Press

CoastLive | A Discussion on VSC's Two High-Spirited Holiday Hits

By: Coast Live

HAMPTON ROADS, Va. β€” Playwright Mark Shanahan ("A Merry Little Christmas Carol," "A Sherlock Carol") and actor Scott Wichmann (Sherlock Holmes) join Coast Live to chat with Chandler Nunnally about the two holiday shows running in tandem at the historic Wells Theatre in Norfolk, sweeping away visitors with stunning stagecraft, brilliant production, and heartfelt Christmas spirit.

"A Merry Little Christmas Carol"
by Mark Shanahan

Adapted from the novella by Charles Dickens

December 8 - December 23, 2024

The time-honored holiday tradition returns to the Wells to bring a heartfelt holiday to Hampton Roads once again! Dance and sing your way with Scrooge as he journeys through his life alongside the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future to find the real Christmas spirit that he’s always been missing…his own. Join the thousands of Hampton Roads families and friends who make the Wells their home for the holidays!

"A Sherlock Carol"
by Mark Shanahan

December 4 - December 29, 2024

Murder, Mystery, Music, and Merriment meet on the Wells stage this holiday season with Mark Shanahan’s joyful and clever A Sherlock Carol. Moriarty is dead, to begin with, and Sherlock is a haunted man. But when a grown Tiny Tim comes knocking on his door asking for an investigation into the untimely death of Mr. Ebenezer Scrooge, the Great Detective must use his gifts to solve a Dickens of a Christmas mystery! Uncover the mystery through this jovial journey in one of the best places to be during the holiday season…Why the Wells Theatre, of course! It’s simply Elementary!

For showtimes and tickets, visit vastage.org, or call the box office at (757) 627-1234.

HR Show | Take a Look Behind the Yuletide Curtain with A Merry Little Christmas Carol

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) β€” It’s a time-honored tradition for the holiday season. A Merry Little Christmas Carol returns to the historic Wells Theatre next month. Director Jordan Setzer and actor Beatty Barnes from Virginia Stage Company joined HRS with the details of this local holiday tradition.

Virginia Stage Company presents A Merry Little Christmas Carol
Runs December 8 through December 23. You can catch the show at Wells Theatre in Norfolk.
For tickets and information call, 757-627-1234 or visit vastage.org.

This segment of The Hampton Roads Show is sponsored by Virginia Stage Company.

Virginian Pilot | β€˜Dracula, A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, Really’ sticks it to The Man

Virginian Pilot | β€˜Dracula, A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, Really’ sticks it to The Man

Playwright Kate Hamill (well-aided and abetted by director Melissa Mowry) has taken lucrative liberties with Stoker’s β€œDracula,” just as she has with other out-of-copyright classics such as Jane Austen’s β€œSense and Sensibility,” β€œPride and Prejudice” and β€œEmma.” Besides gender and nationality-switching key characters such as Van Helsing, Hamill has openly attacked paternalism on all fronts. This VSC production features, for example, an β€œall-female” creative team (with one nonbinary person, as Mowry specifies). In her playbill notes, Mowry calls this production β€œa labor of love and rage,” the rage directed against the degradation of women by men legally empowered to suck their life’s blood from them.

HR Show | Take a Bite Out of this Victorian Horror Story!

HR Show | Take a Bite Out of this Victorian Horror Story!

The newest production from Virginia Stage Company to hit the stage at the Wells Theater is coming just in time for Halloween … with a twist! It’s: β€˜Dracula: A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, Really’. Cast members Darlene Hope and Madeline Calais-King joined HRS with details about the show.

VEER | Women Drive Stake Through Heart of Patriarchal Dracula

VEER | Women Drive Stake Through Heart of Patriarchal Dracula

"What does it mean to have Dracula: A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, really told from the perspective of a woman of color," says Melissa. ...That eventually opened up the world of the play to her. "This play was written during the #MeToo movement, and the Harvey Weinstein trial," she later adds. "Unfortunately, I think the world is meeting the play, where it sort of starts."

JMU | Norfolk theater group brings β€˜brilliant’ display of mental health struggles to JMU

By Ashlee Thompson (JMU | The Breeze)

Editor’s Note: This story contains mentions of mental health and suicide that may be triggering for some readers. If you or someone you know is struggling with their mental health in any way, please visit the American Psychological Association’s website or call 988.

β€œEvery Brilliant Thing” follows main character Anna, played by Anna Sosa, and her struggles growing up with a mother with suicidal depression. (Landon Shakelford | The Breeze)

As audience members took their seats in preparation for a performance about mental health, they were handed a slip of paper with a seemingly random phrase and a number ranging from one to one million. 

Little did they know they would soon be as important to this production as the main character. 

Norfolk-based Virginia Stage Company (VSC) brought its one-man play, β€œEvery Brilliant Thing,” to JMU on Tuesday as part of its Sentara Health-sponsored tour across the state. Taking place on the third floor of D-Hall in the Hall of Presidents, the play’s layout took a unique approach with the audience sitting in a large circular formation surrounding all four sides of the actor and her props. 

The comedy-drama play follows main character Anna, played by VSC actor Anna Sosa, and her struggles growing up with a mother who has suicidal depression. Beginning at 7 years old, Anna creates a numbered, handwritten list of things worth living for in order to cheer up her mother, who’s been hospitalized multiple times due to suicide attempts. As Anna grows up and hits milestones, the list grows with her. 

β€œA lot of us that are part of this project have [experienced] suicide some way in our lives,” Sosa said. β€œWhether it’s friends or family or our own personal struggle, I’m not alone in that, which is part of the reason why this show is so important.” 

As the show progressed, audience participation became a crucial part of the production. When Sosa said the number on someone’s paper they were handed as they entered, they had to yell out what it read. 

β€œNumber 1,” Sosa yelled during a scene. Across the room, someone shouted, β€œIce cream!” This occurred throughout the entire one-hour duration until the list was complete. 

The audience participation went further than just shout-outs. Certain spectators were called to the floor to play significant roles in Anna’s life, such as her father, a veterinarian, a professor, a sock puppet and her love interest. Audience members had to improvise their way through their scene with help from Sosa. 

One audience member, who played a teacher with a sock puppet, was given a microphone and a sock and was tasked with cheering up a 7-year-old Anna. 

β€œI can’t imagine this show without the participation,” Sosa said. β€œIt allows everyone to see themselves in the various components of the show.” 

Sophomore economics major Zach Marks attended the play to earn a wellness passport credit for his Health 100 class. He left with an acting credit. 

Marks was chosen to play Sam, Anna’s future husband she met in college. He acted through their meet-cute, proposal and eventual divorce without any preparation. Sam is an important character to the story, being the one who helped Anna continue and finish her list β€” after it was forgotten after high school β€” and encouraged her to talk with a therapist. 

β€œI thought it was really sweet, everything [Sam] did, reaching out and continuing the list and trying to help her be better,” Marks said. β€œI wasn’t sure what to expect, but I learned there’s a lot of good things in the world.” 

The play focused on various relationships in Anna’s life and how they impacted her, with Sam helping her realize she buried a lot of her familial trauma without realizing.  

β€œIf you lived your whole life without feeling crushingly depressed,” Anna said during the play, β€œthen you probably haven’t been paying attention.” 

In addition to the heavy topics and lessons taught throughout the show, the University Counseling Center was present to answer any questions and provide information about JMU’s mental health resources. 

Psychoeducation outreach specialist Karla Kale thought β€œEvery Brilliant Thing” was important to show on campus to β€œbring awareness” and β€œdestigmatize” discussions about suicide and mental health, especially as this week is National Suicide Prevention Week, she said. 

β€œWe want to make sure folks are aware of the resources and that help is available,” Kale said. β€œThe JMU Counseling Center is a fantastic resource. We are free and confidential to students if they’re looking for support.”  

One of the play’s final scenes sees Anna attend a support group to talk about her mother’s passing. She recalls finding her list again. Anna goes home and finishes the list up to one million items, with the last bullet point saying,  β€œplaying vinyl records,” something she and her dad bonded over. 

β€œIf anyone here has had thoughts of suicide, do not do it,” Sosa said during a monologue. β€œ[Life] may not be brilliant, but things get better.”

Contact Ashlee Thompson at thomp6ab@dukes.jmu.edu. For more on the culture, arts and lifestyle of the JMU and Harrisonburg communities, follow the culture desk on X and Instagram @BreezeJMU.