
today
8 a.m. Armack Orchestra Rummage Sale Arcata High Multipurpose Room
read >8:30 a.m. Audubon Field Trip: Arcata Marsh Klopp Lake, foot of I St.
read >8:30 a.m. HCAR Holiday Craft Fair and Rummage Sale HCAR Sunrise Plaza
read >9 a.m. Arcata Farmers' Market Arcata Plaza
read >9 a.m. Tai Chi for Everyone Arcata Plaza
read >9:30 a.m. Lanphere Dunes Restoration Pacific Union School
read >9:30 a.m. Disovery Walk: Introduction to Architectural Styles Eureka Theater
read >10 a.m. Holiday Craft Fair Bethel Church
read >10 a.m. Jacoby Creek School PTO Annual Holiday Boutique Jacoby Creek School Gym
read >10 a.m. Celebrate Madhavi Arcata Plaza
read >10 a.m. Earlier than the Bird: Pre-Holiday Sale and Fun See Event Description
read >11 a.m. KMUD's 4th Annual Battle of the Rock Bands Mateel Community Center
read >11 a.m. Downtown Fortuna's Autumn Fete See Event Description
read >11 a.m. Mexican Folk Art Sale Private home in Eureka
read >noon Dreamscapes The Oasis
read >2 p.m. The Uniontown Jazz Trio Morris Graves Museum of Art
read >2 p.m. Friends of the Marsh Tour with Art Barab Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center
read >4 p.m. Acoustic and Open Mic Has Beans
read >6 p.m. Matthew Cook Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >6 p.m. The Tumbleweeds Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Jesse & Lee Libation
read >7 p.m. Saturday Evening Dinners for Singles Private House in Arcata
read >7 p.m. Musaic Old Town Coffee & Chocolates
read >7:30 p.m. Joe & Me Cafe Mokka
read >7:30 p.m. Saul Kaye Six Rivers Brewery
read >7:30 p.m. Depaver Jan Westhaven Center for the Arts
read >8 p.m. Defending the Caveman Arkley Center for the Performing Arts
read >8 p.m. Opal's Million Dollar Duck Redbud Theatre
read >8 p.m. Getting It Arcata Playhouse
read >8 p.m. She Loves Me North Coast Repertory Theater
read >8 p.m. Nightshade Serenade presents Gypsy Alchemist Cabaret Redwood Raks World Dance Studio
read >8 p.m. The Medium Gist Hall Theater at HSU
read >9 p.m. Karaoke w/Chris Clay The Boiler Room
read >9 p.m. Austin Alley & the Rustlers Bear River Casino
read >9 p.m. Triple Junction Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >9 p.m. Mission Critical with DJ Dub Cowboy Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. Pato Banton and the Mystic Roots Band Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. Ponche! WAVE @ blue lake casino
read >9 p.m. Play Dead Humboldt Brews
read >9 p.m. Blanket, Emily Lacy, The Candles The Lil' Red Lion
read >9 p.m. Jeff DeMark, UKEsperience Muddy's Hot Cup
read >9:30 p.m. Live DJ Ragg's Rack Room
read >9:30 p.m. DJ Marv The Playroom
read >9:30 p.m. Jimi Jeff & the Gypsy Band Riverwood Inn
read >9:30 p.m. Abstract Rude, DJ Drez, Myka 9 The Red Fox Tavern
read >10 p.m. DJ Blancatron Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >10 p.m. DJ Itchie Fingaz Sidelines
read >11:15 p.m. The Metal Shakespeare Company, 33 1/3 The Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >Photos
Manic About Titanic — HLOC show sails into final weekend
By William Kowinski
When the basic story is so familiar, and the narrative trajectory so extravagantly simple (big unsinkable ship sinks on maiden voyage), it all depends on how it’s done. The Humboldt Light Opera Company does the musical Titanic very, very well. The production excels in every aspect, creating a stylish, polished, harmonized and entertaining whole, with moments of unexpected emotion.
It’s a treat to be able to appreciate the skillful and artful execution of the show’s many elements, but the confidence that the production creates allows you to relax into the illusion and feel the emotion.
And it doesn’t depend on flashy, overwhelming technical achievements. You aren’t going to see a giant ship sinking. Though there’s a single, small tilting room in the second act, the most dramatic special effect is the well-timed skittering of a single tea cart.
Yet the sets and lighting (designed by Jayson Mohatt and Justin Takata) are sumptuous in their way, as well as elegant and eloquent, etching the scenes into memory. Kevin Sharkey’s costumes are ravishing. Director Carol McWhorter Ryder focuses on sets of characters, then fills the large Van Duzer stage with movement (and Sarah Carlton’s choreography.) The singing (as is often the case in an HLOC production) is superior. Above all, there is the orchestra: What a delight to have a full orchestra for a musical, and this one, under the direction of Justin Sousa, impeccably plays an evocative score.
The Titanic , the largest and most lavish passenger ship of its time, steamed out of England on its first and last voyage in April 1912. There were three classes of service for passengers: from first class for the wealthy and renowned, such as John Jacob Astor and his young wife, to third class for poor immigrants bound for America. One of the better moves in the musical’s script (by Peter Stone) is to focus early on a couple in second class — a middle-class Midwestern businessman (Edgar Beane, played by Gene Lodes) and his star-struck wife (Alice, played by Elisabeth Harrington). Since Alice is so curious about the celebrities in first class she provides easy exposition, but with an endearing comic performance and a wonderful voice, Elisabeth Harrington goes beyond this simple expediency to establish the Beanes as the audience’s representatives, as well as a couple whose fate will matter.
We soon see the glamour of first class for ourselves in a dinner scene that literally glitters with sequined gowns and jewels, as characters are deftly introduced. Then there’s another large ensemble scene in third class which is unexpectedly affecting. The Irish émigrés could be living clichés (the burly young fisherman, played by Tristin Roberts, the three young ladies named Kate, played by Laura Hathaway, Krissy Dodge and Essie Bertain), but first with a trio sung by the Kates, and then in a powerful ensemble, they generate real emotion. Perhaps it evokes images of immigrant forebearers (though my grandparents and mother came over from Italy on ships much less majestic than this, where there were a handful in first class and thousands in steerage). But it’s the actors and their singing that really put it over, particularly the radiant Laura Hathaway.
The script probably tries to do too much — there are so many themes and so many characters (based on real passengers) that little gets developed even cursorily. Phil Zastrow as the ship’s owner (and villain of the piece), Kevin Sharkey as its designer and Bill Ryder as the Captain all perform their fairly thankless roles well, but it’s the “minor” characters who stand out: Cailan Halliday as the quartermaster, for instance, and Kevin Richards as the chief coal stoker, and particularly Jordan Matteoli as Radioman Harold Bride. Matteoli seems born to play young (and usually innocent) characters in musicals set between 1910 and 1950. He gets an especially poignant song near the end. Though there are slack stretches and foreshortened stories, the emotion built into the situation — the lives lost, the survivors, how everyone behaved — comes through, thanks to the production and these characters.
I confess I couldn’t imagine song lyrics about the sinking of the Titanic . (The best I could come up with were: MRS. ASTOR: The ship is sinking! MR. ASTOR: Have you been drinking? It’s unthinkable! The ship’s unsinkable! CAPTAIN: Mr. Astor! It’s a disaster!) Not to mention finding a rhyme for “iceberg.” But this musical is more in the operetta style, with most of the dialog sung rather than spoken. Though serviceable and even witty in context, with few exceptions neither lyrics nor songs (both by Maury Yeston) are especially memorable. Perhaps that’s partly why this Tony Award-winning Broadway hit of a decade ago is so little known. But for the length of the show, it hardly matters.
And there are other oddities about the script, such as the Captain about to go down with the ship suddenly reflecting that in 43 years at sea, he’s never seen an accident. It sounds like an insert demanded by the cruise ship industry. But as a whole, the excellence of the Humboldt Light Opera production overwhelms these weaknesses. Maybe the ship sank, but this Titanic is buoyant.
You have only three more opportunities to see it: this Friday, Aug, 17, or Saturday, Aug. 18, at 7:30 p.m., or a Saturday matinee at 2 p.m. at the Van Duzer Theatre on the HSU campus.
With their final shows of this season now playing ( The Nerd and The Sound of Music, respectively), both North Coast Rep and Ferndale Rep have announced their next season. Beginning in September, NCRT Artistic Director Michael Thomas has two modern classics: Jean Giraudoux’s The Madwoman of Chaillot and Marat/ Sade by Peter Weiss. The holiday musical will be Fiddler on the Roof, the spring musical will be Little Shop of Horrors, the Shakespeare between them will be the comedy All’s Well That Ends Well . And next summer’s comedy will be Lend Me a Tenor, the 1989 Tony Award winner by Ken Ludwig.
As announced by Artistic Director Marilyn McCormick, Ferndale Rep will host several showcases in September and October (including Jeff DeMark’s Hard As A Diamond, Soft As The Dirt , and a multimedia show by the L.A. based Camera Shrapnel) before its first production in November, an adaptation of E.B. White’s Charlotte’s Web , followed by the courtroom drama Twelve Angry Men and an all-teen production about school violence called Bang Bang You’re Dead . The spring musical is Hair , the summer musical is Godspell , with a stage adaptation of the film classic Rashomon between.
*To extend the theatrical conversation and expand it beyond the North Coast,William Kowinsky started a Stage Matters blog, at stagematters.blogspot.com . You can alsoe-mail him at stagematters@sbcglobal.net.*

















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