Alabama Shakes' Rose Colored Glasses Bounced by Smokey Joe's in 2002 | Playbill

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News Alabama Shakes' Rose Colored Glasses Bounced by Smokey Joe's in 2002 Quicker than a lick of a jazz guitar, Alabama Shakespeare Festival has swapped its planned world premiere of Rose Colored Glasses, a Jazz-Age musical with Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn music, for the resident Alabama premiere of Smokey Joe's Cafe.

Quicker than a lick of a jazz guitar, Alabama Shakespeare Festival has swapped its planned world premiere of Rose Colored Glasses, a Jazz-Age musical with Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn music, for the resident Alabama premiere of Smokey Joe's Cafe.

ASF in Montgomery had announced the world premiere of the black, jazz-infused musical with Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn songs, but the project is still in development, according to a spokesperson, and won't be ready in time for its March 5-April 14, 2002, run. A future berth at ASF is hoped for. The popular Broadway revue, Smokey Joe's Cafe, featuring the songs of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller ("Spanish Harlem," "On Broadway"), will play the slot.

The 2001-2002 season includes a world premiere play about Civil War re-enactors, Driving Miss Daisy, Much Ado About Nothing, Hamlet, The Tempest, A Doll's House, A Christmas Carol and Somerset Maugham's Sheppey.

Rose-Colored Glasses was to be one of two ASF new works from the troupe's Southern Writers' Project. The new piece will use such songs as "Take the A Train," "Satin Doll," "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good" and "Sophisticated Lady" to tell the story of two Jazz-Age couples in Harlem and Paris in the early 20th century. It was inspired by an idea for a show discussed 30 years ago by Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn and Luther Henderson. The new book is by Carlyle Brown, with music and lyrics also by Ellington, Strayhorn and Henderson. Kent Gash was set to direct.

* The second Southern Writers' Project world premiere is Shiloh Rules, a touching, humorous play about Civil War re-enactors who spar with an African-American female park ranger, May 14-July 27, 2002. The play by Doris Baizley had a small "sneak preview" staging by New Century Theatre at Smith College in summer 2001 prior to the separate staging by ASF. Shiloh Rules was originally developed in workshop at the Intiman Theater and as part of the New Work Festival at the Mark Taper Forum. The work involves four female Civil War re-enactors who "arrive early for the Battle of Shiloh only to run into a U.S. Park Ranger whose job it is to uphold park regulations," according to the announcement. A director has yet to be announced.

Artistic director Kent Thompson told Playbill On-Line: "You get a clear sense why re-enacting is so interesting to these people. It's a sub-culture. There's a whole ethos of re-enactors that you stay in character and only do things that are historically accurate. The park ranger is stunned that anyone would want to re-enact the Civil War. It's about what people get out of this, and that their motives are not about 'the South will rise again' or that the North will win, but greater things — [about people] telling stories and performing."

Alfred Uhry's Driving Miss Daisy plays Nov. 13-Dec. 30, A Christmas Carol plays Nov. 16-Dec. 23, Shakespeare's The Tempest runs Jan. 8-Feb. 23, 2002, The Graduate Company's Children's Theatre staging of Cinderella plays Jan. 25-Feb. 23, 2002, Ibsen's A Doll's House (adapted by Frank McGuinness) runs March 12-April 14, 2002, Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing (directed by Thompson) plays May 21-July 27, 2002, Somerset Maugham's Sheppey, about a barber who wins the Irish Sweepstakes, also directed by Thompson, plays June 4-July 28, 2002, Shakespeare's Hamlet plays June 11-July 28, 2002. Shows are in the Carolyn Blount Theatre, which houses ASF's two venues — the 225-seat Octagon and the 750-seat Festival.

For season information, call (800) 841-4273 or (334) 271 5353 or visit www.asf.net,

— By Kenneth Jones

 
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