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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

  • Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. It’s a pretty broad beat, but Rich delights in finding influences of the past in the present and showing fine arts fans the value of pop culture, and vice versa. ~ Copious Notes is a blog covering that broad spectrum. If you want to read about specific areas of interest, such as theater or opera, click on one of the categories to the right and you will be whisked away to all posts in that category. Also, look around the blog for links; multimedia items such as photo albums, videos, and interviews with artists; and other nuggets. Have fun, and thanks for dropping in. The header for this blog was designed by Danny Kelly and the illustration was drawn by Camille Weber.

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Theater

October 17, 2008

The Opera House's new look

Go into many towns in the United States and you can find old theaters that were once the hub of activity sadly showing their age with paint peeling, curtains falling and creaky old seats breaking as an era slips into oblivion. That is not the case with Lexington’s 122-year-old Opera House. Even last year, visiting artists such as the Broadway seasoned cast and crew from 12 Angry Men were singing the theater’s praises.

If they could see it now.

Over the summer, the Lexington Opera House underwent a $2 million renovation, updating the seats, soundsystem, dressing rooms and many other accomodations. Patrons get their first look tonight as the UK Opera Theatre opens its production of La Boheme. But Tuesday afternoon, photographer David Perry and I got an advance tour with Opera House General Manager Luanne Franklin. Above, you can see a slide show from our visit.

Click here for a larger version of the slide show.

Click here for the whole story on the renovation.

Click here for more on La Boheme.

And click here for the Opera House’s upcoming schedule from LexGo.

October 01, 2008

Natasha's next stage

081001veeprc084 Ryan Case and Shayne Brakefield on the new stage at Natasha's Cafe, where they will present The Mystery of Irma Vep, Oct. 5-17. Photo by Rich Copley.

Folks who turn out to see Balagula Theatre's production of The Mystery of Irma Vep will also see the debut of the new stage at Natasha's.

For years, the cafe has built an audience for its theater offerings usually performing on a stage the size of a modest walk-in closet. It definitely has its charm.

But, according to Balagula theater director Ryan Case, cafe owners Gene and Natasha Williams decided the audience had grown to the point it was time to expand the seating and the stage.

So, Natasha's boutique has moved up to the corner to Main Street and Esplanade as Props Lifestyle Gallery. In the boutique's space is a stage in the back corner of the additional space that was once the boutique, and seating will fill the floor in front of it. A bar will move in where the small stage used to be.

Case says Vep, a two man, myriad-character play could not have been produced on the old stage. He did not know what will follow Vep playwise, though Natasha's has regular schedule of music in addition the theater.

September 29, 2008

2008 Governor's Awards in the Arts

080929dimartino Centre College music professor Vince DiMartino, a ubiquitous presence in Central Kentucky jazz circles, is the recipient of the artist award in the Governor's Awards in the Arts. Photo from Centre.edu.

The 2008 Governor's Awards in the Arts will be presented at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the rotunda of the State Capitol Building in Frankfort.

This year's awards mark two big changes: The award presentations have been shifted from the winter to the fall. Also, it will be the first round of Governor's Awards presented by Steve Beshear, who was elected last fall. The recipients this year include a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, one of Lexington's highest profile musicians, and a Lexingtonian who heads up one of theater's most unlikely success stories.

Here are the recipients:

  • Retired Brown-Forman chairman and CEO Owsley Brown II wins the Milner Award, given for individual commitment to the arts. Brown was active with numerous Louisville organizations, including Actors Theatre of Louisville and the Kentucky Opera.
  • 080929parks Fort Knox native and playwright Suzan-Lori Parks will receive the National Award for a Kentuckian who has had a nationwide impact in the arts. Among Parks' achievements are the Pulitzer Prize-winning Topdog/Underdog and the project 365 Days/365 Plays. She was also a 2001 recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant. Photo, right, by Stephanie Diani.
  • Vince DiMartino is the Artist Award winner. The Centre College music professor and trumpeter is a ubiquitous presence in Central Kentucky jazz circles both as a performer and educator, and he has performed on stages around the world. DiMartino is also co-founder of the Great American Brass Band Festival, each June in Danville.
  • 080929brockKentucky Repertory Theatre in Horse Cave wins the Community Artist Award. The 23-year-old professional  theater defied convention by opening and thriving in a town of just 2,000. The theater is directed by Robert Brock, a Henry Clay High School and University of Kentucky graduate. Photo from imagesglasgow.com.
  • 080929hughes Nicholasville's Charlie Hughes wins the media award for his twice-monthly Kentucky Literary Newsletter which promotes literary arts throughout the state. Photo from Wind Publications.
  • Louisville based ear X-tacy and its owner John Timmons get the business award for support of the arts.
  • The City of Covington wins the government award for utilizing the arts to revitalize its downtown.
  • Owensboro's Julie Ann White will receive the education award for her work in Owensboro Public Schools where she is a fine arts specialist and founded the school system's annual Fine Arts Festival.
  • The Cowan Community Action Group wins the folk heritage award for making traditional arts a centerpiece of its educational outreach.

All honorees will receive Upward Glance, a sculpture by Louisville artist William M. Duffy.

September 26, 2008

Laura Bell Bundy on 'Legally Blonde -- The Musical' closing

With the annoucement that Legally Blonde -- The Musical is closing Oct. 19, we asked Lexington's Laura Bell Bundy, the original Elle Woods on Broadway, for her thoughts. This was her reply:

Bundy, Laura Bell -- Blond promo "It is a bit sad because it is such a great show and makes so many people happy!

"We made a family at Legally Blonde and we spent a significant part of our lives creating the show and keeping the show (and each other) alive.

"But, we had a good run, we broke ground for Broadway and made people who were never interested in theater before interested!  I think our producers were very bold in putting our show on MTV, and I know from the responses I have gotten and still get) from fans that it really meant something to them and made life better or more inspiring in some way.  That is what it is about!  I feel so proud to be a part of this show and this group of people!  My life was truly blessed and changed.  We, Legally Blonder's,  will always be in each others lives so I am not worried about that.  It's just sad to think that I won't be able to go to the Palace Theater to see them all at once! 

"I stopped by last night and even though people were a bit melancholy I think everyone is very proud of the show and of each other.  They are going to go out with such a BANG!  That is just the spirit of this group! The reality is, there are very few shows that last this long on Broadway!  And even fewer shows that actually ever make it...   Everyone should feel very fortunate and proud.  And, I think we all do."

Laura left the show in July and now resides in Nashville where she is working on her recording career, and a zillion other things.

Review: 'Rent Filmed Live on Broadway'

080926rent-rogerandmimi I should tell you: Frankfort's Will Chase as Roger connects with Renée Elise Goldsberry as Mimi in Rent Filmed Live on Broadway. Below: Adam Kantor as Mark sings for the cameras. Bottom: Tracie Thoms as Joanne and Kantor in The Tango Maureen. Copyrighted photos by Casey Stoufer for Sony Pictures.

This is how Rent should be seen on film.

In 2005, the Rent movie came out with great anticipation, and, to a lot of viewers like me, great disappointment. Chris Columbus' film did have great moments. La Vie Boheme and Jesse L. Martin's reprise of I'll Cover You stand out to me as iconic movie musical scenes.

But the movie picked apart the flow of Jonathan Larson's creation, making it more of a standard issue movie musical than the rock opera that it was, and the film as a whole felt hollow. 080926rent-mark It left a lot of us telling people who wondered why we are so enraptured with this show, "You have to see the stage version."

Well, the Broadway production is closed now, but this weekend, you can see Rent Filmed Live on Broadway at movie theaters around the country. The film was made during some of Rent's final Broadway performances, earlier this month. As a bonus for we Central Kentuckians, Frankfort native Will Chase plays Roger, the rocker struggling to connect with others while he faces the inevitability of AIDS.

Chase's interpretation is different from the Broadway Cast Recording and film Roger, Adam Pascal. He's a bit more subtle, with less of an angry edge. But the internal struggle is clear, and we can hear why Chase has become a go-to-guy for Broadway rock musicals.

He has a strong counterpart in Renee Elise Goldsberry as Mimi, who enters with a gorgeous, full voice in Light my Candle, and never flags.

For the uninitiated, Rent is a Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning musical about residents of the Alphabet City neighborhood in New York in the early 1990s. It is based on Giacomo Puccini's opera La Boheme, and these Bohemians struggle with poverty, AIDS and personal travails while trying to pursue their artistic ambitions. Adding to Rent's legend was lyricist and composer Jonathan Larson's tragic death from an aortic aneurysm hours after the final dress rehearsal for Rent's Off-Broadway opening.

All of the film cast is strong, and embodies the energy that made this show go for 12 years on Broadway. Rentheads will have no problem locking in on the story, while people more oriented to the movies may have to work a little bit to wrap their heads around some of the representational theater that takes place. 

Director Michael Warren and his camera crew did seem to have a little trouble capturing some of the full-stage ensemble numbers, particularly the title tune and the Christmas Bells that leads into Over the Moon. But Moon is one of the pieces that is captured exquisitely -- even got some in the crowd mooing on Thursday night at Fayette Mall -- 080926rent-tango in addition to Tango Maureen; One Song Glory, where we see how beautifully stage director Michael Greif isolated Roger on stage; Contact, filmed to accentuate its ghostly wildness; Will I? and Without You.

The last two, from Larson's music and lyrics to Warren's camera work, really help illustrate the big themes and personal stories that helped Rent pave the way for Broadway to address topics that were once taboo and make people see themselves and their friends in this New York story. That's the theme we also see in Seasons of Love, Rent's signature song that takes those huge topics of love, seasons and a year and breaks them down into 525,600 minutes. The final rendition of Seasons in this film also features the original Broadway cast of Rent.

Hopefully a DVD of Rent Filmed Live on Broadway is coming. If asked, "what is it about Rent?," the best answer still is to tell people to try to see it live. But this film is a solid document of this piece of musical theater history.

~ In addition to Will Chase, read more about Kentuckians in the national spotlight in Lu-Ann's Kentucky News Review.

September 24, 2008

Kentuckians leading Cincinnati Shakespeare's upcoming 'Hamlet'

So, you’re a Cincinnati theater company preparing to bring one of the greatest plays ever to your stage. Who do you turn to? A pair of Central Kentuckians, of course.

080924johnson-hamlet Actor Matt Johnson and director Brian Isaac Phillips are well established in the Queen City theater scene.

But allow us a moment of Bluegrass State pride as we note these two Central Kentuckians are leading the Cincinnati Shakespeare Co.’s production of Hamlet to the stage.

Phillips, the artistic director of Cincy Shakes and director of Hamlet, grew up in Lexington and Nicholasville. Johnson, the company’s associate artistic director who is playing Hamlet, hails from Georgetown. Both are graduates of Morehead State University.

The production opens Oct. 17 and runs through Nov. 16. For this production, Phillips is drawing on the film noir tradition to build Hamlet’s world of paranoia.

September 23, 2008

Actors Guild of Lexington hires managing director

Actors Guild of Lexington has hired Kimberly Shaw as its managing director.

Shaw will manage the business side of operations at Actors Guild, allowing artistic director Richard St. Peter to concentrate on AGL's theatrical endeavors.

080923shaw Shaw is a Lafayette High School graduate who has a master of fine arts degree from Columbia University. She comes to Lexington from Princeton University, where she was assistant director of operations at Richardson Auditorium. Shaw is a former research assistant with Actors Equity, the stage actors union, and her credits include Broadway, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the New York International Fringe Festival.

“After conducting a six month national search and interviewing several well qualified candidates, the board voted unanimously to offer the position to Kimberly Shaw," AGL Board President Jim Dickinson said in a news release.  We are delighted she has accepted. We believe that she will be able to substantively impact the business side of our organization and will assist in allowing our artistic ambitions to continue to grow.”

Shaw is the daughter of Lexington actor and director Sidney Shaw, who is directing AGL's current production, Tazewell Thompson's Constant Star. Actors Guild will hold a reception for Kimberly Shaw on the stage of the Downtown Arts Center, 141 E. Main St., at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 2.

September 19, 2008

'Constant Star' a timely history lesson

080909starrc006 Lisa Clark (front, center) is one of five actors who play Ida B. Wells and other characters in Actors Guild of Lexington's production of Constant Star. Behind her are (L-R) Sylvia Howard, Mia Harris, Cathy Rawlings and LaNora Faye Long. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

She stands in the middle of the stage, with four interrogators around her. The accusations fly:

Getting married was a distraction.

Having children showed a lack of commitment to the cause.

How can she be a wife and mother and still be a powerful agent of change?

A mother belongs at home.

No, those are not scenes from the first play about  Sarah Palin play to hit the stage.

This scene actually takes place about 1900 in Constant Star, Tazewell Thompson’s spiritual musical about journalist and activist Ida B. Wells that opened last weekend at Actors Guild of Lexington. It draws more than a few knowing laughs and deep breaths as we contemplate how things have and have not changed.

On the change side, Constant Star reminds us that less than a century ago, black people were routinely murdered in community spectacles. Now, we could be on the verge of electing a black man as president of the United States or a wife and mother of five as vice president.

On the other hand, the show reminds us that many of the issues faced by women and African-Americans are still alive and well in the 21st century.

Continue reading "'Constant Star' a timely history lesson" »

September 11, 2008

The curtain rises on the 2008-09 arts season in Lexington

080909starrc005 Cathy Rawlings plays journalist and activist Ida B. Wells and other characters in Actors Guild of Lexington's production of Taezwell Thompson's Constant Star. Photo by Rich Copley.

The 2008-09 arts season gets started this weekend with a rush of activity, including a milestone in Lexington arts history Friday night: George Zack's final concert conducting the Lexington Philharmonic as its music director. We have thoughts and some stats about Zack's 36-years with the orchestra here and at LexGo.

Two big plays open tonight:

~ Actors Guild of Lexington presents Tazewell Thompson's Constant Star, and the author will visit Saturday.

~ Studio Players bows with the British door-slamming comedy Don't Dress for Dinner.

Sunday, the University of Kentucky Art Museum opens its new exhibit, Masterworks by Kentucky Painters, 1819-1935.

And also Sunday, we publish our annual Fall Arts Guide. Get out your planners.

'Constant Star' at Actors Guild of Lexington

080908thompson Tazewell Thompson has directed all but two productions of Constant Star, his spiritual musical about journalist and activist Ida B. Wells. He'll be in Lexington this weekend to see Sidney Shaw's take on the show at Actors Guild of Lexington. Photo courtesy of Actors Guild.

For the past decade, Tazewell Thompson has been introducing theatergoers to Ida B. Wells.

Most people don’t know much about Wells when they settle into their theater seats to see his musical biography of her, Constant Star, which opens this weekend at Actors Guild of Lexington for a four-weekend run. Thompson really just knew the name when he watched a PBS documentary on the civil rights and women’s suffrage advocate who launched a relentless campaign against lynching in post-Civil War America.

“I was channel surfing, and I came to PBS, and this documentary had just started on Ida B. Wells,” Thompson says from his New York apartment. “I had heard of her, and I knew that she was a newspaperwoman, and she was connected to an anti-lynching crusade. She had just dazzled me in this documentary, and I couldn’t stop thinking about her.”

A year later, he was directing Shakespeare’s Cymbeline at Playmakers Repertory Theatre in Chapel Hill, N.C., and during his stay, he was offered a commission for a new work. It gave him a chance to look deeper into Wells’ life.

He found a few books, including a biography, and a diary, giving him deeper insight into Wells’ feelings and mission.

Initially, he started writing a conventional play, but then things started happening.

“In all the scenes, she kept coming out as someone who took over, and the men in those scenes appeared diminutive in her presence,” recalls Thompson, who is coming to Lexington for the show and will give a pre-show chat Saturday night. “I realized I could have a cast of three or four women to play all the roles.

“Once I discovered that, the play completely opened up for me and I discovered I could write it any way I wanted.”

Continue reading "'Constant Star' at Actors Guild of Lexington" »

September 08, 2008

A 'Rent' closing reader

080907rent-leads The closing night cast of the Broadway musical Rent included Frankfort's Will Chase as Roger, Michael McElroy as Tom Collins, Eden Espinosa as Maureen, and Rodney Hicks as Benny. Copyrighted photo by Casey Stouffer for Sony Pictures' Releasing.

Rent's grand finale appears to have created one of those wish-you-were-there moments you can really only get from live performance.

The groundbreaking Broadway production closed Sunday night after 12 years and 5,124 performances at the Nederlander Theatre.

Of course, 525,600 minutes is what Rentheads truly care about, the time being the measure of a year and the show the story of struggling artists in New York's East Village battling AIDS, addiction, poverty, society and some fading dreams of glory. 

Most shows close quietly with a notice and a last bow in front of the dwindling audience that prompted the end of the run. But Rent became a cultural icon, and by numerous accounts closed in front of an adoring audience that got to see original cast members join the current performers for a rendition of the hit Seasons of Love.

~ The Associated Press reported that last night's performance was dedicated to Jonathan Larson, the creator of Rent who died right after the final dress rehearsal, just like the first show. Reflecting on Larson, producer Allan S. Gordon told the AP, "I don't miss what he didn't write. I feel bad that he isn't here to enjoy what he did."

~ Broadwayworld.com covered the dedication of a bench at the real Life Cafe to Larson.

~ Over the Weekend, The New York Times' Anthony Tommasini reflected on his historic interview with Larson, just hours before he died.

~ Sara Krulwich, the Times' photographer with Tommasini on that assignment, recalls her journey with Rent, including telling the cast that Larson had posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Both of their pieces remind me of the value of arts journalism and beat reporting as the first draft of history.

The closing cast included Frankfort's own Will Chase as Roger, and though Rent has closed on Broadway, we will get to the see the show. The final cast was filmed, and the it will be shown in movie theaters Sept. 24, 25, 27 and 28. The Lexington Theatres will be Regal Hamburg Pavilion and Fayette Mall Cinemas.

August 15, 2008

These shows must go on

080708smoke (41) Gil Thurman as Burl Sanders and Evan Sullivan as the Rev. Mervin Oglethorpe in Smoke on the Mountain. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo. Below: Ed Desiato in the 1950s.

Two hit plays from this summer are getting second runs on alternate stages.

Desiato 1960 ■ Ed Desiato’s performance as John Barrymore packed Natasha’s Bistro in June. At 8 p.m. Aug. 21, he’ll give another performance of Barrymore at The Kentucky Theatre’s State Theatre. The show, by William Luce, portrays the stage and screen icon reminiscing at the end of his career. Tickets are $15 adults, $12 students and seniors. Call (859) 231-7924.

Smoke on the Mountain, the debut production of the Lexington Stage Company, played to sold-out crowds for most of its July run at Studio Players’ Carriage House Theatre. The gospel musical set in a rural North Carolina Church in the 1930s moves to Danville for four performances at Centre College’s Norton Center for the Arts. Showtimes are 8 p.m. Oct. 3, 3 and 8 p.m. Oct. 4 and 3 p.m. Oct. 5. Tickets are $30 each and available by calling 1-877-448-7469 or visiting the Norton Center website.

August 09, 2008

Holly Henson: the show must go on

Click the play button to watch an audio slide show from Cookin' with Gus. If you hit the four-arrow button at the far right of the control bar, it will play in full screen mode.

DANVILLE — When Holly Henson was diagnosed with breast cancer in April, her first thought was, “Let’s go to New York and get the actors.”

OK. It isn’t a standard reaction to being diagnosed with a potentially fatal illness.

But theater has been in Henson’s blood a lot longer than cancer, and when it’s April, it’s time to head to New York and hire actors for the upcoming season at the Pioneer Playhouse. Henson’s father, Eben Henson, built the Danville Theatre in 1950 and directed it until his death in 2004. All 48 years of Holly’s life, summer and summer stock were synonymous, even before she became artistic director a few years before her father passed away.

So cancer or not, she left her home in Minneapolis, picked up her mother, Charlotte, in Danville, and headed to New York to audition a company.

Cancer, however, cannot be ignored. She got the ball rolling, but Holly has spent most of this summer away from the theater where she grew up, pursuing alternative cancer therapies in Minnesota and Oklahoma City.

“Somebody asked the question, ‘Is the Playhouse going to go on?’ and I don’t even see that as being a question,’” said Holly’s brother, Robby Henson, a Los Angeles-based film director. “If it’s summer, the Playhouse is here. We don’t think about it too hard, we just do.”
It just meant that Robby expanded his role from directing the first play of the season, which he has done for years, to staying at the theater to oversee the shows.

And Holly and Robby’s other sister, Heather, helped in the front office and with marketing despite a busy career. Heather is a children’s book author and has three titles coming out this year, including That Book Woman, about a rural Kentucky librarian, due in October.

“When one of us goes down, we come together as a family,” Holly said. “And there’s a larger family of the community and the actors and helping hands.”

Continue reading "Holly Henson: the show must go on" »

August 07, 2008

Norton Center 2008-09 lineup features Tony Bennett, NY Phil

080807bell02 Joshua Bell will perform Jan. 26 at the Norton Center. Photo by Chris Lee.

The Norton Center for the Arts at Centre College in Danville is coming off its most successful season ever and appears poised to top itself in 2008-09.

Season subscribers will soon receive a brochure with a lineup topped by legendary standards singer Tony Bennett; pop music legend Little Richard; the New York Philharmonic Orchestra with Lorin Maazel at the podium; the Kentucky premiere of The Drowsy Chaperone, the 2006 Tony Award winning hit; and arguably the hottest violinist in the world, Joshua Bell.

Here’s the complete lineup, in chronological order. All performances are at 8 p.m., unless otherwise noted:

080807richard Sept. 20: Little Richard.
Sept. 30: Olga Kern, pianist.
Oct. 3-5: Smoke on the Mountain, Bluegrass gospel musical, 8 p.m. Oct. 3, 4; 3 p.m. Oct. 4, 5.
Oct. 12: Spanish Brass, 3 p.m.
Oct. 14: Altar Boyz, off-Broadway musical.
Oct. 21: Cirque d’Or, Chinese acrobats.
Oct. 24: The Beach Boys, 8:30 p.m.
Nov. 12: Soweto Gospel Choir.
Nov. 18: Al Green.
Dec. 4: The King’s Singers.
Dec. 11: Movin’ Out, Broadway musical.
Jan. 12: 100 Years of Broadway, musical revue with Broadway veterans.
Jan. 13: Giselle by the State Ballet of Russia.
080807bennett02 Jan. 16: Tony Bennett.
Jan. 26: Joshua Bell, violin.
Feb. 10: Drumline Live, African-American band show.
Feb. 17: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Broadway musical.
Feb. 19: Red Priest, irreverent early music group.
Feb. 26: Kodo, Japanese percussion ensemble.
Feb. 28: Handel’s L’Allegro, il Penseroso, oratorio presented with visiting and local musicans.
March 1: Tempesta di Mare, early music ensemble.
March 5: New York Philharmonic with Lorin Maazel, conductor.
March 11: St. Petersburg Male Choir.
March 12: Moscow Cats Theatre, acrobatic cat show.
March 15: Orion String Quartet, 3 p.m.
April 11: The Drowsy Chaperone, Broadway musical.
April 15: Annie, Broadway musical.
April 23: Garrison Keillor.
April 27: Ain’t Misbehavin’, Broadway musical.
May 30-31: Chamber Music Festival of the Bluegrass, presented at Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill.

The performances are sold in a variety of season ticket packages costing $966 to $177, depending on performances. Single tickets already are available for some shows. Single tickets for others will go on sale later, depending on availability. Call 1-877-448-7469 or visit the Norton Center's website for information and tickets.

August 01, 2008

SummerFest 2008 among the best in the Arboretum

080708WHITEfpa0242 Tapping Sullivan Canaday White (center, with the script and yardstick) to direct Lord of the Flies was one of the choices that made SummerFest 2008 a success. Copyrighted LexGo photo by Pablo Alcala.

SummerFest is the new event that feels like its been around for years.

That’s because it is the immediate successor to the Lexington Shakespeare Festival, and since there was not a radical change of form, the event is inevitably compared to previous Shakespeare festivals, just like you’d compare the entrees at a restaurant that is simply under new management.

Did the new chefs spice things up, deliver something more pleasing to the palate? Or are we left wishing the old guard was still in place?

This summer is one of the most overall satisfying servings offered up in the Arboretum over the past decade.

There weren’t any highs as dizzying as 2004’s Jesus Christ Superstar, but there also wasn’t anything as low as 1998’s Two Gentlemen of Verona. It was a very even affair, marked by its directors.

Directors will often tell you that 90 percent of the job is directing, and maybe 90 percent of artistic directing is selecting directors, and playing to their strengths.

That may be the biggest reason this year’s SummerFest was so satisfying.

Continue reading "SummerFest 2008 among the best in the Arboretum" »

July 26, 2008

Laura Bell Bundy looks back at 'Blonde' forward to her next projects

Bundy, Laura Bell -- album art Laura Bell Bundy in a photo shot for her CD, Longing for a Place Already Gone. Photo by Larissa Underwood.

Actress Laura Bell Bundy was sitting with five women and all of them wanted her job, playing Elle Woods in the Broadway production of Legally Blonde: The Musical.

For most of the chat, which was shown on MTV’s reality series Legally Blonde the Musical: The Search for Elle Woods, Bundy was the sage Broadway veteran. But then she got reflective about what the experience of playing the perky SoCal sorority girl almost every day for 11/2 years has meant to her.

“I became more true to myself,” the Lexington native said. “I get emotional thinking about it. ... It’s been the best experience of my life because I grew as a human being, because of my character, because of my connection to her and my openness.

“And the fact that I got to express emotion and not hold things in was good therapy for me, and I grew as I was finding her.”

At the time of that conversation, which took place in March but wasn’t televised until earlier this month, Bundy was still several months away from leaving the show. But it was already clear that walking away from her breakout role — one that earned her a Tony Award nomination and made her a marquee name on Broadway — was not going to be easy.

But she needed to do it.

“I’m leaving at the right time,” Bundy said in an interview the week before her final performance, last Sunday. “I’m leaving when the show is still fun for me. I’m still learning, I’m still growing, I’m still making new choices.

“But I’ve been in this show a long time — longer than your health would have you be in a show like this. My body is tired, my voice is tired. I need to go on some serious R&R.”

On July 20, Bundy took her final bow, had a really good cry and then went to a post-show party with current and former cast members to share memories and farewells. Then it was off to an all-night diner with family for a bacon cheeseburger that gave her indigestion, she said. But no worries. She didn’t have to be concerned with going on the next day, or even later in the week.

Bundy is getting to work on other aspects of her career she wants to explore.

But first, only eight days after her last bow as Elle, she is coming back home to Lexington and bringing Legally Blonde co-star Paul Canaan, who was one of the judges on the MTV show. Together they’ll present their Take It From the Top musical theater workshop on Monday and Tuesday at Bundy’s alma mater, Lexington Catholic High School.

Continue reading "Laura Bell Bundy looks back at 'Blonde' forward to her next projects" »

July 24, 2008

'Legally Blonde's' Paul Canaan on the reality show and the workshops

080727canaan Paul Canaan was a cast member in the ensemble of Legally Blonde -- The Musical and served as a judge on Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods. He and Blonde star Laura Bell Bundy bring their Take It From the Top worshop to Lexington July 28 and 29. Photo by Jason Gillman.

Participants in the Take It From the Top workshops July 28 and 29 might be longing to have instructor Paul Canaan watch them and declare, “That’s a hiiit!”

In the eight weeks Canaan was a judge on the MTV reality series Legally Blonde the Musical: The Search for Elle Woods, he developed the affirmation into a personal trademark.
Like Legally Blonde’s star, Lexington native Laura Bell Bundy, Canaan has wrapped up his gig in the ensemble of the hit Broadway musical. Working on the show, Bundy and Canaan formed a strong friendship that has turned into a professional partnership with Take It From the Top, classes they have already presented in New York and will present around the country.

“My passion is teaching,” Canaan says, enjoying a day off at Legally Blonde director Jerry Mitchell’s beach house on New York’s Fire Island. “With arts education being cut in the schools, it was important to us to look at new ways to reach kids.”

Bundy says Canaan “is such a fantastic teacher, and he’s great with kids. He can see potential in a kid and pull that out. He helps people feel comfortable.”

That was also one of his roles on the reality series, which tapped South Carolinian Bailey Hanks to succeed Bundy as Elle Woods.

“Ultimately Jerry Mitchell had the say,” Canaan says of the show’s finale, which was taped in March though it aired on MTV on Monday, two nights before Hanks debuted in the role. “We said, ‘We’re not going to find another Laura Bell Bundy, so let’s find an Elle,’ and Bailey is Elle, completely. With her spirit and spunk, she’s innately an Elle Woods.”

Continue reading "'Legally Blonde's' Paul Canaan on the reality show and the workshops" »

Review: SummerFest's 'Hair'

080721hair (8) Adam Fister, as Claude, leads a performance of Manchester, England, in SummerFest's production of Hair. Below: Cameron Perry was one of two Transylvania University students who excels in this show. Photos by Rich Copley | LexGo.

Check out photographer Brad Luttrell's audio slide show about Hair director Mike Thomas.

Mike Thomas knows it is not enough to just put on the hits. It would be an easy thing to do with his last two assignments in the Arboretum: the Lexington Shakespeare festival's 2004 production of Jesus Christ Superstar and this year's SummerFest production of Hair.

Both have practically become reverse jukebox musicals, kicking so many songs onto the Top 40 that a performance is something of a hit parade. But within and between those songs are stories, and like that 2004 Superstar, Thomas' Hair is fabulous because the production doesn't forget that.

Telling a story is a tougher job with this show, which has a book and lyrics by James Rado and Gerome Ragni and music Galt MacDermot. Hair's plot of Claude, a young man who struggles with where he fits in 1968 America, isn't strong and frequently disappears in songs about sex, drugs, race and war. It has to be tempting here, 40 years after the show's Broadway debut, to just make this, ”let's look at the hippies.“

There is a lot to look at in the SummerFest production with David Steinmetz's simple graffiti-inspired set and Susan Wigglesworth's thrift-store chic costumes. They give the actors a natural environment to play in.

And play they do, with Peggy Stamps' exuberant choreography and support from the Johnson Brothers Band, whose accompaniment sounds authentic while avoiding some of the dated sounds of the Broadway cast recording and movie soundtrack.

Thomas and his fellow directors have a unified vision to respect this era, not make fun of it or get too nostalgic. So we get a show that truly contemplates its subject, its insights and excesses, successes and failures, which is actually what Hair does.

Continue reading "Review: SummerFest's 'Hair'" »

July 22, 2008

BlondeTV: Bailey's a hit!

 Bailey simply sold it.

I don't know if that's what put her over the top in the final episode of Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods. They didn't show the judge's deliberation, so we really didn't hear what Legally Blonde director Jerry Mitchell was thinking. Hanks, Bailey - Legally BlondeBut even this Autumn Hurlbert fan has to admit that in the portions of the audition they showed us, Autumn sang beautifully, but Bailey Hanks (Photo, right, by Justin Borucki for MTV) turned into Elle Woods -- her version of Elle.

Maybe the key was in the one question they showed Mitchell ask Autumn: How do you feel about being a sorority girl?

It's a question that seemed to indicate he was having trouble buying Autumn in the role. Meanwhile, as Bailey performed, the judges were saying things like, "I believe it," and she seemed to channel her excitement through her performances, particularly Omigod You Guys.

So, Wednesday night, the Anderson, S.C. girl -- keeping Elle Woods in the South, y'all -- will take the stage of the Palace Theatre in New York City to succeed Laura Bell Bundy as Elle Woods. Another key comment Mitchell made was, "Neither of you are really there yet."

Has Bailey gotten there in the months since she actually won this contest? That's question critics will probably start attempting to answer later this week.

One thing that was nice was a reality show finale with a lot to do. So often, we are subjected to finales with tons of filler before we hear the handful of words everyone tuned in for. But since the judges had the last word, and it was all on tape, we got the last competition and then the announcement.

A bravo to MTV for a much better show and series than expected.

UPDATE: Playbill reports that all of the final four have been cast in Legally Blonde. Autumn is Bailey's understudy and will be in the ensemble; Lauren Zakrin is going to understudy the Elle on the first national tour, starring Becky Gulsvig, and Rhiannon Hansen is going to play Margot, Elle's best friend, on tour. I love that casting on Rhiannon. That role should work for her. Gotta say, I could also see Autumn as a Vivienne, Elle's chief nemesis, if she wanted to do that swing thing.

Check back later this week for our exit interview with Laura Bell Bundy, who will be in town early next week for her Take it From the Top workshop at Lexington Catholic along with her Blonde co-star and Search for Elle Woods judge Paul Canaan 

For more on Bailey, USA today has a  good story about her.

July 21, 2008

Derek Keeling in 'Grease' after all

Keeling, Derek and Ashley Spencer in Grease Speaking of Broadway-casting reality shows and Kentucky, University of Kentucky graduate Derek Keeling is going to make his Broadway debut in Grease as Danny Zuko after all. 

Keeling and Ashley Spencer will go on as Danny and Sandy Tuesday night, succeeding Max Crumm and Laura Osnes, who won the roles on the NBC reality competition series, Grease: You're the One That I Want, in the winter of 2007. Osnes and Crumm debuted in the Broadway revival of Grease last summer. Spencer was the runner up to Osnes. Keeling finished third behind Crumm and Texan Austin Miller. The winners were decided solely by audience votes.

Since the show, Keeling has been involved in a number of projects, including a musical version of A Tale of Two Cities that debuted in Sarasota last fall and opens on Broadway at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre Aug. 19. Aaron Lazar will play Charles Darnay, the role Keeling had in Sarasota.

Keeling's hometown paper, The Charleston Daily Mail in West Virginia, reports a healthy contingent of family and friends are heading to New York for Keeling's debut. His biography on the Grease website mentions his UK degree. Keeling and Spencer will be sharing the stage with American Idol winner Taylor Hicks, who is playing Teen Angel.

Above: Spencer and Keeling as Sandy and Danny. Photo courtesy of Barlow-Hartman Public Relations.

Handicapping the 'Legally Blonde' finale

Laura Bell Bundy took her final bow as Elle Woods in Legally Blonde -- The Musical on Broadway last night. Tonight at 10 -- really closer to 11 -- her successor will be named on MTV and Wednesday night, the winner will make her Broadway debut.

It's not quite that breathless. The winner was actually selected before Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods even started. In an interview with Laura last week, we said we were going to refrain from asking her who it was, because we wanted to be surprised, and she made some quip about being sued for $5 million if she told anyone, anyway.

But how much of a surprise will it be? Well, here in Laura's home town, we have a habit of handicapping these sorts of things like horse races. So, here's one reporter's take on the final three:

Bailey Hanks, 15-1

BlondeTV - Hanks, Bailey For her: She really looks the part and has shown some spark through the auditions, particularly in dancing, where it seems she would excel in numbers like What You Want and Bend and Snap. She also had exceptional good bad luck -- that's not a misprint -- last week when she was given the wrong hat for What You Want audition but made it work for her. That showed some real stage smarts at handling things when they go wrong, and with eight shows a week, things do go wrong. Just ask Laura.

Against her: She is young, 20, and very green. I believe she said that this was her first time in New York. Her excellence has mostly been in execution too, and the judges have voiced reservations about her ability to connect with some of the emotional depth of her character -- yes, you naysayers, there is emotional depth to Elle. While they like her, the judges and Mitchell may conclude Florence, S.C. to Elle Woods on Broadway is too much of a vertical leap.

Rhiannon Hansen, 50-1

BlondeTV - Hansen, Rhiannon For her: She has the most unique character of anyone in the competition, and may connect with the humor of Elle Woods the best.

Against her: Character is probably what has pulled her through. But there is no part of the triple threat she excels at. In last week's audition, she left serious questions about her stamina to handle a role that requires tremendous stamina. She's also demonstrated some real emotional fragility, which can be devastating in a world like Broadway. When we left the show last week, the judges still had one person to eliminate before the finals in front of director Jerry Mitchell, and it is hard to imagine the scenario in which Rhiannon gets through.

Autumn Hurlbert, 5-1

BlondeTV - Hurlbert, Autumn For her: She has the best voice and acting chops of the remaining competitors, and in areas where she's weak, she has shown an ability to learn. At 27, she's also the oldest of the remaining competitors and, though she's given us a few head-clasping moments, has the most maturity. That maturity also puts her in the best place to handle what will probably be a tough position, being the Broadway lead selected on a reality show.

Against her: Five-to-one are not mortal-lock odds, and there are some questions about Autumn. Is she right for the part? It's easy to see her on Broadway, but not necessarily as Elle Woods. While she's got the singing and acting, Autumn's dancing has been her weak point, and it's a big part of the role. So, if Mitchell is willing to gamble, he may pass on this safe pick.

We'll be watching tonight.

July 20, 2008

'Hair': No nude scene, but . . .

Click the play button to see photographer Brad Luttrell's audio slide show about SummerFest's Hair. Click here to see a larger version, and here to read about director Mike Thomas' return to the Arboretum.

The announcement that Hair would be one of the SummerFest shows this year provoked a question: Will people be getting naked on The Arboretum stage?

In many productions, the first act of Hair ends with the men burning their draft cards and the cast stripping down as they sing Where Do I Go? Many fans of the show think the nude scene is crucial for Hair, an iconic rock musical that grew out of the 1960s counterculture.

But director Mike Thomas says that nowhere in the script is the nudity mandated. Festival directors took that into consideration when they decided that there will be no nude scene in The Arboretum when Hair runs July 23 to 27.

The optional nude scene, however, is hardly the only R-rated element in Hair, and those other parts are non-negotiable. Thomas says Hair’s creators and rights administrators “want the script to be done as it’s supposed to be done.” So audiences who come out to The Arboretum will hear a colorful array of profanity, sexually suggestive material, including the song Sodomy, blunt discussion of race issues and an extensive portrayal of drug use.

“Caution,” Thomas says. “Is it sexually suggestive? Yes. Does it have adult language and content? Yes. I wouldn’t bring children. Beware.”

So why is SummerFest, which has theater-education programs for elementary and high schoolers and has tried to position itself as a family event, presenting a show that even the director says is not suitable for all ages?

“For our purposes, artistically, that is what it was and what it still is,” Trish Clark, executive director of the Kentucky Classical Theatre Conservatory, says of the decision to present Hair. “Why hide that fact from our children? It’s not like the children don’t know. They’re hearing, seeing and witnessing all of that.”

Continue reading "'Hair': No nude scene, but . . . " »

July 17, 2008

'Lord of the Flies' slide show

Lately here at le blog and on LexGo, we've been working to give you a look at local productions beyond the printed word. The latest of these efforts is an audio slide show photographer Emily Spence and I put together about the "band of theatrical brothers," that have put up several superior productions in Lexington over the past couple of years, including this weekend's production of Lord of the Flies.

Click here for a larger version of the Flies slide show.

We've also still got a look at Lexington Stage Company's Smoke on the Mountain up, and watch out over the weekend for photographer Brad Luttrell's sights and sounds from rehearsals for SummerFest's Hair.

July 12, 2008

Elizabeth Orndorff's mysterious career boost

Elizabeth Orndorff doesn’t own a cell phone.

That alone made her feel unqualified to tackle a high-tech mystery plot, which is all the rage these days on shows like CSI and Numb3rs.

080710Orndorff, Elizabeth But she wanted to enter a script into the first ­International Mystery Writers’ Festival last year at Owensboro’s RiverPark Center. Who’d want to pass up a shot at a $10,000 prize?

So, she went decidedly low tech, and stayed close to home.

“I wanted to set it in Kentucky, because the theater and the festival were in Kentucky,” Orndorff said. “So, I checked into places and stories around here.”

The mystery that intrigued her was a widely held rumor that Charles Dickens once visited Mammoth Cave. But there was no record of it. If the great author did visit, he never wrote about it.

Why?

She had the framework for a mystery.

“Charles Dickens had this soap-opera life,” Orndorff said. “He hated America, and he hated slavery.”

The Danville writer’s attempt to answer the question of what might have happened to Dickens in the cave became Death by Darkness, a mystery set in Mammoth Cave’s famous Star Chamber, where, if you turn off your lights, the glow of gypsum deposits dot the ceiling.

It was a hit, winning the top prize at the ­festival, where the competition ­included mystery legends such as Ed McBain and ­William Link.

“I kinda backed into it, which is why I think people liked it,” Orndorff says. “It was more about how these personalities rubbed up against each other in that cave. But there is a dead body. It’s a mystery, so you have to have a dead body.”

A summer later, Central Kentucky audiences are getting to see the play at the ­Pioneer Playhouse, where Death by ­Darkness runs through Saturday. In addition to bringing Orndorff’s award-winning script to Danville, the Playhouse brought in John Nyrere Frazier, who won the award for best actor at the ­Mystery Festival for playing ­Darkness’s lead character, ­Stephen Bishop, a slave who has ­developed a deep connection with the cave.

The new production takes Orndorff back to the ­summer of 2007 and her trip to Owensboro to see the world premiere of her show.

“That was fun,” she recalls. “We got to Owensboro, and there were baskets of flowers in our hotel room, wishing us well.”

Before she got to the festival, ­Orndorff was getting hints that things might go well from the daughter of a friend who was working on the festival. She kept calling saying she’d seen other plays there, “but they aren’t as good as Death by Darkness,” Orndorff said.

Obviously, the festival judges agreed.

Since then, Orndorff has been at work getting the show out there, entering it in contests and sending it to other theaters.

“Having that kind of validation is motivating,” Orndorff says. “You think, ‘I’ve done this once, I can do it again.’”

She’s had other validation, such as her one-act play The Bathroom Cleaner, being performed at the Wonderland One-Act Play Festival in New York City and productions of several of her scripts at Danville’s West T. Hill Community ­Theatre, ­including The Spring ­Cleaning, slated for next April.

She acknowledges she wants to get back to writing, to use the momentum from Death by Darkness to create another attention-grabbing script. And she just might draw some inspiration from the current production.

“It’s wonderful to have it so close to home,” she says. “I’ll be out there several times.”

Copyrighted photo of Elizabeth Orndorff, above, by Mary Robin Spoonamore.

July 10, 2008

Theater review: 'Death by Darkness'

080700deathFarmer Squire Calloway (Mike McRee) and preacher Horace Mallory (Robert G. Hess) discover the mysterious Ophelia Entry (Maggie Robbins) in Pioneer Playhouse's production of Elizabeth Orndorff's Death by Darkness. Below: John Nyrere Frazier. Photos courtesy of Pioneer Playhouse.

DANVILLE -- Last summer, Danville’s Elizabeth Orndorff found herself toe-to-toe with whodunit giants such as Ed McBain and Columbo creator William Link.

And she killed ‘em -- literarily.

Orndorff walked away from the first annual International Mystery Writer’s Festival in Owensboro not only with the prize for best new playwright, but also best new play for her Death by Darkness.

So what was the mysterious rock of Kryptonite in Orndorff’s slingshot to help her knock off the Goliaths?

Was it a shocker worthy of Shyamalan?

Was it a web woven like Christie?

Back home in Danville, the Pioneer Playhouse stepped up as the first Central Kentucky theater to let us see the play and unravel the mystery. The answer is none of the above.

There are mysteries in Death by Darkness, which runs through July 20, and even a genuine, “Whoa! Didn’t see that coming.” And Orndorff, writing her first mystery, deftly executed that puzzle-like structure most mysteries have, where everything falls together in the end.

But Death doesn’t succeed in keeping us guessing as much as it makes us think about ourselves and the forces that mold us like water molds a cave.

Kentucky’s own Mammoth Cave, it’s “Star Chamber” or gypsum crystals, specifically, is the setting for a  journey in 1842.

080700death-frazierSlave Stephen Bishop first greets us, telling us about the cave in increasingly spiritual and foreboding tones:

“You don’t know yourself until you’ve been in the dark for a period of time.”

“No use in asking God, because this here is my cave, and I’m the only one who knows the way out.”

Next time we see Stephen, he’s leading a group of tourists into the cave, including a writer and his wife from England, a Harvard geology student and a local preacher and farmer. Or, that’s who they say they are. Over the next two hours, identities are revealed, lines are crossed, arguments ensue, a few other characters show up, and someone ends up dead.

Whodunit isn’t much of a mystery here. Whydunit is the bigger question among several that are raised, including ones about relationships and justice. In many ways, it’s more of a character study than a mystery.

Pioneer Playhouse gives the show a good ride, particularly by bringing in John Nyrere Frazier to reprise his Mystery Fest award-winning turn as Stephen. There are also numerous strong performances from the playhouse’s repertory ensemble. Director Lawrence Lesher gives the show a quick pace, never letting the action seem as stagnant as half-a-dozen people in a room in a cave could be.

Yes, tighter webs could have been woven, bigger surprises could have burst from the Mystery Fest stage last summer. But Pioneer Playhouse reveals that it’s unlikely any of the other plays in Owensboro were as satisfying as Death by Darkness.

July 07, 2008

BlondeTV 6: 'Just let me be legally blonde.'

Bundy, Laura Bell -- Blond promo It was an up and down night for Natalie on Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods. She won the first competition, a photo shoot in which the idea of standing on a bunch of law books apparently put her over the top. But ultimately she was sent packing because the judges just couldn't see her as Elle Woods.

This episode, in which the contestants got their hair styled blonde to put them all on equal footing in the looks department, was the big redemption for Autumn. After a horrible week in which she bombed in the dance audition, got sick on stage -- reportedly from eating bad yogurt, not nerves -- and wound up in the casting office for the second straight week, she needed a big night to reclaim her front-runner status. And she made a big move with a vocal audition that, from what we were shown, was miles ahead of the competition in maturity, confidence and interpretation.

Autumn was buoyed by a coaching session with Seth Rudetsky, in which he talked to her about having a tough time in auditions and advised: “Say, ‘I’m doing an amazing-few-minutes show.’ It’s not about getting to the next level. It’s about, ‘I’m getting a few minutes to perform on stage.’”

She also seemed to get a lot out of the final five's audience with the current Elle Woods, Lexington's Laura Bell Bundy. Autumn asked Laura what she took from the role, creating a very authentic moment from the Tony nominee who choked up answering:

"Spirit is the word – inspired. I became more true to myself . . . I get emotional thinking about it . . . it’s been the best experience of my life, because I grew as a human being, because of my character, because of my connection to her and my openness. And the fact that I got to express emotion and not hold things in was good therapy for me and I grew as I was finding her.”

It was neat to see Laura still retains a lot of the same emotions she had about this part and this show nearly two years ago, when she was just grasping the reality that she would originate the role of Elle Woods on Broadway. Though she's now been playing the part for well over a year, last night gave you the impression it must be tough for her to walk away.

Autumn seemed to appreciate that, which felt somewhat appropriate, because she definitely walked away from last night's show as an heir apparent.

Now, we shouldn't get ahead of ourselves. Afterall, two weeks ago, Emma seemed to right her ship, and then she was sent packing last week. But this week was different. Autumn's only rival was 18-year-old Lauren, and while the judges liked her, they seemed to feel she probably needed a few more years of work.

Bailey and Rhiannon came up a few steps behind her. Last night, they were auditioning with the title song at the moment Elle feels like she's lost everything she thought she'd achieved. Autumn grasped the complexities of that in a difficult and emotional song. If they can get the dances in Autumn's legs, at this point, it's hard to not see her as the next Elle Woods on Broadway.

Above: Laura Bell Bundy in the first promotional photo for Legally Blonde -- The Musical. Photo courtesy of Barlow Hartman.

As always, check out Seth's breakdown of last night's show.

July 06, 2008

Antony & Cleo: Sexy, absurd tragedy

080624summefest-cleopatra Longtime collaborators Walter Tunis, Adam Luckey and Joe Ferrell share a light moment during rehearsal at the University of Kentucky's Guignol Theatre for SummerFest's Antony and Cleopatra, which opens Wednesday in the Arboretum. Copyrighted LexGo photo by Rich Copley.

If the words “Shakespeare history play” don’t make you think funny and sexy, SummerFest has a production that aims to change your mind.

Director Joe Ferrell sees a Bonnie and Clyde type of humor and steamy sexiness in that whacky Mediterranean couple, Antony and Cleopatra.

But Ferrell says the cast he has is a key to bringing that out in his production for SummerFest, which opens Wednesday at the Arboretum on Alumni Drive.

“All of these folks have done major roles for years, and there are so many ages and types represented here,” Ferrell says, acknowledging the all-star cast seated around the lounge area outside the Guignol Theatre in the University of Kentucky Fine Arts Building.

That ensemble includes Sidney Shaw, who played Julius Caesar and King Lear for the Lexington Shakespeare Festival; Paul Carelli, who played Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing for LSF; Eric Johnson, whose leads have included one of the Three Musketeers and Henry Drummond in Inherit the Wind; Walter Tunis, whose many turns include Macbeth and Adam Luckey, who plays leading roles like postmen deliver mail.

“There’s a great deal of comfort here, and that gives you an ability to try different things and serve Joe’s vision of the play,” Shaw says. 

Tunis says that having a cast of high-caliber players, “illuminates some of the smaller roles,” and thereby illuminates the play. Ferrell cites Shaw’s role as Alexas as an example. In Shaw’s performance, he becomes a character who sees through a lot of Cleopatra’s facades.

“It’s an Alexas that I have not seen before,” Ferrell says.

One of the keys to bringing new colors to the characters is for the actors to make sure they are acting and not reciting.

“The language is so beautiful, you just want to stand there and proclaim it,” Shaw says. “But it has to be done with action and intent.”

Intent is a particular key with Antony, a character who essentially gives away a nation for one woman.
Antony and Cleopatra can be a long play, running as long as four hours in some productions. For SummeFest, where two-to-two-and-a-half hours is the target time, Ferrell has had to cut quite a bit.
“We decided that the focus of the audience is on the title characters,” Ferrell says. “So we stuck to telling that story.”

Therefore, Johnson and Ellie Clark, who play the title pair, have been encouraged to make their relationship very physical, driving home the point to the audience that they can’t keep their hands off each other, which sets the play’s events in motion.

That’s kind of obvious when you think about it. What may not be so apparent if you haven’t studied the script is a juxtaposition of absurdity and tragedy. Ferrell likens that to a scene in Bonnie and Clyde where a getaway driver struggles to park a car while the title couple engages in what becomes a bloody bank robbery.

In Antony and Cleopatra, he sees the same humor in the couple’s death scenes, where Antony’s ineptitude has him bleeding to death for quite a while and where a servant brings Cleopatra asps to do her in saying, “Enjoy the worm.”

Tunis observes, “There hasn’t been a night of rehearsal we haven’t cracked up.”

Terry Withers, who plays Maecenas, says, “The play doesn’t easily fit any category.”

But for them, this production is easily filed under rewarding and enjoyable, which is why they’re all more than happy to come fill even minor roles.

“We all know each other,” says Kim Dixon, who plays Iras. “We love acting together, and we love acting for Joe.”

June 30, 2008

BlondeTV 5: That's TRIPLE threat

Vocal coach Seth Rudetsky breaks down this week's episode.

Last week on Leagally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods, we saw Emma, the competitor who came to the competition with Reese Witherspoon looks and Broadway in her veins, finally rally and live up to her promise.

This week, we saw her go home.

It was a somewhat stunning turn of fortune because, despite battling bronchitis, she seemed to turn in a good dance audition with the lightning fast "shake your junk" sequence from Positive.

But three other competitors turned in great auditions, and this week really emphasized the point that all three elements of the triple threat are essential to make it on Broadway. That's why we had two of the most talented actors and singers, Emma and Autumn, standing in the casting office: They were not that great on their toes -- or in four-inch stiletto heels, as the case was.

Natalie, Bailey and Lauren were the standouts with Rhiannon doing just well enough to avoid a private audience with the judges.

In the course of the show, Emma allowed that she had not taken a dance class in five years, and that is probably the key to why she didn't make the final five. For all her self-awareness, for her maturity and for her savvy, it's kind of strange that she did not prepare better prior to the competition for the dance auditions that were sure to come.

So yes, in her bitter closing comments, Emma is right: Bailey, 20; Lauren, 19; and Rhiannon, 19, are "children," under-aged for the role. But they and 24-year-old Natalie kicked her butt on the dance floor. And yes, she was sick. But we're at a juncture in this competition where one bad day alone will not kill you if the judges think you have a shot. So sending home Emma, who looked like a front runner out of the gate, was a statement that she was not working for them. And while it is understandable that she's frustrated, she bears a great deal of responsibility for her early departure because she neglected one of the three pillars of the triple threat.

Program notes: That "vote for the worst" challenge was a provocative little device that went nowhere. If you didn't see it, the competitors were told late night, in the midst of prepping for their demanding audition, to pick the worst actor, singer, dancer, etc. Autumn took charge, turning it into a best list, but we never heard about it again. Reality TV.

A fun note of Broadway reality was that the Legally Blonde set is full of stairs and tracks for set pieces that, "eat stiletto heels," according associate choreographer Denis Jones. We also learned that Laura Bell Bundy dances in higher heels than the four-inch "Pepto-Bismol" numbers the competitors wore last night.

June 26, 2008

Shakespeare at Equus Run slide show

For the second consecutive year, Actors Guild of Lexington is presenting Shakespeare at Equus Run Vineyards. We went out June 21, the first night of summer, to soak up some of the flavor of the event. Click play to watch our slide show. There are two performances left this weekend.

For a larger version of this slide show, visit hlphoto.com.

EW's New classics: Up for debate (of course)

Pulp Fiction - Travolta John Travolta in Pulp Fiction. Is it really the No. 1 classic movie of the lat 25 years?

Last weekend, the editors of Entertainment Weekly dropped their annual summer double issue and gave  us a good two weeks of debating material.

Is Pulp Fiction really the best film of the last 25 years?

Does Amy Winehouse's year-old debut already deserve Top 10 classic status?

Public Enemy doesn't make the Top 50?

Yes, it's another set of lists. We say that with no derision, because hey, we're going to give you some lists on Sunday. Lists are fun, because they are always a matter of opinion, which means most everyone who reads one will have some modicum of disagreement with it.

EW's new lists are pretty ambitious: The New Classics is 1,000 of the best movies, TV shows, albums, books and other stuff over the past 25 years. My favorite list was actually the final one: Tech, where they named the, "top 25 innovations that changed entertainment."

IPod Even there though, I'd argue against ranking the iPod at No. 4, below the DVD player, Napster and TiVo. Yes, the DVD is a cool advance in home video, but it still was just another method of delivering the videos in some tangible form. The iPod introduced the concept of owning a whole album without leaving your home, or even just picking and choosing the songs you want; singles, but you choose what's a single. It's the most radical change in the distribution of recorded music since the beginning of recorded music. How do you top that?

See, arguing it is almost inescapable.

Pulp Fiction, for me, was a good place to start. I've always considered it a bit overrated, over romanticized. Good movie, snappy dialog and engaging story structure, but not quite all that.

But if you want to argue towering influence, then its No. 1 seems a bit more legit. How many Pulp wannabes have we seen since 1994? Interestingly, Forrest Gump, the movie that beat Pulp Fiction for the Oscar for best picture, isn't even on EW's Top 100. (It's worth noting that EW has always been in love with Pulp.)

There are some nice picks on the movie list, such as Blue Velvet at No. 4, acknowledging the off-kilter brilliance of David Lynch, and giving Merchant Ivory's A Room with a View a nod at No. 24. The Helena Bonham Carter starmaker ushered in the chick-flick-as-literary-costume-drama era we're still in today.

 The music list had several nice visionary choices, such as Madonna's self-titled 1983 album at No. 5, OutKast's Stankonia at No. 12, and R.E.M.'s Life's Rich Pageant at No. 32. All were great albums, and all set the stage for the artists' subsequent chartR.E.M. - Life's Rich Pageant toppers -- Like a Virgin, Speakerboxx/The Love Below and Document, respectively. But then, somehow, Nirvana's Nevermind is left off in favor of MTV Unplugged. ?!

See, debating is sooooo easy. And fun.

I will also give EW props for trying to limit the number of entries from any one artist to one or two. I seem to remember years ago when Rolling Stone dropped a list of the best rock albums ever, and half the Top 10 was by The Beatles. But then, that list also gave this young rock fan a lot of listening to go do.

And this list from Entertainment Weekly seems to come at a perfect time, right before the laziest days of summer. I'd write more, but I've got some watching and listening to do.

P.S.: A very cool thing about the Top 50 stage list is that four of the shows -- Angels in America (No. 1), Elaine Stritch at Liberty (17), Bring in 'Da Noise, Bring in 'Da Funk (24) and Topdog/Underdog (49) were all directed by Frankfort's own George C. Wolf. People, we don't revere this guy enough.

June 24, 2008

Summer classic: 'The Wizard of Oz'

Idina Menzel as Elphaba and Kristen Chenoweth as Glinda perform Defying Gravity, the green witch's anthem from Wicked, at the 2004 Tony Awards.

For 64 years, we knew how to take The Wizard of Oz's Wicked Witch of the West: She was the green-skinned meanie who wanted to kill sweet Dorothy, and her little dog, too. She commanded the  Flying Monkeys and an iconic cackle. And she looked remarkably like mean old Elmira Gulch, who tried to take little Toto away from Dorothy, before the Kansas girl rode her tornado to Oz.

We hated the Wicked Witch of the West, and a remarkable performance by Margaret Hamilton only enhanced our loathing (ding).

What was that -- "loa-thing, pure and un-adulterated loa-thing."

It's that contempt anthem from Wicked, the hit Broadway musical that turned the whole Wizard of Oz story on its head.

Was the green witch actually wicked? Or was she merely suppressed by a conformist regime led by the Wizard himself? Were she and Glinda actually good friends whose bond was strained by the "good" witch's inability to break away from the establishment? Were they in fact in cahoots to stage the Wizard's banishment from Oz so Glinda could take over and Elphaba could escape with her true love, Fiyero, aka The Scarecrow?

Kinda casts a whole new light on the whole "Wicked" witch deal, eh?

Well, whether you adhere to the original story in L. Frank Baum's novel or the new take, based on Gregory Maguire's 1996 novel, there's no denying the 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz is a bona fide classic and well-worth seeing on a big screen. The transformation from black-and-white Kansas to color Oz is particularly stunning shown floor to ceiling, as it will be at 1:30 and 7:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Kentucky Theatre. The Wizard is this week's entry in the Kentucky's Summer Classics series. Admission is $3.

June 23, 2008

BlondeTV 4: Serious

Emma's rendition of Serious with Richard Blake, who plays Warner in Legally Blonde -- The Musical.

When Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods (aka, the most insanely long reality show title ever) began, Emma and Cassie S. were the two competitors that seemed to have the deepest convictions that they belonged in the race to succeed Laura Bell Bundy.

Emma claimed a Broadway bloodline of parents who met in the original Grease and went on to Broadway careers. Cassie's sense of entitlement came from . . . um . . .

Well, tonight, we found out why one was right and one was, well, delusional.

Emma was not having a good week. An advancing case of bronchitis gave her a horrid cough and was draining her energy. By the time she got to the vocal rehearsal, she couldn't get through a song without hacking. But, when Seth Rudestsky advised her to see a doctor, she'd already made the appointment. She got seen -- presumably got a prescription of some sorts, and was able to have the comeback audition of the week. Rhiannon was the judges' darling, but Emma, whose campaign had been foundering, was on with her timing and even her singing, all of which impressed the judges, who were aware of her condition.

Cassie S., on the other hand, had another clunky audition, but when she was put in the bottom three, again, she told the confessional camera, "This is ridiculous. I busted my ass the entire night. Come on, give me credit. I've never even seen the material before. Doesn't that say something for me."

Cassie, no one had seen the material, and at least four of your competitors gave auditions the judges loved. Frankly, I think they dragged Autumn into the casting office to scare her, sort of like they did with Emma last week. Maybe Autumn will respond similarly.

Anyway, in the casting office, when the judges suggested Cassie could be a swing or understudy, she protested she wanted to be the star. Well, she's not going to be on Legally Blonde, because the judges sent Cassie and her little 19-going-on-12 attitude packing.

Tonight actually had a twin killing -- the math of a July 21 finale told you this had to happen, sometime -- with Celina also being eliminated.

"Maybe Elle Woods isn't my part," she said, before entering the casting office.

Ah, self awareness. How refreshing.

June 22, 2008

Edmund Desiato

Desiato 1960 Edmund Desiato in a photo circa 1960. Below: Desiato and Adam Luckey in this year's production of Arcadia at Actors Guild of Lexington. Herald-Leader photo by Charles Bertram. Bottom: Desiato and an unidentified actor in Luv at the Nashville Barn Dinner Theatre in the late 1960s. More photos are on the continuation of this post.

It is one thing to read about Edmund Desiato, but a whole other thing to hear him talk about his career and upcoming production of Barrymore. Click the player below to hear an 8-minute excerpt from our interview with him:


Edmund Desiato will be the first person to tell you he’s no John Barrymore.

“I’m not an idiot,” Desiato says in a ­gravelly voice deepened by cigarettes and with a lingering New York accent. “There was only one John Barrymore.

“I’m doing what Christopher Plummer did,” Desiato says, referring to the actor who originally played the acting legend in William Luce’s play Barrymore. “Plummer played himself, with the characteristics of John Barrymore. That’s the way I am going to play it.”

Desiato is performing in Balagula ­Theatre’s production of Barrymore for three nights this week at Natasha’s Desiato - Adam Luckey in Arcadia, Actors Guild Bistro. It’s a play that the well-traveled actor says he ­always has wanted to do. And while Desiato’s career does not have the national, historic status of Barrymore’s, it is one of the more colorful and diverse ones on the Lexington stage.

It started when Desiato, now 71, entered college in New York, and attempts to study classical guitar and violin didn’t work out.

“I was going to Fredonia State Teachers College in New York State,” Desiato says. “I got involved in a theater group because my faculty adviser was Jo Oatfield, who once upon a time had been an actor on the West End of London and in New York in the ’20s and ’30s. And she knew Fran Fuller, who was the director of the American Academy in New York.

“So she called me into her office one day and said, ‘Mr. Desiato, you did very well in the play’ — I played Priam in Tiger at the Gates, and she thought that was quite a feat for a youngDesiato - Luv Nashville Barn Dinner Theatre late '60s 3 man — ‘and you’re doing rather well in English and in history. However, there are other subjects that you have to master when you are in college, and you’re not mastering them. So, I’ve called your father, and I’ve called Ms. Fuller, and you’re going to audition at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.”

With that decree, Desiato auditioned, and he was accepted.

“My father drives me in for the first day of classes for the new season, drops me off at the corner of 52nd and Broadway, reaches into his pocket, gives me a $100 bill and says, ‘You want to be an actor? Act.’”

And he did.

Continue reading "Edmund Desiato" »

June 17, 2008

BlondeTV 3: Time to grow up (Cassie S.)

Cassie S.'s Omigod You Guys audition. Was she she good? Did her fellow contestants bail on her?

I hope, hope, hope that if Cassie S. looks at herself on Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods in five to seven years, she will be mortified by how she acted on the show. In three episodes, she has emerged as a classic reality show villain -- narcissistic without reason and ready to throw her weight around without inhibition.

Already, the judges have opened themselves up to the question: Did they keep her around, just for the drama? (To be fair, on his wrap-up video, Seth Rudetsky pointed out on his video blog that in the scene where Cassie S. seems to be messing up, she is actually singing the harmony and nailing it.)

But the 18-year-old from L.A. is far from the only contestant to succeed Lexington's Laura Bell Bundy, who is soon leaving her Tony-nominated performance as Elle Woods in Legally Blonde -- The Musical, who has some growing up to do. Even 28-year-year old Selina seems to have come to this competition with a very candy-coated expectation of what Broadway would be like.

She expressed amazement that the contestants would be given something new to learn at the last minute, scoffed at being asked to be in the ensemble (did you miss that cliche about no small parts, just small actors?) and cried about being talked to like a child.

Lauren was "shocked," they would be singing while working out as was Rhiannon, who employed the trademark phrase, "Oh my God," over auditioning while riding stationary bikes.

Once again, this show is giving viewers a good look at what it takes to make it on Broadway and play a role as demanding as Elle Woods. They blanch at riding a stationary bike and singing, but as Elle, they will be executing demanding choreography while being expected to simultaneously belt out a showstopper.

Lauren won the prize of some spa treatment and took along Cassie S. to be nice. All of them could have used the chat with Orfeh, who told them:

~ The need to be ready to, "be rejected 10,000 times."

~ "Grow a thick skin."

~ "Be in great shape."

Interestingly, Lauren ended up in the bottom four and a breath away from elimination, along with Emma (who must check the know-it-all, above-it-all attitude) and Selina (who must check her mocker, rocker vibe). But it was Lindsey, who just didn't seem to be putting forth much effort, who got booted. She actually seemed to have one of the more mature attitudes, admitting in her departure comments she sort of phoned it in, and that wasn't good enough.

Maybe she can rub off on the others from a distance.

Natalie and Autumn are not getting much screen time, but they do seem to be moving through the competition well.

080615bundy-tonys2 The real Elle, Laura Bell, was on the red carpet at the Tony Awards Sunday night, wearing black. It seemed like a bit of a statement she's moving on from Blonde's hot pink world as she told the Associated Press she wanted to wear, "anything other than pink. ... I was like, `Give me something black!'"

Pretty much immediately after she departs Blonde, Bundy will be back in Lexington with fellow actor and Search for Elle judge Paul Canaan for her Take it from the Top Broadway workshop.

Bundy also talked to the New York Post's Cindy Adams about the end of Blonde and her desire to come home: ""I'm finally done in Legally Blonde -- The Musical in five weeks. With pre-opening rehearsals, I've played Elle Woods in this show eight times a week since 2006. I'm done in. It's hard to keep your energy up. Sometimes I don't utter one word all day until I go onstage. My home's in Kentucky. I haven't seen my family in months. They've been here, but I can't spend meaningful time with them. All I want now is to go home. Go to the beach. Sleep. Let my mother feed me.

"I've lost so much weight my costumes are falling off, but nobody's fixing them because they're making new ones for my replacement next month. One bunny costume is so loose, the butt moves after I do."

June 10, 2008

Blonde TV: Cassies battle for the bottom

Cassie O. from Toledo singing So Much Better. The judges liked her voice, but her acting . . . not so much.

"Mean what you say," actor Paul Canaan told Cassie O., who replied with a clueless, "OK."

"I don't feel the intensity of what this needs," writer Heather Hach added.

That the Cassie from Toledo seemed oblivious to a craft called acting during and following her wooden audition  made her the obvious first victim in Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods, the MTV reality show searching for the actor to replace Laura Bell Bundy in the leading role in the Broadway hit.

Last week, we said that none of these 10 girls appeared to be anywhere close to being ready to star on Broadway, and nothing that happened tonight changed that. 

Tonight was acting night -- which alone says this show has gone farther than Grease: You're the One that I Want, which spent next-to-no time looking at acting, in testing at the whole performer.

Legally Blonde -- The Musical associate director Paul Bruni showed up to conduct an acting workshop in which Bailey from South Carolina excelled at, among other things, losing her Southern accent. It probably caused some snickers on the coasts, but checking a strong accent is a real issue for actors from regions such as the Southeast.

Bailey and current BFF Lindsay won quality time with LB actress Nikki Snelson, who plays aerobics instructor Brooke Wyndham. They got to rehearse a scene with Nikki, where Elle and Brooke bond over their Delta Nu-ness, which turned out to be everyone's audition scene with Snelson.

The judges decided to throw the hopefuls a curve, having Snelson drop a line to see how they reacted. Most actors  that we were shown at least paused.  Some struggled with it. Some struggled with other things. Rhiannon -- parents big Fleetwood Mac fans? -- was shown flubbing a few lines, but she had the right spirit. Autumn had the best save of the ladies we were shown, turning the initial flustered moment into part of the scene.

But Cassie O. had to be saved by Snelson, just part of the affirmation that in a group of actors who don't belong there, she really wasn't ready for Broadway. 

Exaggeration watch: This show is already showing a knack for gross exaggerations, such as repeatedly calling Blonde director Jerry Mitchell, "legendary director," several times last week. We love Jerry. But Blonde is his first show directing, and no one becomes a legend on one show.

This week, host Haylie Duff informed us that these would be rigorous auditions like  "no one on Broadway has experienced." Maybe not on TV. But having interviewed numerous Broadway actors over the years, I've heard plenty of horror stories about extrapolated, grueling, soul-destroying auditions, and as Canaan pointed out, if you don't make the cut, you usually aren't told why. 

Box Office: Variety reports Blonde saw an increase in ticket sales after the reality show debuted.

June 06, 2008

Lexington Children's Theatre's 70th Season

Snipes, vivian Vivian Snipes (above), photographed in 2004 in front of Lexington Children's Theatre, and her husband Larry (below), have both penned new scripts that will premier at LCT next season.

World premieres and pirates highlight Lexington Children’s Theatre’s 2008-09 season, its 70th year in business.

Snipes, larry The holiday season will put Larry and ­Vivian Snipes, the theater’s producing director and associate artistic director, respectively, in the spotlight with new scripts.

Larry Snipes has penned a script from Laura ­Numeroff’s If You Take a Mouse to the Movies, scheduled to run Nov. 29 to Dec. 27 at the Lexington Opera House. Vivian Snipes’ adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen will play at LCT Dec. 14 to 20.

Feb. 15 to 21, LCT makes a contribution to the Lincoln bicentennial with the world premiere of ­Keeping Mr. Lincoln, which the theater commissioned from playwright Sandra Fenichel Asher.

Children’s Theatre will end its season with the musical How I Became a Pirate from May 3 to 10.

The rest of the season includes some classics and contemporary favorites.

■ The season opens Sept. 28 to Oct. 5 with Eric Coble’s ­adaptation of Lois Lowry’s Newberry Award-winning novel The Giver.

■ The Headless ­Horseman rides in for a Halloween run of The ­Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Oct. 26 to Nov. 2.

■ The Russian folktale Katerina the Clever plays one weekend, Nov. 8 and 9.

Jack and the Wonderbeans returns Jan. 25 to Feb. 1.

The Watsons Go to Birmingham – 1963 takes a Flint, Mich., family to one of the most volatile times and places in American history on March 15 to 22.

For season subscription information, call (859) 254-4546 or visit the theater's website. Individual show tickets will go on sale Sept. 1.

June 05, 2008

Video: Grand Night for Singing

A Grand Night for Singing opens this weekend at the Singletary Center for the Arts. In our story for today's paper, we talked about the talented "brain trust" that puts Grand Night together from scratch, every year. To compliment that, photographer and producer Emily Spence and I went out to talk to some of the singers about the tunes they get to share and the town and gown camaraderie of Grand Night.

June 03, 2008

BlondeTV: So much better than expected

BlondeTV - Haylie and Jones Haylie Duff, far right, and assistant choreographer Dennis Jones, to the left of Duff, brief the contestants in Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods. Copyrighted photo courtesy of MTV.

We will confess our misgivings up front: It is reality TV, which we have no faith in for substance, and MTV, which completely ceased being relevant to me after the third season of The Real World. Add to that, we saw this before in NBC's dreadful Grease: You're the One That I Want, which tapped the stars of the Grease revival currently running on Broadway.

So, I was not expecting much from Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods, which debuted on Monday night on MTV and will run for seven more weeks.

But if the show can stay on the level of its premier, you can shut me up like Professor Callahan.

The object here is to find a successor to Lexington native Laura Bell Bundy as Elle Woods in the Broadway production of Legally Blonde -- The Musical.

One of the best signs this show has a chance to be good comes in the first segment when Legally Blonde director Jerry Mitchell tells the hopefuls, "Casting the next Elle Woods will be my decision."

With those words, we know this will not turn into a popularity contest where the winner will be determined by whoever has the fan base that can text the quickest. It will be a professional Broadway director, plus veteran casting director Bernard Telsey, Legally Blonde book writer Heather Hach and actor Paul Canaan, who tells the hopefuls, "I wanted to be Elle Woods, but there was a height issue . . . "

By then, we also know that the show isn't going to waste our time with preliminaries. No lingering in the hinterlands to see what crazy, delusional people show up at the open calls. We start with the ladies who got to come to New York, and quicklywe are down to a final 15 who have to be whittled to a final 10 in 45 minutes. So we see a lot of dancing and trying to sing the Act I finale, So Much Better, in which the final note is held for 16 bars. We really do get a sense of how tough being in a Broadway show is.

When Emma, a hopeful who claims Broadway is in her blood because her parents met working on the original Grease, asks associate choreographer Dennis Jones if he could demonstrate a move slower, he says, "I am."

Emma provides the most drama of the night, walking in touting her Broadway bloodline  but apparently not bringing her A game to the audition. But she makes it, and the show also starts to develop some characters, like Bailey, a 20-year-old Southern Belle from Anderson, S.C., who seems destined to become the show's bumpkin, and Lauren, already becoming the meanie.

There is a classic moment in Lauren's singing audition, where she brags, "I'm not here for my 15 minutes of fame making friends with the other girls."

Hach responds, "But Elle Woods would take it to the top, but she'd also make friends with the other girls."

Lauren starts backing up immediately, "All the other girls here are really nice . . . "

Yes, judging by the preview, there will be some drama, some tears, some backstabbing, and you want a little of that on reality TV.

But like Project Runway at its best, The Search for Elle seems to be aiming to present the process of the craft. The main whining in the first episode is about exhaustion. Bundy, who looks a couple of decades more mature than any of these girls when she meets them at the end of the premier, says, "If you are tired right now, that is nothing."

That does bring us back to the overall misgiving about this process, this premise. Dismissing the final contestant cut, Telsey says, "We can't cast based on potential."

But at this juncture, isn't that basically what this show is doing? None of these actors appear to have much professional seasoning in the premier. So really, they are looking for someone who's right for the part and has the potential to be able to go from this pressure cooker to centerstage at the Palace Theatre in a few months.

That's asking a lot.

But fortunately, watching MTV's Blonde talent search doesn't appear to be asking for too much.

June 02, 2008

'Blonde' reality show unlikely to find another Bundy

Bundy - Blonde bow Laura Bell Bundy takes a bow on the opening night of Legally Blonde -- The Musical, April 29, 2007. Before she bows out, we'll see her a few times on the MTV reality/competition show that will name her replacement. Copyrighted Herald-Leader photo by Aaron Lee Fineman. Below: A moment from Legally Blonde The Musicial: The Search for Elle Woods. Copyrighted photo courtesy of MTV.

The argument against a reality show to find Laura Bell Bundy's replacement as the lead in the Broadway production of Legally Blonde -- The Musical is Laura Bell Bundy.

This isn't argument Bundy is making. She has said nothing against Legally Blonde The Musical -- The Search for Elle Woods, the MTV show that premiers tonight with 10 aspiring starlets competing to inherit Elle's hot pink wardrobe. In fact, she's promoting the show, will appear in several episodes and help train the winner for her big debut.

MTV - Search for Elle But you cannot deny that this show is a purely commercial move designed to keep Blonde in the spotlight after its Tony Award-nominated star exits. Yes, there is always that chance that The Search will turn up some diamond in the rough, a previously unknown talent with the skills, magnetism and stamina to fill Bundy's pink high heels.

But that's doubtful, because Bundy didn't walk into the show straight out of Lexington Catholic High School, and that's not how most of Broadway's leading lights got to center stage. Bundy first turned heads when she was 10, taking an Obie Award nominated star turn in Ruthless! The Musical. She had roles in movies such as Jumanji and guest turns on Home Improvement that you can still see on Nickelodeon. If she'd been born 10 years later, in an entertainment landscape like today's that offers more opportunities to child stars, she could have been a Miley Cyrus or Ashley Tisdale. But she actually went to high school here, then went back to New York and walked onto a plum role in a hit daytime drama, followed by a Broadway debut in a Tony Award-winning musical. When we talked to her directors and colleagues on Blonde, almost all referred to the years of work she put in leading up to this show as being of paramount importance to her landing and succeeding in the part.

She paid her dues, but even more importantly, she gained valuable experience that prepared her for a colossally demanding role that is plausibly billed as being as big as Gypsy's Mama Rose. Granted, Blonde does not have Gypsy's literary cachet. But as Elle, Bundy is dancing, singing, acting a range from humor to heartache and basically executing every play in the triple threat book with only a few minutes off stage.

It is a role you work up to, not one you walk into off the street.

Broadway already tried this once, when the revival of Grease held a reality show audition for the leading roles of Danny and Sandy. Likable Max Crumm and Laura Osnes won via viewer votes over a few folks who had more seasoning, and the opening night reviews were not kind. Normally, these roles have gone to veterans who worked their ways up through the ranks or were filled with a little stunt casting. Actually, Grease is resorting to that now, with American Idol champ Taylor Hicks joining the cast for the summer.

Broadway is a business -- big business. And with so many lights on Times Square producers need to do something to make theirs shine brighter. Maybe being the show with the girl from MTV will help Blonde, now well into its second year. But it's not a move that shows a tremendous amount of respect for Bundy, her supporting players or hundreds of other actors who have put in their time on auditions, rejections and bit parts to get roles like this. And in many ways, it will put the eventual winner of the contest in precarious position she'll need Elle-like determination to overcome.

Starting tonight, we'll find out if anyone fits that bill.

May 28, 2008

An imaginative month of theater

As it is in Heaven - UK 2008 Havala Strauss, Jesse Pavlovic, Allyson Smith, Sara Durham, Mary-Hollis Hundley, Cassidy Twyman, Courtney Collier, Jasmine Webb, and Ashley Smith play the women in of the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill in the University of Kentucky Theatre's production of As it is in Heaven, playing the next two weekends at the Shaker Village. Copyrighted portrait by David Stephenson for LexGo.

Late May is usually a sleepy time for theater here in Lexington. But May 2008 has not just been active, it's been adventurous. Last week, LexArts unveiled In This Place . . . a show folks have been buzzing about since it opened a week ago. It's a buzz that usually goes something like, "(Gasp) . . . wasn't that the most incredible thing?!"

The same weekend, TV star and one-time Lexington resident Leslie Jordan opened his one-man show here and Natasha's Bistro brought in Louisville's Shoestring Productions to present Edward Albee's groundbreaking The Zoo Story.

Let's see if this weekend's theatrical adventures are gasp worthy.

The University of Kentucky Theatre is taking Arlene Hutton's As It Is In Heaven back to the place it was born: the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill. The UK troupe will be performing the piece in the Meadow View Barn, which has housed the Chamber Music Festival of the Bluegrass -- another extremely imaginative event -- the last two Memorial Day weekends. Could this be the birth of some sort of Shaker Village Arts series?

Meanwhile, back in LexVegas, Theo Edmonds' Cool Life KY operation is presenting its first theatrical endeavor, The Show. Billed as a rock/folk opera about a rock star who loses everything and finds himself in the Bluegrass State, the performance is being billed as a read-through concert to gain support and input for future touring. So, if you are up for a little more adventure, you might want to check out The Show and tell them what you think.

May 27, 2008

If you can't do the time . . .

Anyone who pays attention to movies or theater has probably read a scathing review of a show, only to walk by a poster or marquee a few days later too see the same critic quoted as if he gave the thing a rave. You know, maybe the critic wrote, "Only an idiot would think this was a great show," and the marquee screams, "A GREAT SHOW!" attributed to that critic. Well in England, that is now a crime, punishable by up to $9,000 in fines or two years in jail, according to Variety.

May 23, 2008

Review: Leslie Jordan -- 'My Trip Down the Pink Carpet'

Leslie Jordan's biggest claim to fame is his Emmy Award-winning regular role as Beverly Leslie, arch nemisis of Megan Mullally's Karen Walker on Will & Grace.

So you might have expected some Will & Grace moments from Jordan when he took the stage at the Kentucky Theatre for his one-man show, My Trip Down the Pink Carpet. Jordan, Leslie And there were a few moments, as he started us out at the 2006 Emmy Awards, where he had won his Emmy and was preparing to accompany eight-time Emmy winner Cloris Leachman onto the stage to present a comedy writing award.

Some in the crowd at the Kentucky clearly remembered the moment. Leachman had a line about always remembering her first Emmy, and Jordan, who had just collected his at a separate ceremony a week before, said he took his everywhere, even to bed.

"It's the only woman I ever slept with," he declared.

It was one of the first of many huge laughs during the night, but the line also served as the catalyst for the rest of the show, as Jordan laid out the journey that brought him to a point he could make such an openly gay declaration before a packed auditorium and a national television audience.

My Trip is based on Jordan's forthcoming memoir of the same name. In fact, the show is essentially serving as its book tour, scheduled to hit nearly 30 cities after this opening night in Lexington.

And it's somewhat appropriate the show starts in the South as that's where Jordan started, growing in up in Chattanooga, Tenn., indulging in a crush on the quarterback for the high school football team. He was also a former University of Kentucky student who once aspired to be a jockey.

Jordan regaled us with tales of a number of his crushes after he moved to Hollywood in the early 1980s and landed supporting roles on TV series with men such as Robert Urich, Mark Harmon and our own George Clooney. His best of the these stories is about how he kept dropping a line in the 1992 series Reasonable Doubts so that they would have to repeat a scene where Harmon pushed him to the ground and straddled him.

In the midst of these tales, Jordan kept winding back to a few important themes: an isolation he felt growing up gay in the Bible Belt and self-loathing that would manifest itself in a simultaneous fascination with and repulsion from people like author Truman Capote and center square Paul Lynde who, like Jordan, were effeminate gay men.

Continue reading "Review: Leslie Jordan -- 'My Trip Down the Pink Carpet'" »

May 16, 2008

Review: 'All the Great Books (abridged)'

080511greatbooks_10 Professor Seale (Eric Ryan Seale) looks on as Coach (Kody Kiser) foists his monster edition of War and Peace on the student teacher (Zack Hightower) in Studio Players' production of All the Great Books (abridged). Copyrighted LexGo photo by Rich Copley.

One of the standard pieces of advice about putting together a rock band is to find people you enjoy being around, whether or not they are great musicians.

An energy will emerge from the camaraderie that will tie everything together.

The same could be said for casting one of the (abridged) plays by the Reduced Shakespeare Company.

While Lexington productions of The Complete History of America (abridged) and The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) have certainly featured some of Lexington’s finer actors, what made them work was the unified spirit of the cast all-in-it-together to convey a tremendous amount of information in as funny a way as possible.

The cast of Studio Player’s production of All the Great Books (abridged) certainly has a lot of information to convey -- 86 books to be exact. The idea of the show is that the three men are teaching a remedial literature class of students that have to familiarize themselves with the tomes in one-hour-and-45-minutes, or they don’t graduate.

The thing is, these aren’t  the best or best-matched teachers for this course.

■ You have Coach, played by Kody Kiser, who comes across as a stereotypical macho football coach. But he also has an unsuspected love for literature, predictably War and Peace and unpredictably Little Women, which he maps out for us like diagraming a play in a game, complete with references to the New York Yankees and steroids.

■ Then there’s professor Seale, played by Eric Ryan Seale, a drama teacher who does not know nearly as much about literature as he should.

■ Finally we have Zach, played by Zack Hightower, a student teacher who probably knows as much about the books as the flunk outs in the class. At his entrance, he says he’s been reading The Lord of the Rings and marvels, “They made a book from the movie!”

Continue reading "Review: 'All the Great Books (abridged)'" »

May 15, 2008

New plays explore Kentucky

Hutton_arlene_fineman Playwright Arlene Hutton, whose As it is in Heaven will be presented by the University of Kentucky Theatre at the Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill. Copyrighted photo by Aaron Lee Fineman.

We often talk about the ability of theater to transport us to times and/or places far away, and that is definitely one of the stage’s beauties.

But sometimes, you get this nagging sensation that you’ve taken enough trips to Elizabethan England or the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and you know there are great stories around here.

Two upcoming productions are going to illuminate that point here in late May, when theater is usually dark.

In_this_place_posterLexArts and the Pick Up Performance Co(S.) present In This Place . . . , a play about the Oldham House, which was built by Samuel Oldham, the first free African American to own property and build his own house in Lexington. It will be presented at the Downtown Arts Center May 22 to 24. (Note: The company is holding open rehearsals at the Downtown Arts Center starting between 3 and 3:15 daily through May 21, except Sunday. The rehearsals are free, though if you come, you are asked to stay for the duration of the approximately 90-minute run through.)

■ The University of Kentucky Theatre will present As it is in Heaven, a play about nine Shaker Women set during the “era of manifestations” in early 19th Century Shaker culture. The play will be performed May 31-June 8 at an open air barn in the Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill, where the play is set.

The play was set there by Arlene Hutton, a New York-based playwright with Kentucky ties who has written about the Bluegrass on several occasions. She was the author of The Last Train to Nibroc, a play set in her parents’ home of Corbin, which spawned two sequels: See Rock City and Gulf View Drive, all with heavy references to local touchstones such as Berea College.

After frequently sitting through plays where I was certain I was missing some of the hip New York references, it was cool to see Gulf View Drive in The City last year fairly confident I was getting a number of things the New Yorkers weren’t.

But seriously, we don’t treasure theater with roots here so that we can somehow be hipper than everyone else when the shows venture out into the world. These are events to treasure because they help us understand the world where we live and the things that are around us we might not have time to or know how to investigate unless someone boils it down into 90-or-so engrossing minutes.

Continue reading "New plays explore Kentucky" »

May 11, 2008

L.A. Times critic comes home to Lexington

The University of ­Kentucky College of Fine Arts distinguished alumni award has gone to such artists as sculptor John Henry, tenor Gregory Turay and Wilco drummer Glenn Kotche.

This year, it went to — I love this — a critic.

F. Kathleen Foley was a theater student at UK in the 1970s and has gone on to a career as a theater critic F_kathleen_foley_2 for the Los Angeles Times and several other publications in Southern California. Foley’s original intention was to act, which she did in New York, Kentucky and L.A.

“I became a critic by default,” Foley says from her home in Los Angeles. “I wanted the free tickets, so after acting didn’t work out, I kind of segued into this career.”

That’s one of two careers Foley has. By day, she works for Breakdown Services, a Los Angeles firm that reads scripts and ­disseminates information about the available roles to actors, directors, agents and other interested parties in the film trade. Foley and her colleagues read scripts, then distill them into quick information about the plots and characters to distribute to clients. For instance, a script might call for a 23-year-old blonde bimbo who roller skates, so when the information goes out, agents can send all of their clients who match that description.

“It’s really leveled the ­playing field,” Foley says.

And she and her ­colleagues have a lot of fun, including reading egregiously bad scripts out loud to one another.

“After Pulp Fiction came out, everything we got was really raw and awful,” Foley says. “But I read good scripts, too. I read The ­Departed,” which won the 2007 Oscar for best-picture.

By night, Foley loves to see good theater, filing an ­average of two reviews a week.

Above: F. Kathleen Foley accepts her distinguished alumni award at UK, May 4, 2008. Photo courtesy of F. Kathleen Foley.

Continue reading "L.A. Times critic comes home to Lexington" »

May 08, 2008

Studio Players' 2008-09 season

Studio Players’ 2008-09 season features a holiday play that has been a sold-out hit in many areas and a contribution to the Lincoln bicentennial celebrations. Here’s the lineup:

Sept. 11-28: Don’t Dress for Dinner by Marc Camoletti, adapted by Robin Hawdon; directed by Gary McCormick. A man’s plans for a romantic weekend in the country with his mistress go horribly awry.

Nov. 6-30: A Tuna Christmas by Ed Howard, Joe Sears and Jaston Williams; directed by Marc Roland. The local radio personalities in the third-smallest town in Texas are back on the air, tellin’ y’all about the Yuletide season happenings. This show is an annual sell-out at Actors Theatre of Louisville and other theaters.

Jan. 15-Feb. 1: The Last of Mrs. Lincoln by James Prideaux, directed by Paul Thomas. This is a look at the life of Mary Todd Lincoln after the assassination of her husband, President Abraham Lincoln.

March 19-April 5: Six Degrees of Separation by John Guare, directed by Eric Ryan Seale. The title of the play, which was made into a hit 1993 movie starring Will Smith, has become a pop culture catch phrase, suggesting we are all just six people away from knowing everyone else. The story centers on a con man who talks his way into the apartment of a wealthy New York couple by saying he is Sidney Poitier’s son and friends with their child, who is away at college.

May 21-June 7: Dearly Beloved by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope and Jamie Wooten; directed by Tonda-Leah Fields. Studio starts the season with an affair gone awry and ends it with a wedding in chaos. Take your favorite June bride.

Season tickets will be $60, and go on sale with the opening of All the Great Books (Abridged), which runs May 15 to June 1. After June 30, the season subscription price will rise to $65. Subscriptions will be available at the Carriage House Theatre during performances, the Downtown Arts Center ticket office, by calling (859) 225-0370.

May 06, 2008

Lyndy is 'Dancing with the Stars'

Lyndy_franklin_in_a_chorus_line_reh Lexington-native Lyndy Franklin and her fellow castmates from A Chorus Line will be on Dancing with the Stars at 9 tonight (May 6) on ABC. Franklin made her Broadway debut in the hit revival of A Chorus Line in 2006 and is now the company's dance captain. Along for the ride was company manager and fellow Lexingtonian Adam J. Miller. Miller and Franklin went to the Sayre School together.

Copyrighted Herald-Leader photo by Aaron Lee Fineman.

April 25, 2008

The return of Walter May

Moonlight_60 David O. Selznick, played by Walter May, envisions a scene from Gone with the Wind as Victor Fleming, played by Eric Johnson, looks on in Ron Hutchinson's Moonlight and Magnolias. Copyrighted photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

~ Click here to read Candace Chaney's review of Moonlight and Magnolias.

The last time Walter May was on stage for Actors Guild of Lexington, it was the theater’s 2004 production of the three-man play Art.

And his last stand at AGL before that was in 2000 for Alfred Uhry’s The Last Night of Ballyhoo, set in Atlanta during the world premiere of Gone With the Wind.

“This time, we just thought we’d put the three-man show and Gone With the Wind together,” May says, settling down for a chat before a dress rehearsal for Moonlight and Magnolias, Ron Hutchinson’s play about how the Gone With the Wind script was written. It opened last weekend at the Downtown Arts Center.

In the play, which is based on a real story, producer David O. Selznick locks himself, director Victor Fleming and writer Ben Hecht in his office. There, during a tense and comical five days, the trio hammers out the script for the film some still consider the greatest American movie ever made.

Despite the coincidences, May says it wasn’t the three-men angle, Gone With the Wind or the fact that it’s another leap year that brought him back to AGL. It was a call from the theater’s artistic director, Richard St. Peter, who was in a bind after actor Roger Leasor had to withdraw from the production to attend to obligations at his day job as president of Liquor Barn.

That brought May back to the stage as Selznick, the producer who has to convince his writer and director they have a hit on their hands, if they don’t mess it up.

“He’s manic, creative and driven,” May says.

Manic may not apply to his stage work, but creative and driven do.

Continue reading "The return of Walter May" »

April 18, 2008

Review: The Music Man

Iowa has been good for Paragon Music Theatre.

Four years ago, the company went there for its debut production, Richard Rodgers and Jessie_rose_penningtonOscar Hammerstein II’s State Fair. It was a stunningly good production for Paragon, especially considering it was its first show.

This spring, the company is back in the Hawkeye State for Meredith Wilson’s The Music Man.

Since March 2004, Paragon has staged numerous excellent shows, so now we have expectations.
In many respects, Music Man lives up to those, particularly in providing strong leads and a solid orchestra. In every respect, you have to admire the effort.

There are moments, particularly the first act showstoppers Ya Got Trouble and Seventy-Six Trombones, where the stage floods with around 50 performers.

Photo, above: Jessie Rose Pennington plays Marian the librarian in Paragon Music Theatre's production of The Music Man. LexGo photo by David Perry.

Continue reading "Review: The Music Man" »

April 16, 2008

Laura Bell Bundy to join Sardi's wall of fame

When Laura Bell Bundy was a young actress in New York City, her mom would take her to dine at Sardi's, the Bundy_albumlaughing_in_times_square famous 44th Street restaurant where caricatures of stars who dined at the restaurant filled the walls.

"She looked up and asked me, 'Mommy, can I have my picture up on this wall?'" Lorna Bundy Jones recalls. "I remember answering her by saying, 'Honey, if you work really hard, someday, you will have your picture up on that wall.'"

Well, someday is now April 24, just five days shy of the first anniversary of the opening of Legally Blonde, Bundy's first lead  role on Broadway. Her caricature will be unveiled at the restaurant, where it will hang alongside of legends such as Leonard Bernstein, Liza Minnelli and Bernadette Peters. It is being drawn by Sardi's longtime artist Richard Baratz, who's drawn Robert De Niro, Marvin Hamlisch  and Billy Joel, to name a few.

Copyrighted photo, above, by Aaron Lee Fineman.

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    Questapalooza 2008

    • Twilight
      In it's third edition, Questapalooza attracted 6,500 people to Quest Community Church in Lexington, Ky., on Aug. 31, 2008. The music lineup was Kirk Franklin, Kutless and needtobreathe. In addition to the tunes, festival goers enjoyed carnival attractions, contests, heard a sermon and witnessed baptisms.

    Ichthus 2008

    • Casting Crowns - Mark, 'Praise You in this Storm'
      The 2008 Ichthus Festival was a roller coaster ride. The week started with the first project by Ichthus Ministries' environmental initiative: ECOS (Earth Commission, Operation Simplify). Then there was the severe thunderstorm June 9 that leveled 14 out of 19 tents at the festival site, with only two days left to open. And it did open, earlier than ever with a Thursday morning battle of the bands. That was followed by one of the hottest Ichthus days ever, and we aren't just talking about Skillet's set the night of June 12. The next day was Friday the 13th, and it turned out to be unlucky for the fest, with thunderstorms scuttling the evening lineup. But as it often has, Ichthus rallied with a fun and worshipful Saturday. The Herald-Leader crew was out there all week. Here's our photo album.

    UK Wind Ensemble goes to China

    • UK-China
      May 19 to 29, 2008, the University of Kentucky Wind Ensemble is taking a trip to China, where it is scheduled to play six concerts and visit seven cities. The tour finds China eagerly anticipating the 2008 Summer Olympics while also mourning the loss of tens of thousands of its citizens to a devastating earthquake on May 12. This photo album begins with images taken by the Herald-Leader's Whitney Waters at event's leading up to the ensemble's departure.

    Actors Guild of Lexington

    • Valentine
      Actors Guild of Lexington's early spring production is Tom Stoppard's brainy drama, Arcadia. The show is a mystery over several centuries involving math, science and literature. Here's a look at some images from the show, which runs through April 6 at the Downtown Arts Center, by Herald-Leader photographer Charles Bertram. The photos are copyrighted by the Herald-Leader.

    Winter Jam 2008 - Rupp Arena

    • MercyMe
      After years of going to -- excuse us while we clear our throats -- Louisville, Winter Jam finally came to Kentucky's true big house, Rupp Arena, March 6, 2008. That gave Lexington a heaping helping of MercyMe, BarlowGirl and Skillet, as well as others. This is a little record of the event.

    UK Opera Theatre

    • 'Hansel and Gretel' - The Witch and Hansel
      The University of Kentucky Opera Theatre is presenting its production of Engelbert Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gretel" through March 8, 2008 at the Lexington Opera House. To give more students a shot at the stage, and for the sake of the singers' voices, two casts were fielded for this production. University of Kentucky photographer Tim Collins shot both casts. Here's a selection of those images.

    Amber Rhodes

    • Amber Rhodes live
      Lexington Native Amber Rhodes is a budding country star, shopping a hit independent release around the country, hoping to land a recording contract with a major label. To take a peek into the life of an aspiring country star, and to see how much work it is, I went down to Nashville to spend a day with Amber, as she works to get her name out there. Here are some pictures from that trip. All photos are copyrighted by the Lexington Herald-Leader.

    Summer Theatre 2007

    • Beauty & the Beast: The village
      Between June 21 and Aug. 2, eight new plays or musicals opened in the immediate Lexington area. That was an extraordinary number of shows for a summer in the Bluegrass State. Here, we offer a photo album from behind the scenes and on stage.

    Ichthus 2007

    • Switchfoot - Tim Foreman
      Ichthus 2007 took place June 14-16 at Ichthus Farm in Wilmore, Ky. Among the featured performers were Switchfoot, Relient K, Newsboys, Third Day and Phil Keaggy (photo, above).

    Laura Bell Bundy

    • Take It From the Top
      On April 29, 2007, Lexington native Laura Bell Bundy realized her dream of creating a role in a Broadway musical when she took the stage of New York's Palace Theatre playing Elle Woods in 'Legally Blonde.' It's a goal she'd been working toward since age 10, when she played monstrous child star Tina Denmark in the Off Broadway hit 'Ruthless.' Her 'Legally Blonde' performance earned Bundy a Tony Award nomination for best leading actress in a musical. Over the years, Herald-Leader photographers have chronicled Bundy's career. These are some of their best shots, along with a few other photos.

    Superchick's Generation Rising Tour in Winchester

    • Group 1 Crew
      Superchick's Generation Rising Tour came to Winchester's Central Baptist Church, May 11, 2007. Joining them were DecembeRadio, Krystal Meyers, Nevertheless and Group 1 Crew. Photos by Rich Copley.

    Stephanie Pistello

    • 'The Diviners,' 2002
      Stephanie Pistello graduated from Lafayette High School and Transylvania University. She went to New York to pursue an acting career, but returned in August 2006 with her New Mummer Group to present Tennessee Williams' "Candles to the Sun" at Actors Theatre of Louisville.

    The Shakespeare portraits

    • 2003: Brandon Jones as Othello
      Since 1999, the Herald-Leader has previewed the Lexington Shakespeare Festival with profiles and environmental portraits of the actors or directors involved in each show. This is a gallery of those fantastic images.

    October 2008

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