Theater

All posts in the Theater category

Jackson Headlines Musical Horror Story

Published December 15, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

american musical horror story.jpg

There is nothing that a gay dude loves more than a diva. Well, maybe there’s…but s-h-h-h…I can’t talk about that here. Anyhow, in my book, if anyone could take on Jessica Lange in the Chicago theater community, it’s the divinely eclectic Caitlin Jackson. Nicely, she seems to be doing just that with her role of Reverend Mother in The Cowardly Scarecrow Theatre Company’s Ryan Murphy send-up Musical Horror Story Exorcism.

From all glimpses, this production promises to offer a bit of blood, a lot of humor and, well, Ms. Jackson (pictured, right, in the photo)! There are only 3 performances left – Thursday, Friday and Saturday, December 15-17th, at the Charnel House, 3421 W. Fullerton, in Chicago. So throw all of your bad habits onto the CTA (or however you get about in this unholy city) and head on over!

More information is available at: https://www.facebook.com/CSTCINC.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Review: Zombie Broads

Published November 5, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

zombie-broads-2

Ladies and gentlemen, I know you’ve been a bit worried, but at last…my butt has been fully restored. Yes. After sitting through countless half-assed productions, often scribbled out by established playwrights, at such venerable institutions as The Goodman Theatre and Steppenwolf –Be honest. How many times have you thought to yourself, “Now, why the fuck did they spend all that money to do…that?!?” – I have been posteriorly redefined by some good old fashioned, gnawingly eviscerating storefront theater.

Factory Theatre’s latest production is a horror comedy that goes by the name of Zombie Broads.  The title is a reference to a book club featuring many of the show’s female characters, but it is also indicative of the fact that playwrights Corbette Pasko and Sara Sevigny have focused the mayhem here around a series of powerful and resourceful femmes. It’s a nice contrast to The Walking Dead, World War Z and other popular forms of undead entertainment that, granted, contain some awesome female characters, but are seemingly more focused on the male perspective in times of apocalyptic crisis.

Here, former cosplayers turned survivalists, Maxine and Marco, are bringing up Shelby, their exasperated daughter, in a shelter style environment. Shelby, certain that a ghoulish uprising is out of the question, just wants a cell phone, a normal job and to be able to spend some less secretive time with her boyfriend, Alex. But sometimes the folks are right, and when Shelby finds out the dead actually can have real bite, she is glad for all the preriquisite training. If only she weren’t feeling so strange…zombie-broads

Nicely, all of Maxine and Marco’s battle minded compatriots are women and the involved and inventive fight choreography by Matt Engle shows these actresses and, therefore, their characters off to strong intent. Indeed, the audience emotionally connects with all of them.

But if I must choose a favorite…I have decided that I want the divine Haley Rice to be my best friend, in real life, forever! Her subtle, slightly bored take on Isabel, the saucy custodian who starts off the crisis, is comic gold. I! Love! Her!

Granted, the second act does lose some of the zippy breeze established in the first, settling into much more nihilistic vibe. Tone-wise, it’s a bit jarring, as is the semi- cliffhanger ending. But the uniformly enjoyable cast is always a treat and it would be damn hard to find original scripting as zanily courageous and heartfelt, amplified by Janice L. Blizt’s flinty direction, as this anywhere else.

Zombie Broads runs at The Factory Theatre in Rogers Park in Chicago through November 26th. More information is available at https://www.facebook.com/factorytheater/ and www.thefactorytheater.com.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Music to Make Horror Movies By: Vivian Blaine

Published August 28, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

vivian 1

She added a little sophistication and dignity to cheesy, fun monster fests such as 1979’s The Dark and to 1982’s Parasite, but the glorious Vivian Blaine was best known for her take on the ditzy Adelaide in the original Broadway and movie versions of Guys and Dolls. Most importantly, perhaps, Blaine was also one of the first celebrity advocates for the AIDS crisis, providing a very visible presence in a time when most public figures shunned the realities of the disease.

Blaine, who also acted and sang in multiple movie musicals with the likes of the vivacious Carmen Miranda and smooth crooner Perry Como, reprised Adelaide’s Lament, her most famous number from Guys and Dolls, on the 1971 Tony Awards, twenty years after her debut in the role. There, she proved, beyond a doubt, that no one could portray the little quirks and eccentricities of the character quite like she could.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

vivian 2

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Countess Bathory: A New Elizabethan Tragedy

Published June 8, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

countess bathory

Many have wondered how I have stayed so youthful over the years. Personally, I think it has something to do with the ingredients in the vanilla frosting from those wizards at Dunkin’ Donuts – but please don’t quote me.

Others, though, have more insidious ways of maintaining their dainty glow. The most notorious of these, of course, is the savagely entitled Countess Bathory. Indeed, terror film projects as assorted as ‘50s cheese fest The Wasp Woman, ‘70s Hammer horror Countess Dracula and the more recent Stay Alive have definitely been inspired by this 16th century noble woman, who was accused of murdering over 600 young girls for their restorative fluids.countess bathory 2

Now, a number of eclectic Chicago theater veterans are tackling the tale of this bloodthirsty dame with Countess Bathory: A New Elizabethan Tragedy. Excitedly claiming to feature “several depictions of physical, psychological, and ritual abuse” this presentation is written by Jared McDaris and features one of Midwest stage’s hottest genre loving temptresses, Mary-Kate Arnold, in the title role. Nicely, this steamy odyssey is free to the public throughout its brief run, as well.

Reservations are, currently, being accepted at https://www.theaterred.com/registration/index.php?event=17 and, don’t worry, you don’t have to be a virginal female to sign up! (Thank the goddess for small favors, huh?)

Countess Bathory: A New Elizabethan Tragedy runs from June 9th – June 25th at the Right Brain Project, 4001 N. Ravenswood, in Chicago. Right Brain Project (4001 N Ravenswood Ave, Ste 405)Further information is available at https://www.facebook.com/events/1122071781185949/.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Review: Mike Mother

Published May 27, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

Mike Mother horiz 3

Add a dash of Joyce Carol Oates style mystery to the Neo-Futurists’ regular blend of theater games, performance art and personal story telling and you’ve got a good take on their current production, Mike Mother. Not surprisingly, the title’s close parallel to Marsha Norman’s Pulitzer Prize winning play ‘night, Mother is also explored in full measure by writer-performer Jessica Anne who, simultaneously, seems to embrace and mock that popular play as she explores her own relationship with her mother here.

That relationship is surrounded by death and deception and, even though the Neo-Futurists are noted for their truthful accounting, the show’s primary strength lies in the gothic vagaries involved with this particular story. As Jessica Anne admits, with a smirk, she’s “evolved” and one is never quite sure what is fantasy or fact here – a tantalizing proposition that allows the piece to stick in your mind for days afterward.

Granted, the final moments involve a bit more self-indulgent introspection than most Neo-Futurists shows, but Jessica Anne still emerges as one of the most interesting performers in the Chicago theater scene. She is ably backed up by actor Mike Hamilton, the Mike of the title, as they explore her past and invite an audience member or two on the stage to share theirs, as well. Director Josh Matthews and scenic designer Erik Newman also contribute, grandly, with specific focus applied to the production’s centerpiece, a beautiful white bathtub, which is used to splashy effect here.

Mike Mother runs through June 4th at The Neo-Futurarium, 5153 N. Ashland in Chicago. Further information is available at www.neofuturists.org.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

 

Review: Trash

Published May 6, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

trash-2-600

You’d have to book a flight to Tampa Bay to catch a sight of former burlesque queen Chesty Morgan, the star of Doris Wishman’s iconic exploitation spy films Deadly Weapons and Double Agent 73. Lucky Chicagoans, though, need only travel to Wicker Park’s Den Theatre to earn a glimpse of Jinx Malibu, the fictional empress diva featured in the Rocket Pussy films, in New American Folk Theatre’s Midwest premiere of Trash.

Playwright Johnny Drago’s take on the Anna Nicole legacy and Tennessee Williams’ classic The Glass Menagerie finds a celebrity blogger arriving on the garbage laden doorstep of the reclusive Malibu. There he discovers Loogie, Malibu’s underwear clad oldest son, the crotchety Othermomma, Malibu’s sarcastic, domineering mother, and Smudge, Malibu’s dreamy yet sheltered daughter. Mistaking him for a Hollywood producer, Malibu and her family act out her deluded version of a comeback film. The horrified blogger plans to escape with the adventure seeking Smudge in tow, but the violence that has been lurking between the cracks of Drago’s setup eventually erupts with one of the cast members, in a moment worthy of an ‘80s slasher flick, reenacting the circumstances of Patsy Cline’s “I Fall to Pieces”, in graphic detail, in Jinx’s front yard.

Thankfully, director Derek Van Barham, who is immeasurably assisted by Clint Greene’s layered scenic design, highlights both the humor and the tension inherent in the lurid reality show circumstances on display here. He is helped, as well, by Anthony Whitaker’s commanding take on Jinx. Whitaker brings a sympathetic edge to the character’s most garish demands and is never less than compelling when on stage. Nicely, the divine Caitlin Jackson, known for her powerhouse portrayals of such icons as Bette Midler and Bette Davis, is allowed to show a more sensitive and hopeful side as Smudge, the show’s one true ray of light, while Kirk Jackson brings a nice sense of physicality and puppy dog energy to Loogie. Meanwhile, Carrie Campana fills Othermomma with a wisecracking weariness, a nice balance to Jamal Howard’s (momentarily) enthusiastic writer.

Trash runs through May 15th at The Den Theatre, 1333 N. Milwaukee in Chicago. More information is available at www.newamericanfolktheatre.org.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

 

 

Review: Cabaret (Touring Production)

Published February 17, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

shannon cabaretAs the tortured Anna Morgan in The Ring, the lovely and versatile Shannon Cochran was best remembered for trying to rid the world of the evil that would come to be known as Samara. In the current touring production of the musical Cabaret, Cochran, bringing elegant resourcefulness to the role of Fraulein Schneider, again faces an oppressive force that threatens to destroy her.

The beating heart of Kander and Ebb’s legendary look at the last days of care free decadence in Berlin before the rise of the Nazi Party, the resigned Schneider, who runs an eroding boarding house with as much dignity as she can muster, has touched a chord in audiences for decades. Finding love, at long last, with Herr Schultz (the completely delightful Mark Nelson here), a happy go lucky fruit vendor, the stern Schneider begins to blossom onstage with girlish enthusiasm. But witnessing violent reactions to Schultz’s Jewish background causes the stricken Schneider to forgo her heart’s desire and opt for survival, one of the show’s most definitive tragedies.

Nicely, this production allows the beautiful Cochran to supply Schneider, generally viewed as a dowdy matriarch type, with an unaccustomed, slim regality. Taking cues provided from the song So What?, in which the Fraulein recounts the days of her well to do youth, Schneider may look like a former beauty queen, but Cochran fills her with so much weary humor and curt wisdom that she never appears out of place in her dreary surroundings. It’s a totally winning performance that adds much gravitas to the emotional ending of the musical’s first act. randy cabaret

Of course, Schneider is not alone in playing against type here. The sweet faced Randy Harrison, best known as Justin from Showtime’s Queer As Folk, is seemingly a far cry, temperamentally and visually, from the exotic quirkiness of Alan Cumming, an actor who has practically owned the role of the Emcee since Cabaret’s incredibly popular 90s revival. But Harrison’s take on the Emcee is authentically dazzling in its own right. Harrison brings a subtle flow to the proceedings while delightfully attacking the perverted joy and sexual deviance that are inherent in the part. Like Cochran, Harrison’s devotion to the role also makes his character’s fate all the more tragic. Ultimately, the poignant dashes of reality provided by these two powerhouse performers are this production’s truest strength.

Cabaret runs through February 21st in Chicago at The Private Bank Theatre, 18 W Monroe Street. For info on tickets and other stops on the tour: www.cabaretmusical.com.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

 

Review: Le Switch

Published January 30, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

le switch

Smartly acknowledging those members of the queer community who have dubious feelings about marriage equality, playwright Philip Dawkins’ Le Switch is a fun romantic comedy featuring a bevy of fine performances and well thought out characters.

Nothing too unusual happens here – as in other projects of this variety, everything ends up resolved, happily. But Dawkins gives nice investment to the history and fears of commitment shy librarian David (an adorably unfettered Stephen Cone) as he manages a long distance relationship with Benoit, a younger, very quirky Canadian florist (the truly sweet Collin Quinn Rice).

Nicely, Cone and Rice are passionately supported by the equally fine La Shawn Banks, Mitchell J. Fain and Elizabeth Ledo, as David’s family, both real and chosen. They, along with Dawkins’ full bodied approach to his often enjoyable characters and Stephen Brackett’s loving direction, make this theatrical offering a sweetly recommended one.

Le Switch runs through February 21st at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont in Chicago. More information is available at www.aboutfacetheatre.org.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

 

The Visit’s Deanna Dunagan: Full Circle Fairy Tales

Published November 6, 2015 by biggayhorrorfan

deanna visit main
The popularity of films like Insidious: Chapter 3 and M. Night Shyamalan’s The Visit have signaled a wonderful trend in genre pictures. These box office successes have revolved around characters like Lin Shaye’s Elise and Deanna Dunagan’s Nana, powerful females who are well above the age of first communion celebrations and tender coming out parties. These women have been complex and vibrant and, in the case of Dunagan’s Nana, believably deadly. Thankfully, Dunagan, a powerhouse veteran of the Midwest theatrical trenches, recently took a moment to speak with me about her career and some of her reactions to making The Visit. A Tony Award winner for her powerful performance of Violet in Tracy Letts’ acclaimed August: Osage County, Dunagan, also, shares her joy over her current role in a revival of Scott McPherson’s contemporary classic Marvin’s Room. McPherson, an activist and actor, was one of the many prominent and important artists to die from AIDS in the 90s. The endurance and hopeful strength that many of those first victims needed to survive in those black days is reflected a bit in his creation of Aunt Ruth, the sunny role that Dunagan so brightly ignites.

BGHF: Let’s start from the beginning, Deanna! You grew up in a small town in Texas. How did you get involved in theater?

Deanna Dunagan: Well, I spent my childhood getting the kids together and putting on plays. In West Texas there was not much theater to be found. But for some reason, from my early childhood, I knew about plays. I put them on. I don’t really know how that happened. We had a Town Hall series that came through. There were magicians, hypnotists and speakers and I guess they had plays, occasionally. But from a very early age, I was really aware that was what I wanted to do. Being from West Texas, I didn’t think I had a shot at it. I thought you had to be a star or be in the movies or be on Broadway to be an actor. How would I ever get there from Monahans, Texas? It seemed impossible. But I actually think I was destined to do this. From my earliest memory, that’s what I wanted to do. First when I was little, I would make up the plays or we would do fairy tales. But then in junior high, I would find a script in a book, somewhere. I’d get the kids together and we’d rehearse on our own. I’d go to the principal and say, “We have a play to put on! Can we put on our play?” They’d have an assembly and we’d put on our play. I made opportunities to do that all through my growing up years. I really think that this is what I’m supposed to be doing.

BGHF: I think anyone who has seen you in any of your roles can attest to that. Currently, your Aunt Ruth in Shattered Globe’s revival of Marvin’s Room is such a delight!deanna marvin's room

DD: I haven’t played anyone like her since my ingénue days. She is just totally loving and trusting. She’s without a mean bone in her body. She’s just the most lovely, sweet lady that you can ever imagine and she has endured so much in her life. Yet, she has nothing but love. It’s a welcome part. I love being her. She’s, also, very funny. I don’t think that I’d love it if she weren’t funny – it might get very boring. But she’s very fun.

BGHF: It’s, also, allowed you to work with your long time collaborator and another prominent woman in Chicago theater – director Sandy Shinner.

DD: She was my very first contact here in Chicago. We’ve remained friends. I’ve done 7 plays with her. There came a time at Victory Gardens when there just weren’t roles for me or I was busy. So, we didn’t work together for awhile. But we were always friends.

BGHF: I need to ask you about a more obscure role now. Do you recall working with David Hedison (The Fly) in the 80s crime thriller The Naked Face?

DD: Yes! Yes!

BGHF: I remember my whole family settling down to watching that on cable, one Saturday night!

DD: You’re kidding! I was his wife! That was interesting. I got that role because I dressed correctly for the part. Bryan Forbes, who was the director and a wonderful guy, came to audition in Chicago. He had been out in L.A. auditioning. He was appalled at the way people came in – torn blue jeans and t-shirts. I was auditioning to play a doctor’s wife, so I came in dressed the way that I thought a doctor’s wife would be appropriately dressed. (Laughs) I think that’s why I got the role! I had a couple more scenes. The other scenes I had wound up on the cutting room floor, unfortunately. That movie was long, anyway. But, that’s so funny that you know that movie! Not many people do!

BGHF: I loved that movie. Roger Moore released his memoir, a number of years ago, so I went back and re-watched it then.

DD: He was so funny. He was the loveliest man. Of course, I was nobody, but I was supposed to be his sister-in-law. So, the director would yell, “Cut!”, and Roger would, immediately, say, “Do you know the one about the Irish Man?” (Laughs) He was, constantly, entertaining us with funny stories and jokes. He was a very nice man.

Film Review The VisitBGHF: Well, you definitely have much more of a presence in The Visit, for which all the fans are grateful. In particular, you do such calibrated work as Nana, telling that spookily beautiful story to Becca (Olivia DeJonge), as she’s being interviewed by her.

DD: It’s so interesting. One of my agents wrote me this morning to tell me that he finally saw The Visit. He mentioned that scene. I was gratified that he picked that out.

BGHF: It was beautiful work. There definitely wasn’t anything staged or over the top with it.

DD: Thank you. I loved that. I believe that is among some of the best work that I’ve ever done, actually. It equals other work I can think of — like in August or Desire Under the Elms or The North China Lover. There was this fairy tale quality about the story she told. Of course, it was a horrific story about her murdering her children; putting them in the pond, in the suitcase. I assume she put them in there, alive, which is even more horrifying. In her madness, she thought that was the way to save them. That they were in danger and putting them in the pond would ensure that they would get to the other planet and be saved. She told the story as if it were a fairytale and then only broke down at the end. Night wrote a beautiful scene. It was a beautiful piece of writing. It was very complicated, interesting… I really got into that.

BGHF: It, also, brought you full circle, in way. You started out, as a young girl, bringing fairytales to the stage and years later, you deliver one, so beautifully, on screen.

DD: Yes. (Laughs) That’s right! That’s right! That’s interesting!

BGHF: Was The Visit another surprise for you? In 2008, you won the Tony…and now the lead in this popular film?deanna august

DD: (Laughs) Well, the Tony was just impossible. It would be like winning the Academy Award. I never even thought of it. I would have thought I had given any possibility of that up when I left New York and came to Chicago. I never thought about it – ever! I watched the Tony Awards on TV, like everybody else. It never occurred to me that I would win a Tony. As for The Visit, I remember my agent saying, “This may have a cult following.” But, it never occurred to me that it would become so popular. It really is an ensemble film. I didn’t feel like I was starring in it. Kathryn Hahn is so well known. She has a series and has done some pretty big films. All the pre-publicity was saying that it starred Kathryn Hahn. So, I didn’t think that I would be particularly noticed. When anybody asked me, I said that it really starred the kids. It was the kids’ story.

BGHF: The kids are wonderful, but so many of the fans believe that Nana really is the standout. I remember reading press that mentioned that you and Kathryn Hahn as the focal points.

DD: That was after it was released. It was interesting. I think in the New York Times that they did a paragraph about Kathryn and how she reminded them of Karen Black. Do you remember Karen Black?

BGHF: Oh, yeah! I loved her.

DD: Then they mentioned me with Peter. The major press really didn’t give Nana much love. But the minor press and the bloggers have loved Nana.deanna dunagan

BGHF: I’m not surprised. They’re the true voice of the public. It, also, shows that audiences crave more strong female characters – of all ages! What an honor that you are such a prime representation of that!

DD: You know I once went away from the theatre. I went to Mexico to write my thesis on costume design. I fell in love with a bullfighter and I was going to stay down there. But people kept calling me. The Dallas Theatre Center was doing The Apple Tree. They couldn’t find anybody, so I came back and auditioned. It was being directed by Lee Theodore, who was the original Anybodys in West Side Story. So, I did that and then I went back to Mexico. Then I got hired by The Globe of the Great Southwest in Odessa, TX. They asked me to come back and do Lady Macbeth. I went and did that. I would try to go away from it. I fully intended to marry my bullfighter and live in Mexico. I was doing a lot of singing down there with my guitar. But theater kept on calling me back. It was the universe. I fully believe that I am doing what I am supposed to be doing.

The Visit, which is still doing the rounds of various theaters, will be released on DVD and Blu-ray on January 5th, 2016. For Midwest residents, Marvin’s Room will continue its justifiably acclaimed run until November 14th at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont, in Chicago. More information can be gathered at http://www.shatteredglobe.org

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

http://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Chicago Horror Theatre Festival

Published October 29, 2015 by biggayhorrorfan

chicago horror
“What do I wear?”

“Can I bring my pet llama?”

“What if my brain fries (like a mad scientist) and I just don’t understand what’s going on?”

Yes, theater, in general, can be scary for some. Nicely, the mad minds behind The Chicago Horror Theatre Festival are bringing you a bevy of stage shows that are actually supposed to terrify you, once you get in the door…not beforehand!

Offerings like Centralia: A Bloody Rock Musical, The Haunted Life (about a boy band of paranormal investigators) and Musical Horror Story Exorcism (featuring the talents of my favorite Midwest theatre diva, Caitlin Jackson) prove that there will probably be plenty to tickle your funny bone here, as well.

Running, both, Halloween weekend and the weekend afterwards at Stage 773 in Chicago, more information can be gathered at: https://www.facebook.com/ChicagoHorrorTheatreFest.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

http://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan