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St. Louis Magazine - December, 2006
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In This Issue

Features

Power Players:
The 50 People Who Run St. Louis
The Man Who Forgot to Sleep Unexpected Lines Cooperstown Never-Be Things We Love The Power 50's Power Picks A Bomb Shelter for Christmas Behind Closed Doors Forgive Me, Darling In The Name of The Father

Departments

Prophet Motive Mr. Smith Makes It To Washington Cooperstown Never-Be Things We Love

Departments

A Conversation with Catherine Hanaway A Kick in the Pants Bean-Counters - Coffee Shopping Check it out: Lucas School House Compton Heights Confessions of a Personal Santa Curtains Up First Look - The Dubliner Flashback - 1963 Good Stuff - Kevin Moss Good Things in Threes Grab a Bite - Pestalozzi Place Harmonica Convergence Holiday Spin In Store - Best of Both Worlds Job Description - The Iceman Cometh Make The Auld New Perspective - Literary Lies Radio Free Santa Raiders of the Lost Accessories Review - Terrene Sugar and Spicer’s The Best Medicine The Tuning Fork of St. Louis Uncommon Knowledge - Susan Talve
2008.07.01 - Awesome Amphibians
Frogs, toads, snakes, lizards, newts, salamanders and caecilians, oh my!...
2008.07.01 - Dinosaurs Alive!
Large-format movie about the giant reptiles that once ruled the earth.SAINT...
2008.07.01 - From Kettle to Keg
A historical look at how St. Louis became a brewery town, from John Coons'...
2008.09.12 - Lutz Bacher: Spill and Aïda Ruilova: The Singles 1999 to Now
The Contemporary's 2008-2009 season opens with Lutz Bacher: Spill and...
2008.11.21 - Arianna String Quartet: Epic Expressions
In their second series concert, the acclaimed Arianna String Quartet follows...

Curtains Up

The “Wendy City” … The Rep’s ultimate musical … and the “Half Monty”?

By Joe Pollack

Wendy Wasserstein gave a voice to American women through a series of elegant, funny, highly personal plays. Many won critical honors; one earned both a Tony and a Pulitzer Prize. After her death last January, theaters lined up to honor her. For “The Wendy City: St. Louis’ Tribute to Wendy Wasserstein,” three local companies will present her plays. The Sisters Rosensweig, running now at the New Jewish Theatre; The Heidi Chronicles, to be staged by the Rep in February; and An American Daughter, which the Orange Girls will produce next summer.

The Sisters Rosensweig, which could just as easily be called The Sisters Wasserstein, gives us three New York Jewish sisters at a reunion in London. Kari Ely (above, in NJT’s Broken Glass) is Sara, the eldest; Lavonne Byers is Gorgeous; and Liz Hopefl is Pfeni.

Ely played several small roles (a wife, a protester, the leader of a women’s group) in the Rep’s production of The Heidi Chronicles back in 1990, two years after the Broadway opening.

“She [Wasserstein] said a lot about women and their places in the world, not just the stage,” Ely says. “I did not have Heidi’s struggle. But now, nearing the middle of my own life, I can understand how much her plays spoke to all of us.”

The Rep’s holiday-season show, despite its unwieldy title, The Musical of Musicals, (The Musical!), might be a keeper. We see the basic story from five viewpoints (think of The Seven Samurai), but the differences come from the music. The tale flows from the musical styles of Rodgers and Hammerstein, Webber, Sondheim, Herman and the team of Kander and Ebb. It will benefit from two things: Director Pamela Hunt, who’s directed several Rep musicals (and who assisted in Musical’s New York birth) and lyricist Joanne Bogart, a member of the original company, who will join Matt Bailey, Edwin Cahill and Kristin Maloney onstage.

I attended Meet Me in St. Louis just after Stages had announced a production of The Full Monty for 2007. A man in a row ahead scurried over and with an almost-panicky expression, asked, “What will it be like?” I said it would be OK, that the nudity was so minimal as to not be present at all and, if he was concerned, to think of it as The Half Monty. He seemed satisfied and returned to his seat, at which point someone sitting behind me said, “Isn’t that so St. Louis!”


For times, prices and theatre locations, check out our online event listings.