Lounge of Tomorrow

Lounge of Tomorrow (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/index.php)
-   Beatnik (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   Hey Brad !! How's The Show? (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=9462)

JWBear 05-16-2009 03:21 PM

Yeah... I can't quite see that either.

innerSpaceman 05-16-2009 03:59 PM

When does the show go on the road?

Cadaverous Pallor 05-16-2009 04:12 PM

I didn't realize that it was Mitch Albom's material. I loved Tuesdays with Morrie (the book). How cool!

wolfy999 05-16-2009 11:23 PM

Brad is having way too much fun....we're never going to get him back!

Gemini Cricket 05-18-2009 12:36 PM

We got another good review for the show. My sisters and supervisors came to the show last night. They liked it. :)

Quote:

Manoa Theatre captures satirical 'Duck Hunter'

By John Berger

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, May 18, 2009

The world of supermarket tabloids is a marvelous place where Elvis and Bigfoot shop at night at 7-Eleven, space aliens regularly make themselves known and mankind shares the planet with various "half-human, half-something else" creatures whose existence defies the laws of Mendelian genetics. Welcome to the world of "Duck Hunter Shoots Angel," Manoa Valley Theatre's Hawaii premiere production of Mitch Albom's tart and satirical yet surprisingly substantial send-up of "tabs" and those who write for them.
Albom combines predictable stereotypes -- the semiliterate malapropism-spouting Southerner first and foremost -- with a subtle but effective message about tolerance, not judging people by geographic origin. Jim Tharp (Duane) and Braddoc DeCaires (Duwell) star as bumbling brothers, allegedly the most inept duck hunters in Dixie, who nonetheless succeeded in shooting something they saw flying over the swamp. They believe it was an angel.
Word of the shooting reaches Lester, the shameless owner/publisher of the "Weekly World & Globe" in New York. Lester and his half-alligator factotum dispatch Sandy, a cynical, burned-out reporter who is both "anti-gun and anti-redneck," to rural Alabama with orders to buy exclusive rights to the hunters' story and fabricate the physical evidence needed to substantiate it if necessary.
(Sandy's back story: He left Alabama years before in search of wealth and fame in "legitimate" journalism. In doing so, he left an innocent woman behind. She had something she wanted to tell him. He was too busy to listen.)
Sandy goes south with Lenny, the paper's 300-pound photographer. They find Duane and Duwell in the swamp and gradually earn their trust. Then, inexplicable things start happening.
Tharp, a longtime star of the local stage, sacrificed his white hair and full white beard to play Duane; Greg Howell, MVT's hair and makeup master, took at least 20 years off Tharp's actual age. With a radical new look and a new spring in his step, Tharp sets aside his usual stage persona of the genial old codger and delivers a well-calibrated comic performance as a much younger man.
DeCaires makes a welcome return to the stage as Duwell. He is well cast opposite Tharp, and they swap one-liners with the precise timing of a veteran comic duo.
Gregory Scott Harris (Lenny), another actor who has been away from the stage too long, is a third key to the show's success. A "fat suit" gives Harris bulk for his role but doesn't slow the flow of his performance.
Karen Archibald's set places the swamp behind a scrim that allows it to disappear when cast members -- Harris, Scott Francis Russell (Sandy), Chantelle J.M. Sawa (Woman) and Vincent Fitzgerald (Gator Man) -- move to other locales. Katherine Clifton (Kansas) tends the counter at a convenience store on one end of the stage. Thomas L. McCurdy (Lester) directs the hunt for the angel-shooters from an office high on the other end.
Archibald's swamp, Janine Myers' angelic lighting effects and sound designer Jason Taglianetti's thunderstorms enhance the actors' work. Mark Archibald's video designs are particularly effective in creating the experience of driving down a rural Southern road at night. Video adds a sense of motion to what could otherwise be a long and static scene.
Source

wendybeth 05-18-2009 01:06 PM

Great review, GC! :snap:

Strangler Lewis 05-18-2009 04:42 PM

Braddoc DeCaires! Hey, you used to be big!

(Congratulations!)

Gemini Cricket 05-18-2009 05:31 PM

More scruffy Greg Sloan-esque doings. :D


lashbear 05-18-2009 05:49 PM

Don't you ever shave again, young man. You hear me, now?

:D

innerSpaceman 05-18-2009 06:16 PM

Silly Bear, Tricks are for kids. Or Brad needs to turn tricks. or something catchy that assures him he's cute cleanshaven, too.




Plus ... he's too good a kisser to let all that fuzz get in the way of face.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 02:20 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.