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  • Held Over by Request

    Washington Post, DC
    April 29 2004

    Held Over by Request
    An Impromptu Assist Turns Into a Six-Week Booking
    By Jonathan Padget
    Washington Post Staff Writer


    Music is integral to the new play "Rosemary and I" at Alexandria's
    MetroStage. The tale of a singer, Rosemary, and her intense,
    mysterious relationship with her female accompanist is staged with
    live musicians -- New York pianist John Hodian and his wife, vocalist
    Bet Williams -- who add a haunting soundscape, composed by Hodian, to
    the intricate drama.

    Critical reaction to the play has been mixed, though Hodian and
    Williams have garnered positive notice for their musical
    contribution. They have also taken advantage of their MetroStage
    engagement to give concerts as Epiphany Project, their identity for a
    genre-blurring musical collaboration that combines everything from
    avant-garde folk and Americana to classical art song and art-pop.

    When Hodian started work on the play last year, though, he had no
    idea that he and Williams would relocate to Alexandria for six weeks
    of rehearsals and performances, with their 4-month-old son and a
    nanny in tow. It was a much simpler proposition at first.

    A fan of playwright Leslie Ayvazian since seeing an earlier work of
    hers, "Nine Armenians," Hodian asked her to write the libretto for an
    Armenian-themed opera he envisions. The artists share Armenian
    heritage, and Ayvazian responded enthusiastically to Hodian's
    request, with one condition: She would collaborate on the opera if
    Hodian would first write music for her "Rosemary and I."

    Fair enough, Hodian thought. By the time a staged reading was held
    last summer during a new-play festival at the Kennedy Center, he had
    recorded the piano-vocal score with the help of Williams, and
    traveled to Washington for the reading. He was expecting merely to
    cue music from a CD. But a planned technical rehearsal fell through,
    and suddenly the cast was in a room with only a piano for last-minute
    preparations before taking the stage.

    So much for simplicity.

    Though Hodian had written the score, he hadn't memorized it. But he
    was undaunted. He sat down at the piano and did a little improvising.
    Ayvazian was reading the part of the elderly Rosemary's adult
    daughter Julia (which she also plays now at MetroStage), and she had
    enlisted a longtime friend, Oscar-winner Olympia Dukakis, to read the
    part of Rosemary in preparation for directing the full MetroStage
    production.

    "As soon as I played the first cue," Hodian recalls, "Olympia goes,
    'Wow, that was great. I wish we were doing that instead of what's on
    the CD.' " Her enthusiasm grew with every musical interlude until she
    proclaimed that Hodian must perform for the reading, which at that
    point was about 30 minutes from starting. Center staff nixed the idea
    at first, Hodian says, "but then she kind of does her Olympia thing,
    and suddenly there's a nine-foot Steinway onstage -- and it's tuned."


    While the shift to live music for the current run of "Rosemary and I"
    was unexpected, Hodian and Williams have no complaints about the
    upheaval of their New York routine. It's a "nice family project,"
    says Hodian of the opportunity to work with Williams on both theater
    and concert performance.

    "What makes it so interesting," says Judith Roberts, the actress who
    plays Rosemary, "is that here is a woman who's much later in her
    life, and you hear this young voice . . . coming at you in a way from
    the past, which reinforces the idea of searching for memories. It's
    very evocative, and [Williams] has a wonderful voice -- very
    powerful."

    Roberts was in the audience for Hodian and Williams's Epiphany
    Project concert Sunday night, featuring songs from their self-titled
    2001 album on their independent label, Epiphany Records. Another
    concert is scheduled for this Sunday.

    "For each song, we just do the things we love," says Williams,
    describing their unbounded approach to musicmaking. A follow-up album
    is in the works.

    Though many independent musicians relish not being easily
    categorized, says Hodian, he wouldn't mind Epiphany Project having a
    clearer market niche.

    "We'd love to be categorized," he says. "I wish we could say, 'Hey,
    it's this," and we could go play all the blues festivals, or play
    classical music venues only, or whatever. But it really is a bunch of
    different things. We do whatever we feel like musically."

    Epiphany Project bookings have been easier to come by in Europe,
    where Hodian and Williams have found audiences and club owners
    especially receptive to their eclectic style. Still, Epiphany Project
    enjoys a devoted fan base in the United States, drawn from occasional
    exposure on public radio and crossover from Williams's work as a folk
    solo artist.

    "The people who like it," Williams says, "like it a lot."

    "We have enough fans to keep buying the records," adds Hodian, "and
    to enable us to make another one, and who'll keep coming to shows.
    That'll continue to make it worth us coming out for."

    Epiphany Project, at MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria.
    Sunday at 7 p.m. $20.

    Rosemary and I continues through May 9. $32-$38. Call 703-548-9044 or
    visit

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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