crafty_packrat: Heart design on whorl of a polymer clay spindle (Default)
Went to see Synetic's production of The Snow Queen today with [personal profile] pleasance, [personal profile] greenygal, and A Pseudonym. It was a lovely adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen story, and a very funny sequence with the Robber Girl.

We're trying to hash out holiday plans, including see The Muppet Christmas Carol sometime next weekend, and maybe Star Wars as well. And watching Spider-man cartoons over the break, as Disney+ apparently has most of them available, if you've subscribed to the service.

I have to say, the days right before the solstice are the worst -- the performance was an afternoon show, and after we had dinner at We, the Pizza it was only about 6 or so and it felt late. Why can't just take all of the winter easy, stay inside mostly and not go out into the cold and damp?
crafty_packrat: Heart design on whorl of a polymer clay spindle (Default)
When to see Synetic Theater's production of The Tempest, which was amazing as usual. However, I am very glad I didn't sit in the splash zone, as I was two rows away and still got splattered a bit. I'm also glad that they did this production in October -- last time they did The Tempest, they did it in February, and getting wet then is a recipe for hypothermia.

For those of you that don't know, Synetic floods the stage with 2 inches of water for their production of the Tempest, and then takes full advantage of it for lots of interesting effects, including a piano that spouts water from the keyboard. This season's production also cast Prospero and his brother with women, so we had Prospera and Antonia, dancing in full-length dresses on a flooded stage.

I'm probably going to buy a subscription to the rest of the season. I actually do want to see the entire slate this time, and that will save me some amount of money.
crafty_packrat: Heart design on whorl of a polymer clay spindle (Default)
I went to see Syntetic Theater's Sleepy Hollow last night with [personal profile] greenygal, [personal profile] pleasance and A Pseudonym.

All in all, it was a very loose adaptation of Washington Irving's classic story The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, but mostly the differences came from making Ichabod Crane and Brom Bones into soldiers recently returned from the Revolutionary War, instead of a schoolmaster and a local tough in the 1790s. They kept the Headless Horseman as the ghost of a Hessian solider, but had him out for revenge because Ichabod and others had killed him during the war, and unnecessarily slaughtered his beloved horse as well.

Which mean there were several fairly terrifying scenes of the Horseman and the horse spirit chasing through the woods after various characters. Yet again, Synetic made one fairly static set piece into several terrifying different things. They also had strips of a Hessian flag (well, an approximation of the actual Hessian flag of the period, anyway) that the Horseman left on the bodies of victims for just that perfect ominous touch.

The scene where the Horseman comes out of the woods on his horse to confront Ichabod and is surrounded by the decapitated ghosts of his victims (played by the ensemble, dressed all in black, wearing identical masks, and carrying their heads) was incredible spooky. The horse at that point was the dancer who'd been playing the horse's spirit throughout, a member of the ensemble working the front legs, and another ensemble member with the Horseman on his shoulders to give him the illusion of being mounted on horseback. It worked really well and was really creepy.

The next play in this season is an adaptation of My Father's Dragon, which should be much more family-friendly.

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