Theater
‘Gigi’ director speaks out
Broadway-bound production balances old and new

Mounting ‘Gigi’ presented unexpected challenges for director Eric Schaeffer. (Photo courtesy Signature)
‘Gigi’
Through Feb. 12
The Kennedy Center
$45-150
800-444-1324
At first the idea of remounting the musical “Gigi” might sound a little dusty. But director Eric Schaeffer guarantees that his reimagined production featuring Hollywood starlet Vanessa Hudgens in the title role is anything but.
“It doesn’t feel like a revival and that’s exactly what we wanted,” says the out director. “We want it to feel fresh and alive, a new musical inhabited by familiar characters that the audience knows and loves.”
Collette’s “Gigi” began as a novella about a Parisian girl whose grandmother and aunt are grooming her to become a career courtesan; but when she and rich playboy Gaston fall in love, things work out differently than planned. The story was first adapted as a play for the Broadway stage in 1951 starring then-unknown Audrey Hepburn. Later the famed team of lyricist and librettist Alan Jay Lerner and composer Frederick Loewe morphed the source material into a hugely successful MGM 1958 musical directed by Vincente Minnelli. In 1973, a less-popular musical version using the Lerner and Loewe score ran for just a few months on Broadway.
Today, the revamped production playing at the Kennedy Center is written by British screenwriter Heidi Thomas best known for the BBC’s popular post-World War II drama “Call the Midwife.” This “Gigi” is new in many ways, yet features memorable tunes from the movie and stage score including “Paris Is Paris Again,” “She’s Not Thinking of Me” and “The Night They Invented Champagne.”
Thomas’ script puts the focus back on Gigi, says Schaeffer. When not changing costumes, Hudgens is on stage throughout the entire show. Even the scenes when Gaston (here played by handsome Corey Cott) is making the rounds of Paris balls, a jealous Gigi can be seen off to the side scanning the society columns for news of her beloved.
Also, the rewrite eliminates what Schaeffer refers to as “the perv factor.” No longer is Gaston twice Gigi’s age. Now she and he are about 18 and 25 respectively. Also, the play’s “Thank Heaven for Little Girls,” a salute to girls’ burgeoning sexuality traditionally sung as an elderly roué, now go to Gigi’s grandmother Mamita (Broadway’s Victoria Clark) and Aunt Alicia (Dee Hoty).
“Heidi is a great collaborator,” he says. “She praises my transitions, and is amazed how I can make a musical flow. And I love her writing. As anyone who has seen Thomas’ television work knows. She is able to write in a way that feels period and contemporary at once, not an easy feat.”
Initially, Schaeffer and the “Gigi” producers wanted to cast an unknown in the leading role and make a star. But it didn’t work out that way.
Toward the end of two weeks of intense auditioning in New York, Amanda Hudgens (famous for Disney’s “High School Musical”) came in, Schaeffer recalls.
“We were impressed from the start because she had learned lines and the songs. Sometimes Hollywood people refuse to audition, much less come so prepared. By the end of the audition I said, ‘That’s our Gigi. Let’s hire her now.’ Vanessa has a certain undefinable quality that makes her perfect for the role.”
Romance and scandal were Collette’s stock and trade. Married several times, she had affairs with men and women. Her early books shocked readers. In her youth she performed a music hall act that included a same sex kiss. But when she wrote “Gigi” at the close of World War II, Collette was aging and things were bleak in France. Perhaps for these reasons, she sets the story in happier a time, the Belle Epoque Paris of her youth.
It’s Schaeffer’s first foray in the era and he strived to totally immerse himself. He and his partner spent some time in the city of light investigating Collette’s haunts. But he credits the production’s design team — Derek McLane (scenic), Natasha Katz (lighting) and Catherine Zuber (costumes) — with creating an exquisite, transporting experience.
“It feels like you’re in Paris. During previews when the curtain went up, audiences instantly applauded. That’s a good feeling. You know they want to go there.”
While Schaeffer is a big fan of the Hollywood musical (he counts “Meet Me in St. Louis” starring Judy Garland and also directed by Minnelli as his favorite), he had never seen “Gigi” when producers asked him to direct the revival two years ago. Once watching, he was immediately charmed by its intimacy and pageantry. He was inspired to bring both quiet and big splashy scenes to the project.
Following the Washington run, “Gigi” moves to Broadway’s Neil Simon Theater. Schaeffer’s extensive directing resume mostly lists Signature Theatre in Arlington where he is artistic director, but also includes the Great White Way (“Follies,” “Million Dollar Quartet”). Does knowing the production is New York-bound raise the stakes?
“Wherever you’re working, you do the best job you can,” he says. “That said, knowing the run show doesn’t end here adds pressure but makes it more exciting. We’ll make changes during the D.C. run. You learn a lot in front of audiences — what works and what doesn’t.”
Theater
Reggie White explores the many definitions of home in ‘Fremont Ave.’
‘Music and humor set against the rhythm of a cutthroat game of spades’
‘Fremont Ave.’
Through Nov. 23
Arena Stage
1101 Sixth St., S.W.
Tickets start at $49
Arenastage.org
For Reggie D. White, growing up Black and queer in the late 1980s and early ‘90s, there wasn’t a lot of vocabulary for his experience outside of the AIDS crisis. Despite being surrounded by family who loved him, White felt isolated in his own home; there was a sort of membrane that prevented him from being present.
With his new play “Fremont Ave.,” now running at Arena Stage, White has written a work about home and the many definitions of that idea specifically relating to three generations of Black men.
Set in a house on a street in a Southern California suburb (similar to where White grew up), “Fremont Ave.” explores the ways a lack of belonging can be passed down generationally. The first act is boy meets girl and creating a home; and the second watches the next generation struggling to achieve something different.
“The third act’s storyline is deeply queer,” White explains. “Boyfriends Joseph and Damon have been together for years yet can’t figure out what it means to make a home. We don’t totally see the relationship solved, but there’s a glimmer of hope that it just might make it.”
The playwright notes, it’s not all about familial angst and alienation: “Much of the play is music and humor set against the rhythm of a cutthroat game of spades.”
Playwright, actor, and educator, White “does all the things.” Currently, he holds the title of Arena’s senior director of artistic strategy & impact, a role focused on artistic vision and growth. Superbly energetic, White splits his time between Arena and his prized rent-stabilized residence in Brooklyn’s desirable Park Slope neighborhood. He’s already told his landlord that he’s never leaving.
At seven, he came close to landing the part of young Simba in the pre-Broadway “Lion King.” Soured by the near miss, White turned his attention to sports and studies. In his freshman year at college in the Bay Area, he took a musical theater class for the heck of it, and soon gave up law school ambitions to focus on show biz. He went on to appear in Matthew López’s Broadway success “The Inheritance” until the pandemic hit.
Winning the Colman Domingo Award in 2021 gave White the flexibility to write “Fremont Ave.” (The award is given to a Black male or male-identifying theater artist and includes a cash stipend and development opportunities.)
“It can be scary to make a career in the arts. I ran from it for a long time. Then one morning I just woke up very grateful for the accumulation of accidental circumstances that landed me in this moment.”
WASHINGTON BLADE: Is queerness your secret to success?
REGGIE D. WHITE: I’m not saying that being queer is my mutant super power, but I do think there is an element of living my life on the margins trying to find a place for myself that I’ve been able to observe relationships and how people engage and interact with each other that gives me a real objective eye on how to render a world that I didn’t live in.
BLADE: What’s queer about your work?
WHITE: There’s this thing that James Baldwin said a lot, it’s about being on the outside of an experience, being able to observe more astutely. With “Fremont Ave.” it felt important to me that the actor leading us through is played by a queer actor. I wanted that authenticity and that experience of having felt isolation.
It’s unique that the central man in each story, the grandfather, stepson, and grandson are played by the same queer actor Bradley Gibson, that amazing TV star with the big muscles.
It’s also interesting to watch a single body traverse over generations in the same house (altered over time by appliance and art updates).
BLADE: Premiering your play as part of Arena’s 75th anniversary season must be a thrill.
WHITE: Sometimes I ask myself, how is this happening? And I didn’t even have to sleep with anybody. But seriously, I’m lucky. Arena excels at taking great care of world premieres, and the production’s director Lili-Anne Brown has a visceral sense of how to create community and life on stage.
BLADE: What else is unique about “Fremont Ave.”?
WHITE: Men aren’t a particularly emotionally literate species, so there haven’t been a lot of plays exploring the emotional condition of men and what it means to learn to love.
For men, love looks like silence. I wanted to explore what it looks like when there’s a deep curiosity about the people we’ve known and loved.
BLADE: Was risk involved?
WHITE: I wrote a deeply personal play. That’s scary. So, to see everyone involved invest their own love into what’s my play, that’s incredible, and a great confirmation of “specificity is the key to universality.” People seeing themselves in the characters has been both beautiful and surprising.
Theater
Set designer August Henney puts new spin on Mary Shelley’s life
‘So Late Into the Night’ an ideal fall show at Rorschach
‘So Late Into the Night’
Through Nov. 2
Rorschach Theatre
The Stacks @ Buzzard Point
101 V St., S.W.
Spooky Action Theater
Washington, D.C.
Tickets start at $74
Rorshachtheatre.com
We’ve all been to that scary party or two. But ordinarily, it’s not by choice.
But with playwright Shawn Northrip’s So Late Into the Night, the spookiness is planned, executed, and fun. Northrip lays out the story of novelist Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, famed author of the gothic masterpiece Frankenstein, and in gathering her Romantic poet friends and lovers, investigates their afterlife.
What’s more, the new play, which also features a rock séance, is performed in the Stacks at D.C.’s Buzzard Point neighborhood, a unique neighborhood positioned where the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers meet, just south of Audi Field.
At the Stacks, Rorschach is activating a high-ceilinged corner retail that serves as the company’s fall home base. Inside the cavernous space, the production’s set designer August Henney is putting a new spin on Newstead Abbey, the grand home of Lord Byron, a friend of Shelley. Included in the new look are a Victorian dining table (33 by 12 feet), grand drapes, and modern rock and roll posters. Audience members can sit at the table or the risers on the perimeter.
Henney, who identifies as a trans gay man, is a Bay Area transplant who arrived in D.C. three years ago to study scenic design at the University of Maryland. The experience has been transformational.
WASHINGTON BLADE: How do you pursue concept before realizing a set?
AUGUST HENNEY: At first, I go through the script and take out words that spark inspiration. I’m very much a words person – I find words and then relatable images. Next, I create a collage and present it to the director.
BLADE: Along the way, does the director exert control?
HENNEY: Oh yes. It’s hopefully conversation, but they have the final say about everything. If it’s very important to me or I think it’s very important to the show, I’ll fight for it.
BLADE: When the show kicks off does your vision typically come to fruition.
HENNEY: That depends entirely on the technical director. I do the drafting and present it to the tech director. Lays out how to do that. Like an engineer and architect. This is how I want the façade to look but I don’t care so much about the insides. Comes down to what we can and can’t do. Usually comes down to cost.
BLADE: How much was learned in life and now much at school?
HENNEY: At school, I came in not knowing much. UMD cleverly matched us up with a cohort who has different skills from you. They do that well. So, there were endless hours in the hallways of the grad school where we’d build models until 3 a.m. working and blasting music. I also learned from my father who is adept at wood working, and jobs in prop shops.
BLADE: How was your coming out as a trans gay man?
Henney: Well grad school really helped with that. I believe the universe puts people in places. And with UMD, it put me in the right place. At undergrad, I got another degree in human physiology and thought I wanted to be a doctor for a second. My path would have been very different.
Scenic design placed me in range of the right people who helped me realize things about myself that I didn’t have to keep hiding. Theater is such an inclusive community already and I feel safe here while the world is so unsafe.
BLADE: This morning, I heard the administration was blaming the government shutdown on trans people. Does that kind of madness get you angry?
HENNEY: Angry, frustrated, and despondent. I get through the days by focusing on the good bits, and the people who make me feel like myself. That’s all you can really hope for in a world that’s falling apart.
BLADE: Yet, the show goes on.
HENNEY: Oh yes, and So Late Into the Night is a wonderful show. It pairs with some of the best things in the world like spooky ghost stories and dramatic rock music in autumn, the perfect season. It’s a show where audience members can feasibly be seated next to Mary Shelley and friends at a big dining table on Halloween night. How great is that?
Theater
‘The Dragon’ a powerfully subversive play once banned in Russia
Relevantly set in immigrant detention center acted out by detainees
The Dragon
Spooky Action Theater
1810 16th St., NW
$23-$43
Spookyaction.org
Weird and abusive, yet still inexplicably tolerated by the populace. That describes the titular ruler in “The Dragon,” the story of how a 400-year-old authoritarian regime endures, now running at Spooky Action Theater.
Originally written by Evgeny Shvarts in the 1940s, “The Dragon” has the feel of a fairytale yet it’s a powerfully subversive play written (and banned) in Stalinist Russia.
And now adapted by Jesse Rasmussen and Yura Kordonsky for Spooky’s new production, the reworked play is relevantly and disturbingly set in an immigrant detention center with the tale acted out by the detainees. Their reality mixes with the story.
The new work is staged by the company’s artistic director Elizabeth Dinkova and performed by a five-person cast (including immigrants from South America, Syria, and Bangladesh) in Spooky’s black box theater on 16th street in the Dupont Circle neighborhood.
Included among the players are Helen Hayes Award-winning actor Fran Tapia and talented actor Gabriel Alejandro, two residents of Columbia Heights, a diverse and currently heavily policed neighborhood in Northwest. While Tapia is working with a visa for those with extraordinary ability and Alejandro is a U.S. citizen, the vibe remains extremely worrying for much of the area’s population.
Tapia, who self describes as “Chilean, Latina, queer and a proud immigrant,” says “The Dragon” resonates to her core: “Despite the stress, you keep going while everything around remains strange; you can’t be your authentic self. You’re thinking twice about what you’re saying and posting, and where and what time you go anywhere. Danger is there as much as we try to pretend it’s not.”
“The Dragon’s” actors are cast in multiple roles, Tapia plays Lancelot, the hero who comes to save the day; Sophia, a journalist who comes to report on detention center conditions; and a beautiful cat.
“As Lancelot, I’m a bit of an outsider. He’s used to fixing things and helping people in distress. In this town the people are unaware that they need help.”
And regarding real life, Tapia says, “Immigration has become topsy turvy. It’s not unusual to see people being detained in broad daylight. It’s not unusual to have five police cars parked on the corner in the afternoon. It makes us think about how people respond to authority and absurd behavior.”
Similarly, Alejandro plays multiple roles including Henry, the son of the mayor (played by Ryan Sellers) and Officer Luis, a guard in the detention center. “Luis is comparatively a nice guy,” Alejandro explains, “Yet, he accepts what’s bad about the regime he serves.”
As a Latino, Alejandro is exploring his identity through the play. “In my daily routine I’m more anxious. I present in a way that I could be a target for the government even though I’m a U.S. citizen.”
What’s happening on the streets isn’t entirely alien to what’s happening in the play, he adds. “In the play, I have some power over people who look like me. I could be in the detention center, and that’s not altogether different from what’s going on in the real world.”
Alejandro who identifies as pansexual moved from his native Puerto Rico to D.C. six years ago. After acting in just one show the pandemic hit and work dried up. Next, he attended the Shakespeare Theatre’s MFA in Classical Acting program at George Washington University, and since graduating in 2023, he’s been consistently working as an actor, something he calls “a joy and privilege.”
And as pansexual, he has an openness to people, says Alejandro. “That’s how I approach my characters. I find a way to love them. Even if they’re bad guys, I find a way to figure them out. That’s what I do here.”
“The Dragon” is satirical, and funny. Still, we know what we’re referring to in the real world, which is very scary and painful. And yet, audiences are given permission to laugh without losing the gravity of the work.
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