynes’ sustained note during “Suffragette City,” and she gets cool points for knowing how to get real notes out of a kazoo during her saxophone imitation.

Williams slips into her “Starman” character with unabashed confidence, copying many of Bowie’s stances and motions. She captures Bowie’s initial vocal shyness that crescendos in front of an audience’s eyes into self-assuredness, adding a slight playfulness pointing to Bowie possibly – just maybe – having a sense of humor layered somewhere under his blue and coral eye shadow? Williams particularly shines in singing “Moonage Daydream,” during her many lovely duet harmonies with Jasmine Graham, and the punching “This is Not America” with Tyler Shadle.

Reminiscent of Bowie’s angular onstage mannerisms, Shadle shows traces of Bowie in his seemingly displeased facial expressions, reaching all the way into space during his “Ziggy Stardust” solo, and his “Space Oddity” duet with Brad Barkdoll. For his part, Barkdoll nails some standout riffs in “Ziggy Stardust,” “Life on Mars,” “Rebel Rebel,” and “Modern Love.” The four-piece band, with Shadle on keyboard, Barkdoll on guitar, Jon Godinez/Alex Dalious on bass guitar, and Dani Fiore/Jeremy Blouch on drums, gel well and back the vocalists cohesively, rounding out the spacy sound.

Embodying Bowie’s reserve, Jasmine Graham starts off her performance quietly, almost unsure. Then she bursts into Bowie’s “Lady Stardust” persona with that giant voice of hers. Graham also joins Williams to close the show with a special encore performance.

If you float in on your tin can to Open Stage to see this musical revue, take your protein pills and put your helmet on. Or put on your red shoes and dance the blues. Whether you’re still looking for life on Mars, or you’re from the MTV generation, or you’re backtracking through your grandparents’ 8-tracks, there’s a Bowie character for everybody to embody.

“Space Oddity: A Celebration of David Bowie” runs Sept. 8 to 17 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit https://www.openstagehbg.com/show/spaceoddity.

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Burg Review: Sip from a snifter of fastidious fun with Open Stage’s “Poirot Investigates!”

The last two times Open Stage performed plays centered on Agatha Christie’s least favorite character, the fastidious Frenchman Hercule Poirot, I watched his trademark cocked eyebrow and Mr. Potato Head mustache through the lens of a YouTube video.

While this reviewer tries to be careful not to compare plays, even reprisals, being in the theater in person to meet Inspector Poirot was a privilege and a joy—so much better than watching him on video in my slippers while eating pandemically trendy homemade sourdough bread.

Directed by and starring Stuart Landon as the straitlaced Poirot, Open Stage’s live version of the mystery/comedy farce “Poirot Investigates!” brings forth elements that cameras miss, aside from the obvious facial expressions and stage movements. Even an HD camera would have only skimmed the velvety texture of Poirot’s plum-colored blazer, or the detailed patterns of the ugliest neckties in all of England. And without a filter, I got to see just how absurdly shiny that mustache really is.

Open Stage brings us smart theater with “Poirot Investigates!” Much like reading a book, you’ll need to rely on your imagination for the literary elements of props, setting and even some costume elements. The bibliophiles among us, and my mother who grounded me from TV for one long summer, would argue that whatever is going on in your brain is way better than how it would have looked onscreen.

Stuart Landon pulls the pretentious Poirot off the page and shuffles him onstage with his aristocratic air, his quirky idiosyncrasies, and his ability to simultaneously look down both sides of his snoot. He’s perpetually inconvenienced and flustered when interacting with anyone, with a sneer that indicates something more displeasing going on under his nose, other than his mustache. If Poirot smiles, it’s because he’s pleased with himself; it’s not to connect with his audience. He’s far too busy for you.

Poirot’s sidekick Captain Arthur Hastings (Chris Gibson) has an important role, delivering the plot points in Christie’s long-form narrative style, keeping that fourth wall perpetually broken. Gibson’s evident stage presence fuels the onstage momentum as a reliable narrator, a classic straight man archetype who mostly sets up gags for everyone else and still manages to get a few yuks for himself.

The other 12 characters, with mostly goofy and alliterative names, are played by the versatile and talented actors David Richwine and Rachel Landon. Seriously, you need a spreadsheet app and a certain amount of focus to track who’s who and when. There’s some head-hopping and gender-bending, so throw out your rulebook on typecasting characters and just go with it.

To help the audience distinguish the play’s many characters (without using props!), Richwine and Rachel quite skillfully use mannerisms, gestures, body posturing and accents. Some accents are recognizable, and others are muddled accents of dubious origins, adding to the farce.

Rachel’s dexterous use of her body and space enable her to bring more than one character onstage at a time. (It’s a visual, so a long-winded explanation from me won’t do. You’ll have to see the play yourself to truly appreciate her skill.) I laughed hardest when she portrayed an ancient hotel clerk wearing the show’s only prop: a pair of Iris Apfel glasses.

Richwine brings silliness to breakout character mobster Johnny “Two Fingers” Grasso, with running gags just north of goofy. Additionally, he shows real skill in prop-lessly pulling off the farcical element of making two identical characters different enough in a case of mistaken identity.

An unseen and underlying main character is the background music (original score by Nicholas Werner). The music interacts with the actors, animates the many long-running gags, keeps the action moving along, and lays down clues for the audience about onstage antics. The music is clever, conveying the play’s many moods while heightening the slapstick.

I confess, I do like that the play’s action and dialogue moved along swiftly. I’m very American like that. But along with that quicker pacing, some of the awkwardness and stilted elegance that characterize both British and French humor lose themselves along the plot line.

Poirot’s narcissistic nature would have him requiring a few more stage-commanding pauses to drive home the more control-freaky aspects of his character. While Landon does integrate all of Poirot’s priggishness, I think stopping or slowing the action to watch Poirot partake in his mundane rituals, complete with his obnoxiously tedious mannerisms, would have added to fleshing out his character more fully. (I’m well aware that adding this very set of actions would have infuriated other people in the audience. But that’s Poirot for you. One reason Christie grew to hate the very character she created.)

The slapstick humor, absurd wordplay, running gags, light potty humor, and the other silly balderdash all make “Poirot Investigates!” a fun performance worth seeing in person. Even a dead body in the middle of the room can’t bring it down.

“Poirot Investigates!” runs May 27 through June 17 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit www.openstagehbg.com/show/poirot.

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Stuffy Yet Silly: Settle in for campy fun as Open Stage presents an Agatha Christie classic

Photos from left: Rachel Landon as the Movie Star, Chris Gibson as Captain Hastings, Rachel Landon as the Femme Fatale, Stuart Landon as Inspector Japp, Rachel Landon as the Awkward Femme Fatale, Stuart Landon as Hercule Poirot.

Fun fact: it takes a novel 95 years from the date of publication to lose its copyright. Another fun fact: every year, countless great stories fall into the public domain because of this law, and sometimes we don’t even notice.

This applies even to stories by renowned authors like Agatha Christie. Her short story collection, “Poirot Investigates,” was published in 1924, which means that, at the height of the pandemic, many of Poirot’s escapades became fair game.

This was something that Stuart Landon, producing artistic director at Open Stage and long-time fan of Christie, could not let go to waste.

“I was like, ‘I get to adapt one of my favorite things, and play one of my favorite characters!’” he recalled.

He and the theater’s “disease cluster,” as he put it—a handful of Open Stage staff—were already planning several theater/film hybrids in the quarantine interim and decided to put on Poirot. Landon adapted the script. They set up some cameras, and, by the fall of 2020, Poirot was gracing Open Stage’s YouTube page.

“It was this tongue-in-cheek, ridiculous adaptation of some of [Christie’s] short stories, but made with all the love,” Landon said.

It was a great chance for people to be distracted from the global panic—and to laugh. Open Stage had done comedic shows before, but never something quite so farcical. But they had a blast with it.

“Some takes, I was barely keeping it together,” Landon said.

Of all the theater/film hybrids they made that year, Landon said that it felt the most like theater. Now, he wants to bring that farcical glory to the stage.

The chosen story is “Adventure of the Western Star,” one of the two classics that they filmed during quarantine. And naturally, all the familiar characters will be back: Poirot and Hastings, two highbrow, rich guys who are very entitled in the way they behave, and two other actors juggling the rest of the characters and supporting the storytelling.

One of the most outlandish characters from the story, Lady Yardley, has some hilarious moments, Landon recalled. I won’t relay them here because, well, the laughs she elicits are so much better in person.

This version will be different.

“It’s gonna be shorter, and it’s gonna be simpler,” Landon said. “We are building this specifically to bring to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2024.”

But it will have that same silliness to it. The mystery almost feels secondary to the frivolity that plays out.

Landon is excited to see what the theatrical performance will look like. As he will be both directing and acting—a feat he’s never done before Poirot—he is a little nervous to see it all come together.

“But I also have a really great team with me,” he added

And that confidence, plus the security of a great story, will work to the team’s advantage.

And it really is a brilliant piece of theater. While we may not need as much of a distraction in 2023 as we did in 2020, Poirot and his high-camp, lowbrow cast of characters will bring just as much lighthearted joy as they did the first time around.

“I hope that the audience is able to just have a good belly laugh and take home a smile,” Landon said. “And have a damn good time while they’re here. I’m looking forward to that.”

“Poirot Investigates! The Adventure of the Western Star runs May 27 to June 17 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg, Tickets can be bought at the box office or online at www.openstagehbg.com.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

 At Open Stage
www.openstagehbg.com
717-232-6736

“Tiny Beautiful Things” 
A new play based on the Cheryl Strayed memoir
Now through May 7

Black NewsBeat with Dr. Kimeka Campbell
Join us in the studio audience for an episode taping.
May 10 and 24 at 7:30 p.m.
June 14 and 27 at 7:30 p.m.

EFF (Erotic Fan Fiction) Live! 
Naughty readings of fanfics
Friday, May 19 at 7:30 p.m.

“Poirot Investigates! The Adventure of the Western Star”
A farcical adaptation of the Agatha Christie short story
May 27 to June 17

OSHKids Summer Theatre Camp
“The Wizard of Oz”
June 8 to 30

 

At Gamut Theatre
www.gamuttheatre.org
717-238-4111

Popcorn Hat Players
“Rollicking Ripsnorters: American Tall Tales”
May 6 & 13 at 1 p.m.

Stage Door Series
“Dreadful Marches to Delightful Measures: A Staged Reading of Shakespeare’s War of the Roses”
May 19 & 20 at 7:30 p.m.
May 21 at 2:30 p.m.

 

If you like what we do, please support our work. Become a Friend of TheBurg! 

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Burg Review: A night of sharing, caring at Open Stage’s emotional, thoughtful “Tiny Beautiful Things”

Have you ever poured your heart out to an advice columnist? Even if your letter wasn’t printed, you probably felt better after spilling your guts to Abby or Ann Landers.

Have you ever thought about who reads and answers those letters?

“Tiny Beautiful Things,” a memoir of sorts, chronicles author Cheryl Strayed’s time as an advice columnist under the pseudonym “Sugar.” Adapted for the stage by Nia Vardalos and directed by Open Stage’s Stuart Landon, the play is a heavy, thoughtful exploration of the human experience, of real problems needing fixes and someone to listen.

We meet struggling writer “Sugar” (not her real name) in her cozy apartment, puttering around the house and writing a few lines here and there, the way writers do when they’re supposed to be writing butt-in-seat style. She accepts the offer to take over the “Dear Sugar” column from a fellow writer for no pay, likely as a way to further procrastinate the novel she’s supposed to be writing.

Then the “Dear Sugar” letters flood her inbox. The problems they hold feel relatable… Letter writers in love… Letter writers falling out of love… Letter writers feeling lonely. Even if you haven’t found yourself in similar predicaments, the scenarios will sound familiar to you. And you’ll hear a few whack-a-doo problems thrown in for comic relief.

At first, Sugar struggles to give good advice. But then she grows into the maven role. In her answers, Sugar shares anecdotes from her own country song of a life. She writes from an obliterated place inside herself, with a fully processed wisdom that arises from scars left by cavernous pain. Much of the dialogue is poetry, with the poet deliberately choosing each perfect word.

It doesn’t take long for readers to pick up on Sugar’s changed voice. They want to know her, to see a picture of her, to know her real name. Readers can also be unforgiving, pointing out inconsistencies with advice she offers. They question whether she is qualified to give advice.

Sugar recognizes contradictions in her advice exist—the cognitive dissonance of two opposing things being simultaneously true. She encourages readers to comfortably linger in the gray, non-binary spaces. Her most troubling dichotomy is this: although the letter writers seem to energize Sugar, all the brave sharing unearths a lot of her own trauma.

In playing the lead role of Sugar, Karen Ruch’s stage presence is a motherly warmth, her soothing voice compassionate for everyone she writes about. Her carefully chosen and delivered words hold everyone with unconditional positive regard, reassuring the audience that her readers will eventually rise above their askew circumstances.

Even through the death of a child. My heart broke listening to Letter Writer #1 (Chris Gibson) ask for advice about losing his 22-year-old son. Gibson lays his grief bare, with his trembling voice and defeated body language. All I had in my pocket was a crumpled napkin from the lobby bar. From that scene alone, I folded it over about 16 times and transferred to it all the mascara that used to be clumped on my lashes.

In contrast, in coping with the loss of her baby, Letter Writer #2 (Jasmine Graham) interprets her character as an emotionless shell, depression turned inward. Graham’s forlorn face and the depth of her pain made me want to sit next to her onstage, to hold her hand and drag her to a therapist’s office, to help make her care about something again.

Along the lines of loss, another gut punch came from Letter Writer #3 (Joellen Terranova), writing to Sugar about transitioning genders and parental rejection. Terranova brings to their performance a mature acceptance of emotionally unavailable parents who let them down when their children needed them most. Terranova’s vulnerability reminded me of a broken vase whose lines you can still see.

Sugar reveals new ways to look at readers’ problems. We aren’t always able to change our circumstances, and we definitely can’t rewrite history. So the way forward is to reach and transcend. Then we can intentionally choose who influences us.

This show feels like therapy, or a support group minus the bad coffee. If you go, remember your tissues, find a sitter for your littles, and skip the mascara for one night. You’re in for public displays of emotion and a cathartic communal cry.

“Tiny Beautiful Things” runs April 21 through May 7 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit https://www.openstagehbg.com/show/tiny-beautiful-things.

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Burg Review: Lives tragically cut short in graphic, heartbreaking “Anne & Emmett”

Keel Warner and Joellen Terranova in “Anne & Emmett”

What do a Jewish girl from Germany and a Black boy from Chicago have in common? Not much on the surface. But once Anne Frank and Emmett Till start unpacking their short but powerful life stories, they find a frightening number of commonalities during their dark time/places in history.

In addition to Open Stage’s annual showing of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” Open Stage (Director Stuart Landon) and Sankofa African American Theatre Company have collaborated to bring us Janet Langhart Cohen’s “Anne & Emmett,” an imaginary conversation between Anne Frank and Emmett Till, both fatal victims of racial prejudice.

Anne Frank (Joellen Terranova) and Emmett Till’s (Keel Warner) conversation unfolds after being transported to a place called Memory, which is where these two spirits come alive when someone calls them to mind together. Set amidst a mirrored, black-and-white stage with characters clad in monochromatic costumes, Anne’s crimson pen is the only slash of color cutting through all the gray.

This isn’t a simple tit-for-tat teen chat. Despite Anne’s belief that everyone is good at heart, Emmett has been taught to fear white people. Their conversational flow sails through choppy and untrusting waters. With all their arguing, they don’t even seem to like each other. Yet through juxtaposing their life stories, a dynamic emerges between the two kids. And commonalities. It’s a genuine exchange that feels real, even though it never happened on earth.

Terranova’s portrayal of 15-year-old Anne Frank feels exactly like Anne popped off the pages of her diary and skipped onstage. Her essence feels a bit naïve, slightly annoying in a little-sister sort of way (if we’re honest), yet optimistic and idealistic despite her circumstances to the contrary.

Helping to tell the lesser-known story of 14-year-old Emmett Till, who was murdered in Jim Crow south for allegedly whistling at a white woman, Warner delivers a street-wise performance that oozes anger. Sometimes, Warner guards his anger in a seething fashion, pushing it down and swallowing it. This makes his larger explosions of anger even more impactful.

One of the most striking commonalities between Anne and Emmett: both had parents who tried to protect them from lurking evil, but ultimately could not. Both stressed “the rules” to their children to try to keep them safe: “Look down.” “No eye contact.” “Be quiet.” “If you see them coming, get off the sidewalk, cross the street.”

Although Anne’s threat is only alluded to with the mental image of the Gestapo’s hobnail boots clicking against cobblestone streets, Emmett’s killer, J.W. Milam (Josh Dorsheimer), appears onstage as a menacing white supremacist figure, doubling down on enjoying torturing and killing Till.

(If I haven’t mentioned yet, this play doesn’t hold back on the graphic details. The parental guidance warning is for children under 14, which is about the same age “The Diary of Anne Frank” appears on most high school reading lists.)

Mamie Till (Sharia Benn) scoops all of her own anger into a huge clump and hurls it right back at the world. With outstanding stage presence and force, Benn delivers a heartbreaking performance of an indignant mother who won’t go quietly—hammering open her son’s locked casket to force a look at his mangled body.

In contrast, Otto Frank’s (David Richwine) anger is turned inward, measured and analytical, with guilt slathering his surface. Replaying the events and expressing what his shoulda/coulda regrets, it’s almost as if he takes responsibility for the results in some way, as if he could have controlled what happened, or avoided it entirely.

Benn, also executive artistic director of Sankofa African American Theatre Company, hopes this play, like Anne and Emmett’s lives, will change the world. “May this stage experience ignite real conversations for real change.”

A key commonality for Otto Frank and Mamie Till: both parents kept their children’s respective memories alive, gave meaning to their deaths, and honored a larger moral obligation to repair the world. They made sure their children’s stories were told, and in the repeated tellings, changed the course of history.

Part of Open Stage’s Good at Heart Festival, “Anne & Emmett” runs until March 26 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit https://www.openstagehbg.com/show/anne-and-emmett.

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Acts of Kindness, Consequence: Humanity, compassion take stage in first-ever Good at Heart Festival

As spring approaches, Open Stage prepares for its first annual “Good At Heart Festival” this month.

The festival will consist of Open Stage’s 23rd presentation of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” Sankofa African American Theatre Company’s presentation of “Anne and Emmett,” and several nights of conversation surrounding social justice, including Black NewsBeat with Dr. Kimeka Campbell, The Obstructed View and more.

What inspired the idea of the Good At Heart Festival? That is an honor that can only be attributed to Anne Frank.

“Anne Frank wrote, that, despite everything, she believes people are good at heart,” said Stuart Landon, artistic director of Open Stage. “And that is the driving force of her writing, in many ways, that we as an institution come back to again and again.”

This will be the 23rd year that Open Stages presents “The Diary of Anne Frank,” featuring four dates for morning matinees and one evening performance. As many as 4,000 students will be able to see Anne Frank’s story at the Scottish Rite Cathedral for the morning matinees (with limited available seating for the public), with a post-performance presentation by Holocaust expert, Lilian Rappaport. There also will be a Wednesday evening performance for the general public (with no post-performance discussion).

Landon thinks the content will hit a bit differently this year, as it’s the first time since the pandemic hit that “Diary” will be staged live.

“There’s something really special about it, because we went through an international trauma together, but not really together at all—we were isolated, living in a tumultuous time in our country,” he said. “Many countries are, when it comes to divisiveness politically, and there are so many echoes of our current world [in the play], and at the very least the emotions around what we’re dealing with.”

Another cornerstone of the Good At Heart Festival are some familiar characters.

“Anne and Emmett,” based on the book of the same name by Janet Langhart Cohen, and presented by Sankofa African American Theatre Company, is an exploration of what a conversation might be like between Anne Frank and Emmett Till from the beyond, or “in memory,” as Sharia Benn, artistic director of Sankofa, puts it.

The play joins these two young teenagers who experienced parallel hate and explores the topics of race, the times they lived in, and even gender perspective.

“There will be moments where the audience will be uncomfortable,” Benn said. “But we need to get into spaces where we go beyond just being uncomfortable—which leads us into silence and complacency—to where we can start to have healing, understanding and even acceptance that this happened… this is how it has impacted people, and that is real. Explore that.”

Benn described her process for choosing pieces for Sankofa as not only looking for content by and about the Black community, but also, “things that we can gather around—a diverse community, our diverse community, not just for a Black audience or a white audience, but to attract both, and different races and backgrounds, into one place so that we can have these meaningful and crucial conversations.”

And that is exactly what “Anna and Emmett” brings to the table—an invitation to delve into the shared experience that people across different races and religions have.

Hand in hand with the nights of conversation scheduled for that week, these two plays are sure to create a thoughtful, encouraging space for the type of discussion that the Good At Heart Festival was created to spark.

“Anne Frank wrote that she wanted her writing to live beyond her,” Landon said. “And has it! It is a great responsibility, and an honor, to take on this story every year and explore all the stories that need to be told.”

“The Good at Heart” Festival runs March 14 to 19 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg, and on March 15 at Scottish Rite Cathedral, 2701 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com.
 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS 

At Open Stage
www.openstagehbg.com
717-232-6736

Stephen Sondheim & James Lapine’s
“Into the Woods”
Running through March 11

 

The Good at Heart Festival

Festival Kickoff
“Theatre for Good: Social Change & Performance”
Features performances from Reclaim Artist Collective & Narcisse Theatre Co.
Free to the Public
Tuesday, March 14 at 7:30 p.m.

Black NewsBeat
With Dr. Kimeka Campbell
Wednesday, March 15

“The Diary of Anne Frank”
At Scottish Rite Cathedral
March 14 to 17
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Morning shows followed by short break and presentation from Holocaust educator Lillian Rappaport at 12:15 p.m.

“Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America”
Documentary Screening at Midtown Cinema
Thursday, March 16 at 7:30 p.m.

“Anne & Emmett”
A new play by Janet Langhart Cohen
Presented in partnership with Sankofa African American Theatre Co.
March 17 to 26 (various times)

The Obstructed View 
Queer talk show taping
Saturday, March 18 at 6 p.m.

Lobby Talk
A discussion about “Anne & Emmett” with the cast
Led by Professor Ellen Stockstill
Free to the Public
Sunday, March 19 at 3 p.m.

An EDI Conversation
With Una Martone (Leadership Harrisburg)
And Joe Robinson (MLK Jr. Leadership Development Institute)
Sunday, March 19 at 7:30 p.m.
Free to the Public

 

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