Tag Archives: Coeurage Theatre company

POOLSIDE CHEKHOV

The tragedy of Ivanov repeats as farce in Boni B. Alvarez’s NICKY, an inspired Chekhov transposition in a world premiere production by the Coeurage Theatre Company, directed by Beth Lopes. But despite the levity induced by the update—NICKY’s pack of contemporary Russians migrates between San Francisco and their investment properties in Palm Springs, where they have gathered to celebrate Sasha’s twenty-first birthday—the characters in the new play cannot escape the discordant decline of their antecedents.

Paterfamilias Pavel (Daniel Kaemon)—in love with his wife, his family, and the endless glasses of vodka necessary to maintain his joie de vivre—is a fit, robust charmer who could not be prouder of his gay son Sasha. For his birthday party, Sasha is joined by three friends—a pair of queens, Julian and Bryce, and a girlfriend, Renee; Sasha’s droll aunt Aurora calls them “the University of San Francisco’s finest.” Aurora is a professional matchmaker, and after Julian points out that Palm Springs is full of gay daddies looking to settle down, Aurora opens her eyes and doubles her business.

Sasha—hopeful, cynical, impulsive, impossible—requires no such matchmaking, since the love of his life has always been around: Nicky, his father’s best friend, a walking ghost of a repressed past who can’t face Anna, his dying wife.

Cyrus Wilcox beautifully captures Nicky’s self-loathing and his passive, listless anomie. In roles that require riveting outbursts of abjection, Sandy Velasco (Anna) and Chris Aguila (Sasha) fully inhabit characters whose love for Nicky will not be denied.

Per Coeurage policy, admission to all performances is Pay-What-You-Want.

NICKY, through July 1.

GREENWAY COURT THEATRE, 544 North Fairfax, Los Angeles.

Image credit: Coeurage Theatre Company

Image credit: Coeurage Theatre Company

FAILURE: A LOVE STORY

Founded in 2009 by a dozen graduates from Cal State Fullerton, the Coeurage Theatre Company embodies the spirit of kids-putting-on-a-show with masterful comic timing and lyricism. FAILURE: A LOVE STORY, by Philip Dawkins, was originally produced by the company in 2015, and is now back on the boards in an energetic revival directed by Michael Matthews at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. (The inaugural play in Center Theatre Group’s new “Block Party” series.)

Set in the 1920s, this Theater of the Absurd-meets-vaudeville tells the story of the Fail family, owners of a Chicago watch and clock emporium and all manner of idiosyncratic behaviors. But as is made clear very early in the show, the source of their livelihood—the measurement of time—ends up leaving most of them with very little of it. In the hands of this deft ensemble, the echoes of loss and regret are never drowned out by the audience’s nearly continuous laughter.

(The showstopper “Johnny Weismuller” was written by Coeurage’s resident composer and music director Gregory Nabours, with lyrics by Dawkins.)

 

FAILURE: A LOVE STORY, through April 23.

KIRK DOUGLAS THEATRE, 9820 Washington Boulevard, Culver City.

centertheatregroup.org/tickets/kirk-douglas-theatre/2016-17/block-party/

coeurage.org

gregorynabours.com

Nicole Shalhoub and Denver Milord (foreground); Gina Torrecilla, Cristina Gerla, Brittney S. Wheeler, and Kurt Quinn (left to right, background) in the Coeurage Theatre production of Failure: A Love Story. Photograph by Craig Schwartz. © 2017 Craig Schwartz

Nicole Shalhoub and Denver Milord (foreground), and Gina Torrecilla, Cristina Gerla, Brittney S. Wheeler, and Kurt Quinn (left to right, background) in the Coeurage Theatre production of Failure: A Love Story.
Photograph by Craig Schwartz.
© 2017 Craig Schwartz