Showing posts with label Lynn Nottage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lynn Nottage. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

'Vera Stark' stars in Manassas

Olivia Royster is Vera Stark and Adrian Alleyne has dual roles in By the Way, Meet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


Who is Vera Stark?  

She's the star of a play with her name, By the Way, Meet Vera Stark, the character whom Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage based loosely on the life of Theresa Harris (1906-1985), a black actor and singer.

Olivia Royster, left, is Vera Stark and Deb Hansen is Gloria in By the Way, Meet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


What I thought was going to be a drama at Rooftop Productions in Manassas turned out to be not so much a drama as a comedrama (with emphasis on the comedy), and a serious message more broadly understood in Act II.

The story revolves around a decades' long relationship between an aging movie star, Gloria (Deb Hansen), a white woman, and her maid, Vera (Olivia Royster), a black woman.

Olivia Royster is Vera Stark, left, and Terresita Edwards is Lottie in By the WayMeet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


In Act II Vera magically transforms from a maid (Act I) into a vibrant star, confident in her style and luxuriating in newfound public appeal and celebrity.  

Along the way, the usual Hollywood suspects enter and claim the spotlight.

Late in life Vera and Gloria meet up and exchange places in a surprise appearance on a television show, 

Who do you think gets her comeuppance? 

That Vera is the same person in both acts is hard to grasp since the characters are extremely opposite, but Ms. Royster's metamorphosis convinces us. 

For community theatre the acting is outrageously terrific, several standout performances which almost outshine the star's.

Elijah Moshe Begab's histrionics as "Maximilian Van Oster," the director of an upcoming movie, are hysterical as he prances and dances, the target of several wannabe actors.  

(Just wait until you see him in Act II as a sideshow where his eyes seem to diverge as he stares up at the ceiling and throws his head back for a big puff from a cigarette propped straight up in his mouth and perpendicular to the floor.)

And, there is Lottie (Terresita Edwards) who's got a whole lottie shakin' goin' on with a lotta voice to match.  This girl belongs on the big stage!  

Lottie is Vera's roommate who knows savvy, especially when it comes to unsavory acquaintances.

Ms. Hansen superbly displays her snobbery and condescension as Gloria, the movie star, unwilling to recognize the talents of others but anxious about her competitors.

Karina Kasara Jimenez as the "fake" Brazilian is a hoot. She lashes out in more ways than one. 

Costumer Laura Mills's swinging 1970s men's suit for Steve Glenn as TV show host, Brad Donovan, with its light blue color and wide lapels fits right in with the comedy. In Act I, Mr. Glenn is the movie's studio head, Frederick Slasvick (rhymes with slapstick), another great rendition of an exaggerated stereotype.

Kudos to the remainder of the cast:  Adrian Alleyn (Curtis Lewis, from Mar. 31 - Apr. 2),  Suzette Farnun, Tia Milton, and Jay Tilley.

Melissa Jo York-Tilley's set design is realistic, from the oak furniture to the paintings on the walls.  (She's also assistant director, hair and makeup designer, and more!)

With a few prop changes by Lauren Hatmaker, scene transitions go smoothly with almost no interruption in the flow of the story. 

Combine this Women's History Month with last month's Black History Month, and Vera Stark makes a great take on both. 

Rooftop's stacked seating makes enjoyment of the production more personable. The theatre is located in the city's historic district, in the Artfactory which reminds me of Alexandria's Torpedo Factory.

But this is the former home of the Hopkins Candy Factory which began operations in 1908. 

Around 1916, it became a feed and flour mill store and by the 1980s, it was a tire warehouse.  

Merchants Tire gave the building to the city of Manassas in 1998 where its conversion as an art center was spearheaded by Carol Merchant Kirby.

Wikipedia quote Ms. Harris:

 I never had the chance to rise above the role of maid in Hollywood movies. My color was against me anyway you looked at it. The fact that I was not "hot" stamped me either as uppity or relegated me to the eternal role of stooge or servant. [...] My ambition is to be an actress. Hollywood had no parts for me.

In Vera Stark, Ms. Harris blossoms, producing ample boasting opportunities for director AnuRa Harrison.

Other members of the production staff are Kimberly Kemp, producer; Erin Decaprio, assistant stage manager; Jimmy Conroy, technicals; Kurt Gustafson and Rebecca Nicoletti, lighting;  Matthew Scarborough, Adriane Harrison, and Pam Mahone, sound; Ivy Elizabeth, dialects;  and Emily Dunn, videographer.  


When:  7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights, Mar. 31 - April 1, 2023 with a matinee at 2 p.m., Sunday, April 2, 2023.

Tickets:  $28.19 which includes fees for students and seniors, and $33.52 with fees, adults

Duration:  About 2.5 hrs. with one intermission

Audience:  For mature teens on up

Language:  X 

Where: The Artfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas, VA 20110 

For more information:  703-330-2787

patricialesli@gmail.com

Friday, September 6, 2019

Mosaic's 'Fabulation' is fantastic fabulous fable


Kevin E. Thorne II's performance as Flow was my favorite in Mosaic Theater Company's Fabulation or, The Re-Education of Undine. Watching from left are Grandma (Aakhu TuahNera Freeman) and Undine (Felicia Curry) /Photo by Christopher Banks

Undine undoes the audience.

At times the laughter at Mosaic Theater Company prevented my hearing all the lines in the uproarious production, the D.C. premiere of Fabulation or, The Re-Education of Undine.

The show is solid entertainment, sketching the no-nonsense life of a New York businesswoman, "Undine" (Felicia Curry), who becomes undone by a conniver named Hervé (Carlos Saldana).  

Hervé could convince a snake to fly. 
Girlfriends, Roz White, left, and Felicia Curry in Mosaic Theater Company's Fabulation or, The Re-Education of Undine/Photo by Christopher Banks

In program notes dramaturg Faedra Chatard Carpenter writes that "Undine" is a mythological "soulless creature" who can recapture her soul if she marries a mortal and bears his child. It's an unhappy union since the mortal does mortal things as we are wont to do.

With proclivities to trick, Hervé whirls Undine round and round the stage in a magnificently choreographed seduction. (Rashida Bumbray was the movement consultant, and Christylez Bacon, rhythm/musical consultant.) 

In a different scene in the solo spotlight, Hervé calls out the names of romantic cities, immediately conjuring bliss. (I, too, was captured in Hervé's spell.)

The manipulator, dast he, fells Undine, forcing her to return to her old home place and her people she hasn't visited in 14 years.  

"Brother, can you spare a dime?"

You laugh at the serious stuff in Undine telling yourself it's just not right, but it can't be helped and away you go.
Herve (Carlos Saldana) rocks Undine (Felicia Curry) in Mosaic Theater Company's Fabulation or, The Re-Education of Undine/Photo by Christopher Banks

The sad but riotous scene in the social services office ("the form!") is too real even for the imaginations of those who've escaped such an ordeal. Director Eric Ruffin builds frustrations to an hilarious apex of a welcome but unlikely exchange. 
 
Script for Undine's girlfriends Rosa (Roz White) and Devora (Lauryn Simone) brought lots of laughs. In their dual and triple roles, Ms. White and Ms. Simone had no trouble projecting their personalities for desired effects.

Ms. Curry, naturally, carries the fast-paced comedrama with flair and confidence as her life unwinds and awakens her to an existence she tried to ignore.

The actors handled their multiple roles with New York stage finesse, but the absolute knockout was Kevin E. Thorne II who is "Flow" in the show, Undine's brother and poet who fiercely protects his "territory" and decries his sister's laments about her life. (The D.C. resident and Howard University graduate was also an FBI agent in the show.)

Except for the long ending with too much melodrama, the script is brilliant, threaded with complex issues of African-American culture and history, most which bypassed me who was enlightened later by the program.
 
For quick scene changes, Mr. Ruffin's clever design of a "ring shout" has actors dressed in white moving in slow, shadowy circles to make African music by beating wooden and steel instruments.

Andrew Cohen's set and Willow Watson's props are nicely balanced and serve purposes more than adequately.

John D. Alexander's lighting chases quick movements and streams upon soloists on the darkened stage, mostly Undine who often turns and addresses the audience in monologues.

Wikipedia says critic Robert Scholes promoted "fabulation" (related to  "postmodernism") to describe contemporary novels of "magical realism" which veer from standard practice. In other words, Undine is a "disrupter" much like the world of disruption we experience daily.

Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for drama (the only woman to be so honored), Lynn Nottage (b. 1964), is the playwright. 
She was at least a decade ahead writing current disrupting literature. Undine opened off-Broadway in 2004. 
 
You can go home again, Undine, but, make sure you don't burn any bridges.

Other members of the cast are James Whalen, the accountant; Aakhu TuahNera Freeman, grandma/doctor/inmate; and William T. Newman, Jr., father/priest.

Other creative team members were Moyenda Kulemeka, costumes; Crescent R. Haynes, sound; Kim James Bey, dialect coach; Jared Smith, assistant director; April E. Carter and Laurel VanLandingham, stage managers.

A listing of post-show discussions may be found under "Dates" at this link.


What: Fabulation or The Re-Education of Undine

When: Now through Sept. 22 at 8 p.m., Wednesday through Saturday; 3 p.m., Saturday and Sunday; 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 12 and 19. Check the calendar for accessibility and post-show discussions dates.


Where: Mosaic Theater Company, Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H Street NE, Washington, D.C. 20002

Getting there: Riding public transportation from Union Station on the streetcar is easy and free, if you can find the streetcar behind Union Station since signage in the station is poor. Valet and parking options are available for those who drive to Atlas.

Tickets start at $20.

Language: Adult but not heavily laden

Duration: About two hours with one 15-minute intermission.

For more information
: Please call the box office and leave a message: 202-399-7993, ext. 2.


patricialesli@gmail.com