“Give ‘Em a Kick” demo song

I’m very happy to be able to post this neat little demo song from the musical “Paul Jennings and The Burning of the White House,” which I’m currently writing with playwright and composer Norman L. Berman.

In this musical, we follow the story of Paul Jennings, a slave to President and Dolley Madison, and his journey of survival and self-discovery during the British burning of Washington, DC in August 1814.

The recent demo song – “Give ‘Em a Kick” – is sung by the 15-year-old Paul Jennings early in Act One. Young Paul is smart, opinionated, saucy, and big with dreams, despite his lowly status in American society. When he feels the rest of the world doesn’t quite accord him the respect he deserves, Paul lets loose with this song, to the annoyance of the other White House servants.

Paul Jennings Photograph

(Photograph of the older Paul Jennings)

Soloist: Olly Sholotan
Ensemble: David Lee, Tonoccus McClain, Fredericka Meek, and Maiya Sykes

You can listen to the song below.

 

Congrats to Roslyn Cohn!

Congratulations, congratulation to the wonderful actress Roslyn Cohn, who has been listed among the top actors and actresses performing roles in the LA area by critic Joe Straw for her performance in my tragedy “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room!”

Joe Straw gives out his “Straw Awards” every year recognizing the best performances he witnessed over the course of the year – performances that stick with him after the curtain falls.

Roslyn Cohn starred in the role of Florence Kling Harding, the acerbic, difficult wife of presidential candidate Warren G. Harding, who worships the stars and foretells the future.

Roslyn Cohn as “Florence Harding” and John Combs as “Harry Daugherty”

“Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” was produced late last year by Theatre40 of Beverly Hills (many thanks to its Artistic Director, David Hunt Stafford!).

The show received several very good reviews and Straw was very complimentary of Cohn:

“The one exceptional bright spot in this production was the performance of Roslyn Cohn as Florence Kling Harding.  Her level of concentration was superior, her backstory put life into the character, and the levels in her ambiguity in character kept one guessing throughout the night. In an especially dramatic moment, near the end, Harding exercised incredible strength not turning around knowing full well what was going on.  Cohn put might and backbone into Harding. And, there was an insatiable craving of wanting more from this brilliant performance.”

Here is the full list of winners for the Last Straw Wards of 2019.

Enter “I and the Emperor”

I’m very pleased to announce I have a finished a new historical drama of which I am very proud – “I and the Emperor.”

Briefly, “I and the Emperor” explores the unlikely, turbulent relationship between the 16-year-old Betsy Balcombe and the aging Napoleon Bonaparte during the latter’s exile on the island of St. Helena. The play is ultimately the story of Betsy herself, who comes to understand life, with all its peaks and valleys, through understanding the complexity and tragedy of the exiled Emperor in her backyard.

At its heart, “I and the Emperor” is a sometimes droll, sometimes dramatic, but ultimately touching and thoughtful coming-of-age tale. As a theatrical piece, the play is noteworthy for its two powerful leading roles and several strong supporting characters and that it requires only 7 actors (2 women, 5 men) and a simple unit set to bring its story to life.

Napoleon and Betsy Balcombe

(Napoleon and Betsy Balcombe, from an etching in Balcombe’s memoir.)

You can read a synopsis of the play here!

“Fifteen Men” recognized!

I want to thank the website Better Lemons for recognizing the recent production of my play “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” by Theatre40 of Beverly Hills!

“Better Lemons was founded by Publisher Enci Box with a commitment to support LA’s arts and entertainment community with aggregated reviews, original content, production resources, and marketing services.”

Each year, Better Lemons recognizes the plays that received the best and most reviews in the Los Angeles area on their platform (both reviews by critics and audience members) – called the Double Sweet Award!

Better Lemons Award

As I scrolled down the list of recognized plays, I came across this:

"Fifteen Men" Better Lemon's Recognition

“Better Lemons” had over 1,200 theatrical productions registered on their system in 2019 and “Fifteen Men” was one of only 92 to receive at least 10 reviews by critics that were overall positive!

Many thanks again to Better Lemons for this honor and for their great work in the LA arts community!

Great ad for “Philosophus”

Many thanks to Eldridge Plays and Musicals for putting together a wonderful ad for the January/February edition of Spotlight.

Spotlight is a multi-annual magazine published by the American Association of Community Theatre (AACT), one of the key organizations in the United States for community theater groups.

“Published six times a year and distributed to 1,800 organizational and individual members, Spotlight is also available to members and non-members for viewing online. The January-February issue is mailed to over 7,200 community theatre contacts.”

"Philosophus" AACT Spotlight Magazine Ad

You can check out the full January/February issue of Spotlight here!

Check out “Philosophus”

My play “Philosophus” received a nice shout-out from its publishing company, Eldridge Plays and Musicals, in an email blast yesterday.

Eldridge is one of the leading play publishers in the United States, founded in 1906 and specializing in over a thousand theatrical works.

"Eldridge Plays and Musicals" Highlighted New Plays

For the holidays leading into 2020, Eldridge is offering a reduced rate for shipping for script perusal – so catch the deal while you can!

Order 4 or more perusal play scripts or perusal musical scripts and get upgraded shipping for FREE.  No promo code necessary.  (Standard shipping rates still apply)

You can check out my play “Philosophus” right here!

Better late than never…

The Santa Monica Daily Press has published this belated, but very positive, review of my play “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room!”

https://www.smdp.com/play-time-president-harding-drops-out-of-a-second-term/184130

If David Hunt Stafford were running for president, you might want to vote for him. But not for the man he portrays in “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room”: Warren G. Harding.

According to playwright Colin Speer Crowley, Harding apparently didn’t want to run at all, “I’m strolling for office, not running,” he said. But after a deadlock among the candidates and four days of voting he was chosen on the tenth ballot to be the Republican candidate and was then elected to become the 29th president of the United States.

Initially popular at first, he and his administration, rife with corruption and scandals, served to earn Harding the historical ranking as “one of the worst presidents” — at least until the election of our current head of state.

Paramount among the scandals was Teapot Dome, in which the Secretary of the Interior, Albert Fall, was charged with leasing Navy petroleum reserves in Wyoming to private oil companies and was convicted of accepting bribes from them. Fall then became the first member of Harding’s Cabinet to go to jail.

Another “scandal” was Harding’s ongoing adulterous affair with a young woman named Nan Britton (Sarah Walker) which was considered unacceptable in the 1920s. Britton confessed to having had a crush on Harding since she first saw his face on a campaign poster, but she was cautious about the relationship because she didn’t want to interfere with his role as president or his marriage to a harridan named Florence Kling Harding (Roslyn Cohn). “I don’t want to ruin your destiny,” Britton said. Nevertheless, she bore him a daughter, a girl named Elizabeth Anne.

Harding apparently sincerely loved his mistress, and David Hunt Stafford played the role with all the yearning and passion that an older man might feel for a lively younger woman. He desired nothing more than to give up the presidency and spend the remainder of his life with her. Which would seem reasonable, considering that Florence, his wife, was a sharp-tongued woman who treated him with contempt and perpetually harangued him.

The other major influence upon him (in addition to his wife) was Harry Daugherty (John Combs), his campaign manager, who also harangued him. Daugherty was adamant in insisting that Harding run for a second term, perhaps because Harding had appointed him Attorney General in his Cabinet.

Florence, however, believed in astrology and often consulted a clairvoyant who told her that her husband was “inclined to melancholy” and would die before he finished his first term. Which caused Florence, who wanted her husband to “pull out” of the presidency, to confront Daugherty at the top her lungs and admit that “People don’t like me” and “Warren is all I have.” “Desolation is my home town,” she concluded.

All this activity takes place in The Florentine Room of Chicago’s posh Congress Hotel, in an opulent maroon and velvet set designed by Jeff G. Rack. The room is serviced by a busybody waiter (Kevin Dulude) and the activity is periodically interrupted by a radio broadcaster (Roger K. Weiss) situated behind a screen onstage who reports “another day, another scandal! It seems like nothing can prevent further improprieties from staining President Harding and his administration… Congressmen from both parties can only wonder if there will be an end to the wide-spread corruption sweeping the nation’s capital.”

And in the end, Florence’s clairvoyant was right! Warren G. Harding died of a heart attack in 1923, in the middle of his first term as president. He was 58 years old.

This gripping and timely political tale was boldly directed by the multi-award-winning Jules Aaron and was seen until mid-December at Theatre 40 in Beverly Hills.

Great run for “Fifteen Men!”

This is the closing weekend for my historical drama “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” at Theatre40 of Beverly Hills and I wanted to salute the entire cast and crew for the wonderful job they did bringing the show to life!

This is only the second staged production of “Fifteen Men” after a prolonged period of development (and development and development… across seven readings and seven theaters over eight years!).

“Fifteen Men” is also the first major play I ever wrote, meaning it has great sentimental value for me, so the fact that Theatre40 handled the show so brilliantly is especially meaningful and satisfying.

Fifteen Men Theatre40 Cast

The stellar actors, from left to right, starting clockwise from back: Roger Weiss, Sarah Walker, Kevin Dulude, David Hunt Stafford, Roslyn Cohn, and John Combs.

Above all, I would like to highlight the following people:

  • Director Jules Aaron for his beautiful, fast-paced staging and his tender care with my words
  • Actress Roslyn Cohn for her powerful, emotion-laden portrayal of Mrs. Harding and all her complicated nuisances
  • Actor John Combs for his folksy, even sympathetic portrayal of Harry Daugherty, which underplayed the Machiavellian
  • Actress Sarah Walker for her bright, sunshiny portrayal of Nan Britton, which completely changed the feel on the stage
  • Actor Kevin Dulude for his sly portrayal of George Harvey and (later) his comical French waiter
  • Set Designer Jeff G. Rack for his BEAUTIFUL set, filled with details and elegance
  • Costume Designer Michèle Young for her wonderful period pieces, which truly captured the (turn of the) decade
  • Lighting Design Brandon Baruch for cleverly taking us into and out of the future (and into Warren Harding’s mind) with his deft lighting changes
  • Sound Designer Joseph Slawinski for his wonderful “soundtrack” blaring (and sometimes beckoning) from the streets of Chicago

A special thanks goes to David Hunt Stafford, the Artistic Director of Theatre40 and also the gentleman who played the character of Warren G. Harding in the play. David first reached out to me in October, 2018 after a happy subscriber at Theatre40 loved “Fifteen Men'” during its world premiere run at Elite Theatre Company of Oxnard, CA. David diligently hunted me down, started to chat with me, and before I knew it, “Fifteen Men” was lined up for Theatre40’s 2019-2020 season. I can’t thank David enough for his trust and faith in the play and for leading such a magnificent theatrical organization. He is a stellar actor, as well, giving a heartfelt, deep portrayal of Warren G. Harding and beautifully using the words I wrote to greater effect than I could ever have imagined.

Many thanks to Theatre40, David, and the cast and crew for a job well done!

Thanks to these theatre-goers!

I came across this great website – Goldstar – which promotes discounts to entertainment events and also encourages reviews of the same.

It just so happens Goldstar has an entry for my historical drama “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” playing at Theatre40 in Beverly Hills from November 14-December 15, 2019.

Above all, I’m happy to see that 6 theatre-goers (unbiard, non-official critics) rated “Fifteen Men,” giving it an average of 4 out of 5 stars and including some really great comments.

Goldstar Logo

Goldstar Ratings for "Fifteen Men"

Thanks so much, whoever you all are!

Great time in LA for “Fifteen Men”

Last Thursday and Friday, I was blessed (truly) to travel to Los Angeles and see Theatre40’s production of my historical drama “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” (playing through December 15th). I had been in correspondence for over a year with Artistic Director David Hunt Stafford, so it was exciting to witness the show seeing the light of day. (“Fifteen Men” was only premiered last year at Elite Theatre Company of Oxnard, CA during their 2018-2019 season.)

image0

"Fifteen Men" Theatre40 Program

"Fifteen Men" Theatre40 Front Poster

Upon entering the theater, I saw this extremely well-done cast board, interspersed with pictures (many, many pictures) portraying the actual historical figures featured in the play:

"Fifteen Men" Theate40 Cast BoardAbove all, I have to give a special shoutout to this wonderful period set by Jeff Grack, portraying the Florentine Room in the Chicago Hotel in Chicago, IL, 1920, chock full of detail and style:

image4As for the play itself, I was extremely, extremely impressed by the depth of the acting, the spot-on directing of Jules Aaron, and the deft lighting design of Brandon Baruch, which cleverly brought the audience in and out of the show’s “present” during flash-forward moments.

Stay tuned for another post of mine that goes into greater depth on the actors!

“Fifteen Men” plays through December 15th… go and check it out!