Monday, December 31, 2007

Your Top 10 2007 Theatre Picks?

So Karen D'Souza from the Merc published her top 10 local theatre picks for the year 2007.

a) I think it's sad I've seen NONE of them. Proves that I totally de-emphasized attending cultural events this year...from theatre to concerts to even movies in the movie theatre. When I focus on work, I really focus. It can be a great thing. It can be a little too much too.

b) I also think it's sad that a San Jose columnist has only one show on her list that wasn't in San Francisco or Berkeley. having not seen a lot of theatre in any part of the Bay Area this year I can't say whether it's a sad statement about the state of South Bay and Peninsula theatre or a sad statement about the pretentious preference our San Jose paper shows for theatre from our friends to the North and East, but it's sad either way.

I'm not saying I had any transcendent San Jose theatre experiences, I probably didn't, but then I went to the theatre only about half a dozen times this year! (Ouch.) The only transcendent experience I had was Spring Awakening in New York.

So, those of you who DID see a lot of great theatre this year...what is D'Souza missing?

Comments:
The Contra Costa Times published a similar list you can see below. There are a few overlaps in the picks. One funny thing is that The Merc has "Blackbird" as one of its top picks while the CC Times calls "Blackbird" a disappointment.

Here's the Contra Costa Times Article:
___________________________


Best of 2007: Bay Area theater
'Man and Superman' soared
By Pat Craig

STAFF WRITER

To get an idea of just how good Bay Area theater was in 2007, consider that the first three picks here will likely end up on my lifetime Top 10 list; or that 2007's best-of list could easily have included at least 10 more entries.

This was also a good year for new works -- Bay Area audiences, particularly those consisting of middle-school-aged girls, were the first to fall in love with the musical version of "Legally Blonde," which launched here, then became a hit on Broadway. San Francisco's Magic Theatre launched a number of shows, including "Rust," "Pleasure and Pain" and "The Crowd You're In With."

It was also a season of new and exciting looks at older works, with American Conservatory Theater's presentation of "Sweeney Todd," Berkeley Rep's production of "Oliver Twist," and the Willows Theatre's innovative take on "Cats."

The Top 10

1. "Man and Superman," California Shakespeare Theater -- A three-hour production of a century-old work is risky, even if the playwright is George Bernard Shaw. That's particularly so when it is performed outdoors on often-chilly summer nights in the Orinda hills. But the gamble paid off big for Jonathan Moscone and his Shakespeare Theater. The production, which included the often-omitted "Don Juan in Hell" portion, was a flawless masterpiece of theater.

2. "Argonautika," Berkeley Repertory Theatre -- This piece of very contemporary theater gives an exciting new look at the old myth of Jason and the Argonauts. The
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wildly innovative play offered a breathtaking blend of technical theater with sharp writing and memorable acting to be one of the season's best.

3. "Sweeney Todd," American Conservatory Theater -- The minimal retelling of Stephen Sondheim's astonishing musical about a revenge-seeking barber who slashes the throats of his customers so they can be made into meat pies offered a fresh and exciting look at the musical. It played in San Francisco at the start of its national tour.

4. "Defiance," Playhouse West -- The words from that old Buffalo Springfield song, "Nobody's right if everybody's wrong," echo through your mind during this short, troubling play about social and political ills bubbling just below the surface at a military training camp. The disturbing show unfolded in Playhouse West's tiny Walnut Creek theater and was an excellent reminder why this intimate theater company must stay alive.

5. "Oliver Twist," Berkeley Repertory Theatre -- The classic Dickens story of the plight of an orphan boy in 19th century London became a horrifying vaudeville show from the 1800s in this memorable retelling of the Oliver Twist story.

6. "Death of a Salesman," A Traveling Jewish Theatre -- Arthur Miller's signature play about the American Dream got a clear-eyed new look from the San Francisco theater group, which sought to explore the story's Jewish roots and hit the stage with a sparkling revival.

7. "Mousetrap" Center Repertory Company -- This Agatha Christie mystery, which has been playing London since Queen Elizabeth was young, is the play everyone knows, but nobody's seen. It got a rousing, attractive and wonderfully wrought production from Center Rep, who signed on an all-star cast to join in the whodunit fun.

8. "Cats," Willows Theatre Company -- This is not a play that normally makes Top 10 lists, but the Willows Theatre version is the exception. The production moves the cat tale from a junkyard to a schoolhouse to become a tribute to a teacher cat, and a show that makes much more sense and is considerably more entertaining then the overstuffed Broadway tabby. It plays through Dec. 30.

9. "Driving Miss Daisy," CTA Crossroads Theatre -- This is a touching tale of an older Southern Jewish woman and her relationship with her black driver. It was a wildly entertaining story, simply presented by the small Walnut Creek theater company by a hugely talented cast.

10. "Sex," Aurora Theatre Company -- Mae West wasn't just another come-hither face. The '20s prototype sex-bomb was also a playwright and an expert at highlighting and exploiting her particular charms. She wrote this show in 1923, the vice squad closed it on Broadway, and Berkeley's Aurora Theatre revived it hilariously.

The disappointments

These are the shows that were, for one reason or another, disappointments -- they weren't necessarily bad or poorly done, just presentations that didn't quite work.

1. "My Mother's Italian, My Father's Jewish, & I'm in Therapy" -- This was a nice, gently funny show that played as if it had been written in the late '50s or early '60s. It was well done, but just didn't deliver the anticipated laughs.

2. "Moscow Cat Circus" -- Cats, onstage, doing tricks. There, that's everything you need to know about this. Now, find something better to do with the rest of the 90 minutes of your life.

3. "Romeo and Julian," Butterfield 8 Theatre Company -- This bold, gender-bending retelling of the Shakespeare play was a gutsy experiment, particularly for a suburban company, but it just needed a bit more work on adapting the script.

4. "Blackbird" -- This ACT show came with a hard-edged reputation, as it candidly explored the aftermath of a man's relationship with an under-age girl. It did, but the intimate story got lost in the enormous American Conservatory Theater.

5. "Expedition 6" -- This production at the Magic Theatre, about astronauts in danger of losing their lives in outer space as the Iraq war unfolds on Earth, had some promise, including actors dangling like puppets above the stage to simulate weightlessness. But the show opened too soon, and might have worked with some tinkering and editing.
 
Thanks Ray.

Notice how this east Bay writer kept her focus pretty much on the East Bay with only a few detours to SF.

I've always considered a symptom of San Jose's inferiority complex that our own critics think they have to leave the entire South Bay to find art worth talking about.
 
Pillowman at Berk Rep was freaking amazing. How much of it was due to a spectacular script or to the acting; probably script.

Angels 2 at City Lights was darn amazing as well. Saw both 1 and 2 at City Lights, and this one blew me away. Hats off to Kit Wilder for getting a great cast. Kevin Kirby as Roy Cohen was a theatre memory that will stay with me for some time.

Had buddies that went to Argonautika at Berk Rep that said it was stunning, and friends that saw Sweeney at ACT.
 
I missed a lot more theater than I saw this year - and saw virtually nothing in SF and literally nothing in the East Bay. That said, my two favorite (local!) productions were Little Shop of Horrors at Cabrillo Stage and Merrily We Roll Along at TheatreWorks.
 
I that theater a lot hope to see ist again!
 
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