Tag Archives: My Fair Lady

The classic ‘My Fair Lady’ comes to DeVos Performance Hall

Left, Jonathan Grunert as Professor Henry Higgins, Madeline Powell as Eliza Doolittle and John Adkison as Colonel Pickering in The National Tour of MY FAIR LADY. Photo by Jeremy Daniel

By John D. Gonzalez
WKTV Contributor


Madeline Powell remembers the first time she saw the film version of “My Fair Lady,” the acclaimed Broadway show from the golden era of musicals.

She was nine-years-old and saw it with her grandparents.

“I remember very vividly watching it, and where we were sitting,” the Texas native said in a recent WKTV Journal interview.

“I remember the parts of the movie that caught my eye, and that I was most fascinated by.”

Now she is reliving those memories every night, playing the lead character of Eliza Doolitte in the national tour of the Broadway musical. It’s her first major role after graduating in 2021 from Oklahoma City University.

She is thrilled to be playing the iconic role in an iconic play, adapted from George Bernard Shaw’s 1913 play and Gabriel Pascal’s motion picture “Pygmalion,” which later became “My Fair Lady,” with a book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe.

A Star from the Golden Age of Theatre

It premiered on Broadway on March 15, 1956 and won six Tony Awards, including Best Musical. The classic songs include “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “The Rain in Spain,” “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” and “On the Street Where You Live.”

The current tour is Lincoln Center Theater’s production of Lerner & Loewe’s “My Fair Lady,”  and winner of five Outer Critics Circle Awards including Best Revival of a Musical and was nominated for 10 Tony Awards. The production premiered in the spring of 2018 at Lincoln Center’s Vivian Beaumont Theater.

It has impacted generations, Powell said.

“I have always held (‘My Fair Lady’) in such high esteem because of that experience with my grandparents,” she said, “and knowing how much they loved it, and what it meant to so many of their friends and so many people in the generations between us.

“It has been at the forefront of my mind, too, when I have been revisiting it in this context of being in the show.”

“My Fair Lady,” as most musical enthusiasts know, is a rags-to-riches story about a Cockney flower girl – flippantly referred to as a “guttersnipe,” in the production – who meets linguist Henry Higgins. He vows to turn her into a “lady” in just six months by teaching her the proper way to speak, as well as dress and act.

Mastering that Cockney Accent

It’s a show with a lot of dialects and accents, which Powell knows a little bit about.

“I had my own little Eliza Doolittle experience when I went to college and learned to neutralize the accent I didn’t realize I had,” said Powell, who is originally from Lubbock, Texas, where she began singing at age four.

Michael Hegarty as Alfred P. Doolittle (center) and The Company of The National Tour of MY FAIR LADY. Photo by Jeremy Daniel

Before the tour opened last fall, the cast worked with a dialect coach because of accents that range from Scottish to various ones in central London. It’s all “very specific because of the importance of the plot,” she said.

The excitement for language has made for a lively cast and crew.

“We have so much fun,” she said. “We can honestly never shut up talking in the accents when we’re not performing, too.”

That excitement comes across on stage where local audiences will get an opportunity to see it over eight performances, April 11-16 at DeVos Performance Hall.

Tickets are available for all shows, including special educator/student rush tickets for only $30, available only one hour before each show. More details at broadwaygrandrapids.com.

Keep an Eye on the Ensemble Cast

Along with the beautiful costumes, Powell said local audiences may want to pay special attention to the ensemble cast, which is “super fun to watch” in big scenes such as the opening number and “Get Me to the Church on Time.”

“It’s all kinds of chaos,” she said. “…They’ve got some interesting relationships they created, and they’re really setting up the world and dynamic for the principal characters. They’re doing all kinds of intentional things. I would keep an eye out for them.”

Overall, she said audiences should be prepared to be really entertained and inspired by the story of Eliza Doolitte.

“It’s a long show, but it doesn’t feel like a long show,” she said. “It’s super packed with interesting and intentional moments. Hopefully that will be impactful for new audience members, and for returning audience members, too.”

That impact, she said, is the transformation of a young woman.

“I can’t think of another character who has such a broad arc,” Powell said. “She is always shown to be really gritty and really smart and she knows exactly what she wants and what she needs to get those things.

“But we really watch her blossom emotionally and become comfortable with feeling her emotions…which is really powerful. We often don’t see women written to be that sure of themselves in musical theater or entertainment at all. It is an honor to do that every night.”

Show Info

Tickets are available online at BroadwayGrandRapids.com or at the Broadway Grand

Rapids box office located at 122 Lyon St. NW. Group orders of 10 or more may be placed by

calling 616-235-6285.

Remainder of the 2022-2023 BGR season includes: 

HADESTOWN, May 9-14, 2023

FROZEN, July 11-24, 2023

More info, including season ticket information for the 2023-2024 season, at https://broadwaygrandrapids.com.


John D. Gonzalez is a digital journalist with 30-plus years of experience as a food, travel, craft beer and arts & entertainment reporter based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He also co-hosts the radio show and Podcast “Behind the Mitten,” which airs at 6 p.m. Sundays on WOOD-AM and FM. Follow him on his journey to discover what’s next. You can find him on Twitter as @MichiganGonzo, on Instagram @MichiganGonzo and Facebook at @GRGonzo. He also relaunched his YouTube Channel. Email him story ideas and tips at michigangonzo@gmail.com.

Review: Civic Theatre’s ‘My Fair Lady’ a loverly production

Alyssa Bauer as Eliza Doolittle in “My Fair Lady” running through March 18.

By Anne Hillman

 

Grand Rapids Civic Theater has begun its production of My Fair Lady, and the production team and cast have brought this well-known story to entertaining life. This production marks the return of many faces who will be familiar to frequent attendees of Civic Theater’s past seasons: Alyssa Bauer as Eliza Doolittle, Michael Dodge as Colonel Pickering, Charles Hutchins as Alfred Doolittle, Kristen Pearson as Mrs. Pearce, and second time Civic alum John Girdlestone as Henry Higgins. Led by director Allyson Paris, joined by a strong ensemble, and supported by a fabulous orchestra, these volunteer actors present a professional level musical to the Grand Rapids community.

 

Wyoming resident part of Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s My Fair Lady cast. Click here to read the story.

 

Accents are central to the story-line as they mark the class distinctions which shape the prejudices and motivations of the main characters, and the choice to bring in dialect coach Spencer Tomlin paid off in the consistency and variety of accents used by the actors. While each actor obviously put in hard work, Alyssa Bauer’s deft transformation from Cockney-speaking flower seller to proper British lady is very impressive. She does an excellent job of keeping the two accents straight and managing to switch between the two during the time that Eliza is still learning her new manner of speaking.

 

Alyssa Bauer’s deft transformation from Cockney-speaking flower seller to proper British lady is very impressive.

My Fair Lady is a hard story to tell in our current context and yet an important one. Issues of class, power, privilege, and sexism are still relevant today, and this production does a good job of demonstrating the ways in which these forces shape the attitudes and expectations of the various characters. Henry Higgins, played exceptionally well by John Girdlestone, is not a particularly loveable personality. His continued arrogance and lack of empathy could have become frustrating for the audience, but the excellent background acting of the other characters in the scenes did a great job of conveying that the misogynist and classist rhetoric was not to be condoned.

 

The music is familiar to many veteran musical theater fans, but previous sessions of listening to soundtracks is not necessary to enjoy this production. The attention to diction extends from the work on accents to the clarity of the lyrics in each song.  Each rhyme, each joke, each insight into a character’s motivation and personality is easily understood by the audience. And the quality of the singing is excellent. Soaring notes and beautiful harmonies are heard throughout the performance, creating a wonderful night out at the theater. Well done Civic Theater; I will be recommending My Fair Lady to all of my theater loving friends and looking forward to the next production.

 

My Fair Lady runs through March 18 at Grand Rapids Civic Theater, 30 N. Division Ave. Show times are 7:30 p.m Wednesday through Saturday and 2 p.m Sunday. Tickets are $18-$37. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit grct.org.

Wyoming resident ‘could have danced all night’ as part of Civic’s ‘My Fair Lady’ cast

Kallie Piette

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma

joanne@wktv.org

 

Singing and dancing on Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s stage is certainly a direct opposite of what Wyoming resident Kallie Piette does during the day.

 

She works for her family’s company, the Great Lakes EMS Academy on Division Avenue in Wyoming, where she works with new students coming in and also teaches CPR and first aid.

 

“It’s hard work to do a show,” Piette said. “It’s three months of Monday through Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. rehearsals and then you have the shows on top of that.

 

“But for me, it’s almost like play time because I get to pretend and I get to sing and dance along with being with friends.”

 

This week, Piette marks her 15th production with Grand Rapids Civic Theatre as part of the ensemble cast of the company’s winter production “My Fair Lady.”

 

“I love the music,” said Piette, who is a cockney woman and a servant maid in the production. “It’s classical musical theater and it has been awhile since anyone around here has presented it. What makes ‘My Fair Lady’ so unique is the music is complicated but it doesn’t sound difficult once you get it.”

 

The 1956 Broadway musical starred Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison, who would later reprise his role as Professor Higgins in the 1964 film which also starred Audrey Hepburn. The story centers on the snobbish phonetics professor Higgins who agrees to a wager that he can take a flower girl, Eliza Doolittle, and make her presentable in high society. The musical features one of the most famous lines in theater —which is also a song — “The rain in Spain falls mainly in the plane” along with such songs as “I Could Have Danced All Night,” Wouldn’t It Be Lovely?” and “Get Me To the Church on Time.”

 

“‘Ascot Gavotte’ is amazing,” Piette said of the songs in the musical, “That is one of my favorites.” The song features the ensemble, which Piette is part of, dressed to the nines at a horse race track where Professor Higgins presents Eliza for the first time.

 

“The talent is amazing,” Piette said. “The performers are incredible, and the costumes, well, from what I have seen, they are pretty amazing.”

 

At the time of this interview, Piette had not seen the full costumes but was scheduled to later in the evening. We both, however; agreed costumer Bob Fowle would certainly wow with “My Fair Lady” as it calls for some impressive designs.

 

“My Fair Lady” runs through March 18 at Grand Rapids Civic Theater, 30 N. Division Ave. Show times are 7:30 p.m Wednesday through Saturday and 2 p.m Sunday. Tickets are $18-$37. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit grct.org.

Grand Rapids Civic Theatre recently announced its 2017-2018 season

A cat in a hat, everybody’s favorite red hair orphan, and a grumpy green Ogre will lead the Grand Rapids Civic Theatre’s 2017-2018 season.

 

The theater company recently announced its upcoming season which will include the musicals “Seussical the Musical, Oct. 20 -29; “Annie,” Nov. 17 – Dec. 17; “My Fair Lady,” Feb. 23 – March 18; and “Shrek the Musical,” June 1 – 17.

 

Kick off the season will be the play “Calendar Girls,” Sept. 15 – Oct. 1, the story of a group of middle-age garden club members who decide to create a pin-up calendar. Other plays for the season are “All the Way,” Jan. 12 – 28, a look behind the doors of the Oval Office as President Lyndon Johnson tries to pass a landmark civic rights bill, and “Akeelah and the Bee,” April 20 – 29, a young women’s fight against the odds to be placed at the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

 

The Summer Repertory Theatre Intensive showcases will feature the musical “School of Rock” and the classic Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women,” July 27 – Aug. 5.

 

Season subscriptions are on sale through Dec. 30. General tickets to individual shows will be on sale starting Aug. 23. For more information, visit www.grct.org or call 616-222-6650.