
Gammage Goers - Alumnus
A panel of ASU Gammage theatregoers shares their opinions throughout the season.
Meet Lynn

Lynn
Where do you live? Scottsdale (Valley resident for more than 2 decades)
Age: 48
Occupation: Writer/Editor
Marital Status? Married
Children and Grandchildren: Three children…Christopher (20), Jennifer (18—a Sun Devil!) and Lizabeth (16)
Where did you grow up? Colorado, Alaska, Hawaii and California
First Broadway show, and where you saw it: Phantom in NYC
What is your favorite Broadway show? Next to Normal (Who knew we were being filmed?!)
What are your hobbies? Reading, Gardening, Volunteering, Teen Taxiing
A song and artist that speaks to you: What a Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong (and anything by “The Boss”)
Something Unique about yourself that defines you: I never leave home without my New York Times.
Video Profile:
Lynn's Video Reviews
Lynn's Written Reviews
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Gammage Goer Review: Annie
By Lynn Trimble
ASU Gammage was a sea of red for the opening night of Annie. The theater was swarming with children—in a good way. Little girls donned their party dresses and patent leather shoes. Little boys sported crisp shirts and sweater vests. Too often Arizona audiences take the Hawaiian shirt and flip flops approach, but Annie seems to have inspired a return to some of the glitz and glamour of theater-going at its best.
The theater was abuzz with families enjoying a festive night of musical theater at its best. If you want to create a magical memory for a child, Annie is a sure thing. So few musicals revolve around the lives of children, and fewer still feature so many talented child performers. More than any other show, perhaps, Annie leaves young audience members thinking—and feeling—“I can do that!”
Madison Kerth, who performs the role of Annie, is a master of the heart-tug moment. The audience is spellbound as she opens the show with “Maybe,” a song steeped in the longings of an orphaned girl wishing for the return of her practically-perfect parents. But it isn’t long before Mackenzie Aladjem, the tiniest cast member, steals the spotlight. What’s not to love about a pigtailed pint-size orphan in tattered grey one piece pajamas?
Youngsters familiar with the music from Annie feel at home early on with favorites like “It’s the Hard-Knock Life” and “Tomorrow”—making it easier, I suspect, for them to sit patiently through lesser known numbers like “We’d Like to Thank You Herbert Hoover.” I’ve seen some productions of Annie that feel like disjointed journeys from one well-known song to another, with little musical meat in between. But that’s hardly the case for this production.
The Hooverville scene, which follows on the heels of “Tomorrow,” is one of the finest song and dance spectaculars of the whole evening. This Annie ensemble seems a true ensemble in the finest sense of the word. They aren’t placeholders between Annie numbers. They’re astute actors and powerful vocalists who really compel the audience to journey back with them to the days of the Great Depression.
It’s clear from earlier tirades with the orphans that Miss Hannigan is a meanie, but another side of the character holds sway as Lynn Andrews performs the song “Little Girls.” This Miss Hannigan isn’t just cranky. She’s a bit kooky too. Stern, but silly. Tyrannical, yet tipsy. It seemed a bit overplayed for my taste, but I suspect it was spot on for younger audience members who got a good giggle out of Andrews’ performance. It wasn’t my favorite portrayal of Miss Hannigan, but it is among the most memorable.
When Annie finally arrives at the Warbuck’s mansion, I’m struck by the simple elegance of the set. Other productions of Annie that I’ve enjoyed through the years have had more sparkle and shine, but this set is far-and-away my favorite. I felt like I was strolling through an elegant art museum full of colors that are bold but never brash. This set works beautifully as a backdrop for the talents of the cast, rather than a showpiece needed to bolster their performances.
Act I draws to a close with a reprise of Annie’s “Maybe”—but not before the audience enjoys a tender rendition of “NYC” and a comical coup with “Easy Street.” Cheryl Hoffman (Lily St. Regis) and Zander Meisner (Rooster Hannigan) play perfectly to both children and grown-ups in the crowd—a balance it can be difficult to strike in musical theater. “Easy Street,” a song I often find more annoying than entertaining, was among my favorite numbers this time around.
As enchanted as I was with Act I, I felt most charmed by Act II— which opens with “You’re Never Fully Dressed Without a Smile.” The singing Boylan Sisters (Liz Bachman, Margaret-Ellen Jeffreys and Katie Reid), in their parfait pink evening gowns, left me longing for a simpler time. Like Miss Hannigan, radio announcer Bert Healy (Ricky Pope) seemed a bit over the top—but the kids in the crowd loved it. So much the better, I suppose.
The funniest scene by far features Kenneth D’Elia as F.D.R. cabinet member Harold Ickes. President Roosevelt (Jeffrey B. Duncan) is joined by Oliver Warbucks (David Barton) and a handful of advisors who ponder possible solutions to the country’s economic woes. Annie chimes in with her own perspective, as Kerth performs a reprise of “Tomorrow”—complete with a “keep the ol’ chin up” arm gesture that’s dogged me since she used it early in Act I. D’Elia runs with it and the audience is in an uproar. You have to love a musical that so masterfully mocks its own muse.
The final scene opens with the curly-haired, red-headed Annie descending a staircase at Warbuck’s mansion in her signature red dress—gleefully offering a series of “Rockette” style kicks while Grace Farrell (Tracy Bair), Drake (Ricky Pope) and the rest of soon-to-be “Daddy” Warbucks’ staff hail her to the tune of “Annie.” By now, I’m surrounded by little girls leaning forward on the very edges of their seat. They’re captivated—as it should be.
The jig is up for the “Easy Street” trio, who’ve been attempting to collect a reward by posing as Annie’s long-lost parents, and the audience relishes watching them get their comeuppance. Annie is reunited with her orphan friends, who gather around a Christmas tree brimming with gifts like a giant orange tricycle and a red bouncing ball nearly as tall as the tiniest orphan.
All is well as Annie, Warbucks, Grace and F.D.R.—along with orphans and staff—ring in “A New Deal for Christmas.” It’s another strong ensemble performance, one of so many that make the evening sing. The audience clearly appreciates the performances of each and every one, rising in an enthusiastic standing ovation as the ensemble takes their bows ahead of actors performing the lead roles. The conductor and musicians are lavished with generous applause as well, proving that “together” is every bit as glorious as “tomorrow.”
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“August: Osage County”
Casual conversations with cast members
On a recent trip to Tempe, Estelle Parsons donned a dingy bathrobe, alternated smoking cigarettes and unscrewing her pill bottle, and repeatedly raved about the rhythm of Eric Clapton’s music. She was on stage, performing the lead role of Violet Weston in the play “August: Osage County.”Before rehearsals for Friday night’s show at ASU Gammage, Parson graciously paused for an hour of casual conversation with a small gathering of Valley artists and arts supporters, including several of the Gammage Goers tasked with reviewing shows during this season’s Broadway Across America series in Arizona.
She’s been meeting with artists and arts advocates while on tour with “August: Osage County,” including stops in Denver and San Francisco. A lifelong New Yorker, Parsons acknowledges her bias for believing everyone needs to be in New York, but recognizes that theater is becoming more widespread—with various degrees of quality and success. She doesn’t appear snobbish, just smitten with her hometown.
Parsons sits atop a small stack of stairs in the ASU Gammage lobby—much shorter than the staircase she maneuvers with various degrees of success when she’s on stage as a pill popping matriarch—and looks like anyone you might meet on the street (assuming you’re on a hip street—and Mill Avenue certainly qualifies).
The first thing I notice is her caramel-color shoes, a somewhat-worn cross between moccasins and penny loafers (no pennies, of course). Then her large red round eyeglasses, the small singular hole in her faded blue jeans and her half-tucked in blouse with an overall leaf pattern in muted tan, green and blue (plus a peachy color I’m not astute enough to identify).
She’s interested in learning more about Arizona’s arts community and where theater fits into the hustle and bustle of our lives. She’s concerned that too few people are going to the theater these days. The last thing Parsons wants to hear, she says, is “Oh, I went to the theater once.” Good theater pulls people back time and time again. “August: Osage County” clearly fits that bill in her book: “This play is a phenomenon.”
“I don’t even call it a play,” Parsons says, “because the audience starts to interact with it immediately.” Other plays, she observes, come out of literary tradition. “This one doesn’t do that.” Still, she’s quick to distinguish herself from folks well-versed in literary criticism. That’s not her thing. “I’ve been in acting all my life,” says Parsons (she began acting in community theater productions at the age of seven).
Her vast credits include being an original member of the NBC-TV “Today Show” (she was the first woman to do news reporting for a television network), garnering an Academy Award for her performance in the film “Bonnie and Clyde,” starring on television for 10 years as “Roseanne’s” mother and more. Parsons was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2004. Still, these aren’t the things she’s come to share.
Instead, she talks about the work, the craft of acting. “I never went to school or anything,” she says. “I apprenticed in summer stock places while at college.” A theater student in the group asks Parsons about her technique. She’s gracious and genuinely helpful in her reply—yet says, “I don’t have a technique.” Someone once told her, she recalls, that this was her technique.
“I’ve prepared myself through my life of acting to let things happen to me after I get out on stage,” she says. “I believe I was born with a gift and I’ve spent my life trying to be aware of this, to use this.” Her tone is matter of fact, earnest but not egotistical. “I have always,” she adds, “tried to listen inside me.”
Once Parsons reads a script she’s mindful of “what comes up in me, what questions come up.” “I read the script,” says Parsons, “and get up and try to do what it gives me.” Parsons readily admits that she doesn’t like taking acting classes. “I don’t like anyone telling me anything,” she says, “as an actor.”
“What happens today is not the same as what happens tomorrow,” reflects Parsons. “Stay open during rehearsals, performances.”
Paul Vincent O’Connor, who performs the role of Charlie Aiken in “August: Osage County,” has now joined Parsons sitting on the steps. He agrees and tells her, “Yes, you’re exquisite at that.”
O’Connor has extensive film and television credits and spent 16 years as a member of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. He and Parsons agree that while actors can do research and other prep work for their roles, what they really traffic in is the emotional.
O’Connor references Greek philosophers such as Marcus Aurelius (Roman emperor and Stoic who wrote: ‘Time is a sort of river of passing events’) and cites a quote attributed to Heraclitus (a later Greek philosopher who wrote: ‘You can never step in the same river twice’).
They also agree that acting demands emotional and physical stamina. If you work the craft, you already know this all too well. But those of us who witness the work sometimes take it for granted. The more time I spend with theater folk, including my daughter Lizabeth, the more I appreciate the blend of rigor and agility this craft demands.
“It’s a lifelong commitment doing long, physical work like this,” says Parsons. She describes the physical activities built into her busy schedule—hiking, weightlifting, working with a personal trainer, swimming, running—as just part of her life as an actor. “I’m Swedish,” quips Parsons. “My mom was born way up by the arctic circle, so I’m stronger than most.”
Of course, none of this occurs to you as you’re watching the Westons continuously unwind and rewind their lives, their relationships, their memories.The set features a three story house that bodes of the heaviness this home heaves onto the hearts of its inhabitants. The writing (described by Parsons as “sparse”) scarcely gives an on-edge audience time to breathe between revelations and their reverberations. The actors draw you into a world infinitely more real than anything you’re likely to see on a reality TV show.
The live performance allows for interaction you simply can’t get from that little box or giant screen in your living room. (You can make it 3-D, but it’ll still pale in comparison to live performance art). Audience members, insists Parsons, are an integral part of the show. Not just “August: Osage County,” but every work of live theater. “We must listen to the audience,” she says. “Audiences have a tremendous effect on how actors are.”
O’Connor has performed in touring productions of “August: Osage County” in both London and the U.S., and is quick to point out the differences between audiences in the two countries. He’s also seen differences among American audiences. “Every region,” he observes, “has a different sensibility.”
Play-going is a much greater part of life in England, reflects O’Connor. “They understand what the process is and their part in it.” London audiences take their seats promptly and are very attentive. They applaud vigorously (“over their heads” if they’re especially pleased with something), but show fewer emotions than American audiences.Parsons and O’Connor became mindful at this point that rehearsals were set to begin onstage, and didn’t want to be late. We had to let them go before anyone had the chance to ask something I suspect was on many of our minds. “What can we do to encourage more Americans to attend, understand and appreciate the theater?” In the absence of their insights, I’m going to venture a guess…
Practice, practice, practice…
I’ll see you at the theater.
--Lynn
Lynn Trimble is a 2009-2010 Gammage Goer who does freelance writing/editing as The Poised Pen and writes a daily arts blog for Raising Arizona Kids magazine.
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“In the Heights”
Cast Party Conversations
by Lynn Trimble
ASU Gammage Goer
2009-2010 SeasonAfter opening their Arizona tour at ASU Gammage to a full crowd who met the work with an enthusiastic standing ovation, the cast of the Tony Award®-winning musical “In the Heights” gathered for an after-party to share food, drink and conversation.
I attended with my daughter, Lizabeth, a senior theater student at Arizona School for the Arts, who has been enjoying season tickets to ASU Gammage Broadway series with me for more than a decade.
After every show, she races to the stage door armed with a constellation of Sharpie pens (some black, some silver, some fine point, some thicker), hoping cast members will be gracious enough to share autographs as they leave the theater.
But a cast party has a different vibe. The guests are all invited—hence the check-in area and nametags—and decorum takes precedence over doing what comes naturally.
We attended as guests of ASU Gammage, along with other Gammage Goers charged with reviewing the evening’s performance.
Everything ASU Gammage does is polished and professional, and the cast party was no exception.
Colleen Jennings-Roggensack, Executive Director for ASU Gammage and Assistant Vice President for Cultural Affairs, welcomed cast members and guests alike as she lauded the evening’s performance.
We were all especially pleased that Lin-Manuel Miranda—who conceived “In the Heights,” wrote its music and lyrics, and originated the lead role of “Usnavi” on Broadway—joined us for the celebration.
Miranda will reprise his role for this weekend’s matinee performances of “In the Heights” at ASU Gammage, something he says will help him as he works with a talented team to take the 2008 Tony Award®-winner for “Best Musical” (plus three other categories) from stage to big screen.
Miranda was gracious about posing for photos with cast party guests, and took the time to engage with many of us in thoughtful, genuine conversation. As we spoke, I looked around the room and noticed the plethora of paper napkins layering nearly every flat surface.
I recalled author J. K. Rowling’s confession that she’d written many of her original “Harry Potter” musings on napkins and scraps of paper that got shoved into a box until she got around to patching them all together into what we now know as one of the best-selling books of all time.
I wondered whether Miranda might have done something similar, knowing he’d originated his earliest versions of “In the Heights” as a sophomore at Wesleyan University. Not the case, he shared. Instead, Miranda told us, he scribbled those first musings amidst sketchy notes taken during an astronomy class.
I certainly hope he kept that astronomy notebook, because it contains the genesis of an idea that grew into a musical destined to do nothing short of transforming the way musical theater is crafted and carried forward for future generations. That transformation is already taking place.
We enjoyed some other fun conversations that evening, starting with two young men who recognized Lizabeth from a recent community theater production of “The Laramie Project” and raved about how much they’d loved the piece. That was a “mom” moment I’ll never forget.
Then there was our conversation with Michael Porto, Director of Marketing and Communications for ASU Gammage, who shared that he’d be seeing “American Idiot” in New York the following evening. I was proud of Lizabeth for not suggesting he hide her in his carry-on luggage.
Previewing shows is just a small part of what the fine folks at ASU Gammage do to bring us the best in Broadway theater each season, but it’s the piece many of us envy the most. A five-day trip to see three shows on Broadway, with meetings packed in between, might be exhausting—but it sounds exhilarating.
Our final conversations were with a fellow Gammage Goer and his guest. We compared notes about what has been an overwhelmingly positive and pleasant experience, discussing trends in live theater and sharing our varying preferences.
Lizabeth and I tend to favor edgier works, including “Spring Awakening,” “Next to Normal,” and “American Idiot” (and we are ever so sad that we won’t get to see the play “Red” before it closes on Broadway).
Our cast party companions shared that they prefer lighter, happier fare—including Disney musicals like “Mary Poppins,” which had a wonderful run at ASU Gammage earlier this year.
That’s the beauty of ASU Gammage. There’s something for everyone. The serious. The lighthearted. The classic. The cutting-edge. It’s evident in the upcoming 2010-2011 season too.
We’ll be there as longtime season ticket holders, and hope we’ll see you there too.
It’s been a joy and honor to serve with the first class of ASU Gammage Goers—and we can’t wait to see future Gammage Goers share their insights and enthusiasm for all things Broadway.




















