Fall 2012, No. 8: Miners Alley Playhouse’s “The Three Penny Opera”

Multiple Henry Award-winning actor Megan Van De Hey makes her Miners Alley Playhouse debut in "The Three Penny Opera."
Two-time Henry Award-winning best actress Megan Van De Hey makes her Miners Alley Playhouse debut in “The Three Penny Opera.”

 

By John Moore

When: Sept. 7-Oct. 21

Written by: Bertolt Brecht, music composed by Kurt Weill

The story: Brecht’s milestone musical is a biting satire of the post-war rise of capitalism, wrapped up in Weill’s jazzy score and the tale of Macheath (Mack the Knife), a debonair crime lord on the verge of turning his illegal empire into a legitimate business.  When Macheath marries Polly Peachum, her father (Jonathan Peachum) is greatly angered.  He controls the beggars of London, and he strives to get Macheath hanged.  Peachum exerts considerable political influence, and eventually Macheath is arrested and imprisoned.  At the point of execution, in an unrestrained parody of a happy ending, a hard-riding messenger from the Queen dramatically arrives at the last minute, and Macheath is both pardoned, and elevated to the title of Baron.

Why it made the list:  Miners Alley Playhouse, which isn’t known for musicals, is branching out by taking on a difficult piece in an election year. And by landing Megan Van De Hey, winner of the past two Henry Awards for best actress in a musical, it’s not messing around. It’s worth noting that director El Armstrong has cast three members of the local handicapped theater group PHAMALy (Lyndsay Palmer, Daniel Traylor and Briana Berthiau). Not for any poltical or creative point — only because they have killer singing voices.


Cast list:

Richard Cowden

 

Director: El Armstrong

The cast:
Briana Berthiau
Erica Lyn Cain
Richard Cowden
Don DeVeux
Rob Gale
C.J. Garbo
Kris Graves
Dana Hart Lubeck
Verl Hite
T.J. Hogle
Michael Ingram
Lisa Morse-Moore
Lyndsay Palmer
Juliette Petersen
Daniel Traylor
Megan Van De Hey

Where: 1224 Washington St., Golden

Performance times: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 6 p.m. Sundays (except for the closing matinee on Oct. 21, which begins at 2 p.m.)

Tickets: $30.50-$34.50; senior, student and group rates available

Contact: 303-935-3044 or map’s home page

 

The Fall 2012 theater preview countdown:

No. 1: Curious Theatre’s “The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity”
No. 2: Ben Dicke Presents’ “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson”
No. 3: Abster Productions’ “August: Osage County”
No. 4: Midtown Arts Center’s “In the Heights”
No. 5: Denver Center Theatre Company’s “The Giver”
No. 6: Local Theater Company’s “Elijah: An Adventure”
No. 7: Vintage Theatre’s “The Cider House Rules”
No. 8: Miners Alley Playhouse’s “The Three Penny Opera”
No. 9: Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center’s “Make Sure It’s Me”
No 10: Creede Rep’s “Is He Dead?” at the Arvada Center
No. 11: Theatre Or’s “The Value of Names”

Among the many other shows to watch:

Sept. 1-16, 2012: Ami Dayan Presents “A Happy End,” at Buntport Theater Read my interview with playwright Iddo Netanyahu
Sept. 4-16, 2012: National touring production of “La Cage Aux Folles,” at the Buell Theatre
Sept. 7-Nov. 3, 2012: Boulder’s Dinner Theatre’s “Avenue Q”
Sept. 7-22, 2012: Germinal Stage-Denver’s “A Kind of Alaska”
Sept. 7-Oct. 6, 2012: Spark Theater’s “Rebecca” (note new address: 985 Santa Fe Drive)
Sept. 11-30, 2012: Arvada Center’s “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” (and Oct. 4-14 at the Lone Tree Arts Center)
Sept. 13-16, 2012: PACE Center’s “Scarlet Letter, The Musical” (Parker)
Sept. 14-Oct. 14, 2012: Town Hall Arts Center’s “Sweet Charity” (Littleton)
Sept. 14-Nov. 10, 2012: The Avenue’s “Murder Most Fowl”
Sept. 14-Oct. 14, 2012: Ashton Entertainment’s “Picasso at the Lapin Agile,” at the Aurora Fox
Sept. 15-Oct. 14, 2012: Bas Bleu’s “The Love of the Nightingale” (Fort Collins)
Sept. 20-Oct. 14, 2012: Denver Center Theatre Company’s “Fences” (Space Theatre
Sept. 21-Oct. 21, 2012: The Edge’s “Boom” (Lakewood)
Sept. 27-Oct 21, 2012: Denver Center Theatre Company’s “The Three Musketeers” (Stage Theatre)
Oct. 2-24, 2012: And Toto Too’s “Pardon My Dust” (at Laundry on Lawrence)

Complete Denver Post theater listings:

By company

By opening date

Capsules of all currently running productions

 

 

By John Moore

Award-winning arts journalist John Moore was named one of the 12 most influential theater critics in the United States by American Theatre Magazine during has 12 years at The Denver Post. Hen then created a groundbreaking new media outlet covering Colorado arts an culture as an in-house, multimedia journalist for the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. He also founded The Denver Actors Fund, a nonprofit that has raised more than $600,000 for theatre artists in medical need. He is now a journalist for hire as the founder of Moore Media Colorado. You can find samples of his work at MooreJohn.Com. Contact him at culturewestjohn@gmail.com