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Two Muses' AT THE BISTRO GARDEN Team Discusses Show

By: Sep. 07, 2014
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"You aren't inventing the wheel, but you are putting in the spokes. And you hope that wheel will carry the show!" observes Los Angeles-based theatrical director Jules Aaron, currently in Metro Detroit to helm Two Muses Theatre's Midwest premiere of the new musical, At the Bistro Garden. It's an apt metaphor for the Motor City and an even more appropriate one for such a collaborative effort as launching a new theatrical work. Written by fellow Angelinos, the book by Deborah Pearl and music/lyrics by David Kole, the show, which runs from September 26 through October 19 promises to surprise and delight Michigan audiences.

At the Bistro Garden is a sharply funny and touching look at the lives of three friends from Beverly Hills who lunch weekly at the famous Bistro Garden restaurant, circa 1987. Their friendship keeps them from shattering and helps them get through infidelities, betrayals, a daughter going astray, love lost, and love found. Winner of the 2005 ASCAP Best New Musical award, the show was previously workshopped in L.A.

"The idea came originally from David Kole. He started out with five songs and a clear sense of who these women were. He asked me to sing - I also sing professionally- on the demos. He had no book, so I created the story, and wrote scenes that give the women distinctive voices, while also helping identify where additional songs would be needed. I love that it's about the strength and vulnerability of women - and what's behind the facade that we see - because these women are every woman underneath. We started on this a while ago, and the 80s are cool again, so it's perfect timing. Huge shoulder pads and big earrings and the heyday of the wealthy in Beverly Hills give us a good context for the comedy," explains Pearl, a longtime television writer/producer, whose credits include Designing Women. "Over the years, working in television, I learned so much about comic timing - what works and what doesn't. And since I'm a singer as well, I hear the human voice as melody. That's how I write. I hear the characters speak in my head and it's like I'm taking dictation. Sometimes I can't type fast enough. When it comes to you, you listen."

Kole adds, "People ask how I write from a woman's perspective. It's from observing. I got this idea while having lunch at the Bistro Garden. I went there the first time with Cloris Leachman - I do her orchestrations, including her stint on Dancing with the Stars. I realized what a great restaurant it was and I'd see all these 'Old Hollywood' folks and I'd get a sense of the lore. Flynn, Sinatra all used to go there. I wrote five songs to define the characters I'd invented. I wanted to make a small show. And no one was writing for women, particularly women in their 40s. I was going to write the book myself, and I knew Deborah as a studio singer. She sang on the demos, and I ran into a wall writing the actual stories. I had five characters with developed backgrounds - middle names, children, wardrobes - but I didn't have a real story. Deborah came up with the story arc."

Pearl then met Aaron, who was in New York directing a play starring a mutual friend. As all great showbiz stories go, they struck up a conversation, she told him about this new work, and he was intrigued.

"I've gotten to the point in my career where I specialize in new shows. I've done 70 plus new shows. I'm currently working on three new shows. Deborah asked me to look at their musical and I liked it very much. When the Two Muses opportunity came up, it seemed like a great fit," elaborates Aaron. Aaron's mother, who, at 95, still lives in Oak Park in the house where he grew up and is an active writer and director herself, was "the marriage broker. She had seen several shows at Two Muses that she liked a lot. She said it would be so nice if I could do a show out here and we could spend some time together. Barbie [Amann Weisserman, one of Two Muses' co-founders] and I spoke about a year ago, and I said let's find something that we both like. Six months later we landed on Bistro Garden, and we started specifically to look at schedules. And here we are. It was one of those things. It's such a treat to spend this time with my mom and to work with a theatre that is a real up and comer. They produce well. They are very sharp."

Aaron, a Wayne State graduate who also holds a Ph.D. from New York University, isn't the only member of the creative team with ties to Metro Detroit (or, for that matter, with an influential mother). Kole was born and raised in Grosse Pointe where he attended high school, leaving at 18 to tour with Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians, eventually landing in Beverly Hills where he has worked as a film composer in addition to his theatrical work. "Nathan Judson was my band teacher here. Big influence - taught me music, theatre, opera. My mother introduced me to musical theatre. My mom is from New York and we'd go in the summer and see all the original productions. Anything Rodgers and Hammerstein - King and I, South Pacific - and then Sondheim - both had profound influences. I've been accused of being Sondheim-esque. I was immersed in A Little Night Music when I was working on Bistro Garden. Jonathan Tunick's pointillistic orchestrations speak to me."

For Pearl, though, working on this show has been her introduction to the wolverine state. "This is my very first trip to Michigan. It's so beautiful. Reminds me of where I grew up in Pennsylvania. I so miss the green from my years of living in L.A. I actually had an intro to Detroit by my friend Allee Willis - composer of Earth, Wind, and Fire's 'September' among other of their hits. She has a music video and movie in process called - I Love Detroit. And I see why. It's such a creative place. I'm moved by the commitment to the arts here. Everyone in our production is so into it. And talented. And really happy to be working. And they like my material!" Pearl laughs heartily. "I always love people who love my material. And I played one of the roles in the workshop, so it's fun to see someone else playing that role. It takes a huge amount of work to mount a show. People don't appreciate that. Musicals are a ton of work and an equal amount of fun. That's what I hope people who come to the show will leave with. An evening of fun. At the Bistro Garden is a joyous experience."

Pearl is an active volunteer back home, somehow finding time between all her artistic endeavors to sing a monthly jazz service at her synagogue, perform at high holidays at Cedars Sinai Medical Center, and co-found and direct a collective of professional and non-professional singers called "The National In Choir" who've been entertaining at hospitals and senior centers every December in L.A. for over thirty years. Her Jewish identity is important to her as an artist. She spent years studying Torah with Jewish writers and producers (funded by "Avi Chai") "Art is transformative. The most joyful use of my voice and my writing is in a spiritual context. There's nothing better than lifting people up with your work," she notes. "And everyone here is happy to share in the creative lifting."

Aaron echoes Pearl's enthusiasm for their newfound Michigan friends, "This cast is a really great group of people. They have talent and a wonderful attitude and sense of dedication. So sweet to be around. I have high hopes that we are going to have a very strong show. When you work in New York or L.A., the amount of talent is overwhelming and you are working with casting directors. When we finished casting in Detroit, I was very pleased."

But how does Kole, with whom the central concept of Bistro Garden first began, feel about the process so far? "I look forward to handing my little child over to other people. I love seeing their takes on these characters or how they sing a melody I wrote. I love people attaching their own bits to my germination of an idea. It always makes it better than what I had in mind. I've literally worked with thousands of musicians and hearing what they do with my work, how they phrase a line is always a pleasure," he relates.

"I had never done theatre in Detroit. My expectations have been so exceeded from my time here in Detroit. Diane [Hill, Two Muses' other co-founder] and Barbie are phenomenal. And I love their families. Observing Jules work with the actors and the wonderful choreographer [Allyson Smith] and musical director [Daniel Bachelis] is phenomenal. Jules is not on a power trip but is very encouraging, supportive. He understands my characters. These characters ... they are like my children. Deborah is their adoptive mother, and Jules really understands them. They are real now."

Kole concludes, "What's really great is I'm looking around this rehearsal space and I see all these people - actors, production team, audience - and it started with this little idea I had and now everyone is here taking part in this. It's such an honor. Their lives are being changed by this little idea. It's so gratifying."

Two Muses Theatre, recent recipient of an operational grant from Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs (MCACA) and the NEA, performs in the intimate 150-seat theatre inside Barnes & Noble Booksellers, located at 6800 Orchard Lake Road in West Bloomfield (south of Maple). Performances are Sept 26-Oct 19 on Friday and Saturday evenings at 8:00pm and Sunday afternoons at 2:00pm. Advance tickets are available for $23 for adults and $18 for students and senior citizens and are available at the door for an additional $2. Group discounts are also available. Doors open 30 minutes prior to each performance. There is ample free parking and handicap accessibility.

For tickets and information, please call 248-850-9919 or visit www.twomusestheatre.org.



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