Saturday, March 21, 2026

Folger Shakespeare Theatre: As You Like It

 The whole world has heard of Shakespeare if they have any knowledge of "western" history.  He's just probably the most famous real person after Adolf Hitler.  Hell, a movie written about the death of his son based on ZERO re-searchable information other than he had a son who died young, just one an Actress an academy award!  And if you asked anyone to name a play that Shakespeare had written, I would bet you dimes to donuts that they would name a Tragedy.  Probably "Romeo and Juliet," then I'd go with "Hamlet" or "Macbeth".   If you pressed them for a History, most people couldn't and those who could would probably say "Richard" or "King Richard" missing the actual title "Richard III".  Calling for a comedy would probably yield better results.  The likeliest answer would be some butchering of his most difficult play title to get right.  Of course, I'm speaking of "A Midsummer's Night Dream". 

In all of this "As You Like It" probably wouldn't come up at all.  Yet of all of his comedies, I think it is most accessible.  Especially, if you just do a quick pre-presentation tutorial on the roles and their relationships to one another.  It's a fun play, with lots of opportunities for slapstick, audience participation and song.

The story sets up around two brothers who have a falling out.  One is exiled to a distant woods with his faith companions.  The other schemes to increase his power over his little kingdom.  As the latter's reign grows increasingly untenable, more members of the elite head for the woods.  As they do royals (cousins--no Big Whoop back then) don disguises and fall in love--there's a lot of falling in love.  Ultimately it all works out in love's favor and our two lead lovers Orlando (you're welcome, Florida!) and Rosalind join a group in a joyous wedding in their Utopian paradise, the "Arden Woods."

Joy is the word.  No matter how the overall production goes at Folger Shakespeare Theatre, when it's a comedy, it's always full of joy.  Because I really like this play, I've seen it now 3 times.  Of those, this production was my least favorite, but I didn't not enjoy it.  It was just a little uneven.  The concept of setting it in Washington, DC was "meh".  I mean, we're in fucking Washington, DC already!  And aside from a scrim in the beginning with a projection of the capitol dome (which is also across the street from the theater!!) and the homage to the "columns" at the National Arboretum on the cover of the program, it was only a vehicle for the costume designer to play with.  Now, IF the Arden woods was dressed to look like the National Arboretum's "Columns" memorial?  That would have been great.

In spite of this, the actors brought the joy.  I commend especially, Tsilala Brock as Rosalinda who had her best moments in the guise of the boy, Ganymede, but nonetheless rose above those around her to establish a presence worth following.  Manu Kumasi was a delightful Orlando, engaging and empathetic in turns.  and Ahmad Kamal as Touchstone.  He seemed to take on responsibility for the success of the entire production engaging the audience  with a gusto that was leading.  He opened doors for others to walk through.

In the end, any Shakespeare to see at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre is an intimate experience as close to the real deal as you're likely to get short of the New Globe in London.  The house reeks with gravitas and easily transports you to a special place--one where anything is possible.  Seeing a show there is always worth the price of admission.  Which brings me to my next point.  There are four seats on either side of the entrance which are considered "obstructed view".  They only require one to lean forward to see anything that might be obstructed.  They cost $20.  I always purchase one of these.  The seat beside me costs $86.  The seat in front of me costs $108.  At $20, I can feel a little disappointed without feeling regret for coming!


Touchstone (Ahmad Kamal)

The Princely Brothers: Ollie (Terrence Fleming) and Orlando (Manu Kumasi)

The Cousins: Rosalind (Tsilala Brock) and Celia (Sabrina Lynne Sawyer)

Ensemble celebrating Love.  John Sygar on Guitar

Orlando asks Rosalind to marry him, her father, Duke Senior (Jefferson A. Russell), ready to give his blessing.

Zen Lego Moment...

 


Saturday, March 7, 2026

1st Stage: Between Riverside and Crazy

 I loved this play!  Written in 2014 by Stephen Adly Guirgis, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Best New Play in 2015.  And deservedly so!  The dialogue was so fresh and spontaneously funny at times.  The plot is clear, but the turns and twists along the way were one delightful hard right followed by an even more brilliant hard left.  I recommend leaving your seat belts on throughout the duration of this flight.

The set, designed by Tony Cisek is the most elaborate I've ever seen at 1st Stage.  They truly pulled out all of the stops and in doing so added a layer of magic to the play that Broadway's production didn't even have.  It deserves a BRILLIANT all its own!

The show was rescheduled back after the sudden death of the actor who originally had the lead and naturally the production is dedicated to his life and legacy.  I'd seen him in other productions and knew him to be a solid actor--someone who can carry the arch of the character.  However, and I mean no disrespect, the actor who replaced him, another whose work I am familiar with here in the DMV, just took the lead character, Walter "Pops" Washington to a degree of intense presence that I could not imagine anyone else performing the role.  Nor could I imagine what it would be like to get the call to come and fill the shoes of colleague who has just passed into Ancestry.  Clearly, he was the perfect choice.

As to the other actors, again not a loose screw in the lot!  Two who I will highlight, one a longtime presence for me in the DMV.  An actor who will do anything to embody a role.  An actor who has often also appeared in programs as the understudy.  And while I have really enjoyed Dylan Arrendondo in other performances (most notably as Philinte in Constellation Theatre's production of "The School For Lies"), as Oswaldo, the ex-con with lingering Father issues, it was like I was watching a actor I'd never seen before blossom in a role that left me with a complex range of emotional connections to the character.  

The other was Fabiolla Da Silva as the Church Lady, a con artist intent on swindling Pops who ultimately received from him that greatest gift of grace.  It's a tour de force performance from start to redemptive finish.  I honestly can't remember the last time I watched a new play that had been on Broadway and enjoyed it so much.  "John Wilkes Booth: One Night Only" was a better play, but it has yet to be presented on the Great White Way.  

My local peeps have a week to see this one, and I promise you won't regret the effort.
Lulu (Hannah Taylor) and "Pops" Washington (Addison Switzer) after Lulu who is Pops' son, Junior's, live in girlfriend, has just revealed that she is pregnant.  One of many lies that fill his world.

L-R: Junior (Shawn Sebastian Naar), Lulu, Pops, Det. Audrey O'Connor (Ellis Greer) and Lt. Caro (Chris Genebach)

The Church Lady (Fabiolla Da Silva) brings her mix of Christianity and Santeria to "Pops" to heal him!  But in the end all he gets is Boner and a Heart Attack!  It's a highlight moment in the humor that is woven adeptly throughout the play.
The incredible, glorious, utterly inspired and perfect set!  Designed by Tony Cisek.  Bravo!

Late Winter Snow: Musk Oxen

Musk Oxen in my Garden.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Chesapeake Shakespeare Company: Fences

 I had seen this performed once before at Ford's Theater in DC and was, safe to say, underwhelmed.  So when I saw it on Chesapeake Shakespeare Company's season, I really wanted to give it another chance.  Recently, I'd seen Wilson's "Joe Turner has Come and Gone" there, and it was mesmerizing.  One of the things I've come to appreciate about Wilson's Century Cycle--you can't downplay the elements of magical thinking if you want the play to really reverberate.  

This production was outstanding!  For nearly the first 2/3's of the show, I was thinking that I was watching a nearly different play altogether from the first time.  The ensemble of actors was pitch perfect.  Led by DeJeanette Horn as the swaggering, imperfect Patriarch who is being forced into a modern world that he feels unwelcome in.  I'm sure that I'm not the only one to make the comparison between Wilson's Troy Maxson and Miller's Willy Lohman.  In the right hands, they are equally as powerful.

Playing off Horne was the equally as talented Lolita Marie as Rose Maxson, the family's Matriarch..  And when the bombs start to fall, and the truths start to pop, her presence and her measured energy throughout those scenes was a tour de force of amazing acting--the work of an atypical talent.  She didn't just play Rose, she was Rose.  Here every emotion landed hard on the heart.  


Costumes and props were seamless in their integration into the show.  The set, designed by Timothy Jones, was a work of art, both simple and filled with delightful details.

I left the Ford's Theatre production thinking, "I don't see why people think this is such a great play."  I left today's production with my mind racing with ideas and swirling over them all was this: "I get it."


Two friends, Jim Bono (Aaron P. Watkins) and Troy Maxson (DeJeanette Horne) sharing a pint at the end of a long work week

The Maxson's backyard is like a magnet for family and friends.

Troy & Rose (Lolita Marie) Maxson.

Troy recruits his teenage son, Cory (Isaiah C. Evans) to help him build his fence.

The unraveling of paradise begins.

Rose is the one who calls the patient 'dead.'

Cory on leave from the Marines meets his step-sister, Reynell (Makayla Uqdah) for the first time

Uncle Gabrielle (Shakill Jamal) calling to the angels of God.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

National Gallery of Art: works from the Corcoran Collection

 The final stop was a walk through a series of galleries with a mix of National Gallery and Corcoran Gallery works from the American 19th century collections.  It was so nice to see these old "friends".  Ever since the National Gallery absorbed the over 2,000 works from the defunct Corcoran Gallery, what was once easily accessible, became hidden in storage.  


"The Departure," 1837
Thomas Cole, 1801 - 1848

DETAIL: "The Departure"

"The Return," 1837
Thomas Cole, 1801 - 1848

DETAIL: "The Return"

"Niagara," 1857
Frederic Edwin Church, 1826 - 1900

This image of North America's most famous waterfall was an iconic part of the Corcoran Collection.

The works of Albert Bierstadt (1830 - 1902) were an integral part of the Corcoran Collection.  None more pronounced than this gorgeous reproduction from his visit to Mount Corcoran in the Sierra Nevada Mountains on California.  Bierstadt made copious drawing and oil and watercolor sketches during his visit to the western United States.  Then he spent years recreating these images from those notes and sketches and his memory.  The results are resplendent with details and ignited the imaginations of his admirers and collections back in the east.  Most of his paintings are momunmental in size as well: six feet tall, 10..12 feet wide.  They were meant to be displayed in public spaces.
"Mount Corcoran," 1876 - 1877
Albert Bierstadt, 1830 - 1902

DETAIL: "Mount Corcoran"

DETAIL: "Mount Corcoran"

I mean, just look at the translucency of the water!  It's stunning.

"Buffalo Trail: The Impending Storm," 1869
Albert Bierstadt, 1830 - 1902

DETAIL: "Buffalo Trail: The Impending Storm"

The drama implicit in this painting is the very essence of the "sublime".  The idea that nature is both inspiring and every threatening.  Beginning with the Hudson School and moving forward thought-out the 19th century, this concept was a favorable pursuit in the design and execution of works of art that depicted the natural world.  
"Simpton Pass," 1911
John Singer Sargent, 1856 - 1925

In my humble opinion, John Singer Sargent is one of the greatest artists ever.  The complexity of this genius even comes through on this relatively innocuous work.  

"Mount Monadnock," circa 1911 - 1914
Abbott Handerson Thayer, 1849 - 1921

Monday, February 23, 2026

National Gallery of Art: Mary Cassatt: An American in Paris

 Some images from a lovely little focus show of the works of American Impressionist painter, Mary Cassatt (1844 - 1926).  The works are all from the collection of the National Gallery of Art.  In three rooms, they divide between oil paintings, and prints, some colorized with watercolor.

I was so grateful for having attended the Mary Cassatt Retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art back in the fall of 2024.  A much larger display with a very in-depth look at her turn in the 1890's to printmaking.  This exhibit gave a taste of the process; Philadelphia afforded a banquet.  Which is fine.  Not every stay is a week's long event; sometimes, you just have a little sleepover.  


"Young Girl at a Window," 1883 - 1884
The Corcoran Collection

"Little Girl in a Blue Armchair," 1887
Collection of Mr. & Mrs. Paul Mellon

The Mellons underwrote the construction of the National Gallery of Art and gave the lion's share of their personal collection to kick start it's acquisitions.  They are also largely responsible for the establishment of the Virginia Museum of Fine Art in Richmond where they established a gallery dedicated to pieces from their Equestrian collection.

"The Boating Party," 1893 - 1894
Chester Dale Collection

A Stamp Collector's memory of the same--my introduction to the artist back in middle school.

"Woman with a Sunflower," circa 1905
Chester Dale Collection

"The Letter," 1890 - 1891
Chester Dale Collection

"Maternal Caress," 1890 - 1891
Gift of Miss Elisabeth Achelis

"Reflection," circa 1890
Alisa Mellon Bruce fund purchase

The artist, age 22 or 23