Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat kicks off the Summer Theatre main-stage season June 25



The Lees-McRae College Hayes Auditorium and Broyhill Theatre stage will come to life in vibrant colors on June 25 with the premiere of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.
The first of three shows in the highly anticipated Lees-McRae Summer Theatre line up, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat tells the biblical saga of Joseph, a young, prophetic boy sold into slavery by his jealous brothers.
Family-friendly and set to an engaging cornucopia of musical styles, from country-western and calypso to bubble-gum pop and rock ‘n’ roll, this Book of Genesis tale emerges both timely and timeless.
Directed by Janet Barton Speer and written by Phantom of the Opera writers, Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber, the two-hour long show will take place June 27-30 at 7 p.m. and June 25 and July 1-2 at 2 p.m.
“I have directed “Joseph” four times previously and still find it as exciting as the first time I experienced it,” Speer said. “I am taken with the way Webber and Rice created this piece, using vaudeville, song and dance–and even some clogging in our show–to tell the biblical story.”

Wednesday, May 31, 2017

My Perennial Flower Garden


Always a surprise and delight to see my perennial flower garden in bloom. My island of mixed perennials consist of  Red Hot Poker, Iris, Lupine, Yarrow, Lavender, and Stella De Oro daylily. The Lavender and Stella De Oro have buds and are getting ready to bloom.

My Mother planted these Lupines and I'm always happy to see them return each spring.
Red Hot Pokers are putting on a show!


Thursday, May 4, 2017

Installing my Nucleus Hive of Honeybees


  1. Collected my nucleus hive of bees from Beech Mountain Beekeeping. Secured in car to make sure no bees can escape during the journey to Banner Elk.
  2. Placed nuc hive in position near the hive stand.
  3. Placed new hive on the stand, with the entrance block in place to reduce the entrance.
  4. Sprayed three empty frames with sugar water.
  5. Opened nuc hive and gently smoked the bees.
  6. Lifted out first frame of bees and placed in hive.
  7. Continued to transfer remaining frames of bees.
  8. Added one frame of foundation at front and in-between each frame of bees.
  9. Shook any bees still in the nuc hive into the new hive.
  10. Fitted crown board and the hive roof.
  11. Gave the bees a feeder full of syrup. Will continue feeding until the bees have drawn out all the frames of foundation.

Monday, April 24, 2017

Happy Earth Day 2017!

The bees were buzzing in the apple trees on this beautiful Earth Day 2017 in Banner Elk, North Carolina. Happy Spring!!

Honeybee (top left) working the apple blossoms.
Promise of apples this fall!

Winesap apple blossoms!

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Little Theatre’s ‘Joseph’ is a colorful, fast-moving spectacle - Winston-Salem Journal Review

Originally a short pop cantata, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” eventually blossomed into a longer recorded piece, a stage production and even a movie.


As envisioned and enlivened by Nick Zayas, directing the popular musical for Little Theatre of Winston-Salem, it’s the kind of storytelling that definitely benefits from visuals and spectacle.

The Little Theatre production, which opened Friday night, puts a large cast to good use throughout the show, and brings pizzazz and impressive technical work to the tuneful tale.

If you don’t know this musical, “Joseph” uses a mixture of mostly modern music genres — including western, go-go dance club, French cafĂ© and a particular 1950s rocker — mixed with more traditional tunes.

As with other Webber-Rice works, the show has no spoken dialogue. Everything is related in song.

The Biblical tale of Joseph’s relationship with his 11 brothers, along with his dream interpretation skills, moves from his fawning father’s gift of the “coat of many colors” to his brothers’ plotting to get rid of him. Father Jacob thinks he’s dead and gone, while he works through challenging times in Egypt.

Saying more would give away too much, and the occasional nods to modern situations should be surprises. Let’s just say Joseph has his troubles, but holds on to the good.

Andrew Brodeur presents a firm but believably humble Joseph, with a youthful presence and a commanding voice.

The show primarily belongs, however, to the Narrator character, who pushes the story along with her information and observations. Charity Hampton was in very good voice from beginning to end in that vitally important role.

On the amusing “Those Canaan Days,” as they lament the downturn in their situation, brothers Mark Walek (Reuben), Glenn Otterbacher (Napthali) and Calum O’Boyle (Gad) get well-performed solo shots.

Jed Macosko (Pharaoh) also makes the most of his “Song of the King.” And from the lively “Jacob and Sons” near the beginning to the ending songs, the combined voices of the cast make a strong impression. Margaret B. Gallagher, music director, and her orchestra support them nicely.

Director Zayas and choreographer Becky Koza work the cast well with the song and dance aspects, but nowhere better than with the 12-member children’s chorus. The young performers are actively involved, which is not always the case.

The scene with “Go, Go, Joseph” impressed for color, costume and dance as well.
A nod must be given to Daniel Alvarez’s striking set design and lights, and LeeAnn Farrell’s costuming. A three-person “fly crew” hints at an impressive and aggressive scene design, which certainly turned out to be the case.

At its core, though, this “Joseph” is well-organized, transitions smoothly and keeps the action moving right along. For many audience members, it should be just plain fun to take the ride.

By BILL CISSNA Special Correspondent  Apr 2, 2017