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Theater: Flora, The Red Menace

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  • Theater: Flora, The Red Menace

    THEATER: FLORA, THE RED MENACE
    By Rick Reed

    Windy City Times, IL
    June 28 2006

    Music and Lyrics: John Kander, Fred Ebb;
    book: David Thompson
    At: Theo Ubique at No Exit Cafe, 6970 N. Glenwood
    Phone: 773-743-3355; $20-$22
    Runs through: July 30

    While this early, career-launching effort is not the first play that
    comes to mind when one thinks of the musical legacy of Kander and Ebb
    ( Cabaret, Chicago, Kiss of the Spider Woman, etc. ) , Flora, the Red
    Menace does have the prescient feel of greatness...and the richness
    of history: the 1965 Broadway production of Flora boasted the debut
    performance of Liza Minnelli in the lead ( and she won the Tony that
    year ) .

    The story of Flora, the Red Menace ( nice, plucky Hungarian immigrant
    gets mixed up with the Communist party through her association with
    a charming man in depression-era New York and finds she has to make a
    choice between love, party alliance and her own independence ) is not
    the kind of thing big, show-stopping musicals are made of-and that's
    a good thing. The tiny storefront No Exit Cafe is an ideal venue for
    this story of a group of down-on-their-luck artists and revolutionaries
    struggling for meaning and recognition during hard times.

    Under Fred Anzevino and Beverle Bloch's deft direction, Flora, the
    Red Menace comes to rousing, romantic and engaging life, transporting
    audience members into a world that's in the past, but a world we
    can all identify with. Who hasn't been young and idealistic, hungry
    to fulfill a dream or two? Anzevino and Block are blessed with a
    talented young ensemble to flesh out the story and characters one
    can easily love. Jeremy Trager shines here. Trager is a veteran of
    several Theo Ubique productions and while I've found his work a tad
    hammy in the past, he really delivers here. He makes his stammering
    Armenian immigrant, Harry Toukarian, a memorable and believable young
    man; we see his conviction, his fervor and, most importantly, his
    hunger for love and acceptance. It's a standout performance, and it's
    great to see this kind of growth in a performer. As Flora, newcomer
    Elizabeth Lesinski sparkles; brassy and bigger than life, this Flora
    charms and captivates, and Lesinski makes it easy to imagine a life
    filled with love and success for this character. Danielle Brothers,
    as the staid Communist revolutionary Charlotte, steals the show in
    whatever scene she's in, with perfect comic timing and verve.

    It doesn't seem possible that there should be so much talent and
    charm in a little storefront production such as this one. But don't
    question it. There it is. Get yourself a ticket. You won't be sorry.
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