Theatre Review: No Place Like Gandersheim

Skylight Theatre Company’s 40th season celebrates the World Premiere of No Place Like Gandersheim. Written by Elizabeth Dement. Directed by Randee Trabitz. Produced by Gary Grossman for Skylight Theatre Company. Associate Producer: Tyree Marshall.

Roz (Jamey Hood) has written a sex comedy to be performed by the nuns at her abbey. Mother Superior Berga (Shannon Holt) and nun Madlen (Lauren Gaw) are excited about their performance. It’s their opportunity to experience something they cannot do in real life. It is now time to present the play to the Roman Emperor. How will he react?

Playwright Elizabeth Dement explores the historical role of women in different periods. As a time-warping journey story, Roz experiences the frustrations of living in a male-dominated society. Roz lives as a nun in medieval Germany, as a successful Hollywood TV writer in the present, and as an aspiring writer pitching a project in the future to 75-year-old Vita (Charrell Mack), who thanks to advanced treatments, looks way younger than her real age.

In all of the three periods, Roz is supported by other women. However, that support is also limited. In the case of Mallory, a funny and superb Shannon Holt, her position as the head of the studio is contingent to hitting all the quadrants to satisfy the investors and advertisers. As Roz’s show is hitting only one of the quadrants, Mallory decides to cancel it. It is in Hollywood as a TV writer that Roz also experiences another aspect of womanhood. She is the mother of Thea, her teenage daughter. The play presents the challenges of parenthood, specially for working writers, who live with the constant anxiety of getting their shows canceled in very short notices.

The stage design and the lighting create a fantastic mood that enhances the time periods depicted in the story. Director Randee Trabitz translates the script into a hilarious and touching production that presents the reality and the frustrations that women have suffered throughout history. At the end, Dement and Trabitz ask the question: Has anything changed for women?

No Place Like Gandersheim

Skylight Theatre
1816 1⁄2 North Vermont Ave.
Los Angeles, CA. 90027
Parking information: https://skylighttheatre.org/plan-your-visit/

Opening: 8:30pm Saturday, May 20, 2023
Schedule: 8:30pm Saturdays, 3:00pm Sundays, 7:30pm Mondays
(No performance on Monday, May 22 & Monday, May 29)
Closing: June 25, 2023

Tickets: skylighttix.org

Written by Elizabeth Dement. Directed by Randee Trabitz. Produced by Gary Grossman for Skylight Theatre Company. Associate Producer: Tyree Marshall. Cast: Lauren Gaw, Shannon Holt, Jamey Hood, Charrell Mack. Creative Team: DeAnne Millias (Scenic Design), Shannon Barondeau (Lighting/Video Design), Mylette Nora (Costume Design), Alma Reyes-Thomas (Sound Design), Joyce Hutter (Properties Manager), Victoria Hoffman (Casting), Cedes Sifuentes (Production Manager).

Theatre Review: Ghosts

Odyssey Theatre Ensemble presents Richard Eyre‘s adaptation of Ghosts, written by Henrik Ibsen. The play is directed by Bart DeLorenzo. The setting is somewhere in Norway in 1882. 

Widow Helene Alving (Pamela J. Gray) is about to face additional challenges in her life. Once her son Oswald Alving (Alex Barlas) is back from Paris, he starts having feelings for the house maid, Regina Engstrand (Viva Hassis Gentes). Regina, however, has her own challenges. Her father, Jacob Engstrand (J.Stephen Brantley [sic]), is trying to convince her to come live with him when he opens up a hostel for seamen. In reality, he implies that this place would be a brothel. Regina dislikes the idea to live with Jacob, preferring to dream of a life with Oswald in Paris—even learning a few words and phrases in French.

As Reverend Manders (Barry Del Sherman) comes to visit Helene, a few things are revealed. Manders finds some of the books Helene has been reading. Some are about systems of oppression and others are about women’s rights. This concerns Manders as they live in a conservative community in the countryside. There is also the fact that Helene once run to Manders to tell him she was in love with him, willing to leave her husband behind. Manders rejected her and she went back to her husband. Helene then sent Oswald to Paris and he became a painter.

After her husband passed away, Helene set up an orphanage in his memory. Jacob works as a carpenter and Manders handles the legal matters of the institution. Manders suggests Helene not to insure the orphanage as that would imply her lack of faith in God’s protection. Later, the orphanage catches fire and burns down.

The character’s dynamic relationships and motivations are influenced by events that occurred years earlier. Helene’s feelings for Manders, Helene’s husband dissolute lifestyle, and the relationship between Jacob and her wife Johanna—this character is only referenced and never seen in the play—all happen years ago. 

Ibsen created strong female characters in his plays. Much like Nora in A Doll’s House and Hedda in Hedda Gabler, Helene in Ghosts is also a troubled woman who has to figure out how to survive the humiliation of her husband’s infidelities with other women and either leave or stay with him to meet the community standards as an obedient housewife and a dedicated mother.     

Regina is one of the most intriguing characters in this play. Regina is seen flirting with Manders when he arrives to visit Helene. It is also implied that Jacob molested Regina earlier in her life. Regina flirting with Manders could be a result of her abuse by Jacob, a way to test Manders’ integrity as a man of God, or a way for her to open up a possibility if everything else fails for her.  

Talking to Manders, Helene admits that she sent Oswald to Paris to protect him from the negative influence of his father and that she built the orphanage as a screen to hide the licentious life of her husband. Helene also discloses Oswald and Regina who they really are and the impossibility of their relationship. The devastating fate of Oswald is also revealed and both Helen and Regina find themselves at a crossroad, forced to make difficult decisions that will define their lives forever. When the orphanage was destroyed by the fire, it was also a symbol that the truth was finally exposed and the ghosts of the past were coming back to haunt them all.

Ghosts is about the conservatism of the late 1800s, the traditional roles of women, the discussion of venereal diseases, prostitution, incest, and euthanasia, highly controversial issues at the time Ghosts was published. In fact, the play was banned in Europe for several years and thrashed merciless by the critics when it was finally allowed to be staged in theaters.

As for DeLorenzo’s production, the choice of cast is an excellent opportunity to pair up experienced thespians with upcoming ones. Pamela J. Gray and Barry Del Sherman offer exceptional performance, carrying most of the weight of the material. J.Stephen Brantley delivers a terrific performance as an unnerving and opportunistic Jacob. Viva Hassis Gentes and new comer Alex Barlas are two fine young actors giving their performances the intensity and vulnerability necessary to portray Ibsen’s complex characters.

The lighting (Christine Ferriter, lighting designer) is a phenomenal element that helps the director tell the story. Both the lighting and sound effects/music (John Zalewski, sound designer) add a dramatic effect to the transitions and pivotal scenes and create a dark and Gothic ambiance to the set (Frederica Nascimento, scenic designer).

Ghosts is an intense experience; the lighting, the music, the scenic design, and the powerful performances create a latent sense of tragedy, featuring topics that are still controversial and relevant in today’s society.            

Ghosts

Written by Henrik Ibsen. Adapted to the stage by British director Richard Eyre. Directed by Bart DeLorenzo. Starring: Alex BarlasJ.Stephen Brantley [sic], Barry Del Sherman, Viva Hassis Gentes, and Pamela J. Gray. Presented by Odyssey Theatre Ensemble. Ron Sossi, Artistic Director

Odyssey Theatre
2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Los Angeles CA 90025


Performances: 
September 10 – October 23
Fridays at 8 p.m.: Oct. 7, Oct. 14* and Oct. 21 (dark Sept. 16, Sept. 23, Sept. 30)
Saturdays at 8 p.m.: Sept. 10 (Opening Night), Sept. 17, Sept. 24, Oct. 1, Oct. 8, Oct. 15, Oct. 22
Sundays at 4 p.m.: Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 2, Oct. 9**, Oct. 16, Oct. 23 (dark Sept. 11)
Mondays at 8 p.m.: Sept. 19**, Sept. 26, Oct. 3, Oct. 10, Oct. 17 (dark Sept. 12)
*Wine Nights on Friday, Sept. 9 and Friday, Oct. 14: enjoy complimentary wine and snacks and after the show.
**Post-performance discussions with the artists on Monday, Sept. 19 and Sunday, Oct. 9

Tickets: www.OdysseyTheatre.com