Showing posts with label Eric Storck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Storck. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2023

A 'Full Monty' comedy in Vienna


Appearing in Vienna Theatre Company's Monty Python's Edukational Show are, from left: Charlie Boone, Bruce Alan Rauscher, Peter Storck, Kevin Lukacs, and Bill Evans/Photo by Claire Tse 


I laughed and laughed.  After all these years, it was my first venture with "Monty" and his crowd.  

It won't be my last.

The Vienna Theatre Company   presents a lampoon of Monty Python's (Famous) Flying Circus, complete with sketches, songs and animation in an abbreviated  collection of some of the British troupe's crazy scenes.

Hilarious skits involving a parrot (PETA won't like) to a fine dining experience fill the stage in quick successions of all things ridiculous.   

"Election Night Special" is special indeed!  A "silly party"?  Aren't they all?

 
From left, the actors in this scene at Vienna Theatre Company's Monty Python's Edukational Show are Peter Storck, Charlie Boone, Benjamin Zimmerman, Bruce Alan Rauscher, Rachel Heffron, and Patrick Hogan/Photo by Claire Tse 


My favorite skits were the restaurant scene with its overworked staff and "who's got the cheese?"

Spam, spam, spam! That's all you fill me with! 

What better break from the depressing news of the day than to spend time with Monty and his gang of troubadours who take you on a twisted escape trip through a world of absurdity?  

We need it!

Thirteen actors spread the goods through 20 or so  scenes which meant about 80 different costumes charged to designer Lauren Brooks who pulled the huge number off with seemingly seamless effort.  

The experienced actors and their stage skills quickly become evident as one scene transitions nicely into another. And their love of theatre permeates the show which seems far shorter than 90 minutes (plus intermission).

Sets are minimal (by Adrienne Kammer, John Vasko, and Bill Evans with props by Kristy Dautant), and who needs 'em when your brain is flying fast to keep up with the rapid-fire dialogue?  

The backdrop "art work" must be by one of those new and upcoming AI artists, excepting the scenery from Vienna, of course, which brings it all home.

I think it takes a special kind of humor to "get" the full works by Monty. It sure helps to always look on the bright side, Monty or not.

Hold tight for a wacky night in Vienna! 

Cast members are Charlie Boone, Thomas Breen, Bill Evans, Shayne Gardner, Rachel Heffron, Patrick Hogan, Kevin Lukacs, Joe Neff, Steven Palkovitz, Bruce Alan Rauscher, Reece Smyth, Peter Storck and Benjamin Zimmerman

Writers: Monty Python, Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam (also, animation), Eric Idle (also, music and lyrics), Terry Jones, and Michael Palin.

Other production team members are Eric Storck, director; Ann Storck, producer; Allison Shelby, music director; Emily Steindl, choreographer; Katie Boone and Nicholas Boone, stage managers.

Also, Ann McSherry, lighting; Rhett Russell, sound;  David Shelby, projections; Mason Shelby, animations;  Mary Ann Hall, program; Turner Bridgforth, graphics, and Jeff Storck, photographer.  



WhatMonty Python's Edukational Show

When: Friday and Saturday ni
ghts at 8 p.m. through Feb. 4, 2023 with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m., Jan. 29 and Feb. 5, 2023.

Where: Vienna
 Theatre Company, Vienna Community Center, 120 Cherry St., SE, Vienna, VA 22180

Tickets: Online at Vienna, VA – WebTrac Ticket Search (myvscloud.com) or in person at the Vienna Community Center during open hours or before each performance, if available. $15.  

Language: "G" with a sprinkling of a few adult words 

Audience: For teens and adults

Duration:  About 90 minutes plus one intermission  

For more information, please call: (703) 255-6360


patricialesli@gmail.com


 

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

'Be My Baby,' a winter winner in Vienna

Danny Issa and Casey Bauer star in Vienna Theatre Company's Be My Baby, a romantic comedy by Ken Ludwig/Photo by David Segal

I loved this play.  There's so much to love about it:  the humor and style, the story, the fun, the "important message." 

Consider it an early Valentine present from the Vienna Theatre Company, written by D.C.'s own Ken Ludwig, a lawyer by training, a playwright by passion.

The story is totally implausible, but it works.  In Scotland (why Scotland?) a young couple (Casey Bauer and Danny Issa) marry (a play with a wedding!  A surefire winner) but are unable to have children, so the bride's aunt (Allison Shelby) agrees to travel abroad, to California no less, with the groom's caretaker, a grumpy old man, a geezer (John Barclay Burns (related to Robert?)), to fetch a newborn for the childless couple, the baby of a relative who doesn't want the baby (?).  The mutual love the older couple shares is not.  (Did you get all that? Where do playwrights come up with these ideas?  Anyway, it's much simpler to follow than the way it appears here, and...)

The young couple (Gloria and Christy) are a real life young couple, girlfriend and boyfriend, so their "sizzle" is not pretense.  
From left, actors Allison Shelby, Erick Storck, and Danny Issa face Casey Bauer (the bride) and John Barclay Burns (in kilt) in Ken Ludwig's romantic comedy, Be My Baby, at the Vienna Theatre Company/Photo by David Segal

In Be My Baby, everyone does an admirable job of speaking with a Scottish accent (with no voice coach listed in the program) and Burns' accent is actually real (according to program notes), however, in the beginning, Ms. Bauer speaks a little too fast, and is sometimes hard to follow. (I found myself wishing she had a microphone, but perhaps her rapidfire delivery was first scene jitters.)

Ms. Shelby is beautiful and perfectly suited as a grandmother and caring relative, and Mr. Burns is dynamic, delivering zingers, but the two "ensembles," Eric Storck and Meg Hoover, come very close to stealing the show.  They portray several characters and vary their voice inflections and gaits to suit the fancy of a nurse, a flight attendant, bellman, preacher, judge, to name a few of their roles. (Kudos to the costume designer, Susan Devine.)

And for more content, how about some lines from "Scotland's favorite son," its national poet, Robert Burns (1759-1796), spoken in Be My Baby by the living Mr. Burns, such as "For whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest I will lodge; thy people shall be my people...."?

The sets are simple and adequate.  Strollers and a baby carriage hang from the black ceiling to foretell the future (nicely designed by Suzanne Maloney, also the play's director). Everything is all black, save the mostly wooden structures:  a door frame, a bench, a table, a desk, a railing. In the second act, for some reason, props from earlier scenes remain and clutter up the stage, distracting from later scenes until they are removed. 

And who counted the scene changes?  They zoom by quickly, in and out, and no one will doze.

Particularly effective are Aunt Maud's first plane ride, and the opening car scene when Maud and Gloria ride together and move their bodies perfectly in time with each other and the car's rhythm.

The sound designer/composer Jonathan Powers does an outstanding job with constant baby cries, the noises from different vehicles (a car, a jet engine, a cruise ship's horn) and lots of 60s music brought back to life for those of a certain age.  (Mr. Ludwig celebrates his 65th birthday in March.)  I hereby nominate Mr. Powers for a "watchie" (Washington Area Theatre Community Honors).

At the end, the bride cries real tears, and I did, too, swept away by the moment.  Will Be My Baby have that effect on you?

On opening weekend, almost a sell-out.

Other key crew members: Laura Fargotstein, producer; Mary Ann Hall, stage manager; Micheal J. O'Connor, assistant stage manager; Tom Epps, lighting designer; Kimberly Crago, master electrician; John Vasko, master carpenter; Leta Fitzhugh, scenic artist; and Rachel Comer and Meghann Mirabile, prop masters. 

What:  Be My Baby by Ken Ludwig

When:  Jan. 30, 31 and February 6, 7 at 8 p.m., and February 1 and 8, at 2 p.m. 

Where: Vienna Theatre Company,120 Cherry Street, Vienna, VA 22180 (Vienna Community Center)

Tickets: $14

Parking: Lots of free parking on-site

For more information: 703-255-6360 or visit the website

Duration: Two hours with intermission

To read other local reviews of shows still playing, go to Other Reviews on DCMetroTheaterArts.
 
Patricialesli@gmail.com