Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Plugging along

The theatrical life has certainly been continuing in fits and spurts since the last post. We've seen quite a fair bit of it; and during a week-long vacation, the long play Reunions was essentially wrapped and readied for submission, while further progress was made on newer full-length work-in-progress Rehearsals. While I have been diverted lately by converting another older novel manuscript into a digital version, I feel reasonably good about play progress at the moment.

On the play-going front, we saw a very delightful The King and I done at the Weaver Academy in Greensboro, starring Carlos Nieto, Mara Norris and her daughter Skye. A very nice production throughout. Two days later, we saw The Sound of Music done in Winston-Salem at Stained Glass, with Cameron Williams and Mary Lea Williams. Overall, also very pleasing, though we wished that they could have found two young men for the "family" who could also sing.

We were unfortunately crunched for time when the National Black Theatre Festival got to town, as it does every other year. We only got to two productions, but Knock Me a Kiss was quite good. We also saw two shows paired, one about singer Lena Horne and the other about Harriet Tubman. The Lena Horne show was just so-so. But Spirit of Harriet Tubman was a knock-out. The one-woman show was deeply impressive and moving -- what an actress! It deserved wider exposure than it got.

I mentioned a couple of blogs back that my short script, "At The Shrine," was accepted for production as part of the first-time "The Top :10" at the Franklin Park Arts Center, up in Virginia. We drove up on August 5 and caught the opening of three performances on Friday night. What fun. I honestly believe I had the best director and the best cast and, well, by popular vote, nearly the best script. We came away thinking there were three contenders for the Best Script -- and one of them won. I fell short by two votes, apparently. Pretty good!

But more excitingly from my standpoint is that the short play won Best Overall Production and one of two Best Actor awards, for the woman who played Grandma Clemmons in the play. It would have been a travesty, IMHO, if she had NOT won. Our friend Lissa and son Andy were with us, so all in all, quite a wonderful theatrical excursion!

And the following night, my beloved wife and trusted first reader, Kathy, was given a Lifetime Honorary Member award from Kernersville Little Theatre. Delicious icing on our cake!