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Block Talk- Episode #90: Brenda Dharling

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She's the dancing diva of NYC! After years of snatching all the crowns, she's sharing all on this incredible episode of Block Talk. It's Brenda Dharling!

To listen to the episode, visit iTunes, SoundCloud, or Sticher! And don't forget to leave a 5 star review while you're there!



Spotlight On...Trevor Ashley

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Name: Trevor Ashley

Hometown: Sydney, Australia

Education: High School at Sydney Technical High

Select Credits: Edna Turnblad in Hairspray, Thenardier in Les Mis, Miss Understanding in Priscilla Queen of the Desert, - world premiere cast.

Why theater?: I've loved it since I saw Cats when I was 5. It's all I ever dreamed of doing, so I'm glad I make a living doing it all over the world.

Tell us about Liza’s Back (Is Broken): It's a fantasy that I wrote, where Liza Minnelli recounts the roles that she should have played. Basically it's a great chance to belt out a whole bunch of Musical Theater anthems, but give them the Minnelli twist.

What is it like being a part of Liza’s Back (Is Broken)?: I love it. I've done this show across the globe and wherever I go it always gets huge laughs and a great reaction!

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love all kinds... musical theatre is obviously my passion, but I love drama, dance, opera. I am always inspired seeing people onstage as I know how hard it can be, but when you get to see something really special: like Bette Midler last year in Hello, Dolly!– well, that's when you know you're in the room with greatness.

What’s your favorite showtune?: Fuck, I love so many, but at the moment, “Some People.”

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Bette Midler or Patti LuPone. Or Nathan Lane. Too many!!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: It would be called: “TrAshley! The Musical.” I would hope that Jonathan Groff would play me. He's obviously much thinner and better looking, but so am I in my head.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I would love to see the original cast of Chicago– and maybe also one of the performances where Liza took over for a few weeks. It's one of my favourites, and I would love to have seen Gwen Verdon and Chita. It must have been something!

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Come From Away. I make everyone coming to New York see it. It was my favourite of that season.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Wine. I love wine. But I've stopped drinking for 6 months. Trying to prove to myself I can do it!!

What’s up next?: I go straight home to do a concert at the Sydney Opera House. I'm very lucky!

Trevor Ashley’s Liza’s Back (Is Broken) makes its American debut at Sony Hall on Monday, February 4. For more on Trevor, visit trevorashley.com.au


Block Talk: Episode 93- RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 4 RuCap Episode 8

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Well that was a gaggy episode! Catrina Lovelace joined me to RuCap the latest episode of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 4!

To listen to the episode, visit Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, or Stitcher!


Spotlight On...Alejandro Cervantes

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Name: Alejandro Cervantes

Hometown: Oakland, CA

Education: NYU Tisch Class of ’18 Baybeeee

Favorite Credits: A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the Juneberry Collective or The Orange Terror Cycle by Kev Berry.

Why theater?: It’s the only job where, at the end the day, I can say “if I knew what I was doing now in the 8th grade, I’d be so proud of myself”

Tell us about Elaine, Strips at Liberty:Elaine, Strips at Liberty is a burlesque/cabaret/one-man-show/homage to the legendary Elaine Stritch and her autobiographical masterpiece (and similarly titled) Elaine Stritch at Liberty. Strips blends musical theater standards with contemporary pop songs, celebrated Broadway folklore with private intimate stories, vodka with soda - all in a celebration of tenacity, theater and a good drink.

What inspired you to write Elaine, Strips at Liberty?: I’d been memorizing Elaine’s monologues for cocktail parties and to impress older men, and the next thing I knew I was off book and obsessed. Performing and reinterpreting Elaine’s stories is my way to embody her perseverance, grit and fearlessness - and maybe take some of that strength with me when the show ends.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Sparkly stuff.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I want Bebe Neuwirth to play my mom.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I was crazy about School Girls; Or, The African Mean Girls Play and then, of course, anything Sara Kommer writes.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Liza Minelli’s assistant, he’s probably an actor, and it’d be called “Dunkirk”.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Opening night of Elaine Stritch at Liberty at The Public tops the list. Follow ups: Christine Baranksi in Mame in DC (it was  supposed to go to Broadway but then investors got scared by Wicked) and closing night of Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Charcuterie boards.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Married.

What’s up next?: I’ll be in Kelly (1955) at the New York Theater Festival this March!

For more on Alejandro, visit  http://alejandrocervantes.com/

Spotlight On...Michael Gioia

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Name: Michael Gioia

Hometown: Carteret, NJ

Education: Montclair State University (I actually have a degree in English!)

Select Credits: The Secret Garden at the Lucille Lortel, 5th Floor Theatre’s Debbie Does Dallas 

Why theater?: Why NOT theatre?! Honestly, tho...

Tell us about Bitching & Belting:Bitching and Belting started as a Facebook post. Aside from theatre, my favorite thing in the world to do is, well... complain! My friend and frequent B&B collaborator, Joey Nelan, and I always joked about how we would put on a concert one day where we could combine both. We’d title it something like “Bitching and Belting.” Then, one day I put a status on Facebook asking if anyone would come to such show. Cut to five sold-out shows later, we're ready to bring the sixth B&B to The Green Room 42!

What is it like being a part of Bitching & Belting?: I always tell my cast and collaborators that all I want to do every time is have a party with my friends, and that's truly what “Bitching and Belting” is! We’re not here to showcase our writing or audition for casting directors, we are just getting up on stage to live our best lives and bitch and complain about every little thing bothering us (dating, bills, auditioning, you name it). As we say, no note is too high and no complaint is too small! 

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: The best kind of theatre are shows that keep you thinking and talking long after the curtain has come down. Jonathan Larson, of course, was so inspirational -- as he was/is to so many of us. Writing about his life and legacy 20 years after Rent debuted is one of the highlights of my writing career (you can find it on Playbill.com!). Talking to his close friends and family to get to know this man who only exists through his music inspired me even more. How he longed to create and change Broadway. That’s what we're all trying to do, right? That’s why these concerts are so important -- the people you meet, the memories you make, the art you bring to life. You never know where it will lead you, what new ideas you'll come up with or what your next big project could possibly be!

What’s your favorite showtune?: OMG, isn’t this like asking a parent to pick their favorite kid? I guess I’ll just tell you one of the most played on my iTunes... Anna Kendrick's version of “I Can Do Better Than That,” currently at 318 plays, from The Last Five Years movie, which made me CRY SO MANY TEARS OMG HERE I AM SOBBING AGAIN. I also love to sing “Giants in the Sky.” Who doesn't love Into the Woods? And then, of course, anything from Rent, Wicked, omg the list goes on... I TOLD YOU I COULDN'T PICK!

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I love working with new songwriters and have been so lucky to do so. We all collaborated on The Contemporary Musical Theatre Songwriters You Should Know: Live!, based on an article I wrote for Playbill a few years back, so I don't know how anything in the world could possibly top that. But like Sara Bareilles, girl... Call me.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Some hot mess non-eq who could barely get his life together but has a killer smile and charming personality. Obviously titled: I Woke Up Like... THIS?!?!?

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I will always be so sad I missed seeing the original bare: a pop opera live in New York City.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I mean... I think everyone should see Wicked like once every few weeks, so...

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: OMG, SPEAKING OF WICKED... Who DOESN'T like falling down a YouTube rabbit hole of "Feeling Things I Never Felt" Competition vids???? (You know you've watched them.)

What’s up next?: A little birdie told me that “54 Sings Ariana Grande” is coming back by popular demand to 54 Below! (April 13, get your tix, the first one was SO sick!) My friend and B&B cast member, Melanie Brook, is producing, and I'll be among the sure-to-be stellar cast. Also, check out 5th Floor Theatre, which I'm on the board of! We have a great season coming up, and we put on some of the best non-union shows New York City has ever seen! So proud of that company!

For more on Bitching & Belting, visit https://ci.ovationtix.com/34878/production/1004285?performanceId=10366611 and https://5thfloor.org/

Spotlight On...Cammerron Baits

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Name: Cammerron Baits

Hometown: San Diego, California

Education: BA in Theater Studies from Brigham Young University with emphasis on directing and acting.

Favorite Credits: I have had the opportunity to work on several intimate productions which I really love. My favorite works are ones that have pushed me  to try new and inventive ways of storytelling. The ones that come to mind are, Spring’s Awakening where I had the privilege of directing a deaf actor and incorporating that and movement into an impactful ending. The next is Maximalista, a show where I produced choreography and created music as well as video projections that enhanced the elements of the central theme of the leading characters struggle with mental health and its effect in her family.

Why theater?: I am dedicated to portraying the power of human intimacy in an elegant and impactful manner, that evokes a sense of true story immersion and an authentic connection to the characters' emotions: their triumphs, struggles, pain, and joy. Theatre not only is a perfect medium to tell stories this way, but also to achieve my ultimate artistic goal of bringing each script to life with tasteful stage direction, powerful blocking and expressive talent, while extracting and amplifying the elements of relatability that convey humans' intrinsic interconnectivity.

Tell us about Ms. Delight: Ms. Delight is an incredibly well balanced dramedy about a famous ex-Mormon drag queen who after over a decade of estrangement reunited with their so. Unexpectedly just moments before a performance.  For all of those theatre lovers they are in for a delightful story that of a father and sons estranged relationship. For the drag enthusiasts out there Witti Repartee whole plays Stella Delight  does not leave you hanging when it comes to classic drag, and well thrown shade.  The show has one performance only this coming Saturday (March 2nd) and 7pm. Tickets can be purchased at https://m.bpt.me/event/4074382

What inspired you to direct Ms.Delight?: Straton is one of my favorite up and coming playwrights and this is my third time working for him. He truly has mastered the balance of comedy and drama in this specific genre of dramedy, while maintaining a sensitivity for the subjects he writes about, so when he asked me to direct again it was a no brained for me. I am excited to have been able to incorporate my Mormon background as well as my drag and performance knowledge to this show!

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: As an artist, I am Inspired by authentic stories about the human experience. I'm passionate about exploring dynamic relationships and the impact that intimacy and love have on the psyche. As our interactions with others shape our lives and ultimately our hearts, exploring these experiences through theatre has the ability to elicit a visceral reaction with audiences from all walks of life.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I would have to say Charlize Theron, while not a theatrical actress I think she is a highly underrated actor who has such a beauty in the nuances of her craft and storytelling. I also would love to work with incredibly dynamic actor Sean Berdy o play like tribes. Lastly it would be a dram come try to work with  the thrilling Billy Porter.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Honestly, Come From Away, I can not and have not been able to recommend enough it is my favorite show I have ever seen on broadway and every time I have seen it I am taken on a multi-layered emotional journey and am blown away by the details I notice for the first time, and would pay full price to see it an with time.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: This is such a tough question haha I think it would be called “By The Way” and it would be a coming of age story but also a story of self love and defying the boundaries others place on me.  I would really love to see what Robbie Amell would bring to that story. 

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I really was sad to have missed Angels in America in its recent broadway revival. I think the story is so crucial and well told with that brilliant cast I wish I had seen how they told it. As far as musicals, I egret having not seen once on this island, I really wanted to go and just never found the time to fit it in.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: haha I love talent based competition shows, especially project runway and skin wars, however currently I am binging, the great interior design challenge. I can’t get enough, those shows really keep me inspired to continue following my passion.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _______?: A politician. As shocking as that is, the worlds truly go hand in hand.  I actually started college as a political science major with hopes of becoming a senator, but eventually found my way back to theater.

What’s up next?: Honestly I’m not sure. I have had several great auditions recently, as well as some coming up soon. I am also in talk of a few directing projects so stay tuned!

For more on Cammerrron, visit www.CammerronBaits.com

Spotlight On...Brandon Raines

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Name: Brandon Raines

Hometown: Manchester CT

Education: Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts

Select Credits: Film: Sam “Neighbors”, Vin “Geeble”, Evan “Live”, Sam “your invited”
Theater: Monkey “Journey to the West”, Benedick “Much Ado About Nothing”, A-RAB “West Side Story”. Select Television: Blue Bloods, The Blacklist, Fosse/Verdon, Law and Order SVU, Instinct

Why theater?: I love all forms of acting, in all different kinds of projects, but theater definitely holds a special place in my heart. Something about being in the room with your audience, it allows you to reach them, play off of them, communicate with them in a way thats only possible when doing live theater. Which I love because I feel like I can really effectively share my characters story.

Who do you play in Ms. Delight?: I play Roy Young JR in Ms. Delight

Tell us about Ms. Delight?:Ms. Delight is a play about the fictitious famous NYC drag queen, Ms. Stella Delight, coming back in contact with her son, Roy JR, after more than a decade of being estranged. Roy unexpectedly breaks into Stellas dressing room one night, and the two are left to try and resolve years worth of  abandonment, regret, anger, fear, persecution, and see if the two can infect have a relationship.

What is it like being a part of Ms. Delight?: Being part of Ms. Delight has honestly been a blast. The cast and creative team are all some really rad individuals. I have really enjoyed working with Cammerron Baits as our director, he really has given the actors space to breathe and discover our characters and play with new thoughts and ideas every single rehearsal. Additionally sharing the stage with Witti (Repartee) and Rebekah (Wilson) is such a gift in its self, they are both so much fun to work with and because of their fantastic talents I have really been able to develop my character so much further.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love really intimate, raw, unapologetic, original pieces of theater. When I am an audience member, I never want to leave the theater happy. I don’t like where there is a crystal clear resolution, or a “villain” and a “hero”. I don’t think that that is reflective of how life really is. We all have a story. We are all doing our best with the light we have at the time. We are all multifaceted and complex and beautiful and I think having characters and plots like that is important, and thats the kind of work I’m interested in doing. As for who/what inspires me thats a very loaded question because I’m inspired by something/someone new every day. I will say the three performances that I have seen that really have stayed with me as an actor, and that I think about constantly are Andrew Garfield as Prior Walter in Angels in America on Broadway, Alex Sharp as Christopher in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time on Broadway and Christiane Noll as Diana in Next To Normal at TheaterWorks in Hartford CT.

Any roles you’re dying to play?: All of them.

What’s your favorite showtune?: None of them.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Marianne Elliott

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Cameron Monaghan and it would be called “Sleeping On Subways, a series of questionable choices leading to one hell of a story, the life and times of Brandon Raines. Part One.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Not that far back but I would go see the 2009 Broadway production of Peter and the Starcatcher

What show have you recommended to your friends?:Once on this Island at the Circle in the Square

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Sitting in my living room and watching horror movies and eating a whole sleeve of Oreos at 11am on a Tuesday.

What’s up next?: Not a clue, I am in the process of auditioning for some really exciting stuff so hopefully one of those!!

Drag365: #8- Witti Repartee

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Name: Witti Repartee

Where can we find you out and about?: I’m often seen at Rockbar (where as the “Queen Mum” I’ve starred in staged readings, judged competitions, co-hosted fundraisers and where I throw my annual 39th Birthday Party), but can also be found at Excelsior in Park Slope hosting the Oscars, their annual Pie Baking contest and other special events, the Eagle, where I’ve been the host of Halloween and numerous Team Eagle events, and as a member of New York’s chapter of Drag Queen Story Hour.

Why Drag?: Drag gives me an opportunity to play a character and perform songs that a guy generally wouldn’t do.  It’s a fantastic outlet for someone with a theatre background who never followed that path as a profession.

What made you start drag?: When I was thirteen, I was rooting through the costume collection during summer theatre camp and chanced upon a purple suit that was very similar to the one worn by Dana Carvey’s Church Lady on "Saturday Night Live."  One or two “Isn’t that Specials” later, and I was hooked.  I started doing it more seriously in college, and then performed around New Jersey before meeting my drag mother in a production of La Cage Aux Folles in 1997.

Who are you drag inspirations?: Easily, the “Charleses” – Busch, Pierce and Ludlam.   Beyond that, it’s a blend of Agnes Moorehead, Bette Davis, Bette Midler, Rosalind Russell and Bea Arthur.

Your favorite part of drag is _____?: Giving newer queens a platform to take the stage, own the spotlight and shine!  The shows I produce are always variety-style revues, and I always have a couple early-career queens in the lineup:  I wouldn’t be who I am if Victoria Weston hadn’t taken me under her wing in 1997 and given me a slot in her show on Fire Island.  I was untested, untried and made a mistake or two, but with guidance learned who I was, where my voice was and how to hold an audience.  It’s my job to help provide that for others, when and how I can.

What is your number one makeup secret?: Let the lash glue dry completely.

The three must haves of drag are _____?:  Lashes that fit your face, shoes that you can stand in on a concrete floor for three hours, and confidence.

Who are some of your favorite drag artists, designers, stylists, producers, etc. to collaborate with?: My sisters Pepperica Swirl and Farrah Moans are amazingly fun to plan and host shows with.  Excitingly, Pepper (PlanetPepper) designs almost all of my custom clothing, and Farrah (MOANS) is an amazing jeweler!  My hair designer, Izzy Decauwert, is phenomenal:  5 years at Hairspray and she makes fabulous structural wigs that hold up!  I’ve had a lot of fun working with Jason Romas at Rockbar on staged readings, and my favorite producer is the co-founder of Kaleidoscope Collaborations, Nick DiCeglie, who is a gem and a gentleman.

What has been the most rewarding moment in your drag career?: There are two that vie for it:  stepping down in 2013 after a year as Empress XXVI of New York:  my Emperor, Ritz Kraka and I made over 160 appearances, 16 trips around the country and gave away or made possible over $120,000 in grants through our work with the Imperial Court of New York.  Emotionally, though, it would have to be Folsom Street East 2016.  It was a week after the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, and instead of the comic number I’d planned, I had to sing "I Am What I Am."  We were all scared, and singing that song with an audience of thousands of people was such a unifying and grand moment.  I hope the audience remembers it as well as I do!

If you were to do one character on Snatch Game, who would it be and why?: Oh lord.  I consider myself an actor and a singer, not an impressionist.  The perfect character on Snatch Game has to be A) someone you can do well, B) someone who has enough catchphrases or tics that they can be exaggerated, and C) someone who is enough of a pop culture icon that the audience is going to buy in.  The two that have worked best on the show, to me, were Bianca del Rio’s Judge Judy and Jinkx Monsoon’s Little Edie. (Although Ben Delacreme’s Maggie Smith as Violet Crawley and Paul Lynde were also exceptional.)    Who would I do?  Bette Davis or Bea Arthur, probably.  My Holland Taylor would slay, but these days people just know her as Sarah Paulson’s wife.  Which is sad.

How can drag change the world?: Right now, we all need to smile more.  Drag can add joy.  Marie Kondo approve.

What is the biggest tip you can give a queen starting out today?: Know who you are.   You’re not playing yourself in a dress, you’re creating a character:  who is she, where does she come from?  Every song, every costume choice, it all needs to hang on something and the arc of a well developed character is it.

Social Media: @wittirepartee on Instagram and Twitter

For more on Witti, visit wittirepartee.com and follow @titndrag365

Spotlight On...Adam Bertocci

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Name: Adam Bertocci

Hometown: Bronxville, NY

Education: Northwestern University

Favorite Credits: The Shakespearean mashup Two Gentlemen of Lebowski. Although I am still proud of my work as the Wolf in my high school production of Into the Woods.

Why theater?: I come from film, where everything tends to get a little literal. I love how on stage you can create a world through suggestion, through the audience’s imagination, even just an actor’s words.

Tell us about Miranda from Stormville: It’s a modern take on The Tempest. Miranda Milano is nineteen years old and trapped in an isolated little town in the wilds of New Jersey, caring for her overprotective father in his state of mental decline. What happens next... well, we don’t follow the original beat for beat, but fans of the original will get a kick out of spotting the connections, I hope, and people who are unfamiliar with the original should be able to enjoy it as a self-contained show.

What inspired you to create Miranda from Stormville?: I recently reread my diary from the day the idea hit me which seems to confirm that it just kinda popped in there, although at the time I envisioned it as a short film, and (I’d totally forgotten this part) an animated one. What can I say... I always found “The Tempest” fascinating and mysterious, I love how people are drawn to tinkering with it in surprising ways, and I could easily see the original from Miranda’s perspective. The rest, who can say.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Theater that literally speaks to me: words! I love a nice big speech, a snappy dialogue, a big argument with sentences popping off like fireworks. Changes by the project, but I guess it always comes back to my own life and memories. Even when I’m riffing on Shakespeare, everyone is really based on someone I know...

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:  Right now Brie Larson is high on my list. Shamefully,  I haven’t seen “Captain Marvel” yet.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I am thinking here more of my friends who are not into theater than those who are... I try to make it a mission in life to get people who had Shakespeare ruined for them in high school to give him a shot. A solid production of, oh, one of the romantic comedies can be both delightful and totally accessible to the novice.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: At present Tom Holland seems right to tackle my formative years. The title, to quote my best friend about me: “Stranger as the Years Go On”.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?:  Lately I have been kicking myself for missing Annaleigh Ashford in Sylvia. She has been wonderful in everything I’ve seen her do, and I have a weakness for people playing animals.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: In art, silly/sappy teen comedies. In life, literally everything I eat.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Working in film, as I do, so, boring answer, huh. Outside the arts, I guess some kind of number cruncher, finance sort, though I fear I lack the killer instinct.

What’s up next?: Whatever someone wants to go forward! Right now I’m writing a couple of short stories for fun. I enjoy the challenges that come with trying one medium or another, seeing what you can do on the page or the stage or the screen. Sometimes, as I found with Miranda, something that begins as one kind of project you realize works better as another...

Review: The Many Hauxs of the White House

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By Michael Block 

Throughout the history of time, the true backbone of the American presidency is the First Lady. And we’ve had some iconic ladies filling that position. Offering her unique viewpoint on history and drag, Heidi Haux has compiled a “best of” list of First Ladies sharing their story in First Haux, which made its debut at The Duplex.
photo by Michael Block
Using Melania Trump as a framing device, Melania seeks help from First Ladies of the past to help her through her newfound title. Unlike a Dickensian drama, not all of these “ghosts” have wise words to spare. From Martha Washington to Jackie Kennedy to the Bushes, the array of women offer a slice of their journey that played an impact to their moment in history. Playing into intelligent storytelling through each wifes' music and sound clip selections, Heidi takes pop culture and history and marries them into a subversive theatrical evening. There’s a fairly formulaic structure to keep this solo cabaret moving. Heidi goes from wife to wife with a number and a costume change, accompanied by an oft comedic history lesson. She has room to play with order and stray away from a mostly complete chronological timeline. At the end of the day, tone is key and insuring the balance of the hilarious moments between the dramatic bits heightens the arc of the piece. With Jackie O, Hilary, and the Bushes coming so close together, the latter half of the night becomes heavy-handed. That being said, Heidi, a campy queen at heart, delivers some extraordinarily winning heartbreaking moments. See Jackie O. Move over Natalie Portman, Heidi Haux has taken your gig. As she continues to develop this powerful piece, there is an opportunity to dive deeper into characterization and voices on mic. Distinguishing from Heidi neutral and individual First Lady assists with storytelling.
First Haux goes beyond a solo cabaret. This is a work of theater. First Haux deserves a larger stage. Heidi Haux has managed to entertain while educating through the art of drag.

Review: Get Out of Jersey

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By Michael Block

New Jersey is more than just Italian mob families and rich housewives and booze-guzzling shore-goers. There’s a rich landscape of mountains and beaches and farms and gardens. Well, itt is in fact the Garden State. Using Jersey as the backdrop, Adam Bertocci transplants the characters of Shakespeare’s The Tempest into a magical place called Stormville. But what exactly is Stormville? Buckle yourselves in for a two-act adventure called Miranda from Stormville, presented by Random Access Theatre at IRT.
Miranda from Stormville is a version of The Tempest that tells the tale of finding the time to get out and break free into the world. Miranda is a young woman stuck taking care of her decaying father, Pops Milano. Pops has a revered reputation in town where any mention of his name garners an immediate reaction. When a tempest of a storm stalls two travelers on their way to Atlantic City, Miranda takes pals Will and Steve in. Along the way, they are introduced to Ariel, a high-spirited caretaker of Pops, and Calvin, a dark and mysterious handyman of sorts. Bertocci creates a mystery that evolves as to what this world is and how these strangers are incorporated into this specific moment in time. Is it a world of fate or is it all a concoction created by Pops? Bertocci’s writing has a sense of whimsy, but with a twist. He offers a fairly accessible palette of dialogue that breaks into a heightened sense of language at times. By staying close to the plot of the source material, Bertocci has allowed the modern themes to feel reborn, despite the characters being weighed down by circumstance in Props game of chess. What’s missing from Miranda from Stormville is a sense of true urgency. A storm is happenstance in this modern world. A mechanic can easily fix the car and the boys can be on their merry way. They willingly trust the words of strangers when their overall objective of leaving is absolutely achievable. Those keys aren’t lost forever. But the source material needs them to remain even if modern logic says otherwise. If the magic and mystery is truly just a ploy to allow Miranda to go on her own way, she needs to have her moral obstacle arrive sooner as her backstory has informed us that she’s given very little thought to actually abandoning her father and running away with her heart. She seems content to being one of those people trapped in redundancy.
photo by Rachelle White
With a lack of urgency in the text, it’s possible for the stakes to rise up if the pacing gets faster. Director Jennifer Sandella allowed the play, like the set, to feel lived in. She focused in on the relationships of the various duos in the show. With so much wonderful character-focused work, the show desired to be brisker and to move from scene to scene faster. With a brave use of space from Sandella and scenic designer Roni Sipp, maneuvering from location to location with many jump cuts forced the scene changes to lag. And not all scene shifts were accompanied by a musical or ambient undertone. Bertocci’s text plays into a world mystery and magic. Sandella did an admirable job navigating the clarity when defining the rules of the world. Establishing what characters know and believe is essential for the audience to follow along. With pieces of furniture and levels to describe specific rooms and locations, Roni Sipp chose a smattering of old and new. One of the more dynamic elements of the set was the usage of items hanging down from the sky. From shades to plants to the skeleton of an umbrella, they helped to fill the space physically and viscerally.
Even as an ensemble piece, at the center of this story is the titular Miranda. Mackenzie Menter has a very ethereal way about her portrayal of Miranda. She had Miranda waver back and forth in her young emotions, seemingly having a change of heart at the flip of a dime. She didn’t quite have a hunger for more which made her move to leave that much more surprising. As the new entity in Miranda’s world, Gabe Templin’s Will certainly captured the odd man out character. He was a stranger in a strange land. As the way in for the audience, Will gets to be our eyes and ears for the unknown. The character processes a lot in this quick slice of life story and makes a discombobulated decision. Now for the magic of the world, Anna Cain and Brendan Cataldo as Ariel and Calvin respectively played on opposite sides of the spectrum of magical and realistic. Cain’s Ariel had a lot of whimsy to her. She took the playful approach without a flourish. Cataldo’s Calvin was the most interesting character and performance. As we learn in the second act, Calvin personified the legendary Jersey Devil. As a Jersey boy myself, my heart desired a reference to this creature lore so the inclusion of this plot point was icing on the cake. With a brooding demeanor and sense of mystery, Cataldo left you wanting more. And that’s a good thing.
Adam Bertocci allows Miranda to be set free at the end of the play. Even being a safe place, the moral of this story is there’s always a time to leave home for a new life and adventure. There is an ambitious concept within Miranda from Stormville that is poignant today. It just needs some tweaking to resonant further.

Block Talk- Episode 105: Kiki Ball-Change

Block Talk- Episode 106: Make Mike Watch Dirty Dancing

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I'm so excited to release the first of hopefully many in the new series on Block Talk, Make Mike Watch! This will be a series of episodes were my guests will suggest a movie for me to watch for the very first time! On this episode, Pussy Willow and Aria made me watch Dirty Dancing and then we sat down and dissected it!

To listen to the podcast, download and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, and Stitcher!


Block Talk- Episode 107: Aria Derci

Block Talk- Episode 109: Michele Shocked

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What you're about to hear may shock you. It's my interview with the fabulous Michele Shocked!

To listen to the podcast, visit Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, or Stitcher! And while you're there, leave us a 5 star review and download and subscribe!

Block Talk- Episode 111: Make Mike Watch Singin' in the Rain

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How have I never seen Singin' in the Rain? Listen to the latest Block Talk Episode were Nancy Nogood made me watch the classic movie musical!

To listen to the podcast, download and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, and Stitcher!


Spotlight On...Aaron Feinstein

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Name: Aaron Feinstein

Hometown: Los Angeles, CA (But I live in NYC)

Education: MFA Theater Directing UCLA

Favorite Credits: Next Stop- Produced by the first ever ALL IN(clusive) ALL-City Theatre Ensemble with the New York City Department of Education; Surreality TV- Produced by Actionplay; Miracle Project New York and LA - various productions.

Why theater?: I truly value the community building aspects of creating theater. For me, the rehearsal room is a place where those of us who feel we don’t quite fit the norm can have a platform to play and create. I love witnessing the amazing growth that happens when individuals create from their own passions and ideas, and tell their own stories in a devised theater process. I enjoy traditional plays and I have directed many as well, but I find a lot of this kind of theater is tremendously boring. I am always inspired to re-invigorate my love of theater through devising vital new works that are created within unique communities.

Tell us about Welcome To My World?: Welcome To My World is an original musical devised in Actionplay’s inclusive AIMS program. I founded Actionplay in 2011 to provide inclusive arts experiences to individuals with autism and related condition and disabilities. The program creates theater within an inclusive setting where neurodivergent individuals and neurotypical individuals (along with many other identities) collaborate and create together. The idea of “Welcome To My World” came from a young woman on the autism spectrum in our AIMS program who wanted to theatricalize the experiences of a young autistic woman living in NYC. Through our collaborative devising process, the idea evolved into a musical about an autistic young woman who befriends an extra-terrestrial from another planet. It’s wacky, moving, and spirited as most Actionplay productions are.

What is it like directing Welcome To My World?: Our rehearsals, which took place over 27 Sunday mornings from 10:30-noon, energize me and have been the highlight of my entire week. I think I’ve created a playful environment where our company feels comfortable in exploring their own ideas, and bringing in their passions and interests no matter how wild or bizarre others may think they are outside of the rehearsal room. It’s always tough for me to combine the diversity of ideas into a cohesive piece, but I’m proud of this show. Welcome to My World has ideas as diverse as the love of Roy Orbison’s music, Cosplay Parties, Sci Fi, and schmaltzy dad jokes – and they've all been generated by the individuals in our company. In general, when directing Actionplay shows, I love that I get to say “yes” more than I get to say “no”.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Stuff that feels vital and different than what I’ve seen before. A lot of times, this kind of groundbreaking theater is created within interesting communities, and I think many of these shows go under-the-radar because they break the rules. I like theater that breaks rules. I’m a theatrical director, but I am so inspired by music, and I am a musician as well. I love the freedom that comes from the improv tradition in music and theater, and I believe that incredibly vital work that is as serious and polished as anything can come from an improvisatory framework. I love watching things happen in the moment. They just feel more alive.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Hm…I love the English company Complicite, and their devising process is something to aspire to. I think they’ve always created work that bridges the community aspects of making theater with high-art, and I aspire to their level of theatricality.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: The new production of Oklahoma which I saw at St. Anne’s, but now is on Broadway is certainly one of the more interesting pieces I’ve seen recently, and it keeps coming up in conversation. I mean, I couldn’t have thought of a play that I never wanted to see again more than “Oklahoma” The magic of the diverse and inclusive casting, original arrangement, and just the badassnes of Ali Stroker making the role of Ado Annie into a really strong female character is enough to inspire me that these kinds of updates to old plays can be pulled off really well.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Jeff Bridges, and it would be called….”Yeah Dudes, We Made That.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Anything by Pina Bausch that I haven’t seen. My favorite was Nelken (Carnations), but those pieces are just beautiful and informative to how far one can go when thinking about creating work with a company.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Watching terrible morning TV like “Hot Bench” or “The Today Show” with Hoda and whomever….

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be ______?: Trying to start a punk band.

What’s up next?: Finishing up a documentary I’m directing about a single dad raising his non-speaking son and attempting to fine love in NYC. It’s been a long process, and it’s exciting to be completing it.

Actionplay’s Welcome To My World plays Saturday, May 18 at 7 pm & Sunday, May 19 at 2 pm at The Sheen Center. More info available at www.sheencenter.org/world.

Block Talk- Episode 113: Boyish Charm

Block Talk- Episode 115: Audrey Phoenix

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She rose from the ashes to become Iconic and now she's here to talk about it! It's my interview with Audrey Phoenix!

To listen to the podcast, download and subscribe from Apple Podcasts, SoundCloud, or Stitcher!

Spotlight On...Gabriel Maria Rodriguez

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Name: Gabriel Maria Rodriguez

Hometown: Mamaroneck, NY

Education: Mamaroneck High School, BFA in Acting from Emerson College, ongoing participant in The Michael Chekhov School in Hudson, NY

Favorite Credits:the umbilical point (Walking the dog Theater, the first full production for a solo play by me), fire (Walking the dog Theater, a piece my friends and I created from scratch), and playing Elliot in Water by the Spoonful by Quiara Alegría Hudes (Lyrics Stage Company, Boston)

Why theater?: In this life, I have been and always will be a storyteller. I have always felt most myself when seeking out stories, studying stories, feeling about stories, learning stories, learning from stories, standing in front of people and telling stories. I don't have an explanation. It's just what I do. I don't know that I could stop myself even if I wanted to. I secrete stories.

Tell us about Jack of Cups: Jack of Cups takes place thousands of years from now. Whatever environmental catastrophe we in the present have ahead of us, the people of this future have behind them. They have survived and grown a better world from the rubble. Every Spring, the communities of this world come together for the Remembrance Festival, a collective ritual of healing and renewal and the biggest party of the year. On the first night of the Festival, Jack of Cups, a mysterious servant of the goddess Mother Ocean, arrives and tells the origin story of this world: their post-apocalyptic creation myth. The play takes place at the Festival, during this first night.

What inspired you to write Jack of Cups?: The first thing was necessity. I met someone who ran an event space, and she invited me to do a solo show in her space. I said yes to her, without knowing what I’d do. I looked out into the thin air and said “Okay so I need a play now, please!” I started listening for it. Some weeks later, Jack and his world started showing up. I am always wondering (obsessing) about the future of our planet and the beings who live here. I believe that, however much we are able to come together to unify and heal, we have gone too far and the catastrophe is here. And it will worsen. But! At the same time, I don't believe total annihilation is certain, and I do believe that humanity is not fundamentally hateful, that we have inherent goodness. We have forgotten who we are, but we will always be capable of remembering. This picture lends me a kind of paradoxical discomforted hopefulness. Because we have pushed ourselves to such an All or Nothing sort of precipice, this moment in our history is likely the best opportunity we're ever going to get to create a free, loving world! This play was generated through asking the question: “If humankind DID become reborn through surviving the struggles to come...what would that look like?” As a storyteller and sci-fi/fantasy nerd, I find abundant hope in the power of the imagination. In writing Jack, I looked to the practices of legendary worldbuilders like Ursula K Le Guin and Carla Speed McNeil. If humanity is going to make it through and create a harmonious world, we will need to imagine that world first. Jack of Cups is one attempt to do this.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I am most drawn towards stories that incorporate perspectives both human and non-human, and explore the interaction between the two. It is sometimes difficult for me to get into Humans Sitting in a Room Only Talking About Human Stuff. That being said, I like any well-told story. Creators who are working out of a sense of wholeness, who are deeply listening, who are open and curious and playful. I’ll watch people like this tell any story. Artists who are searching for something, who are living in the questions. I can be soothed by a “Here’s the right answer, the end” sort of story as much as the next person, but ultimately I believe the most nourishing art is art that wakefully encounters uncertainty and paradox. My fellow members of Experimental Bitch Presents are prime examples of this. They inspire me constantly.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Kate Tempest or Peter Brook.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:What The Constitution Means to Me was pretty incredible. Talk about an artist standing courageously in uncertainty and paradox!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I would play me. It would be called “Word Witch.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Peter Brook’s Mahabharata.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I don’t believe in guilty pleasures. Pleasure is an inherent good. If the thing that gives you pleasure isn’t hurting anyone, there’s no reason to feel guilty. I non-guiltily love chocolate.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: A queer theologian studying, writing about, and teaching about comparative religion and mythology.

What’s up next?: More Experimental Bitch things! In July, I’ll be playing a role in the upcoming workshop for EBP’s production of member Sophia Heinecke’s New Nostalgias, directed by our amazing, kind, incisive artistic director Tatiana Baccari. Sophia is a brilliant, poetic, singular playwrighting voice. I am overjoyed to have a part in helping her work reach a wider and wider audience.

For more info on Gabriel, visit www.experimentalbitchpresents.com and www.gabrod.com.
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