Sunday, February 16, 2025

Theater Review: WHITE

Note: Scripps Ranch brings us a wild, crazy show called "WHITE." Sorry, I couldn't make the photos behave, so try to make do with this review. 

Leave it to Scripps Ranch Theatre to come up with a piece that drives you crazy, makes you laugh and keeps you enthralled for the entire 90-minute, intermissionless piece.

Tonight it’s James Ijames’ “White,” which starts with a (caucasian) artist named Gus (Joey Landwehr) and a (black) actress named Vanessa (Mysia Anderson, who also plays two other characters) and their helpers/friends named Jane (Noelle Caliguri) and Tanner (Kevin Phantom), then blossoms into a much wider piece with so many characters that I lost track of who or what they are or want to be. 


The overall topic here is privilege in the art world: who gets it, who wants it and how they do or don’t work together.


The overall idea is the presentation of diversity and our own individual biases, racial and sexual identities and LGBTQIA identities. Got it?


If it all sounds hopelessly confusing, don’t worry about it. Just sit down, relax and enjoy the crazy show you’re about to see. Cringe now and then if it feels right. I might have called the show “Lost in the Kerfufle,” but though I like that title I must admit that it’s just as possible that nobody (except me) was lost, so take that for what it’s worth. 


The cast is terrific, Yolanda Marie Franklin gets a lot of credit for directing this crazy show, and from my perspective a huge amount of credit also goes to Cassandra Crawford for her costume design(s), that seem to change almost on a dime and fascinate with each switch. Ted Leib’s sound designs, John Spafford’s set designs (and construction) and Deanna Trethewy’s lighting designs also deserve credit.


“WHITE” runs through March 9, 2025 at Scripps Ranch Theatre in Scripps Ranch. Shows are Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.


For tickets, call (858) 395-0573 or buy online at https://scrippsranchtheatre.org/showtckets/

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Theater Review: Other Desert Cities


                     Cast of "Other Desert Cities"

       Geoffrey Ulysses Geissinger, Alan Rust, Melanie Lora, Rosina Reynolds, Debra Wanger. Photo by Karli Cadel.

Families. Oy. Especially the folks who live in an upscale Palm Springs home in Jon Robin Baitz’s “Other Desert Cities,” called a “searingly funny drama” on the program cover of Cygnet Theatre’s latest theatrical offering.


It is just that, not to mention almost depressing, given the way they sometimes treat each other. Alan Rust* plays Dad Lyman Wyeth, trying to keep the family happy and functional. Lyman is a former actor who served as an ambassador in the Reagan administration.


Mainly, there’s writer Brooke Wyeth (played by a deliberate Melanie Lora*), home to celebrate Christmas with the family after a six-year absence. Brooke is about to write another book, this one a sad family memoir about a tragic event from the past. 


Brooke’s mom Polly (brilliantly played by Rosina Reynolds) used to be a screenwriter. Now she’s just a solid Republican who sometimes gets annoyed at “you indulged children of the ‘me’ generation.”


Brooke’s other sib is youngest son and reality TV producer Trip, played by Geoffrey Ulysses Geissinger with the devil-may-care attitude of the young.


Then there’s elderly Silda Grauman (wonderfully played by Debra Wanger*), Jewish, bitter and alcoholic. She whines “I’ve been on a diet for two weeks and all I lost is 14 days.”


What’s going to happen? Oh, lots of things, some funny, some sad, some that will probably remind you of someone or something in your life. 


But it’s all done well, as is typical of Cygnet. 


* member of Actor’s Equity



The details


"Other Desert Cities" plays through March 2, 2025 at Cygnet Theatre, 4040 Twiggs Street in Old Town.


Shows Wednesday through Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 7 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.


For tickets call the box office (619) 337-1525, open from 12-6pm or write them at boxoffice@cygnettheatre.org.

Monday, February 3, 2025

Theater Review: The Half-Life of Marie Curie

 

                            The Half-Life of Marie Curie

Let’s face it, ladies, it’s never been easy to be a woman. It’s tough now, and it was much more difficult in the early 20th century when Polish-born Marie Curie (aka Maria Salome Sklodowska-Curie) was a physicist and chemist who revolutionized the scientific understanding of radioactivity.

Curie’s work led to new cancer treatments and the discovery of radium and polonium. She was also the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, receiving the award in 1903 for radiation research. In 1911, she won a second Nobel Prize in chemistry for isolating radium. 


Now New Village Arts Theater in Carlsbad presents playwright Lauren Gunderson’s fascinating play “The Half-Life of Marie Curie,” a two-character piece that shows Curie and older scientist/electromechanical engineer Hertha Ayrton (portrayed by Leigh Scarritt) playing lickety split off each other in a 90-minute, no-stops-allowed piece that may wear you out as much as it surely tires them.


Frequently seen on the NVA stage, Actors’ Equity member Scarritt takes it upon herself to teach the young Curie how to survive in this environment, where women are not encouraged to work, let alone to, you know, SAY anything to the men with whom she shares the science.


Daughter of a Polish Jewish watchmaker and a seamstress, Ayrton gave herself freedom to dress and act much more flamboyantly than her younger counterpart (credit costume designer Claire Peterson).


The British Ayrton (full name Phoebe Sarah Hertha Ayrton), was an electrical engineer, mathematician, physicist, inventor, and suffragette. Born Phoebe Sarah Marks, she was awarded the Hughes Medal by the Royal Society for her work on electric arcs and ripple marks in sand and water. 


Rachael VanWormer is also often seen on this stage, and never fails to perform magnificently. Her character Marie Curie got a doctor of science at the Sorbonne and was awarded half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903, for a study into spontaneous radiation. In 1911 she received a second Nobel, this time in chemistry, for her work in radioactivity. In 1921, President Harding of

the United States presented her with one gram of radium in recognition of her service to science.


Director Kym Pappas gives them plenty of time and space to show us how they  worked together.


I wish I could write faster and remember better (or at least have gotten hold of the script) so that I could quote accurately how the women deal with each other and some of the often-amusing things they say. These were two very special women, and Gunderson gives us a wonderful glimpse of two extraordinary women.


But never mind, be aware that this is a play like none you’ve ever seen. It is also one you should not miss, especially if you are a woman and have lived through some of the problems we still have with the male of the species, though mostly to a lesser degree.


The details


“The Half-Life of Marie Curie” plays through Feb. 23, 2025 at the Dea Hurston New Village Arts Center, 2787 State Street in Carlsbad. 


Shows are Thursday through Sunday. Times: 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Sunday; 2 pm Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. Approximate runtime: 90 minutes with no intermission.


Tickets are available through the box office at info@newvillagearts.org, or by calling (760)433-3245. Box office hours are Tuesday-Friday from 12-5 p.m.



                                     The real Hertha Ayrton



                                            The real Marie Curie