Author Archive
Sixty-six years old and still packing a punch
Posted by: | CommentsAbove: A scene from ATC’s production of “The Glass Menagerie”
It’s the final weekend for Arizona Theatre Company’s acclaimed production of Tennessee Williams’ earth-shaking 1944 drama, The Glass Menagerie.
This is a don’t-miss production, so do your best to grab a remaining ticket or two.
It’s amazing how great art can continue to speak to us decades after its creation. Centuries later is one thing — by that time, the noise has filtered out and all that’s left is the bell-like sound of the work’s final meaning. But decades are the real test. Changes in fashion — verbal, visual and sentimental — are merciless, and what in 1944 seemed radical and powerful could easily feel unremarkable in 2010. Not so the early plays of Tennessee Williams. Go and see for yourself.
Worth the “Diversion”
Posted by: | CommentsAbove: Link to Ballet Arizona’s new YouTube channel
Five hours and counting until the final performance by Ballet Arizona of its Classic Innovations program at the Orpheum Theatre. The program includes company director Ib Andersen’s newest ballet, Diversions, set to the score of the same name by Benjamin Britten.
Post-Balanchine, it has become a choreographer’s duty to uncover music never used before in dance, and to unfold through it his or her relationship to that music. Andersen accomplishes this in stellar fashion in Diversions, an eye-filling essay on masculine and feminine movement types. Among other things, Andersen has taken care to use his airborne males to maximum effect. I’d wager (hyperbole alert here) there are more jumps in this ballet than in any three others.
Britten composed the music during his American sojourn in the early ’40s. (He’d come from England as a pacifist to avoid involvement in World War II, only to find the USA engaged after Pearl Harbor.) Written for Paul Wittgenstein, who’d lost his right arm in World War I, the piece for piano, left hand, and orchestra amounted to a wordless protest of sorts against the imbecility of war. There’s no such subtext in Andersen’s ballet, which exults in the sheer energy and inventive complexity of the music.
Ballet Arizona will make its Kennedy Center debut in June with Diversions.
Last-minute romance
Posted by: | CommentsNo video is yet available of Ballet Arizona’s Sleeping Beauty. Above, to give a taste of the company’s excellence: Natalia Magnicaballi in Ballet Arizona’s La Sylphide a few years back.
I’ll let the print media tell you, as I assume they will, about Ballet Arizona’s lush and energetic production of The Sleeping Beauty; about how Ginger Smith danced Aurora Thursday night like a sunbeam lighting up a landscape; about Roman Zavarov’s astonishing knack for staying aloft at the exact height of a jump; about how Natalia Magnicaballi’s Lilac Fairy owned the stage at Symphony Hall by dint of her seemingly easy musicality and presence. Certainly they’ll tell you that, and if they don’t, well, I just did.
That’s the good news: Phoenix has a production of this treasured, damned-difficult-to-produce ballet to rival that of any city our size and a good many considerably bigger.
The bad news: You waited too long to get those ever-so-romantic tickets to the Valentine’s Day performance of The Sleeping Beauty and now it’s SOLD OUT! (You might be able to catch a couple tickets for the performance tonight, Feb. 13.)
Luckily for you, there are about a gazillion other Valentine’s Day-appropriate events where you can take your sweetie to curry the intimacy you so desire. Okay, Sleeping Beauty would have been No. 1 to that end, but you blew it, so make the best of your situation and choose from the following:
I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change (Mesa)
The title says it all. This Off-Broadway musical hit explores the craziness of relationships, ca. Now. The Valley perennial is in its fourth production.
Gypsy (Peoria)
There’s life in the old girl, and more romance than you might recall if all you know is the movie version. Oh yeah, and there’s stripping – not exactly romantic, but in the right direction.
Madama Butterfly (downtown Phoenix)
If tragic love somehow fulfills your emotional need and gets her or him in the right mood, you can’t do better than Puccini’s classic about love to die for.
The Play About the Naked Guy (Phoenix)
Here’s a wild card: Stray Cat’s production of a play that pits commerce against art. Commerce wins, I guess, since the play is marketed partly on the basis of the very nudity-as-sales-device it satirizes. Not your traditional Valentine’s Day date, but who said we have to be traditional?
She hasn’t been kissed in a hundred years…
Posted by: | Comments
A scene from Ballet Arizona’s production of The Sleeping Beauty. (Photo by Tim Fuller)
Everyone knows Nutcracker, and everybody at least knows about Swan Lake.
But Tchaikovsky composed three full-length ballet scores and it’s the least-known, Sleeping Beauty, that many balletomanes count as his greatest.
“It’s less often done than the other Tchaikovsky ballets because of the number of people you have to put onstage,” says Maria Simonetti, rehearsal director for Ballet Arizona. Ballet Arizona’s production of Sleeping Beauty plays Feb. 11 -14, with Tchaikovsky’s music performed live by The Phoenix Symphony.
Simonetti’s job is to coordinate the activities of everyone involved in the mammoth production. She plans rehearsals for the 40 dancers, apprentices and trainees of Ballet Arizona, and if a dancer needs to be called out for a costume fitting or a press interview, Simonetti schedules it.
She doesn’t get much sleep doing her job for this ballet.
“We have 26 little children, 30 teenagers and 40 company dancers in Sleeping Beauty. Some of them have as many as five costume changes,” Simonetti says.
The story of Sleeping Beauty follows the famous fairytale, in which an envious witch puts a beautiful princess under a spell. The princess pricks her finger on a spinning wheel and falls into a deep sleep. Only “love’s true kiss” can awaken her – and that takes 100 years to arrive. The music was used as the basis for the score to Disney’s animated feature of the same name.
The 100-year wait poses a challenge for productions of Sleeeping Beauty, Simonetti says. Since a century has gone by when the princess awakes, all the costumes and wigs on the cast have to be different from the ones before.
Another part of Simonetti’s job is observing the rehearsals run by company artistic director Ib Andersen. She notes Andersen’s choreography and corrections, and helps ensure continuity in future rehearsals and performances. As she puts it:
“I work to make sure the dancers are moving the same feet, the same arms” from one time to the next.
A native of Buenos Aires, Simonetti was trained there at the fabled Teatro Colon and worked as ballet mistress for Chicago’s Hubbard Street Theatre before joining Ballet Arizona in 1997. In the year 2000, the company near extinction, Andersen came aboard as artistic director. Simonetti became his right hand in rebuilding Ballet Arizona into a viable company, and one of high artistic quality.
“I’ve been working for Ib for ten years now,” she says. “He’s a great artist to work for as well as a great boss.”
That the company can stage all three Tchaikovsky ballets in a single season – Swan Lake and Nutcracker came earlier in the year – is tribute to Andersen’s vision, the dancers’ talent, and to the persistent striving of Ballet Arizona’s board, staff and administration.
Dynamic…and then some
Posted by: | CommentsLeila Josefowicz plays the final movement of Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1
There are violinists who effect a natural cool – the name Hilary Hahn comes to mind – and then there are violinists like the Canadian winner of a MacArthur Genius Grant, Leila Josefowicz, seen above playing some Bruch. One way is not right and the other wrong; they are simply two opposing ways of conforming the body to the experience of musical expression.
Josefowicz will perform in recital tonight, Friday, Feb. 5 at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts.
Of awesomeness, geeks, and breaking the mold
Posted by: | CommentsJason Robert Brown sings “Being a Geek” from 13
Not many casts of musicals get kudos from the guy who wrote the songs. But on Sunday night, Jason Robert Brown pronounced the Valley Youth Theatre production of his show, 13, to be “awesome.”
“I see many productions of 13 around the country,” Brown went on to qualify, “and not a lot of them are awesome.”
I saw VYT’s 13 opening night, and I have to agree with its songwriter.
Brown was in Phoenix at the invitation of Valley Youth Theatre artistic director Bobb Cooper, who smartly decided to mount the Arizona premiere of this dazzling show about coming into adolescence, despite the fact that the original Broadway production closed in 2009 after only a brief run. Go figure.
13 tells the story of 12-year-old Evan Goldman, whose happy life in New York is disrupted by divorce. He suddenly finds himself in Indiana, where he is forced to confront his own sense of worth in the face of cliques and peer pressure. The song “Being a Geek,” sung above by Brown in a YouTube clip, sort of sums it up.
Brown not only attend the opening, but gave a concert of his songs Sunday at the Herberger, performing numbers from 13, Parade, Songs for a New World and a show that must qualify as one of the best and most original musicals all time, The Last Five Years. I confronted Brown backstage after the concert with the words, “Broadway songwriters are not supposed to be terrific singers, pianists and entertainers,” to which he shrugged and modestly replied, “I broke the mold.”
13 runs through Feb. 13.
To Lenny, With Love
Posted by: | CommentsLeonard Bernstein on musical metaphor
A group of musicians are presenting something called “To Lenny With Love” at the Kerr Cultural Center tonight (Friday, Jan. 22).
I’ve never heard of the musicians performing, but I plan to be there, because the “Lenny” of the title is Lenny Bernstein, and I don’t miss opportunities to celebrate that man.
Yeah, I know all the negatives. He was self-important. Years of praise had gone to his head and made him less than humble. His appetites were limitless and often out of control. His energies were so scattered among composing, conducting, lecturing, etc. that he failed to accomplish in any one of his disciplines what he might have accomplished had he only stuck to one.
And your point is…?
The greater a gift someone brings you, the more you forgive. Right? Lenny’s gift was enormous: He loved music with unlimited passion and wanted everyone else to love it like he did. I can live with the unfettered appetite thing and the big head and all, if that’s what I get in return.
I’ve written so much about Lenny for so many publications that I’m not quite sure when or for what the following was written. I searched “Bernstein” on my Mac and found it. It seems to be a review of the CD “Leonard Bernstein’s New York,” a Nonesuch compilation of Bernstein’s Broadway and other Manhattan-related music.
Here ’tis:
There are inexplicable times when musical energy settles on a single human being in such concentration that it defies explanation. So it was with Leonard Bernstein.
He was the first great American-born conductor. He was the first American-born music director of the New York Philharmonic. He was a sensitive pianist, a passionate teacher, and a writer of insightful commentary.
I was blessed to experience that power several times in person. In 1985 I took a job writing press releases for The New York Philharmonic, and as I sat at my desk on the fourth floor of Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center, music from the auditorium was piped in. This was so I would know when breaks came and could run downstairs to get musicians’ permissions for photographs and press release texts.
One day, the music being rehearsed below was Aaron Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man, a short, simple piece known forward and backward by most lovers of American music. Zubin Mehta, the Philharmonic’s music director of the time, was leading the rehearsal. I sat concentrating on a press release, vaguely aware that the rehearsal had come to a stop, when all of a sudden it started up again. And when it did, I literally jumped out of my seat. It was still the Copland Fanfare, but transformed. The same pages of music had suddenly taken on new energy, new meaning, a fresh sense of importance.
Leonard Bernstein had taken over the rehearsal.
That’s why he was the best-regarded American conductor of his time. And yet, Bernstein was primarily a composer. By ”primarily” I mean that the center of his musical life was composing. Even when conducting, Bernstein thought like a composer — one key to his strength on the podium. His output was slim – he was busy doing all those other things – and toward the end of his years the energy dissipated, producing works that were simply not up to the level of his early years. As a mature man, he was perhaps more than a little self-conscious of his place, his persona, his celebrity; the music showed it. Ah, but as a young man….
”Leonard Bernstein’s New York” is the name of a CD from Nonesuch containing selections from Bernstein’s three musicals set in New York, plus bits from his New York ballet Fancy Free and the sole film he scored, On the Waterfront, also set in New York. All the music was composed before Bernstein turned 40 and took over the artistic helm of the Philharmonic. He would never again compose a successful musical or any music to equal for sheer popularity his youthful output (with the sole exception of Chichester Psalms, 1965).
There are songs from On the Town (1944), Wonderful Town (1953) and West Side Story (1957), divided roughly into the bewitching (”A Little Bit in Love,” “One Hand, One Heart,” the Danzon from Fancy Free) and the frantic (”Come up to My Place,” “Wrong Note Rag”), and what’s clear in all of them is this easy sense of inventive melody, at slow tempo or fast.
”There is no more beguiling melodist,” Ned Rorem wrote of him on the occasion of Bernstein’s 70th birthday.
I believe that Bernstein’s uniquely enchanting gift for melody owed largely to the congruence of his talent with the mood and musical language of New York in the 1940s and ’50s. Bernstein was not a native New Yorker, and he reveled toward the end in being associated with the Vienna Philharmonic. He seemed to distance himself from identification with New York, even downplaying what he called the ”Broadway Lenny” image many people had of him.
Yet it was not only New York energy that fueled the best of his early music, but specifically Broadway’s musical theater language. Before the 1960s, when the current pop language blew into place and blew everything else away, the Broadway musical was the lingua franca that made popular-Classical cross-pollination possible. Like Gershwin before him, Bernstein wrote for the commercial stage and the concert hall, without any great change from one to the other.
Want evidence? Consider the middle movement of Chichester Psalms. The main melody was originally set to a completely different text for an abandoned musical, with lyrics by Comden and Green. In Leonard Bernstein’s New York, there is a song called “Ain’t Got No Tears Left,” an aching ballad cut from On the Town and recorded here for the first time. I listened to it and experienced a weird sense of hearing something familiar, but in a dream. Then I recognized the tune. Bernstein had salvaged the cut song, increased the tempo and used it as a theme in the scherzo to his Symphony No. 2, Age of Anxiety.
This easy back-and-forth of Classical and pop is now vanished. After the sea-change of the ’60s, popular music took on a different feel, and the musical language of the Broadway theater transmogrified into Phantom of the Opera, et al. The result is that a great source of American musical energy and invention has been squashed.
By virtue of one of the stranger twists of fate in my life, I was the drummer for what might have been Bernstein’s last musical. The never-to-be -produced Race to Urga was a show Bernstein started in the mid-’60s with Stephen Sondheim as lyricist. The script was based on a Brecht play somewhat predictably about greed, capitalism, etc.
Jerome Robbins was enamored enough of its partially completed score to mount a workshop production at Lincoln Center in 1987. As a friend to the music director, I was volunteered as drummer when the first one quit.
It was a joyous couple of weeks for me, watching Robbins work with playwright John Guare and a young cast to mount a production intended to persuade Bernstein to come back to Broadway for one more show.
The score was the familiar enchantment, a typically Bernsteinian blend of arching ballad and rhythmical kick. At the end of to weeks, we did the show for an invited audience including Bernstein, who attended with his sister on his arm, and Sondheim, who sat through it bent over puzzles in a newspaper. We awaited word from The Man himself, but ultimately his decision was not to return to the project. He never again wrote for the theater.
So, instead of more Bernstein shows, we have “Leonard Bernstein’s New York.” I’ll take of Lenny whatever I can get.
He’s got hand, baby….
Posted by: | CommentsGeorge Costanza peddles McDonald’s
I like to boast to fellow Seinfeld fans that I knew about George Costanza long before he was George Costanza. In 1989, I scored free tickets to a remarkable show called Jerome Robbins’ Broadway, a tribute to the great director-choreographer. Made of bits from Robbins’ previous shows, this crazy quilt of musical comedy was held together by a narrator of such irrepressible, cherubic energy that you found yourself actually waiting for the singing, dancing, wisecracking narrator to return to the stage for his next bit.
This was Jason Alexander, who only a few months later would start swapping non sequiturs with Jerry Seinfeld on NBC and help make TV sitcom history.
Turns out, I wasn’t the only one who caught Jason Alexander’s talent, pre-Seinfeld. In the mid-’80s, several million TV watchers witnessed Alexander, hair sprouting luxuriously from his scalp, pitching the “McD LT” specialty hamburger in the commercial posted above. Somehow, I look at this and think, “George? Is that you?”
Alexander was an experienced showman long before he was George, and he’s returned to live theater in his most current project, Jason Alexander as Donny Clay, a one-man, stand-up, semi-improvisational, interactive spoof of lifestyle gurus. The show plays one night only – today, Saturday, Jan. 9 – presented at the Celebrity Theatre by the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. Tickets are still available.
Back to normal?
Posted by: | CommentsPATTI LUPONE in “Gypsy”
Now is the time of year when we all pretend we really liked the fact entertainment has been dominated for nearly a month by holiday fare. We smile when we say Nutcracker, we exult in A Christmas Carol, we sing Hallelujah for Handel’s Messiah, but we silently thank the deity of our choice or the coming of January.
Of course, some of us like to keep the seasonal flame alight. If you’re a holiday hanger-on, you may want to catch The Phoenix Symphony’s annual, traditional New Year’s Eve Gala: Viennese waltzes, Auld Lang Syne, and a flute of champagne. You may even wish to hear those Christmas carols one last time – I don’t blame you, they are like nothing else we hear the rest of the year. If so, check out the last two nights of Copperstate Dinner Theater’s Christmas Jukebox, an interactive event in which you choose the holiday tunes you want to hear.
On the other hand, if you’re ready to say goodbye to the holidays and hello to the middle of the theater/music/dance season, your Phoenix Symphony event of choice won’t be the New Year’s Eve Gala, it’s be the Symphony’s premier pops event of the 2009-2010 season: Broadway goddess Patti Lupone in concert Saturday, Jan. 2. ASU Gammage is also offering a sudden change-up from Christmas in the form of that chestnut of the Great White Way, Annie.
After this weekend, though, it’s back to normal – and a pretty good normal it is, too, with appearances by comedian Jason Alexander, jazz singer Dennis Rowland, the Ying Quartet and Marvin Hamlisch, plus productions of Ain’t Misbehavin’ and August” Osage County – and that’s all before Jan. 15. As usual, check out ShowUp.com to get a jump on planning your cultural month.
Behind the ballet
Posted by: | CommentsBallet is made of sweat and grace. As Ballet Arizona’s production of Ib Andersen’s The Nutcracker enters its final week for this year, the grace will be evident to anyone sitting in the audience at Phoenix Symphony Hall. To see the sweat, you have to attend rehearsal – or talk to someone in the company.
Click above to hear an interview with Ballet Arizona’s Ian Poulis talking about the production. The interview is from the radio show Arts on the Town from two years ago, but Poulis’ comments — about Nutcracker and Ballet Arizona, about Balanchine technique and the challenges facing young dancers — still apply.


