items tagged with Jonathan Grafft
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Theatre
Category: Reviews
2012-11-12 12:01:00
After 12 years in the television-news business, I spent my first Election Day in more than a decade not covering the elections, but rather seeing a play about a bid for the presidency and the decision of whether to use personal attacks on opponents. And while watching the District Theatre’s The Best Man, directed by Bryan Tank, I wondered if the point being made in this political morality play – that the business of politics is on a downward moral spiral – is one that needs to be made. Don’t we, as a nation, already know that dirty politics are wrong, and doesn't this make the message of playwright Gore Vidal’s 1960 work dated? A day later, though, I read an article about personal attacks and dishonesty continuing to be a part of political campaigns because these tactics work, and so Vidal’s play, for better or worse, appears relevant after all.
Read More About Moral Combat: "The Best Man," At The District Theatre Through November 18...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Theatre
Category: Reviews
2012-09-10 12:00:00
Judging by Friday’s performance of The 39 Steps at the Playcrafters Barn Theatre, it’s apparent that director Tom Morrow likes sight gags and British humor. He handles playwright Patrick Barlow's comically melodramatic take on the 1915 spy thriller – and Alfred Hitchcock's 1935 film – with care, avoiding over-the-top staging but highlighting the humor in ways that elicit a lot of laughs. (Whereas overselling the gags would likely elicit groans.)
Read More About Hitchcocked: "The 39 Steps," At The Playcrafters Barn Theatre Through September 16...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Theatre
Category: Reviews
2011-10-10 12:00:00
New Ground Theatre’s God of Carnage is one of the funniest shows, if not the funniest, I’ve seen on a Quad Cities stage so far this year. Not only is the script by playwright Yasmina Reza sharp, surprising, and witty, but director Derek Bertelsen’s handling of the pacing and his cast’s character choices had me laughing embarrassingly loudly at Thursday’s performance. Even two days later, I find myself mentally inserting quotable dialogue from the play into conversations (though I’d rather not quote any of it here, as most of the best lines involve the “F” word).
Read More About The Parents Trapped: "God Of Carnage," At The Village Theatre Through October 16...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Theatre
Category: Reviews
2011-04-11 12:00:00
On Thursday night, the cast of the Richmond Hill Barn Theatre's Escanaba in da Moonlight brought me to a place I’d yet to arrive at in all of the theatre I’ve seen in the area: I experienced a fit of tear-filled giggles so strong, so overwhelming, that I missed several lines of dialogue.
Read More About Yooper-Duper: "Escanaba In Da Moonlight," At The Richmond Hill Barn Theatre Through April 17...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Theatre
Category: Reviews
2010-02-01 12:01:00

[Editor's note: On February 3, Harrison Hilltop producers Tristan Tapscott and Chris Walljasper announced the cancellation of the remaining performances for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf.]
As much as I like theatre, three hours in a chair can be a bit too much for me. The Harrison Hilltop Theatre's recent production of Long Day's Journey Into Night felt long, but mainly because the show's script is populated with lengthy, repetitious monologues. Its current production, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, is roughly the same length, but doesn't have the same plodding feeling. Perhaps it's because almost every line in the play seems weighty yet unpretentious, with an overall pacing quick enough to both keep and force your attention, lest you miss a sharp-tongued phrase.
Read More About House Of Booze: "Who’S Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?," At The Harrison Hilltop Theatre Through February 14...
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