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, March 24, 2023

Dr. Fauci was at St. John's, Lafayette Square


The Rev. Robert W. Fisher, right, interviews Dr. Anthony Fauci at St. John's Church, Mar. 19, 2023/By Patricia Leslie


The Reverend Robert W. Fisher called it a “fireside chat,” and that’s what it was when Dr. Anthony Fauci visited the Adult Forum at St. John’s Church, Lafayette Square to talk about his life and answer a few questions.

Dr. Fauci grew up in a mixed Italian, Puerto Rican, Jewish, African-American, Catholic Brooklyn neighborhood where his family’s mantra was to give back to the community and perform public service, a mission which has influenced him throughout life. 

It was a sense of "service for others and not for financial gain," Dr. Fauci said.

Neighbors, friends, and family members took care of each other, amidst a great sense of community, Dr. Fauci said.

Church vestry member Wendy J. Fibison introduced him at St. John's as our "our national treasure," similar to "hero" which candidate George H.W. Bush called him during a 1988 presidential debate.  

Appearing very much at ease before a friendly crowd of about 150, Dr. Fauci displays a “great bedside manner,“
Rev. Fisher said.

Beginning with Ronald Reagan, Dr. Fauci has served seven U.S. presidents as medical advisor, all good relationships, "with the exception of one," he said to audience laughter. No names were mentioned.

Before he visited the White House in his official role the first time, a mentor cautioned Dr. Fauci that the White House was a seductive place where invitations to return were always desirable, and sharing bad news was not something you wanted to present to the leader, but it was a requirement of the job and he did it, offering "inconvenient truths" when necessary.

Dr. Fauci said the many unknowns about Covid-19 produced the evolving treatments to fight the virus. 

Denying there was any "flip-flop," and terming the pandemic as a "gaslight," Dr. Fauci said it was "a rapidly evolving situation" and "we didn’t know that Covid was spread by breathing by persons without symptoms!" 

He likened fighting over Covid treatment to "the Army fighting with the Navy in a war."

"We had a common enemy, but we fought each other," he said.

He guaranteed another pandemic will come, perhaps not in the lifetimes of many present, but "it is going to happen again. We must use the lessons we’ve learned." 

(Before Covid, the last pandemic was the 1918 flu which killed about 50 million persons worldwide.)

Dr. Fauci said there is undisputed truth that persons who are vaccinated and boostered are better protected against Covid. "It's a slam dunk."

Those who disagree about vaccines should not be made to feel "stupid and dumb," but "we are evolving into an anti-vaccine era“ and taking “a gigantic step backwards."

As for "gain of function, generally when someone talks about it, they don’t know what they’re talking about.“

Many envy Dr. Fauci's good health at age 82 which he attributed to a combination of physical, emotional and spiritual well-being, noting that being perfectly balanced in all areas is unlikely, but you can try.

He's always been active physically, “running marathons, and half marathons." Plus, it's important to have a close association with someone to help you decompress, he said, acknowledging his wife sitting nearby. 

“If I had to do it alone, that would be very difficult," he said.

When a church member asked him about his book, Dr. Fauci said he has not written one, and although he's officially "retired," he's not retired because he forgot about retirement and scheduled events for three months out from retirement.

He advises his medical students to “expect the unexpected,“ the way his life has gone.

A valuable lesson he's learned in Washington, D.C., he said to laughter, is to be "very nice to everybody in Washington, D.C."

patricialesli@gmail.com












Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Wildest expectations soar at the Washington Cathedral


Sergei Rachmaninoff, age 10 or 12, St. Petersburg/Wikimedia Commons

The title of the program was To the Wild Sky and my favorites were all there:  Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849), Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943), and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at the Washington National Cathedral with Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892) and the Cathedral Choral Society

Who knew about their links? 

Conductor Steven Fox leads the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and the Cathedral Choral Society at the Washington National Cathedral, Mar. 19, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

In the Cathedral's crossing, the musicians, soloists, and chorus hypnotized the audience throughout the afternoon with Rachmaninoff's unsettling response to a painting and his intrepretation of Poe's  "bells! bells!  bells!" ringing everywhere.  
The Isle of the Dead, 1880 - 1886, Arnold Bocklin (1827-1901)

Also on the program was Tennyson's text of his poem, In Memoriam: A.H.H., sung by soprano Andriana Chuchman, who later joined the Symphony, other soloists, and Chorus in Poe's The Bells.
Soprano Andriana Chuchman at the Washington National Cathedral, Mar. 19, 2023

After all, it is the 150th anniversary of Rachmaninoff's birth (April 1 or [O.S.] Mar. 20, 1873) and the DMV has gone plumb Rachy with three performances in a week and I am going to them all.    

Lucky me!*

To combine the literary immortals with music is an astonishing feat and one which most assuredly exceeded expectations at the Cathedral from the first note to the last.  

The audience was as captivated as I who had anticipated the sounds would echo in the Cathedral's great hall, diminishing the aural effects but that was not to be.

 
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra's percussionists at the Washington National Cathedral, Mar. 19, 2023
 
Guest artists, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and the Cathedral Choral Society at the conclusion of the performance, To the Wild Sky, Mar. 19, 2023
The Washington National Cathedral, Mar. 19, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

First on the program was The Isle of the Dead, Rachmaninoff's response to a popular painting by Arnold Bocklin (1827-1901).  

The music filled one with a sense of dread. In the boat as we neared the island, foreboding and heavy anxiety filled my emotions as waves and strings deepened, cymbals crashed and threw me around the vessel as it neared shore. The landscape echoed with the coming climax. 

Upon landing, a single violin greeted us with a rainbow  and not such an unpleasant ending.

Death be not proud.

The next selection, Ring Out, Wild Bells, to the Wild Sky was composed by Augusta Read Thomas (b. 1964 and a Pulitzer Prize finalist) in 2000 on commission to welcome the new millennium. 

For her base, the composer chose Tennyson's poem with its message of the "universal" drive for peace.  It begins with multiple voices singing like bells in tandem with Ms. Chuchman, chorus, and orchestra. 

Dare I write the best was saved for last?

"The bells!  The bells!  The bells!" so reads Poe's title he wrote in 1848-1849 and spoken confidently cappella before the musical presentation by an unidentified man on video.

"Hear the sledges with bells" is Poe's first line, a sledge, coincidentally or not, was the vehicle used by Rachmaninoff and his family to escape Russia forever in 1917 as the nation's revolution took hold. 

Program notes said an adaptation of Poe's Bells by the Russian Konstanin Balmont (1867-1942) led a student at the Moscow Conservatory in 1912 to recommend to Rachmaninoff that he put the poem to music. 

After the composer read the verses, he "decided at once to use them for a choral symphony," an incredible performance at the Cathedral for the audience to hear that which became "the one I like best of all my works."

The movements included solos by John Ramseyer, tenor, Ms. Chuchman, and Aleksey Bogdanov, baritone, all exceeding quality demanded by Washington's attending classical perfectionists. 

With a 20 minute intermission, the concert lasted almost two hours, an unforgettable production which will be hard to outperform by this week's remaining Rachmaninoff concerts.

More about Rachmaninoff: 

Is it Rachmaninoff or Rachmaninov? Music for Everyone says the Rachmaninoffs changed their name from Rachmaninov when they fled Russia, likely because the family was pre-revolution Russian bourgeoisie.


Boosey & Hawkes, "the" classical music publisher, says about Rachmaninoff: "The years up to the Russian Revolution were spent in an exhausting whirl of playing and conducting, with the family’s country estate at Ivanovka, in the countryside south-east of Moscow, offering a haven of peace where he could concentrate on composition. The works that emerged during this period include the Third Piano Concerto, the symphonic poem The Isle of the Dead, the choral symphony The Bells, and two a cappella choral works, the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom and the Vespers."

Rachmaninoff was born into a musical family and began piano lessons at age 4. After fleeing Russia 
with his family and settling in the U.S. about four decades later, he made a living by giving many performances but, like many artists, finding little time to compose.  

On Feb. 17, 1943, already "gravely ill" and almost 70 years old, Rachmaninoff played his last recital at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville where a statue to the composer was dedicated in 2003, the 130th anniversary of his birth, at the site of the 1982 World's Fair.

He became an American citizen shortly before he died of melanoma that year.

Conducting Sunday was Steven Fox, assisted by Joy Schreier, pianist.

*More Rachmaninoff:

The National Symphony Orchestra, 7 p.m., Mar. 23, 2023 at the Kennedy Center.

BSO, 8 p.m., Mar. 25, 2023, Music Center at Strathmore, Angel Blue and Rachmaninoff II; tickets starting at $35.

BSO, 8 p.m., Apr. 13, 2023, Music Center at Strathmore, Marin Conducts Rach 3; tickets starting at $35. 

In Baltimore BSO Rachmaninoff performances, Mar. 24, Mar. 26, and Apr. 15, 2023.

Of note, Poe and Tennyson were born in the same year, 1809, as was President Abraham Lincoln.

Why are most of the great composers Russian?  I am guessing many Ph.D. students have written their dissertations on this topic, at least one I would like to read!  Does their nation's turbulent past play a role?



patricialesli@gmail.com

Friday, March 10, 2023

'Kinky Boots" strikes and lights up Olney

Kinky Boots at Olney Theatre Center/DJ Corey Photography

Broadway comes to Olney...again.  

Ladies and Gentlemen of the theatre, I present to you another fabulous show at the Olney Theatre Center, based on a true tale, but this one, a "kinky" story, an unlikely story, one filled with entertainment, dancing and costumes to make your eyes pop and yearn for sunglasses.

Plus, the show's got a message. (Not that it needs one.)

Solomon Parker III is "Lola" in Kinky Boots at Olney Theatre Center/DJ Corey Photography

The glam, the dancing, and the costumes!  (Repeat) The costumes!  

Who needs a plot when you've got costumes like these?  Kendra Rai must have worked vigorously to complete them, aided by a "few" helping hands.

Harvey Fierstein has written a great book accompanied by singer/songwriter Cyndi Lauper's score.  The show won six Tonys (including the most coveted, "Best Musical") in 2013, three Laurence Olivier's (London) and the Grammy in 2017, and more.

Can all these judges be wrong?

The Angels and Solomon Parker III (center) as "Lola" in Kinky Boots 
at Olney Theatre Center/DJ  Corey Photography


I dare say, Olney must have spent more than a shoestring of its budget outfitting these "ladies" (and gentlemen) in this energetic production which, sadly, is missing from the repertoire of theatres in some states (according to director Jason Loewith in his introductory remarks on opening night) because...well, fear of the unknown, the different, those who are not like you and me, the future, and the small world goes on.

Ahem, ahim, aher, aaahhhit.   

Kinky Boots' roots stem from a family shoe factory going out of business in Northampton, England.

Market conditions and changing fashions have sent the once successful family plant into near closure until circumstances bring family member "Charlie" (Vincent Kempski) together with a drag queen, "Lola" (Solomon Parker III), whose apparel for all her "lady" friends could stand a boost with better, supportive heels, and ones that are elevated, if you please.  

Talk about serendipity!

Coaxed by an employee (Alex De Bard as "Lauren") and ding! ding! ding! circuits in Charlie's brain flash and spark the realization of the opportunity to make fancy boots, kinky boots, big boots, shiny ones, jeweled boots to showcase in an Italian shoe show.

(For those needing a definition, the Urban Dictionary defines "drag" as "someone [who] dresses in an exaggerated style, typically that of a woman." A man is called a drag queen and a woman who takes part is called a bio queen. It's a lot of fun.  Anyway...)

Yellow boots, red boots, green boots, sparklies which go up beyond the knee!  Thigh highs! Yowee!  But, back to the fine story with songs to boot.

The star is, of course, Mr. Parker who leads them all, supported by Charlie who manages ongoing side story romances with two predictable personalities, the uppity "Nicola" (Candice Shedd-Thompson) and the more down-to-earth "Lauren,"  both roles the actors capture well, vying for Charlie's attention. 

"Could it be? Could it be?" Lauren asks herself. "Is he the one?"

Mr. Loewith, the always smiling Olney artistic director, celebrates ten years at the theatre by directing this show, and I doubt he ever had so much fun. (On opening night, the show gave him specially handmade "jeweled" tennis shoes, the tennies for which Loewith is known far and wide, and what a perfect combination with the title.)

Kinky's outstanding choreographer is Tara Jeanne Vallee, assisted  by Christopher Youstra who leads the excellent orchestra of eight musicians.

Other cast members are Chris Genebach, Stephen F. Schmidt, Grayden Goldman, Dustin Sardella, Zach Cook, Karl Kippola, Kaiyla Gross, Sarah Anne Sillers, Henry Harleston, Ricardo Blagrove (also fight captain), and Calvin McCullough.

Also, Stephen Russell Murray, Catrina Brenae, Alexis Krey, and Tyrell Stanley.

And not to forget, of course, the "angels," a heavenly crew who never stop kicking up storms: Malachi Alexander, Quadry Brown, Robbie Duncan, Shane Hall (also, dance captain), Daniel Powers, Connor James Reilly, and David Singleton.


Others on the creative team are Larry Peterson who must have used a ladder to pile the wigs so high (and how did they stay in place amidst all those dance numbers?) and Leigh Wilson Smiley whose dialects convinced me everyone is British. 

Milagros Ponce de Leon is scenic designer; Max Doolittle, lighting; Matt Rowe, sound; Casey Kaleba, fight director; and Devon Vaow, drag consultant.

Also, Ben Walsh, production stage manager, and Allison Ann Bailey and Cat Moreschi, assistant stage managers.

The original Broadway production was directed and choreographed by Jerry Mitchell. Kinky Boots is based on the Miramax motion picture of the same name by Geoff Deane and Tim Firth.

We can change the world when we change our minds.

What: Kinky Boots 

When: Through Mar. 26, 2023 (held over!), Wednesday through Saturday nights at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m.

Where: Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, MD 20832.

Tickets: Start at $42 

Ages: For ages 10 and up. 

Rating:  PG-13

Masks: Optional at Thursday - Saturday performances and required on Wednesday and Sunday shows

Refreshments available which may not be taken to seats.

Parking: Free, lighted and plentiful on-site

Duration:  About 2.5 hours with one intermission

For more information: 301-924-3400 for the box office, Wed. - Sat., 12 - 6 p.m. or 301-924-4485  


patricialesli@gmail.com







Tuesday, February 28, 2023

'Lettice' Alexandria's stars entertain you again

From left, Patricia Nicklin is Lettice and Rachael Hubbard is Lotte Schoen in Little Theatre of Alexandria's Lettice and Lovage/Matt Liptak, photo

Patricia Nicklin is a frequent actor on stage at the Little Theatre of Alexandria and she's up there again, this time as the star of Lettice and Lovage, a British comedy Peter Shaffer wrote for Dame Maggie Smith.

In 1990 Ms. Smith won the Tony Award for her performance of the daffy lady whose circumstances bring her together with another goofy woman, Lotte Schoen (Rachael Hubbard), their conversations, frictions, and relationship the story describes.

Whew!

And that's what you might say after listening to these two swat word circles for a while.

Ms. Nicklin is Lettice, a tour guide at an historic English country house where the detailed Ms. Schoen objects to Lettice's embellishments of events, and away they go.

Naturally, common ground is found between them and a common drink which Lotte consumes a lotte of the concoction Lettice brings to the table.  

Ms. Hubbard's portrayal of a increasingly drunk lady is spot on!

When it all goes pear-shaped, you know something's up!

Joan Lawrence has fashioned dowdy costumes to fit these two whose characters need no more sparkle anyway. 

Indeed, they are jolly good sports at chin-wagging.(?)

For a fan of British humor, this script will tickle your fancies, I dare say. 

As they say across the Atlantic, Lettice is "a picnic short of a sandwich."

Other cast members are James Blacker, Tegan Cohen, Colin Davies, Nicole "Nicki" Gray, and Nicole Lamberson.

The production crew:  Hilary Adams, dialects; Kirstin Apker, set decoration; Juli Tarabek Blacker, director; Julie Fischer, set design; Allison Gray-Mendes, properties and technical director; Kira Hogan and Ramah Johnson, stage managers; and JK Lighting Design.

Also, Janet Kennelly, assistant set painter; Chanel Lancaster, hair and makeup; Manuel Medina, sound; Dan Remmers, master carpenter; sheri ratick stroud and Griffin Voltmann, producers; Mona Wargo, set painting; Robin Worthington, wardrobe coordinator; and Russell M. Wyland, rigging.

When: Now through March 18, 2023, Wednesday - Saturday nights, 8 p.m.; Sunday matinees, 3 p.m.

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

Tickets:  $24, weekdays; $27, weekends (These prices include fees.)

Masks are required in the auditorium and strongly encouraged but optional in other areas of the theatre.  

Language:  Rated "G" 

Duration:  About 2.5 hours with one 15 minute intermission

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

Parking: On the streets and in many garages nearby with free parking during performances at Capital One Bank at Wilkes and Washington streets.

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


patricialesli@gmail.com

Sunday, February 19, 2023

GALA's 'Gardens' grow hilarious!


From left, Victor Salinas, Alina Collins Maldonado, Juan Luis Acevedo, and Luz Nicolas in GALA Hispanic Theatre's Jardin Salvaje (Native Gardens)/Daniel Martinez, photo


It's a laugh-a-minute at the garden show onstage now at GALA Hispanic Theatre, the Spanish world premiere of the English version with surtitles on two overhead screens.

From start to finish, Jardin Salvaje (Native Gardens) is hilarious and the solid acting makes it that much more enjoyable.

Like a rose blooming in spring, neighbors begin their relationship nicey nice which doesn’t take long for smoldering issues to break ground and open.

Juan Luis Acevedo as Fabio almost steals the show with his antics, swoops, dives, and other gymnastic feats to portray increasing dissatisfaction with his new next-door neighbors (Democrats without a doubt) who have invaded his space and may cause him to lose (once again!) the community's garden show competition.

Dios mio!

Plus, those youngsters look to be wretched "tree huggers" who shun insecticides!

Can it be? Next door to me?

Oh, my! Look how my garden grows...or did, until Pablo (Victor Salinas) and his very pregnant wife, Tania (Alina Collins Maldonado) moved in, at first, kind people, good people, until...until!

Hilarity sprouts, takes root, and blossoms without fertilizer.

Fabio's wife, Virginia (Luz Nicolás), the consummate professional frequently seen on GALA's stage, is a realistic mate who helps nurture the "friendship" with the newbies. And (worst of the worst!), she smokes! 

She smokes!


A silent team of landscapers (Fabian Augustine, Janine Baumgardner, Edwin Bernal, and Lenny Mendez) come to clean up the yard and make ready for Pablo's law firm party about to take place in the back yard, and party is what they do, all right:  Making light of their customers, dancing and sharing their joyful personalities to add more merriment to an already merriful show.


That the setting is in Washington with some wonderfully snide remarks about certain neighborhoods produces lots of laughs.

The set is a marvel with the tallest tree I've seen on a stage with...could this be right? Individually placed pieces of bark? It's a treasure, one that the new couple adores but the old fuddy duddies next door want removed. (Nominations, please, for Grisele Gonzalez, scenic designer, and Chelsea Dean, properties.)

My goodness, whose leaves are those?

It all comes down to a fence which happens to be the dividing line between the properties, or is it?

Sound designer Justin Schmitz fills the land with happy music, at least at first.


Costumer Jeannette Christensen was busy dressing the characters quickly in different outfits every time they went in the house and when they came out.

Alberto Segarra lets the sunshine (and nighttime) in with perfect lighting.

Gardens is written and adapted by Washington's own transplant from Mexico, Karen Zacarias, one of the most produced playwrights in the nation. Once seen, you'll definitely buy tickets when you see her name attached to other shows.

Applause to director Rebecca Aparicio and other production team members: Deja Collins, projections; Alyssa Hill, stage manager; Jon Townson, technical director; P. Vanessa Losada, production manager; Hugh Medrano, producer; and Gustavo Ott, translator.

What: Jardin Salvaje (Native Gardens)


Covid policy: Masks are optional for guests who are fully vaccinated and boostered. Otherwise, masks, please.

When: Thursday - Sunday nights through Feb. 26, 2023

Where: Gala Theatre, 3333 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20010.

Tickets: $48, or seniors (ages 65+), students, teachers, military, and groups (10+), $35. Ages 25 and under, $25. To purchase, visit galatheatre.org or call 202-234-7174.

Handicapped accessible

Duration: About 90 minutes plus one intermission

Metro stations: Columbia Heights is one block from GALA. Or, get off Metro at McPherson Square, take bus #52 or #54 up 14th, or, walk the two miles from McPherson Square and save money and expend calories! Lots of places to eat along the way.

Parking: Discounted parking at Giant's garage around the corner on Park Road. Validate your ticket in GALA's lobby.

For more information: Call (202) 234-7174 and/or email info@galatheatre.org


patricialesli@gmail.com

 

 

 

 




Friday, February 10, 2023

Last weekend to steak out a Renaissance artist at the National Galley of Art

     

"Come in to my abode, my pretty, and see what jewels I have to show you." One of Vittore Carpaccio's dragons, considered to be the devil.

Vittore Carpaccio, Saint George and the Dragon and Four Scenes from the Martyrdom of Saint George (detail), 1516, oil on canvas, Abbazia di San Giorgio Maggiore, Benedicti Claustra Onlus, Venice

The first retrospective exhibition ever held outside Italy of a Renaissance artist's paintings and drawings will close Sunday at the National Gallery of Art.

Because few museums in the U.S. can boast of having any of his works, the name of Vittore Carpaccio (c.1460/1466–1525/1526) is unfamiliar to most Americans who more likely recognize his surname, chosen by a Venetian restauranter in 1963 for a special dish he cooked up for an ill countess.

Based on the artist's unique reds, the cook anointed  his special dish of raw meats, "steak carpaccio."
Vittore Carpaccio, Portrait of a Woman Holding a Book, c. 1500-1505, Denver Art Museum Collection, gift of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation

The National Gallery show has mounted a glorious show of 45 paintings and 30 drawings by Carpaccio, a native Venetian, who made them for societies, churches, and wealthy families.

He painted large, colorful religious scenes from Bible chapters, and for individual patrons, his works were mostly secular, all in the era's style of flat faces, mostly lacking expressions (except when it comes to bored women).

For the wealthy, Carpaccio's figures are, naturally, dressed in the finest fashions of the day.

Carpaccio made several portraits which included women with books, which is commendable that patrons wanted him to paint subjects in intellectual pursuits, however, most women then didn't read to gain knowledge per se but to learn how to teach their children how to read. 

Wealthy families hired tutors to educate their daughters.  

Carpaccio's characters occasionally hint at a smile as in Portrait of a Woman Holding a Book, above, compared to Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, whose mouth is more flirtacious than Carpaccio's Portrait. I suppose one must strain to catch a glimmer of a smile in Carpaccio's Woman, but my imagination permits me to see one because I want to see one. Rather like hearing what you want to hear other than what is really said. 

Since the two Italian artists lived about the same time [da Vinci, 1452-1519], might they have been trained in the same school?
Vittore Carpaccio, Two Women on a Balcony, c. 1492/1494, Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia, Museo Correr,  Venice.This work has been reunited with its partner, Fishing and Fowling on the Lagoon, c. 1492/1494, from the J. Paul Getty Museum. Both were painted on the same wooden panel and believed to have been part of a folding door at a Venetian palace.  In the 1700s, the works were split 
in two but reunited to introduce the exhibition. The forlorn, sculpted women wait patiently on their husbands who are out fishing. (More than 500 years later, things remain the same.) 
Vittore Carpaccio, A Young Knight, 1510, Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid. This is a large painting, filled with symbols. Pick them out before you check the link

Another large painting is Carpaccio's The Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand Christians on Mount Ararat, 1515, loaned by the Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice. It is based on the lives of the saints and 10,000 Christian converts killed by Romans and Muslims with whose empires Venice was engaged in conflict. Vasari mentions The Martyrdom in his 16th century Lives of the Most Famous Painters, Sculptors, and Architects.

Vittore Carpaccio,The Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand Christians on Mount Ararat, (detail) 1515, loaned by the Gallerie dell'Academia, Venice
Vittore Carpaccio, Allegorical Figure, (detail) c. 1498, private collection. She's probably "Virtue"; read below.
Vittore Carpaccio, Youth in a Landscape, (detail) c. 1498, Accademia Carrara, Bergamo. He is probably Hercules who weighs whether to follow "Virtue" (the woman above) or "Vice," pictured on another panel which is missing, and, of course, a woman. For all good Venetian fellows, Hercules chose "Virtue," laying the groundwork for them to follow.  A flowing landscape also connects these works, 
probably part of a chest. Giorgione was thought, originally, to have been the artist, according to the catalog. Until the 1930s, they were in a private Venetian collection, but the two female panels entered the New York art market in 1939 where "Vice" was swallowed up by...? And since absent from the public.  

Wherefore are thou, "Vice"?  To show up on "Antiques Roadshow"? Check your attic.  "Vice" looks like a twin of "Virtue" (disguised, per usual), looking in the opposite direction towards Hercules, according to an illustration found in the catalog.  "Virtue" and "Vice" originally appeared on either side of our hero, much like you see the morning "tee-hee" talk show hosts positioned on CNN and Fox.  Without a doubt, those producers studied Carpaccio to design their sets.

At the exhibition's exit,  one of Carpaccio's dragons bids "arr
ivederci" to departing guests. 

On the exhibition website, NGA’s John Strand writes Carpaccio drew his dragons smaller than imagination, likely because they could be more easily "defeated." Dragons were a symbol of the devil and Carpaccio makes them into scary creatures with the  teeth of daggers. 

Carpaccio is a favorite son of Venice which, at the turn of the 16th century, was a thriving marketplace, equivalent to New York City today and what was Hong Kong. The city looks forward to the artist's return March 18 to the Pacazzo Ducale, where his works will be on view through June 18, 2023.

A large catalog with 300 illustrations, many in color, has over 340 pages and is available in the shops, or it was. Since I now cannot find it, perhaps it's sold out and once seen, readers will understand why!

I nominate Susan Marsh and her team of book designers for the Academy Award in Book Covers for their magnificent choices of Carpaccio's, Two Women on a Balcony, c. 1492/1494, who grace the cover and look longingly towards the book's spine where, on the back cover, Carpaccio's men enjoy a sporting good time fishing and boating in Fishing and Fowling on the Lagoon, c. 1492/1494.

If you can't find the catalog, the National Gallery has plenty of other Carpaccio items for you to consider, ranging from prints, magnets, china, cards, and (the symbol of Venice) the Lion of St. Mark Corset Cuff Bracelet, made especially for NGA ($370, choice of red or blue with gold).

Valentines, anyone?

Peter Humfrey of the University of St. Andrews was the curator, in collaboration with Andrea Bellieni from the Museo Civici di Venezia and NGA's Gretchen Hirschauer.

What: Vittore Carpaccio: Master Storyteller of Renaissance Venice

When: Through February 12, 2023. The National Gallery hours are 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily.

Where: West Building, Main Floor National Gallery of Art, 6th and Constitution, Washington

How much: Admission is always free at the National Gallery of Art.

Metro stations for the National Gallery of Art:
Smithsonian, Federal Triangle, Navy Memorial-Archives, or L'Enfant Plaza

For more information
: (202) 737-4215

Accessibility information: (202) 842-6905


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