Showing posts with label Michael Kharfen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Kharfen. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Alexandria loved this 'Murder'!

From left, Brian Lyons-Burke is Monsieur Bouc, Michael Kharfen is Hercule Poirot, Brianna Goode is Countess Andrenyi and Paul Donahoe is the Head Waiter/Michel in Little Theatre of Alexandria's Murder on the Orient Express/ photo by Matt Liptak


Leaving the show, all I heard were gushes of adoration coming from the crowd for Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, the newest production of the Little Theatre of Alexandria with its huge cast who all deliver marvelous performances on a knockout set!  (By Matt Liptak)


My head did spin a few times ogling the elegantly designed 1930s parlor/lounge car which swings to compartments and hallways and who went where?


We go chug, chug, chugging along, just like we're on the train, too. 


Indeed, after experiencing Ken and Patti Crowley's big train headlamp shining in our eyes, coming right at us (with sound by Janice Rivera) against a black backdrop surrounded by long drapes, I was on the Polar Express


Get out of the way!

On left, Patricia Nicklin is Princess Dragomiroff and Julia Rudgers is Greta Ohlsson in Little Theatre of Alexandria's Murder on the Orient Express/ photo by Matt Liptak


The show is an adaptation by notable playwright Ken Ludwig who makes this train ride one heckuva really big show, loaded with tricks and detours to keep the audience guessing. Mr. Ludwig has infused the production with a goodly amount of humor to stir the interactions and make it more fun.  

 

Murder is near the top of Agatha Christie’s most loved mysteries, made into films, television productions, radio, a graphic novel, and games.  She keeps the audience (and readers) guessing.


"Whodunnit"?


The time is 1934 and the train has left Istanbul bound for the west, until it can't, when it gets stuck in snow. 


The year was about six years after Ms. Christie was actually on a train which stalled for six days in Turkey, and it, like the one here, was filled with unusual characters whom the writer used to mold into her fictional characters.

 

Right off the bat (none of these onboard, as far as we know) the bad guy enters, a Mr. RATchett (Paul Caffrey) who is shortly snuffed out, and most of the passengers seem to have a motive to do him in.  


A rat may be dead, but fear not, since

the herculean Detective Hercule Poirot (Michael Kharfen) is onboard and at your service, please, delightful with a twitching mustache, who sets off to find whodunnit (with a little help from his friends) before the killer strikes again!  


Brian Lyons-Burke is Monsieur Bouc, the stuffy train line president a la grumpy Santa.  


Eleanore Tapscott is the eccentric (they all are) and outgoing Helen Hubbard who talks and sings loudly, to the aggravation of all.

 

Avery Lance is Hector MacQueen, Mr, RATchett's secretary while Patricia Nicklin is the arrogant and "titled" Princess Dragomirof of Russia who has a bone to pick. Her servant girl,  Greta (Julia Rudgers) follows nicely along. 


Then there's the beautiful countess from Hungary (Brianna Goode, also the fight captain), Paul Donahoe who has a good time as conductor, Colonel Arbuthnot (John Paul Odle), and Mary Debenham from England (Danielle Comer). 


Aren't these the sort you meet on your train ride?


Costumers Jean Schlichting and Kit Sibley have fitted the players in classy apparel.  After all, who but the well-off could afford a train ride like this in 1934?


Hats off to Larissa Norris, the wig designer, who had more than enough heads to fit!  


Other production crew are Stefan Sittig, director, who has triple responsibilities as the fight choreographer and voiceovers, the latter duties he shares with Samantha Regan. 


Luana Bossolo and Kadira Coley are the producers; Alden Michels, dialect coach;  Jennifer Hardin and Caitlin O'Leary, stage managers; Julia Lisowski, properties design; Art Snow, special effects


Comedrama or dramacomedy? It's also known as a portmanteau dramedy.


All aboard!

 

When: Now through April 13, 2024, Wednesday - Saturday nights, 8 p.m. Sundays at 3 p.m.

Where: Little Theatre of Alexandria, 600 Wolfe St., Alexandria, VA 22314

Tickets:
 $21 - $24 

Audience: General

Duration: About 2 hours with one 15 minute intermission

Public transportation: Check the Metro and Dash bus websites. Dash is free to ride and has routes which are close to LTA.

Parking: is free on streets and at Capital One Bank at Wilkes and Washington streets, a block away. Paid parking is available at nearby garages.

For more information: 

Box Office: 703-683-0496; Main Office, 703-683-5778 or boxoffice@thelittletheatre.com.


patricialesli@gmail.com


 

Thursday, January 24, 2019

'Superior Donuts' is a super play in Reston

 From left, Bryce Monroe ("Franco") and Michael Kharfen  ("Arthur") star in Reston Community Players' Superior Donuts/ Jennifer Heffner Photography


The superior acting in the Reston's Community Players' newest production, Superior Donuts, more than makes up for the lame title which, I suspect, does not draw audiences and might even turn some away. 


Who wants to see a play about donuts?  Or so, it would appear. 


May I be so bold to suggest a different title, Trading Places?

Indeed, it was "trading places," the theme which struck me, rather than racism which director Seth Ghitelman writes in the program notes.

The production begins with the pernicious, prickly parasite, Max (wickedly acted by Tel Monks) in the racist role, but Max means no offense. 

He taunts the black policeman, Officer Bailey (Matthew McCarthy): "I didn't mean anything by it, really."

Sure.


The play's timing is right for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Black History Month next month, but, to me, this was all about contrasts of young and old, new and stale, go and stop, zest and doom. It had nothing to do with "donuts" which serves as a substitute for a much bigger piece of life's pie.  (Groan)


Mr. Ghitelman extracts marvelous performances from his cast, especially from the star of the show, Michael Kharfen who is Arthur Przybyszewski, the shopkeeper who makes the best donuts in Chicago, but whose life is rather hum-drum. 

Like the boring donut's shape, Arthur's life continues endlessly, round and round with nothing particularly to upset the apple cart other than constant sad memories he tells in soliloquies under a spot light (which tend to drag the play down. Dialogue could have better communicated the messages. I found myself thinking: "Oh no, not another one").

Regrets, yes, Arthur's had a few, but in walks a human tornadoBryce Monroe as Franco, to drive Arthur's meaningless life pattern off course and set a new trajectory, or try to, anyway.


Arthur hires the upstart Franco who knows a thing or two about finding new customers, mind you, and how to attract members of the opposite sex. Franco doesn't hesitate to unload his ideas about shop and self improvements on Arthur.

To Arthur, Franco says:  Why doncha play some music in here? Rearrange the seating?  And if you have any interest in that pretty policewoman (Mattie Cohan is Officer Osteen), why don't you stand up straight?  Get some shoes besides those lifeless tennis shoes, cut your awful pony tail, trim those eyebrows, and wear a nice shirt. Shed your hippy, old-fashioned ways, and Officer Osteen might take a shine to you, if you showed you care.


But does Arthur care?


Franco is too peppy, too full of life, hopes and dreams.  He's enthusiastic, and he's young!  Let's get real here and "grow up!" Arthur shouts at him.  Dim your lights!

But who grows up? 

A dream is shattered and hope is quashed until revived by an odd life saver who is rescued himself.

The bad guys (expertly acted by Ian Mark Brown as a tough and realistic Chicago hood, ably assisted by Michael King) enact punishment which is far too extreme.  Did they have to go that far?

And what about the language? 

Audiences need to be forewarned that Donuts is full of bad words, none, necessary but included, one supposes, to attract millennials to the stage, but is that what they want?   Pshaw.  It's a put-off.
From left,  Ian Mark Brown ("Luther") and Michael Kharfen ("Arthur")  duke it out while Michael King  ("Kevin")  watches in Reston Community Players' Superior Donuts/ Jennifer Heffner Photography

 
The longest and best fight I have seen on stage was skillfully choreographed by Karen Schlumpf and Ian Claar (is there an award for fight choreography?) who direct two old men to duke it out all over the set and back in the kitchen.

One!

Two!

Pow!

Here, have some hot donut grease on top of that arm.

Ouch!

One of my favorite characters was Sally Cusenza who portrays a homeless woman who slouches in and out of the shop every now and then, a welcome creature dressed to the nines in homeless attire, lugging along a grocery cart full of her last belongings.  Her mannerisms and personality add a welcome dimension to the show, with some funny lines, but no one ridicules her. 

(Congratulations to Ms. Cusenza who excels in triple roles as hair and makeup designer.)


Donuts was billed as a comedy but if this is a comedy, you can eat all the donuts in Chicago for a year and not gain a pound. Besides, you'll be gnawing about these Donuts, not the sugary kind. 


Also in the cast is Tice Rust, a heavy who, in real life, is a Spanish teacher at Herndon High School.


Other crew members are Bea and Jerry Morse, producers and set decoration; Laura Baughman, stage manager; Ashley Primavera, assistant stage manager; Maggie Modig, set designer; Adam Konowe, lighting;  William Chrapcynski, sound; Mary Jo Ford, properties; Mary Gayle Rankin, costumes;  Sara Birkhead, master electrician; Scott Birkhead, master carpenter; Sandy Dotson, light board operator.

Tracy Letts, who wrote the 2008 Pulitzer winner, August: Osage County, is the playwright.

Rated: R 


Language:  X

Ages: Adults

Who: Reston Community Players 


What: Superior Donuts
by Tracy Letts
 
When: Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. through Feb. 2 with a Sunday matinee at 2 p.m., Jan. 27, 2019.

Where: Reston Community Center, 2310 Colts Neck Road, Reston, VA 20191


Tickets: Buy online, at the box office at the Community Center, or call 703-476-4500 and press 3 for 24-hour service.  $28, adults; $24, students and seniors.
 

Duration: About two hours and 15 minutes with one  intermission.
 

patricialesli@gmail.com