Category Archives: Theater for kids

5 (Wild & Crazy) Little Monkeys at Adventure Theatre MTC

This weekend marks the opening of Adventure Theatre MTC’s 5 Little Monkeys, the fifth production of the theatre’s season. Settling into the show’s final dress rehearsal on Thursday night, I wondered to myself: how in the world are they going to take a short children’s book about 5 monkeys falling off the bed and turn it into an entertaining hour-long production?

Why oh why, when it comes to Adventure Theatre MTC, do I ever ask why? I should know better by now.

Which monkey is your kid most like? Photo Credit: Adventure Theatre MTC

Directed by Karin Abromaitis and produced by Michael J. Bobbitt, the cast of 5 Little Monkeys and one extremely patient and forgiving mother, takes us through the seemingly innocuous parts of any parent’s, human or apparently monkey, day with young children and sheds light on how absolutely nothing is simple with a gaggle of children in tow. Valerie Leonard is exceptional as the patient and even-tempered mother of 5 rambunctious monkeys and as she introduces the audience to monkeys 1-5, she skillfully describes each monkey’s temperament.

I quickly identified monkey #3 as most-like my youngest and monkey #4 as most-like my oldest. Read: trouble-maker and curious, and bookish and rule-follower. I am sure every parent in the audience will surmise which monkey is most similar to their children, which is part of the fun. The play opens at the start of what turns out to be, for momma monkey, a very long, trying day. In the beginning, the mischievous monkeys beautifully convey the chaos and mess that ensues when children take on any kind of baking project, in this instance, making a birthday cake for mom (one day early). After successfully destroying the kitchen, starting a fire in the oven, and bringing the fire truck out to the house, the cast then leads us to a picnic in the park.

What could possibly go wrong?

Anyone who has ever taken several young kids to the park themself knows exactly what could go wrong – though without spoiling it – there is a surprise animal appearance during this park outing that particularly delighted my reptile-obsessed monkey #3  three-year-old. We especially loved that plot twist.

These monkeys must wear her out. Photo Credit: Adventure Theatre MTC

The final outing for the monkey crew is to the store for new clothes. Again, shopping with young kids is not efficient or for the faint of heart, as Leonard repeatedly loses some, or most, of her monkeys that day. I could relate, trust moi.  By this point in the play, I began to wonder if they were actually just going to ignore the jumping on the beds premise of the book, but fret not, they saved the very part the kids are familiar with for the show’s conclusion. The actors who so energetically and skillfully portray young children also take on other character roles throughout the show, which is  elegantly performed in rhyming prose, including shopkeepers, fire men and of course, the Doctor.

The entire time I sat there, I was in awe of the physical demand of this play on the actors. They must feel like they’ve just participated in a sprint triathlon at the end of each production, frankly I was tired for them. But it’s just this – the highly physical element and comedy of this play – that makes it the ideal show for younger kids especially. Afterall, this book particularly appeals to the youngest monkeys among us, and I love that Adventure Theatre MTC offers such a variety of productions throughout the year that even 2-and-3-year-olds can enjoy the thrill of going to the theatre and come away wanting to go again. Also very noteworthy – the costumes in this production. I loved the bright and cheerful colors of each monkey’s costume but I especially loved the monkey hair on the legs and heads of some of the monkeys – I couldn’t figure out how they made it but it’s fantastic.

5 Little Monkeys is on through June 3. Tickets are $18 each and can be purchased online or by calling 301-634-2270. I’d definitely encourage you all to soak in this play, especially if you have younger monkeys at home. It’s a fun and entertaining hour-long production.

Disclosure: Adventure Theatre MTC invited me and my guests to the final dress rehearsal but my opinions here are my own.

Imagination Stage’s Rapunzel: As much for moms as for kids

Baby snatcher or not...I loved the witch...and her costume. Photo Credit: Imagination Stage

Full disclosure: as a kid, Rapunzel was always my least favorite of the Disney’fied stories. I never really understood why Rapunzel was such a push over and just didn’t crawl down the tower, even if her mom was a witch. And then, of course, the fact that her mom wasn’t really her mom but a child kidnapper is bound to unsettle any child.  So I chalked it up as a creepy tale and moved on. Then I became a mother to two young girls and frankly, locking them up in a high tower often strikes me as an appealing idea. As does having magical witch powers. On Sunday, we attended Imagination Stage’s production of Rapunzel and heading into it, I already knew I’d like the witch, but I was ill-prepared for how much I would like all the characters and their modern twist on the Grimm fairytale.

Directed by Kathryn Chase Bryer and performed by just a cast of four extremely talented actors, Imagination Stage’s Rapunzel is a spring musical you don’t want to miss. It is billed as a “musical fairy tale about letting your hair down,” and what you could easily overlook is that the show is just as much about Rapunzel letting her hair down as it is about parents letting their kids find their own freedom. The story line skillfully ignores the Witch as a kidnapper and instead portrays her as a flawed human being; a mother who actually means well and wants what’s best for her daughter, just makes a few too many controlling mistakes along the way.

We’ve all been there, I’m sure. And in this day of constant media attention around American mother’s apparent need for perfection and helicopter parenting, I found it refreshing and relaxing to sit through 90 minutes of an imperfect mother making mistakes (again, let’s conveniently ignore kidnapping) and her child pushing boundaries, for them both to discover the importance of letting go and respecting each other.

So why else did I love this production?

Umm..the costumes and of course, the actors. Imagination Stage always gets it right. The whole time I couldn’t help but wonder, do they have sales

The fabulous cast of Rapunzel. Photo Credit: Imagination Stage

 because I’d be the first in line to purchase some of those costumes for future Halloween’s. Again, back to the witch, Gillian Shelly, who made her Imagination Stage debut. Her costume, particularly at the beginning, with the vegetable garden incorporated into her cape, was outstanding. I coveted her green wig and her striped stockings the entire time. And her sparkly magical black ring that gave her boundless power, of course.

#powerhungry

 Jonathan Atkinson starred as Prince Brian and he rocked a Euro club look which was endlessly amusing, along with his wig.  I loved that Rapunzel was not a white blond actress but instead was played by an African-American actress, Felicia Curry. The added touch of the flowers inserted into her ridiculously long braid was a great detail. And finally, last but certainly not least, was hilarious Simon, Prince Brian’s valet, played by Michael John Casey. He skillfully played several different parts throughout the show, including a grass-eating cow, but it was his smooth dance moves to charm the witch that really won me over. He was down right hilarious.

About the costumes, Director Kathryn Chase Bryer said, “There is a feeling that these tales are ancient and therefore timeless. When I began conversations with the designers about the world of Rapunzel, we all agreed that though the story takes place in ‘fairytaleland,’ this script has a modern feel to it and we wanted to capture the feeling. To that end, we have come up with some really extreme costume ideas that feel modern, even futuristic in some ways, and we juxtapose this high fashion style with a set reminiscent of a classical fairytale.”

Couldn’t have said it better myself……

Imagination Stage is marketing the play as appropriate for ages 4 and up, which of course I ignored and brought along my theatre-obsessed almost 3.5 year old. I now concede that they are right and there is no reason to bring anyone under the age of 4 to the play. With an intermission, it was easily 90 plus minutes long and the story line and lesson just aren’t suitable for the youngest among us. In short: it went over my 3-year-old’s head. The singing and the dancing were entertaining enough to keep her captivated for most of the first half but once intermission was over with, she was eager to go home. My six-year-old sat there mesmerized, enthralled and delighted the entire time.  A few times I glanced over to just see her mouth gaping open a bit and sheer delight on her face, which really, is what taking our kids to these musicals is all about, right?

Ticket prices range from $10-$22 and the musical has now been extended until May 26. My advice: hurry up and purchase your tickets before it’s sold out. Purchase your tickets online  or call 301-280-1660.  Though I don’t review many activities, I am a theater hound and tend to review lots of plays, especially children’s theater in DC, so to keep up with more reviews and other fun, frolic and witchy ideas, “Like” the Wired Momma Facebook page.

Disclosure: Imagination Stage gifted the tickets to me but my opinions here are all my own. In short: we loved it!

Alexander had a terrible, no good, horrible, very bad day

Alexandar and most of the first-rate cast in the opening scene. Photo Credit: Bruce Douglas

For anyone who’s ever had a bad day, whether you are four years old or 74 years old, this one’s for you. Adventure Theatre’s production of Judith Viorst’s book, Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good Very Bad Day, can take your bad day and put it into perspective in 60 short minutes. And there’s nothing better than “bad” in kid perspective to shift a grouchy adult mood, let’s be honest. With a script written almost more for parents than the kids, much to my delight, the new musical at Adventure Theatre will have you in stitches from the opening scene to the very end.

The musical performance is led by Parker Drown (2010 Helen Hayes Award Recipient for Outstanding Lead Actor, Resident Musical), who stars as Alexander, complete with his bright red hair. But his supporting cast is equally as strong, ebullient and charming with their hilarious shenanigans. Honestly, as someone who has a regular running joke with her younger sister that she needs to desperately go get a new face, they had me hooked when that was one of the first things Alexander’s brothers said about him in the opening scenes. Call  me Beavis or Butthead, but I love that sort of snarky, bratty sibling behavior, and it’s woven throughout this delightful musical.

I am embarrassed to admit that we don’t actually have this book chez moi but I certainly plan to go out and purchase it now. If you are Alexander-illiterate, as was I, then you can easily gather that Alexander’s day starts off lousy and the misery builds from there.  The charm of the musical is the way the adult-actors realistically portray what makes for a bad kid day. Starting his day off with gum in his hair, forgetting to draw a picture for school and then his mother failing to pack desert in his lunch are just some of the reasons the day is bad, early on, in the horrible, no good day. The desert scene was one of my favorites. While all his friends are enjoying their sweet treats lovingly packed by their parents, Alexander is pouting, and his mother is wheeled in carrying an enormous banana split, taunting him.

Love it.

Now what could take a bad day and make it worse?

One of my favorite scenes: Alexander and the dreaded Dentist. Photo Credit: Bruce Douglas

The dentist, of course! And in this production, it’s like watching a scene out of Little Shop of Horrors, with the thick-German accented plunger-yielding Dentist, naturally.  The elaborate kid-imagination that this cast brings to life on stage is entertaining and top rate. Honestly, Adventure Theatre is a gem that we are so lucky to have access to with our kids.

Directed by Gail Humphries with music by Shelly Markham, this production is the fourth production of Adventure Theatre’s 2011-2012 60th Anniversary Season. Tickets are $18 each. The performance opened just this weekend and runs until April 9th. Given that it’s such a delightful way to spend an hour, I’m guessing it’s safe to assume the tickets will go fast, so I wouldn’t waste any time. Frankly, I’m tempted to see it again. Adventure Theatre recommends this play for children ages 4 and up. I did bring my three-year-old, to an evening performance at that, and she loved it – but it is a little bit longer than most other Adventure Theatre productions, so keep that in mind when making your decision.

Also, be sure to bring some gently used or new shoes when you go to the show.  Adventure Theatre’s Community Engagement projects continue in partnership with Souls4Soles.org: Changing the World one pair at a time. For the duration of Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, bring your new or gently used sneakers to Adventure Theatre’s lobby to benefit Souls4Soles.org, a national program that ships new or gently used shoes to people all over the world who need them- (including Australia)!
 

Disclosure: Adventure Theatre invited me to the final dress rehearsal of this performance. It was a treat to see it on the eve of opening night, without a doubt. The opinions here are all my own.

“The Snowy Day” – a warm winter musical delight

“You’re never too old for snow,” beamed Peter “The Great,” in Adventure Theatre’s new musical production of The Snowy Day based on the Caldecott Award Winning book by Ezra Jack Keats. And there couldn’t have been truer words than on Saturday, the first snowy day of the winter, when we attended this magical performance. My girls were beaming with excitement was we hustled through Glen Echo Park and they stomped through slushy snow and squealed the entire way to the front door.

The Snowy Day...a delightful book & wonderful musical

Peter the Great, played by Alan Wiggins, does an outstanding job of genuinely exuding the youthful thrill over a first snow that only a kid can feel. And what is captured so well by the supporting cast of the musical is how every one of us truly delights in snow, regardless of age, along with watching our children enjoy it for the very first time. Personally, I absolutely loved the bright red snow suit Peter wears, identical to the one in the book, because  its bright color really stands out beautifully against the urban back drop of the set and the magical, glistening snow, who also play a role in the musical. Harold the Snowman, Roberta the Crow and George the Pirate serve as excellent supporting characters to Peter. As the mother of an avid-pirate-loving three-year-old girl, just the pirate hat resting on Peter’s bed before the play even began served as enough to keep her attention but then the actual presence of a “snow pirate” – who even knew there were snow pirates – delighted her more than I can explain.

As the musical continues with Peter playfully experiencing his first snow, he happens upon Harold, the leg-less Snowman determined to get to the North Pole to avoid melting. Peter soon delivered my favorite line of the musical as he explains he can’t travel to the North Pole with Harold because he can’t travel beyond his block, as directed by his mother. The snowman asks “What’s a mom?” and Peter dead pans “Someone you don’t want to mess with.”

Loved it. That’s about right.  Someone you don’t mess with, kids. And husbands….

The two soon embark upon an adventure that at times, feels a bit like the Wizard of Oz, each character challenging their own perceived limitations, as they befriend Roberta, the very colorful and bright Crow. Roberta is trying to head South, though she can’t fly, and Harold needs to head North, though he’s just gotten legs thanks to Peter’s industrious thinking to make them for him. In the end, ironically, it is George the Pirate who helps Harold reach his destination.  The singing and dancing are well choreographed and interspersed in nicely to break up the dialogue and keep the younger kids’ attention. The addition of the snow as a supporting character was a really unexpected, and fitting twist, and is part of a final surprise for the entire audience at the end of the play. I can’t spoil it for you, of course! But rest assured, the children will love it.

Directed by Jessica Burgess with music and lyrics by Howard University’s Darius Smith, this show is the second of Adventure Theatre’s African American Adventures Series, a series of five world-premiere musicals based on the African-American experience written by African-American artists. Tickets are $18 each, with group and field trip rates available, and can be purchased through the box office by calling 301-634-2270 or online at www.adventuretheatre.org.  Children under the age of 1 are free. My three-year-old was very interested in the musical, which lasts just under an hour, though I would be hard pressed to want to bring a child younger than three to see it. My six-year-old asked to go again as soon as we left the theatre.

The Snowy Day just opened this past weekend and runs through February 12, so hurry up and purchase your tickets while they’re still available. Beyond a delightful way to spend an hour, it’s another great indoor activity for these cold winter weekends.

This just in – Adventure Theatre has added the following performances:

Sunday, January 29th at 4:30pm
Friday, February 3rd at 7:00pm
Sunday, February 5th at 4:30pm
Friday, February 10th at 7:00pm
Sunday, February 12th at 4:30pm

Disclosure: Adventure Theatre gifted me the tickets but my opinions here are my own.