Million Dollar Quartet : Great Balls Of Fire!

On December 4, 1956, Sam Phillips hosted a jam session in his Sun Records recording studios featuring four stars of the early rock and roll genre. All four had hits with Sun Records: Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, and of course, Elvis Presley. There are a number of recordings available that document the songs they performed that day including a bit of studio banter but they don’t tell the whole story.

The cast of Million Dollar Quartet. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Playwrights Colin Escott and Floyd Mutrux further imagine events of the day in their musical, Million Dollar Quartet. And they weave a very dramatic story around twenty two hits from these four artists. And they go beyond just banter in a studio during a jam session to also flesh out a story that gives us the history of Sun Records and Sam Phillips and some of the dynamics of the burgeoning recording industry in post-war America.

Before I get further into the performances, I want to compliment Daniel Conway on the truly amazing set design he developed for the Sun recording studio. It seems to hit all of the notes that we see from period photos of recording studios while feeling open and friendly to the audience experience and certainly gives the performers the space needed to rock on!

And I have a question for director Laura Braza: how do you prepare to cast a play like this when the four main characters are well known and well loved personalities with clear and discernible traits and performing styles? I was a but dubious at first but once Million Dollar Quartet got underway, those doubts were erased. Braza has assembled an incredible ensemble here who get the story and the history and they music!

Seth K Hale and Aja Alcazar. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Although not an actual member of the quartet, Sun Records owner, Sam Phillips is a principle character here. Seth K Hale is a dynamic and enthusiastic Sam Phillips. Hale’s Phillips is not only fully invested in the music, he is fully committed to his boys and Sun Records, and Hale clearly plays to that role. But he also has to switch up a bit as Escott and Mutrux have given him a second role: Phillips also speaks directly to the audience at times, separate from the interactions on stage, giving us the history of Sun Records, his relationship to the artists, and his plans for the future…and a bit of back fill and back story so we too are in the know. He’s the glue that pulls the overall story together.

Blake Burgess. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Blake Burgess is Johnny Cash. Tall and somber at times as the man in black, he also knows how to have a good times with his friends. Burgess throws himself into the songs and hits some low notes that I am not sure even Cash managed on stage. But Burgess is a sure presence here!

Carl Perkins is played by Armando Gutierrez with a ton of vigor and exudes Perkins enthusiasm for his own music. And Gutierrez’s singing and guitar playing are so so suited to the genre. But Perkins can be a little direct and aggressive in protecting his own music, taking a dim view of Phillips introduction of Jerry Lee on piano for the sessions for a new Perkins single. And he clearly takes umbrage at both Phillips and particularly Elvis for recording Blue Suede Shoes, a song Perkins wrote, immediately after his own release of the song. Of course Elvis had a bigger hit with it (which should have put songwriter royalties in his pocket but maybe not given the era). But Gutierrez can bring that feisty to bear here too, befitting that subplot in the story.

JP Coletta. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

And Jerry Lee Lewis! The flamboyant, over the top, piano player and singer! How do you bring that to life? Well Braza found her man in JP Coletta…who can play any style from the gospel tunes to country licks to straight ahead rock and roll…standing up, sitting down, standing on the piano, reaching over the piano backward, and all without missing a beat or a lyric. But he’s always his own best front man and promoter and ends up being the subject of a few very funny and very clever jokes. But really, Coletta is a consummate piano player and feels Jerry Lee to his very core.

Patrick Morrow, Joe Hebel and Armando Gutierrez. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

And here’s Elvis! Elvis is probably a hard role given that the whole world saw him on television and movies throughout his career. But Joe Hebel gives us the young and rebellious and yet a bit unsure star performer here. Never missing a vocal hiccup or physical tic or any other familiar bits and pieces of the Presley swagger, almost to the point of parody, and I think in 2025 that is the point. But Hebel brings it all to life.

And then there’s Dyanne, a singer in her own right that tags along as Elvis’ girlfriend. Although not part of the quartet they all encourage her to join in and Aja Alcazar’s Dyanne does with a flawless voice and amazing range. Alcazar gives us a Dyanne that holds her own here with the boys and proves to be a star on her own. And she played off of Jerry Lee’s advances just right!

The cast of Million Dollar Quartet. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

There are 22 songs here. Not the ones actually recorded that day which were often gospel or country standards that all of the artists knew. Instead Escott and Mutrux gave us a tapestry of hit songs from each artist and other hits of the period that they may have covered or admired at the time. So beyond the great solo personalities, the feeling of camaraderie and ensemble prevails for most of the songs. No small task to present a memorable performer set in everyone’s memory but then to stay in character while performing in ensemble is a real accomplishment. And this cast pulls that off in a resounding fashion.

The cast of Million Dollar Quartet. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

This is a remarkable musical written around a number of dramatic events (some that happened but probably not as shown) with songs that live on in our culture and just when you think the play and drama has resolved and you prepare to clap…a rock concert breaks out. What a rousing toe tapping finale! This is the last new show of the season and the Rep left us with a whole lotta shakin’ goin’ on.

The Milwaukee Rep presents Million Dollar Quartet at the Wilson Theater at Vogel Hall at the Marcus Performing Arts Center now through May 24, 2025. It runs about two hours without intermission…and you won’t miss that intermission with the music going down, trust me. And listen to the band!

Cast Change Note: Blake Burgess continues as Johnny Cash through May 11th, but Trevor Lindley Craft assumes the role after that.

More information and ticket info can be found here.

Extra Credit Reading: Program

Every Brilliant Thing Enthralls With Insights, Hope, And Sharing

This is a very intimate play…featuring one actor as storyteller who engages the audience in the telling. And the Goodman Mainstage at the Milwaukee Youth Art Center is the ideal intimate venue for the telling of this tale. We all become family here.

Yes, we only have one actor/character on stage. The character does not have a name and begins their story with a monologue that explains what the term Every Brilliant Thing means and where it originated. And at this point it is important to mention that this is a play about mental illness and suicide. And our actor is a youngster when we first meet and we get to share their growth and awareness and thoughts through a decade or better. And at first Every Brilliant Thing is a list to help their mother heal…a simple list of Brilliant Things! But eventually it becomes a coping mechanism as our actor struggles through their life as well…and obviously suffers from a reluctantly acknowledged mental health issue of their own.

Elyse Edelman. Photographer: Ross Zentner. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre.

Director Molly Rhode as taken a risk here…and instead of casting a single actor for entire run…Rhode has cast Milwaukee favorites James Carrington and Elyse Edelman on alternating evenings. Which opens up a new question that I hadn’t considered before…what effect on the story will gender have? Will a female character seem more sympathetic? Will a male character be perceived as weak? ??? Edelman held the floor when I attended on Sunday March 2 and just mesmerized the audience. She is a grand story teller!

James Carrington. Photographer Ross Zentner. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre.

But even without the dual casting this story will evolve differently at each performance. There are roles for the audience to play, as the actor selects audience members to play a vet, school counselor, and father. So bring your best actor voice and face when you attend. Depending on the actor and the audience member selected, the story will deviate from performance to performance and there will be a fair amount of ad lib activity on everyone’s part.

Elyse Edelman. Photographer: Ross Zentner.. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre.

But there’s more: There’s the actual Every Brilliant Thing List! When a new audience member found her seat next to me, I exclaimed, what great seats! And she replied, yes they are as long as I don’t have to be in the play…at which point Edelman came over and recruited my neighbor to participate…simply reading a line when her number was called: “Really Good Oranges!” There is some fun when a volunteer has forgotten their number and fails to respond on the first cue.

James Carrington and audience member. Photographer: Ross Zentner.. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Chamber Theatre.

Yes, the topic is mental health and some sad life events. So there are moments of feeling choked up with tight throats and teary eyes. But there is an incredible amount of hope and happiness here and laughter that make this play feel full circle and complete…despite the unusual format.

I’d appreciate hearing from any of you who experienced James Carrington in this role. I have seen him in a number of other plays and I am sure he nails this!

Every Brilliant Thing continues at the Goodman Mainstage Hall at the Milwaukee Youth Arts Center (just north of the Deer District in the old Schlitz Brewery area) through March 16, 2025. Run time: approximately 75 minutes, no intermission​

Additional information and tickets available here. If you have druthers on whether you see Elyse Edelman or James Carrington, the dates of their performances are listed.

Romeo And Juliet Even In Appalachia Remains The Love Story For The Ages

In his Rep in Depth presentation on opening night, Matt Daniels explained the genesis of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Always the ready adapter of a good story, Shakespeare had plenty of potential sources and Daniels lists the myriad of poems, novellas, dramas, legends, etc that preceded the play that he wrote…the most famous and most popular play on stages to this day…and onto the contemporary version, West Side Story. And then a touch on the shift to Appalachia for this adaptation and the dialects there being the closest contemporary dialects to those of Elizabethan England. Intriguing. He even brings up the ‘parallel’ of the Hatfields and McCoys vs. Capulets and Montagues. More on the Appalachia thing later. And finally, since we all know the story, why do we all continue to seek out presentations of Romeo and Juliet. As Daniels said, spoiler alert, they all die. But we still find hope in the story?

The cast of Romeo and Juliet. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

Director Laura Braza adapted this version of Romeo and Juliet and sets us in Appalachia and brings into the staging, some bluegrass or early country music. This is the third Shakespeare play in recent memory where the Rep has included contemporary music as a supporting motif….Braza’s Much Ado About Nothing and Daryl Cloran’s As You Like It. Braza has such a clear sense of the story and is such a solid story teller, I don’t think she needed this bit of stage play. And she hews so near the original text and working with the spare stage, this is clearly what Shakespeare would be doing in 2025. But being able to dress the characters in modern dress and working with contemporary accents eliminates distractions and the audience is bound to the story through the text and the action.

The cast of Romeo and Juliet. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

Romeo and Juliet requires a rather large ensemble and Braza was fortunate to bring together a cast of very skilled and very popular local actors. Nate Burger who is most often seen on the stages of American Players Theatre plays both Benvolio and Friar Laurence. His Friar Laurence is a bit mischievous in his support of young love and then devious in his plan to thwart authority and finally clearly powerless when actually facing that same authority. Matt Daniels is Lord Capulet and comes across as very much in control and controlling until the ‘death’ of his daughter Juliet…when he loses it and the acting here may be just a little over the top for me. You may have noticed Daniels as Ebenezer Scrooge in Mark Clements’ A Christmas Carol the past few seasons. Laura Rook, also a mainstay at American Players, is Lady Capulet, a clearly loving wife and mother and maybe just a bit of doting mother…but she can be just as stern and demanding as required by the text here.

Dimonte Henning is a graduate of UWM and the Rep’s Emerging Professional Residency and most recently directed Clyde’s for the Milwaukee Chamber Theater. Henning too plays a number of roles but he gives us a very gentlemanly Lord Montague. And Alex Keiper who was June Carter in the Rep’s Ring of Fire and also appeared in Titanic, is an incredible nurse to Juliet. She clearly loves the girl and abets her in her flirtation and marriage to Romeo but too folds in the face of the Capulet’s plans for the girl.

But the high drama at the pivot point in the play is the street fight between the Capulet crew and the Montague family. And here Davis Wood, a current Rep EPR, is Tybalt while Mathew C. Yee, a writer and actor from Chicago, is Mercutio. They give us all of the animus and hatred necessary to bring the fight to its deadly fruition.

Pictured: Kenneth Hamilton, Alex Keiper, Piper Jean Bailey and Nate Burger. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

But the make or break roles in Romeo and Juliet is casting the right Romeo and the right Juliet…actors who can work off of each other and build a stage chemistry that lets us believe in the story. Braza has done that here.

Kenneth Hamilton is our Romeo, another returning actor from Braza’s Much Ado. Hamilton is the complete Romeo here: full of swagger, a hormonal young male, easily swayed in love, and little thought beyond himself. Hamilton easily portrays a teenager in love, well for the moment. All in to the point of ignoring his own safety, both in the garden under Juliet’s window and later as Friar Laurence tries to whisk him away in the face of his exile. But he also swiftly portrays the hot blooded street fighter who slays Tybalt which brings his world crashing down and the brash lover who returns home to face death on the news that Juliet has died. Hamilton’s interactions with our Juliet play true.

Pictured: Piper Jean Bailey. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

What light through yonder window breaks? Well it is Juliet and Braza has found a jewel for her Juliet in Piper Jean Bailey. A recent graduate of Northwestern University, this is Bailey’s Milwaukee Rep debut and first professional role. Bailey easily moves from the naive 14 year old that we first meet with her parents and quickly develops into a crush-worthy and crushing on Romeo teen during the Capulet’s party scene. But Bailey really brings the drama in the balcony scene and attendant soliloquies, she has a solid command of the Shakespearean text and story. And she is just the right amount of playful with Romeo and her nurse particularly through the planning of their wedding. She certainly knows how to play an excitable 14 year old and then cleanly morph into a young adult as the tragedy comes to a head. She was clearly the fan favorite as she received the loudest and warmest round of applause during the standing ovation. I will be shocked if we don’t see her again and again on the Rep stages in the future.

Pictured: Piper Jean Bailey and Kenneth Hamilton. Photo by Michael Brosilow. Photo courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

Romeo and Juliet runs through March 30, 2025. And while the Rep’s home is being remodeled, it is being presented in Vogel Hall of the Marcus Performing Arts Center. The entrance to Vogel Hall is on the riverwalk side of the MPAC just off of State Street. Additional information and tickets can be found here.

Extra credit reading: The Program