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Posts: 2534
04/16/12 04:19 PM
bst16 wrote:Thanks for all the info! All around high praise for the music, set design, and production quality. Excellent comments about Justin, too. (He looks great in that clip, our guy can act). Just sounds like the story needs a little tweaking. Not unusual. Could make for an interestingly different dramatic B'way musical. In any case, a quality project to be a part of, and Justin sure seems happy, healthy, and fit. Good enough for me.Hey, Spring! I might be able to get away for the Atlanta production. I'll let you know if I go.. Also, if I can muster up the energy, maybe I'll post a "treat" among the EJ cobwebs... for old time's sake. Love ya.
Also: Justin Guarini of Ghost Bros.killed it at TonyEvening Gala last nite. I'm not even an Amer. Idol fan but justin =vocal pyrotechnics!
04/16/12 04:25 PM
04/16/12 04:47 PM
Justin cast as "Drake" in the Stephen King & John Mellencamp musical,
"Ghost Brothers of Darkland County"
For tickets phone (404) 733-5000 or visit For tix: alliancetheatre.org/ghostbrothers.
May 2012:
The Blame It on Bacharach concert will be released on a single disc and includes "Alfie," performed by Valerie Pettiford; "What the World Needs Now," performed by Marilyn Maye, "The Look of Love," performed by Justin Guarini; "A House Is Not a House," performed by Donna McKechnie; and "Anyone Who Had a Heart," performed by Melissa Manchester, among others.
Click here to pre-order the STAGE concert discs.
"I'm thrilled to be playing the role of Joseph," commented Justin. "Being able to do it in front of 11,000 people every night, outside and under the stars, is truly magical. I'm honored to be part of the history and tradition of The Muny."
Posts: 1210
04/16/12 10:10 PM
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04/17/12 01:28 PM
04/17/12 03:00 PM
04/17/12 03:02 PM
04/18/12 02:47 PM
04/20/12 04:35 PM
A collaboration between Stephen King, John Mellencamp and T’Bone Burnett, Ghost Brothers of Darkland County debuted earlier this month at the Alliance Theatre in Midtown Atlanta. In fact, Atlanta was lucky enough to be the premiere city for Ghost Brothers. And I was lucky enough to be invited by the Alliance Theatre to attend one of this show’s performances.
This was a show like no other that I’ve ever seen. No wonder it took Mellencamp and King over a decade to get their play to the stage. Ghost Brothers is set in a small town in Mississippi and drifts back and forth in time between 1967 and 2007. It follows the path of one family and its feuding brothers from one generation to another.
There are shocks and plot twists and I certainly couldn’t have guessed the ending. If you are fan of Stephen King it certainly has his signature style all over it. Beyond the plot and storyline, what I loved about Ghost Brothers were the songs (there are nearly 20!), set design and special effects. I loved the “bar” set just above the cabin where the main character Joe was often found. Oh and the special effects, besides blood spatter, of the ghosts, weather changes, etc were amazing.
The show runs through May 13. Performances are everyday except Monday with additional afternoon performances at 2:30 on weekends. Tickets to Ghost Brothers of Darkland County are $65-$85. Note that this show is not for kids. There’s lots of violence and profanity. If it were a movie, it would be R-rated. So, leave the kiddies at home.
Tips: Looking for a nice pre-theatre restaurant? Nan Thai Fine Dining is located not too far from the Alliance Theatre. Parking costs at the Alliance are ridiculous at $15. Opt for street parking or nearby lots for under $10.
http://atlanta-restaurantblog.com/2012/04/ghost-brothers-of-darkland-county-hits-atlanta/
04/20/12 04:39 PM
When a new American musical called Ghost Brothers of Darkland County opened last week in Atlanta, its creators were on hand to relish a standing "o" from a crowd enamored with the star power in the room. In addition to spooky novelist Stephen King and John "Hurts So Good" Mellencamp (who wrote the book and the music for the play, respectively, although neither performs in it), celebrities from the A-list on down took in more than two hours of ghosts, gore, and a few belly laughs at the premiere. Luminaries in the choice seats included Meg Ryan, Charles Barkley, Kim Fields and Pamela Des Barres.
In the late 1990s, Stephen King got a visit from John Mellencamp, who'd heard a ghost story while house hunting for a cabin in his native Indiana. The two decided to turn their conversation into a musical (heaven, help us), and because it's all scary and American and stuff, they asked T-Bone Burnett to be the music director on the project, and - voila! - Welcome to Southern Gothic.
The cast, creators and director of Ghost Brothers of Darkland County following the world premiere at the Alliance Theatre. April 11, 2012. Photo by Raymond McCrea Jones.
After a decade of roundabouts, Ghost Brothers of Darkland County hit the stage April 11 the Alliance Theatre (where small plays go to become big plays under the direction of rockstar Susan Booth), and if audience reaction means anything, this musical just might have legs.
Whether or not those legs are strong enough to run the marathon all the way from Peachtree Street to Broadway remains to be seen. But at least until the inaugural run of Ghost Brothers ends on May 13, this lightweight mash-up of bluesy rock songs and twisted drama is the hottest ticket in A-town.
Now for the cast rundown: Broadway vet Shuler Hensley makes filet mignon out of the rump roast he's thrown in his role as Mississippi patriarch Joe McCandless (wish this Tony-winner had more of the spotlight); American Idol alum Justin Guarini is a revelation as Joe's songwriter son, Drake; and country musician Dale Watson was great in his teeny role as a radio announcer (more, please).
I appreciated the Southern-ness (accents and all) of Emily Skinner's portrayal of Mama Monique McCandless (Joe's wife), and as Frank, Lucas Kavner's brilliant deadpanning made me wonder, "Where's a TV crew when you need one?" Sweet-voiced Kate Ferber as Jenna got to chirp the most memorable melodic bits ("Home Again," "Away From This World"), and Kylie Brown as Anna held her own in a look-alike role that caused confusion visually but was vocally distinct. Likewise, the ensemble cast sounded good, and 10 year-old Royce Mann was a standout as Young Joe.
But, as with any King story, good and evil commanded the stage in this gothic tale of brotherly-love-gone-awry. Christopher Morgan played the hell out of Dan, an angelic ghost who tends bar and meddles in the McCandless's business while soothing papa Joe in an otherworldly honkytonk where he sips - and spills - decades of painful memories. As entertaining as Ghost Brothers was during Act I, I was so starved for a moment of gut-wrenching emotion, I almost ran up on stage to hug Morgan (whose credits include Kiss Me Kate and Five Guys Named Moe) during the first-half finale, "Tear This Cabin Down." What a voice! This theatregoer will definitely pay closer attention to the Alliance's calendar if Morgan's on the bill...
Now, let me play the devil's advocate for a minute: Jake La Botz was creepy and funny and devilishly good as "The Shape," the smartass, Vegas-by-way-of-Deliverance apparition who slinked around every corner of the set waiting for a character to screw up. His comic relief was so dead-on, it wouldn't surprise me if Ghost Brothers gets re-tooled into a musical revue called "The Shape Shack" (now there's an idea those finicky New York audiences could sink their teeth into).
Perched above the set on a semi-visible stage, Mellencamp band member Andy York and his fellow instrumentalists held the whole thing intact by accompanying the performance live. The set itself was a woodsy cabin, but I would have loved to see more of Adam Larsen's modernist projections, which merely hinted at how cool Ghost Brothers of Darkland County could be if we weren't all so hung up on time and place. Remember: the South can be deep in more ways than one.
Follow Kristi York Wooten on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kristiwooten
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kristi-york-wooten/angels-and-devils-in-the-_b_1438068.html
04/24/12 03:05 PM
As I wrote last week, it took twelve years for Ghost Brothers of Darkland County to get from inception to execution. I attended the red carpet premiere on April 11. Here are my thoughts.
Before the show started, ghostly figures flitted across the stage, projected onto the walls. It was an eerie effect because I didn't expect anything to be happening yet. I was talking to others in our group when I noticed motion out of the corner of my eye. Then we realized there were stationary figures at the edges of the stage. Was the old man sitting on a bus stop bench real or a mannequin? More of these figures materialized, part of the ensemble that would join the actors on stage from time to time.
Two thirds of the stage is taken up by the interior of a lakeside cabin. There's a living room—which has a couch, a grandfather clock, a huge fireplace and a gun rack—and a small bedroom with a Shania Twain poster on the wall and bunk beds.
Beyond the cabin's Spanish moss-covered roof is an old water tower. To the left is an open area used for exterior action and flashbacks. An old Pontiac convertible is pushed onto the stage here from time to time. In one wing is a lover's leap. An elevated roadhouse set is located left of the cabin's chimney. From this significant vantage point, a bartender and central character Joe McCandless contemplate the past. The four-piece band, composed of musicians who regularly play with Mellencamp, occupies a screened-in loft above the stage.
As the show starts, a figure emerges through a trap in the floor. Tattoos cover his arms and chest, and he looks like a satanic rockabilly singer. This is "The Shape," a kissing cousin of Randall Flagg perhaps, played with sassy glee by blues singer/songwriter Jake La Botz. He sashays and saunters around the stage like he owns it. His opening piece, "That's Me," sets the tone. In it, he claims responsibility for every evil thought and malicious deed.
The Shape reappears frequently during the play, goading characters into making bad choices. He quickly becomes an audience favorite. For two generations he has been wreaking havoc on the McCandless family in the Mississippi town of Lake Belle Reve. Joe was ten when his older brothers died in 1967. Andy got easy As in school, whereas Jack struggled to make Bs. Their fierce rivalry worsened when a girl entered the picture. They argued and fought whenever Jenna wasn't around, forgetting that young Joe was watching everything.
Jack unexpectedly wins the Hawkeye Shootin' Competition. They drink too much that night and the love triangle comes to a head. What happens next becomes as romanticized in Lake Belle Reve as the stories of Cain and Abel or Romeo and Juliet. Only Joe knows the truth. His sons, Frank and Drake, appear to be heading down the same destructive path as his brothers. He needs to set the record straight so they can learn from the past.
Frank just sold his first novel for half a million dollars. He's bound for New York with Anna—Drake's ex-girlfriend, who bears a strong resemblance to Jenna. (The past harmonizes, right?) Drake blew his big chance when he screwed up during one of his band's gigs with a talent scout in the audience. He'll probably be stuck working at the local garage for the rest of his life.
Drake broke Frank's arm during their most recent set-to, but Frank goaded him, so the two are equally culpable. Joe summons his sons and his wife, Monique, to the family cabin, the site of the long-ago tragedy. Anna comes with Frank, putting everyone on edge. Unlike Jenna, who was a pleasant, high-spirited girl who genuinely liked Jack and Andy, Anna isn't nice at all. She's probably with Frank only to torment Drake—she knows Frank is unlikely to take her to New York now that he's found success. She spends a lot of the play slumped on the couch, seemingly uncertain why she's there. Monique isn't given much to do, either. She doesn't know Joe's secret but she encourages him and tries to keep her sons from bickering, but—even though she gets a couple of show-stopping songs—she is somewhat superfluous to the action.
The ghosts of Andy; Jack; Jenna; and Dan Coker (Christopher L. Morgan), the black cabin caretaker who unfairly received some of the blame for what happened in 1967, are interested in Joe's story, too. They're trapped in the cabin until the truth can set them free. Ten-year-old Joe (Royce McCann) chimes in occasionally, urging his older self to come clean.
The cast includes a Tony Award winner (Shuler Hensley as Joe), a Tony nominee (Emily Skinner as Monique) and a runner-up from the first season of American Idol (Justin Guarini as Drake), along with professional musicians La Botz and Kate Ferber (Jenna).
The songs range from R&B to C&W to rock and roll, mixed with ballads and Patsy Cline-esque torch songs. The vocal performances are all strong, though Ferber stands out in "Home Again," "And Your Days Are Gone," and "Away from this World," and struts her stuff in a short dress and stockings in "Jukin'." When the ghosts sing as a chorus, their harmonies are magical, and the full power of the ensemble is amazing. A program insert containing the final song listing indicates that King, Mellencamp and director Susan V. Booth tweaked the show right up to the last moment. A reprise was added to the second act, and the final song was renamed "The Truth is Here" from "The End is Here."
The show's staging, lighting and visual effects are all remarkable. When a character looks at a photograph, it is projected for the audience to see. As time ricochets back and forth, the years scroll backward and forward on the cabin's roof. Other text cues occasionally appear on the walls. Panels in the floor allow characters and props to emerge on demand. The actors do double duty as props crew. Though those who use the lover's leap are obviously jumping safely onto an air bag, the fact that they perform this ten-foot leap at all is impressive—and they have to do it several times. During the energetic dance routine—reminiscent of "Thriller"—that ends Act 1 ("Tear This Cabin Down"), the lights make the entire stage look like it's on fire.
Like many Southern Gothic tales, Ghost Brothers hinges on a secret. When the truth is revealed, it may not seem like such a big deal, but it changes how the McCandless family is seen—and how it sees itself. The romantic legend loses its sheen. It is also a secret borne by a 10-year-old boy. As such, it shaped the fifty-year-old man he became. The first act dragged a little, with Joe dithering over how to tell his story—and how much of it to tell. The second act is much peppier; as the ghosts of the past and the present intermingle, tensions rise and the conflicts come to a head.
Signs outside the theatre warn of Stephen King levels of violence, profanity and adult situations. Certainly this isn't family entertainment. There are numerous sexual references and sensual behavior (though no nudity), and jarring special effects associated with gunshots. Some of the violence is stylized, including the use of a transparent curtain that portrays flowing blood.
Viewers familiar with King's other works will find themselves in familiar territory once the truth is revealed. King explored the need to make changes to get things right in the Dark Tower series and in an episode of Kingdom Hospital. The question is: who has to change and when do they have to do it? For a while, it looks like the show might end like a Shakespearean tragedy, but there is redemption.
There is no word yet whether Ghost Brothers of Darkland County will have a life beyond its run in Atlanta. King and Mellencamp fans who find themselves in Atlanta between now and May 13 shouldn't pass up the chance to see this show if they can.
- - -
Bev Vincent is the author of The Stephen King Illustrated Companion and The Road to the Dark Tower. He has been writing "News from the Dead Zone" for Cemetery Dance for over a decade. He can be found online at bevvincent.com. Friend him on Facebook or follow his Twitter feed.
http://www.fearnet.com/news/reviews/b26105_news_from_dead_zone_lsquoghost_brothers.html
http://www.atlantaintownpaper.com/2012/04/theatre-review-ghost-brothers-of-darkland-county-at-the-alliance/http://www.fearnet.com/news/reviews/b26068_ghost_brothers_of_darkland_county_i.html Part 1 of 2
04/24/12 03:16 PM
Tirdad Derakhshani, Inquirer Sideshow Columnist
Doylestown-raised American Idol superstar Justin Guarini is taking Atlanta by storm as one of the stars of a stage musical written by Stephen King.
A Stephen King musical? Yep, that’s right.
The purveyor of putrefied gore, the master of the macabre has combined forces with John Mellencamp to create Ghost Brothers of Darkland County at Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre,
Justin plays Drake McCandless, one of the feuding sons of Joe McCandless (Tony winner Shuler Hensley). The show costars Lucas Kavner as one of Drake’s brothers.
Here is how Justin’s people describe the musical:
"In the tiny town of Lake Belle Reve, Mississippi in 1967, a terrible tragedy took the lives of two brothers and a beautiful young girl. During the next forty years, the events of that night became the stuff of local legend. But legend is often just another word for lie. Joe McCandless knows what really happened; he saw it all. The question is whether or not he can bring himself to tell the truth in time to save his own troubled sons, and whether the ghosts left behind by an act of violence will help him - or tear the McCandless family apart forever."
Justin, 33, who was the runner-up on the debut season of Fox' American Idol, says the musical has given him a chance to expand his range as an actor.
“I get to play a wide range of dark emotions during my time on stage,” Justin tells Atlanta Neighbors Newspapers. “[It’s] not something I experience in the day-to-day of my real life. I enjoy stepping outside my personal comfort zone on stage.”
Justin says he can relate to character Drake, who “is a small-town locally famous musician with dreams of hitting the big-time country scene.”
The show is a homecoming of sorts for Justin, who was born in Atlanta. His dad, Eldrin Bell is a former Atlanta Chief of Police (Bell is currently a member of city government).
Before moving to our region, Justin cut his teeth as a sapling singer with the Atlanta Boy Choir, which he joined when he was four years old.
04/25/12 02:49 PM
^^ On the Alliance Theatre's main page. When you click it, it takes you to their Twitter.
:) Justin's looking fine there. :):):)
Posts: 137
04/25/12 06:09 PM
04/28/12 01:04 PM
Speaking of American Idol babies, Justin Guarini is all over Twitter sharing love for his baby who just turned one! William Neko Bell Guarini is looking more and more like his daddy, don’t you think?
04/28/12 01:06 PM
From Idol to Broadway follows Guarini's journey from the days before American Idol to his first show on Broadway with a blend of stories and popular songs.
American Idol season one runner up, Guarini has participated in the national Idols Live! tour, completed two studio albums, and starred in the films From Justin to Kelly and Fast Girl. His Broadway credits include Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown and American Idiot.
For more information and tickets to From Idol to Broadway, click here.
04/28/12 01:18 PM
- Last Friday, I attended “Ghost Brothers of Darkland County” at the Alliance Theatre, which featured Justin Guarini, who played one of the sons, who happened to be an embittered musician. The dark musical, created by Stephen King and John Mellencamp, focuses on a cabin and a father who, as a child, saw his two older brothers die over a girl in 1967. Forty years later, the father (played brilliantly by Tony winner Shuler Hensley) brings his family, including his two sons, to the cabin to reveal secrets about what happened. Justin plays one of those sons, jealous of his more successful brother who also happened to steal his girlfriend. It’s an echo of what happened 40 years earlier. The play runs through May 13 and is well worth going to in my mind. The music is mesmerizing, the stage production brilliant. The weakest point is the plotting but it’s not fatal.
Justin Guarini is currently starring in the world premiere of Stephen King's Ghost Brothers of Darkland County, now playing at the Alliance Theater. He stopped by Good Day Atlanta to talk about his role and the play.
Information: Ghost Brothers of Darkland County Alliance Theatre 1280 Peachtree Street NE Atlanta, GA 30309 (404) 733-4650
04/29/12 12:17 PM
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