Cast of ’10 Lovers’ (Robyn Cohen). Produced by the Inkwell Theater Company.
Category Archives: Theatre
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25May
‘D is for Dog’ is back
June 8th – August 4th @ The Hudson Theatre, Hollywood
(I’ll be doing every show EXCEPT July 21st)
CLICK FOR 1/2 PRICE TICKETS & INFO
Guy and the ‘D is for Dog‘ cast nominated for BEST COMEDY ENSEMBLE for the LA Weekly Theatre Awards.

Cast and crew outside South Coast Repertory, opening weekend.
Stage Raw: D is for Dog
By Steven Leigh Morris Tue., Jul. 12 2011 at 9:16 AM
NEW REVIEW GO D IS FOR DOG begins with deceptive simplicity, as a (seemingly) entertaining parody of the mindless and stultifying conformity of the 1950s. Playwright Kate Polebaum’s script focuses on the Rogers family, a robotic quartet consisting of a devoted couple, Mr. and Mrs. Rogers (Guy Birtwhistle and Nina Silver), and their enthusiastically complaisant kids (played by adults), Dick and Jane (Michael Scott Allen and Taylor Coffman). Each morning, a smiling Mrs. Rogers pirouettes through the kitchen to display its glories, and at each breakfast the family pays a jingled tribute to Maxwell House and Aunt Jemima. Only Mr. Rogers, a scientist who works for the omnipotent Conservation Company, is aware of the ominous forces threatening their home. He maintains a protective silence so as not to alarm his loved ones — until strange phone calls start to intrude on their innocence. Director Sean T. Cawelti and tech director Tyler Stamets marshal a panoply of talent to relay what metamorphoses into a riveting sci-fi tale that, like the best of that genre, comes off as frighteningly prescient.
The spot-on ensemble include Coffman’s strangely aberrant child and Birtwhistle’s caring Dad, a beacon of humanity amidst the bizarre landscape that envelops him. What makes this production so distinctive, however, is its staging – a coalescence of elements that includes flawlessly calibrated sound (John Nobori) and original music (Nobori and Ben Phelps), artful lighting (Haylee Freeman) and stunning graphics (Matthew T. Hill). The menacing life-size puppets are spooky enough to haunt one’s nightmares for a very long time. Studio/Stage, 520 N. Western Ave., L.A., Fri.- Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun, 4 p.m. thru Aug. 7 (323) 463-3900. studio-stage.com. (Deborah Klugman)


