Theater
Cirque explores majesty, mayhem of insect world
OVO is a breathtaking, gravity-defying show
The return of Cirque du Soleil to the D.C. area ā the OVO show at the Plateau at National Harbor through Oct 24 ā is a stunning one. It wows the senses and defies the imagination with dazzling displays of this Montreal-based company’s technical magic of sound-and-light projections and imagery deployed to fool the eye.
But, most of all, with Cirque it’s the human touch of 54 performers from 16 countries, and director Deborah Colker, the renowned Brazilian choreographer, the first woman to write and direct a Cirque production. Colker has integrated dance movements and a Latin musical beat from composer Berna Ceppas into many numbers in the show.
The basic storyline is set in the world of insects, a huge colony teeming with every variety ā fireflies, spiders, scarab beetles, butterflies, even fleas ā and one stout-hearted ladybug (played with great expressive humor by Michelle Matlock) who becomes the love interest of a stranger visiting the colony, an impetuous and amorous ant-like creature (played with equally deft humor by Francois-Guillaume Leblanc). The narrative arc of OVO is the tale of their courtship, with insect pheromones flying.
As for the title “OVO” ā Portuguese for egg ā there is one, and itās the great mystery of the show, with strange power over the insects somewhat akin to that of the monoliths in Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 paradigm-bending, psychedelic-science-fiction film “2001.”
The insects are struck with awe at its mystery and also intensely curious about it, as they portage it from place to place, and sometimes it even glows with secret intensity. But forget this storyline and instead watch the action, sometimes at ground level ā comically, with ants juggling their food, as in bits of kiwi and kernels of corn ā and other times high overhead ā romantically, in the gorgeous swooning dance of butterflies mating.
As the sun rises on a bright new day, the vibrant cycle of insect life is evoked with a wake-up call from the comical senior bug Flippo, played with knockabout charm by Joseph Collard. OVO overflows with contrasts āĀ highs and lows, majesty and mayhem as the hidden, secret world beneath our feet and fluttering or buzzing about us overhead is revealed as both tender and torrid, noisy and quiet, peaceful and chaotic. It is a world of biodiversity and beauty, filled with ceaseless noisy action, often punctuated with almost voice-like squeaks and squawks yet at other times with moments of simple quiet emotion.
During the two and a half hours of the tightly structured show, interrupted with one intermission, there are acrobatic acts that appear impossible to believe, including a trapeze act where six flyers soar so dangerously high in the biggest ever performance of its kind performed under a Grand Chapiteau (the half-million-dollar yellow and blue, towering Big Top).
This act is considered to be the most difficult in the world in terms of the distance between the stations and combines many circus disciplines ā banquine, Russian swing and swinging chair. And the finale, executed to gorgeous music, features 20 artists running, jumping and indeed leaping straight up a high vertical wall.
But all along the hardest working insects are the bright red ants, played with grace and incredible foot-juggling athleticism by a troupe of six young women from China.
As for the Ā mysterious egg, timeless symbol for the life cycle, it gives the show its underlying thread. In fact, graphically, “OVO” hides an insect in its name. The two letters “O” represent its eyes while the letter “V” forms the nose. Ā Both wit and wisdom come together in “OVO.” This show must be seen to be believed.
Theater
Timely comedy āFake Itā focuses on Native American themes
Arena Stage production features two out actors

āFake It Until You Make Itā
Through May 4
Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St., S.W.
Tickets start at $59
Arenastage.org
A farce requires teamwork. And Larissa FastHorseās āFake It Until You Make Itā now at Arena Stage is no exception.Ā
The timely comedy focuses on Native American nonprofits fractiously housed in a shared space. Friction rises when rivals River (Amy Brenneman), a white woman operating in the Indigenous world, goes up against the more authentic Wynona (Shyla Lefner) to win a lucrative Native-funded grant.
While Brenneman (best known for TVās Judging Amy) is undeniably a big draw, it takes a group collaboration to hit marks, land jokes, and pull off the well-executed physical comedy including all those carefully timed door slams.
As members of the six-person āFake Itā cast, Brandon Delsid and Eric Stanton Betts, both out actors of partly indigenous ancestry, contribute to the mayhem. Respectively, Delsid and Betts play Krys and Mark, a pair of two-spirited Native Americans who meet farcically cute and enjoy one of the playās more satisfying arcs.
For Krys, every attractive man is a potential next fling, but when Mark, handsome and relatively reserved, arrives on the scene, itās something entirely different.
Both onstage and sometimes off, Betts plays the straight man to Delsidās waggishness. But when it comes down to real life business, the friends are on the same page: not only are the L.A.-based, up-and-coming actors intensely serious about their film and stage careers, but theyāre also particularly engaged in the themes of Indigenous People found in āFake It.ā
On a recent Wednesday following a matinee and an audience talkback, they were ready for a phone interview.
In establishing whose voice was whose, Delsid clarified with āIām the one who sounds a little like a Valley girl.ā
WASHINGTON BLADE: Brandon, youāve been with the show since its early work-shopping days in 2022 and through its debut in Los Angeles and now Washington. Have things evolved?
BRANDON DELSID: Definitely. Iāve grown up in the last couple of years and so has my character; itās hard to know where I end and Kry begins. Thereās been a real melding.
Eric and I are both queer, and to get to play these roles that are so human, imperfect, sexy, and interesting is really joyful.
As queer artists you donāt always get the chance to do work like this. So many stories are queer trauma, which is incredibly important, but itās liberating to feel joy and ride it off into the sunset, which, without revealing too much, is kind of what we get to do.
BLADE: Thereās some race shifting in āFake Itā particularly with regard to āpretendianā (a pejorative term describing a person who has falsely claimed Indigenous status).
ERIC STANTON BETTS: The last few years Iāve been on a journey with my cultural identity and place in the world. Iām a mixed BIPOC artist, my dad is Black and Native American by way of the Cherokee tribe and my mom is white.
Since 2020, Iāve tried to figure out where I belong in this cultural history that I havenāt had a tie to throughout my life; itās gratifying to find my way back to my indigeneity and be welcomed.
In the play, race shifting is introduced through farce. But itās never in a disrespectful way; itās never mocked or done in a way to take away from others. The playwright parallels race shifting with gender fluidity.
DELSID: But in life, there are people posing as Indigenous, actively taking grants, and the play goes there, we donāt hold back. Larissa, our playwright, has made it clear that sheās not trying to figure it out for us. With that in mind, we hope people leave the theater interested and curious to learn more.
BLADE: Mark arrives kind of the middle of some crazy drama, bringing along a jolt of romance.
BETTS: Yeah, when I show up, weāre all sort of shot out of a cannon, struggling to keep up with the initial lie.
DESLID: A very gay cannon.
BLADE: Whatās up next for you two?
BETTS: Both Brandon and I are up for the same part in a TV pilot, so one of us may be getting some very good news. I also have a Tyler Perry film coming out soon [he plays a model, not an unfamiliar gig for Betts].
DELSID: Coming up, I have a recurring part on HBOās āThe Rehearsal,ā and a supporting part in āJune and John,ā a John Besson film. But doing āFake It Until You Make Itā in L.A. and now D.C. has been a special time in our lives. Itās 23/7 togetherness. Thereās that hour for sleep.
Theater
āBad Booksā a timely look at censorship in local library
Influencer vs. conservative parent in Round House production

āBad Booksā
Through May 4
Round House Theatre
4545 East-West Highway
Bethesda, Md.
Tickets start at $43
Roundhousetheatre.org
While a library might seem an unlikely place for a heated contretemps, itās exactly the spot where adults go when theyāre itching to battle out what books minors might be allowed to read.
In Sharyn Rothsteinās āBad Books,ā two women, The Mother (out actor Holly Twyford) and The Librarian (Kate Eastwood Norris), swiftly become mired in a quarrel that comes with some weighty repercussions.Ā
The Mother is a popular conservative influencer on a mission. Sheās furious that the local library has overstepped its bounds and she blames The Librarian, a woman who adheres to the āit takes a villageā method of child rearing and is dedicated to the young people who approach her reference desk.
Thereās some background. It seems The Librarian who dresses young (tight jackets and Doc Martens) and curses a blue streak, forged a friendship with Jeremy, a teenage library regular.
While the details are a bit hazy, it seems the troubled Jeremy confided in The Librarian regarding some personal issues. In return, she suggested a helpful book ā Boob Juice.
Unsurprisingly, based solely on its title, the book has thrown The Mother into a pique of outrage. After finding Boob Juice in her sonās bedroom, she made a beeline to the library; and not incidentally, The Mother hasnāt read the recommended work and has no plans to do so.
Set in a suburb with lax gun laws, the story explores facets of division and conciliation. The Mother insists she isnāt so much about banning books as she is keeping some books away from young people until theyāve obtained parental approval.
āBad Booksā is performed in the round. Built on a rotating stage, Meghan Rahamās set is simple, pleasingly serviceable, and easily transforms from the library into a small corporate office, and later the assembly room of a church. Overhead floats a circular glass shelf filled with a cache of banned books. Things like a rolling book cart and a goldfish bowl add some flavor to the different locations.
The Mother wasnāt always a popular conservative warrior with an enthusiastic horde of followers.
Her past includes penning a book that later filled her with guilt and regret. She refers to that early questionable literary accomplishment as her bad book. And while over the years, she has persevered to find and destroy each and every printed copy, she hasnāt entirely succeeded.
Norris plays three women who figure meaningfully into the arc of Twyfordās mother character. In addition to The Librarian, Norris is The Manager, a broadly played piece of comic relief, and The Editor, a warm woman who reveals things about Jeremy that his own mother never knew.
Smartly staged by Ryan Rilette, the production is part of a National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere. While Rothsteinās script offers two strong roles (skillfully performed by celebrated actors Twyford and Norris), its ending feels too neatly resolved.
In the past, Twyford and Norris have successfully joined forces for numerous DMV productions including Studio Theatreās production of David Auburnās two-hander āSummer, 1976,ā the story of a longtime and unlikely friendship between two women who meet as young mothers during the Bicentennial summer.
Though different, both The Librarian and The Mother share a strong and ultimately hopeful relationship with words.
Thereās a quote from E.B. Whiteās classic āCharlotteās Webā that pops up a couple of times in the briskly paced 80-minute play. Charlotte, the wise spider, says, āwith just the right words you can change the world.ā
Theater
STCās āVanyaāĀ puts pleasing twist on Chekhov classic
Hugh Bonneville shines in title role

āUncle Vanyaā
Through April 20
Shakespeare Theatre Company
Harman Hall
610 F St., N.W.
Shakespearetheatre.org
Shakespeare Theatre Companyās āUncle Vanyaā freshly rendered by director Simon Godwin and starring Hugh Bonneville in the title role, puts a pleasing twist on Chekhovās tragicomic classic.
As disheveled, disheartened, and overworked Vanya, Bonneville is terrific. Though very different from the actorās fame making role as Downton Abbeyās Lord Grantham, a proud, fastidiously turned-out aristocrat who presides over a manicured country estate peopled by a large staff, his Vanya is equally compelling
For āUncle Vanya,ā Chekhov imagines a house on a ragged estate in the Russian forest whose inhabitants display varying degrees of discontent brought on by the realization that theyāre leading wasted lives. Middle-aged Vanyaās dissatisfaction and disappointment have been tempered by years of hard work. But all of that is about to be challenged.
With his plain and steadfast niece Sonya (Melanie Field), Vanya keeps the place going. And while barely putting aside a kopek for himself, heās ensured that proceeds have gone to Sonyaās father Alexandre, a querulous academic (Tom Nelis), and his alluring, much younger second wife Yelena (Ito Aghayere) who live in the city.
When called to retire, the self-important professor and his wife economize by joining the family in the country. Overcome by the intense boredom brought on by provincial isolation, theyāre not happy. Turns out, life in the sticks isnāt for them.
At the same time, the urban coupleās presence generates quite an effect on the rural household, changing the mood from one of regular work to idleness. Whatās more, Vanya and family friend MikhaĆl Ćstrov (John Benjamin Hickey), an unusually eco-aware, country doctor, are both bewitched by Yelena.
Meanwhile, young Sonya, whoās long carried an unrequited torch for Ćstrov grows increasingly smitten. And while Yelena, whoās bored with her aging husband, expresses teasing tenderness with Vanya, she feels something more serious for Ćstrov. Itās a whole lot for one house.
Superbly staged by Simon Godwin, STCās artistic director, and performed by a topnotch cast, the very human production begins on an unfinished stage cluttered with costume racks and assorted props, all assembled by crew in black and actors in street clothes. We first see them arranging pillows and rugs for an outside scene. Throughout the play, the actors continue to assist with set changes accompanied by an underscore of melancholic cello strings.
With each subsequent scene, the work moves deeper into Chekhovās late 19th century Russian world from the kitchen to the drawing room thanks in part to scenic designer Robert Brillās subtle sets and Susan Hilferty and Heather C. Freedmanās period costumes as well as Jen Schrieverās emotive lighting design.
In moments of stillness, the set with its painterly muted tones and spare furnishings is a domestic interior from a moment in time. Itās really something.
Adapted by contemporary Irish playwright Conor McPherson, the work is infused with mordant wit, ribald comedy, and sadness. Like McPhersonās 2006 play āThe Seafarerā in which the action unfolds among family, friends and others in a modest house filled with confrontation, laughter, resentment, and sadness. All on brand.
For much of āUncle Vanya,” McPhersonās script leans into humor, funny slights, the professorās pretentions, and Vanyaās delicious snarky asides; but after the interval, the playās stakes become perilously heightened ready to explode with resentment and feelings of wasted potential, particularly frustrations expressed by Vanya and his intelligent but unfulfilled mother (Sharon Lockwood).
When it appears that mismatched couple Alexandre and Yelena are poised to depart, the house is struck with a sense of both relief and gloom.
Not everyone is disturbed. In fact, the familyās old nanny Nana (Nancy Robinette), and Waffles (Craig Wallace), a former landowner and now lodger on the estate, are elated. Both are eager to return to the pre-professor schedule of an early breakfast and midday lunch, and menus featuring simpler fare. They long for the return of the humble Russian noodle.
āUncle Vanyaāmelds cynicism and hope. Like life, itās a grasp at fulfillment.Ā
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