βI think Little Shop of Horrors is one of the great musicals, that is both fantastic score, great characters, and it is a story that does not at all feel dated,β says Tom Quaintanceβ¦
WHRO: "Fat Ham," a delectable play with sides of humor and heart, at Wells Theatre through Sunday
WHRO | By Kate Nowak
Published February 10, 2025
The Pulitzer-Prize-winning play reimagines Shakespeare's tragedy at a Southern family barbecue.
βFat Ham,β by James Ijames, is a modern take on Shakespeareβs βHamletβ and uses biting humor, absurdly big personalities and heart to explore familial tensions and cultural expectations in the context of a Southern barbecue.
The Pulitzer-prize-winning show, produced by the Virginia Stage Co., features Juicy, our modern Hamlet, who grapples with what it means to be a young queer Black man rejecting the violent and hardened examples of manhood heβs always known.
Juicy has planned a party to celebrate his motherβs recent wedding. The nuptials, however, have caused a stir: His mother married shortly after her husband was killed. And sheβs married her late husbandβs brother. The ghost of Juicyβs father appears, telling Juicy to avenge his death.
β 'Hamlet,' but a Black barbecue, is intriguing and funny,β said Jerrell Henderson, the showβs director. He said that though the characters and scenes can be outlandish, so is the source material.
βYou can go through 'Hamlet' and buy everything that happens,β he said, "but when violence intersects with karaoke, intimate family drama and soul food, βCan you buy that?β
βThe lives of African Americans throughout the course of our time in this country have been riddled with absurdity that we have had to grapple with simply because what else are you gonna do?β Henderson said.
The small cast brings depth and reality to their characters, which shines through the ridiculous quirks, dirty jokes and musical theatrics.
βThey are characters,β Henderson said, βbut they have heart.β
The play explores heavy themes and realities, but the large dose of comedy helps the medicine go down.
βSatire is humor with a bite β¦ itβs got some darkness in it,β Henderson said, βbut if you can laugh at it, it makes it easier to embrace.β
As a lifelong fan of Shakespeare, Henderson said βHamletβ is a work steeped in rich and universal human experiences and emotion, which makes it ripe to be reworked into a modern context.
βThatβs what we as artists do,β he said, βwe reinterpret.β
Henderson said he is reevaluating what hope means to him with the current political landscape, pending environmental crises and cultural divides, but he thinks the ending of βFat Hamβ is a more hopeful alternative to the tragedy of βHamlet.β
βBefore we can move forward, we gotta unlearn,β Henderson said about the generational and cultural scars explored in the play. "But itβs possible to progress. We can do it; it has happened in American history. What if we reimagined our world?β
"Fat Ham" cast member Janae Thompson is a member of WHRO's Emerging Leaders Board. WHRO's advisory boards do not make editorial decisions.
"Fat Ham" plays through Sunday at the Wells Theatre, 108 E. Tazewell St. Tickets and show times are available at vastage.org.
The Virginian-Pilot | βFat Ham,β a Black and gay modern βHamlet,β sizzles at Virginia Stage Company
Coastlive | Hear about FAT HAM from the Cast!
Black Music & Cuisine at the Heart of Fat Ham
Review: A merry little Christmas mash-up in Virginia Stage Companyβs βA Sherlock Carolβ
By Paige Laws
The humbug is afoot!
Youβd better check your Christmas stockings for Easter eggs, theater parlance for referencing one play in another.
The Virginia Stage Co. has produced Mark Shanahanβs version of Charles Dickensβ βA Christmas Carolβ β βA Merry Little Christmas Carolβ β since 2021. Shanahan has also written a sequel, βA Sherlock Carol.β His sometimes sweet, sometimes silly, but always clever sequel is based on Dickensβ classic but mashed up with A. Conan Doyleβs βThe Adventure of the Blue Carbuncleβ (1892). Confused yet? Fear not.
The shows are running in rep, meaning they are being performed at different times in the same weeks (βA Merry Little Christmas Carolβ runs through Dec. 23) with the same set and, mostly, the same cast.
Itβs, at first, a most unlikely sounding combo β Dickens and Doyle β but Shanahan makes it make marvelous sense. Scrooge (especially before his Christmas redemption) and Sherlock share one overwhelming character trait: narcissism. Think of it as βThe Miser and the Analyzer: A Tale of Two Narcissists.β (Note that critics love hiding Easter eggs, too.) Dickens published βCarolβ in 1843 and βA Tale of Two Citiesβ in 1859. Doyleβs Sherlock Holmes works span 1887 to 1927.
What is afoot in London, 1894, the setting for βA Sherlock Carolβ?
Well, the playβs first lines are βMoriarty is dead to begin with. Moriarity is dead.β Sound familiar? Well, the beginning of Dickensβ βCarolβ is βMarley was dead: to begin with.β Marley was Scroogeβs long-dead partner, who comes in ghostly form to save Scroogeβs soul. The similar-sounding Moriarty is Holmesβ longtime nemesis, the βNapoleon of Crime,β recently killed in a struggle with Holmes at Reichenbach Falls. But our Holmes here is still haunted by the ghost of Moriarity. Heβs so obsessed that Holmes thinks he still sees him fleeing around corners. The play begins with Holmes in a downward spiral of depression, alienated from his only friend Dr. Watson (now happily married). Things look bleak for the worldβs greatest detective.
Beatty Barnes, the resilient stand-up comic and tragedian, plays Scrooge in both. The other mostly Equity main cast double also (except Scott Wichmann playing Sherlock Holmes). Tiny Tim is played by a child in βA Merry Little Christmas Carol,β but is an adult in βA Sherlock Carolβ since itβs set two decades later. But didnβt you always wonder what would become of Tiny Tim? Now youβll know! He becomes a slightly limping Dr. Tim Cratchit, head of a struggling childrenβs home and hospital.
The doubling, tripling and quadrupling of roles, within and among the plays, is possible because of conventions of story theater (or Epic theater, for loyal Brechtians). Characters engage with one another within the world of the play but also directly address the audience.
The fun is, of course, in recognizing the parallels between two charactersβ lives in an adventure designed for them. The similarities and differences ricochet off one another. The more you know of the two βoldβ characters, the more youβll try vicariously to save them β from themselves. The audience becomes a vital part of the process by wanting a good βfutureβ for our fictitious friends and dreading their destruction which would equal an attack on our great literary canon.
A less charitable way to view unusual adaptations of the classics is to consider them as a kind of author hacking. Kate Hamill (author of the VSCβs recent βDracula, A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, Reallyβ) can be seen as a hacker of Bram Stoker and, often, Jane Austen. Shanahan can be seen as a hacker of Dickens and Doyle.
But, in this case, the hack is so ingenious, so wry, so self-conscious of its βinvasiveβ moves that it works. It entertains. It uplifts rather than denigrates its precious classic sources. Dickens and Doyle are tough enough to take this sort of ribbing. Itβs almost like a Great Authorsβ roast. The more you know and love your Dickens and Doyle, the more you should appreciate this tribute. And, if you donβt know much about them, youβll learn more.
Ideally, see both shows, but, at least, see the newer of the two. Remember to take along your Easter basket.
Page Laws is dean emerita of the Nusbaum Honors College at Norfolk State University. prlaws@aya.yale.edu.
Read the Full Interview Here at The Virginian-Pilot Online
___
If you go
When: Various dates through Dec. 29
Where: The Wells Theatre, 108 E. Tazewell St., Norfolk
Tickets: Start at $15
Details: 757-627-1234, vastage.org
HR Show Holiday Special | The Gift of Theatre
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) β Itβs a double dose of holiday magic at the theatre thanks to Virginia Stage Company. Steve Pacek, director for βA Sherlock Carolβ and an actor in βA Merry Little Christmas Carol,β and Rachel Fobbs who acts in both productions, joined us to share more about what fans can expect to see on the stage.
Virginia Stage Company
βA Merry Little Christmas Carolβ: Dec. 8-23
βA Sherlock Carolβ: select days Dec. 4-29
The Historic Wells Theatre: 108 East Tazewell St., Norfolk
757-627-1234
VAStage.org
This segment of The Hampton Roads Show is sponsored by Virginia Stage Company.
VEER Arts Preview | A Carol or Two from Virginia Stage Company
By Jerome Langston
The Cast and Production Stage Management Team of Virginia Stage Companyβs A Sherlock Carol : (L-R)Patrick Halley, Scott Wichmann, Seth Patterson, Steve Pacek, Sarah Manton, Beatty Barnes, Tia Collier, Emma D. Emde, Rachel Fobbs, and Abbigail LaRocque. Photo by TOC Creative/Glenn Fajota.
βHeβs one of my constants. So anything that he does, Iβm just immediately drawn to,β says Steve Pacek, the Philly actor, playwright, and director β regarding his creative partnership with acclaimed playwright and actor, Mark Shanahan. Itβs late on an unseasonably warm Thursday, and Steve, along with actor Scott Wichmann, have called me to chat about A Sherlock Carol, the highly inventive holiday play being produced by Virginia Stage Company, and performing in rep with their annual holiday classic, A Merry Little Christmas Carol. Steve is directing A Sherlock Carol and is one of the actors starring in this yearβs Christmas Carol, both of which are penned by Mark Shanahan, whom Steve has built both a long-running friendship and artistic partnership with.
Itβs quite fitting then, that this hit Shanahan holiday show, marks Steveβs mainstage directorial debut at the Wells Theatre, following his lauded work as an actor in a number of prior VSC productions, including last seasonβs Dial M for Murder and The Legend of Georgia McBride, which was a stand-out in season 41. Scott, previously of Richmond fame as both an actor and musical performer, is now based in Hampton Roads with his wife, who is also an actor. Scott plays the lead role of Sherlock Holmes in A Sherlock Carol. Today is the second day of staging for the show, and these two artistic gentlemen are chatting with me during an evening break in rehearsal. And though they havenβt known each other for a very long time, Steve and Scott clearly have the chemistry of brothers, who share the same creative passions. I ask the director how he came to this project, and what A Sherlock Carol, is really about.
Read the full article on Veerβs Website HERE
WANT TO GO?
A Sherlock Carol, December 4 β 29
A Merry Little Christmas Carol, December 8 β 23
Presented by Virginia Stage Company
Wells Theatre
Jerome L. Langston is a widely published arts and culture writer, who has written for Port Folio Weekly, The Virginian-Pilot, Style Weekly, and the Washington City Paper. Currently he covers theatre and music for Veer Magazine.




