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Austin Live Theatre calendar


Arcadia Austin Shakespeare Tom Stoppard

Performance added on Saturday, 2/18, 2 p.m.

 

 

Opening this week ALT

The Crucible Arthur Miller Mary Moody Northen Theatre Austin TX
Romeo and Juliet City Theatre Austin
Messenger No. 4 and The 23 Would-Be Lives of Phineas Hamm
The 21 Would-Be Lives of Phineas Hamm Rachel McGinnis
Proof David Auburn Trinity Street Players, 2/17-3/04
UT New Theatre

includes Bacha Bazi by Gabriel Jackson Dean; The Chronicles of Bad Ass Women by Holli Gipson; Static by Tom Horan; and River City by Diana Grisanti

For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide, Uprise Productions, Austin, TX
Civilization All You Can Eat Jason Grote Salvage Vanguard Theatre
The Robber Bridegroom ALfred Uhry
Woodwork Hank Schwemmer, Paper Chairs
Nick Kellogg, Katie Moss, Beirut Southwestern Univesity
Funny, You Don't Look Like A Grandmother, Hill Country Community Theatre
Vintage Hitchcock Joe Landry Bastrop Opera House TX

 


Continuing on Stage ALT

Arcadia Tom Stoppard Austin Shakespeare at the Rollins Theatre, Long Center, 2/02-19
Cafe at the End of Time Sue Carroll Moore
Marsha Sray Searching for Eden, Paradox Players, 2/10-26
FronteraFest Short Fringe Hyde Park Theatre Austin TX
Boeing Boeing Marc Camoletti Austin Playhouse TX
Meredith McCall Next to Normal Zach Theatre
Hamlet, Sam Bass Community Theatre, Round Rock, 2/10-3/03
Mid-Life Crisis the musical Tex-Arts, Lakeway TX
Miss Evers' Boys by David Feldshuh, Renaissance Guild, San Antonio, 2/10-26
San Pedro Playhouse, San Antonio, 2/11-3/10
Death of A Salesman by Arthur Miller, Rose Theatre Company, San Antonio, 2/10-25
Six Degrees of Separation John Guare Classic Theatre San Antonio
A View from the Bridge Arthur Miller Vexler Theatre San Antonio
Everything Will Be Different, Proxy Theatre, San Antonio
Rent Woodlawn Theatre, San Antonio, 1/27-2/26
Oklahoma San Pedro Playhouse, San Antonio
Ghosts in the Afternoon Overtime Theatre San Antonio, 1/13-2/11
Ain't Misbehavin Fats Waller Josephine Theatre San Antonio TX
Happy Birthday Marc Camoletti, WimberleyPlayers, 2/03-26
Little Women adapted by Matt Buchanan EmilyAnn Studio Theatre, 2/03-26
At First Sight, Annie Pie, Way Off Broadway Community Players, 1/20-2/11
Lend Me A Tenor Gaslight Baker Theatre Lockhart
Chrome Cruisin' 1950s Dinner Theatre, Playhouse Smithville, 2/03-14
The Color Purple, VLA Theatre, Killeen TX
Nunsense, Circle Arts Theatre, New Braunsfels, 2/02-26

 

 

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Theatre for Youth ALT
If You Give A Mouse A Cookie (with Martin Burke), Saturdays 2/18-3/24
Urinetown KidsActing Austin TX
Joseph Technicolor Dreamcoat Austin Conservatory of Theatre Austin TX
The Story Wranglers, State Theatre, 2/28


 

Coming Soon
A Midsummer Night's Dream, American Shakespeare Center 'Almost Blasphemy' tour at the University of Texas, 2/22
'Tis Pity She's A Whore, American Shakespeare Center 'Almost Blasphemy Tour' at University of Texas, 2/23 only
Cabaret McCallum Fine Arts Academy Austin TX
Glengarry Glen Ross David Mamet A Chick and A Dude Productions Austin TX
Sleepers Wake James D W Peden Overtime Theatre, San Antonio
Spring Awakening Austin High School Red Dragon Players, 2/24-26
Singin in the Rain Georgetown Palace Theatre TX
The Tempest by William Shakespeare, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, 2/24-3/03

 

 

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The 1940s Radio Hour, Austin Community College Choir at the One World Theatre, November 17-29 Print E-mail

 


1940s Radio Hour, Austin Community College



I knew that The 1940s Radio Hour done last week at the One World Theatre by the Austin Community College Choir would provide us a time machine to amusement. The surprise for me was the dipsy-doodle movement of that flight through time.


I went to the 11:30 a.m. performance, enjoying the novel sensation of driving in daylight to a theatre performance. I got there half an hour early, picked up my ticket, hiked upstairs to the theatre and was astonished to find myself walking into a capacious performance space with almost every seat already filled. I had to scramble to get a front seat to the far right of the stage.

Looking a little closer, I realized that I'd unwittingly signed up for the "senior special" performance -- rarely had I seen such a vast display of tidily coiffed older women. Yes, I saw some men here and there, usually of the same age, but for a moment it was if the Frank Sinatra fan club of 1942 had been waiting eagerly and patiently in that magic space for the past 68 years. Buzzing and happy, they didn't mind that the show started ten minutes late.

1940s Radio Hour Austin Community CollegeStrictly speaking, most of these folks were probably toddlers back in 1942, so the time warp wasn't exactly perfect. But the ACC choir players gave us good renditions of the golly-gee-whiz all-American entertainment of the 40s, so it hardly mattered.

The set-up for the Radio Hour is familiar -- it's exactly the sort of ensemble piece about young hopefuls in the entertainment world churned out in the various Big Broadcast films of the 1930s and perfected by Arthur Freed at MGM. The hassled, abrupt producer; his dutiful second banana ordering the players around; a crooner with a drinking problem; a cute girl group, the Boutineers, that's a direct knock-off of the Andrews sisters; a couple of clean-cut young men, one destined for the Army Air Force and another taking the relay from his older brothers, now both in the service; "Pops," the janitor; the Judy Garland vulnerable heart of gold, and the tough sexy blonde who reeks of late nights with sugar daddies.


William Cody Querner, Jenny SchmerberSince it's a show about a show, you get the preliminary set-up, initially pantomimed, as cast, crew and musicians gather, interact, and establish their characters; the radio show itself with a pop list of 21 very familiar numbers; then the after-show, off the air, as players disperse, musicians pack up, and Pops takes his broom to the stage again. Oh, and after that, the real curtain call.

This sounds deceptively simple. As far as storyline and comic bits go, it is. The ACC choir players are re-enacting that same old story of kids with stars in their eyes, the one we recognize and love. But they are also taking on songs, themes and dances that are vividly established in our memories, in versions perfected by artists such as Sinatra, Glenn Miller, those Andrews sisters, Peggy Lee, Judy Garland, Ella Fitzgerald and even Carmen Miranda. Those bygone artists made it look so easy!

But how would you like to have Benjamin Grafton's challenge of matching Sinatra's cool command of the lyrics, the pauses and the innuendos of "Love Is Here To Stay" or "I'll Never Smile Again"? Or Raven Wilkins' job of imitating Judy Garland's carefree, pitch perfect rendition of "Rose of the Rio Grand"? The visual and aural spectacle of them and others attempting those high hurdles is edifying. One is tempted to score them against 6.0 perfection, the way it's done in ice skating, and all in all they do really well.

Katie Walther 1940s Radio Hour Austin Community CollegeAt the very top of this game is Katie Walther playing "bad girl" Ginger Brooks. She has the musical assurance, the command, nuance and the personality of the best of the old timers. "Blues in the Night," that Peggy Lee favorite, is the shining moment of the show -- all the more so because she has the confidence to do it straight and then with the backing of all the male players. During their two numbers with her, they get the vaudeville treat of lifting that singing hot babe into the horizontal, not once but twice. And she can dance, too.

William Cody Querner, Hailey Tuck 1940s Radio HourHailey Tuck as stylish Connie Miller delivers with style and vulnerability "I Got It Bad (and That Ain't Good)" and "I'll Be Seeing You." Raven Wilkins as Ann Collier the all-American sweetheart puts lots of heart into her numbers -- particularly "Black Magic" and "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" (a Judy Garland perpetual).

The singing Boutineers hoof and prance and harmonize it with Chiquita Banana and the inevitable "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" (Tiffany Leigh Coghill, Jordan Gott, Lauren Ilyse Klein and Jenny Schmerber). The foursome tended to surround tightly a single microphone at the front of the stage, so from my disadvantaged seat I lost their faces most of the time.

Of the guys, I most appreciated the singing of Kenneth Black as Neal Tilden and both the singing and dancing of William Cody Querner as Yalie B.J. Gibson. Jonathan Melendez as second-banana Lou Cohn is confident with the comedy, the radio sound effects and with the dancing moves.

ACC choir director and associate professor Dr. Jim Shepherd is "Jimmy Shepherd" in the director's credit in the program. He kept the action snappy and all those actors firmly in character throughout the show.  Stylish choreography is by co-director Tamia Zulueta.

Proceeds from the five performances at the One World Theatre will help defray costs for the ACC choir's planned trip to New York to perform Faure's "Requiem" with other choirs at Carnegie Hall in April, 2010.

 

EXTRA

Click to view program for The 1940s Radio Hour by Austin Community College Choir

 

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