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Tapestry Theatre Company - ARCHIVE
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May 9 -  24, 2008
Richard III
Reviewed May 10 by Brad Hathaway

Running time 2:50 - one intermission
It's a wrap for Tapestry

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It is always sad when a theater company ceases production. Tapestry will bring its twelve years of producing community theater in Alexandria to an end with this production of a Shakespeare play, just as it began with the Bard. Their first production was The Taming of the Shrew which they put on in an amphitheatre of a Fairfax County park. Later, they mounted their work in the Grace Episcopal Church in Alexandria. Most recently, it has been the Nannie J. Lee Center, with way too many seats for the audiences they have been able to attract and a stage that is often too large for the sets they have been able to construct. Still, in the tradition of the show going on, they overcame many barriers and mounted classics, contemporary works and even championed the work of a local author with annual Jefferson Morris festivals. This Richard III offers a solid performance by Andrew Greenleaf in the title role and two highly enjoyable performances by Lee McKenna as widowed Queen Margaret and Peggy Jones as tormented Queen Elizabeth.

Storyline: As Edward IV approaches his death late in the fifteenth century, his brother Richard sets about to remove all those who might gain the throne in his place. He arranges the deaths of his other brother and his children, his own nephews and others who stand in his way while those he doesn’t kill he imprisons. But insurrection mounts and Richard faces his foes on the battlefield. He is out maneuvered and slain, bringing an end to the War of the Roses and to what the victor refers to as “these bloody days.”

Greenleaf makes the deformations of his Richard the centerpiece of the performance. His hump back, withered arm and pronounced limp make it almost unnecessary to tell the audience in Shakespeare's words that he is "Deformed, unfinish'd, sent before my time into this breathing world." His most horrid deformations, however, are of the soul and the character. While Shakespeare's version of the story may be lousy history, it is compelling theater when delivered with brio, and Greenleaf handles the task well.

The large cast is a game group, with a good deal of intensity evident in even the smaller roles, and a collective emphasis on clarity of delivery of the sometimes difficult dialogue. No one seems to rush over other people's lines, and, as a result, the story is clearly told. Among the more enjoyable performances, other than those of the women mentioned above, are those from Carl Brant Long as the principled Lord Hastings who is dispatched by Richard before intermission. Later he creates a very different persona as he doubles a different role for the second half of the show.

Costuming a period production of a Shakespeare history play is always a challenge and that challenge is well met here by Elizabeth Vernaci and director Schulman with the help of a six member construction team and costume loans from companies throughout the region. The final sword fight is energetic and effective, quite above the usual standard for community theater productions. Schulman's vision for the production included a video presentation involving a "TV Host," but the video equipment malfunctioned opening weekend. The company will attempt to restore the video to the production for the final performances.

Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Susan Schulman. Fight direction by Karen Schlumpf, Brian Farrell and Al Myska. Design: Gary Augustine (set) Elizabeth Vernaci and Susan Schulman (costumes) James Robertson (lights) Robert Pierce (stage manager). Cast: Manny Argueta, Gary Augustine, Sara Bickler, Kristine Cornils, Jes Decker, Mark Edwards, Andrew Greenleaf, Ty Hallmark, Peggy Jones, Andrew Langan, Christine Lange, Daniel Lavanga, Carl Brandt Long, Lee McKenna, Elizabeth Miller, Robert Colby Perkins, Jr., Carolyn Piccotti, Steven Rosenthal, Jay Tilley, David Van Ormer, Jim Vincent, Kathryn Wanschura.


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August 10 - 26, 2007
Crimes of the Heart
Reviewed by Brad Hathaway

Running time 2:15 - one intermission
A dark comedy of sisters gathered to support each other in grief and scandal
Click here to buy the script 


Beth Henley's Pulitzer Prize winning dark comedy about sisters gathering together in support of one of their number who just shot her husband gets off to a slow start, but it picks up speed and the three actresses playing the sisters pick up confidence as the show progresses, resulting in an entertaining evening. The comedy of it all also escalates as more and more tragedies in the lives of the family are revealed. In Henley's view, the release of tensions for a family under pressure often comes through laughter - or at least an attack of the giggles. The reason Henley's play has had such success is that she struck on a little-acknowledged fact of life, one known so well by many people who have shared a loss or a time of trouble within that unique support group that is composed of siblings. The laughter is therapeutic and real.

Storyline: Three sisters gather in their childhood home in small Hazlehurst, Mississippi on the day that one of them is arrested for shooting her husband, one heads off on a date with a married man who used to be her boyfriend and the other suffers the pangs of approaching spinsterhood as no one seems to recall that it is her thirtieth birthday. Add a fatal stroke that befalls their grandfather and the emotions spill out in laughter as a defense against uncontrollable tears.

Henley's play followed an unusual path to success. Co-directors Zina T. Bleck and Herb Tax point out in their notes in the program that it was the first play ever to win the Pulitzer Prize before being produced on Broadway. It had been produced at a number of regional theaters, most notably at the Humana Festival of New American Plays at the Actors' Theatre of Louisville, becoming the second play to win the Pulitzer after production in the Humana in just the first three years of the festival. It went on to a Broadway mounting that earned a Tony Award nomination for best play. Henley was also nominated for an Oscar for the best screenplay when the story was filmed with Diane Keaton, Jessica Lang and Sissy Spacek as the sisters.

Bleck and Tax have a trio of appealing actresses for the three sisters' roles. Cynthia Heusman plays the eldest, the one who has remained at home to care for their grandfather. She faces her thirtieth birthday with a sense of dread, but Heusman also shows some of the girlish giddiness that she's yet to shed. Catherine Nelson Hassett plays the middle sister who has come home from a failed effort to become a star in Hollywood just in time to share her sibling's troubles. She has the requisite sardonic edge of one who has had too many doors slammed in her face. The youngest is the source of the troubles that start the evening off. Hannah Gavagan is bubbly as her character tries desperately to hold on to the fiction that her attempt to murder her husband was no big thing.

Supporting players include an effective Mary L. Fettes as a cousin whose main role in the piece is to help deliver some of the history of the family so the audience can understand the events on stage. Neither Alex Avila as the youthful attorney defending the youngest sister against charges of attempted murder nor August H. Kruesi as the married man the middle sister takes up with on her first night back home make their roles particularly believable, and the production isn't helped by a stodgy set design that presents little opportunity for effective blocking, but Bleck does get the cast to wear costumes that work very nicely to suggest time, place and character. It all falls on the shoulders of the three actresses playing the sisters. They respond with an almost sibling-like bond.

Written by Beth Henley. Directed by Zina T. Bleck and Herb Tax. Design: Jennifer Rose, Mark Edwards and Elizabeth Vernaci (set) Lolita Marie (hair and makeup consultant) Zina T. Bleck, Kristine Cornils and Erin DeCaprio (properties) Herb Tax (special effects, lights and sound) Zina T. Bleck (costume coordination and photography) Helen McCarthy (stage manager). Cast: Alex Avila, Mary L. Fettes, Hannah Gavagan, Catherine Nelson Hassett, Cynthia Heusman, August H. Kruesi.


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February 16 - March 4, 2007
Having Our Say
Reviewed by Brad Hathaway

Running time 2:35 - one intermission
A warmly human two-woman show
Click here to buy the script
Click here to buy the book


Theater can cast so many different spells. In this particular piece of theater magic there is no big dramatic catharsis, no gut wrenching tragedy, no escalating parade of comic explosions - just a pleasant evening in the presence of two lovely ladies whose acquaintance it is a pleasure to make. It is a visit that will linger in the memory. "The Delany Sisters? Yes, I remember them" you may say years from now, only to remember that you met them through the magic of theater and that you weren't really invited into their home. These two gentle ladies share their stories in their own words. Their own words seem good enough, thank you. The words ring true because the play is based on an oral history. Their own words seem so real because they really are their own. They have a great many stories to tell and their history covers a lot of ground - from the deep south to Harlem - and a lot of time. A great deal transpired in the century they shared.

Storyline: At age 100+ the Delaney Sisters, invite you in to their home as they prepare dinner on the birthday of their late father, a man who had been born a slave and sired ten children, all of whom went on to college. The sisters regale you with stories from their century including their experiences under the infamous Jim Crow laws, their pioneering efforts to gain college educations and establish careers for themselves, and the strong family ties that survived a tumultuous century.

The play is based on a book which is an expansion of a newspaper article written for the New York Times on the occasion of the younger sister's 100th birthday in 1991. Since it is a reminiscence, not a thing happens during the show. Oh, a meal gets prepared and a table gets set. But all the events of these ladies lives are simply told, not shown. The stories are all interesting, however. These ladies covered a wide variety of places and events in their lives.

Still, the material would be static and dull if not for the ability of Rhonda Gayle Carney and Lolita-Marie to bring the characters to life. Neither actually appears to be over a hundred years old but each moves with the deliberate pace of the elderly and each shakes just a bit. Credit may be due to director Peggy Jones for the fact that neither over-does the mannerisms, however, so they never become distractions. Lolita-Marie is the older sister, the one who had been a school teacher in a New York City high school for white children. (She got the job by missing the in-person interview and then just showing up on opening day - imagine the shock to the students and staff in 1926!) Carney is the younger sister who established a practice as a dentist in Harlem after graduating from Columbia University. She was only the second black woman to be licensed as a dentist in New York State.

The two actresses capture the closeness of the relationship between these two unmarried ladies who spent their entire lives together, moving north with so many other blacks in search of economic and social freedom. Their view of the world is unique but their affection and reliance on each other is universal. It is good to know them.

Written by Emily Mann based on the book by Sara Delany, A. Elizabeth Delany and Amy Hill Hearth. Directed by Peggy Jones. Design: Elizabeth Vernaci (set and stage manager) Susan Schulman (costumes) Lolita-Marie (makeup) Mary Goldring (hair) Meredith Morrison (properties) Bob Morrison (projections) John Larmett (lights) Elizabeth and Bob Morrison (sound) Bob Morrison, Bonnie Briar Productions LLC (photography). Cast: Rhonda Gayle Carney and Lolita-Marie.


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August 11 - 27, 2006
Little Women

Running time 2:10 - one intermission
A solid recreation of a century old stage piece

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Zina Bleck directs the 1912 stage adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's 1868 novel. The script was highly successful when it first appeared with a healthy Broadway run, a subsequent London mounting which helped make a star of Katherine Cornell, and a national tour that saw the play mounted at the Belasco Theatre (where Woodrow Wilson attended) across Lafayette Square from the White House. The novel has survived over the decades but the play has lapsed into obscurity. Bleck gives us an opportunity to re-visit it with a cast that gives it a respectful, if somewhat mixed presentation. Tapestry has dipped into historically interesting material before but never quite so deeply into the past nor quite as satisfyingly. With a few very good performances to counterbalance the few clunkers and with a solid hand from the director, keeping the production moving along sharply and drawing attention to the key plot points for a clear approach to storytelling, the show is never less than pleasant and often quite fascinating.

Storyline: The four March Sisters - responsible Meg, pretty Amy, sickly Beth and would-be writer Jo - are growing up in Massachusetts during the Civil War. Their mother must travel to Washington, DC, to bring their ill father home after his service to the Union in the war, but soon the family is together again and the sisters begin to be courted by gentlemen.

The role of Joe is the principal part in the script and gets the strongest individual performance. Sara Drehmer makes a chipper teenager with both the enthusiasm for the future and the anxiety over her ability to succeed coming through quite clearly. Also very good is Rachel Simms as her vain younger sister who eventually wins the heart of the charming next door neighbor (played with panache by  Cody Crenshaw). Simms has a very good sense for the comedy of the role. Larissa Kruesi is a bit too soft-spoken but she shows her inner turmoil as the responsible elder sister, and Natalie Woods brings charm to the shyness of the fourth sister.

Penny McKee Weis is fine as their mother, and both Alex Avila and Michael J. Fisher are effective as other suitors for the sisters, but Dick Costello is much too obviously acting as the father and Elissa Hudson overdoes the brittle attitude of the family's wealthy aunt. Lending welcomed touches of stage presence in smaller roles are Bailey R. Center as the wealthy neighbor and Erin Gallalee as the family maid.

Set designer Jennifer Rose provides a substantial structure of theatrical flats for the single set play with a few steps at the rear for exits to the upper floor, two visible alcoves, which clarifies the comings and goings written into the script, and plenty of playing space for separate groups of characters to conduct discussions in this re-creation of a very busy household. It may not rival the set for the original Broadway and national tour which featured David Belasco's replica of the actual house that Louisa May Alcott grew up in in Concord, Massachusetts, but it establishes time, place and tone quite successfully, indeed. Susan Schulman's costumes accomplish the same functions as well.

Written by Marion De Forest based on the novels by Louisa May Alcott. Directed by Zina Bleck. Design: Jennifer Rose (set) Susan Schulman (costumes) Lolita Marie (hair and makeup) Kristine Cornils (properties) Kay Sullivan (lights) Herb Tax (sound) Bob Morrison, Bonnie Briar Productions (photography) Jessica Lada (stage manager). Cast: Alex Avila, Bailey R. Center, Dick Costello, Cody Crenshaw, Sara Drehmer, Michael J. Fisher, Erin Gallalee, Elissa J. Hudson, Larissa Kruesi, Rachel Simms, Penny McKee Weiss, Natalie Woods.


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May 12 - 28, 2006
Fahrenheit 451

Reviewed April 14
Running time 2:30 - one intermission
The stage adaptation of the novel about book burning

Click here to buy the novel


Two and a half hours is too long for the interest that this stage adaptation of Ray Bradbury's 1953 novel can generate. Director Mark Edwards tries to keep the interest level up by using video projections of newscasts, commercials, and reality programming as the story requires. However, the excessively wordy script and his cast's mixed abilities eventually loose the battle to maintain any sense of wonder over the prescience of Bradbury's predictions of half a century ago, or suspense over how his story will end. The result is a rather plodding presentation that will nonetheless interest those who remember either the book or the movie version with pleasure.

Storyline: In an "alternative present" firemen don't put out fires, their job is burning books which are seen as a danger to society. One fireman stops to read one of them before burning it, however, and begins to wonder just what the magic of the written word is all about. He discovers a clique of rebels who carry on the literary tradition by memorizing books before they can be burned.

When word first surfaced that Tapestry would tackle a stage version of Ray Bradbury's classic science fiction novel of the early 1950s, it sounded like such a good idea. Here's a story that tried to warn us of the temptations of the "dumbing down" that popular culture can wreak and the dangers of trading freedoms for security. The novel featured predictions for the future that seem prescient from this vantage point a half a century later -- wall mounted, big screen TVs, tiny in-ear radios, all the horrors of phony "reality" programming. But Bradbury's novel doesn't translate to the stage quite as well as you would hope. Where lots and lots of words pour out on the two hundred pages of the novel, many fewer can work from the stage in just over two hours. Bradbury did his own adaptation. He's not a stranger to stagecraft as he has many a play to his credit. Adaptation, however, proves not to be his primary job skill.

The production begins with the chanting of quotations from the great books by the cast in black costumes before a white set. It is an auspicious beginning and is followed up by a well choreographed and executed fight scene. The promise of the first few minutes is not maintained, however, as the wordiness of Bradbury's novel on stage begins to weigh the production down, and highlight the limitations of the cast's abilities. In the role of the fireman, Anthony Van Eyck handles himself well on stage, but his character seems particularly static even as he progresses from loyal book burner to subversive book reader. Alex Bastani handles many small scenes fairly well as the fire chief but bogs down in the big explanation scene at the end of the first act. Michael Fisher is the most entertaining as the cautious to the point of paranoia tutor, but doesn't have much to do beyond his one big scene. None of the women in the cast seem able to make much of their roles.

With seventeen scenes, the play cries out for a set design that won't require scenery and furniture shifts between each one, but this production finds the cast members or stage hands hefting a couch on here, carrying a table off there all too often. Some of the scene changes are covered by video projections, but the delay seems a problem nonetheless. Edwards seems unable to find the key to creating momentum and the pace rarely varies, which gives the problem of pauses all the more impact.

Written by Ray Bradbury based on his own novel. Directed and with adaptations of video material by Mark Edwards. Design: Kay Sullivan (set and lights) Mark Edwards and Peggy Jones (costumes) Kristine Cornils (properties) Karen Schlumpf and Brian Farrell (fight choreography) Mark Edwards and Cathy Ryan (sound) Mark Edwards and Liz Miller (music) Tim Novak and Phillip Dang (video) Bob Morrison (photography) Peggy Jones (stage manager). Cast: Manny Arguenta, Alex Bastani, Jennifer Calhoun, Rhonda Carney, Jacqueline Chase, Ricky Clarkson, Cody Crenshaw, Michael Fisher, Gabbriella Herzberg, Caitlin Hurwit, April Lee, Sam McCrea, Michael Parks, Charles Robertson, Tyler Robinson, Anthony Van Eyck.


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February 10 - 26, 2006
Romeo and Juliet

Reviewed February 11
Running time 2:55 - one intermission
Shakespeare transposed to 1960s

Click here to buy the script


Peggy Jones directs Shakespeare’s romantic tragedy with a high sense of concept - not always something that makes a four hundred year old play better. In this case, it makes it different and actually highlights some of its more complex, less frequently emphasized messages. However, it doesn't compensate for the lack of discipline, experience and skill of its performers. Of course, community theater productions such as this one are precisely where some performers get the experience and develop the skills that will serve them and their audiences well in future productions, but few show much polish as of yet. There are flashes of emotion and  instances of impressive stage presence, but they are too few and far between in a lengthy production where the director's concept and what she does with it is the most intriguing factor of the evening.

Storyline: Somewhere in America in the 1960s, a white Romeo Montague falls in love with a black Juliet Capulet and they secretly marry just as their families’ feud hits its peak. Romeo is banished for killing Juliet’s cousin and Juliet is promised to another. In a ruse to avoid that fate she takes a potion that leaves her seeming to be dead.  But Romeo, not having received the message explaining the plan, believes she is dead and kills himself. When she awakes to find her lover dead she, too, takes her own life. The families, with grief on both sides, reconcile.

Jones' concept of placing the action on the streets of an American city during the time of Vietnam and Civil Rights struggles is well thought out, and highlights some aspects of the script beyond the story of star-crossed young love. With the feuding families of different colors, the hatreds are immediately recognizable to modern audiences. Romeo's suicide isn't accomplished with dagger or poison but with a syringe, arguably one of the iconic objects of the 60s. Finally, Jones uses the recordings of the Beatles not only as scene and time setting incidental music, but as commentary as well. The pre-show music is early, innocent Beatles ("Love Me Do" "I Want To Hold Your Hand and "She Loves You"). As the story progresses and the tragedies pile up, the score advances to the more mature output of Lennon and McCartney with slayings set to "Helter Skelter" and the message of the final scene nicely wrapped up in the final Beatle quote "In the end the love you take is equal to the love you make."

Alex Avila makes a modern Romeo with a virile energy and youthful vigor that nearly overcomes the limitations of his capacity for delivering Shakespeare's iambic pentameter in meaningful doses. Unfortunately, Danielle Eure doesn't have such vigor or energy going for her as Juliet. Cody Crenshaw brings a strong stage presence and an effective understanding of the role to the part of Mercutio while Paul Morton overdoes much of the heightened anxiety of Friar Lawrence.

The fight scenes are well choreographed by Al Myska and are kept brief enough to avoid making excessive demands on the performers who may not have had much training in stage combat. Some productions of this play feature lengthy duels, usually with swords. Not only would such scenes be anachronistic in this 1960's concept, they would highlight the limitations of the performers. Here, instead, highly physical struggles with short knives works to the advantage of both the concept and the performers.

Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Peggy Jones. Fight choreography by Al Myska. Design: Bob Ciccottelli (set) Susan Schulman (costumes) John Larmett (lights) Peggy Jones (properties and music) Bob Morrison (photography) Kay Sullivan (stage manager). Cast: Chancellor Agard-Wilson, Manuel Argueta, Jr., Alex Avila, Jacqueline Chase, Ricky Clarkson, Kristine Cornils, Dick Costello, Lindsey Caroline Crabill, Cody Crenshaw, Tricia Daniels, Danielle Eure, Michelle Evans, Gail Frazier, Rashard Harrison, Gabriella Herzberg, Caitlin Hurwit, April Lee, Amanda Mandigo, Jeri Marshall, George Mayfield, Paul Morton, Carolyn Piccotti, Charles Robertson, Jeida Robertson, Keila Robertson, Tyler Robinson, Daniel Staicer, Cal Whitehurst, Laura Wood.


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January 16 - 25, 2004
The Crucible

Reviewed January 18
Running time 3 hours 10 minutes


Tapestry seems to be hitting some sort of stride as they settle in to the slightly too big theater at the Nannie J. Lee Center. The facility is head and shoulders above their previous playing spaces and the stability of being able to program shows well in advance and the knowledge that they will have a fine hall in which to present their work must make it easier to attract new talent to their company. This solid community theater production of Arthur Miller’s searing drama is directed by D. Scott Graham in his first effort at Tapestry, and features a satisfying performance by Tapestry first-timer Greg McCay in the leading male role of John Proctor.

Storyline: Arthur Miller’s drama uses the historical record of the hysteria that resulted in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 to explore issues that were very much on his mind when it was written in 1953. That was the height of the hysteria over allegations of communist infiltration with the Army-McCarthy hearings, the Alger Hiss case and Hollywood blacklisting.

Graham takes a measured, almost leisurely pace for much of this lengthy but fascinating play. He flanks it, however, with two high-energy scenes. The opening scene in which Reverend Parris (played here by a slightly stiff Colby Mills) spies the wild explosion of the children’s emotional release as they dance in the forest is as impressive as is the final, heart-rending scene in which McCay makes clear the anguish and torment that Proctor feels as he is faced with the choice between dishonesty and death. In between some of the scenes bog down in the effort of some of the cast to get their tongues around much of Miller’s stylized dialogue.

McCay’s passion is well matched in the performance of Liz Williams as his wife. Their parting when she is arrested on suspicion of witchery is particularly touching. Two of the girls involved in the making of the madness that captured Massachusetts are central to the piece and each is portrayed in marvelous performances. Meredith Richard captures the growing confusion of the wavering witness, Mary Warren, and Julia Stemper is fascinating to watch as her Abigail Williams controls much of the course of events in a scandal that gets out of hand and costs her everything for which she is scheming.

Graham also seems to be responsible for the simple but eloquent set design which is dominated by a subtle stack of unbalanced platforms mounted by a door frame that could well suggest a gallows. Chuck Martin, who has just been nominated for a WATCH award for his fight choreography for Tapestry’s 2003 production of Macbeth  provides another set of moves for the struggles in the homes and the courtroom.

Written by Arthur Miller. Directed by D. Scott Graham. Design: Charlie Rizor, Leslie Byers and D. Scott Graham (set) Ember Martin, Leslie Byers, Denise Marios (costumes) Carlyn Lightfoot, Peggy Jones (properties) Chuck Martin (fight choreography) D. Scott Graham (lights) Andrea Johnson (sound) Carlyn Lightfoot (stage manager). Cast: Tom Aberant, Stephen Alexander, Leslie Anne Byers, Kat Goodway, Teddy Gron, Phillip Hylton, Mildred Langford, Bud Larkin, Chuck Martin, Greg McCay, Colby Mills, Carolyn Piccotti, Anne Rechter, Denise Reid, Meredith Richard, Angelia Rorrer, Brittany Rorrer, Julia Shapiro, Rachel Simms, Aimee Snow, Julia Stemper, Liz Williams. 


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January 10 - 26, 2003
Macbeth

Reviewed January 11
Running time 2 hours 15 minutes


Tapestry’s most visually satisfying production in memory is its impressive effort to tackle one of the theater’s most challenging plays. That they succeed as well as they do is a testament to the growing maturity of this tenacious company. Formed in the 1990s, the company has now taken up residence at the Nanny J. Lee Center after years of performing in church halls and pick up locations. Director Ember Martin has joined Tapestry’s team for the first time and her work here gives reason to anticipate good things to come. She maintains a narrative clarity in this work that makes the sometimes sprawling story comprehensible. She draws comfortable performances from a large cast and provides a number of impressive stage pictures.

Storyline: With prophecies from three witches ringing in his ears and driven by his wife’s ambitions, a Scottish lord kills his King and assumes the throne only to find that he must commit other murders to keep it. As guilt eats at him and at his wife, he is cornered and killed by one of his own intended victims.

Martin fills the hall with witches. They crawl out of the audience, cackle from the aisles, scamper over the lip of the stage and hover in the background throughout the story. She punctuates key points with battle and sword fight action choreographed by Chuck Martin whose similar work for The Arlington Players’ Richard III walked away with the 2000 WATCH Award for choreography. Her Macbeth is a welcome newcomer, Tom Nunan. Both he and his Lady Macbeth, Liz Williams, approach their characters’ ultimate insanity from different sides, she driven mad by the collapse of her certainties while he is all but overtaken by his own fears before being dispatched by Rick Rodgers, a slightly melodramatic but still powerful Macduff.

Martin’s approach works as well as it does because of the design work of Jarret Baker, who came up with the single platform set, and D. Scott Graham who provided the flexible lighting design and the atmospheric soundscape of music and sound effects. Given the budget constraints on a production of this type, Leslie Anne Byers’ costume design must have been extensively augmented by cast member contributions, but there is a notable consistency to the look of the costumes. The makeup which Martin and Byers collaborated on, on the other hand, seemed to lack that fine touch.

The Kauffman Auditorium in the Lee Center, while a major improvement on past spaces for Tapestry, poses significant problems for a community theater troupe. Not the least of these is the large number of seats that must be filled before it doesn’t seem empty. It is an echoey space as well, which placed increased importance on Martin’s emphasis on actors’ enunciation and Graham’s choices of sounds. The intrusive announcement welcoming the audience and asking that cell phones be switched off, while welcome at most performances, seemed a magic-killer taking place after the gradual beginning of this production. Perhaps it was required by the management. But it still seemed to work to defeat the effort to get the show underway with subtlety. 

Written by William Shakespeare. Directed by Ember Martin. Choreography and fight direction by Chuck Martin. Design: Jarret Baker (set) D. Scott Graham (lights, sound) Leslie Byers (costumes). Cast: Tom Nunan, Liz Williams, Rick Rodgers, D. Scott Graham, Ric Andersen, Linda Deutsch, Kathryn Funkhouser, Paul Funkhouser, Gregory Gardner, Phillip Hylton, Tracy Johnson, Peggy Jones, David Mahl, Chuck Martin, Robert Nelson, George Redden, Charlie Rizor, Jeffrey S.E. Sculley, Julia Shapiro, Dan Staicer, Tom Wedemire, Liz Williams, John Downing, Leslie Anne Byers, Elizabeth Darby, Marian Lane, Carolyn Lightfoot, Anne Rechter, Denise Reid, Aimee Snow, Julia Stemper, Kimberly Stowell.


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July 6 - 14, 2002
Jefferson Morris One-Act Festival

Reviewed July 6
Running time 1 hour 45 minutes
Price $10


Perhaps this theater company has some special affinity for one-act plays. The quality of the work here seems to go up when performing one-act pieces instead of multi-act plays. The Jefferson Morris Festival is named for a young local playwright whose one-act plays first went before audiences in Tapestry productions and now, even when the plays are by others, the festival still bears his name. In this set there are two plays, one by a New Yorker who peoples his play with characters out of history, and one by a professor of theater at American University whose characters are extraordinarily real.

Storylines: Don Juan in Hell’s Kitchen brings Helen of Troy, Beatrice, Cassandra, Rosalind and Mary Shelly together in competition for the poet Byron’s affections. The setting for the interchange between these historical and fictional characters the "Hell’s Kitchen" neighborhood in a distinctly modern Manhattan where the gates of hell are, in reality, the 44th Street subway entrance to the A Train. Sunday Dinner, on the other hand, takes place in the living room of a modest home as three sisters gather for the meal of the title. They share memories and dreams, argue and criticize and generally act as real siblings do. In the process, a gloriously warm portrait of a real family with strengths and weaknesses is created in a mere 50 minutes.

The humor of New York author Matthew Wells comes through loud and clear in the staging by director Peggy Jones. His script mines the anachronistic potential of the concept of having characters from history and classic literature set down in the modern world. The plot may be a bit far fetched, but the nice thing about one-act plays is that they can give an author, a director or a cast the opportunity to play around with concepts that couldn’t survive a full evening’s examination. So long as the wit sparkles, harsh judgment can be suspended. Although the performances here tend to hit the punch lines with excessive zeal, one can still revel in such gems as a Byronesque ode to King Kong, the dismissal of an affair between a man and his half-sister as "not incest but sort of outcest" and Byron’s refusal to go to Chelsea because Milton lives there. But even Tim Pullen, who gets most of Byron’s material over, can’t make a line about a mid-day meal like "was this the lunch that faced a thousand lips?" ring true.

All of the slack that the audience may cut Wells because his piece is a mere one-act play is completely unnecessary in the case of Caleen Sinnette Jennings’ marvelously structured 1993 play Sunday Dinner. She is the same playwright whose two one-act plays Playing Juliet/Casting Othello were so successful as a single evening’s material in a co-production of Source and Folger a few years ago. Denise Reid directs this staging with simple blocking that allows the actresses playing the three sisters to interact through expression and body language. It may help that she is one of those actresses. She plays the elder sister, a near-spinster whose memories of her momma and her religion are her life. Erika McKinley is the image-conscious television reporter and Norleana Mathis is the pregnant wife of an unemployed man who has apparently always had difficulty supporting her financially but has nevertheless earned her love and respect. Together, they create an impressive ensemble.

Jarret Baker provides a serviceable set design for Sunday Dinner featuring separate rounded panels forming the living room of the sister’s home while his graffiti-bearing boards and steps for Hell’s Kitchen is a bit more self conscious and, thus, less effective.

Don Juan in Hells Kitchen written by Matthew Wells. Directed by Peggy Jones. Cast: Tim Pullen, Aimée Meher-Homji, Carolyn Piccotti, Kim Gowland, Jodi Loveless, Aimee Snow. Sunday Dinner written by Caleen Sinnette Jennings. Directed by Denise Reid. Cast: Denise Reid, Rika McKinley, Norleana Mathis, Ironda Campbell. Design: Jarret Baker (set) Stephanie Fairbanks, Denise Reid, Charlotte Souders (costumes) Jason Loveless and Ryan Delbridge (lights).


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January 18 – February 3, 2002
To Kill a Mockingbird

Reviewed January 26
Running time 2 hours 10 minutes


The story at the center of this stage adaptation of Harper Lee’s novel is so simple, so strong and so absorbing that it can make up for many shortcomings in a production. So it is with this production that has strengths and weaknesses. But, since the strengths have all been concentrated on the core story, it makes this an impressive, if mixed piece for the relatively new Tapestry Theatre Company.

Storyline: In a small southern town in the depression a true gentleman of a lawyer is called upon to defend a poor black man on a charge of attacking a white woman. Seeing his strength of character as he does what he believes is right, his children learn important lessons.

Director Zina T. Bleck has obtained the services of two fine actors and draws from them performances of strength and simplicity. Never mind the quality of the performances of others (and some are good while some are not.) These two are the lawyer and the defendant. Both approach their roles with quiet dignity, preferring to give subtle clues to the audience about what their characters are thinking and feeling rather than awkwardly underlining material they know to be solid enough without emphasis. Gregory Mangiapane is quietly strong as he proceeds to do his duty and Eric Grace is quietly dignified if understandably terrified as the trial scenes progress.

One of the reasons that Harper’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel worked so well in the first place, and its stage and film adaptations have been so emotionally impressive, was her decision to see these events through the eyes of the lawyer’s children. For this production, three young performers, Nathan Schwartz, Rachel Simms and Jackie Birnbaum do a credible job providing that perspective.

Tapestry has begun staging their shows at the Nannie J. Lee Recreation Center’s large auditorium/theater. It is a great improvement over their old space in the day room of a church, but it still presents challenges to their designers. The stage is large, requiring substantial sets and the hall his noisy and big, putting a premium on the performers’ abilities to project their voices. These challenges weren’t all overcome in this production but they were well enough met to let the power of Mangiapane and Grace’s performances and the elegance of Bleck’s simple direction shine through.

Written by Christopher Sergel based on the novel by Harper Lee. Directed by Zina T. Bleck. Design: Tim Pullen (set) Vanessa Lee Smith and Kevin Smith (lights) Susan Schulman (costumes) Scott Olson (sound.) Cast: Gregory Mangiapane, Candice Baker, Alex Bastani, Jackie Birnbaum, Eric Grace, John Kirby, Scott Olson, Michael Ratliffe, Nathan Schwartz, Rachel Simms, Dave Smith, Katie Sutliff.


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October 19 – November 4, 2001
The Importance of Being Earnest

Oscar Wilde’s last great satire on the customs and curiosities of English society gets an unfortunately mechanical production in the first offering of this community theater company’s new full season.

Storyline: Two English gentlemen get caught up in romantic intrigues. The country gentleman has adopted a false identity for his forays into London. The city gentleman uses that false identity for a foray into the country. Between the two of them they stir up a long hidden family secret.

Director Carol A. Strachan’s staging of this light and frothy play gets off to a slow start but perks up a bit when the ingénues appear late in the first act and at the start of the second. Laura Hayes and Maggie Glauber do their best to overcome the inertia engendered Eric Clingan’s stiffness as the country gentleman and Nathan Clark’s early strutting as the city fop.

The play begins to take on some sparkle during the second act and hits its stride in the final act, which is quite entertaining. By then, all of the cast gets into the spirit of the thing and it all ends on a high note.

When the play was first staged, the producer cut one part from the script – that of a Mr. Gribsby, a solicitor. Strachan has restored the few lines of dialogue for that character, making this production of some interest to purists and completists. However, it really only serves to confirm the original decision to cut the part. Phillip Hylton does about all that can be done with the part but that really isn’t much.

The set looks unfortunately skimpy on the large stage of the well-equipped Kauffman Auditorium at the Nannie J. Lee Center at the southern edge of the City of Alexandria. The production is uneven but manages to give a view of why this 110 year-old play is still taken up by companies around the world.