Wednesday 23 November 2011

Pittsburgh CityPaper - 23/Nov/2011

[Source]

NOVEMBER 23, 2011
Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir
While the show at present isn't what playwright Keith Bunin wants it to be, what it is is swell.


BY TED HOOVER

Luke Macfarlane in City Theatre's Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir.
Photo courtesy of Suellen Fitzsimmons.
Boy -- if there was ever a show with my name written all over it, it's Keith Bunin's Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, now world-premiering at City Theatre. Mark Rucker directs Luke Macfarlane (late of TV's Brothers & Sisters) in the role of Sam Bendrix -- a bartender at the legendary New York cabaret in 1958 -- who has coerced the owners into letting him perform for one night only. And thanks to a few too many cocktails, his between-song patter turns into self-confession.

Tony Ferrieri has designed the sumptuous recreation of the Bon Soir, made even more atmospheric by Andrew David Ostrowski's moody and expressive lighting.

Pittsburgh's musical genius, Douglas Levine, is not only music director but plays the nightclub pianist, and his terrific jazz combo runs through a list of American Songbook standards which could have been lifted directly from my iTunes.

So I was totally prepared to fall in love.

And yet I have to say that I was less than enthralled. It's not bad, certainly, and never less than entertaining. But on the whole, the show feels generic and unmoored.

Bunin has set his play in the '50s and, for the life of me, I can't tell why. Nothing in the show's plot or attitude is either necessary to, or even formed by, that time. The character of Bendrix processes the world around him with a sensibility so firmly rooted in the 21st century that there's no way to emotionally locate him in Bunin's chosen period.

But while the show at present isn't what Bunin wants it to be, what it is is swell. And a lot of that is because Macfarlane is just about as charming as anyone has a right to be; with his honest vulnerability, there's not a second we're not cheering him on. He also happens to be quite a good singer -- but, like the script, his voice is out of place. This was an era of brooding crooning (think Sinatra), not the bright, clear, unshaded singing Macfarlane provides.

As it stands, the show needs to amp up the authenticity. But until they get that, they've got the entertainment part covered.

Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir continues through Dec. 18. City Theatre, 13th and Bingham streets, South Side. 412-431-2489 or www.CityTheatreCompany.org

Tuesday 22 November 2011

post-gazette.com - 22/Nov/2011

[Source]

'Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir' charms at City Theatre
Stage review
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
By Bob Hoover, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

John Heller /Post-Gazette
Luke Macfarlane brings an understated tenderness and regret tinged with hope to the one-man show
"Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir."
City Theatre has discovered an effective time machine and finely tuned it to 1958 to re-create the mood and music of that year for its charming "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir."

It's the premiere of Keith Bunin's emotional biography of a gay man looking for love in the wrong decade framed with evocative romantic show songs of the mid-20th century.

Reminding us a bit of "Mad Men's" Don Draper in his white shirt, narrow tie and slick hair, Luke Macfarlane plays Sam with an understated tenderness and regret tinged with hope. Bartender and fill-in singer at the tiny Bon Soir club in New York's Greenwich Village, Sam is saying farewell to his unhappy Manhattan history with a final performance.

'Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir'
Where: City Theatre, 1300 Bingham St., South Side.
When: Through Dec. 18; Tuesday-Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Thursday-Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 5:30 and 9 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m.; Nov. 30 and Dec. 7, 1 p.m. matinees.
Tickets: $35-$60. 412-431-2489 or www.citytheatrecompany.org.
Blending great songs by Gershwin, Porter, Kern, Weill and even Pittsburgh's Oscar Levant with his sad tale of searches for a lover in the closeted '50s, Sam risks all by baring his soul to the habitues of the cozy club.

Once inside City Theatre's second stage, the intimate Hamburg Studio, audiences pass through that time machine into a genuine New York basement dive. All that's missing from scenic designer Tony Ferrieri's nicely realized set is a cloud of cigarette smoke.

From the cramped bar to the small tables and the cheap wood paneling behind the band, his Bon Soir immediately evokes the feel of the times. Add the hip music from the combo led by pianist Douglas Levine and the world is 53 years younger.

Credit Brad Peterson for sound design and Andrew David Ostrowski for lighting as well.

Under the direction of Mark Rucker, City Theatre's " 'way back machine" works its magic, transporting its audiences in a way only live theater can do. Mr. Macfarlane, who logged hours on the TV prime-time soap "Brothers & Sisters," gracefully holds center stage for most of the one-act show, which is probably 20 minutes too long.

While he movingly tells the ups, but mostly downs of his character's love life in the Big City, Mr. Macfarlane as a singer seems more comfortable in the lower registers. He and the band have a great rapport, however, a tight relationship that draws the audience in on the performance.

Playwright Bunin's vision of what gay men faced in the 1950s echoes the writing of Christopher Isherwood and more closely the fine Tom Ford film with Colin Firth, "A Single Man." It's a familiar story, told afresh thanks to the great musical framework that saves the story from mawkish sentimentality.

Bob Hoover: bhoover@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1634.


First published on November 22, 2011 at 12:00 am

Friday 18 November 2011

Playbill.com - 18/Nov/2011

[Source]

Begin the Beguine: Luke Macfarlane Stars in Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, Opening in Pittsburgh
By Kenneth Jones
18 Nov 2011

Luke Mcfarlane in Sam Bendrix...
Photo by Kristin Martz
Luke Macfarlane, star of the TV series "Brothers & Sisters" and Broadway's recent Tony Award-winning production of The Normal Heart, plays the title role in the world premiere of Keith Bunin's 1950s-set show tune-studded play Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, opening Nov. 18 following previews from Nov. 12 at City Theatre in Pittsburgh.

Mark Rucker directs the work, which features music by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwin brothers. Performances play City Theatre's intimate Hamburg Studio Stage. It continues to Dec. 18.

According to City Theatre notes, "The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon."

Macfarlane recently played Scotty Wendell on ABC's "Brothers & Sisters." His credits also include FX's "Over There" and the feature film "Kinsey."

"Sam Bendrix requires an actor loaded with charisma and charm," City Theatre artistic director Tracy Brigden said in a statement, "someone who can tell an emotional story, and — most importantly — someone who can perform these wonderful songs. Luke's magnetic star power on the very intimate Hamburg stage is going to make for an unforgettable evening of theatre."

The musicians are R.J. Heid (percussion), Douglas Levine (pianist), Jeff Mangone (double bass, alternating) and Paul Thompson (double bass, alternating). Levine is music director and penned original arrangements.

The design team includes Tony Ferrieri (scenic), Angela M. Vesco (costume), Andrew David Ostrowski (lighting) and Brad Peterson (sound).

City Theatre is at 1300 Bingham Street in Pittsburgh, PA. Visit CityTheatreCompany.org.

Thursday 17 November 2011

Post-gazette.com A&E / THEATER & DANCE - 17/Nov/2011

[Source]

Luke Macfarlane steps into role of volatile singer in City Theatre's 'Sam Bendrix'

Thursday, November 17, 2011
By Sharon Eberson, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Luke Macfarlane rehearses for his one-man world premiere,
"Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir," at City Theatre.
Imagine you are seated in a smoky cafe in 1950s New York, ready for a night of same-old, same-old as a young man and three-piece band perform a cabaret act of popular music. The city outside bustles to a cultural sea change that's exploding artistic norms.

If you've arrived at the scene, you have found your way to the other side of the time tunnel where performer Luke Macfarlane and writer Keith Bunin hope to lead audiences experiencing "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir," a world premiere at City Theatre's intimate Lester Hamburg theater.

The one-man show includes music by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwins within the structure of a cabaret act that turns out to be a confessional by Sam. He is saying goodbye to New York, where he had come from a small town, like so many others, and things hadn't turned out quite as he planned.

'Sam Bendrix at The Bon Soir'
Where: City Theatre, Lester Hamburg Studio Stage, 1300 Bingham St., South Side.
When: Through Dec. 18. 7 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 5:30 and 9 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday; 1 p.m. matinees Nov. 30 and Dec. 7; no performances Nov. 23-24.
Tickets: $35-$60 (check online for student and senior discounts); citytheatrecompany.org or 412-431-CITY.
Sitting in a Starbucks on the South Side on a spring-like day a couple of weeks ago, Mr. Macfarlane and Mr. Bunin discussed the collaboration that has brought this project to City. "Sam Bendrix" strives to generate the feeling of a time and place while incorporating some of the lesser-known songs by big-name composers of the era. And it's about what it meant to be gay in 1958, when the play is set.

"If you were from a small town in the middle of the country you might not know any other people like you, and it led to a sort of influx into the cities and it created this New York City life that really was unprecedented," Mr. Bunin said. "We were also interested in the ways things were very open and very coded, and the incredible things that were going on artistically. Like the Beat generation, the modernist painters ... Jackson Pollock, Frank O'Hara, 'West Side Story,' ... Jack Keroauc, Allen Ginsberg ..."

"It's so interesting to really look at this history and you say, 'Oh my God, these things were happening at the exact same time.' It's shocking," Mr. Macfarlane said.

You may recognize the name Luke Macfarlane and the chiseled good looks from his stint on the ABC series "Brothers & Sisters," in which he played Scotty, who was coupled with one of the brothers of the title. He made his Broadway debut last year in the acclaimed revival of "The Normal Heart," about the rise of the HIV/AIDS crisis in the early 1980s.

The native of London, Ontario, sings and plays the cello, too, which is in part how he wound up as Sam Bendrix. Mr. Bunin had worked on another project with Mr. Macfarlane, so he knew he could sing, even though the last time was with a high school band, before Mr. Macfarlane changed gears and decided to tackle drama at the Juilliard School in New York. (You can listen to tracks of his singing with that band, Fellow Nameless, at lukemacfarlane.org/fellow-nameless.)

"That was the fun thing about knowing the actor," Mr. Bunin said. "I think it's a real privilege. Normally when you write a play, you write a play not knowing who is going to be in it. The fun thing about this was it was a manageable situation. That was a great way to work, and a way you never get to work."

Although the weight of the play would seem to be squarely on the shoulders of the 31-year-old Mr. Macfarlane, he has solid help in music director Douglas Levine, who is the onstage accompanist and who has to react to Sam's increasingly dangerous dialogue.

"They are the other audience," Mr. Macfarlane said of the band. "Doug's fantastic. He's such a gifted pianist. We have yet to start working with the whole band [adding bass and drums], and when they come in, that's going to be great for Doug because I can hear him imagining the whole band and with his 65 fingers, he's playing the whole band. I think when he doesn't have to do that, he's going to take it to level 150."

Mr. Macfarlane has put his trust in Mr. Levine as he has trusted Mr. Bunin and director Mark Rucker, another partner in the "Sam Bendrix" project, to give him all he could handle -- but not too much.

"Keith is such a ferocious reader and knows so much about history before he starts a project. And in a way starting out with more and kind of cutting back was sort of a cheat for the actor. A lot of my background work was done for me, and sometimes in rehearsal I find myself saying another line from another draft. But it's in a great way, because the character is living these lines he may never get to say but they are still very real in my head."

He laughs when it's suggested that "Sam Bendrix" is for someone with masochistic tendencies, because there are so many things for an actor to play: Sam is a singer and a musician who has to bare his emotions and get increasingly drunk as the play progresses. Mr. Macfarlane pointed to a revealing line in the play in which Sam, speaking of someone else, says, "The only reason people get drunk is they have an excuse to say things they would never say."

"I think like most actors, it's really exciting to be challenged," the actor said. "You're constantly saying, 'Put me in coach.' That's what all actors want to do. And I knew when I looked at the script for the first time, I could do this. There are also times when you look at things and think, 'Oh my gosh, this isn't me.' So I feel it's like the privilege of the playwright knowing the actor. He didn't give me anything impossible. I don't pull a trombone out."

Both men are glad to introduce the play in the intimate setting of the Hamburg, standing in for the real Bon Soir, a lamented Greenwich Village club where famous comedians and singers like Barbra Streisand and Ethel Waters were known to perform. The character of Sam is the club's bartender who fills in at the mike on some nights.

Mr. Bunin noted that "it's really a play, so it doesn't work in a cabaret space," where people are being served and perhaps talking over the performer. "I found when researching this, you go to Joe's Pub or the West Bank [Cafe in New York], and people don't really listen there ... and this show requires the audience to listen to everything that's being said. So it wants to have a feeling, which I think Tony [Ferreri] and the designers are creating at the Hamburg, of it being in a cabaret space."

The playwright was familiar with City's stages from a short visit during a rehearsal of his play, "The Credeaux Canvas," in 2002. He and artistic director Tracy Brigden go way back to her stints at the Manhattan Theatre Club and Hartford Stage.

The play was workshopped at Vassar College with five performances for audiences before coming here. Both men are eager for more feedback from discerning audiences like the ones they expect at City Theatre. Mr. Macfarlane attended a performance of "Time Stands Still" there, and observed that the audience was "sophisticated and listened really well."

In their first few days in Pittsburgh, the friends and colleagues had visited The Andy Warhol Museum and Fallingwater, and Mr. MacFarlane, who has been living and acting in Los Angeles for most of the past decade, had called his sister to tell her he had awakened to snow for the first time in a long time.

Pittsburgh was making him feel nostalgic for a city of his youth, Hamilton, Ontario, "where the steel industry used to be," and at the same time revealing its artistic side.

"It wants to be in a city of culture," Mr. Macfarlane said of "Sam Bendrix." "Pittsburgh is really interesting in that way. There seems to be a real commitment to culture and there has been for the past hundred years, in a way that other cities don't have, and cities that are closer to epicenters."

Or as Mr. Bunin put it, "You feel like the city has its own identity and it's very secure in its identity. ... There's a sense of a cultural civic pride."

Sharon Eberson: seberson@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1960.

Wednesday 16 November 2011

TRIB LIVE | A & E - 16/Nov/2011

[Source]

'Sam Bendrix' hits the highlights of a heyday
By Alice T. Carter, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Wednesday, November 16, 2011


Luke Macfarlane performs onstage during a dress rehearsal on Thursday for the City Theatre's production of "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir."
Justin Merriman | Tribune-Review
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Photos
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Luke Macfarlane
Justin Merriman | Tribune-Review

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'Sam Bendrix at the
Bon Soir'
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Produced by: City Theatre Company

When: Through Dec. 18 at 7 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 8 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 5:30 and 9 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays

Admission: $30-$60, discounts available for students and seniors

Where: City Theatre, 1300 Bingham St., South Side

Details: 412-431-2489 or website
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About the writer
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Alice T. Carter is the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review's theater critic and can be reached at 412-320-7808 or via e-mail.

Luke Macfarlane wants to make one thing clear about "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir."

"It is not a cabaret act," he says. "It's a beautiful, delicate play, a one-man show disguised as a cabaret act."

Some confusion is inevitable.

The play takes place in 1958 in the Bon Soir, a legendary nightclub where performers including Barbra Streisand and Phyllis Diller got their starts.

The Bon Soir was a smoky, intimate venue where well-dressed, diverse audience -- blacks and whites, straights and gays -- gathered to hear music by legendary songwriters such as Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwins. It was an era before rock 'n' roll, the Stonewall riots, the Civil Rights struggle and the Vietnam War changed the world.

"It was an intimate world -- a club where so many different parts of New York could get together," Macfarlane says.

At the center of the spotlight is Sam Bendrix, a young singer who takes the stage and his band for a final performance before he quits New York City forever.

While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon.

Written by Keith Bunin, whose play "The Credeaux Canvas" was produced at City Theatre in 2002, "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir" is having its world premiere through Dec. 18 in the Hamburg Studio at City Theatre on the South Side.

Interwoven into the action are some two dozen songs, some of which would have already been classics and others that were contemporary hits of the period.

"Keith wanted a blend of songs people knew and some that would be unfamiliar," says Mcfarlane, who has been playing Sam Bendrix since last year when the play began as a workshop production in New York City.
The move to a fully-staged production at City Theatre is the next stage in its development.

"It's about finding a space where it can transform to what it might become," Macfarlane says. "We might also discover that I can't pull off the show."

Macfarlane's career spans roles on television, in movies and on stage. He is most widely known as Scotty Wendell on the ABC series "Brothers and Sisters." In April, he made his Broadway debut playing Craig Donner in the revival of "The Normal Heart."

"Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir" is his first one-man show, an experience he calls "daunting, terrifying."
Since being cast in the workshop production, he has spent time researching the cabaret experience and the world in which the play is set.

"I've been trying to take in as many cabaret performances as I can," he says while lamenting the fact that few contemporary cabarets reproduce the ambiance of the Bon Soir.

He feels a deep connection to the character he plays.

"I understand Sam in an intimate way -- all the things that pull him in this life -- and I play the cello. Try to find someone else who can do that," he says.

City Theatre artistic director Tracy Brigden believes Macfarlane is well-suited to the role.

"Sam Bendrix requires an actor loaded with charisma and charm, someone who can tell an emotional story, and -- most importantly -- someone who can perform these wonderful songs," she says. "Luke's magnetic star power on the very intimate Hamburg stage is going to make for an unforgettable evening of theater."

Luke and Keith Bunin was on Pittsburgh TODAY

Clip: Kong Chang

Luke Macfarlane and Keith Bunin was on Pittsburgh TODAY on the 16th of November.
Original clip was posted on facebook

Playbill.com - 16/Nov/2011

[Source]

THE SCREENING ROOM: Luke Macfarlane Sings in Sam Bendrix at Pittsburgh's City Theatre (Video)
By Michael Gioia
16 Nov 2011

Luke Macfarlane, who was last seen on Broadway in the Tony Award-winning production of Larry Kramer's The Normal Heart, is currently  starring in the title role in the world premiere of Keith Bunin's 1950s-set show tune-studded play Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, which began in Pittsburg Nov. 12.

Mark Rucker directs Sam Bendrix, which officially opens Nov. 18 at City Theatre's Hamburg Studio Stage and continues through Dec. 18. The production features music by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwin brothers.

According to City Theatre notes, "The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon."

Macfarlane is also known for playing Scotty Wendell on ABC's "Brothers & Sisters. His credits also include FX's "Over There" and the feature film "Kinsey."

The City Theatre is located at 1300 Bingham Street in Pittsburgh, PA. For more information, visit CityTheatreCompany.org.

For a preview of Macfarlane in Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, look below:

Monday 14 November 2011

The Eponymous Theatre Critic Blog - 14/Nov/2011

[Source]

 "Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir" from City Theatre

"Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir" by Keith Bunin follows Sam Bendrix, a bartender/crooner who, for one night only, has been given the time onstage to perform a nightclub act all his own...for someone who may or may not show up.

The City Theatre manages to set up a convincing lounge atmosphere, complete with (fake) smoke clouding and swirling around the lights. There are two and four-seat tables set up on risers so parties can sit together comfortably, and guests are even encouraged to bring their drinks with them. After all, it is a nightclub. The lighting stays ambiant, and the music from the band is clear and engaging without being overpowering.

The show is...fine, in every good and bad sense of the word. Luke Macfarlane, of some television acclaim, plays Sam and uses the audience as any good nightclub comic, basically as a second character or straight-man for his one-liners. Macfarlane's voice is like velvet, and he wears the character of Sam Bendrix like a dinner jacket - tailor-made. The musicians, while subtle, are great, really coming across not as actors (which they aren't) but as musicians there to support their lead. All in all, the show has the appeal of a good, low-key date night or something to bring your visiting grandparents to for nostalgia's sake.

However, those looking for a "something more"  night of theatre may want to look elsewhere. Basically, "Sam Bendrix..." is another "my life as a gay man" one-man show. And, while this one has the distinction of being set in 1958 New York City, it is pretty much the same-old, same-old. Macfarlane is affable, friendly, pretty darn virtuous and very nice to look at, and in the little over an hour and a half he's onstage we get to hear snippets about his childhood, his move to the Big Apple, his loves and subsequent heartbreaks, his tender relationship to his mother and a lot of forgotten classic songs. But then, try to find a one man (of any gender) show that doesn't involve music or tales of ex-boyfriends or that life in New York City was/is harder than it seems. Maybe less songs and more history? Maybe higher stakes and less affability? There needs to be something to take this particular show out of it's already well-worn path.

There is one moment where Sam and the band look nervous, after all, it is 1958 and the mere mention of homosexual practices are grounds for a police raid. But, rather than the tension mounting as the story becomes more and more intimate and overt, everything melts away to more relaxed singing and talking. Similarly, the play suffers from several anachronisms. For one, the play is set in 1958, Sam mentions buying a Chatty Cathy doll for a friend's daughter several years before...which is miraculous, as the doll was only available in stores in 1960. Similarly, The Cat in the Hat only came out in 1957...also, the blender they pull out at one point is decidedly not vintage, but now Epony is just being picky.

As stated before there is nothing "wrong" with the show. It is enjoyable, takes a few low-key suprising turns and is willing to make you laugh and send you on your merry way. And there is nothing wrong with that, but some innovation in the form may be the shot in the arm this show needs to truly distinguish itself.

- The Eponymous Theatre Critic does is fact know when the Chatty Cathy doll was made because Eponymous was the one standing at the front of the line at Macy's in 1960 buying five of them for reasons which, as of now, seem very silly and far away. Yes, Eponymous is old.

Saturday 12 November 2011

Playbill.com - 12/Nov/2011

[Source]

Begin the Beguine: Luke Macfarlane Stars in Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, Starting Nov. 12 in Pittsburgh
By Kenneth Jones
12 Nov 2011

Luke Mcfarlane in Sam Bendrix...
Photo by Kristin Martz
Luke Macfarlane, star of the TV series "Brothers & Sisters" and Broadway's recent Tony Award-winning production of The Normal Heart, plays the title role in the world premiere of Keith Bunin's 1950s-set show tune-studded play Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, Nov. 12-Dec. 18, at City Theatre in Pittsburgh.

Mark Rucker directs the work, which features music by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwin brothers. Performances play City Theatre's intimate Hamburg Studio Stage. Opening night is Nov. 18.

According to City Theatre notes, "The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon."

Macfarlane recently played Scotty Wendell on ABC's "Brothers & Sisters. His credits also include FX's "Over There" and the feature film "Kinsey."

"Sam Bendrix requires an actor loaded with charisma and charm," City Theatre artistic director Tracy Brigden said in a statement, "someone who can tell an emotional story, and — most importantly — someone who can perform these wonderful songs. Luke's magnetic star power on the very intimate Hamburg stage is going to make for an unforgettable evening of theatre."

The musicians are R.J. Heid (percussion), Douglas Levine (pianist), Jeff Mangone (double bass, alternating) and Paul Thompson (double bass, alternating). Levine is music director and penned original arrangements.

The design team includes Tony Ferrieri (scenic), Angela M. Vesco (costume), Andrew David Ostrowski (lighting) and Brad Peterson (sound).

City Theatre is at 1300 Bingham Street in Pittsburgh, PA. Visit CityTheatreCompany.org.

Broadway World.com - 12/Nov/2011

[Source]

Luke Macfarlane Joins City Theater's SAM BENDRIX AT THE BON SOIR 11/12-12/18

Saturday, November 12, 2011; Posted: 05:11 AM - by BWW News Desk

City Theatre has announced that Luke MacFarlane, star of ABC's hit series Brothers & Sisters, will perform the title role in the world premiere of Keith Bunin's Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir. Mark Rucker will direct the play, also featuring music by legendary songwriters like Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein and the Gershwins. Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir plays on City Theatre's intimate Hamburg Studio Stage November 12 - December 18, 2011. The Opening Night performance is Friday, November 18 at 8 pm.

Mr. Macfarlane recently playEd Scotty Wendell on ABC's Brothers & Sisters and appeared in the 2011 Broadway production of The Normal Heart. Audiences will also recognize him from FX's Over There and the feature film Kinsey.

"Sam Bendrix requires an actor loaded with charisma and charm," states City Theatre Artistic Director Tracy Brigden, "someone who can tell an emotional story, and - most importantly - someone who can perform these wonderful songs. Luke's magnetic star power on the very intimate Hamburg stage is going to make for an unforgettable evening of theatre."

City Theatre will announce the entire production team, including musicians and designers, shortly.

The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon.

CITY THEATRE PRESENTS THE WORLD PREMIERE OF
Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir
When: November 12 - December 18, 2011

Preview Schedule
Saturday, November 12 at 5:30 pm; Sunday, November 13 at 7pm;
Tuesday, November 15 and Wednesday, November 16 at 7pm;
Thursday, November 18 at 8 pm

PRESS / OPENING NIGHT
Friday, November 18 at 8 pm

Regular Run Schedule
Tuesday and Wednesday at 7 pm; Wednesday at 1 pm;
Thurs. and Fri. at 8 pm; Sat. at 5:30 & 9 pm; Sun. at 2 pm

Where: City Theatre, 1300 Bingham Street on Pittsburgh's South Side

Single tickets start at $30.

Students and age 26 and younger may reserve $15 tickets, subject to availability.

Seniors (age 60 and older) may purchase $22 rush tickets at the Box Office beginning two hours before show time, subject to availability.

Groups of 10 or more are eligible for discounts.
Call Kari Shaffer at 412.431-4400 x286.

Tickets are available at 412.431.CITY (2489) or CityTheatreCompany.org.

City Theatre is Pittsburgh's largest producing company located outside of downtown's Cultural District. Now in its 37th year and settled on Pittsburgh's historic South Side, City Theatre specializes in contemporary and new plays and has brought to Pittsburgh playwrights such as Adam Rapp, Christopher Durang, Eric Simonson, and Jeffrey Hatcher. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Tracy Brigden, Managing Director Mark R. Power, and a 45-member Board of Directors, City Theatre's mission is to provide an artistic home for the development and production of contemporary plays of substance and ideas that engage and challenge a diverse audience. www.citytheatrecompany.org

Friday 11 November 2011

An announce from City Theatre - 11/Nov/2011

[Source]

This weekend: the Hamburg Stage becomes the legendary Bon Soir!
  


Read Pop Filter's interview with playwright Keith Bunin here

November 12-December 18, 2011  

world premiere
by Keith Bunin
directed by Mark Rucker
music direction by Douglas Levine
  
featuring songs by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein, the Gershwins, and more! 
  
The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon.

featuring Luke Macfarlane of ABC's Brothers & Sisters!

   

See it at City!



Performances selling out -
Buy your tickets today!

412.431.CITY (2489)
CityTheatreCompany.org 

Thursday 10 November 2011

Photo by Justin Merriman - 10/Nov/2011

[Source] Please see original photo at "Justin Merriman Photography: Luke Macfarlane"


Luke Macfarlane, who is best known for his role as Scotty Wandell on ABC's Brothers & Sisters, rehearses on stage during a dress rehearsal for the City Theatre's production of Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir on Thursday evening, November 10, 2011.

Wednesday 9 November 2011

POP City - 09/Nov/2011

[Source]

Pop Filter Hot Pick: City Theatre presents world premiere of Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir
Jennifer Baron | Wednesday, November 09, 2011


City Theatre is bringing a world premiere production to its intimate Southside-based Lester Hamburg Studio Stage. The latest play to mark its 37th season, Keith Bunin's Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir, will transport audiences to a highly creative and influential moment in American history.

The year is 1958, the setting the legendary Bon Soir club in New York's lively Greenwich Village. At the bustling cabaret-style club, charismatic musician Sam Bendrix and his talented band are about to take the stage for what will be their final riveting performance. Underscoring the cultural, political and societal shifts brewing beneath the surface of modern America, the new play weaves a "tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon."

As the drinks and the music flow around Bendrix, he's about to make the dramatic decision to quit the New York City life forever. Audiences will be mesmerized by some of the era's most enduring songs--as a lone chair the young singer reserves "for a special someone" sits empty in the club all night.

Move over Tom Cruise--there's another Hollywood star in town! Starring in the title role is accomplished actor and singer Luke Macfarlane, best known for his portrayal of Scotty Wendell in ABC’s hit series Brothers & Sisters. Macfarlance recently appeared in the 2011 Broadway production of The Normal Heart, and has also starred in FX’s Over There, Robert Altman's Tanner on Tanner (Sundance Channel), and in the feature film, Kinsey. The Canadian actor and musician, who was born in London, Ontario in 1980, studied drama at New York City's prestigious Juilliard School, and has starred in several award-wining Broadway and Off-Broadway productions.

“Luke’s magnetic star power on the very intimate Hamburg stage is going to make for an unforgettable evening of theatre," says City Theatre's artistic director Tracy Brigden.

"I am fascinated by this particular period in history in New York. So much was going on comedically and in the art world, with jazz, the Beats and painters at The Museum of Modern Art; West Side Story was on Broadway and Chet Baker was playing. It's a very interesting time," says playwright Keith Bunin, who previously worked with Macfarlane, and first met Brigden 15 years ago in New York. "In the play, Sam is about 30 years old, and is from the generation that served in World War II, a time that redistributed so many people into big cities, where they discovered new worlds."

Based in Brooklyn, the 40-year-old playwright has been in town rehearsing since Oct. 17. He started working on Sam Bendrix in 2009, and workshopped the play in Los Angeles and at Vassar College. "We are really creating a real City Theatre production of this show. It's been a great experience for the star, the director and myself to work with all of the Pittsburgh people, including the design team, local musicians and musical director Douglas Levine."

Directed by Mark Rucker, the show's design team includes Tony Ferrieri (scenic), Angela M. Vesco (costume), Andrew David Ostrowski (lighting), and Brad Peterson (sound).

Both the audience, and the songs themselves, play a central role in the drama. "I want the audience to feel like they are in the time period, not superior to it, or nostalgic for it. What's really fun is that the audience is both themselves, and cast in the role of an audience that would be watching the show in 1958," says Bunin, who is quick to point out that this does not translate to audience participation (so no need to exercise those vocal chords or dance steps!).

"It's really a play disguised as a cabaret act. What's tricky about this show is that you don't want to do it in an actual cabaret space, where the audience is not really paying the same type of attention and the expectations are different. Part of the fun has been developing the songs with the musical director, the actor and the director. These songs are so tensile, in terms of meaning and arrangements; the lyrics and music are so strong. The art and lyricism of mid-century American music is really incredible."

To cull the right music, Bunin listened to hundreds of songs during a research process that was greatly aided by the convenience of YouTube and iTunes. Songs range from both popular and lesser known numbers composed from the 1930s through the 1950s, with a focus on pieces that were actually performed in clubs in 1958.

Bunin returns to the City Theatre, where his play The Credeaux Canvas was produced in 2002. His plays, The Busy World is Hushed and The World Over, both premiered off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons. Next up for Bunin is the screenplay for a live action animation version of the life and work of Dr. Seuss, a project spearheaded by Johnny Depp's production house, Infinitum Nihil, and Universal Studio's Illumination Entertainment. Bunin is also developing a screenplay for the film adaption of a book by Stephen King's son, Joe Hill.

An announce from City Theatre - 09/Nov/2011

[Source]

Luke Macfarlane of ABC's Brothers & Sisters is Sam Bendrix!


November 12-December 18, 2011  


world premiere
by Keith Bunin
directed by Mark Rucker
music direction by Douglas Levine

featuring songs by Cole Porter, Leonard Bernstein, the Gershwins, and more!

The drinks and the music flow at the legendary Bon Soir. In 1958 Greenwich Village, a young singer and his band take the stage for a final performance before he quits New York City forever. While a chair he's holding for a special someone sits empty all night, Sam Bendrix tells a classic tale of an era not yet ready for the revolutionary changes on the horizon.

See it at City!



Performances selling out -
Buy your tickets today!

412.431.CITY (2489)
CityTheatreCompany.org

Monday 7 November 2011

City Theatre's Backstage Blog - 07/Nov/2011

 [Source]

Ask Luke Macfarlane.
Published November 7, 2011

ASK LUKE.

.Luke Macfarlane, star of ABC’s Brothers & Sisters joins City Theatre for the world premiere of Sam Bendrix at the Bon Soir by Keith Bunin.

He will be doing lots of interviews with the Pittsburgh media, but we thought it would be fun to let our Facebook fans have a chance to ask him questions!

All you have to do is click the “submit a question” button below and add your question in the comment box on the facebook page.   It’s that easy! We will shoot an interview with Luke where he answers your questions. Look for it on our Facebook page!