121809 - Centre Stage

 

 
 
From the Editor:

With recent snow storms crippling the Eastern seaboard, flash floods surprising folks in southern Florida and frigid temperatures assaulting citizens from Nebraska to Chicago, not to mention a lingering recession and war and the "rumors of war" that dominate today's headlines, it's difficult to imagine how Americans will be able to enjoy the 2009 holiday season.

Maybe this year you will be forced to shorten your shopping list, tighten your belt and stay home for New Year's Eve or attend service at your favorite church, temple or synagogue for a word of inspiration and encouragement.

Perhaps you can find something simpler to do - taking a walk along the beach, making angels in the snow, engaging in a rigorous game of snowball fighting or taking a stroll in the rain with your beloved.

In this issue, we have chosen to focus on four holiday classics that are featured on stage every December, reminding us that love, hope and peace are really the "reason for the season." Even if you can't get to the theater this year, you can certainly adjust your dial for holiday tunes on your radio or check out one of your favorite films like Rudolph, Charlie Brown, A Christmas Carol or my favorite, It's a Wonderful Life.

The other story in this abbreviated edition is  a review of the delightful new Disney film, The Princess and the Frog.

And of course we'll be back in January with more interviews, reviews and features of artists, thespians and other talented folks who are among the best of the bunch.

For now, it's time for this writer to take a few moments to give thanks, enjoy a day at Disney World with my firstborn (Jasmine) and cuddle up next to my "other half."

Shouts go out to Dale, Charlie, Nate, Willie, Candace, TJ, Sharon and the St. Mark UMC family, Hakeem, Cyril, Rev. Phil, JDW (peace be unto you brother) and of course my best friend in the whole wide world (that's MOM), Pearl, my little man Jared, Ralph and Johnny (you've got it going on).

Finally, I reluctantly say farewell to my friend, E. Lynn and to that one-of-a-kind entertainer from Gary, Indiana - Michael Jackson. May they both rest in peace.

See ya in 2010!

D. Kevin McNeir
Senior Editor
Centre Stage Magazine

 

Michael R. Moore
Art Director
Steven Brown
Contributor
Kheven LaGrone
Contributor
Rudy Reed
Contributor
 
In This Issue: Holiday Classics Remind Us to Believe in the Impossible Walmart "Crowns" Little Princesses  

 

 

Holiday Classics Remind Us to Believe in the Impossible

Power of Love, Redemption and Hope Continue to Inspire Audiences

By D. Kevin McNeir
Sr. Correspondent
Editor

 

 
 
 
December is that month when last minute shoppers jam malls, long lost offspring return home for family feasts and little boys and girls - good and bad - clamor for high-tech goodies, cash-filled envelopes or age-appropriate toys. But for some, it is that time of the year when we renew our faith in humanity, remind ourselves that all things are possible and hold fast to dreams of a world where peace reigns supreme.

And what better way to inspire people even if soothsayers and politicians are predicting gloom and doom then with four great stories. To be specific let's consider two plays, one short opera and a ballet that collectively have become perennial favorites for audiences around the world - Langston Hughes's Black Nativity, Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Gian Carlo Menotti's Amahl & the Night Visitors and Peter Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker.
Each of these pieces, while written by four men from different races, countries of origin and periods in history, have all emerged as popular theatrical events for Americans anxious to take advantage of a few days of vacation or perhaps hoping to get in the "holiday spirit."

For this writer, Christmas isn't the same without an evening with Charles Dickens and a handkerchief for those tears that will inevitably fall as Scrooge embraces Tiny Tim at the conclusion of the play and the small boy says, "God Bless us every one."

Join us as we take a closer look at four Atlanta-based venues that are currently producing these December favorites as we consider why each continues to stand the test of time.

 
Soulful Gospel Sounds are backdrop for Hughes' Black Nativity
 
When Harlem Renaissance writer Langston Hughes's play Black Nativity was first produced on Broadway on December 11, 1961, he called it a "gospel song play." Eventually it would be produced in churches, theaters and on college campuses in almost every major U.S. city but its premier was not without controversy.

Two of the original cast members, Alvin Ailey and Carmen de Lavallade quit the show right before opening day because of their objection to the word "black" being in the title and it potentially being too divisive for a mixed Broadway audience.

But Hughes was determined to write plays and musicals (over 20), novels, short stories and poetry that affirmed the legacy of his ancestors, encouraged his people and remained steeped in the oral tradition.

Perhaps that is why this play with its intricate choreography, poetry and music and songs from the Black Church has become such a favorite among audiences, African Americans in particular.

And it has become a regular fixture for Kenny Leon's True Colors Theatre Company serving as its annual holiday musical at Atlanta's Southwest Arts Center.

 
 
 
This year's show is directed and choreographed by Patdro Harris with music directed and arranged by J. Michael - the same team that brought The Wiz to delighted audiences.

This writer can't help but marvel at the "Midas touch" that Leon seems to possess - with each show this season the crowds get bigger and bigger and the works continue to impress critics and move the audience.

Harris says that working with Leon is always a treat for him because their "artistic eyes are the same."

"I worked with Kenny on the movie and the play, A Raisin in the Sun, and as always he trusts me," Harris said.

"We do a lot of work together and it's always about the art - never the people. Langston Hughes wrote this so we could have a voice.

Black Nativity has sounds that will remind you of a storefront black church but then takes you the Mother Land with rhythms of Africa and phrases in Swahili and the Uruba tongue. Look for the powerful voices of Andrea Gooden and Tim Stylez and hold on to your seat when Mary and Joseph (Kelley Young and Juel Lane) dance like there's no tomorrow.

He wanted Blacks to have a Christmas story that sounded like something we could understand and to which we could immediately relate. And for him, "black" was an inclusive term, not an exclusive one.

"People want to be encouraged and so many need to be healed. This is a great story that reminds us that even those who are different from us or less fortunate deserve our respect and tolerance.

 
When this was written we needed a voice - we needed to be able to go to the theater and hear the voice of Christ and hear folks singing and shouting like us Nutcracker and A Christmas Carol were holiday traditions but they didn't sound like us."

Kevin O'Hara is perhaps the brightest star in this ensemble piece but he is joined by a stellar cast that also includes Cynthia Barker and Barbara Grant who portrays a homeless stranger that ultimately reminds the members of prosperous The Light Church what the real meaning of Christmas is all about - love.

"Some may like the angels or the griot while others will be enamored with the dancing, the music or the story itself," Harris said. "But it has something for everyone."
For more information go to www.truecolorstheatre.org.

 
"Bah, humbug" - Words that Lead to One Man's Redemption
 
Ebenezer Scrooge (Chris Kayser) spreads his new-found holiday cheer with a well-deserved raise for his housekeeper Mrs. Dilber (Bernardine Mitchell) Photo by Greg Mooney
 
This writer has seen almost every film production of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol and has had the good fortune of seeing it on stage every Christmas season for the past ten years - first at Chicago's Goodman Theatre and most recently at the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta. But it is strange that while the story remains the same, every production is somehow different - leaving me with yet another lesson to be remembered or a memory to savor.

Veteran actor Chris Kayser stars as Ebenezer Scrooge in the Alliance's 20th year of bringing this incomparable play to the Atlanta community and he is just as evil, selfish, frightening and finally lovable as Dickens undoubtedly imagined when he first penned this classic He is particularly convincing when he awakes on Christmas morning after having been visited by the three "ghosts,:" newly filled with the spirit of Christmas.
Bart Hansard does double duty as both Christmas Present and the ineffable Fezziwig and shines in both roles as does the always outstanding Neal A. Ghant who returns in the role of Bob Cratchit. Bernardine Mitchell is a glorious Mrs. Fezziwig and young Royce Mann will warm your heart in his performance as Tiny Tim.

This writer would also like to acknowledge Sinatra Onyewuchi, a product of the Atlanta Public Schools who is an ensemble member and also plays the role of Dick, a high school classmate of young Scrooge and is the understudy for the role of Bob Cratchit. Many promising actors from the Atlanta area like Onyewuchi are routinely provided with the opportunity to gain on stage experience in annual productions like the Alliance's Christmas Carol or Nutcracker which both require large casts.
 
 
The Cratchit family raises a glass in thanks for a Christmas feast of roast goose.  Photo by Greg Mooney
 
 
Peter Cratchit (J.C. Long) and his brother Tiny Tim (Tendal Mann) anticipate their Christmas Day feast of roast goose. Photo by Greg Mooney
 
 
Ebenezer Scrooge (Chris Kayser) bah humbugs through the streets of the city. Photo by Greg Mooney
There are several aspects of this play that make the Alliance's production one worth seeing - from lively music and elaborate costumes to the special effects. Who can resist becoming excited as Bob Marley's ghost rattles his chains, moans in agony and then begins to fly across the stage?

And don't be surprised if you jump in your seat when Scrooge makes his first appearance, rising from the center of the stage or later in the production when the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come dons the stage in his shroud.

Director Rosemary Newcott should be congratulated for her courage in continuing the tradition of this being a piece with an interracial cast.

For example, Bob Cratchit is played by an African American while his children are of various races. And while Fezziwig is White his wife, Mitchell, who like Kayser is a longtime Atlanta favorite, is Black.

But then this story is not about race - it's about one man's opportunity to revisit his past where he can consider the errors of his way and contemplate changing his life for the better. It's a tale of redemption that returns each Christmas season, reminding us all that in this sea of millions of humans, that what we do for one person can make all the difference.
For more information go to www.alliancetheatre.org.

 
With "Amahl" as the Star, Opera Can Be Fun
 
Theatrical Outfit and Georgia State University School of Music join forces in presenting Gian Carlo Menotti's haunting opera about a crippled boy and his poverty-stricken mother and the miracle they experience on one special night when traveling magi from the East mysteriously appear and seek rest in their humble home.

This introduction to opera is perfect for children - first because it is performed in English and second because the run time is under one hour. With a sparsely decorated set, this piece rests on its music and as it is performed without microphones or electronic enhancements the director, W. Dwight Coleman, takes full advantage of the theater's outstanding acoustics.
Amahl and the Night Visitors was first performed December 24, 1951 at Rockefeller Center (New York City) and commissioned by NBC as the debut performance of the Hallmark Hall of Fame. It was the first network television holiday special to become an annual tradition and continued to air on NBC every year until 1966.

Menotti's inspiration for Amahl came after seeing a triptych painting by Hieronymus Bosch, The Adoration of the Magi, during a visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. In his interpretation, a crippled boy, Amahl, sees a star in the sky that mesmerizes him.

But because he is prone to telling elaborate stories, his mother admonishes him, despite the fact that he is now telling the truth. So, when three traveling kings arrive at their home seeking shelter she assumes that Amahl is once again lying.

The story continues and is a beautiful testimony of faith in miracles, hope for a better tomorrow and the comfort that comes when neighbors reach out to one another.

The production is double cast and features students and alumni from Georgia State University.

The character of Amahl is played by three members of the Georgia Boy Choir - Thomas McKean, Ruben Roy and Eric Stumiolo and boasts a vocal score that is a new and revised edition of the original opera.

It is a moving fable that once again lives up to the mission of the Theatrical Outfit - "presenting stories that stir the soul."

For more information go to www.theatricaloutfit.org.

 
Atlanta Ballet and Nutcracker - Fifty Years Strong
 
Peng-Yu Chen as Marya in The 50th Anniversary of The Nutcracker.  Photo by C.McCullers
Before the curtain opened at Atlanta's Fabulous Fox Theatre and that unforgettable ballet composed by Tchaikovsky began, those lucky enough to attend the opening performance (Dec. 11th) received the added bonus of welcoming back the Ballet's artistic director emeritus Robert Barnett who was instrumental in bringing the piece to Atlanta along with members from the 1959 inaugural performance.

Barnett continued the tradition of enjoying the ballet by brining two of his grandsons who were attending their very first Nutcracker.

The timeless score was performed by the Atlanta Ballet Orchestra and choreographed by the Ballet's current artistic director, John McFall.

Add to that a breathtaking set, designed by Peter Horne and the agility and prowess of the dancers and the result was a performance that was unquestionably magnificent.

By the way, the Atlanta Ballet is the longest continuously operating ballet company in the United States (founded in 1929).

 
 
Kelly Tipton & Nathan Griswold as Snow Queen & King in The 50th Anniversary of The Nutcracker. Photo by C.McCullers
It's difficult to assess each dancer individually given the huge cast that is required for this show and because sometimes dancers (as well as their understudies) often learn and perform various roles on any given performance.

Still, this writer suggests that you pay close attention to several noteworthy sequences in which the dancers particularly excelled including: the hilarious battle between the Mouse King and the Nutcracker and the Dance of the Snowflakes (both Act I), the thrilling, perfectly synchronized Spanish Dance, the delightful tumbling antics performed by Mother Ginger and her Polichinelles in the Dance of the Clowns, the always exciting Trepak (Russian dance) and the Grand Pas de Deux which includes the beautiful Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy (all in Act II).

While The Nutcracker was poorly received when it was first performed at the Mariinsky Theater in St. Petersburg in December of 1892, its popularity has grown in Western countries beginning in the mid-1950s to such an extent that it has become the most popular of all ballets.

This endearing story of a little girl's Christmas Eve in which dreams become reality, where fairies dance in snow-covered forests and the world is filled with wonderful things runs through December 27th.


For more information go to www.atlantaballet.com

 

 

Walmart "Crowns" Little Princesses

The Princess and the Frog Marks Disney's First Black Heroine

By D. Kevin McNeir
Sr. Correspondent
Editor

 
 
 
   
With visions of being "princess for a day" dancing in their excited heads, young girls across the nation, in affiliation with local Boys & Girls Clubs and with the financial support of Walmart, walked the pink carpet, donned their tiaras and played Disney trivia games before enjoying a special viewing of what has emerged as last weekend's number one box office choice - The Princess and the Frog.

Hoping to ride the success of previous princess-themed films, including The Little Mermaid, Aladdin and Beauty and the Beast, John Musker and Ron Clements have joined forces as the directors for this new animation which is a twist on the classic tale.

Set in New Orleans and infused with music befitting a Mardi Gras fete, the story revolves around a young

 African-American woman, Tiana (Anika Noni Rose), who becomes a frog after kissing a prince (Bruno Campos) who has himself been turned into a frog by the movie's bad guy - a voodoo shaman (Keith David).

Some critics have claimed that this film lacks the memorable tunes or a truly scary villain that have been the hallmark of previous Disney greats and argue that it may have been a bigger hit had it been released a decade ago.

But based on the reactions of the young girls with whom this writer saw the movie and the huge number of families who spent their green last weekend, The Princess and the Frog looks like it's going to be a must-see movie for the holiday season - and another money maker for its producers.

   
 
 
"All little girls dream of being a princess and we were excited to sponsor approximately 365 private screenings in selected US cities as part of our longstanding relationship with Disney and Boys & Girls Clubs of America," said Kelly Kletzing, an Atlanta-based Walmart store manager.

Most of the girls who were on hand at Atlanta's Regal Theater in Atlanta Station were children of color and the buzz which was generated because of the film's princess being Black did not go unnoticed.

"Channel 11's Kids & School Reporter Donna Lowry helped us with our program before we showed the movie and it was clear that the girls were excited about the first Disney princess in 10 years being an African-American character."

History will ultimately determine whether The Princess and the Frog will live up to the Disney hype but with its message that all dreams are possible and that when we dig deeply we can discover what really matters in our quest for happiness, this film is still entertaining, inspiring and magical.