Press

THE HOBBIT | Featured on The Hampton Roads Show

Did you miss the chance to see our Director (Billy Bustamante) and Bilbo (Jeffrey A Haddock) engage in a wonderful discussion about the excitement getting made on-stage for The Hobbit? Well check out the full segment below!

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) – The magical tale “The Hobbit” will soon be taking center stage in Hampton Roads thanks to the Virginia Stage Company. Director Billy Bustamante and actor Jeffrey Haddock share more about the upcoming production.

Virginia Stage Company
108 East Tazewell St., Norfolk
“The Hobbit” October 19 – November 6
Tickets: 757-627-1234 or visit: VAStage.org

This segment of The Hampton Roads Show is sponsored by the Virginia Stage Company.

Mirror, mirror...Hot 'Cat' raises roof at Virginia Stage Company

By Page Laws Correspondent

A lot is being done with smoke and mirrors in downtown Norfolk. “Wicked,” a hugely profitable, trucked-in show, has been using smoke and mirrors to successfully sell high-tech magic at Chrysler Hall; meanwhile, a ew blocks away, the Virginia Stage Company (nonprofit, everything made on site) is using mirrors and smoking-hot acting to conjure its long-delayed offering of Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.”

Though antithetical in style and production, both are see-worthy shows. But back to that mirror held up to life over at the VSC. Perhaps because the COVID-19 wait was so long (going on three years), what might have been a normal-sized mirror grew into a giant soul reflector, hung beneath the new Wells fly loft, thankfully installed during the hiatus. Director Khanisha Foster, who in 2019 helmed the VSC production of the now-controversial play “The Bluest Eye,” and her then-as-now set designer Josafath Reynoso, have slanted the giant mirror just so, in order to reveal to the audience a big brass bed plus any occupants therein.

The problem is, of course, that Maggie the Cat (Anna Sundberg plays the famous feline as a feisty redhead) can’t get her hobbling, boozing husband Brick (Gregory Warren) interested in any bed action, least of all with her. As Big Mama (Marsha Estell) later says, pointing to the bed, “When a marriage goes on the rocks, the rocks are right there.” Maggie’s frustrated; Brick is bombed; and Big Daddy, though he’s been lied to about it, is riddled with cancer. Human vultures (such as a minister, palm outstretched) are gathering.

Williams re-creates this Southern Gothic marital shipwreck by psychoanalyzing one of the great dysfunctional families of American theater. Besides Maggie and Brick and Brick’s never-seen-but-alwayspresent dead best friend Skipper (gay in an era of zero tolerance), we have well-meaning matriarch Big Mama; wife-bullying patriarch Big Daddy (Jeffrey King, in a remarkable performance); Brick’s rightfully resentful older brother Gooper (Angel Dillemuth); Gooper’s wife, Mae, aka Sister Woman (Wallis Herst); and three of Gooper and Mae’s “noneck monsters” (children, in Maggie-speak), one of whom, Trixie (Miri Quaintance), bears a sneaking resemblance to her stage mother, Herst. (Hint: they are also related offstage.)

Without the 25 plays of Thomas Lanier (“Tennessee”) Williams III (1911-83), Broadway might have long ago shut down, and the same is true for the Hollywood studios that churned out all those outrageous film adaptations. Many people who think they know the play are remembering the Hollywood-censored 1958 film starring slip-clad Elizabeth Taylor as Maggie, dreamy Paul Newman as Brick, and burly Burl Ives as Big Daddy.

Purge those portrayals from your mind, however, for director Foster’s highly theatrical, concept-driven version, beginning with her casting of actors of color in the traditionally white roles of Brick, Big Mama, Gooper and Sister Woman/Mae. Foster is forthright about her interest in race and quick to point out her own background: “I am the daughter of a Black Panther father and a white mother whose family invented Bubble Wrap,” she says in the playbill. (Bubble Wrap? That fortune likely makes Big Daddy’s $10 million look like chump change.)Foster indicates that the play clicked for her (note Brick’s sought-after “click” in the play) when she learned the story of Strom Thurmond’s forbidden love for a Black woman. That liaison produced a daughter whom the longtime U.S. senator quietly kept up with all his days. When this daughter’s Black mother died, however, Thurmond began his segregationist assault on Black rights. That displacement of thwarted love into destructive rage against innocents is what’s occurring in the play, Foster suggests in the playbill, a concept that guided her direction.

Now “clicks” are a personal thing, and, although I can’t identify with Foster’s inspiration, it has engendered strikingly unified results. They are clear in Reynoso’s flamboyant, ultra-classical set design: Greek columns, sweeping colonnade and double staircase, billowing long gauzy curtains, and, of course, the truth-telling mirror. It all adds up to surreal nouveau riche excess. My only suggestion for remodeling would be to add the ’50s equivalent of a Jacuzzi. The small bathtub behind a screen seems a bit déclassé.

Foster’s sound design, by Steven Allegretto, follows surreal suit by spookily echoing the offstage sound of a croquet ball being struck, as if to presage doom. Allegretto’s sonically conveyed thunderstorm is also apocalyptic. Costumer Bryce Turgeon must have also been told to succeed by excess. His glittering, Indian-inspired maternity suit for Herst is so beautiful, however, it makes it hard to concentrate on what Sister Woman (generally played as just drab and pregnant) is saying to increase her future fortune. Her husband Gooper is likewise costumed in a suit so outré that Dillemuth is lost behind its stripes. Not to be outdone, Maggie wears an orange ombré slip. Did they even do ombré in the ’50s?

Still, the whole is greater than any slip, and Big Daddy and Brick, both of them unremarkably costumed, raise the roof with their visceral acting, a choreographed dance of mutual pain and repression. In the first act pasde- deux of hate and avoidance with Maggie, Warren’s Brick comes across as a bit stolid. Shakespeare veteran Jeffrey King — 20 seasons with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival — comes playfully bouncing across the brass bed in Act 2, and elevates the acting of the whole cast, but especially that of Brick. The audience notes that Big Daddy is punished for his bed-jumping stunt by an attack of pain so fierce he can scarcely conceal it.

A famous, eventually out gay figure in real life, Williams was capable in his great works of crazy excess and careful craftsmanship. Foster respects and conveys both. Known for his directorial stage directions, Williams insisted that the characters we so dislike also be human beings with whom we can empathize. Even the egotistical, racist, philandering Big Daddy, so brutal to his long-suffering wife (played by Estell as a little dim but never oblivious) earns a modicum of sympathy via his physical suffering, but also through his surprising tolerance for Brick, whom everyone suspects of also being gay. Big Daddy is on to the Southernfried liars who surround him (“Mendacity, mendacity!”), including his eldest son Gooper, armed with a corporate law degree and fecund wife. Mae is equally insistent that her husband and ill-behaved gaggle of children (plus one in the oven) should rate higher than the family favorite, Brick the lush and his childless, ill-tempered wife.

Maggie, besides being catty, has estranged Brick by sleeping with poor Skipper. (“We made love to each other to dream it was you.”) That’s projection/displacement, all right: Foster’s concept in action. The director concludes her playbill remarks with a provocative invitation: “Now, let’s tell some family secrets.” And that she does, with the help of that provocative, bawdy-house mirror.

You can safely jump off that hot tin roof now, Maggie. This production ensures you’ll always land on your feet.

Page Laws is dean emerita of the Nusbaum Honors College at Norfolk State University. prlaws@aya.yale.edu

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Featured on CoastLive

Take a look at this wonderful segment on CoastLive with actors Angel Dillemuth and Wallis Herst who play Brick’s older brother Gooper, and Gooper’s wife Mae respectively.

HAMPTON ROADS, Va — Chandler Nunnally sits down with Wallis Herst and Angel Dillemuth to discuss their work in Virginia Stage Company's production of Tennessee Williams’ Pulitzer Prize-winning drama, "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," which paints a portrait of a family in crisis in the steamy Mississippi South.

"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" is running now through October 2! For tickets and more details, visit vastage.org.

Presented by Virginia Stage Company
vastage.org

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Featured on The Hampton Roads Show

Virginia Stage Company’s Production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof was featured on The Hampton Roads Show!

Director Khanisha Foster and actor Gregory Warren (Brick) got to share some of the inspiration behind this production, and the eagerness to finally mount this production after a long two-year wait! Hear more about what they have to say here!

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof runs September 14th - October 2nd at The Wells Theatre. Tickets are available at vastage.org/cat or by calling 757.627.1234 Mon-Fri. between 10am - 5pm.

PRESS RELEASE: Virginia Stage Company Opens Season 44 with Tennessee Williams’ Most Acclaimed Work Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

Norfolk, VA - Virginia Stage Company welcomes theatre lovers of Hampton Roads and all around as it opens the curtain on it’s Forty-Fourth Season with Cat on a Hot Tin Roof written by Tennessee Williams at The Historic Wells Theater (108 East Tazewell Street, Norfolk VA) to be performed September 14th - October 2nd, 2022.

Virginia Stage Company joins the ranks of other performing arts organizations returning from the pandemic with a renewed vigor to connect world-class live theater with the passionate audiences of Hampton Roads. Khanisha Foster, a familiar artist to VSC Audiences, returns to bring the three year long awaited Williams play to life on the stage. Having directed such thought-provoking works at the Wells like The Bluest Eye and Disgraced; the beginning of this season promises to be unforgettable. Khanisha is joined by an incredible creative team made up of some of VSC’s most memorable designers; scenic design by Josafath Reynoso (The Bluest Eye, Disgrace), costume design by  Bryce Turgeon (The Legend of Georgia McBride, Dreamgirls), lighting design by David Castaneda (Parchman Hour, The Bluest Eye), and sound design by Steven Allegretto (Guys & Dolls, Dreamgirls)

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is one of Tennesee Williams’ most famous works, and arguably his most controversial. Penned in the 1950s and revised in the 1970s to make it more ‘digestable’ to the  mainstream, this Pulitzer Prize-Winning Drama paints a portrait of a family in crisis in the steamy Mississippi South. A birthday celebration brings secrets to the surface as everyone gathers at the family home. With Big Daddy’s dwindling health, Brick’s troubled past, and Maggie’s desperation for love and money, will the truth ever be revealed? As Khanisha read this work, stories and histories from her own past bubbled up and led to a unique approach to this work that she has come to be known for.  She states:

“What really led me to bring this living history into Cat was Strom Thurmond. He and a Black woman…had a love affair. She got pregnant. They didn’t marry as they wanted to, but they had the child. For years Strom Thurmond would visit his daughter at college... and ask after her mother. Well, one year she told him that her mother had died. It was after this news that Strom Thurmond started to enact laws that devastated Black people.  What does it mean to repress your feelings for someone you love so much that after they die you want to punish everyone that looks like them? Is like them? That’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. After that, our path for this play became clear.”

Producing Artistic Director Tom Quaintance is thrilled with the team of artists that are working on this production.. “This cast can only be described as a force of nature…Big Daddy (Jeff King) and Marsha Estell (Big Mama) command the space in a way that’s indescribable. Maggie (Anna Sundberg) and Brick (Greg Warren) have this electric interaction that made me miss live theatre more than I ever have.” The fiery conviction of Williams’ words will surely deliver a powerhouse experience of live theater that arts lovers in Hampton Roads will not want to miss.

ENTRY POLICY 

We have updated our Entry Policy on 8/26/22.  For this upcoming production, we request all patrons to continue to wear masks inside the theatre. To review our policy, visit: https://www.vastage.org/entry  

TICKETS

Performances of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof are scheduled Tuesday - Saturday at 7:30pm, Saturdays & Sundays at 2pm at The Historic Wells Theatre, located at 108 E. Tazewell Street, Norfolk Va. Tickets range from $25 - $68. Membership packages for Virginia Stage Company include a five show package starting at $125.00, or our flexible Theatre on Demand Packages starting at $196.00. Virginia Stage Company Members receive numerous benefits, including 20% savings on every show, unlimited exchanges with no exchange fees, discounts at local Hampton Roads establishments. and additional discounts for in-house concessions and drinks.

The Young Professionals Membership is available for Young Professionals ages 20 - 45 starting at $125.00. This membership includes invitations to preshow receptions to network with local professionals in the Hampton Roads area. The Hampton Roads Pride Night membership starts at $135.00 and includes networking opportunities around VSC performances to connect and meet members of the Hampton Roads LGBTQIA+ Community.

Subscription packages and single tickets can be purchased by calling the Box Office at (757) 627-1234 Monday through Friday from 10am - 5pm or visiting https://tickets.vastage.org/packages 

Interviews can be arranged by contacting Director of Marketing, Maris Smith, at msmith@vastage.org.

Virginia Stage Company is Southeastern Virginia’s leading theatre destination, serving an audience of over 58,000 annually, both at the Wells Theatre and throughout the community. Virginia Stage Company’s mission is to “enrich, educate, and entertain the region by creating and producing theatrical art of the highest quality.”

Facebook: /vastage | Twitter: vastage | Instagram: vastage

###

Dreamgirls featured on CoastLive!

In case you missed it…the wonderful talents of Katelan Corprew, ShaaNi Dent, and Amorise White were featured on CoastLive as they promoted the exciting co-production between Virginia Stage Company and Norfolk State University Theatre Company for Dreamgirls. Catch the full interview below!

If this dazzling and dreamy performance has got you excited to see the show, make sure you get tickets at www.vastage.org/dreamgirls before we sell out. This is one show you will NOT want to miss!


Dreamgirls Interview: Tom Quaintance and Anthony Stockard

Virginia Stage Company couldn’t be more excited to welcome the Hampton Roads Community to the Wells Stage as it marks it’s fifth co-production with the talented and accredited artists at Norfolk State University Theatre Company in the form of Dreamgirls.

If you’re not excited yet then please take a listen to the words from Dreamgirls director and Norfolk State University Theatre Company Producing Artistic Director Anthony Stockard and VSC’s PAD Tom Quaintance as they exclaim the excitement, joy, and energy that is going to grace the Wells Theatre Stage.

This is a show you won’t want to miss! Make sure to get tickets at www.vastage.org/dreamgirls today!