Music to their ears

For the coming season, Baltimore theaters mix sure things and guilty pleasures among more challenging works to bring in audiences

  • The arena-rock love story, " Rock of Ages," comes to The Hippodrome Theatre Nov. 30-Dec. 5., 2010. (Pictured: The Broadway cast)
The arena-rock love story, " Rock of Ages," comes… (Photo by Joan Marcus)
March 28, 2010|By Tim Smith | tim.smith@baltsun.com

Rock music, from a slicked-down '60s group to high-hair '80s metal bands, will help propel Baltimore's 2010-2011 theater season, along with crackling scores from decades-old Broadway shows. The common tune running through all of this is hopeful box-office appeal.

"The economy is requiring us to be smarter and more nimble," says Jeff T. Daniel, vice president and executive director of the France-Merrick Performing Arts Center, home of the Hippodrome Theatre. "You can't take anything for granted anymore. No one knows how any show will do."

Choosing proven products can help ease some of the suspense, though, and if there's one sure bet in the world of touring productions today, the Hippodrome has it next season - "Jersey Boys."

Never mind that this buoyant 2005 bio-musical about Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons played for weeks this season in Washington. "It's a phenomenally successful show," Daniel says. "And our subscribers have a desire to see this show at the Hippodrome in their seats."

Giving the public what it wants is the oldest lesson in show business, and it's one that makes even more sense in a lingering recession, when people are being extra cautious with their spending.

Next season's Broadway Across America lineup at the Hippodrome includes the surprise New York hit " Rock of Ages," a show built around the music of such bands as Styx and Twisted Sister. It moved from off- to on-Broadway last year and is still running strong there.

" 'Rock of Ages' is going to be a guilty pleasure," Daniel says.

The offbeat Blue Man Group, which has developed a global fan base for its techno- comedy, will be part of the season, along with such market-friendly products as the aerial extravaganza "Cirque Dreams Illumination" and "Shrek The Musical." Like this season, which has the well-traveled "Phantom of the Opera" heading into town next month, 2010-2011 will include a visit by the another big '80s musical, " Les Miserables."

"West Side Story" rounds out the Hippodrome lineup. This will be the national tour of the successful revival of the iconic 1957 musical, directed by its librettist, Arthur Laurents.

A 35-year-old musical figures in the 2010-2011 season at Center Stage - "The Wiz," where Oz and Motown get their groove on, will receive a new production. "I'm doing the original version, not the one after Hollywood got a hold of it," says company artistic director Irene Lewis.

Also on tap for Center Stage is the East Coast premiere of a new adaptation of David Guterson's popular book (later a movie), "Snow Falling on Cedars," a tale set on the West Coast in the 1950s that looks into crime and prejudice. "Crime and Punishment" will be another theme next season, via an adaptation of Dostoyevsky's novel by Curt Columbus and Marilyn Campbell.

Lewis will also offer a new staging of Harold Pinter's classic "The Homecoming," a potent multilayered examination of a family, sex and suppression. And the comical folks of Chicago's famed Second City will take up temporary residence in Charm City to gather material for a new, Baltimore-specific play for Center Stage.

One more production is to be determined. Among the pieces being considered for that sixth spot on the season are a solo work about Thurgood Marshall and a Kathleen Turner vehicle about the late journalist Molly Ivins.

Complementing the main productions will be the continuation of Center Stage's recently introduced cabaret series, expanding from four shows to five. "I will ask some artists from this season to come back," Lewis says, "but I'd also like to expand the variety."

Meanwhile, Everyman Theatre and Rep Stag are putting the finishing touches on their 2010-2011 offerings.

"We're still a couple of weeks away from announcing," says Everyman artistic director Vincent Lancisi. "But we're pretty excited about next season. I'm looking for what will be the best combination of plays to blow the roof off of this place for our 20th anniversary and the last in our current facility. We have the potential to add a sixth show; we normally do five. And there's the possibility of a festival within the season celebrating a playwright."

Details for the Rep Stage's 18th season aren't completely set, either, but Michael Stebbins, producing artistic director, has provided some intriguing hints: "A fantastic variety of plays, including an American comedy written in 1916 by one of the most celebrated and unsung playwrights of that time period; an intimate and electric play, written in the 1960s, which was considered a theatrical milestone - both for its dramatic technique and for its outspoken theme - by a playwright currently having a worldwide renaissance."

Stebbins is also looking at "a dark comedy about three teenagers who come together to disclose the truth about a scandal that has rocked ... their worlds" and "a recent off-Broadway hit by one of America's up-and-coming female playwrights."

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