Tag Archives: katherine luck

Seattle’s Watershed Opera presents modernized, family-friendly arias

6 Dec

The singers of Watershed Opera are more attractive than the law allows. Svelte and sexy,

Watershed Opera's “Femmes Fatale” presented an evening of murder, mystery and mermaids at Town Hall Seattle on Dec. 3.

Watershed Opera's “Femmes Fatale” presented an evening of murder, mystery and mermaids at Town Hall Seattle on Dec. 3. Photo courtesy of Watershed Opera.

their look falls somewhere between soap opera glamour and glitzy prom-wear. Think sequined evening gowns, slinky chiffon scarves and sweeping up-dos. If you ever wondered who, besides 15-year-olds, buys those rhinestone chandelier earrings at Claire’s Boutique in the mall, the answer is pretty people with pretty voices. They aren’t tacky, however. They’re having fun with the opera singer stereotype.

- Read full review at Crosscut.com

Seattle’s 5 best bets for the holiday season

2 Dec

When it comes to holiday productions, Seattle is drowning. Katherine Luck separates

Seattle's annual production of Black Nativity returns to the Moore Theatre in December. Photo by Chris Bennion.

Seattle's annual production of Black Nativity returns to the Moore Theatre in December. Photo by Chris Bennion.

Seattle’s annual production of Black Nativity returns to the Moore Theatre in December. Photo by Chris Bennion.

the men from the boys.

Shopping around for holiday entertainment in Seattle can be as trying as a trip to an overcrowded mall. While the abundance of holiday performances from which to choose is certainly appreciated, narrowing the list down to a core group of must-see shows presents a challenge. The following is a selection of the best bets for 2011, from dance to traditional theatrical favorites to musical extravaganzas.

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
“The Herdmans were the worst kids in the whole history of the world,” narrator Beth Bradley informs the audience at the outset of The Best Christmas Pageant Ever.

- Read article at Crosscut.com.

A drama of aging offers insight, pain

1 Dec

After 15 years of making his Master of Social Work degree earn its keep at various

Mark Cherniack's one-man show, "Jalopies," is at Annex Theatre through Dec 10. Photo courtesy of Mark Cherniack.

Mark Cherniack's one-man show, "Jalopies," is at Annex Theatre through Dec 10. Photo courtesy of Mark Cherniack.

retirement facilities, Mark Cherniack appears to have learned a hard lesson: Getting old is painful. His one-man play, Jalopies, presents inspired-by-true-stories from inside a Seattle assisted-living facility. While not altogether devoid of hope, these stories are none too cheery.

- Read review at Crosscut.com.

Theater Schmeater’s latest takes a road trip through holiday pandemonium

25 Nov

Rachel (Alyssa Keene) is a Christmas junkie. She gets high by anticipating Santa,

Rachel (Alyssa Keene) and Tom (Mathew Middleton) await the first improbable plot twist in Reckless. Photo by D. Hastings.

Rachel (Alyssa Keene) and Tom (Mathew Middleton) await the first improbable plot twist in Reckless. Photo by D. Hastings.

experiences uncontrolled euphoria at the sight of falling snow, and nearly swoons at the sound of holiday carols. But this Christmas Eve, her husband, Tom (Mathew Middleton), gives her the worst present ever.

“I took a contract out on your life!” he blurts out. The hitman is on his way, so out the window she goes, fleeing for her life in her robe and slippers, with the parting words, “This is so . . . mean!”

- Read full review at Crosscut.com.

New Seattle theater company Blank Stage Theater’s first foray

22 Nov

Remember your high school math teacher expounding on the elegance of proofs? These often confounding demonstrations of the truth of mathematical statements have driven many a mathematician to distraction, as evidenced by the 358-year struggle to discover a proof for Fermat’s Last Theorem, former holder of the Guinness World Record for “most difficult math problem.” Their elusive, maddening beauty provides the framework for David Auburn’s 2001 opus, Proof.

Catherine (Nathania ten Wolde) struggles with math and madness in Blank Stage Theater's production of Proof. Photo by Mary Kalhor.

Catherine (Nathania ten Wolde) struggles with math and madness in Blank Stage Theater's production of Proof. Photo by Mary Kalhor.

- Read full review at Crosscut.

Michael Jackson tribute a circus of error and bizarre subtext

11 Nov

If you’ve ever wondered what a big, blowout rock concert would look like if its superstar

The stripper pole routine, performed to Michael Jackson's 1993 song "Dangerous." Photo courtesy of Cirque du Soleil.

happened to be dead, look no further. Cirque du Soleil’s Michael Jackson The Immortal World Tour is it. A bloated bonanza larded with some of the most popular music of all time, high tech wizardry that failed as often as it astonished, and so-so acrobatic routines, Michael Jackson The Immortal would have destroyed Jackson’s career if he’d had the ego to mount such a production during his lifetime.

- Read full review at crosscut.com.

Mile-high dining and double agents

4 Nov

Cafe Nordo’s latest dinner theatre production blends 1960s air travel, Northwest food, and communist spies. Welcome aboard.

Cafe Nordo  International spies Saul Needle (Ray Tagavilla), Svetlana Romanova (Aimee Bruneau) and Lin Biao (Max Davis) are on a mission to Seattle in Cafe Nordo: To Savor Tomorrow.

International spies Saul Needle (Ray Tagavilla), Svetlana Romanova (Aimee Bruneau) and Lin Biao (Max Davis) are on a mission to Seattle in "Cafe Nordo: To Savor Tomorrow." Photo courtesy of Cafe Nordo.

You’re seated aboard Pan Am Flight 892, about to take off from Honolulu bound for Seattle. You’ve just listened to President Kennedy announce the opening of the World’s Fair. It’s 1962. Creating an intimate fantasy world, filled with stunning stewardesses, communist spies, CIA plots, and some of the best cocktail fare in town, Café Nordo launched its fourth dinner theater extravaganza in Fremont’s West of Lenin theater on Oct. 28.

- Read full review at Crosscut.com.

New Mormon play bewilders, but with genuine angst

1 Nov

The Mormon Bird Play is a challenging piece of theater. Six male actors play young

The Mormon Bird Play by Roger Benington makes its world premiere at Washington Ensemble Theatre in Capitol Hill. Photo courtesy of Washington Ensemble Theatre.

The Mormon Bird Play by Roger Benington makes its world premiere at Washington Ensemble Theatre in Capitol Hill. Photo courtesy of Washington Ensemble Theatre.

girls. And birds. And Mormon pioneer women, who might also be birds. Making its world premiere on Oct. 28 at Washington Ensemble Theatre, this play by triple threat Roger Benington (playwright/director/set designer) envisions the environs of Salt Lake Temple as a nest of superstition, secrets, miracles, and black magic.

- Read full review at crosscut.com.

Robin Hood provokes cheers at Seattle Children’s Theatre

27 Oct

With an emphasis on action and adventure, which never go out of style, Seattle Children’s Theatre recently unveiled their new production of the medieval tale of Robin Hood. The mythic English folk hero, who robbed from the rich and gave to the poor, has been given new life in a high-energy production that pits good versus evil while evoking laughter and cheers from the audience.

(L-R) Hans Altwies and Basil Harris in "Robin Hood." Photo by Chris Bennion.

(L-R) Hans Altwies and Basil Harris in "Robin Hood." Photo by Chris Bennion.

Under the direction of Allison Narver, the play moves at a lightning-fast clip, buffeting the audience from sword fight to archery tournament to tender love scene with speedy grace. As Robin Hood, Hans Altwies does more than just shoot a few arrows. He climbs trees, swings from ropes and tumbles around the stage with astonishing agility.

Altwies and co-star David Quicksall — who plays several key characters, including Little John, Friar Tuck, Will Scarlett and Prince John — are both veterans of the death-defying, rope-climbing free-for-all that was Seattle Children’s Theatre’s 2010 production of In The Northern Lands. Joining Altwies and Quicksall are Hana Lass (Maid Marian and Much the Miller’s Son) and Basil Harris (the hilarious Sheriff of Nottingham and the humorless King Richard).

The actors seamlessly don and doff roles, constantly changing costumes (cleverly designed for rapid removal by Catherine Hunt) and personas — even accents. Set Designer Jennifer Lupton’s take on Sherwood Forest is dark and brooding, with plenty of branches to swing from and shady corners to leap out of.

The production is hurt by Greg Banks’ bizarrely structured script, however. The text jumps erratically (and needlessly) from stage action to first person narration to third person narration — all carried out by the same actor in the space of a single paragraph of dialogue. Banks can’t seem to decide if his play is a straight-up adventure piece, a morality play about poverty and injustice, or a British pantomime complete with action-killing exhortations from the actors, urging the audience to shout things at the villains as they commit their villainy. Given the agility and high-caliber acting of the cast, Seattle Children’s Theatre would have been well advised to go with a simpler Robin Hood script.

Though the play is recommended for kids age 8 and up, the younger members of the audience were able to appreciate most of the swordplay and silliness.

Robin Hood runs through Nov. 27. For more information, visit www.sct.org.

A charming play at The Rep, but a dark question beneath

9 Oct

Lorenzo Pisoni was raised by clowns. As a teenager, his father, Larry, ran away from

Humor Abuse review by Katherine Luck

"Humor Abuse" is at Seattle Repertory Theatre through Oct. 23. Photo by Chris Bennion.

home to join the circus. By the time little Lorenzo could walk, he was running away, too — away from his father’s small-time family circus in search of the real world. His father’s response was to pin a button on Pisoni’s clothing that read, “I’m Lorenzo and I belong to the circus.” Pisoni’s one-man show, Humor Abuse, is simultaneously a tribute and an indictment, drawing the audience into the true story of a childhood dominated by a quest for laughter that was all too serious.

- Read full review at Crosscut.com.

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