Showing posts with label Caitlin Boho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caitlin Boho. Show all posts

Thursday, April 4, 2013

THE ADDING MACHINE Opens Tomorrow at ISU

Elmer Rice's The Adding Machine has long been cited as a fine example of American expressionism. That means the tone is a bit surreal and strange, with a dark, nightmarish story and characters like Mr. Zero, the antihero hero, who personifies man's inhumanity during the Machine Age more than a real person.


Rice was a major player in American theatre in the early part of the 20th century, even though he wrote only two well-known plays, The Adding Machine and Street Scene, both of which made it to Broadway. Street Scene was made into a 1931 movie starring Sylvia Sidney. The Adding Machine also got a movie, but not till 1969. In that one, Milo O'Shea and Phyllis Diller (!) played Mr. and Mrs. Zero.

The plot is pretty simple, in an expressionistic and surprising sort of way. Mr. Zero is a nothing, a nobody, as you might guess from the name, and he works (and has worked for the last 25 years) as a bookkeeper at the same company. But progress marches on, and the day comes when the boss tells Mr. Zero he's been replaced by an adding machine. His job -- annoying and monotonous as it is -- is the only thing he has, and he strikes out when he's fired, killing his boss. That results in a murder trial and execution, after which Mr. Zero gets sent to the Elysian Fields. Happily ever after in the afterlife? Nope. He's still just a cog in a huge machine, doomed to continue to repeat his mistakes.

Companion pieces for The Adding Machine might be Fritz Lang's Metropolis, an example of German expressionism with a similar critique of industrialization at the expense of the worker, or Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times, which gives the Man vs. Machine issue a comic twist and a sweet, appealing hero, or Stairs to the Roof, a Tennessee Williams play inspired by The Adding Machine.

Third-year MFA director Jeremy Garrett has put his stamp on Illinois State University's Adding Machine, with David Fisch as Mr. Zero and Caitlin Boho as his nagging missus. Others in the cast include Storm Angone, Pat Boylan, Trace Gamache, Lizzy Haberstroh, Matt Helms, Dominique Jackson, Drew Mills, Kent Nusbaum, Jenny Oziemkowski, Jason Raymer, Allison Sokolowski, Kelly Steik, Kaitlyn Wehr and Arif Yampolsky. Jake Wasson is the scenic designer, with Olivia Crosby as costume designer and Deborah Smrz as lighting designer.
The play opens tomorrow night in the ISU Center for the Performing Arts, with performances at 7:30 pm through April 13, and one Sunday matinee on April 7 at 2 pm.

Click here or here for ticket information.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Now Playing: The ISU/Mary-Arrchie "Electra"

The big Illinois State University/Mary-Arrchie Theatre collaboration on "Electra" opened last night, with excellent reviews for the production itself and ISU actresses Emily Nichelson and Caitlin Boho as Electra and her vengeful mom, Clytemnestra.

Writing for ChicagoNow, Katy Walsh notes that family dysfunction like that on display in "Electra" never goes out of style. "Adapter and director Sonja Moser ambitiously attacks this ancient subject matter," writes Walsh. "Moser comes at it from several different angles. It’s part mythology lesson, part rock concert, part school pageant, part mud fight."

Walsh goes on to call "the dynamic harmonizing chorus (Gwen de Veer, Lauren Pfeiffer, Paula Nowak)" brilliant, and single out Boho and Nicholson. "Caitlin Boho (Clytemnestra) [is] outstanding as the statuesque mother," Walsh offers. "Her oration is delivered with commanding majesty. And then as Emily Nichelson (Electra) rants at her, Boho’s emotionless face has two tears run down it. WOW! Nichelson is her own little powerhouse of emotion. She spirals out of control at exhausting speed. And then she sings with divalicious ferocity. ELECTRA is a musical. And the finale is a melodious gift to the gods."

Boho and Nichelson are both reprising roles they played when this "Electra" first appeared at ISU, and they've both been seen on-stage in other roles locally.

Boho was Mary II in Sarah Ruhl's sweeping "Passion Play" last year, and she played Miss Jones in the Frank Loesser musical "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," where she brought down the house nightly with the big "Brotherhood of Man" anthem near the end of the show.

Nichelson appeared as naive Cecile in "Les Liaisons Dangereuses" at the Center for the Performing Arts, and in "Picasso at the Lapin Agile" and "Blackbird" at Centennial West.

"Electra" continues at Mary-Arrchie in Chicago through July 29, with performances on Friday and Saturday evenings at 8 pm and Saturday and Sunday afternoons at 3 pm. Ticket prices range from $15 to $20, and you can order them here.