Thursday, March 27, 2025

"Fat Ham" ★★★★



They say there is no blood on the pulled pork in James IJames’s “Fat Ham,” but we're not so sure. We get Margo Hall directing, a terrific ensemble of actors, a danceable music score and a story that has plenty of meat to go with all that grease. The story jumps in a direction that was somewhat unexpected, given it’s connection with Hamlet, written by William Shakespeare, the old white guy who published it in 1603. But we see where the story is going for the entire one hour and forty minutes, so there are no surprises here.


It’s difficult to say who the stars are - each actor gives us something to love. Jordan Covington starts us off as Tio (above, with chin in hand), best friend and cousin of Juicy, played by Devin A. Cunningham. Juicy is fat and gay, Tio is slim and horny. Tio is happy, Juicy is morose. 


Ron Chapman is one scary dude, both as the frightening ghost of the slain Pap and Pap’s evil brother Rev. We especially love Courtney Gabrielle Williams as Opal, the only character who seems at peace with herself.



Jenn Stephens, who looks great in turquoise, Phaedra Tillery-Boughton, who really knows how to pray, and Samuel Ademola, the one character whose confession seems forced, round out the cast. 

It truly is a shame that Rev, the mean pitmaster, was such a hard head — “He really did know his way around a pig.” 


RATINGS ★★★★

The San Francisco Theater Blog Awards Division has but one reviewer in charge of gender-bending Elizabethan dramas about barbecue. We are granting “Fat Ham” Four Stars. The show is a lot of fun and clearly an audience favorite. Shoutout for the prayer sequence.

And here’s the rub: It’s on the pork. Fat Ham feels like a hit.

_____

“Fat Ham”

San Francisco Playhouse

450 Post St. (Second floor of Kensington Park Hotel)

Through 4-19-25

$35-$135



Thursday, March 20, 2025

“Mrs. Krishnan’s Party” ★★★ BANG



It’s a new and different night at Marin Theater Company, normally a theater but tonight a grocery where rice meets dahl and story meets improv.  It  takes awhile to get to your seat, through the revamped rear stage doors and up the stairs, but when you do you find yourself in the back room of Mrs Krishnan’s grocery store, somewhere in a country we are taking to be New Zealand. 


The two co-writers and the two actors are Kiwis. So New Zealand is a good guess.

In the back of the store, we are taking part in a celebration of the joyous Indian holiday of Onam. As the party evolves, we go a little deeper and understand Mrs. Krishnan is thinking of selling her store and moving back to India, where she was born. 


Kalyani Nagarajan, who plays Mrs. Krishnan, is a gifted physical comic, doing brilliant things with voice timbre and body language. Her two dance sequences are spectacular, worthy of a ticket all by themselves.


We need all of these physical gifts because we can’t understand much of her thick dialogue. Fortunately. the show is raucous and slapstick.  Mrs. K. and James, her young helper, played by show co-writer Justin Lewis, are flying constantly around the room, joking with audience members, cajoling some into coming upstage and stirring the rice, others into talking about how long they have been married. We who remain seated, garlands around our necks and balloons on our laps, can tell Mrs. K. is distraught. You would be too if your late husband’s ashes had just been mistaken for salt and tossed into the pot of dahl and rice.


No, Mrs. K! Don't taste the rice!


We get it. Poor Mrs. Krishnan has been working too hard. Her son is refusing to come home for the holiday. And James has a secret as well. 

This show is meant to draw us in, to burst through the barrier between artist and audience. We love the idea. We'd like to hear a little better. But we love balloons. It feels good to walk out of a theater smiling.



RATINGS ★★★ BANG

The San Francisco Theater Blog Awards Division, International Branch, awards THREE STARS with a Bangle of Praise to “Mrs. Krishnan’s Party.” It turns out to be a simple story — the lady is lonely. She misses her son. Life is what you make it. Nagarajan and Justin Lewis are terrific. The sound mix is too, a collection of Bollywood and Indian trad music worthy of the Bangle of Praise.


Mrs. Krishnan’s Holiday Party

Marin Theater Company

397 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley

Through March 30, 2025

$45-$95



Monday, March 17, 2025

“Art” ★★★★




It’s brilliant, funny and real. “Art,” written by Jasmina Reza, is almost 30 years old now, but hits home for this reviewer in a way most newer “relationship plays” never do. This is a story about male friendship, the way men actually talk, relate, think and act. They are getting older.
They are hotheads, they storm in and out of the room. Each has issues of his own as well as with the other two. But the heart of this story is the strong desire that Marc, Serge and Ivan have to remain friends. 

And it's 1998. It's still a world where you have to be in the same room to fight. No one can send anyone else a nasty text and then ghost him. It feels...refreshing. 




David Sinaiko plays Marc, who feels the way most of us in the audience feel about the painting for which Serge, played by Benoit Morin, has just paid $200,000. Some men, as they hit their forties, take mistresses or buy Porsches. Serge buys a painting, but not just any painting. It is completely white. No frame. No color. A 4' x  5' white rectangle. 




Serge feels it is "art." Marc tells him it's a piece of "shit." 

Meanwhile, Ivan, the third member of the troika, is trying to appease both Marc and Serge. It's not working, primarily because Ivan is being drawn into a marriage he doesn't want and neither do Marc and Serge. This is the one thing about which they can agree.


On the surface, "Art" is about art - what makes it so? Why does an artist's reputation determine its worthiness? And what makes up a friendship? Can you speak the truth, even if it hurts? Does friendship have a frame around it? 

We love the staging of the show along with lights and sound -- the way the characters can break the fourth wall and speak directly to the audience in an echo-y reverb with lights up on the speaker and dimmed on the others. It's effective and funny.

RATINGS: ★★★★

The San Francisco Theater Blog Awards Division gives The Shotgun Players' production of "Art" FOUR STARS, one each for writing, acting, directing (Emilie Whelan) and staging. There is no lead actor-- each member of the ensemble is terrific. We identify most with Marc (David Sinaiko), because, well...he's right about that idiotic painting.

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"Art"
Shotgun Players at Ashby Playhouse
1901 Ashby Avenue, Berkeley
EXTENDED through April 12, 2025
Prices from Pay What You Can to $80

Sunday, March 9, 2025

Happy Pleasant Valley: a Senior Sex Scandal Murder Mystery Musical: UNRATED




A few comments:

1.) A musical is a giant puzzle. It is very difficult to write, cast and stage. Someone sitting in an audience can imagine only a fraction of the time and effort writers, designers, producers, directors and actors must invest in order to assemble all the pieces into a flowing work of art.

2.) Nobody is getting rich doing theater in Palo Alto.

2.) Any Opening Night performance, particularly for a World Premiere, is bound to be laden with nervous energy. The theater has been filled with comps and everybody’s parents and boyfriends are there.

3.) Sometimes this nervous energy leads to greatness.

4.) We all have stereotypes. Some are harder than others to break. 

5.) It's easier to fit "Cats" or "Gigi" or "Hamilton" on a marquee than “Happy Pleasant Valley: A Senior Sex Scandal Murder Mystery Musical,” 

5a) So it’s always a good idea, when the title of your show is “Happy Pleasant Valley: A Senior Sex Scandal Murder Mystery Musical,” to make sure the story makes sense, the music is tuneful, the murders are comprehensible and you don’t patronize everyone over fifty in the audience, which at the Lucie Stern Theater pretty much includes the entire roster of season ticket holders. 

6.) Sophie Oda (Jade) and Lucinda Hitchcock Cone (Vicki) are excellent singers and underutilized Miller Liberatore (Dean) appears to be as well.

And that’s my review.


RATINGS: UNRATED

The San Francisco Theater Blog Awards Division, several members being over fifty, is too tired to give this show a rating. We’re going to the potluck and then we’ll need a nap.


Happy Pleasant Valley: a Senior Sex Scandal Murder Mystery Musical

Lucie Stern Theater

1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto

Through Mar 30

$44-$94