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Stage Presence...

Random & occasional musings on theatre-related topics...   

Birds + Bees + Humans = Theater!

3/19/2013

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Theater is everywhere.  It goes on every day in countless spaces around us, big and small.  If we're lucky, we stumble upon a show that surprises us with a fresh perspective; one that enriches our understanding of the roles that theater can play in our lives.  This is just such a show:
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                                                            Performance. Art Exhibit. Dialogue.

        A diverse cast explores female sexuality. The truthful, the awkward, the poignant and humorous. 


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Maggie Keenan-Bolger
(co-creator, The Birds and The Bees Unabridged)
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Rachel Sullivan 
(co-creator, The Birds and The Bees Unabridged)
I'm convinced that if every show had a Maggie Keenan-Bolger and a Rachel Sullivan, every show would also have a full house every night! These two makers of theater have seemingly inexhaustible enthusiasm, creativity and commitment to making life work better for all of us. And they've made us a show about being sexual beings, especially women (and those who so identify), that is designed to entertain, educate and elevate. It's called "The Birds and The Bees Unabridged,"  and the show, and accompanying art exhibit, runs for five performances at Speyer Hall in NYC from March 27-30 '13 (see end of post for more details).
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I had the privilege of sitting down with Maggie and Rachel to find out more about the motivations and inspirations that gave rise to The Birds and The Bees Unabridged, and couldn't help but be swept up in their excitement for the process that birthed this show. The two met while working on their graduate degrees in Applied Theater (the use of theater to effect social change), and each is committed to the belief that there needs to be significant change in how women view themselves as sexual beings, and therefore how we experience sex in our lives. More openness and acceptance of ourselves and our sexual reality, in their opinions, will naturally flow from stepping away from a notion of a single "normal" and towards a plurality of "normals" that are the truths for each of us. To that end, they prepared a survey to start the discussion, and crossed their fingers for 500 responses.  They needn't have worried...2000 responses came in; some of the returned surveys running as many as 50 pages.  Looks as if they were right that we have a need to talk about sex!

From these responses, they selected the topics that respondents ranked as most important to a show about female sexuality (#1 was partner communication,  #2 was reproductive rights, #3 sexual violence, and so on) and those that had the unifying theme of communication. Then they gathered a group of twenty actors that spans ages 20-70, a range of professions (teachers, lawyers, real estate agents), includes a mother and daughter and a transgender actor who self-identifies as someone with a female body but "man identified."  Read about the cast members here.
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The key to casting, Rachel said, was that, as well as being at least somewhat stage-experienced, the group be made up of "nice" people; people who could form a community of trust and productive conversation. Together, Maggie, Rachel and their creative team and actors set about evolving the ideas into a stage work. There has been no set script from which to work, making the process fully collaborative and responsive.  Everyone has had a voice in  what is working and what's not as successful.  That's part of the fun, said Maggie; i.e., some of the actors read the survey responses and then, during the development process, the actors would remember specific survey comments they'd read that felt "powerful" to them and that they felt should be included; while other actors would describe a personal issue they felt should be addressed in the show, but not one they wanted to be part of addressing.

Both described the show as a "quilt," made up of separate stories that, when stitched together, form a beautiful whole.  The show is expected to run around 90 minutes, and when asked what the audience can expect to see, M & R shared that there'll be a series of vignettes/scenes that stand on their own and may include dialogue, music and/or designed movement relating to experiences in the realm of female sexuality. There is no nudity, and the show does not have an age limit.  Instead, the women feel that individually appropriate decisions must be made. What about men, you might ask? Well, this is a work of theater performance, designed to entertain, and there is a universality to our human existence that makes theater a unifying medium. Personally, I welcome shows that expand my insight into those around me!  So the show may be about women, but it's for everyone. 

A discussion of the "birds and bees" seems one without a definitive end, so I was particularly interested in what might come next for the show, as well as for its creators.  As Rachel said with a laugh, "the most interesting, intoxicating and difficult thing about theater is that it is never finished!" Specifically I asked if there would be any interaction with the audience post-show (such as exit surveys or talk backs) and both expressed the intent for some form of further communication of that sort. They feel that, although they can't really take the current incarnation with this cast on tour, that the show would be a great fit for college communities, among others. And we all agreed that there was an embarrassment of riches in the way of ideas, topics and personal stories that deserve to be told, to provide plenty of material going forward!

The biggest surprise, the two said, has been the amount of support they've received since they first started the project.  From a healthy survey response rate to the successful Kickstarter campaign that funded this initial production, the willingness of people to become involved convinced them that they are on the right track.  So if you can make it to the show during this, its original run, go... don't miss the opportunity to see this unique theater work, created by two women from whom I know we'll hear much more in years to come! And along with being entertained, you may find yourself changed "for good," to quote another show that involves women getting to know themselves  (heck, even Glinda and Elphaba could use a bit of Maggie and Rachel in their lives I suspect!).
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The Birds and the Bees Unabridged

Wednesday, March 27th- 8pm
Thursday, March 28th- 8pm
Friday, March 29th- 8pm
Saturday, March 30th- 2pm and 8pm

Buy tickets here / suggested donation $10/$15/$25* (based on interest and economic ability)

Speyer Hall at University Settlement  (see map below)
184 Eldridge St.
New York, NY. 10002

(photos of  Maggie & Rachel at work and of the cast are from the show website)

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The Collective Breath

3/12/2013

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Sometimes, there's not a great deal to say about something that means a great deal....but what there is, is worth saying.  

So, this is just a short ode to those moments when I'm in an audience watching a live performance, and I'm captivated and enthralled, and transported...and I realize I'm not even breathing, because I don't want to miss a second, or make a sound that would break the spell.   But the best part?  It's not just me...everyone is transfixed...no coughs, no rustles, no whispers, not even any audible breathing.   That collective breath is magic.  It is the power of the actors and the story and the setting to make us one for an instant.   One of the many gifts of live theatre is the give and take between the actors and the audience.  And it can happen even in a show that isn't a hit, or one you don't love...because it's really about the human experience of having someone tell you a story.  Remember when you'd hold your breath as you listened to a bedtime tale?  Waiting to say  "good night, moon," or hear "happily ever after," or "and then Harold dropped off to sleep."  One of my fondest memories is of being read aloud to, and I love reading aloud to this day.  I'll look up from the page, and see my niece still, but somewhere else...in the story with Harry, Hermione and Ron.  And we're there together.  Just like at the theatre, but there, we're with strangers,  strangers with whom we've gone on a journey without leaving our seats.  We may never know their names, but we breathed together for a moment; and it was magic.

The next time you're in a theatre, and you find yourself completely in the moment, listen to the audience and you might hear...absolutely nothing.

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More "Smash" Fun

2/26/2013

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It's "Smash" night tonight (NBC,  9:00pm EST) and on my last visit to NYC, there was more "Smash" filming adventure for me!  On Feb 15 '13, the show was filming at The Longacre Theatre on W48th St in the afternoon, and that evening at The Lyceum.  I was able to get some photos and watch Anjelica Huston, Christian Borle, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Megan Hilty and  Leslie Odom Jr. do their "Smash" thing!

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The scene being filmed was the arrival at a performance of a fictional show, "Gathering Storm," by Tom (Christian Borle) and Eileen (Anjelica Huston).  They are joined by Daphne Rubin-Vega, reportedly playing a Broadway publicist (Rubin-Vega was the original "Mimi" when the musical "Rent" opened on Broadway in 1996). 

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I was able to get a close up photo of one of the faux Playbills, and peeked inside at the "filler pages," which ironically were taken in part from an actual production from some years back starring Will Chase (the actor who played Julia's paramour and "Joe DiMaggio" in "Bombshell" last season).

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Anjelica was the first in front of the entrance, met by Christian and they exchanged greetings, to be joined shortly by Daphne.  The three chatted briefly and then entered the lobby together.  There was a large crowd of extras playing the theatre-goers, some holding Playbills, who filed into the lobby before, during and after the principals "met up" in front.  

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I was not quite as fortunate with photo quality at The Lyceum Theatre that evening while the show was filming a "Bombshell" scene; the equipment and extras were inconveniently placed (and the crew dogged in their pursuit of keeping us at a distance) this time :).  But it was fun to catch glimpses of Megan Hilty (Ivy) and Leslie Odom Jr. (Sam) exit the stage door to greet "fans" waiting for Ivy after a performance of "Bombshell."

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Blurry, but the only photo of any quality I was able to get of Leslie Odom Jr.   He walked right by me shortly afterwards, and we exchanged "hi"s, but it was too chaotic for me to take a close up :).  Nice guy!

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Blue Roses, Jonquils & Glass Souls: "The Glass Menagerie" Reimagined

2/25/2013

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If you had asked me over the years if I'd seen Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie," I would have answered "of course!," without hesitation; but this would have been an inadvertent misstatement.  This play is such a part of the American theatre lexicon, that I assumed I must have seen it; hadn't everyone?  But I now realize that the lovely new production of this classic play was my introduction of sorts and oh, what a first meeting it was...a perfect storm of talent and creativity that swept me away!  It is fittingly referred to as a "memory play" in Willams' script, and for me, the memories I have of this production will surely last.  

The American Repertory Theatre (A.R.T.) in Cambridge, MA is the incubator for many a marvelous production that may or may not move to Broadway, but is likely to enrich the theatre world either way.  The artistic director, Diane Paulus, seems to have a particular knack for seeing the past with new eyes.  Witness the Tony® Award-winning revivals of "Hair" (from The Public Theater, for which she was Tony® nominated as the director), "Gershwin's Porgy and Bess" (at A.R.T.) and the current revival of "Pippin," (A.R.T.) opening on Broadway in April  '13.  I had seen her immersive, boundary-pushing rock musical version of "Prometheus Bound" at A.R.T. in 2010, and knew, no matter what else happened, I would be surprised and challenged.

So I did not hesitate to make the trip to Boston to see how Williams' famous work would be interpreted.  The team assembled for the production definitely inspired confidence:  John Tiffany as director ("Once" for which he won the Tony® Award, "Black Watch"), Stephen Hoggett ("Once," "American Idiot") doing the "movement" design (he does not refer to it as choreography) and a cast made up of Cherry Jones, Celia Keenan-Bolger, Zachary Quinto and Brian Jacob Smith.  
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As an interesting aside, the WBUR, Boston Public Radio website has a marvelous article about John Tiffany's condition for signing on: Cherry Jones (Tony® winner for "Doubt" and "The Heiress," and with many other stage and film credits) must agree to be Amanda, the determined southern matriarch struggling for survival during the Great Depression; a mother tightly woven into the psyches of her children.  For her part, Cherry Jones wanted nothing to do with it.  Thankfully for all of us, she changed her mind.  Her Amanda is expansive and amusing; at her best when spinning the tales of her youth.  We can see her as a carefree young girl with potential beaux lining up to fill her dance card, only to be brought harshly back to reality when she cruelly points out her children's failings to them, justifying her motives the whole time.   Cherry Jones has a wonderful, throaty laugh, making it almost impossible to resist trying to understand the confounding Amanda.  And her quieter, gentler moments with her children give us just enough insight into a mother's protectiveness to go with her on this journey.

Zachary Quinto ("24," "Heroes," "Star Trek," and multiple theatre credits)  is Tom,  Amanda's son and younger child, and sole breadwinner for the family.  Tom is trapped in the suffocating world of the tenement apartment he shares with his equally suffocating mother and his beloved sister, Laura.  As Tom, Zachary conveys the character's simmering pain and the depths of his regret from the first line; his low, considered drawl commands us to listen.  I felt an urgency to the story, despite the measured cadence, and I knew I was in good hands with this storyteller.  His tenderness with Laura and ambivalence with his mother softened the bitterness, and he moved easily between narrator and player.

It has been said that "The Glass Menagerie" is the most autobiographical of Tennessee Williams' plays, a subtext that makes the work all the more poignant, and lends an interesting layer to Tom's (Tom was Willams' real life given name) pent up frustration.   While it is never discussed, Willams' homosexuality, perhaps a part of Tom's story, is a comfortable fit in the play, and in Zachary Quinto's portrayal of Tom.
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Celia Keenan-Bolger ("The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee," "Encores: Merrily We Roll Along," "Peter and the Starcatcher") is Laura, the emotionally and physically fragile daughter who finds peace, and her equilibrium, in her collection of tiny glass animals, represented in this production by a single glass unicorn.   Celia's Laura is vulnerable, yet not without sparks of strength.  She summons her courage against her mother's fury, as she defends her decision to secretly drop out of the dreaded business course in which her mother enrolled her.  She also conveys a fragility that is not without awareness or determination.  It is a satisfying laugh from the audience when, as soon as her mother leaves the room, she removes the "breast enhancers" her mother has insisted she wear to compensate for her regrettable "flat chest," and stuffs them away under the sofa cushion.  But Celia is remarkably capable of moving us with merely a tightening of her jaw, or a far away gaze.  I saw the show from the third row the first time, and halfway back in the theatre the next day, and Laura's silent pain was equally powerful from near or far.

The pivotal "Gentleman Caller," (Jim) who pulls Laura out of her comfort zone, if only for a brief moment, is played by Brian Jacob Smith, who has just the right affability and ease to convey the promise of a savior for Amanda, Laura and Tom.  Jim's entrance into the action brings a relief of sorts; as if a dusty window was cracked to let in the sun, even if only for a minute, and Brian radiates good cheer and an athletic ease of movement.  When Jim teaches Laura to dance, the chemistry between Brian and Celia gives us all hope.

It is Jim who called Laura "Blue Roses" during high school, after he misunderstood when she told him that "pleurosis," was the illness that had kept her out of school.  As Amanda is given to rose-colored memories of her youth as the quintessential southern belle, it is perhaps appropriate that her daughter, who lacks the joie de vivre that her mother tells us often she had in abundance, has this somewhat melancholy nickname.  

For Amanda, the flower of choice is jonquils.  She describes  being obsessed with collecting jonquils to bring home from outings as a young girl, despite her mother's admonition that there was no more room for them in the house.  No problem, says Amanda, "I'll just hold them myself."  She seems to have collected "gentlemen callers," with equal abandon, but ends up marrying an alcoholic who fails to live up to the expectations for providing a pampered and privileged life.  Instead, he abandons the family early on and exists in the play only as an unseen portrait to which Tom, Laura and Amanda gesture in disappointment.  

All of the weight of the family's survival is on Tom's shoulders.  He grimly endures his existence working at the shoe factory (when he'd rather be writing poetry) by "going to the movies" each evening, to the chagrin of his mother who is appropriately fearful that it is not the movies that are providing Tom's entertainment.  One of the most powerful (and darkly entertaining) moments in the show is when Tom finally snaps at his mother's haranguing, and acts out a laundry list of imaginary dire deeds and alter egos in accordance with her suspicions.

Amanda's desperate hope that Laura will, despite her physical and mental limitations, find a man to marry who will save her from certain institutionalization once Amanda is gone, drives the play.  It is clear that Laura will not be able to hold a job, so marriage is her only possible haven, and Amanda is determined to conjure some southern magic to make it happen.  

Tom is pressured to bring home a "gentleman caller" for Laura, and inadvertently brings home the only boy that Laura had ever recalled as an object of her affection (from afar during high school), who possesses all the requisite charm and kindness, but suffers from a fatal flaw that had escaped Tom's notice: he's engaged to someone else.   Although Jim does not appear until fairly late in the play, his role in Laura's story is a crescendo, and the scenes between them are riveting.

There are those productions in which the set is truly another character in the show, with its own ability to interact with, and even speak for, the human characters.  This is one of those shows.   The series of angled, tiered platforms that make up the stage are isolated from the audience by an inky pool of liquid.  The characters sometimes stand at the very edge of the stage, staring into this abyss; Tom even stops just short of touching the surface at one point.  It represents the challenges faced by the characters, the unknown darkness of the future, the depths of memory and imagination and even the promise of distant hope.  There is a soaring fire escape that rises into nothingness, and a sliver of a neon moon rising out of the water.   Fittingly, there are no actual walls.  Instead the walls are created for us by the actors, closed in by their despair and circumstances.  This also gave a somewhat timeless quality to the story, allowing the focus to be on the universal themes of internal and external human struggle.  Stephen Hoggett's "movement" continues this opening up of the story through the series of pantomiming actions performed occasionally by the actors; movements that only suggest activities such as clearing the table, lighting the candles or just wordlessly exchanging stylized touches.  It was particularly effective in reminding us that the story is a memory being related by Tom, not a realtime telling.  The lighting works its magic as well, as when the single tiny crystal unicorn reflects like a prism as Laura caresses it and holds it to the light.  I felt as I was in a constant twilight of the mind.

I was fortunate to be able to see the show once in the evening, and then again the next day before I left Boston, at an early student matinee, after which there was a post-show discussion with the cast.  It was fascinating to be a part of two very different audiences; the high schoolers were involved  in a much more vocal way than the older audience the night before.  I was particularly struck by their audible delight in Laura and Jim's kiss, only to be seemingly stunned into silence when the tragedy to follow became clear.  Some of them had clearly studied the play prior to attending, and I heard some interesting discussion between a chaperone and some students about the choices the actors were making.    I also spoke with one of the theatre's staff after the talkback, and he said that this is one of the reasons they make such an effort to hold these events for students, and that many of these schools had participated in others in the past.  We both remarked at how, after an initial hesitation during the chat with the cast, hands were shooting up everywhere with questions; a true testament to the effectiveness of these actors and the creative team.

The moderator first asked about each actor's prior experience with the play and what had drawn them to this production.  Celia had the least experience with the play, never having seen even the film (but had read the play in school).  Her primary motivation for doing the A.R.T. production was the opportunity to work with John Tiffany and Stephen Hoggett.  After seeing their work in "Once" and "Black Watch," she would have "gone anywhere," as far as necessary, to work with them, and was delighted that she had only to come to Boston.  The chance to work with Cherry and Zachary was also key to her decision.  

Zachary had read and seen the play, but it had not been his favorite Tennessee Williams work.  He felt that, in this case, fate brought it to him at the right time in his life, after he'd had more life experience to bring to the role, and now found the play to be layered and complex in a satisfying way.  

As it turned out, Cherry had auditioned for Laura six times during her career, but had never gotten the part.  She laughingly attributed it to perhaps being too "big-boned," and not right for the fragile Laura.  But she was clear that she had never wanted to play Amanda, and flatly refused when it was proposed.  John Tiffany prevailed on her to at least read it again, and this time, she said, she saw something different and was hooked.  She had previously seen Amanda as unappealing, annoying and overbearing.  However, she then realized that, as a mother dealing with a child with limitations, she had no choice but to be a "locomotive" so that Laura didn't end up in an institution, and that energy drove everything she did.  

Other questions asked by the students included the significance of the miming; of the set design feature of the pool; what part of the play was the most challenging for each actor and how the play is evolving over the run.

As far as the miming, the actors discussed John Tiffany having them do exercises to get in touch with how they would suggest the physical world as if they were experiencing it internally. Celia noted that the characters don't say everything that they're thinking, and the silent movement is a way to relate to their internal experience, and that it can be taken in different ways, so that there is no "right" interpretation.  I enjoyed the Celia first responded to the student's query by countering "what did YOU think it meant?"  Zachary also praised Stephen Hoggett's ability to integrate the movement into the action in such a meaningful way, and how it helped give an extra dimension as they were in rehearsal and developing their characters.

When asked about what parts of the play are the most challenging,  Cherry immediately brought up Amanda's constant talking and frenetic energy.  Personally, she said, she's a "slow" person and she was getting tired of hearing herself talk, and was fearful the audience would also find Amanda tiresome.  She dealt with the challenge by working to convey Amanda's deep love for her children as the driving desperation.  Celia's choice was the scene before the gentleman caller arrives, as it touches all of the character's vulnerabilities.  She mentioned feeling a great connection to the character of Laura, which was a "great gift" as it doesn't always happen, and some roles require much more work to develop.  Here, she felt that some part of Laura was just "in her" from the first time she read the script.
 
Brian talked about having to watch the other three be brilliant for the whole first act, and then coming on for the final scenes and feeling the pressure to "make himself useful" as he is walking up the fire escape for the first time to enter the action.  

For his part, Zachary said that the biggest challenge for him was having to create nuances in his performance to suggest the character as an older Tennessee Williams relating to the audience and a younger Tennessee Williams relating to the other characters.

When asked about how the play is evolving, Celia said that the audience makes it different each time; this audience, for example, was very "vocal in a good way" and it made her braver and she tried some new things.   She also mentioned that this production is an amalgamation of the three different versions of the play, the reader's, actor's and London versions.  John Tiffany allowed them to adapt as needed, and Celia fondly referred to it as the "Cambridge version."  

Brian also talked about each performance being different; case in point being the night before, when he went to take the prop stick of gum from his pocket to hand to Celia, and the gum wasn't there.  He and Celia had to improvise around the missing prop.   Having been there the night before, I can confirm that they did such a good job of covering, I didn't know until I saw it with the gum the next day!  

Both Cherry and Zachary talked about how the openness of the set is a different approach to the play, and gives them more freedom to explore different options, leading to an evolution over time.  

On a more practical note, one student was quite concerned about the glass unicorn prop that must break each performance, and how they dealt with it.  Celia answered that, in fact, it doesn't usually break on its own and that she surreptitiously breaks off the horn most times, and that a new figurine is used every night.

For my part, I am hoping that they need many more tiny glass unicorns in the future (they will if the talk about this production moving to Broadway comes to fruition)...this "Glass Menagerie" deserves to be seen by many more audiences!

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A "tweet seat" compromise?

2/22/2013

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There's been much discussion recently about the idea of having "tweet seats" at designated performances of shows, much of it heated and, being a tweeter myself, I thought I'd weigh in with what I think is an alternative plan.

"Tweet seats" are grouped seats from which using your mobile device of choice to tweet about the show as it's happening is allowed, and even encouraged. Let me be clear, I am 100% against the idea. The potential for extreme intrusion on the theatrical experience of others is just too high. Never mind the impact on actors.  Live theatre is a different animal than movies/television, where "live tweeting" the action has become more common; the showing of filmed entertainment does not depend on the attention and involvement of the audience. And there are no live performers who may suffer from the distraction.

The notion that we are not capable of sitting for 90-120 minutes just experiencing what's happening on the stage without commenting (other than normal audience reaction of course), is more than a bit distressing to me. You absolutely take the risk that you will not be engaged by the action; but that's what catnaps are for :). Better you quietly doze than tap and glow while others are having their moment with the show!  

I'm a marketer from way back (undergrad degree + practical experience), and I am wowed by, and completely appreciate, the boon that social media is to the theatre.  It can wave a magic wand over a show's promotion budget and strengthen its impact exponentially.  Virtual word-of-mouth is incredibly powerful, and I encourage theatres and theatre companies to use it generously, but with some restraint as well.

Here's what I would do if I wanted to use Twitter to market my show, but wanted to avoid committing to "tweet seats": 

  • set up a Twitter account (and website/facebook page) at the very beginning of the development process;
  • use the accounts frequently to connect with fans, other shows & theatres, bloggers, etc;
  • follow my followers back if possible, especially those that tweet me more than once and are early-adopters (don't underestimate the effect it has on fans to feel appreciated: responding to tweets begets more tweets :));
  • gauge interest in a tweet-friendly performance by asking those interested to "register" their openness to attend and indicate availability;
  • schedule the special performance for right before regular previews or, at a minimum, early in previews to allow sufficient time for impact;
  • offer reduced ticket price for this performance;
  • offer an incentive to these social media users by having a pre-performance insight presentation providing background info on the show, cast, etc.
  • set up a "lounge"-type space for use before, at intermission and after the show with seating and refreshments, show marketing materials and a theatre/show staffer to answer questions and spark discussion;
  • limit actually tweeting/device use to before, during intermission and after the show;
  • give extra incentive in the way of future ticket discounts to encourage a return visit to the show (or the next show) with friends;
  • if possible, hold a talkback with the cast/team after the show;
  • listen and take the feedback seriously, even if it's not all positive!

I have attended a couple of social media events held by theatres, and it has provided a whole new dimension to my appreciation of the show, even if ultimately, the show wasn't my favorite.  An incentive to try something new without a risk other than the time invested is always appealing.   I can never say never about actual "tweet seats"; but at this point, I can't get behind encouraging audience members to  be distracted during a performance (and possibly distracting others or the cast) and then putting their potentially distracted reactions out into the twitterverse for a wide audience to see.

I can, however, get behind marshaling the power of social media by courting savvy social media users through other perks.
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It was a "Smash"n' time!

2/4/2013

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In honor of the Season 2 premiere of "Smash," tomorrow night, I offer this fun, behind-the-scenes gift that fate gave me a couple of weeks ago!

So I was sick.  Something sinus-y, but not contagious.  Just bad enough that I was miserable, but not bad enough to cancel my theatre weekend, and forfeit the tickets I'd already bought.  My Muse hotel friends made sure my room was ready, made me tea and sent me popcorn.  I holed up in the room until hunger for hot soup drove me out onto W46th St. to the Europa Cafe on the corner (great soups!).  It's a good thing I was too broke for room service, because when I went out, I was greeted by a line of unmistakably filming-related trailers parked along 46th St. outside the hotel.  I saw the "Universal" stamp on the side of the otherwise unmarked trailers and realized that there was a good possibility that one of my favorite television diversions (see previous blog post below), "Smash," was likely filming that evening.  Sure enough, the last trailer in line had the photo to the left on its door!  I struggled with my geeky angel sitting on my shoulder whispering "ask someone when/where they're filming!" but was saved from extreme geekiness when there was really no one around to ask anyway. 

I got my soup, and returned to the hotel, extracting a promise from the front desk staff that they would call me immediately if they saw any evidence of filming going on.  I sniffled and coughed and rested (feeling properly sorry for myself), until it was time for me to leave for "Golden Boy" at the Belasco Theatre on W44th St.  As I was heading that way, I encountered an official-looking young woman near the trailers wearing a badge-thingy, and my geeky angel beat me into submission, and I asked her when/where filming might be happening.  "Oh," she replied, "we're filming right now over on W45th St.!"  Perfect!  It was on my way to the show!  But time was limited and in the most nonchalant manner I could muster, I calmly sauntered towards the next block, pulling my camera out as I broke into a walk-run.

Sure enough, there was the commotion in front of the Lyceum Theatre, standing in for the fictional "Lily Hayes Theatre," home for "Bombshell," the musical at the center of "Smash" (so far, anyway :)).   I love watching filming of movies, television, etc., and got to do it a fair amount when I lived in Los Angeles; but it's been a bit of a dry spell in DC.  So "Smash," or no, I was still excited to get to see a bit of the fun.  They appeared to be filming an "opening night" for the show, with a crowd of extravagantly dressed extras milling about the front of the theatre.  The scene being worked on had "Tom," (Christian Borle), tux-clad, being driven a few feet in a limo and stepping out amid a flash of cameras.  

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I was able to mingle with the extras for a few minutes and watch the limo moving up and back a few times, with Christian inside (the photo to the left shows a very serious Christian right before he glanced up and we exchanged smiles through the limo window :)).

Realizing that I was flirting with the disastrous possibility that I would miss the curtain of the show I was actually paying to attend, I took as many photos of the marquee and crowd as I could and then dashed to the Belasco just in time. 

After my show let out, I walked back by the Lyceum on the way home, to see if anything was still going on.  The crowd had dispersed but the lights were all still on and this time I was able to get close-ups of the front window cards with the fictional show information.  What a treasure!!  You can see that the detail in the props; the characters' names, etc.  But my favorite part is the tape covering the star's name and then the director's name.  

[WARNING~SLIGHTLY SPOILERY-SKIP TO FINAL PARAGRAPH IF YOU WISH]In one of the photos you can see an "Iv" peeking out at the beginning. Whether the tape was there to avoid spoilers, or whether the tape is a plot point (last minute substitution, for example), remains to be seen.

In the meantime, I had a wonderful respite from feeling lousy that made me completely confident I'd made the right decision in dragging myself to the city that was going to make me feel better no matter how sick I might be!!
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Click the photo below to go to the NBC site for the show & watch the 2-hour season premiere tomorrow, Feb 5 '13, at 8pm EST.

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This is one "One Night Stand" I'll never regret...

1/30/2013

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It was a dark and stormy night, but inside the movie theater...ok, it was also dark; but one of my favorite feelings is realizing I've just smiled continually in the dark for the entire length of a movie, play, musical.  Just me and my smile.  That was me for the entire ninety minutes of "One Night Stand," a documentary film that celebrates the monumental talent on which Broadway is built!  This was a one-night-only showing of the film in theaters around the U.S. (it will screen in Canada  in February), but there will be a DVD available down the road.  

The set up is simple.  A generous group of souls in the Broadway community: actors, writers, composers, musicians, directors, set designers, lighting designers, choreographers, have all come together to create four 15-20 minute musicals in one 24 hour period to be presented at a benefit that raises funds for The Exchange, which supports theatre artists.  

The volunteer artists are divided into four teams with a composer (or 2), a book writer, 4 actors, a director, choreographer, etc.  There's a meet and greet for the entire group before the teams are formed, during which the actors present a single prop they've brought with them with some explanation as to its significance, which may or may not influence what happens later.  For example, Richard Kind's old costume from an appearance on "Sesame Street" became the basis for one of the stories, and a re-gifted pop-up book on phobias (!) gave birth to another.

At 10:00pm, the front line of the composers and writers get to work, spending all night creating the story and 2-3 songs that will be passed to the team of actors they've selected at the start.  The real chaos begins when the actors, directors, et al. take over.  Inexplicably, these incredibly talented people received scripts and scores at 8:00am and at 8:00pm that evening were on stage, in costume, without scripts (mostly :)), singing, dancing and acting in fully realized mini-musicals.  If I hadn't seen it....

And to hear the participants talk, it is one part excitement, one part "it's for a good cause altruism," and ten parts insanity to even attempt it...and they all loved it.  Alicia Witt compared it to the feeling of taking drugs without the drugs.  Even in the dark moments, each one seemed able to see it as the musical theater equivalent of a so-terrifying-it's-thrilling theme park ride.  In fact, Cheyenne Jackson described it as being put in the car to ride Space Mountain and laying the track down as you go.  Rachel Dratch (Second City; Saturday Night Live) had seemingly the toughest time; in large part due to her insecurity with her singing in the midst of the massive voices surrounding her.  She needn't have worried.  She was perfect.  

I think the most unbelievable part was being the fly on the wall, watching the composers and writers go from zero to plot and music.  I will forever be a fan of every single one of these artists.  I was familiar with many of them: Ben Pasek and Justin Paul created two of my favorite musicals this past year ("Dogfight" and "A Christmas Story"), Gina Gionfriddo wrote one my favorite plays of this past year ("Rapture Blister Burn"),  and I'd seen almost every actor on stage at some point (Alicia Witt, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Tracie Thoms, Roger Bart, Cheyenne Jackson).  It was sheer magic when the first seeds of a story, and first notes and lyrics of fledgling songs were tossed out by the writers and composers, and I was immediately hooked.  I wanted to be in those rooms, be part of this fabulous creative maelstrom.

The stories ranged from the angst encountered the morning after a bridal shower during which an unfortunate choice of words from one of the bridesmaids caused a rift, to a celebration of phobias (complete with a song called "Purel Desire"), to a disgraced Ponzi schemer who wants to escape to Staten Island to sell his suits to the "natives," to the three brothers, all Dr. Williams, all neurosurgeons who fight over who will do the surgery on the beautiful female patient.  

I immediately fell in love with the wonderful songs written by Lance Horne for the bridesmaids musical ("Rachel Said Sorry" was a highlight of the movie); and Gabriel Kahane (a musician I've been hearing a lot about lately in my Twitter feed :)), who was responsible for the criminally clever "Purel Desire" in the "phobia musical."

The filmmakers, Elisabeth Sperling and Trish Dalton, did a great job of cutting between the groups and, during the actual performance, between the scenes of the musicals, so that you got just enough substance to truly appreciate each one as a finished piece, and still feel as if you had somehow played a part in seeing them born.   There was also a good balance between watching the process unfold without commentary, and listening to the artists talk about the process before, during and after the event.  This was a truly unique opportunity to get the tiniest glimpse into how a musical comes to be; and I am really grateful to (and in awe of) everyone involved for the sheer magic of it all.  Seriously, every single one of them has just gained a new fan!  


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The stage on my screen...

1/26/2013

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When you love theatre as much as I do, it's tempting to fill every night with a show.  And, if you have been paying attention to this website, even a little, you might think that's exactly what I do.  I wish!  But the cost of tickets, even discounted ones, adds up, and it's not always possible to get to a theatre, so I have to find some way to get my theatre-fix in other ways.   

Of course, there's always Twitter, which can be endlessly entertaining; I love reading comments, news and general silliness from those in the theatre industry and those who love it.  But there are also some theatre-themed entertainment options that involve more than 140 characters, and only require turning on a computer or the television from the comfort of my couch: a current network television show, a Canadian television show from several years ago (available on Netflix), and a web-only series about the humor to be found in the life of auditioning actors (on both sides of the table).  

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"Smash" / NBC Tuesday nights / Season 2 starts Feb 5 

Yes, I know.  It's not a documentary about the making of a musical :).  It's a primetime soap opera with the theatre as its milieu.  And I love it.  For the most part, the acting is great (full disclosure: I'm not a huge Katharine McPhee fan), and the cast is drawn, in part, from real-life stars of the stage, which is huge draw for me.  

The basic premise?  Musical theatre composer/lyricist, Tom (Christian Borle, wildly talented stage actor) and book writer, Julia (Debra Messing, best known for TV's "Will & Grace"), just off the success of their hit musical "Heaven on Earth" begin work on a new musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe.  The major producer, "Eileen" (played by the great Anjelica Huston), is in the midst of a bitter divorce from another Broadway producer who is bound and determined to prevent her production plans from coming to fruition without proving she can't do it without him.  

The primary first season storyline  focused on the competition between the two women vying for the lead role (played by Broadway actor Megan Hilty of "Wicked," and Katharine McPhee, American Idol finalist), one a veteran of prior shows ("Ivy," portrayed by Hilty) and one, a newcomer with no real experience ("Karen," portrayed by McPhee).   Throw in a highly talented, highly temeramental director, prone to sleeping with his leading ladies, and the show has some major pitfalls to overcome if it's to make it to opening night :).  Guest stars from the first season included Bernadette Peters as Ivy's stage-star mother, difficult to please and prone to stealing Ivy's spotlight; and Uma Thurman as the film star (with issues :)) brought in as "Marilyn" to bring the show the needed press.  Press it got; a successful lead actor it didn't.

The creator and original writer of the show, Theresa Rebeck, has moved on to focus on other projects (her recent Broadway play, "Dead Accounts," ran this past November/December), but if the casting news and preview of the second season (currently available on the web and on demand cable channels) are any indication, the show has upped the ante in the way of star power, bringing back Bernadette Peters and adding Jennifer Hudson as an already-successful stage star.  If you follow the real-life rising stars of Broadway, you might recognize the name Jeremy Jordan, most recently the star of the Broadway hit "Newsies," who joins the show as an up and coming composer/performer.  I really loved his first appearance toward the end of the preview episode, where he sings a wonderful song "Broadway Here I Come," written by another real-life up and coming musical theatre pro, Joe Iconis.  I've had the pleasure of seeing Joe perform in NYC and he's one talented guy.  Even the ensemble that makes up the "cast" of "Marilyn" features some very talented dancers and singers.  I've enjoyed seeing dancers I recognize, including Alex Wong a fabulous dancer from the original cast of "Newsies" (and a former contestant on "So You Think You Can Dance") and Spencer Liff (a choreographer whose work I've admired on SYTYCD).

If you like story-driven primetime dramas that don't have to take place primarily in the courtroom and/or involve abundant violence, and enjoy a bit of sudsy romance, great music, and a unique setting (behind the scenes of a musical theatre venture), give "Smash" a try!  The first season is also available on the web and on demand, and will shortly be available on DVD.  The show's Wikipedia page is also a great overview of story, characters and cast.


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"Slings and Arrows" / Canadian television series which ran from 2003-2006 / available on DVD (Netflix streaming as well)

I don't think I could do a synopsis better than the one from imbd.com:  "In the fictional town of New Burbage, legendary theatrical madman Geoffrey Tennant returns to the New Burbage Theatre Festival, the site of his greatest triumph and most humiliating failure, to assume the artistic directorship after the sudden death of his mentor, Oliver Welles. When Geoffrey arrives he finds that Oliver is still there, in spirit anyway, and with his guidance (and often in spite of it) Geoffrey attempts to reconcile with his past while wrestling the festival back from the marketing department. Despite a bitter leading lady, a clueless leading man, and a scheming general manager, he manages to stage a remarkable production of Hamlet -- the play that drove him mad."

I am currently only part of the way into the second season, and so far it's a hoot!  I was introduced to the show via Twitter, after seeing it mentioned several times by some theatre folk I follow.  It was easy to find on Netflix (instant streaming available) and I was quickly drawn into the wacky world of New Burbage, its quirky denizens, theatrical and otherwise, and the constant question of whether the show will go in...in spite of itself :).  The fact that the company focuses on the works of Shakespeare just adds to the fun!

The show reminds me a bit of "Northern Exposure"  or "Ballykissangel" in the willing suspension of disbelief that it elicits from me; especially with the cast of characters, all of whom I find myself rooting for, no matter their relative madness!  I have a strong feeling I'm going to be sad when I get to the end of the episodes.

By the way, you might notice a young Rachel McAdams (around the time she gained fame with the film "The Notebook") as the hopeful ensemble member desperate to make it as an actor.


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"Submissions Only" / web series / Season 3 in the works, first two seasons available on the show's site

What's not to love about a hilarious peek into the trials and tribulations of auditioning for the theatre?  This series, created by two uber-talented actors, Kate Wetherhead and Andrew Keenan-Bolger, centers on the character of "Penny," (played by Wetherhead), a reader for a casting agent (with aspirations of course, both on the stage and in love).  The series has garnered an avid fan base; the third season is the result of a successful kickstarter campaign.  It has a constant stream of recognizable faces, both from stage (Keenan-Bolger, Anne Nathan, Beth Leavel, Annaleigh Ashford) and screen (Jesse Tyler Ferguson made a cameo during the finale of the second season).  If you want to see the full list, here's a link to the show's page on imdb.com.

The deadpan delivery of the snarky, not-so-assisting assistant, "Gail" (Lindsay Nicole Chambers) is always fun, as is the capable Colin Hanlon as "Tim," the casting agent who must deal with the revolving door of crazy that brings in auditioning actors, predatory producers and his friend Penny in the throes of her latest misadventure.

I've seen and enjoyed both Andrew Keenan-Bolger and Kate Wetherhead on stage as well; Andrew in "Newsies," and Kate in "The Other Josh Cohen," and it's a treat to see their talents aimed this way!

Each episode runs about 15-20 minutes; a perfect "snack" of giggles and grins with a theatre theme.

So, if you like the theatre, and want to enjoy it in a slightly different way, you might give one or more of these a try.  I'm glad I did!

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Do it again 2012.... 

1/3/2013

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I've always loved that old Lifesavers commercial that had the child saying "Do it again, Daddy" after watching the sunset.  There are lots of times I think we all feel like that about life moments..."do it again, universe, do it again."

I saw nearly 150 shows in the calendar year of 2012, and instead of a "Top 10" or "Best of" list, I decided to compile a list of the shows that left me thinking "do it again, please" right then~I didn't want the feeling I had at the end of the show to go away.  As an experiment, I'm making this list based on my gut instincts and trying not to over think.  As a result, they are not in any particular order.  This is not to say that I didn't want to (and did) see other shows more than once, and/or thought them wonderful and very worth seeing; these just comprise the "experience cream" that rose to the top of the theatre pot I stirred this year.


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  • Once The Musical
  • Peter and the Starcatcher
  • The Columnist (Manhattan Theatre Club)
  • Harvey (Roundabout Theatre Company)
  • Encores! Merrily We Roll Along  (New York City Center)
  • Pippin (A.R.T. American Repertory Theatre / Boston)
  • Godspell (final performances)
  • Chaplin
  • Fun Home (Public Theater)
  • Really, Really  (Signature Theatre / Arlington, VA)
  • Stick Fly
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (Classic Stage Company)
  • Into The Woods / Shakespeare in the Park (Public Theater)
  • Ann (Kennedy Center / Washington DC)
  • Red Hot Patriot  (Arena Stage / Washington DC)
  • Dogfight  (Second Stage Theatre)
  • Assassins Reunion Concert (Roundabout Theatre Company)
  • The Mystery of Edwin Drood (Roundabout Theatre Company)
  • Priscilla Queen of the Desert (final performance)
  • The Normal Heart (tour)
  • Tribes  (Barrow Street Theatre)
  • The Other Josh Cohen  (SoHo Playhouse)
  • Murder Ballad  (Manhattan Theatre Club)
  • Baby Case (New York Musical Theatre Festival show)

Now these are not necessarily all shows that opened in 2012~Godspell and Priscilla both played their final performances in 2012 and those final performances were amazing experiences, so they made the list.
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And now that I've made the list, these are a few shows that came to mind after I've given myself more time to consider:  Newsies (a fantastic cast giving a memorable performance), The Best Man (a truly all-star cast including Angela Lansbury & James Earl Jones), The Break (a staged reading of a new musical at Signature Theatre in Virginia).

I'm always a bit overwhelmed by my eclectic tastes, and this list represents such a diversity!  But I feel as if it's a real testament to the choices in theatre we are fortunate enough to be offered.  
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In brief, the list includes:
  • substantial-budget Broadway musicals (Once, Chaplin, Peter and the Starcatcher, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Godspell), 
  • and Broadway plays (The Columnist, Stick Fly, Harvey); 
  • a small Off Broadway play (Tribes), 
  • and small Off Broadway musicals (Fun Home, Dogfight, The Other Josh Cohen, Murder Ballad); 
  • a touring show (The Normal Heart); 
  • one-actor shows about real people (Ann, Red Hot Patriot); 
  • limited-run, special events (Encores! Merrily We Roll Along, Into The Woods, Assassins Reunion Concert); 
  • a new play and a musical revival in development but with big potential (Really, Really, Pippin).  
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Time-wise, the shows cover the entire year; some are from early on and some I just saw in December.  

They also represent shows with famous actors (John Lithgow, Kathleen Turner, Neil Patrick Harris, Bebe Neuwirth, Christina Ricci); Broadway stars (Will Swenson, Celia Keenan-Bolger, Christian Borle) and with lesser-known (but no less talented!) actors that I will absolutely follow to their next project (Rob McClure, Lindsay Mendez, among others).  


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Geographically, they cover Arlington,Virginia; Washington, DC; New York City and Boston...and they include shows that made intimate spaces seem enormous, and shows that made cavernous theaters seem intimate.  Not one of these shows inspired agreement among those I know that saw them; all that mattered was how they made me feel.
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By the way, I'm completely confident that 2013 will live up to its older sibling, and it begins tonight with C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters, from The Shakespeare Theatre Company here in DC.  Can't wait to get started!

These marquees are of three of the 2013 shows on the calendar; and I'm also really looking forward to Motown The Musical and Kinky Boots!

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p.s. If you go to the Stage Left...Behind cover page, you can see when I saw each of the shows, and link to the month page with that show's comments.  December is listed on Stage Right...Now.
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Gifting through theater...

12/22/2012

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It's not just for the holidays, this gifting thing :), and the nice thing about theater-themed gifts is that they are generally suited for any gift-giving time.  

I know what you're thinking, but I pinkie swear that this is not an elf-serving gift grab.  It just occurred to me that my own love of all things theater  might be helpful for those of you attempting to choose gifts for other theater-lovers.  Many gifts that I think would greatly please a theater-lover are easy to order, easy to wrap and sure to earn you a place in someone's heart.  If you're having trouble finding just the right present, here are some things you might consider (and even if your giftee is only a fan of a particular show, you can find targeted treasures by show as well!):

  • For the holidays, theater-themed ornaments from Playbillstore.com: (gift certificates are also available):

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  • For the memorabilia-saver on your list, from Playbillstore.com:
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  • Or perhaps you know someone who just saves their tickets to all sorts of events: theater, concerts, galas, their child's recitals.  Uncommongoods.com, which has a wonderful selection of creative and unique gifts, has this ticket stub diary available.  You may also find it other places, but I like this merchant, so I'm linking to them this time :).

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  • Gifts that give from the online store for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS:   


(BCEFA store is closed from 12/21-1/2, so these won't work for Christmas, but some are available from Playbillstore.com)

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  • Gift certificate to a theater in the giftee's area:  below are links for The Kennedy Center in DC, New York City Center in NYC and Wolf Trap Center for the Performing Arts in Virginia.  In some cases, the theater may use one particular ticket service, such as Telecharge (Lincoln Center for example) or Ticketmaster (Signature Theatre in Virginia) and then a gift certificate to that service may be an option.  I have had a good experience with Telecharge gift certificates (see next idea).
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  • Gift certificate to Telecharge.com (source for many Broadway shows~but not all); this would work for someone who you know is planning a trip to NYC and wants to see a show.  But if you think they're leaning towards seeing a particular show, check that show's ticket link first to confirm the service being used.
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  • Books, cast recordings, DVDs:  For these categories, I'd check Amazon.com first as the return policy is apt to be better. You can search by show or just search "theater" or "Broadway." If you'd like to give the gift of music and are not sure what cast recording the person would like (or has already), an iTunes gift card to purchase Broadway cast recordings will work fine.  Below is a sampling from current offerings on Amazon.
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  • And I have to throw a toy in the mix for good measure!  The "Be a Broadway Star" board game is a fun choice for a range of ages!

  • If you know that your giftee attends a particular theater with regularity; e.g., The Public Theater or Lincoln Center in NYC, The Kennedy Center in DC, Signature Theatre in Virginia, many theaters have membership programs that aren't ticket subscriptions, but instead offer a range of benefits such as discounts, hotline access, priority ticketing, etc.  They are usually less expensive than subscriptions, and still benefit the theater.  Below are some links to membership pages.
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  • If your recipient is also a generous soul and appreciates donations made in their name; and you know they frequent a particular theater in their area, I can't think of a theater that wouldn't appreciate a donation, especially the smaller theaters that depend on local support.  Most theater websites have a page devoted to donations.  Below are three examples of regional theaters with links to their donation pages: The Keegan Theatre in DC; The Vineyard Theatre in NYC and The American Repertory Theater in Boston.
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Personally, I've received, and given, many of the above and been very happy with the results on both sides.  There are some that are more difficult to give than others if you're not completely certain of your giftee's personal taste (memberships, donations), but if you can ask a few pertinent, discrete questions, you may be able to narrow down your options.  Here's hoping you get standing ovations from anyone lucky enough to receive a gift from you!!
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