By André Hereford on July 3, 2022 @here4andre
Imagine being a Black man on trial in a segregated courtroom in Depression-era Alabama, accused of raping a local farmer’s daughter, and mounting your defense before an all-white, all-male jury of local farmers.
It’s hard to imagine that man getting a fair trial, even if he were innocent, which happens to be the case in To Kill a Mockingbird (★★★★☆), Aaron Sorkin’s riveting adaptation of Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.
At some point in U.S. history, the race, class, and gender dynamics driving Lee’s combustible scenario might feel quaint, laughably antiquated, obsolete. We’re not there yet. Mockingbird‘s Southern-fried courtroom drama still holds plenty of compelling truth in its reflection of racial injustice.
The accused, Tom Robinson (Yaegel T. Welch), a Negro in official ’30s parlance, faces the electric chair — if a lynch mob doesn’t get their hands on him first. And seemingly all that stands between Tom and his worst fate is the most decent and honest white man in the county, a self-described country lawyer named Atticus Finch.
For this smooth-running touring iteration of director Bartlett Sher’s Tony-winning Broadway production, Richard Thomas embodies Atticus in all his goodness, and complex moral reasoning.
Enshrined in the American imagination as an honest and decent country boy, Thomas injects just enough self-doubt and self-awareness into his portrayal to complicate the character’s heroic standing without diminishing him as a model of integrity.
Sorkin’s play — narrated by both Atticus’ precocious daughter, Scout (Melanie Moore), and willful teenage son, Jem (Justin Mark) — draws attention to Atticus’ tendency to excuse the bigotry and racial animus expressed by their “friends and neighbors,” while also encouraging his kids to treat all people equally. Don’t judge a man unless you’ve walked a mile in his skin, he admonishes Jem and Scout.
Atticus gets called out on his contradictions by the family’s cook Calpurnia, played with wit and savvy by Jacqueline Williams. Jem, increasingly frustrated with his father’s tolerance of their neighbors’ intolerance, also is critical, deeming Atticus to be meek in the face of corruption and hatred.
Thomas and Mark layer Atticus and Jem’s father-son conflict with love and respect, thus really putting the sting in the boy’s disappointment, or in his dad raising his voice in anger. On the other hand, in moments of deep sympathy between the two, the actors engender a tenderness that heals all wounds.
Moore adeptly juggles Scout’s role as guileless innocent and trusty tour guide to the town, often our eyes and ears on events just partly dramatized. Her Alabama accent wavers — and intentionally or not sounds dead-on like Amy Poehler’s hyper kid character Kaitlin on SNL — but the characterization works.
The Finch family rapport, abetted by Williams as Calpurnia, reinforces their bond with the audience as the household comes under attack, literally and figuratively. The script and direction pace the relevant reveals of the court case with masterful timing, which applies almost equally to the humor, except that a few comic beats are banged too heavily.
There’s nothing heavy at all in Miriam Buether’s graceful scenic design. Pieces glide in, descend softly, or are gently rolled into place, linking to turn a bare stage into a courtroom, or into the front porch of the Finch house. The town comes to life in the setting, as well as in the ensemble.
Yaegel T. Welch as courageous defendant Tom Robinson, Steven Lee Johnson as visiting-for-the-summer Dill, and Richard Poe as shrewd Judge Taylor offer solid approaches in support. Joey Collins’ performance as Bob Ewell, the ornery father of alleged victim Mayella, tips towards parody of a redneck villain, but Arianna Gayle Stucki is fairly mesmerizing as the prevaricating farmer’s daughter.
Mary Badham, who, at age 10, played Scout in the film version (becoming the then-youngest ever Oscar nominee for Best Supporting Actress), gives a feisty turn as crotchety, mean-for-no-good-reason Mrs. Henry DuBose.
Though, as funny as it is watching DuBose rampantly insulting everyone who crosses her path, she’s an eerily potent example of the sort of hatred that keeps this story current, and keeps honest and decent folks fighting for justice.
To Kill a Mockingbird runs through July 10 in the Kennedy Center Opera House. Tickets are $49 to $199. Call 202-467-4600, or visit www.kennedy-center.org.
By Doug Rule on July 17, 2022 @ruleonwriting
Over the next few weeks, the Kennedy Center features a bevy of appealing, original, and widely diverse programming to lure you. The main immediate attraction at the moment is "The Black Outside Again Weekend with Amanda Seales," a three-event program put together by the comedian/actor known for playing Tiffany DuBois on HBO's Insecure and also a former co-host of The Real.
The weekend kicks off with a live version of Seales's music/comedy trivia game Smart Funny & Black, described as "a head-to-head battle of wits knowledge of Black history, Black culture, and the Black experience" (7/22, Concert Hall), followed by a live taping of the podcast Small Doses with Amanda Seales in which the host "brings you potent truths for everyday use" (7/23, Terrace Theater), and concluding with the standup special "An Evening with Amanda Seales" (7/23, Concert Hall).
By André Hereford on July 22, 2022 @here4andre
Lifted by the bright, buoyant spirit of young love, Anything's Possible (★★★☆☆) conjures a sweet romance between high school seniors Kelsa (Eva Reign) and Khal (Abubakr Ali). The film doesn't radically shake up the modern romantic-comedy formula, except by centering this teenage love story around a teen who happens to be trans.
Played with verve and confidence by newcomer Reign, Kelsa is enjoying life as a smart, fashionable, relatively well-adjusted, and socially stable cool girl at Pittsurgh's River Point High.
Whatever major issues or anxieties she's dealing with, she generally channels into the video diary that she posts online, but keeps from her exceptionally supportive -- and protective -- mom Selene (Tony-winner Renée Elise Goldsberry).
By Sean Maunier on July 11, 2022
For anyone who has been waiting too long to get out of the house and into the sun, Muna has delivered a shimmering queer soundtrack for the rest of the summer. Easily their strongest album yet, Muna (★★★★☆) is as intimate and relatable as their best work, but on this outing, they are more energetic, celebratory, and outwardly confident than they have ever been before.
The L.A.-based trio's third album opens with last year's "Silk Chiffon," a track that NPR aptly called a "queerworm" in their roundup of 2021's best songs.
It couldn't have hurt that their runaway hit was collaboration with Phoebe Bridgers, whose Saddest Factory Records label they signed to after being dropped by their previous one, a pivot that by all accounts is working out pretty well for them. "Silk Chiffon" easily became their biggest song to date, and it's probably fair to say it built a lot of hype for the upcoming album outside their already devoted fanbase.
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