Showing posts with label The Audience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Audience. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Love Letter to Broadway by Lesa Holstine

LUCY BURDETTE: A couple years ago, I spotted Lesa Holstine at a book conference in New York, and somehow we began chatting about Broadway. I loved hearing about her family trips to take in as many shows as they could in a short stretch, and I'm betting you'll enjoy it too!

LESA HOLSTINE: Kristin Chenoweth, who originated the role of Glinda in “Wicked”, just did a concert series called “My Love Letter to Broadway”. I could easily say the same, but I can’t sing. I’m passionate about Broadway, and, recently have tried to make a couple trips a year to see shows in New York City.

I credit my mother and two good colleges for my love of theater. My hometown, Huron, Ohio, has the longest running summer theater in the state. My mother would take us to see their children’s productions – “Cinderella”, “The Wizard of Oz”, and the actors would come out in costume to meet the children afterward. Both Kent State University and The Catholic University of America had outstanding theater departments. I had a wonderful “History of Theater and Drama” class at Kent State, taught by the chairman of the department, and we were required to attend plays and review them as part of the class.

But, it was the first show I ever saw on Broadway that won me over. I was attending a conference, and decided to go to the show that was closest to the hotel. It turned out to be “Les Miserables” before it closed the first time on Broadway. I had first row balcony seats, perfect for all of those songs addressed to the heavens. And, the theater! I had only been in giant modern theaters. There’s an intimacy to Broadway theaters that is seldom felt elsewhere. I fell in love with Broadway, but also fell in love with “Les Miz”. 

It wasn’t until I moved to Indiana four years ago, though, that I had the chance to go to New York regularly. It’s so easy to get there, flying non-stop from Nashville. When I go to BookExpo in the spring, I usually go to three shows. And, then, in 2014, I went on a mad, week-long trip with a friend, and we crammed as many shows in as we could. We saw “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder” twice. I had a front row seat to “You Can’t Take It With You”, and James Earl Jones was just six feet away from me! I saw “Pippin”, and sat behind the conductor. I could see every song that was coming up next. There truly is “Magic to Do” at a Broadway show.


Best of all, I went back to see “Les Miserables”, once again at the Imperial Theatre. And, I fell in love with the actor playing Jean Valjean, an Iranian-born actor, raised in Canada, married to a British woman, Ramin Karimloo. He had been the youngest actor to play the Phantom. And, now, he brought a depth and strength and passion to the role of Jean Valjean. I went back to see the show a second time that week. And, in 2015, I would go see him two more times in the role before his run was over. 

Remember, though, when I said my mother took us to the theater when we were children? My sister, Linda, and I decided to return the favor. In June 2015, we took Mom and our younger sister, Christie, to New York. Neither of my sisters had been there, so we all picked three things we wanted to see while we were there. I picked three shows. And, I carefully selected shows that would be memorable. We went to see “The King and I” at Lincoln Center, starring Kelli O’Hara, who went on to win the Tony Award. Tyne Daly from Cagney and Lacey starred in “It Shoulda Been You”, and her partner in crime, Sharon Gless, sat in front of me, and talked to me afterward. And, maybe the most memorable show was “The Audience” with Helen Mirren. Only two corgies could steal a scene from the queen.

Linda and I have been back to Broadway twice together, long weekend trips that are really Broadway trips. She made me stand at the stage door to meet Ramin Karimloo after I dragged her to Les Miz. We laughed at the irreverence of Jim Parsons in “Act of God”. Our last trip took us to “The Front Page” starring Nathan Lane, John Goodman, and Jefferson Mays, “Sweet Charity” with Sutton Foster, “Fiddler on the Roof”, and “Holiday Inn”, where I met Bryce Pinkham afterwards, and learned his grandmother was a librarian. And, coming full circle, we ended our recent weekend with Kristin Chenoweth’s show, “My Love Letter to Broadway”.

I, too, love Broadway. I pick my shows carefully, sometimes with a star in mind, sometimes based on the recommendation of a friend. I read The New York Times reviews, and follow Playbill. I won’t pay an enormous amount of money to go see Hugh Jackman when he’s in a play that doesn’t interest me. But, I’ll pay full price to see a show starring Sutton Foster or Bryce Pinkham or Jefferson Mays or James Earl Jones or Ramin Karimloo or Kelli O’Hara when it’s a plot or musical that entices me. I’ll go see a drama or a comedy, but I truly enjoy the musicals.

I already have my spring 2017 shows selected. “Come From Away”, the musical about the flights that landed in Newfoundland on 9/11 was recommended by a friend. Another friend saw “Groundhog Day” in London. How can I pass up Bette Midler and David Hyde Pierce in “Hello, Dolly!”? And, “Anastasia”. Ramin Karimloo will be back on Broadway in that show.


Thank you, Lucy, for asking me to write my own love letter to Broadway. Have you been bitten by the theater bug? Or, do you have your own passion, some hobby or interest that demands your attention? For me, it’s books and Broadway.

Lesa Holstine is a library manager/administrator who blogs about books and authors, especially mysteries.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

"Let's All Go to the Lobby..."


JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I admit it, we are one of THOSE families when it comes to summer movies. We keep track of what's opening each weekend, watch all the trailers online at Rotten Tomatoes, and see our favorites as soon as they come out. I actually have a commodious purse used exclusively to smuggle sodas and candy X 4 into the cinema (we call it The Bag Of Special Purpose.) Fortunately, we've discovered the Patriot Nickleodeon's $5 Tuesdays, so we're not breaking the budget.

Just in the past two weeks I've seen 1) WHITE HOUSE DOWN :fun, as long as you don't think too hard about the plot. Channing Tatum and Jamie Fox are funny and have great chemistry together.  


2) DESPICABLE ME 2 :Ross, the Youngest and I all enjoyed it. Not as good as the first, but a family-friendly movie parents won't have to force themselves to see.  



3)THE HEAT :the perfect flick to take in with your girlfriend(s). Hysterically funny, incredibly foul-mouthed, and SO refreshing to see a story about two women that doesn't involve romance/dysfunctional families/being a victim.


How about you, Reds? Can you recommend any of the recent releases? Are there any movies coming out that you're dying to see? Or if you're more the put-on-your-slippers-and-turn-on-Netflix type, what have you streamed lately?



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Well, we are the exact oposite. We TALK about going to movies, but never quite get there...so thank you for the info! (Sadly, I think the last movie-movie we saw was ARGO. We are pitiful.) Anyway! I am EAGER to see World War Z, certainly, and Twenty Feet From Stardom, and even Pacific Rim, which has gotten such great reviews! I know there are more...too bad we all can't go to the drive-in!



HALLIE EPHRON: We're even worse -- we don't even talk about going to the movies. For us it's Netflix, and we don't even stream it.

Favorite recent movie: Silver Linings Playbook. Even though the portrait of mental illness is so rosey tinted. And I'm a sucker for anything with ballroom dancing.
Best recent movie experience - last night we saw Helen Mirren in the second to the last London stage performance of The Audience, live streamed to independent theatres through NT Live (http://ntlive.nationaltheatre.org.uk/). Every seat in the theatre was sold - @$20 a ticket. What a treat! I kept thinking: Wouldn't it be great if Broadway had a program like this?


DEBORAH CROMBIE: We are big-budget action movie junkies, so the latest things we've seen in the theater were Iron Man 3 and the new Star Trek. (LOVED IO3; Star Trek, not as much as the first one.) Fortunately--or unfortunately for our budget--we have an iPic Theater about ten minutes from our house, and once you've seen a movie in a reclining seat with your own plush blankie, and food and drink served to you, Cinemark seems pretty dull.


But we are movie-philes, and Friday night at our house is Thai take-out and movies on the home theater. Last weekend it was a movie called London Boulevard. Great cast--Colin Farrell, Kiera Knightly, 
Eddie Marsan, Ray Winstone, David Thewlis (that's Professor Lupin from the Harry Potter movies) and the lovely Ben Chaplin--and the director, William Monahan, won the Oscar for original screenplay for The Departed. Verdict? A mess. Couldn't understand any of the dialog, and Monahan apparently couldn't make up his mind whether it was a Guy Ritchie film or a Martin Scorsese film. Combination of the two--train wreck.
Weekend before, Life of Pi. Lovely. Wished we'd splurged on Blu-Ray.

World War Z is on our iPic list. Looking to see if I have a birthday coupon from last month...

PS, Hallie, I loved Silver Linings Playbook, too (more than Rick) even though it was a bit of mental-illness-miracle-cure. Still, GREAT performances from all the cast, great script, and who can resist ballroom dancing???


JULIA: We loved World War Z, even though it's very different from the book (which everyone should read!) How about you, dear readers? Any summer flicks you're looking forward to? Any suggestions for what we should see? Or avoid?