Tag Archives: Rachel Landon

Burg Review: Revenge is served hot, creatively, colorfully in Gamut’s “King Lear”

Gamut Theatre takes us to ancient Britain for Shakespeare’s tempestuous, epic tragedy, “King Lear,” spearheading themes of love, betrayal and revenge.

The Gamut cast and crew, directed by Thomas Weaver, bring us a stage version so gory and graphic that I’ve been asked to keep its three most brutal scenes a secret.

But I CAN tell you the visceral way those scenes made me feel, in all their forbidden grotesqueness, like a teen watching a horror movie alone in the basement after curfew. And with over three action-driven hours of “King Lear,” there’s plenty more I can share. So shut up your doors for the storm. You’re in for a wild night.

Gamut’s main stage turns itself tribal, set with makeshift wicker furniture and tattered coverings (scenic designer, Andrew Nyberg; props designer, Karen Ruch; scenic painter, Ian Potter), possibly symbolizing the temporary and delicate nature of King Lear’s power.

The contenders’ costumes (costume designer, Callie Lythgoe; assistant costume designer, Jen Kilander; costume crafts artisan, Rebekkah Hurlbert) give a nod to the movie “Braveheart,” with animal remnants splayed across tartan, and face paint smeared everywhere.

“King Lear” (Clark Nicholson) features a house divided as the main character holds a contest of love, pitting his daughters Goneril (Rachel Landon), Regan (Gabriella DeCarli), and Cordelia (Weimy Montero Candelario) against each other, competing for his love.

He transitions his kingdom to them – but only to the love contest victors, while the other daughter holds her own contest of love between the King of France (Marcus McGhee) and the Duke of Burgundy (Calian Byard).

Then there is the Earl of Gloucester (Jeff Wasileski), whose illegitimate son Edmund (Elizabeth Hood) intends to take the inheritance from the legitimate son, Edgar (Alex Winnick), who is pretending to be someone else.

Vicious conflict ensues as competing family dramas play out (fight director, Hood; fight captain, Sean Adams). You may want to wear a poncho if you sit in the front row (blood designer, Brianna Dow).

After King Lear retires, he goes mad. Nicholson expertly arcs this character from a ruler akin to the boss level of a video game to a loon clearly losing his faculties. (This sentiment hits home as my own parents dwell within that same life season, and I watch them spend my inheritance like dandelion seeds on a windy day.)

During Lear’s descent into madness, he spends more time with The Fool (Hope Mackenzie), who gives this play lissome flair with her nature-inspired dancing.

As rival sisters Goneril and Regan, who are sometimes each other’s advocates, I can’t decide which manipulative wench plays nastier, Landon or DeCarli. Both ladies approach their roles with delicious force, like each chomping at opposite ends of a juicy underbelly, both trying to eat the biggest share.

The way they run their husbands Albany (Diego Sandino) and Cornwall (Robert Campbell) inspires me to assert myself more fiercely within my own marital dynamic. As Edmund, Hood rivals the sisters’ intensity, wielding the bastard moniker like a verbal weapon, emerging as a powerful antagonist.

I’m not sure if Shakespeare originally wrote a dance number into this play, but it is one of my favorite scenes. Reminiscent of the aggressive haka dance, the onstage Gamut players channel their most belligerent ancestors with rhythmic, ritualistic dancing to penetrative music, vibrating and palpitating under the skin. (music composer, David Ramón Zayas; sound designer, Mike Banks).

In rivalry for my favorite scene is of the otherwise dignified Kent (Adams) insulting Oswald (Brennan Dickerson) in a spewing fountain of obscenities like Chevy Chase vilifying his boss in “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” after opening his jelly of the month Christmas bonus.

If you’re a fan of overly violent stories where only a few characters live until the end, and the remaining characters are missing a few body parts, get thee to Gamut Theatre to see “King Lear.” If ye fret about following The Bard’s iambic pentameter, known to be overly poetically flowery, ye need not understand word by word by word.

The actors use gestures, facial expressions, and stage movements to help you catch on why they’re fighting each other. You can also tune in to the digital program for a scene-by-scene synopsis. And if you didn’t like this review, bring your mace and club to my neighborhood and fight me.

“King Lear” runs March 7 to 29 at Gamut Theatre, 15. N. 4th St., Harrisburg. For more information and tickets, visit https://www.gamuttheatre.org/lear.  

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Burg Review: In Open Stage’s funny, tragic “Stoney Brook,” life gets complicated for the “Baby-Sitters”

In Rachel Landon’s original play “Stoney Brook,” directed by Karen Ruch, Open Stage hits that sweet spot of childhood, then turns it salty. Based on the wholesome book series “The Baby-Sitters Club,” this fan fiction chamber play fast-forwards the seven mini-caregivers 30 years later, imagining them as edgier and decidedly more compelling than their saccharine-coated adolescent versions.

In the book series, the BSC ran their business out of Claud’s bedroom. The onstage setting, smacking of a blend of products from Claire’s Boutique and Spencer Gifts, Claud’s perfectly preserved bedroom invites the girls back as fully formed women. (Credit the overwhelming number of props to prop master, Landon; Becky Arney, props; and Kalina Barrett, set designer.) The strains of 1990s FEMpowerment songs play like an anthem. I wish I knew whom to credit for the playlist, because it perfectly sets the play’s mood back to a time when your entire world revolved around your friend group.

But then plot crosses unexpectedly with “The Big Chill.” Claud has committed suicide, and the reunion of childhood BFFs centers on her funeral.

We meet the first BSC alumnae during a graphically private moment, undressing during a gusher of a hot flash. It would have been funnier had we known the stripper was former tomboy Kris (Tara Herweg), because watching a tomboy do anything in a dress and pantyhose captures a certain irony. Although Kris has achieved fame and success as a young adult author, Herweg brings to this character a mix of awkwardness and aloofness, with just a dash of defensiveness for having lost touch.

Enter Mary (Alexis Campbell), once Kris’s best friend. Campbell at first plays the quiet Mary as sensible and gently judgey. As the evening wears on, she flies her freak flag without apology. Then, during one of the most emotional moments of the play, there is an incident that disrupts the calmness of her personality so hard that I wanted to sneak offstage and cry with her.

Thirty years can change people, and life clearly kicked these ladies around. Playwright Landon uses this time warp to make the once sweet Stace (Landon, understudy) into a sharply funny alcoholic. Stace’s earthy step-sister, Shae (Kelsey Markey), turns into an oversexed attention-seeker. Former dancer Jess (Danielle Woods) develops layers within her character, delivering an emotionally intelligent performance that seems to lead to self-acceptance. Of all the girls, the once junior Mall (J’aime Elizabeth) finds her voice the loudest and the angriest, personifying a peri-menopausal mood swing. When one of the actresses mentions Virginia Woolf, I think, “Yep, exactly.”

Landon’s script captures the complexities of female friendship dynamics. Like many in this same generation, we made our first friends with those geographically close to us. Then those friendships gradually fell away when our worlds became bigger. Female friendships tend to be complicated and messier than the emotionally uncluttered hangouts with male friends. But like any past situation you return to, the phrase, “You can’t go home again” rings harshly true.

This parody pushes boundaries, and some toe-taps across the line may make audience members uncomfortable. Recognizing a former version of myself tops my discomfort level. Otherwise, settle in for an unsupervised “slumber” party, complete with racy language, drug use, sex toys, over-the-top PDA (same-sex), political disagreements, and eating junk food found in a deceased woman’s bedroom regardless of its expiration date. If smoking in small spaces bothers you, sit near the door and excuse yourself when the ladies light up those funky brown cigarillos from the gas station.

For some additional conflict, playwright Landon could have chosen to write in a BSC rival from the book series, like Cokie Mason, but that would have felt too contrived and convenient for the plot premise. Instead, Landon smartly planted an intruder into an already tight group – a clearly mismatched love interest. Every time Shae’s partner, Freya (Nikki Heckermann) strode onstage, the group dynamic shifted south to a cringey place. I imagine her director’s notes probably read, “Make Freya as annoying as possible.” Well done, Heckermann. I loved to hate your character.

In the script, I had some trouble reconciling some of the past with the present. From the book series, I remember Claud mismatching with her family, and sometimes clashing with her sister. But some of the finer details surrounding Claud’s present-day downfall don’t align with a nuclear suburban family who would maintain a childhood bedroom as a shrine. It bothers me that Claud’s sister throws a rager downstairs during Claud’s funeral, and that her ashes aren’t treated reverently. Where are Claud’s parents and her daughter? Maybe if I had a better sense of what extreme trauma happened with Claud’s family over the past 30 years, I could more easily make peace with these details. From the sickly-sweet books to this post-apocalyptic present is too far a jump for me to make.

No matter how far away the BSC characters forayed away from idyllic Stoney Brook, their innocent versions exist only in the pristine pages in the middle-grade section of the library, next to the “Highlights” magazines. If you want the latest on these ladies, you’ll need to head over to Open Stage’s femi-drama adult stacks. But you don’t have to read the book series to appreciate this play. You might also want to grab a signature drink in Open Stage’s lounge. The ladies onstage are well ahead of you already, and you’ll need to get caught up. If you have kids under 18, be sure to leave them at home with their own baby-sitter.

P.S. You can reach out to the national Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988.

Open Stage’s original “Stoney Brook” runs through March 7. For more information and ticket sales, visit their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/shows/stoneybrook.

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All Grown Up: So, what happens when “The Baby-Sitters Club” reaches middle age?

The cast of “Stoney Brook.” Image courtesy of Open Stage.

Childhood friendships are rekindled and redefined in “Stoney Brook,” an all-new, original parody play lovingly sending up “The Baby-Sitters Club,” opening this month at Open Stage.

At the intersection of nostalgia and adulthood, this production brings together six women, who were all friends in their youth, for one riotous, hilarious and emotional evening. This play will have you both laughing and crying (maybe at the same time) and serves as the perfect excuse for a girl’s night out. 

Written by Rachel Landon, “Stoney Brook” tells the story of a group of friends who are no longer preteens taking part in their shared babysitting business but adult women in their forties who have since grown apart and experienced all of life’s ups and downs. When a tragic death brings them back together in their hometown of Stoney Brook, the women reconnect, reminisce, joke, weep and maybe drop a few “f-bombs.”

“In this play, there are a lot of women speaking frankly,” said Karen Ruch, its director. “Menopause, periods, sex—when women are alone, they speak very differently about those things. There’s a level of safety and comfort and some shared experience.”

The new play explores themes of friendship, grief, privilege, motherhood, identity and all the complexities of being a woman.

The new comedic play is a parody of “The Baby-Sitters Club,” the famous book series by Ann M. Martin, published by Scholastic from 1986 to 2000. The story of these girls became a source of inspiration for several spin-offs and adaptations, including a 1990 TV series, a 1995 film, a 2020 TV series and an ongoing graphic novel series since 2006.

“This was a series that was very close to me, and to get to think about these women as adults fascinated me,” Landon said. “This is pure parody, but it’s written with a lot of love.”

Those who have read the books may catch some Easter eggs, but if you haven’t, no problem. You will get to know these women very quickly, and everyone will find someone on stage they relate to.

“Stoney Brook” proudly features an all-female cast and creative team, including Alexis Campbell as Mary, Stacy Erdman as Stace, Tara Herweg as Kris, Kelsey Markey as Shae, Danielle Woods as Jess, J’aime Elizabeth as Mall and Nikki Heckermann as Freya. Jasmine Graham, Rachel Landon and Adrienne Thoman serve as swing understudies. The play is stage-managed by Brianna Dow, who also serves as sound designer. Lighting design is by Karen Gasser, set design by technical director Kalina Barrett, and costume design by Carol Manzer.

“Stoney Brook” will leave you remembering the times in your life when you danced around your room pretending your hairbrush was a microphone, and if you’ve been thinking of an old friend or two, it may just urge you to finally make the call. 

“Stoney Brook” runs Feb. 7 to March 7 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For tickets and more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

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

“Stoney Brook”

The babysitters are back—and chaotic
Feb. 7 to March 7

Black NewsBeat
“Rhythm, Rest & Regulators”

An evening of resistance and radical joy
Friday, Feb. 6 at 7 p.m.

EFF Live!

Outrageous, raunchy, and hilarious
Thursday, Feb. 12 at 7:30 p.m.

BaRPG

Live-action RPG meets comedy
Wednesday, Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m. 

Court Street Cabaret

Broadway favorites, shared live
Sunday, Feb. 22 at 6 p.m.

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Burg Review: Slurp up the laughs at Open Stage’s madcap “Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors”

Open Stage vants you to attend Count Dracula’s open house at his creepy castle.

But don’t be scared off by the dimly lit, cobwebbed corners, brocaded wallpaper and creaky doors. There are scads of impromptu dance parties, actors randomly throwing sparkly confetti, and Count Dracula baked a gluten-free, cruelty-free, vegan cake… That one’s for his realtor. He also baked a cake that tastes good, just to velcome you.

Mixing campy comedy, gothic horror, slapstick farce, sexual overtones, and a bag of A-positive platelets from the snack bar, director Stuart Landon brings us a silly twist on Bram Stoker’s already twisted tale, reminiscent of Mel Brooks’ Frankenstein (“Franken-schteen”) and “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.”

Count Dracula (Brad Barkdoll) and his realtor Jonathan Harker (Isaac Austin) set the scene at Dracula’s London castle location, location, location. The setting itself becomes a main character, with its spooky crimson lighting (Tristan Stasiulis) penetrating the canned mist, and the strains of world music I’m certain I hear in my weekly Zumba class. Although I give the mirror at my gym the clumsiest salsa dance ever witnessed, the players’ onstage dances are much more watchable (Aréanna Hope Kroll, choreographer). They’re meant to be silly, and they’re easy enough that you could try them out during your own living room dance parties.

Barkdoll plays his Dracula with an over-the-top brand of sultry, pumping his cautious-but-clueless realtor for information about his adventurous fiancé, Lucy (Jasmine Graham.) Later, at the couple’s engagement party, the dynamic between Austin and Graham feels initially strained and unromantic. Enter the leather-bound, sexually charged Barkdoll flashing into the party during a well-placed thunder clap, carrying his cake plate. Dracula is thirsty for blood spritzers, and it’s Lucy’s neck he wants as his party punch cup.

At that same party, we meet Lucy’s father, Dr. Westfeldt (Joellen Terranova), who runs a mental asylum in his house, and his straight-jacketed patient Renfield (also Terranova). This double-casting and constant quick-changing earns Terranova admiration as they skillfully play both characters in many of the same scenes, all ridiculously and riotously constructed.

We also meet Westfeldt’s other, less favorite daughter, the flighty Mina (Anthony M.C. Leukus), who tries too hard to attract the same level of attention as her sister, Lucy. When Mina falls ill after a snog-sesh with Count Dracula, Dr. Van Helsing (also Leukus) pays her a house call. As lightly as Leukus plays Mina, he presents Dr. Van Helsing with more gravity. Although Dr. Van Helsing is a caricature of a German housefrau, (and I think I recognize the costume from “The Sound of Music,”) Leukus’s character interpretation gives credence to being a female doctor in 1897.

The otherwise lighthearted storyline is easy to follow, peppered with running gags, humorous sound effects (Anthony Pieruccini, sound design consultant; Victoria Deiorio, sound designer), and Freudian sips – I mean, slips. Hilarious Easter (and Halloween) eggs abound everywhere, with any bloopers blending seamlessly as part of the slapstick. Also, in a surprising character development, Austin cocoons the boy-like, weakling Harker, eventually emerging him as a fully-fledged badass, as evidenced by his well-hung costume (costumes by Jacob Schlenker and Rachel Landon).

You can pick up Dracula swag.

If you attend Dracula’s open house, with or without your favorite realtor, there are warnings for younger and more sensitive viewers. This comical show is worth attending more than once, drinking in its various viewpoints. If you’re looking for different character renditions and maybe even an alternative blooper reel, there is a special show on Oct. 8 featuring understudies Kroll and Luke Rider. And you won’t want to miss the post-performance discussion on Oct. 19. If you do return for a second or third helping, please be sure to return the cake plate.

P.S. If you stop by Open Stage’s bar, check out Dracula’s rhinestone-studded swag, and bite into your very own plastic fangs.

Open Stage’s “Dracula: A Comedy of Terrors” runs October 4 through November 1. For more information and ticket sales, visit their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/shows/dracula.

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Burg Review: Emotions dig deep, laughter rings out in “The Colored Museum”

[Voice over the loudspeaker in a brightly lit museum.] George C. Wolfe’s “The Colored Museum” is a satirical collection of vignettes that challenge stereotypes surrounding the African American experience. Sankofa African American Theatre Company and Open Stage partner to take you on a museum tour without ever leaving your seats.

Let the actors punch your admission ticket, taking you beyond the velvet ropes. You’re going to be poking fun at old Black stereotypes while confronting them. (Old = 1619 to 1986, from the time the first ship arrived in Virginia to the year Wolfe authored the play.)

Co-directed by Sharia Benn and Johntrae Williams, “The Colored Museum” presents 11 vignettes where the exhibits come to life – highlighting Black themes in ways that are provocative, full of social commentary, controversial and dressed to the nines in the finest costumes from the 20th century (costume consultant, Rachel Landon). Although the themes were groundbreaking for 1986, I’d like to think that pop culture has progressively mainstreamed Black topics to the point that lighter travelers are more aware, more conversant than in years past. That isn’t to say you won’t find anything shocking. You will. I did.

Please follow me. We’re walking, we’re walking, aaannnd pause here.

On our first tour stop, we meet Miss Pat (Weimy Montero-Candelario), a bossy stewardess who takes us aboard a slave ship. As she shackles each passenger, she shouts out instructions: no rebelling, no drumming, no talking to each other, no worshiping God. Montero-Candelario brings an authoritarian spitfire energy to Miss Pat, reprising this same role for the play’s finale. Although she plays several characters throughout the vignettes, the standout performance is of Lawanda in “The Hairpiece,” along with Benn as Janine. Together those gossipy ladies make The Woman (Melinda Anderson) think twice about her beauty routine.

Then Aunt Ethel (Benn), one of the shackled passengers, sings us a jazzy ditty on her cooking show, where she cooks us up some… ssh, I’m not gonna spoil your supper. Benn also convincingly slips into a younger character’s pinafore to portray young Normal Jean Reynolds in “Permutations,” a solo piece I found most unsettling, and Mama in “The Last Mama-on-the-Couch Play,” a meta piece fit for “Masterpiece Theatre.” Marcus McGhee, Johntrae Williams, Anderson and Montero-Candelario add to the hilarity that is Mama’s family dynamic.

Now, we walk to the Fabulous Wing of The Colored Museum. McGhee and Amandine Pope describe what it’s like to model for Ebony Magazine. They may be fabulous, but they feel objectified. McGhee regales us as the equally fabulous Miss Roj, a baggage-addled drag queen looking to scrap with someone in the parking lot of the nightclub. Pope again becomes fabulous in another nightclub act, LaLa “Amazing” Grace. Pope’s an unreliable narrator entertainer whose will exceeds her skill. In mottled French accent she lifted somewhere from her self-important fantasy world, she talks about her fellow singers of mixed descent being rejected in the United States. Montero-Candelario plays her cowering maid, stirring the pot with Lala by bringing her tattle-tale correspondence on silver platters. Kudos to Flo’rance (Te’Sean Richardson) for being the creepiest character in all 11 skits, followed closely by Journie Williams.

Although Johntrae Williams appears in many of the funny vignettes, his star shines brightest with his poignant performances in the Self-Reflective Wing of “The Colored Museum.” As Junie Robinson in “Soldier with a Secret,” he reveals startling confessions of dark things most soldiers won’t talk about. And in “Symbiosis” as The Man, he becomes an unlikely combination of vulnerable and violent toward The Kid (McGhee), in a relatable story about letting go. McGhee delivers an earnest rendition of “My Girl,” carrying enough emotion to bring back his scene partner’s youth.

No matter how the culturally charged content may affect you and your loved ones (over age 16, please), I hope you will be open-minded enough to let this play in, to let potentially uneasy ideas reside with you, to consider how they make you feel. If parts of this play make you uncomfortable, that means you are willing to challenge your beliefs about certain paradigms, to claw under the surface of stereotypes, and to reflect on those ideas with empathy and respect. Benn, also the executive artistic director of Sankofa African American Theatre Company, asserts that, “It is in these moments of ‘squirm’ when the laughter fades and the truth lingers, that provocative transformation begins.” You may even be able to mentally add other topics to form a more complete theme list, from 1987 to the present.

Perhaps you are uncomfortable laughing in public about things that are maybe a little touchy. You’re not a bad person if you laugh – at least I hope not, because most of the vignettes are hilarious. If you just like to laugh, usually at inappropriate times, and you aren’t offended very easily, then come sit by me. Hopefully if we laugh together – loudly, publicly – then we can de-sensitize otherwise raw topics, taking the stinger out.

That’s the end of our tour. Please be sure to visit the gift shop on your way out, or the bar at intermission. I think you’ll find “The Colored Museum” worth the price of admission.

“The Colored Museum,” a production of both Sankofa African American Theatre Company and Open Stage, runs through June 19. For more information, check their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/shows/thecoloredmuseum. Image courtesy Open Stage/Sankofa.

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Burg Review: Open Stage rocks a story of identity, love, struggle with the explosive “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”

TJ Creedon in “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”

Ladies and gentlemen, ready or not, Open Stage brings to Harrisburg “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” a volatile marriage of cabaret, burlesque, a punk/rock show, and an onstage catfight during RuPaul’s Drag Race.

Director Chris Gibson and Music Director Brad Barkdoll fly the freak flag to assemble an over-the-top drag immersion. It’s messy, like Courtney-Love-after-a-swig-of-pills messy. Yet within the musical’s operatic monologue is a life story about trying to find love, complete with an absentee father, a cold mother and the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The club where we meet Hedwig (TJ Creedon) is nowhere near Berlin. It’s right next to Whitaker Center, and Hedwig’s ex-boyfriend, Tommy Gnosis, is playing a louder show next door. Clad in rhinestones, latex, and peek-a-boo undergarments, Creedon embodies fury while delivering raunchy jokes and unbridled anthems. He excels in bringing forth the vulnerability of Hedwig from underneath all the physical and emotional trappings, her drive to find her other half, and her struggle with how to fit together with someone else without losing more of herself along her journey.

The music is charged electricity, prickling under the skin like a butterknife in a wall socket. A brooding Barkdoll (guitar) leads band members Jeremy Blouch (bass), Dani Fiore (drums), and Daphne Rinkus (keys) through 90 minutes (no intermission) of pulsating rhythms. There may only be two handfuls of songs, but they pack a wallop while they tell Hedwig’s tale.

Creedon is raging dynamite, blowing up the stage, stomping in thigh-high platform boots like the fifth member of KISS. The performance is daring, unchecked, uncontrollable, and could explode at any moment.

As onstage wallflower, Yitzhak (Rachel Landon) enters into duets with Hedwig, in much the way an alter ego takes over when recessive parts of a personality emerge, the masks we wear in life. In appearance, Landon’s clandestine trappings (costume designer, Hanniel Sindelar) are so understated and blended, I didn’t recognize her until she started singing. In the duets, Creedon and Landon don’t exactly blend, and they aren’t supposed to.

At first, Landon putters onstage as Yitzhak. Then she finds that confident voice within herself. All the while, her voice is throaty, flinty-rock, at the end bursting forth from the manly-looking shell that holds her. All the symbolism applies.

The music was so driving, so fulfilling, in fact, that it would be easier to tell you about the only song in which I wanted to take Hedwig up on her offer to throw tomatoes: “Sugar Daddy.” Although I do love candy themes and Sears catalog close-ups of men’s undies, the country music vibe cancels out all that was good about the song’s essence. The other 10 songs – the long punk stripteases, even the moody ballads – rocked my world like a guilty one-night stand.

The finale doesn’t sit neatly like a perfectly coiffed wig. Instead, it’s a screamer, the way one might react after a botched sex change operation, as one does, yes? Hedwig gains the strength to step out of her own way, throwing all her self-loathing feelings away like her crimped wig, revealing her naked, authentic self.

Lighting designer Tristan Stasiulus succeeds in using lighting techniques that bring a glorious amount of shadow and skeeve to those onstage, drawing attention to the appropriately disturbing art (Brianna Dow, projections designer) complementing the music. The music is underground-loud, a bit muffled at times, but it’s not a sanitized experience that you bought tickets to immerse yourself within.

Hedwig says, leave yer little runts at home. And if you don’t want various parts of a drag queen inches from your face, sit somewhere other than the first row. Hedwig would remind you that the theater is intimate enough for you to throw your tomatoes at her from any row… although this reviewer trusts that if this is your subgenre, you will leave with all your fruits and vegetables intact.

“Hedwig and the Angry Inch” runs through March 1. For more information, check their website at https://www.openstagehbg.com/shows/hedwig

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Midtown Cinema to hold grand reopening following closure, storm damage

Midtown Cinema

Midtown Cinema is rolling out the red carpet and cueing up the films.

Harrisburg’s indie movie theater will fully reopen this week, following a temporary closure due to damage sustained during Hurricane Debby in August.

At the time, cinema officials shared that the Reily Street theater had suffered water damage and renovations would be necessary.

On Tuesday, Midtown Cinema announced its reopening for Friday, Oct. 18, with “reimagined” features. According to Rachel Landon, general manager, the theater now has a new stage in the lobby for performances, more social space, a permanent red carpet and improved soundproofing between theaters.

“This reopening is not just a return to the way things were—it’s a reimagining of what Midtown Cinema can offer,” Landon said.

To mark the reopening, Midtown Cinema will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 4 p.m. on Friday, along with a happy hour at the Zeroday Outpost, located inside the theater. There will also be tours of the facility, live music by Trace Jordan and a full schedule of movie screenings starting at 7:30 p.m. Midtown Cinema will show “The Apprentice,” “Saturday Night” and “Exhibiting Forgiveness.”

3rd in the Burg’s movie night will also take place that night at the cinema, showing “Night of the Living Dead.”

Midtown Cinema is offering members complimentary admission to a film of their choice that evening, while supplies last.

Midtown Cinema is located at 250 Reily St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website.

 

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A Viral Phenomenon: How “Ride the Cyclone” found new life with Gen Z

Photo courtesy of Open Stage

This fall, Open Stage brings the electrifying and darkly comedic “Ride the Cyclone” to downtown Harrisburg, and it’s a show that has captured the hearts of a new generation—thanks in large part to its viral success on social media.

What began as a quirky and obscure musical in 2008 has found new life with Gen Z, who have made it a sensation on platforms like TikTok.

“Ride the Cyclone” tells the story of six teenagers from the St. Cassian High School choir who perish in a roller coaster accident. In the aftermath, they find themselves in a surreal limbo, where a fortune-telling machine named The Amazing Karnak offers one of them the chance to return to life. Each teen must make their case through a series of wildly different musical numbers, exploring their past lives, regrets and dreams.

The show’s eclectic mix of humor, pathos and macabre themes has struck a chord with Gen Z, a generation deeply attuned to stories about trauma, self-discovery and the search for identity. In 2022, the haunting song, “The Ballad of Jane Doe,” exploded on TikTok, with fans captivated by the darkly beautiful performance. Overnight, “Ride the Cyclone” transformed from a cult favorite into a viral sensation.

“The energy and passion the fans bring to this show is incredible,” says Emily Reusswig, who plays the character Jane Doe in Open Stage’s production. “You see it everywhere online—cosplay, fan theories, art. I first heard of this show through TikTok and was obsessed! This story about life, death and identity resonates deeply with the fans and with me.”

In the production, audiences meet the choir members: Ocean O’Connell Rosenberg, a perfectionist choir captain with a superiority complex; Noel Gruber, a romantic dreamer obsessed with New Wave French cinema; Mischa Bachinski, a fiery Ukrainian adoptee and aspiring rapper; Ricky Potts, an imaginative kid who dreams of aliens; Jane Doe, the unnamed and forgotten girl searching for her identity; and Constance Blackwood, the sweet girl hiding deeper complexities.

“There’s a catharsis in seeing these characters, who are so full of life even in death, express their fears, dreams and desires,” says Open Stage artistic director Stuart Landon. “It’s a reminder that even in the face of tragedy, there’s humor, connection and the search for a second chance.”

The team at Open Stage is ready to bring this viral hit to central Pa. The cast features Josh Dorsheimer, Jasmine Graham, Maggie Haynes, Ethan Hommel, Em Kase, Carly Lafferty, Drew Patti, Emily Reusswig and Zach Roush. Stuart Landon directs, with TJ Creedon as assistant director, Kayla Capone Kasper as vocal director, and choreography by Zsuzsanna Smith. The stage manager is Stacy Reck, who is assisted by Chris Krahulec and Emma Sweigart. Costumes are designed by Brock Viering, with props by Becky Arney, audio by Kevin Cole and Wayne Landon, lighting by Tristan Stasiulis and projections by Sammi Leigh Melville and Rachel Landon. The scenic design team includes Janos Boon, Addison Griffin, Heather Jannetta and John Kern. Brad Barkdoll, playing the role of a rat named Virgil, leads his fellow band members: Ellen Carnahan, Adrienne Connaghan and Dani Fiore.

As fans flock to TikTok to share their love for “Ride the Cyclone,” Open Stage audiences will get a chance to experience this thrilling, fast-paced and deeply human story live on stage. Whether you’re a long-time fan or discovering the show for the first time, “Ride the Cyclone” promises to be a theatrical experience that leaves you thinking, laughing and maybe even shedding a tear.

“Ride the Cyclone” runs from Oct. 12 to Nov. 2 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court Street, on the street level of the Walnut Street Garage, in Harrisburg. For tickets and more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com.

Rachel Landon serves as the education coordinator at Open Stage.

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

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

At Gamut Theatre

www.gamuttheatre.org
717-238-4111

Popcorn Hat Players
“Sleeping Beauty”
Sept. 18 to Oct. 5
Wednesdays and Thursdays at 10 a.m.
Saturdays at 1 p.m.

TMI Improv
Oct.18 at 7:30 p.m.

Stage Door Series
Hamlet-ish!
Oct. 11 & 12 at 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 13 at 2:30 p.m.

Dracula Reading
Oct. 23 at 7:30 p.m.

 

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

Black NewsBeat
With Dr. Kimeka Campbell
Oct. 9 & 23, 7 p.m.

EFF Live! (Erotic Fan Fiction Live!)
Naughty readings that will make you laugh!
Oct. 11, 7:30 p.m.

“Ride the Cyclone,” a musical
The viral sensation comes to Harrisburg!
Oct.12 to Nov. 2

Court Street Cabaret: Oversung Edition
Open Stage singers bring awesome performances of overdone showtunes.
Oct. 17 to Nov. 1

Big Wigs
A Vegas-style impersonation show
With Aggy Dune & Mrs. Kasha Davis
Sunday, Nov. 3
VIP Meet & Greet, 1 p.m.
Drag Show, 2 p.m.

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Burg Review: Open Stage makes Fleetwood Mac fun with “Go Your Own Way”

Open Stage unleashes a hauntingly familiar Mac attack with “Go Your Own Way: A Celebration of Fleetwood Mac,” paying tribute to a band that, since 1967, has regaled audiences with their stormy soap opera within their mystical hookah den.

Unlike the often-warring original band, the Open Stage cast has adorable onstage chemistry, with genuine affection for one another. They make performing fun.

Producer Wayne Landon, Music Director Brad Barkdoll and Music Arranger/Band Rehearsal Director Anthony Pieruccini selected almost 30 hits representative of Fleetwood Mac’s evolving sound over the decades—folk, blues, pop, soft rock, arena rock and power ballads. There are even nods to band members’ works pre-1974, before the most recognized lineup cemented itself.

The set feels hazy and magical, like walking into a fortune teller’s train car after the rain wa-SHEZ you clean. The stage looked as if Stevie Nicks herself had draped her laundry everywhere, with loosely strewn scarves, handkerchiefs, tablecloths and doilies accenting. The costumes (Brock Viering) simultaneously stood out and blended in, with their flowy fabrics and showy patterns and belly-unbuttoned shirts with chunky lapels pointing far east and west.

Although this show is not meant to be a tribute band in which the performers impersonate the artists note for note, many of the show’s elements come close. For example, Barkdoll’s guitar riffs and vocals impress throughout, plus his blue eyes that can be seen from space conjure Lindsey Buckingham’s originals. Madison Eppley’s witchy countenance resembles a young Stevie Nicks, but with Eppley’s vocal range decidedly more flexible than Nicks’ alto. When the cast launched into “I Don’t Want to Know,” I thought for a split second someone had cranked up my old hi-fi.

The cast plays many of the songs just as I remember them, minus the skips and scratches on my vinyls and the ka-chunks between songs on my 8-tracks. Many of the arrangements held little surprise Easter eggs, making second-hand news of the original recordings. Some of the nicest surprises were the acoustic arrangements for songs I expected to be larger, like “Big Love,” (TJ Creedon) and a little gender-bending when Creedon nailed “You Make Loving Fun” in the key of Christine McVie.

With all the bravado of arena rock, tambourine man Creedon belts his songs with energy and humor, especially in his interpretation of “Second-Hand News” (imagine the twangy bridge “bow bow bow bow buh-bow” with dancing). He just as easily shows his versatility with the Latin rhythm-laced “Black Magic Woman” and some haunting harmonies as he swaggers through “Dreams.”

Showing range and style variety, Jasmine Graham delivers the rollicking “The Chain,” followed by the more lilting “As Long as You Follow,” “Say You Love Me” and “Over My Head,” the latter of which is Graham’s natural key. She eases her way through the subdued “Gypsy,” getting stronger and more self-assured with the (no spoilers) encore song—an anthem that every older woman I know has felt dirty about crooning behind tinted car windows rolled all the way up.

Eppley slips slowly into the Stevie Nicks persona, almost shyly, as if trying it on in the dressing room. Eppley’s voice is soft and pretty, subtle almost. With “Sara,” she had me transported—easily one of the best performances of the evening. By the end of the set, she is swaying and twirling more confidently, beautifully bringing the more introverted Christine McVie’s “Everywhere” and “Little Lies.”

With strong vocals, funny banter and confident stage presence, Rachel Landon powerhouses the hard blues songs, her greatest hits being the obscure “Oh Well,” followed by “World Turning” and the thoughtful ballad “Landslide.” Landon is also a standout as a backup vocalist, easily picked out for pinpointing just the right harmony with any lead singer—not an amateur-level skill.

Much like Christine McVie, Jess Logan provides a solid keyboard backdrop, although her vocals lie more in the alto range, throaty and flinty, delivering sensually sentimental performances with “Silver Springs,” “Rhiannon,” “Gold Dust Woman” and the nowhere-to-hide acoustic “Never Going Back Again.” And extra points to Logan for donning the short-lived snood associated with Nicks’ fashion sense. “Rhiannon” was my favorite song of the evening, with every element tight and perfectly on-point.

Jeremy Blouch/Alexander Dalious on bass guitar and Dani Fiore on drums lay a cohesive foundation, driving and pulsating in the backdrop. In Mick Fleetwood and John McVie style, the drums and bass set the mood without overpowering, allowing the vocalists to shine.

Inspired by the Landon family, I brought my dad as my plus-one. Dad has been a Fleetwood Mac super-fan since Bob Welch and Peter Green were members. Whether your own plus-one is a gold dust gypsy named Jewel-Eyed Judy or someone younger from the Rhiannon era, at intermission, be sure to go back again to Open Stage’s lobby bar for a Fleetwood Mac-inspired cocktail. No spoilers, but the wordplay will not go over your head. Oh, and don’t leave too early. If you yell “Encore” at the end, you’ll hear a secret song not listed in the program.

“Go Your Own Way: A Celebration of Fleetwood Mac” runs through Sept. 21 at Open Stage, 25 N. Court St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.openstagehbg.com/shows/fleetwoodmac.  

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Midtown Cinema suffers water damage from storm, closes for restoration

Midtown Cinema (file photo)

Harrisburg arthouse patrons will need to take an extended intermission, as Midtown Cinema has closed temporarily due to flooding.

The remnants of Hurricane Debby swept through the Harrisburg area overnight and early this morning, causing widespread flooding and downed trees.

The cinema, located on Reily Street, suffered water damage inside the building, according to Rachel Landon, the cinema’s general manager.

“I woke up this morning to some incredibly difficult news,” Landon said, in an email. “It turns out Hurricane Debby gifted the cinema by flooding our facility overnight, and the damage in significant enough that we will have to temporarily close our doors for restoration.”

Water damage occurred “throughout the facility,” according to a cinema press release.

“The full extent of the damage is still being assessed, but it is clear that substantial restoration efforts will be required to return Midtown Cinema to working order,” the release stated.

Landon estimated that the restoration “may take several weeks, meaning that all future programming is cancelled.”

“This is an incredibly challenging time for us, especially after over two decades of serving the Harrisburg community,” said John Tierney, co-owner of LIFT Development and Midtown Cinema. “Midtown Cinema has been a fixture in the city’s cultural scene, and we are committed to doing everything in our power to restore the cinema and continue our mission.”

The cinema stated that employees will contact patrons who purchased tickets for cancelled shows.

Going forward, the cinema plans to keep members, patrons and the community updated on the restoration process through its website and social media channels.

“As we work through this difficult period, we look forward to reopening our doors and continuing to enrich, connect, and inspire our community through the art of film,” Landon said.

Midtown Cinema is located at 250 Reily St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.midtowncinema.com.

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