GRACE NOTES: Friday, June 24, 2022

 

This Weekend’s Highlights:

Friday, June 24

  Where We Belong, written & performed by Mei Ann Teo, opens at Chicago’s Goodman Theatre.

  The Music Man, directed by Sandra Mae Frank & Michael Baron, featuring deaf, hard of hearing, and hearing artists James Caverly (Harold Hill), Adelina Mitchell (Marian), Vishal Vaidya (Marcellus) Florrie Bagel (Ethel Toffelmeier), Heather Marie Beck (Alma Hicks), Amelia Hensley (Eulalie Shinn), Matthew August (Tommy), Gregor Lopes (Olinn Britt), Andrew Morrill (Mayor Shinn), Anjel Piñero (Woman #1), Mervin Primeaux-O’Bryant (Maude Dunlap), Nicki Runge (Mrs. Paroo), Christopher Tester (Oliver Hicks), and Dylan Toms (Ewart Dunlop) with Jay Frisby, Sarah Ann Sillers, Sophia Early, Aarron Loggins, Jane Enabore, and Stephen Russell Murray, opens at MD’s Olney Theatre Center.

  Trevor: The Musical (Off-Broadway production), by Dan Collins & Julianne Wick Davis, directed by directed by Robin Mishkin Abrams, featuring William Hagelberger (Trevor), Mark Aguirre, Aaron Alcaraz, Ava Briglia, Sammy Dell, Tyler Joseph Gay, Ellie Kim, Colin Konstanty, Brigg Liberman, Diego Lucano, Alissa Emily Marvin, Isabel Medina, Echo Deva Picone, Dan Rosales, Aryan Simhadri, Yasmeen Sulieman, Sally Wilfert, Aeriel Williams, and Jarrod Zimmerman, begins streaming on Disney+.

  Signature Theatre‘s Broadway in the Park concert, directed by Matthew Gardiner, with special guests Kelli O’Hara and Adrienne Warren, along with Erin Driscoll, Vincent Kempski, Rayshun LaMarr, Kevin McAllister, Donna Migliaccio, Nova Y. Payton, Awa Sal Secka, and Bobby Smith, at 8 PM ET at Virginia’s Wolf Trap.

  “Goosebumps The Musical: Phantom of the Auditorium” original studio cast recording, by Danny Abosch & John Maclay, featuring Krystina Alabado, Alex Brightman, Noah Galvin, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Will Roland, Stephanie Styles, and R.L. Stine, released  here.

  Our Brother’s Son, by Charles Gluck, directed by David Alpert, featuring Dan Sharkey, Allen McCullough, Liz Larsen, Harrison Chad, Leeanne Hutchison, Midori Tashima Nakamura, and Dan Sharkey, with Ethelyn Friend, Ben Rosenbach, and Dared Wright, closes at Off-Broadway’s Signature Center.

  FCP Theatre Group‘s No One Will Be Immune and other plays and pieces, a collection of rarely seen short one-act plays by David Mamet, featuring Cooper McAdoo, Molly B. Thomas, Elliot White, and Harry White, closes at Hollywood’s The Complex.

  Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, directed by Jeramiah Peay, featuring Shayna Gabrielle, Lea Madda, Michael Mullen, Will Potter, Chris Ramirez, and Liam Risinger, closes at LA’s Studio|Stage (520 N. Western Ave.)

Saturday, June 25

   Lempicka, by Carson Kreitzer & Matt Gould, directed by Rachel Chavkin, featuring Eden Espinosa (Tamara de Lempicka), Amber Iman (Rafaela – June 14 – July 12), Ximone Rose (Rafaela – July 12-24), George Abud (Marinetti), Victor E. Chan (Baron), Natalie Joy Johnson (Suzy Solidor), Jacquelyn Ritz (Baroness), Andrew Samonsky (Tadeusz Lempicki), and Jordan Tyson (Kizette), with Leanne Antonio, Lauren Blackman, Leovina Charles, Milena J. Comeau, Michael Louis Cusimano, Alexa Jane Lowis, David Merino, Luke P. Monday, Devin L. Roberts, Morgan Nicholas Scott, Joey Taranto, and Mariand Torres, opens at La Jolla Playhouse.

  Rogue Machine Theatre‘s The Beautiful People, world premiere by Tim Venable, directed by Guillermo Cienfuegos, featuring Alexander Neher and Justin Preston, opens at LA’s Matrix Theatre.

  ROE staged readings, by Lisa Loomer, directed by Vanessa Stallings, featuring John Achorn, Kenya Alexander, Sufe Bradshaw, Pamela Dunlap, Aleisha Force, Christina Hall, Susan Lynskey, Ed Martin, Kate Middleton, Rob Nagle, Xochitl Romero, opens at LA’s Fountain Theatre.

  Happy 100th Birthday Judy Garland concert, starring Debbie Wileman, conducted by Ron Abel, at 7:30 PM ET at Carnegie Hall.

  Oklahoma!, directed by Daniel Fish, featuring Arthur Daryill (Curly), Anoushka Lucas (Laurey), Patrick Vaill (Jud Fry), James Davis (Will Parker), Liza Sadovy (Aunt Eller), Marisha Wallace (Ado Annie), Stavros Demetraki (Ali Hakim), Raphael Bushay (Mike), Greg Hicks (Andrew Carnes), Rebekah Hinds (Gertie Cummings), Ashley Samuels (Cord Elam), and Marie Mence (lead dancer), closes at London’s Young Vic.

  Britannicus, adapted by Timberlake Wertenbaker, directed by Atri Banerjee, featuring Nathaniel Curtis, William Robinson, Sirine, Saba, Hanna Khogali, Helena Lymbery, Nigel Barrett, and Shyvonne Ahmmad, closes at London’s Lyric Hammersmith Theatre.

  Brian Stokes Mitchell: Songs and Stories closes at NYC’s 54 Below.

  Beloved, world premiere by Arthur Holden, directed by Cameron Watson, featuring Sam Anderson (Stephen), Taylor Gilbert (Dorothy), and Cherish Duke (Sylvia / Miriam / Marika), closes at North Hollywood’s Road on Magnolia.

  Cock, by Mike Bartlett, directed by Taubert Nadalini, featuring Annika Chavez, Dennis Delsing, Mathew Dunlop, and Sean Hemeon, closes at Hollywood’s LGBT Center.

  Tru (Act 1 only), by Jay Presson Allen, featuring Jamie Galen, closes at Hollywood’s. Three Clubs Stage Room ( Vine Street).

Sunday, June 26

  Broadway Bares benefit, in support of BC/EFA, with choreography by Laya Barak, Nick Kenkel, Jonathan Lee, Al Blackstone, Jessica Castro, Armando Farfan, Ricky Hinds, Stephanie Klemons, Sekou McMiller, Michael Lee Scott, Gabby Sorrentino, Kellen Stancil, Andrew Turteltaub, James Alonzo White, featuring Nathan Lee Graham, Lesli Margherita, Bonnie Milligan, Maulik Pancholy, and more, at 9:30 PM ET & Midnight at NYC’s Hammerstein Ballroom.

  Roundabout Theatre‘s Exception to the Rule, world premiere by Dave Harris, directed by Miranda Haymon, featuring MaYaa Boatend (Erika), Malik Childs (Tommy), Mister Fitzgerald (Abdul), toney Goins (Dayrin), Amdandla Jahaya (Mikayla), and Claudia Logan (Dasani), closes at Off-Broadway’s Steinberg Center.

  Dreaming Zenzile, by Somi Kakoma, directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz,  featuring Somi Kakoma (Makeba), Aaron Marcellus, Naledi Masilo, and Phumzile Sojola, closes at Off-Broadway’s New York Theatre Workshop.

  Happy Birthday Doug, directed by Tom DeTrinis, featuring Drew Droege, closes to Off-Broadway’s SoHo Playhouse.

  Belfast Girls, by Jaki McCarrick, directed by Nicola Murphy, featuring Labhaoise Magee (Ellen Clarke), Aida Leventaki (Molly Durcan), Mary Mallen (Hannah Gibney), Caroline Strange (Judith Noone), and Sarah Street (Sarah Jane Wylie), closes at Off-Broadway’s Irish Rep.

  Trading Places, world premiere by Thomas Lennon, Alan Zachary & Michael Weiner, directed by Kenny Leon, featuring Aneesa Folds (Billie Rae), Bryce Pinkham (Louis), Marc Kudisch (Mortimer Duke), Lennie Wolpe (Randolph Duke), McKenzie Kurtz (Penelope), Josh Lamon (Beeks), Joe Montoya (Phil), and Don Stephenson (Coleman), with Julia Grondin, Jacob Roberts-Miller, Kevin Zak, Jimmy Ray Bennett, Dana Costello, Kayla Marie Cruz, Benjamin Howes, Raymond J. Lee, James Luc, Malaya Reid, Xavier Reyes, Michael McCorry Rose, and Nyla Watson, closes at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre.

  Sister Act, restaged by Steven Beckler, featuring Nicole Vanessa Ortiz (Deloris Van Cartier), Jennifer Allen (Mother Superior), Akron Watson (Curtis), Belinda Allyn (Mary Robert), Diane J. Findlay (Mary Lazarus), Kara Mikula (Marty Patrick), Jarran Muse (Eddie Souther), John Treacy Egan (Monsignor O’Hara), Anthony Alfaro (Pablo), Ryan Gregory Thurman (TJ), and Jacob Keith Watson (Joey), with Rachelle Rose Clark, Steve Czarnecki, Madeleine Doherty, Denzel Edmondson, Dion Simmons Grier, Kolby Kindle, Ashley Masula, Stephanie Miller, Alaina Mills, Heather Parcells, Chandler Reeves, Michael Schimmele, Alyson Snyder, Anne Fraser Thomas, Ariana Valdes, and Zuri Washington, closes at NJ’s Paper Mill Playhouse.

  Kiss My Aztec!, by John Leguizamo, Benjamin Velez & David Kamp, directed by Tony Taccone, featuring Krystina Alabado, Angelica Maria Beliard, KC Dela Cruz, Chad Carstarphen, Nicholas Caycedo, Eddie Cooper, Richard Ruiz Henry, Z Infante, Jesus E. Martinez, Maria Christina Oliveras, Joel Perez, Geena Quintos, Daniela Rodrigo, Desiree Rodriguez, and Matt Saldivar, closes at Hartford Stage.

  Uncle Vanya, translated by Richard Nelson, Richard Pevear & Larissa Volokhonsky directed by Michael Michetti, featuring Hugo Armstrong (Vanya), Anne Gee Byrd (Marya), Brian George (Serebryakov), Khetanya Henderson (Elena), Brandon Mendez Homeras (Astroy), Jane Taini (Marina), and Sabina Zuniga-Varela (Sonya), closes at Pasadena Playhouse.

  The Light, by Loy A. Webb, directed by Jacqui Parker, featuring Dominic Carter and Yewande Odetoyinbo, closes at Boston’s Lyric Stage.

  Bruce, world premiere by Richard Oberacker & Robert Taylor, directed & choreographed by Donna Feore, featuring Jarrod Spector, Hans Altwies, Eric Ankrim, David Menoit, Preston Truman Boyd, E. Faye Butler, Beth DeVries, Candice Song Donehoo, Jay Donnell, Alexandria J. Henderson, MJ Jurgensen, Justin Keyes, Ramzi Khalaf, Corinna Lapid Munter, Tomothy McCuen Piggee, Cullen R. Titmas, Brenna Mikale Wagner, Matt Wolfe, Geoff Packard, and Napoleon Maurice Douglas, with Kyle Nicholas Anderson, Brian Lange, and Sarah Rose Davis, closes at Seattle Rep.

  The Karate Kid: The Musical, world premiere by Robert Mark Kamen & Drew Gasparini , directed by Amon Miyamoto, featuring Jovanni Sy (Chojun Miyagi), John Cardoza (Daniel LaRusso), Kate Baldwin (Luiclle LaRusso), Alan H. Green (John Kreese), Jake Bentley Young (Johnny Lawrence), Jetta Juriansz (Ali Mills), and Luis Pablo Garcia (Freddie Fernandez, with Manik Anand, Trevor James Berger, Leah Berry, Gabi Campo, Caitlyn Caughell, Kristina Garvida Doucette, Zachary Downer, Francis Florendo, Kayla Jenerson, Sydney Jones, Josh Hoon Lee, Noah Lentini, Garrick Macatangay, Abby Mastusaka, Justice D. Moore, Omar Nieves, Jackson Kanawha Perry, Isidro Rafael, Sangeetha Santhebennur, and Victor Carrillo Tracey, closes at STAGES St. Louis.

  Hood, by Douglas Carter-Beane & Lewis Flinn, directed by Mark Brokaw, featuring Anthony Chatmon II (Robin), Savy Jackson (Marian), Billie Aken-Tyers (Much), Caitlin Humphreys (Lady Ann), Erin Kei (Lady Jane), Aury Krebs (Meg), Daniel Lopez (Troubadour), Jamen Nanthakumar (Friar Tuck), Luke Anthony Neville (Will Scarlet), Nick Rehberger (Sheriff of Nottingham), Zachary Francis Stewart (Little John), and Imani Youngblood (Gamble Gold), with Jordan Sam Rich, Michail Roberts, Darius Vines, Danielle Vivcharenko, and Taylor Erin Wade, closes at FL’s Asolo Rep.

  In The Heights, directed by Benjamin Perez, featuring Rubén J. Carbajal (Usnavi), Daisy Marie Lopez (Nina), Hosea Mundi (Benny), Claudia Mulet (Vanessa), Jacquelin Lorraine Schofield (Abuela Claudia), Jose Carlos Rivera (Sonny), Shadia Fairuz (Daniela), Crissy Guerrero (Camila), Lindsey Dantes (Carla), Kevin Solis (Piragua Guy), Benjamin Perez (Kevin Rosario), and Kevin Trinio Perdido (Grafitti Pete), with Steven-Adam Agdeppa, Marcos Alexander, Remmie Bourgeois, Bianca Brandon, Andrea Dobbins, Juan Guillen, Haley Izurieta, Rachel Josefina, Jodi Marks, Monika Peña, Mario Rocha, Tristan Turner, Isaac Uhlenberg, and Bridget Whitman, closes at CA’s La Mirada Theatre.

  Ensemble Theatre Company‘s Sleuth, directed by Jenny Sullivan, featuring Daniel Gerroll (Andrew Wyke), Matthew Floyd Miller (Milo Tindle), closes at Santa Barbara’s New Vic.

  The Legend of Georgia McBride, by Matthew Lopez, directed by Jamie Torcellini, featuring Taubert Nadalini (Casey), Karese Frizell (Jo), Tom Trudgeon (Eddie), Jeff Summer (Jess Sumner), and Donzell Lewis (Rexy), closes at Long Beach’s International City Theatre.

  Lonesome Traveler: Generations, world premiere by George Grove & James O’Neil, directed by O’Neil, featuring George Grove, Rick Dougherty, Jerry Siggins, Sylvie Davidson, Andrew Huber, Alexcia Thompson, and Trevor Wheetman, closes at Ventura’s Rubicon Theatre.

  INTERSTATE, by Melissa Li & Kit Yan, directed by Jesca Prudencio, featuring Jupiter Lê (Dash Koi), Gillian Han (Adrian Tong), Jaya Joshi (Henry Ahuja), Michelle Noh (Mom), Reuben Uy (Dad), Stefan Miller (Pastor Fred), Natalie Holt MacDonald (Madison), and Krystle Simmons (Carly), closes at LA’s East West Players.

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  Reviews for Titanique at Off-Broadway’s Asylum Theatre:

Theatermania (Zachary Stuart): …a ridiculous musical parody. Just in time for Gay Pride comes Titaníque, which is currently playing under a Gristedes supermarket at the Asylum Theatre… Speaking with an accent that is the aural equivalent of poutine slathered in maple syrup, Mindelle embodies Céline at her most quirky, riffing as if no one (or perhaps everyone) is watching… Constantine Rousouli, occupying the borderlands between dopey and sexy… Omniscient and omnipotent, Céline hovers throughout, leading the doomed passengers in renditions of songs like “To Love You More,” “Because You Loved Me,” and, of course, “My Heart Will Go On.”

New York Theatre Guide (Gillian Russo): …Don’t go expecting a piece of high art or a faithful recreation of the James Cameron film it’s based on, but do expect a titanic amount of pure joy… Titanique launches from a Titanic museum tour, where visitors are gawking over the Heart of the Ocean (here an oversized Party City decoration)… Some of those songs are more cleverly slotted in than others, but they’re all gorgeously performed. The Titanique cast’s Broadway-grade talent shines at its fullest through their voices. Rose (Alex Ellis) and The Unsinkable Molly Brown (Kathy Deitch) get the powerhouse duet “Tell Him,” which starts as a heartfelt encouragement and ends as an extended innuendo involving an eggplant prop…

Get Out Magazine (Eileen Shapiro): The musical and the cast were flawlessly unsinkable. Infusing pop culture, an ode to the 90’s, and the catalog of Celine Dion, entangled with the original story, provided Titanique with an awe-inspiring brilliance that doesn’t exist anywhere else on earth… The whimsical scenarios made us laugh, the music gripped us and the talent excited the hearts of all present. Celine Dion was portrayed by Marla Mindelle (the co-author). She was an impeccable Celene sparkling with authenticity… Titanique re-ignites the fire that went out on Broadway during the pandemic, and brings back the effervescence we’ve all missed.

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MA’s Barrington Stage Company has announced casting for two upcoming productions:

  ABCD (July 1-23), world premiere by May Treuhaft-Ali, directed by Daniel J. Bryant, featuring Melvin Abston (Ellis), Justin Ahdoot (Bilal), Maribel Martinez (Mika Ramos), and Chavez Ravine (Joanna Krueger), Juri Henley-Cohn (Ibrahim), Torée Alexandre (Tamara Gardner), Pearl Shin (Sunghee), and Brandon St. Clair (Davon Lawrence).  At two very different public schools in the same city – an underserved school on the verge of shutdown, and an elite magnet program nearby – pressure to perform well on standardized tests drives students and teachers to compromise their integrity.  Details here.

  Anna in the Tropics (July 16-30), by Nilo Cruz, directed by Elena Araoz, featuring Blana Camacho (Ofelia), Wilson Jermaine Heredia (Paloma/Eliades), Marina Pires (Conchita), Alexis Cruz (Cheché), Geilber Cruz (Santiago), Alex Redriguez (Juan Julian), and Gabriela Saker (Marela).  In 1929, a handsome lector arrives at one of the last Cuban cigar factories in Tampa to entertain the workers while they hand-roll cigars. But when the lector begins reading “Anna Karenina,” the passionate, frustrated lives of the characters in the book begin to parallel those of the listeners, leading to jealousy, betrayal, and sexual awakening.  Details here.

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  Video: Highlights from Camelot at the St. Louis Muny.

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  LA’s Center Theatre Group has announced has announced its 2022-23 season at two of its theaters:

AHMANSON THEATRE:

   2:22: A Ghost Story (Oct. 29 – Dec. 4, opening Nov. 4), by Danny Robins, directed by Matthew Dunster. An intriguing, funny, and scary supernatural thriller, transporting audiences into one adrenaline-fueled night where secrets will emerge and ghosts may appear.

   Ain’t Too Proud The Life and Times of The Temptations (Dec. 13 – Jan. 1, 2023, opening Dec. 14), by Dominque Morisseau, directed by Des McAnuff, with choreography by Sergio Trujillo.

   1776 (Apr. 15 – May 7), with all-female, non-binary & transgender cast, directed by Jeffrey L. Page & Diane Paulus, with choreography by Jeffrey L. Page.

  A Soldier’s Play (May 23 – June 24, opening May 24), by Charles Fuller, directed by Kenny Leon.

MARK TAPER FORUM:

  The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe (Sept. 21 – Oct. 23, opening Sept. 28), by Jane Wagner, directed by Leigh Silverman, starring Cecily Strong.

   Clyde’s (Nov. 15 – Dec. 18, opening Nov. 19), by Lynn Nottage, directed by Kate Whorisky.  Casting TBA.

  Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 (Mar. 8 – Apr. 9, 2023, opening Mar. 15), written & revised by Anna Deavere Smith.

   A Transparent Musical (May 20 – June 25, opening May 31), based on the hit TV series, by Joey Soloway, MJ Kaufman, Faith Soloway, directed by Tina Landau, with choreography by James Alsop. The musical comedy explores a new story as family secrets of the Pfeffermans, a Jewish family living in Los Angeles, come to light and inspire journeys of self-discovery, acceptance, and joy.

   Fake It Until You Make It (Aug. 2 – Sept. 3, opening Aug. 9), world premiere by Larissa FastHorse. A bold comedy about being whoever. you want to be, even when it’s not who you are.

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  Mandy Patinkin and his wife, Kathryn Grody, will star in a Showtime pilot of “Seasoned,” written by their son Gideon Grody-Patinkin and Ewen Wright, which is expected to shoot in NYC in August.  A premiere date is TBA.

The series follows a committed (and slightly insane) married couple, who have been married for 43 years. The source of their unending magic is the same as their unending woe: that they’ve stayed together all this time.

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  Steve Ross & Jean Brassard’s Allons Enfant Encore – une Fois!  will run July 14-16 at NYC’s Pangea.

Karen Akers, Greata, Meg Reichardt, and Kurt Hoffman

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  RIP: Actress Maureen Arthur died on June 15 following an extended battle with Alzheimer’s. She was 88.

Maureen made her mark on musical theatre history on screen as Hedy La Rue in “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.” She also played the role in the national tour for two years, and then appearing in the Broadway musical.

She appeared in a multitude of  sitcoms, including “Get Smart,” “Please Don’t Eat the Daisies,” “The Monkees,”  “The Flying Nun,”  “Gomer Pyle: USMC,”  “Love, American Style,”  “Sanford and Son,”  “The New Dick Van Dyke Show,” “Laverne & Shirley,” “Mork & Mindy,” “CPO Sharkey,” Too Close For Comfort,” and many more.

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Additional works have been added to “You’ll Be Swell! You’ll Be Great! The Fine Art of Performance,” the new exhibit from NYC’s Helicline Fine Art, which will continue through Aug. 31.

  Created between the 1920s – 1990s, more than 3 dozen additional works have been added, depicting theatre, film, dance, music, and circus.  In-person viewings can be arranged as well. Featured works include paintings, costume and set design drawings, illustrations, photographs, and more from a plethora of Broadway shows, films, and more.

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  The world premiere of Roger Q. Mason’s Lavender Men will run July 30 – Sept. 4 (opening Aug. 6) at the Skylight Theatre, directed by Kate Burton. A streaming option will be available on Aug. 20.

  Alex Esola (Elmer Ellsworth), Roger Q. Mason (Taffeta), and Pete Ploszek (Abe Lincoln).

A historical fantasia which follows Taffeta, a self-proclaimed “fabulous queer creation of color,” who invades Abe Lincoln’s private world to confront issues of visibility, race and LGBTQ+ inclusion that still challenge us today.

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  Video: Trailer for 1776 at Cambridge’s A.R.T.

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  The new web series, “Ms. Guidance” will premiere Wed. June 29 on BroadwayWorld  (link available next week). The series is written by James Ryan Caldwell, directed by Van Hansis & Melodie Sisk.

  Amber Gray, Van Hansis, Tyler Hanes, Ian Unterman, Calli Alden, and Adriane Lenox, with Mark Boyett, Sam Faulkner, Andrew Hollinger, Erin Kommor, Ginna Le Vine, Antonio Marziale, Ashley Austin Morris, Amy Russ, Nikki Snelson, Kit Williamson, Marco Zunino, Michael Urie, and Elliotte Crowell.

A dark comedy about Jenny Bump, a talented and narcissistic actress dealing with a failed acting career. After a humiliating meltdown on a New York Stage, Jenny calls it quits on her acting career and retreats to the performing arts boarding school she attended in her youth, to be a guidance counselor. However, listening to the dreams of her students quickly stokes the dying embers of her own,  and she is soon plotting a new path to stardom, wreaking havoc on her friends and family.

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Beanie Feldstein has announced her engagement to Bonnie Chance Roberts.

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The cast album for Trevor has been released here.

  Audio: “My Imagination”

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  Complete casting has been announced for Aspen Musical Festival‘s The Sound of Music in Concert, to take place July 25  & 26 at Aspen’s Benedict Music Tent, directed by Marc Bruni, with music direction by Andy Einhorn, and choreography by Denis Jones.

  Christy Altomare (Maria), Brandon Victor Dixon (Captain von Trapp, Ashley Blanchet (Elsa), Ana Maria Martinez (Mother Abbess), Brad Oscar (Max), with Sydney Brochers, Megan Brilleslyper, Katherine Burns, Amelia Burshe, Eleanor Carroll, Valérie Filloux, Kayleigh Flynn, Chance Friedman, Claire Griffin, Peyton Herzog, Julia Holoman, Grace Lerew, Emma McAlister, Nina Mutalifu, James Nottingham, Sierra Quint, Jessica Reese, Anna Riley, Legan Saad, Nijel Smith, Harry Spitteler, and Gabrielle Turgeon.


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