Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Elizabeth Herbert’

Quality theater on Whidbey? Believe the rumors.

Elizabeth Herbert

Elizabeth Herbert is a busy bee.

Bouncing from production to production, the prodigiously-talented South Whidbey resident could be referred to as an actress/writer/director/acting coach, but that would miss out on about 23 other jobs she’s had in the worlds of theater and TV.

After directing City of Angels at the Whidbey Island Center for the Arts in 2014, Herbert spent a year working on a show in Las Vegas.

Between then and now, she penned a full-length comedy which became a finalist in a New York competition and worked with daughter Chelsea Randall on a children’s TV show.

Herbert worked as an acting coach on the pirate-themed musical The Adventures of Captain Callie, which Randall created and wrote for WhidbeyTV.

In the near future, Herbert plans to direct a pair of one-act plays, teach summer acting classes and mount a production of To Kill a Mockingbird at the Driftwood Playhouse in Edmonds.

Oh, and she’s also currently writing a sitcom.

Somehow, in the middle of the hurricane, Herbert has carved out time to direct the Neil Simon farce Rumors, which runs at WICA Mar. 31-Apr. 15.

The play, which ran 535 performances on Broadway in the late ’80s, winning a Tony for Christine Baranski, is set at an anniversary dinner party.

Things quickly fall apart as gunshots, a car accident and much verbal back-stabbing replace dinner as everyone’s focus.

Herbert has long wanted to bring the play to vibrant life.

“I proposed Rumors to WICA a few years ago, before we entered the surreal world in which we are currently living,” Herbert said. “It was a funny play written by a favorite playwright of mine, Neil Simon; it was also a farce, which I love to direct.”

Farce uses an emphasis on characters taking themselves over seriously, intensified body energy and big/wild characterizations, which makes it even more appropriate in the cracked world we currently inhabit.

“Timing is everything,” Herbert said. “Now you can see how RELEVANT this silly, funny play has become.”

The cast for the production includes:

Brian Burroughs
Jim Carroll
Gail Liston
David Mayer
Christina Parker
Megan Parker
Nicole Parnell
Brian Plebanek
Kathy Stanley
Ken Stephens

For ticket info, pop over to:

https://www.wicaonline.org/events-calendar-view/2017/3/31/rumors

Read Full Post »

It's like sunshine flows from every pore in Chelsea Randall's face. (Kelsey Simmons photo)

It’s like sunshine flows from every pore in Chelsea Randall’s face. (Kelsey Simmons photo)

Savannah (left) and Chelsea Randall, early in their careers.

Savannah (left) and Chelsea Randall, early in their careers.

Chelsea Randall has a smile that lights up the world.

Not just the room she’s in, or the city outside that room, or the continental U.S., but the entire freakin’ globe. It’s a documented fact.

Seriously.

Scientists in Oslo have determined that one smile from Ms. Randall can cure entire villages of depression, malcontentedness and you-look-like-you-have-a-stick-up-your-rear syndrome and are debating flying her into war-torn countries as a one-woman USO tour shooting joy from her dimples.

It’s Nobel Prize-worthy research, really.

For the next two nights, you, the person reading this article as you try to open your eyes and stuff some cereal in your face, can help make the sunniness bloom in her cheeks. Can make her eyes twinkle like the stars set free from the heavens.

It’s simple.

Slap down a few bucks and see Whidbey Island Center for the Arts production of “City of Angels” as it plays its final two shows.

Fill the seats, from the floor to the back row and reward the show’s supremely-talented choreographer/assistant director (and everyone else involved in the creation of an intricate, wildly entertaining musical comedy) for the countless hours she has poured into giving Whidbey a slice of Broadway in its own backyard.

Chelsea, working with mom Elizabeth Herbert (director) and lil’ sis Savannah Randall (one of the show’s leading ladies with Karla Crouch and Deana Duncan) has taken a show that won multiple Tony Awards and injected her own brand of sassy dance into it, bringing new life to the already-strong music.

The show is fast-talkin’ and high-swingin’ for the fences, and the untold hours she and her cohorts have poured into the show need to be rewarded.

Of course, you could wait until Chelsea ends up on the Great White Way, as a writer or choreographer, and go buy a ticket to see her work then.

Or, you could make your wallet happy and spring for a ticket now and still have some bucks left over for dinner or drinks pre-or-post-show.

You’re smart. You’re reading this story, after all. So the decision is easy.

Unleash the smile.

BUY TICKETS at:

http://wicaonline.com/2013-2014/CITYOFANGELS.html

Read Full Post »

The early days of actress Savannah Randall (left) and choreographer Chelsea Randall.

  The early days of actress Savannah Randall (left) and choreographer Chelsea Randall.

Chelsea (left), Savannah and mom Elizabeth Herbert (right), out for a day on the town.

  Chelsea (left), Savannah and mom Elizabeth Herbert (right), taking the theater world by storm.

The Chelsea Randall Appreciation Society is standing by, paddles at the ready, if you don't make the right choice.

  The Chelsea Randall Appreciation Society is standing by, paddles at the ready, if you don’t make the right choice.

Your butt in a theater seat. Make it happen.

Whidbey Island Center for the Arts production of “City of Angels,” a majestic, sweeping musical comedy set in the film noir-drenched world of classic Hollywood, opens tonight for a two-week run in Langley.

It’s simple. You buy a ticket (or, better yet, multiple tickets) and the Chelsea Randall Appreciation Society doesn’t have to hunt you down and apply the Paddle o’ the Hurtin’ Butt.

We know where you live. We have the technology.

So, if you treasure your ability to sit down in the days to come, it’s simple — go bask in the inspired choreography laid down by Ms. Randall (which was not in the original Broadway show, it’s all her), the snappy direction of Elizabeth Herbert (her mom, who used to hang out with Elvis and Henry Fonda in her days as an actress) and the acting with a capitol A delivered by a cast that includes (uber-talented) little sis Savannah and Coupeville’s own heartthrob crooner, Jim Castaneda.

It’s an easy choice.

Otherwise Mr. Affleck and the boys will be round to see you. Soon. Very soon.

Go buy tickets here:

http://wicaonline.com/2013-2014/CITYOFANGELS.html

Read Full Post »

Two of the "City of Angels" leads -- Tristan Steel and Savannah Randall, during the production of "Big," which, like "CoA," was choreographed by Chelsea Randall. (WICA photo)

Savannah Randall shares a scene with Tristan Steel during the production of “Big,” which was choreographed by big sister Chelsea Randall. (WICA photo)

Savannah (left) and Chelsea Randall, the early years.

Savannah (left) and Chelsea Randall, the early years.

Chelsea (left), Savannah and mom Elizabeth Herbert (right), out for a day on the town.

Chelsea (left), Savannah and mom Elizabeth Herbert (right), out for a day on the town.

Savannah Randall can lay down rhymes like Tupac.

The very definition of talented, the 23-year old South Whidbey-based actress (one of the stars of the upcoming Whidbey Island Center for the Arts production of “City of Angels”) has juggled four theatrical productions at one time.

She’s had a second home on the stage (“Life is so … mundane … without it!”) since she was three.

She’s starred in countless short films written, directed and edited by the other two thirds of a crack trio that includes mom Elizabeth Herbert and older sister Chelsea Randall.

She has a beautiful singing voice that can skip from Nicki Minaj to Idina Menzel, while putting her own unique spin on the song at hand.

And yet now, in between bites of a sandwich at the Greenbank Store, the bright, bubbly blond is laying down lyrical truth about dinosaurs, until she dissolves into a brief fit of giggles.

There are people who act, or at least try their hand at it, and then there are stars. Bright, burning, irresistible super novas who grab your attention and refuse to let go.

Savannah Randall is, most certainly, one of the latter.

Musical comedy, serious drama, teenage soap opera, childhood detective sagas (her 13th birthday featured her family and friends producing a professional-grade, ready-for-rental DVD called “Chloe Solves a Mystery”)  and (maybe) even a TV series she’s writing based on her life — she can do it all, and often does.

When she and older sister Chelsea were selling candy as youngsters, instead of going door-to-door, they set up a tap dance floor outside of a grocery store in Las Vegas and then hoofed it until the money poured in.

In a lifetime of entertainment (her dad is a stage manager, her mom a child actress turned writer/director, her sister a dance prodigy/screenwriter/choreographer/film editor while grandpa Pitt Herbert was a character actor in the movies who played opposite everyone from Elvis to Jimmy Stewart), Randall has rarely, if ever, shied from the spotlight.

“I was a rambunctious, precocious child I guess. I really, really liked the attention!,” she said with a laugh.

And, if that means dancing along side her sister in 118-degree weather on a flat bed truck parked at an Air Force base — while dressed as the characters from “Men in Black” while an air show roars by in the background — so much more the fun.

“I’m white, white, white and Norwegian, and we’re wearing black suits and sunglasses and planes are dive bombing us in the background and everything is swirling round and round,” Randall said. “I have never been so hot in my life, but it was one of the greatest moments of my life!”

The Randall sisters grew up on the stage (their parents met when dad became mom’s agent), and Savannah made her stage debut at three, singing at one of Chelsea’s school productions.

“I watched my sister dance and knew I really, really wanted to do that with her. I wanted to do everything with her!”

A dancer until age 17, she moved into ballet, but developed a fondness for hip hop (“I wanted to be the next Britney Spears, when she was sane”).

Attending one of her mother’s acting schools as a tot (“She told me I had to sit in a chair and not move, not interrupt the class. I didn’t move the entire year — I was riveted”), she soon developed the acting bug.

The Acting Bug is actually the name of the school the family founded in Vegas, immortalized in wrist tattoos the three women share. Her time there was invaluable to her growth, as an actress and a person.

“We learned everything, the kind of stuff you don’t touch on, that you need for being on a theater stage,” Randall said. “Not just lines and blocking, but learning to scream and really sell it, how to die and make it convincing, continuity — who teaches that ? — but it’s so important.”

The trio moved to Whidbey Island in 2007 and plunged into local theater work, while also bouncing around to do work off-Island as well.

At one point Randall, who is playing dual roles in “City of Angels” and has to recite her dialogue backwards during a moment when the film noir movie-within-a-movie gets rewritten on stage by the Hollywood screenwriter who is dreaming it up, bounced like a pinball between four shows.

She was starring in “Blythe Spirit” and “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” (where she had her favorite role of her career so far channeling four-year old Sally Brown), stage managing “Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and starting up on “City of Angels.”

The women in her family have no time for sleep.

“Four shows, that’s my limit. Well, maybe…”

And then she giggles at the thought that maybe, just possibly, she could do more than four shows. After all, she was still singing and working a “real” job while doing the aforementioned shows.

“Theater makes me feel alive,” Randall said. “You’re making something magical, creating something that shines brightly for a few days, or a few weeks, and then it’s gone and you need that next cosmic, wonderful, life-transforming moment.”

Whether it’s making a quick-change backstage during “Rocky Horror Picture Show” that required “fishnets, blue eye makeup, red lipstick, a black slutty slip, dog collar, black gloves and heels that I had to tape together to keep them from coming off during the next dance,” or rewriting dialogue for “The Full Monty” on the fly, to keep the audience from knowing that a cast member was being wheeled out in mid-play after a mild heart attack, she lives for the adrenaline rush of live theater.

Maybe it’s a family trait, as Chelsea once cut an actress out of a pair of skates that refused to get untied during a production of “Big,” then, hand gushing blood after the scissor blades slipped, ignored it since she needed to make a kite appear from above the stage moments later.

First rule of the stage — the show always, always goes on.

Second rule — get Savannah Randall to star in your show, have Chelsea Randall choreograph it and Elizabeth Herbert direct it, and your standing ovations are already assured.

Read Full Post »

The cast of "City of Angels" works on a big number. (Chelsea Randall photo)

The cast of “City of Angels” works on a big number. (Chelsea Randall photo)

“City of Angels,” a Tony-award winning musical comedy from the creator of TV landmark “M*A*S*H,” is a fast-talkin’, toe-tappin’ mash-up of private eyes, crooners and dangerous dames.

As the cast and crew at Langley’s Whidbey Island Center for the Arts prepares for the Feb. 7-22 run, dive into our four-part series that shines a spotlight on what awaits you on opening night.

Through good times and bad, through chaotic rehearsals and the occasional hiccup, one thing has remained constant for the creative team behind “City of Angels.”

They love their cast.

“This is a great group,” said choreographer Chelsea Randall. “I love them all so much. They have been so fun and such troupers.”

Community theater often brings together a mix of seasoned pros and never-set-foot-on-a-stage newcomers.

Toss in the fact “City of Angels” is full of snappy songs and big dance scenes, plus a lot of whip-smart dialogue, and it’s not necessarily the easiest play to pull off.

But Randall and director Elizabeth Herbert, the very epitome of seasoned pros, have been pleasantly surprised by how well their diverse cast has meshed.

“This musical is challenging in any arena,” Herbert said. “So kudos to this community for stepping up to the task.”

Whether it’s Tristan Steel doing a dead-on impression of a tough-talkin’, frequently roughed-up private eye or Carrie Whitney scoring big laughs as a memorably ditzy starlet, this is a cast to watch.

Seriously. Go buy a ticket already.

Then have your autograph book with you and hang out at the stage door until you get every last name in your little book. A list to make that hunt a bit easier:

The “City of Angels” cast:

Stone: Tristan A.B. Steel
Stine: Robert Atkinson
Donna/Oolie: Savannah True Randall
Carla/Alaura: Karla (Gilbert) Crouch
Buddy/Irwin: Jim Carroll
Gabby/Bobbi: Deana Duncan
Munoz/Pancho: Ryan Saenz
Avril/Mallory: Carrie Whitney
Jimmy Powers/Pasco: Jim Castaneda
Dr. Mandril: Lars Larson
Peter Kingsley: Gabe Harshman
Sonny/Yamato: Keith Mack
Mahoney/Del Dacosta: Bob Thurmond
Big Sixx/Studio Cop: Steve Ford
Luther/Werner: Mikkel Hustad
Gene: Pete Seybert
Madam/Masseuse: Kathy Stanley
Angel City Quartet: Matt Bell, Linda Mclean, Christina Parker, Rob Scott
Ensemble: Hannah Mack, Melinda Mack, Sarah Parker, Loretta Seybert, Aleah Stacey

To buy tickets heads over to: http://wicaonline.com/2013-2014/CITYOFANGELS.html

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »