Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Artistically Speaking - The Odd Couple


Laughing Like a Jew
By Chris Hanna

Julia Child often laughed about her experience being raised as a child on tuna noodle casserole in Southern California. It wasn’t until she was in her twenties and sat down to her first Parisian meal that she knew in her heart that she was actually French. Myself, I didn’t have to wait that late to discover my hidden identity - and it didn’t arrive with a foreign meal. No, all it took me as a young boy was a television dial and a typical evening in front of the TV with my Irish American family:  Leave it Beaver, Gilligan’s Island, The Beverly Hillbillies.  Everyone around me laughing loud -- and my wondering just what they found so funny.

Then one particular evening the dial got moved to a program we didn’t usually watch, The Dick Van Dyke Show, and came to life right away. The show’s two bickering side characters, Maury Amsterdam and Rosemarie, were my favorites. Their dry banter seemed so much funnier than the over the top guffaws of most sit coms that I thought their dialogue was the funniest set of lines ever written. I asked my parents why more characters didn’t joke like that on the shows we watched and I still remember my mother’s somewhat startled response:
“That’s Jewish humor, sweetheart.”

The rest of the family was soon cackling again to Art Carney’s antics on The Honeymooners, but my mother’s explanation had been an inspiring springboard for me. Home alone on sick days I soon discovered Jack Benny, Milton Berle, Groucho Marx, Jerry Stiller, and my absolute all-time favorite: Burns and Allen. George Burns’ wry comments to the camera, cigar in hand, drove me to convulsing laughter every time.  He was dead serious, pausing only when absolutely necessary for a sly smile suggesting, ‘laugh now if you want,’ like a dentist giving permission for a quick rinse between fillings. Somehow, by not trying to be at all funny, he was hilarious. 

So I had a Jewish sense of humor. Who knew? And because laughs were my passport through the countless discomforts of adolescence, I might as well been Bar Mitvah’d at thirteen along with the rest of my Westchester classmates.

By the time I entered my stage career years later, American theater seemed to have lost its sense of humor; particularly its Jewish humor. Regional theaters, like our wonderful Virginia Stage Company, had risen to prominence and they were focused primarily on producing culturally significant work. Back then comedy wasn’t considered cultural or significant unless written before 1800 (another Lysistrata anyone?) or by British playwrights.  And within that rarified world of theatrical art, everyone agreed on the importance of banishing our public enemy number one: that old time Jewish jokester, Neil Simon.

Neil Simon’s plays had earned big profits for Broadway producers over decades but Artistic Directors at regional theaters considered them pedestrian fluff.  Audiences were allowed rhyming couplets of Twelfth Night and the mindless quips of Private Lives but Neil Simon’s plays were left to community and high school stages.

Styles change everywhere, of course, and the stage is no exception. No change has made me happier within the theater world over the past decade than the reevaluation of Neil Simon’s talent. Although written decades past, his plays have never seemed more contemporary or funny than they do today.  Like any great master of Jewish humor (including Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, who came along after Simon’s heyday)  Simon understood that stories don’t have to be serious or funny. They can be both, and that can happen at the same time.  Simon’s humor comes from the confrontation between human eccentricities and the realities of everyday living. What makes them so unique to us these days is that they manage to stay so warm hearted, even as they x ray the human soul. Witty banter doesn’t take away the tsuris but it sure makes for a lot of fun.

For the characters of The Odd Couple, as for George Burns and Groucho Marx before them, cigars can be a big help too. I hope you can make it down to the Wells for our terrific production.





Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Whipping Man

A Note from the Artistic Director

Chris Hanna,  Artistic Director
I’m not sure at what point a New Yorker becomes a Virginian. I bought my Norfolk house in 1993 and raised my son there from kindergarten to college. I have buried two dogs in Commonwealth soil and planted dozens of azalea bushes as well. I order hash browns over grits at breakfast however and still wonder how anyone could pass up any opportunity for catsup. So I wonder in my heart, am I still truly a carpetbagger?

Watching the powerfully talented cast of The Whipping Man prepare for Friday night’s opening, I have finally been able to answer that question for myself. Regardless of my upbringing, yes, Virginia is my genuine home. Mathew Lopez’s drama has received successful productions across the country since its New York premiere but I can’t imagine it connecting with any audiences in the way it does for Virginians.  And as it does to me.  It is a well worn cliché that Virginia is obsessed on its own history but Lopez’ play turns that cliché into poetry. The play makes me incredibly proud as a Virginian, not of region’s history, but of its courage to use that history for seeing into the present.  Historical events may change over time but human character never does.  As William Faulkner famously wrote, “The past is not dead; it’s not even past.”

It means even more to me that I’ve become so connected to Virginia heritage through the work of Mathew Lopez, a Hispanic Jew raised in Florida, and the show’s director, Jasson Minandakis, who was raised in Richmond and is now raising his own family in Northern California.  As you will see when watching The Whipping Man, their personal connection to Richmond at the end of the Civil War is surprisingly immediate. It reminds me that Shakespeare didn’t travel to Rome to write Julius Caesar; the human imagination, like the human heart, is capable of stretches far beyond the rules of science and reason.  I have never watched a production claim the Wells stage so authentically and or felt my own  connected to Virginia soil as I do watching this play, even as an adopted son.

I hope you find that the show, and its connection to our rich Commonwealth, means as much for you.

Best,

Chris Hanna
Artistic Director



Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Frog Kiss - A World Premiere

A Note from the Artistic Director

I vividly remember the first time I read the script for FROG KISS, the exceptional new musical having its world premiere at the Wells. I was enjoying a beer and steamed shrimp over a July 4 weekend at the Coinjock Marina (great seafood an hour south on the road to Nags Head). Broadway producer Tamara Tunie had sent me the play, raving about it herself, but she was a biased producer and the play was a love story about a frog! I opened the binder ready to roll my eyes, wondering whether I’d need a second beer just to make it through to the Second Act. Instead I was enchanted by page three. I listened to the show’s smashing music on the drive back to Norfolk and called Tunie about producing the premiere as soon as I hit town.

 It’s funny to think back now to that August afternoon noon - and recall neatly printed lines filling fresh white pages - as I watch the show it has all become. Of the many productions I’ve watched mounted on the Wells stage, FROG KISS may be the most alive. It’s certainly the biggest. Perhaps it’s also the most pure fun.

What’s surprised me the most is how closely the show on the stage resembles what I’d imagined reading the play on the page. Bringing imagination to life in this art form is tough and risky work. It means countless design concepts and technical drawings, casting calls and agent negotiations, dance rehearsals and costume fittings – the list goes on and on. Sadly, it can go wrong at any point.

But not this time. Suddenly, it’s opening night and there it all is. Exactly as pictured. To my great surprise and joy, FROG KISS has turned into a stage fairytale through a fairy tale creation.

A basket of steamed shrimp and a love story about a frog. We never know where a true fairytale is about to lead.

Chris Hanna
Artistic Director