American Players Theatre Cancels Their 2020 Season

This isn’t the news that I was expecting…not news that I wanted to hear. I hadn’t ordered my tickets for the season yet because I was waiting to see how the summer was going to shake out and how the safer at home programs were going to be administered. I have only missed one season since 2002…and I had really hoped to squeeze a play into the summer.

But here is the news from the email that I received this afternoon:

We have some news. And it’s not the news we were hoping to share today.

In light of the ongoing pandemic, and for the safety of us all, we have made the painful decision to cancel APT’s 2020 season. With so much research garnering so few answers, and knowing that venues hosting large public gatherings will be among the last to reopen, we do not see a path to a summer season this year. We’ve included some information below on ways you can see a bit of APT in the coming months. But first, there are a few things we’d like you to know.

First of all, we miss you. Wow, do we miss you. As we continue to work in the ways we are able, the recurring theme from our actors and artists and staff is how palpable it is that you, our incredible audience, are not with us in person. It’s difficult to fathom that, at a time when we’re all craving a deeper connection, we have to take care of each other by keeping to ourselves. So while we regret that we won’t see you as soon as we’d like, we’re working on some beautiful ways to be together while we’re apart. The first of those endeavors is the “Out of the Woods” series, which you can read about below.

Second, you will still have the chance to see this season in full. Our plan is to move this group of glorious plays to 2021 en masse. So while the 2020 season may be cancelled, the stories within it are simply delayed. In the meantime, if we can safely do so, we’re looking into producing different plays later in the year. And we promise that as soon as we know if that is possible, you’ll know.

Finally, please consider a tax-deductible donation. Cancelling our season will be an unprecedented hardship for APT, as we stand to lose 75% of our annual income. Your support will help sustain our acting company, staff and property so we can rise to this enormous challenge and preserve the APT that you know and love.

The APT Board and APT Foundation Board are leading the charge. We’re proud to announce that they have offered to match all income from donations – dollar for dollar – up to $750,000 between now and June 5. Please help us to realize this amazing gift and to show your support for APT’s future. There are many other benefits to donating, including a new one: exclusive content created by APT’s Core Company. Get all the details about that and the other benefits here. Any amount is greatly appreciated.

What happens in these woods, on these stages…it’s special. The combination of these exquisite stories, these actors, this audience – that’s not something that just happened. It’s been a four-decade labor of love. And it’s clear that there is much more hard work to come. And, like everything else that happens here, we cannot do it without you. We have endured tough times before, and this may prove to be the toughest yet. But we know that, with you on our side, we will be able to return to our Hill again. Until then, we are with you from afar.

We’re very excited to announce that APT has partnered with PBS Wisconsin to bring you Out of the Woods, a virtual play reading series featuring APT’s Core Acting Company, along with a few other great actors. These play readings will be posted on the PBS Wisconsin website on the dates below, and be available to view for free for a limited time.

Out of the Woods::

Chekhov One Acts By Anton Chekhov. Directed by Aaron Posner Friday, June 5 Three stories about the complexities of love and life; marriage and moving on, last seen at APT in 1985 and 1986.

As You Like It By William Shakespeare. Directed by John Langs A quite-nearly-perfect Shakespearian comedy, featuring one of his greatest heroines.

Arms and The Man By George Bernard Shaw. Directed by William Brown Friday, June 19 Love and war collide in a uniquely Shavian fashion when an “enemy” soldier climbs in through the idealistic Raina’s window.

Julius Caesar By William Shakespeare. Directed by Stephen Brown-Fried Friday, June 26 Growing unease over Caesar’s popularity spreads through Rome, spurring good people to do terrible deeds.

Are You Now Or Have You Ever Been… By Carlyle Brown. Directed by David Daniel Friday, July 3 Writer and activist Langston Hughes faces down his fears by writing a poem on the eve of his appearance before the Senate Committee on Investigations on Un-American Activities.

An Improbable Fiction By James DeVita. Directed by Tim Ocel Friday, July 10 A world-premiere reading of James DeVita’s new play, told largely in Shakespeare’s own words. It’s plague time, and Shakespeare’s characters reunite at The Boar’s Head Tavern to celebrate life, and ruminate on the state of the world.

For more information please visit : American Players Theater

Eclipsed

I saw Eclipsed at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater on March 6th. I usually try to publish my impressions within 48 – 72 hours. But I found it hard to get my thoughts together on this and the time stretched until the coronavirus pandemic canceled the performances…and I decided it wasn’t necessary to write this…but I was wrong…the play continues to echo in my consciousness.

“Eclipsed” is a 21st Century history play, set in the second Liberian Civil War in 2003. And playwright Danai Gurira has divined a very disturbing play from the basest events of that era. It reminds me of a Shakespeare history play a bit. First we have five very carefully limned woman characters who are as unique from one another as they can be. Women who probably would never have met if they hadn’t been caught up in these circumstances that they can’t control. And then their struggle to control those circumstances that they can.

And like Shakespeare, the characters are speaking English, but the Liberian dialect. And it draws you in because you have to concentrate very hard until you grasp the cadence and accent and start to understand what they are saying. It throws you off your game for the first few minutes. But that’s good.

Lights up, we meet two women who are hiding a teenager under a wash tub. Seems like fairly strange behavior to our eyes but they are hiding a teenager from the commander of the rebel forces fighting to overthrow the despotic leader of Liberia. They are wife number one and wife number three of the commander. Women who have been kidnapped and held as slaves to provide the commander with meals, laundry service, housekeeping, and sex. The stress on the women and the teen are apparent and there is some strains in their relationships.

Whether out of anxiety, naivety, or tempting the inevitable, the teen wanders from the compound and is discovered by the commander who forces himself upon her. She is now wife number four. When she returns her voice says it is nothing but her actions belie her words and it is obviously a serious trauma.

Life goes on and there is a clear hierarchy in the compound with wife number one, played by Jacqueline Nwabueze, as the matriarch. Depending on the situation she takes on the role of boss, teacher, mother, confidant, consoler, and liaison to the commander. She also determines who gets to select items from the spoils of war that trickle down to her charges. She has clearly taken to these roles and shifts easily from one to another as required. Ms. Nwabueze makes these shifts in feeling and focus seamless and natural…given it is invisible to the audience indicates how hard she is working!

Wife number three, played by Sola Thompson, is younger and with child…the commanders child. She shifts from showing pride in being popular with the commander to announcing that she does not welcome motherhood. Ms. Thompson shows her growth as the environment shifts…and she has decisions to make for herself.

Wife number four chafes at her role in the compound until a book arrives in the hand me downs. She is the only woman who has an education and can read so she is charged by wife number one with reading to the group. She is played by Matty Sangare…who effortlessly displays the confusion and shifting ideas experienced by wife number four as new situations are thrust upon her.

And then wife number two, played by Ashleigh Awusie, arrives. She has escaped the compound if not the situation by becoming a rebel soldier rather than a concubine. Ms. Awusie’s swagger will be recognizable as a stereotype some of us will read as Che Guevara. She claims that her AK-47 has given her freedom and she uses this sense of freedom to seduce wife number four into joining her in the rebel army. But her claim doesn’t ring true even as she repeats it several times to anyone who will listen. Instead it allows her to express her anger and pretend to avoid the misogyny in the rebel camps. And she has some pretty unkind things to say about the government soldiers. Though she does seem to revel in her role as mentor to wife number four.  Ms. Awusie does an amazing job of relaying the underlying doubts and fears that wife number two is feeling despite her declarations of independence and sovereignty in her own life.

And finally, Nancy Moricette is Rita, an activist and peace negotiator who appears in the compound to promote a ceasefire and peace agreement. She apparently is the only woman who the commander is afraid of. And she tries to hold out hope and a promise for the future to all four of the others in the play.

There are a lot of changes in the hierarchy and relationships and personal identities as we watch the events change and progress. And when a peace is finally achieved, we just see the compound dissolve as if it never happened…yet we know that these women will be scarred for life. That ending didn’t quite work for me…but it’s not unlike the Prince of Norway just sorta showing up.

There are five incredible women actors portraying the characters on stage…but there are three male characters as well…although they have no spoken words…and are not represented by actors.

The first of course is the commander who is defined in the conversations of the wives and their actions indicating his off stage presence. And then there is President Charles Taylor, the despotic leader of Liberia who eventually resigns and is driven from the country. Wife number two often exclaimed that the rebels would make him wear a dress before they killed him when they took control of the capitol. And then the subject of the book that wife number four is reading, the big man of America, Bill Clinton. The wives were amused that his taking a number two would cause so many issues for him in America.

Director May Adrales made this play speak to us. She managed to keep the suspense and anxiety and doubts in line and all five actresses in character for a very difficult and changing environment. She has been an instrumental force at the Rep and I look forward to her direction of future plays in Milwaukee.

Two disturbing thoughts kept nagging at me…and they weren’t part of the play…but introduced by the play. Why wasn’t I aware that there were two civil wars in Liberia? And was that my own shortcoming or just America’s disinterest in Africa? And how could we allow this to happen?

I am sorry for the cast and audiences who didn’t get to complete this run because of the COVID-19 closures. The actual shortened run was March 3 – 12, 2020 in the Quadracci Powerhouse. This would be a worthy candidate to revive in a very near future season.

Hedwig and the Angry Inch

This is a reprint of my remarks about “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater presented in their Stiemke Studio during the 2019 – 2020 season. This originally appeared on my Facebook timeline February 1, 2020.

“You Kant Always Get What You Want” is the punchline to a joke in the Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s Hedwig and the Angry Inch. You will understand when you see this musical. And this is a musical unlike most others…it relies on punk rock and glam rock in a rock club or cabaret setting to present the story. For Milwaukeeans of a certain age, think the old Teddy’s or Humpin’ Hannah’s or Zaks. The genre isn’t as shocking as it probably was when it was first introduced but it still makes an impact. And if you are lucky enough to get cabaret table seating down front, you will be part of the show.  And the roadies will keep offering you ear plugs…because this is after all a rock concert…but unless you have sensitive ears…you probably don’t need them and you don’t want to miss Hedwig’s direct monologues to the audience.

And of course in the past twenty years, society’s relationship and understanding of the varieties and expressions of sex and gender have matured, but this musical remains as culturally and socially relevant as ever because we still have a long way to grow. You just may view it a bit differently that the younger you would have. And Hedwig’s story is compelling and moving and is ably told through song and her interactions with the audience…and a few asides and distractions that pull us along. “Tommy can you hear me?

Matt Rodin as Hedwig is phenomenal. The character is totally believable and you accept her immediately. And Matt carries the songs both vocally and theatrically. I love him in this role. You will be jealous of his voice and his legs and his boots (yes you will).

And then there’s Yitzhak, played by Bethany Thomas. My goodness can she just push a song to its ultimate limit and beyond. Both her support vocals and solos are astounding. You may remember her from the Stackner Cabaret presentation of Songs for Nobodies. I don’t think there’s anything she can’t sing and make you feel it.

So besides the acting and music…there’s a real story here. Some history around the division of Europe and the fall of the Berlin Wall and how that affected real people. Culture shock of moving from that culture to America. And the questions that we all share at some level or another, around sex and gender and love and support and who am I and why do I love/hate you and why do I need to be here?

So yes, see this. You will feel. And you will leave satisfied.

Text by John Cameron Mitchell, Music and Lyrics by Stephen Trask

Directed by Mark Clements

January 28 – March 8, 2020

Stiemke Studio