06.03.2018 Views

TP_030818

The Tinley Junction 030818

The Tinley Junction 030818

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

30 | March 8, 2018 | The tinley junction Life & Arts<br />

tinleyjunction.com<br />

Curtain Call Theatre to bring ‘Enchanted April’ in March<br />

T.J. Kremer III, Editor<br />

Springtime is all about<br />

rebirth and discovery. All<br />

around Nature transforms<br />

from the cold and gloomy<br />

winter into the warm and vibrant<br />

spring.<br />

So it’s only appropriate<br />

that during the first two<br />

weekends in March, Curtain<br />

Call Theatre is scheduled to<br />

present its rendition of “Enchanted<br />

April” to the stage,<br />

a play that’s focused on<br />

transformation of the human<br />

heart and spirit.<br />

“It’s a story of self-discovery<br />

and coming to terms<br />

with, if you want to say baggage<br />

and demons and ghosts<br />

in your life,” said the play’s<br />

Director Mark Frost.<br />

Based on the 1922 novel,<br />

“The Enchanted April,” by<br />

Elizabeth von Arnim, the<br />

play follows the lives of four<br />

women who decide to shrug<br />

off dreary post-WWI London<br />

in favor of a holiday in<br />

Genoa, Italy.<br />

Two of the women, Rose<br />

Arnott and Lotty Wilton,<br />

who are acquainted through<br />

sight only at the same church<br />

but are both struggling with<br />

issues in their marriages,<br />

read an advertisement for a<br />

trip to Italy; however, they<br />

can’t afford the trip on their<br />

own, so they get two more<br />

women, the widow Mrs.<br />

Graves and young socialite<br />

Caroline Bramble, to help<br />

share the expenses.<br />

“Everyone is trying to escape<br />

dreary London for this<br />

beautiful enchantment that<br />

you will find at San Salvatore,<br />

[which] is the name of<br />

the castle where they go on<br />

holiday,” Frost said. “And,<br />

so, it’s a story of those interrelationships<br />

with each other,<br />

but then how they use those<br />

to figure out some things for<br />

themselves, and each one of<br />

them finds some transformation.<br />

And so I think that’s<br />

timeless because all of us,<br />

I think, have at times have<br />

Curtain Call Theatre will perform its rendition of “Enchanted April” on March 9 and 10 at<br />

11112 Front St. in Mokena. The play will feature several performers from Tinley Park and<br />

general admission tickets are $20. T.J. Kremer III/22nd Century Media<br />

things in our lives that don’t<br />

go the way we exactly plan<br />

them to be and we’re looking<br />

to transform ourselves,<br />

from time to time.”<br />

Lynn Meller, of Tinley<br />

Park, who plays Rose, said<br />

she connected with her<br />

character as a straight-andnarrow<br />

sort who has some<br />

disdain for others not like<br />

her, but, by the end, learns<br />

to accept her own need for<br />

change.<br />

“We all go through changes<br />

as we get older, as we find<br />

our place in life and what<br />

we are meant to be doing, or<br />

what we think we are meant<br />

to be doing, and that’s kind<br />

of what’s going on in this<br />

show,” Meller said.<br />

“We go on this trip to try<br />

and get away from people<br />

when we realize that wasn’t<br />

the entire point of what we<br />

should’ve been doing: We<br />

should’ve been trying to<br />

find out who we are as individuals,<br />

and then we can get<br />

back together with all of our<br />

friends and family and start<br />

anew in a way.”<br />

Dan McGrath, also of<br />

Tinley Park and is making<br />

his return to Curtain Call<br />

Theatre after a hiatus of a<br />

couple years, plays Mellersh<br />

Wilton, the husband of Lotty<br />

Wilton, who is an acquaintance<br />

of Rose. McGrath said<br />

his character, at first, represents<br />

a profound resistance<br />

to change.<br />

“He’s very prim and<br />

proper,” McGrath said. “He<br />

tends to think that the world<br />

revolves around him, especially<br />

with regard to everything<br />

in his immediacy, that<br />

he can have any kind of control<br />

and he wants to control<br />

it, including his wife.”<br />

Judie Brugler, of Frankfort,<br />

plays Costanza the Italian<br />

housekeeper. Brigler said<br />

her character is in the middle<br />

of all these transformations<br />

and unusual situations, and<br />

she doesn’t know quite what<br />

to make of it all; however,<br />

even Costanza gets caught<br />

in the transformative web by<br />

the end.<br />

One challenge for Brugler<br />

was the fact that none of her<br />

lines are in English.<br />

“All my lines are in Italian,”<br />

Brugler said.<br />

But, with the help of some<br />

friends from northern Italy,<br />

Brugler was able to prepare<br />

for the role.<br />

“It was wonderful to sit<br />

down and have a glass of<br />

wine with them, and they<br />

would tell me about their<br />

travels in Italy and what the<br />

people were like, and their<br />

thinking and their philosophies,<br />

and that helped me a<br />

lot,” she said.<br />

Joshua Reid, of Mokena,<br />

plays Antony Wilding, a<br />

young artist who was raised<br />

British and fought in WWI.<br />

Wilding’s parents and grandparents<br />

owned the castle in<br />

his youth but died while he<br />

was in the war, leaving the<br />

castle to Wilding.<br />

“Enchanted April” will be<br />

Reid’s first time on stage as<br />

an actor, but a love of art in<br />

all its forms drew him to try<br />

out for a role.<br />

If you’re going…<br />

What: “Enchanted April”<br />

When: 7:30 p.m. March 9 and 10; 2 p.m. March 11 is<br />

sold out.<br />

Where: 11112 Front St. in Mokena.<br />

General admission is $20. Tickets can be purchased<br />

online at ccctheatre.com, or by calling the box office at<br />

(708) 607-2281<br />

Upcoming productions<br />

•”Who Sings Your Story,” an evening of music at 7:30<br />

p.m. March 24.<br />

•Auditions for “12 Angry Jurors” are scheduled for<br />

April 8-9, performances June 15-17 and June 23-25.<br />

•Emily McCabe Musical Theatre Program is currently<br />

holding registration for its summer productions of<br />

“Singin’ in the Rain, Jr.” (June 11 camp starts for<br />

children in grades 4-8, performances July 13-15) and<br />

“Bugs!” (June 11 camp starts for children in grades<br />

K-3, performance July 5).<br />

•Auditions (for people who are sophomores in high<br />

school through age 23) for Summer Stock Theatre’s<br />

presentation of “Urinetown, the Musical” are<br />

scheduled for May 16 and May 18, with performances<br />

scheduled for July 19-22.<br />

“This is my first production<br />

I’m ever in, so I’m glad<br />

I took the plunge and decided<br />

to do it,” Reid said. “But,<br />

this one in particular, I think<br />

it’s fascinating that it’s set in<br />

1922, which is, like, a hundred<br />

years ago now. So to be<br />

playing a character that lived<br />

a century ago is, one, a challenge,<br />

but also very rewarding<br />

at the same time. It kind<br />

of exposes you to a different<br />

way of life that you really<br />

wouldn’t have the chance to<br />

explore outside the theater, I<br />

guess. It was a challenge that<br />

I through would be a fun one<br />

to take on. And I got to do a<br />

British accent, as well.”<br />

June Graffy, of New<br />

Lenox, who co-produces the<br />

production and also serves<br />

as assistant executive director<br />

of Curtain Call’s Board<br />

of Directors, handles the<br />

behind the scenes activities<br />

needed to make a production<br />

run smoothly.<br />

She said even though the<br />

story is nearly 100 years old,<br />

the transformative theme<br />

still resonates with audiences<br />

today.<br />

“I think it brings people<br />

back to a point where … it<br />

gives a perspective of what<br />

life was like, and, really, it’s<br />

not that much different than<br />

to now: people wondering<br />

are they on the right path,<br />

are they with the right person,<br />

do they need some time<br />

alone. Same things as now<br />

only in a different time setting,”<br />

Graffy said.<br />

By the end of the play,<br />

all the characters are transformed<br />

in some way; some<br />

through actively searching<br />

for answers, and others simply<br />

by stumbling across a set<br />

of circumstances that they<br />

happen to have found themselves<br />

in.<br />

Reid said he hopes audiences<br />

will walk away from<br />

the show feeling that they<br />

should never give up hope.<br />

“If your life isn’t necessarily<br />

going the way you want it<br />

to, that it’s not outside of our<br />

power to affect some sort of<br />

change to make it better.”

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!