The search for a season
from BJ Jones
It’s the week after the opening of Souvenir and our audiences and the critics appear to be most pleased. It’s funny, charming and surprisingly moving, but what appears to fascinate our audience the most is that it is about a real person.
Over the years, work that reflects our human condition seems to resonate quite strongly. Character driven, and quirky plays and musicals like last season’s Grey Gardens, or Side Show, the musical about the conjoined twins, always strike a chord with our subscribers and it’s one of the reasons I look for these interesting pieces when considering our upcoming seasons.
I like to find work that shakes up our perceptions of social and political issues, like Permanent Collection, Gee’s Bend, or Ground, a play that we commissioned and will premier at the Humana Festival this year in Louisville.
I mention this now, as I am in process of choosing next season and often I am asked by subscribers how I choose our seasons and how far in advance we work on it. I tell them we are always looking for work that they will respond to. We have had the rights to Souvenir for two seasons but we found other plays that felt more appropriate and timely, so we did those first. READ MORE 
Written By:
BJ Jones
Souvenir: “deceptively complicated”
Souvenir is a “deceptively complicated piece” (Chicago Tribune) - funny and light on the surface, yet delving more deeply into the lives and psyches of its two characters than one might initially realize - and we’re so pleased that the critics have seen it that way. Some of their thoughts on the multi-layered nature of the play are below. We’d love to hear yours. (To comment, just click on the title of this entry, then scroll down to find the comment area below.)
“Temperley also probes such fascinating matters as how singers really never hear what everyone else hears, and thus they don’t really know how they sound. They all take things on trust. More interesting yet, the piece also explores the question as to whether such little things as correct notes, pitch and rhythm really matter as much as the guardians of culture say they do. If you can move people without them - maybe move people more because you don’t have them - then who needs them?” -Chicago Tribune
“[Powers] succeeds in making Jenkins seem less a figure of fun than a true American original. She has a game foil in Anders, who brings out the tenderness in McMoon’s reluctant ability to overlook his patron’s flaws, which might otherwise seem like opportunism.” -Time Out Chicago
“Everyone with a need for artistic self-expression is not necessarily artistic. But who is to say what is art? Florence Foster Jenkins had the means to do what she felt was her destiny.” -TheaterWorld.com
“[Cosme McMoon] accepted a well-paying gig he thought would be short-lived and under-the-radar, but it turned out to be life-changing as for years he provided impeccable musical accompaniment for a woman who seemed blithely unaware of how dreadful her singing was, or, if she knew, simply believed that art was simply what you imagined it to be in all its glory.” -Chicago Sun-Times
Written By:
admin
A little bit of magic
from Lynn Baber, Artistic Administrator
I really think that theatre has a lot of magic in it. I’m really lucky to have a job where there is a little bit of magic in every day. This week’s magic looked like this~
Five minutes before The Marvelous Wonderettes closed:

Two hours after The Marvelous Wonderettes closed:

Twelve hours after it closed the stage looked like this:

And 36 hours after it closed it looks like this:

Not only does that seem magical to me, it seems kind of impossible. We do the impossible and the magical all the time around here. It’s our job. I can’t wait to see what Northlight looks like tomorrow.
Written By:
Lynn Baber
And the Survey Says…
We asked, you answered! Though we were sad to say good-bye to The Marvelous Wonderettes this weekend, we had a marvelous time on memory lane and were thrilled to have so many audience members take the trip with us. Here’s a final look at the 1950s with your answers to our 50s Favorites Survey:
Best Song
WINNER: Rock Around the Clock (36.3%)
Only You (22.5%)
Unchained Melody (18.1%)
In the Still of the Night (17.5%)
Teddy Bear (5.6%)
Worst Song
WINNER (or LOSER, in this case): Purple People Eater (42.8%)
Doggie in the Window (30.2%)
Sea Cruise (18.9%)
Sh-Boom (8.2%)
Favorite Musical Artist
WINNER: Elvis Presley (33.8%)
Bobby Darin (21.0%)
Buddy Holly (19.7%)
Doris Day (14.6%)
Chuck Berry (10.8%)
Celebrity Crush (Male)
WINNER: Ricky Nelson (38.2%)
Troy Donahue (27.8%)
Elvis Presley (21.5%)
Sam Cooke (6.3%)
Johnny Ray (6.3%)
Celebrity Crush (Female)
WINNER: Annette Funicello (35.7%)
Marilyn Monroe (28.0%)
Sandra Dee (19.6%)
Rita Hayworth (16.8%)
Written By:
admin