Friday, February 28, 2025

Back To Basics at the Backdoor Playhouse: On All The Good Gifts of the Godspell Revival

 


[picture of the Godspell cast is from the College of Fine Arts Facebook page]

Of the many glories of the musical Godspell, audiences feel familiar stories and parables we have known since Sunday school, and probably heard preached countless times, suddenly feel real and raw and even a little rambunctious. But even as this 54-year-old play has made a 2000-year-old story startle and marvel audiences since Nixon was president, Tennessee Tech’s current revival of the production now showing at the Backdoor Playhouse, makes this well-known rendering of the Gospels pop with poignancy and passion. 

Director Brooke Howard, musical director Wendy Mullen, and technical director/lighting designer Craig Dettman have collaborated with a dynamic ensemble of student actors who exceeded every possible expectation and a live rock band that handles every number with effervescent and energizing emphasis. 

Godspell always feels like a back-to-basics primer to me. As far as I am concerned, it brings both a gold standard for musical theatre and a reliable reference point for how best to convey religious themes in pop culture. Since around 2012, directors have had the option of an updated script for their productions, which means that even for an old Godspell-head like me, the play’s brief comedic bits feel more contemporary than dated.  

The first thing you notice when you enter the intimate confines of our campus theatre for this show is that it looks like someone forgot to clean up. Why else would there be an extension cord, a skateboard, and orange traffic cones cluttering up the corner of the stage. A utility light and plastic curtains throw off the impression that painting and renovations might be going on, and we will soon get kicked out by a gruff misfit in coveralls. Of course that is not the case at all, and when the poly sheeting soon gets raised, it reveals the colorful Godspell set that we might call a mixed-up mixture of magical man-cave meets jubilee junkyard. Strings of lights are hung scattershot and random street signs and license plates decorate the backstage wall, along with a plethora of chaotic chalk graffiti, with hearts and peace signs galore. The dynamic cast in their shabby chic attire complete the shiny happy vibe.

Browsing the program, it’s not the least surprising to learn that many of the cast are music or theatre majors of one variety or another, and based on their bios, some with singing and stage credits dating back to primary school. But the pivotal and standout performance of John the Baptist/Judas simply slayed me, so surprised was I to learn that this show is this performer’s theatrical debut. When he is not holding an entire audience rapt with his acting and singing, Gabe Tardy is a grad student in civil engineering. Wow. 

If this entire soundtrack that I have loved my entire life had a hit single, it might be “Day By Day,” and Maddie Maas’s interpretation of this song really brought that infectious energy. Such a strong number so early in the first act made everyone present on opening night realize what a master course in vocal performance we would be witnessing. 

While every song soared and never bored, several standout numbers really riveted. Elliot Klein’s virtuosity on “All Good Gifts,” interspersed with recorder solos, had me hanging on his every word and note and wanting to shout “Amen.” Rachel Young’s heartfelt rendition of “By My Side” might have made me a wee teary-eyed, not the only time that this happened in the show. Zeke Eckert and the entire cast almost dissolved the walls of the Jere Whitson building with the holy banger “We Beseech Thee.” 

Although Riley Keegan’s Jesus has traded the Superman t-shirt of the play’s earliest productions for a baseball jersey, and his short hair suggests that the hippy Christ of the 1970s might have cleaned-up a little for these stressful times, his performance is an all-encompassing medicine, compassionate and bold. Keegan’s charisma facilitates the family feeling for the entire cast. It’s a lot to ask a young actor to be the Lord and Savior in a secular performance of this play that is open to the public and not a church pageant. But Riley Keegan leans into this role with a sense of calling and vocation. Keegan is compelling from front to back, from the convicting retelling of the parables and his soulful and searing singing on tracks like “Save the People” and “Alas for You,” right down to serving his friends the bread and the cup and facing his fate on a wooden cross that is strapped with bungee cords to a sturdy step ladder. 

Before Stephen Schwartz birthed the life and teachings of Jesus into the musical so many appreciate and adore, it was a story conceived by John-Michael Tebelak. He found church cold and lacking in the very love that was at the heart of the Christian story. Inspired by the frolic of the counterculture at the time, Christ became a sacred clown and the disciples a band of merry folk. But when the production first finally launched, much of the modernity came specifically in set, costume, and Schwartz’s songs, because the actual ancient teachings of Jesus remained entirely faithful to the primary text. Yet if we unpack our own baggage about religion and leave our prior judgments at the venue door, the collision of ancient and contemporary is actually a singular vision of truth and love. Really, this much joy and love presented without irony or apology does feel like something from the traveling circus caravans of old.

Even as I write this review as it’s getting quite late after attending opening night, I want to believe in all the truth and love that I just experienced in this show. But I know that sometimes, I simply can’t get there. I want to believe, but help my unbelief. That is why this show is more than a play to me. It’s been something magical and miraculous since I saw it as a young child and memorized the songs from a now-scratchy vinyl record. 

I feel resurrected from just watching the show. It took everything to wait for the curtain call to get on my feet with others during the standing ovation. I felt like leaving my seat, letting the spirit move my body, and trying to join the fantastic choreography onstage. I am sure the theatre staff are grateful I remained seated, but that’s just how good this show made me feel. 

Whether you have been seeing versions of this play for your entire life, as I have, to where the songs live in your bones, or whether you are seeing this show for the very first time, the current rendering of Godspell at the Backdoor Playhouse might give you goosebumps, might remind you of deeper meanings that you have forgotten, and it might even bring you closer to God. It did all these things and much more for this reviewer, and I really hope to catch the show a couple more times before it closes on March 8th. 
-Andrew William (Sunfrog) Smith 

Andrew Smith is a local teacher, DJ, poet, and activist. He has reviewed live theatre in Cookeville for almost 20 years. 

As of this writing, you can still catch Godspell at 7:30pm at the Backdoor Playhouse (rear of Jere Whitson/Admission building, just off the main quad at Tennessee Tech) on February 28, March 1, 6, 7, and 8. There is one matinee on March 1 at 2pm. Tickets are open seating and available at the door: General admission: $15.00; Senior citizens: $12.00; Student admission: $5.00 (This is for all university, college, and high school students. ID required.); Faculty & Staff Night: $5.00 (2nd weekend, Thursday night performance)

Thursday, February 27, 2025

“We Rise Above” Showcases Community in a Mesmerizing Montage & Potluck of Poems

 

Building from the strength of “I Am My Ancestors Wildest Dream,” the innovative Cookeville Theatre Company (CTC) is back with another inspiring Black History Month production. Like its predecessor, the new “We Rise Above” is an ensemble performance that serves the community by showcasing the community. 

In creating this new production, director LaTrece Willis clearly focuses on how the multimedia production looks, sounds, and feels to its viewers and performers, with a keen sense of an overall vibe and interactive aesthetic that shimmers and shines. The fierce and fast-paced production will capture your heart with its delightful diversity. A fulsome feast for the ears and eyes, “We Rise Above” welcomes its audiences to sample each vignette in a visually sumptuous variety show, mesmerizing montage, and potluck of poems. 

Switching things up from the 2024 performance, the play makes a strong nod to Black women poets, offering a crash-course syllabus on the strongest voices in womanist and feminist poetics from the last sixty years. We hear from the lauded likes of the recently passed Nikki Giovanni, as well as from Maya Angelou, Ntozake Shange, Gwendolyn Brooks, and an original poem by cast member Monica Reynolds. 

In addition to poetic performances, the musical selections are a mellow mixtape of classic and contemporary that really amplifies the vocal and choreography talents of the multigenerational cast. Yes, you are going to get some Nina Simone and Clara Ward, but you are also going to hear Beyonce and Alicia Keys. Whether we are listening to Adrianne Buck sing or watching Sya Johnson and Lauren Keele dance, these incredible cast members will capture, carry, and take care of your heart for the hour you are fully present for this fabulous presentation. We might say that the men in the cast are there to support the stunning women, but when they throw down with the renditions of Al Green or The Temptations, you will simply be transported to that magical place that those classics always take you.

You may or may not know that Cookeville is currently bursting at the seams with a community theatrical revival. Live plays have always been a big deal in this college town, but things have grown greatly in the last few years. On any given weekend, you could see more than one show at various venues around town, produced by various production teams. The Cookeville Theatre Company and the Wesley Chapel/Arena Theatre on 9th Street (just east of Spankies and across the street from Collegeside Church) have been a great part of this rising and thriving scene.

Although I have only scribbled shoutouts to a handful of the cast and crew in this far too-brief review, this stunning creative collage truly is the loving labor of our entire village. When you attend, get there a few minutes early to pick up your program and study the entire breakdown of cast, crew, and assorted credits. I get super grateful and emotional just scanning the many details and seeing how many hands collaborated to make this impressive and necessary performance. It’s truly sad that “diversity” and “Black History” have become bad words to some in these strange times, but you sure wouldn’t know that from the exuberance, empowerment. and enthusiasm found in this amazing show. As your neighbor as much as a reviewer, a heartfelt thank you to everyone involved, especially to the event’s many sponsors and benefactors, to director LaTrece Willis, and to the founder and producer of CTC, Kathleen Gilpatrick. 

As of this writing, only three performances remain at 7:30pm on February 27, 28, and March 1 at the Wesley Theatre at 271 East 9th Street. Get your tickets (while they last) and more information at the website: www.cookevilletheatreco.org
-Andrew William (Sunfrog) Smith 

Andrew Smith is a local teacher, DJ, poet, and activist. He has reviewed live theater in Cookeville for almost 20 years. 


Saturday, February 22, 2025

Coming Up (TOTR 489)

 

-originally aired on WTTU 88.5 FM The Nest on Saturday, February 22, 2025

-this episode is dedicated to the careers of Ani DiFranco & the late Utah Phillips; it is the third in a series of shows situated primarily in the 1990s, to coincide with this semester’s “American Mixtape” class

-listen to the audio archive here:
Stream Coming Up - TOTR 489 by Teacher On The Radio | Listen online for free on SoundCloud

-all views only represent the host & the artists played, never the student managers or the Communication department or the university

Ani DiFranco - What If No One’s Watching (1992)
Ani DiFranco - Cradle and All (1995)
Ani DiFranco - Coming Up (1995)
Utah Phillips - Stupid’s Song (1997)
-excerpt from Democracy Now, hosted by Amy Goodman, on the occasion of Utah’s passing in 2008
Utah Phillips - Preacher and the Slave (1999)
Utah Phillips - Soup (1999)
Folk Alliance International - Lifetime Achievement Award for Utah Phillips - 1997
Utah Phillips - I Got To Know Why (1999)
Utah Phillips - This Land is Not Our Land (1999)
-excerpt from Democracy Now, hosted by Amy Goodman, from an interview in 2004
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco - Korea (1996) 
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco - Candidacy (1996) 
Utah Phillips - Michael  (1991)
Utah Phillips - Trooper’s Lament  (1991)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco - Direct Action (1999)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Unless You Are Free (1999)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  I Will Not Obey  (1999)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  The Most Dangerous Woman(1999)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Nevada City, California(1996)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Bum on the Rod (1996)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Enormously Wealthy (1996)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Mess With People (1996)
Utah Phillips & Ani DiFranco -  Natural Resources (1996)
Ani DiFranco - Tis of Thee (1999)
Ani DiFranco - Independence Day (1998)
Utah Phillips - Yellow Ribbon (1991)
Utah Phillips - Riding The Peace Train (1991)
Utah Phillips - Room for the Poor (1997)

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Something Is Forming (TOTR 488)

 

-originally aired on WTTU 88.5 FM The Nest on Saturday, February 15, 2025
-this episode is the second of a series of shows situated in the 1990s, to coincide with this semester’s “American Mixtape” class

For a long time, I have known that the 1990s contained multiple missing links in my lineage. I was there, but sometimes I feel like I missed it. I was there, but I wasn’t. Many adventures taken, many more missed.

In an alternate arc of life’s timeline, the hippypunk that was co-organizing DIY urban hardcore shows at the start of the decade & the back-to-the-land hippy who was finishing a Master degree in Literature at the end of the decade, that otherwise crunchy & scruffy one, he might have deviated on another path. 

I didn’t miss everything & was intensely traveling, settling down, studying, playing, working on two literature degrees, & creating magic & messes along the way, including the founding of a rural land experiment (aka commune) that still exists to this day (although I left the land back in 2009). 

I didn’t miss everything & might have ended up in the Mile High Stadium parking lot in Colorado, just to catch a little of the action on Shakedown Street, even if I didn’t have a ticket & didn’t stay for the Grateful Dead show. I might have walked barefoot on Rainbow Gathering trails in Minnesota & New Mexico, dodging the many potential casualties, moral & imaginary of that far-flung & freewheeling life. I tasted the edge

Even as an avid music fan, I missed a lot of music along the way. For the last couple years, I have been obsessed with the versions of the 1990s that I missed & have enjoyed traveling down many meandering tangents. What if I had gone on a permanent hippy tour, ideally as a journalist, but everyone knows back then, there were many ways to get on the bus, some legit, others illegal. I might even smell like patchouli oil, might be wearing a vest without a shirt, baggy pants, & Birkenstocks. 

With the mid-decade untimely & ultimate demise of Jerry Garcia’s visit to this reality, the jammy scene was only just getting started & blowing up, for the true neohippie 90s renaissance. HORDE tour, or “Horizons of Rock Developing Everywhere,” was the unwashed alternative to the grunge & rap on Lollapalooza. Regional scenes sprouted & popped like wonderful weeds across the continent. This playlist & a corresponding radio episode reflects only some of the work I’ve been doing to remember a version of my 1990s that never was.

Blues Traveler - Hook (1994)
This is the hook song to an expansive expression of the specifically end-of-the-century jam rock scene, mingling right close to the similar explosion of alt-rock at that time. In addition to his howling harmonica, vocalist John Popper’s aching vocals, like so many 1990s masculine rock wailings, that vibey voice is the hook that this song called “Hook” really needs. Blues Traveler were one of many that was more out-front for the 1990s jam renaissance, including taking a central role in the HORDE festival (Horizons of Rock Developing Everywhere, 1992-1998). 

Dave Matthews Band - What Would You Say (1994)
I honestly did not believe that there could be a 90s jammy revival playlist with some mention of the legendary DMB. But can I tell you that group always comes with an asterisk, as I don’t understand their appeal as much as some of the other groups from this period & genre? I have always known about DMB, but some of the songs that follow in this playlist are new discoveries (to me) that I will return to again & again. 

Spin Doctors -  Two Princes (1991)
If the neohippies were to merge with alt-rock & be something bigger than the last freaky tours of the Grateful Dead or the emerging Phish scene, they needed some standard-bearers for that torch. Maybe the Spin Doctors were that team, the infectious bite & bump are surely here, all the way down the line. Spin Doctors were one of the flagship groups for the ambitious & wondrous Wetlands Preserve, New York’s decade-defining dose of intentional beauty & utopia for shows & activism.

Ben Harper & the Innocent Criminals - Steal My Kisses (1999) 
I feel like Ben Harper’s perfect voice could bend the universe & then some, vocal iterations touching the thin line between reality & some sacred romantic illusion delusion intrusion. I love songs like this where the jammy things accept gravity & collide into gospel & soul & everything where we feel music in the most embodied way. One of my early Ryman Auditorium shows in the 2000s was a marathon Ben Harper set of over 30 songs & around 3 hours with women shouting marriage proposals & more to the singer from the pews.

Mr. Blotto - Kiss Me in the Morning (1994)
If one song about kissing is good, two will be better. Now it’s time to get into the regional jambands that I probably never would have heard of back then & that I definitely would have never discovered had I not chosen a months-long scavenger hunt into this topic. But once I am there, I am there. Wherever the jammy scene in every city gathers, it gathers. Mr. Blotto are from Chicago, still active, & I cannot imagine them without their dedicated dancers. The way the end of this song soars, acoustic guitars over swelling organ bursts, the cinematic chorus makes me think of my sweetie: I want to kiss her in the morning. 

Jupiter Coyote - Flight of the Lorax (1993)
They had me at the title. They had me at the slinky vibe. Any reference, no matter how fleeting, to a Dr. Seuss character, for the win. Hailing from Macon, Georgia, bands like this must have such crunchy grooves in their very bones. The narrator tells the protagonist to contrast a deep breath of the way it is with the way we think that it oughtta be, before dropping such a nasty groove that the listener can get lost in the flight of the song. Take a deep breath of another southern jam brand. 

Blue Dogs - World Turns A Revolution (1996)
Heading up the highway from Georgia to the Carolinas & then Virginia, here are the Blue Dogs. Beginning as a college band, the Blue Dogs are still kicking it. Their tag-lines describes  themselves as “alt-country roots rock.” One of the joys for me in rediscovering this decade is this: as to where that “roots” niche ends & the expansive jammy space begins is not a fixed or guarded line. No gatekeepers on either side, far as I can grok. For a split-second, the intro is spare, just a maraca & a conga, & we just might be in the primal hippy sphere. Then, the lyrics kick-in with the jam-band-meets-Springsteen lament about the plight of working for “the man.” It’s a solid groove, & the invocation of “revolution” here is honest & aspirational, not naive at all, though that would be fine, too. 

Ominous Seapods - Some Days (1997) 
Another New York jamband, the Ominous Seapods describe themselves as “an americana, bluegrass, blues, country, funk, jam, rock, songwriter group.” This songs drops in the pocket of my being, to take up residence in my chest, propelled to dance by myself down the trail of life. Once I get stitched in the infectious chorus of this song, I am stuck & might be singing it forever. It’s plaintive, addictive, swelling, bursting like the hippy choir must!

Max Creek - Something is Forming (1998)
Going all the way back to 1971 & still active today, Max Creek are “jam band pioneers” & have collaborated with members of the Grateful Dead, Phish, & the Allman Brothers. They are a 90s band insofar as they passed through the 90s as with this glorious track that I can say is about being the thing that it describes, the genesis of new forms, as expansive as this genre of genres, & that includes progressive rock, country, funk, calypso, jazz, reggae, new wave, & blues. This song invokes “the edge of the universe,” & I think that kind of liminal lightning is what pulls folks into this everlasting scene. 

Strangefolk - Valhulla (1997)
The strange folks in Strangefolk hail from the same Burlington, Vermont that brought us the likes of Phish, not to mention Bernie Sanders or Ben & Jerry ice cream. This song’s title conjures a swirling mythic flight & the song itself takes us soaring on some kind of misty journey that feels both internal & eternal. Much of Jesse Jarnow’s aforementioned work functions as a kind of “psychedelic geography,” & it’s no wonder that Burlington is an outpost of grand significance in the Untitled States of Jam.  

Calobo - What Time Is It? (1997)
When I first started crawling around the archives of the 90s scene, I was struck by how many of these spicy sonic stimulants were sparked by midsize towns in the midsouth & midwest, as well as from college campuses. But one of the folkier folk sounds that I found actually heralded from the Pacific Northwest comes from Calobo. Calobo’s contagious & catchy hippy-folk sound offers such a medicinal munch & sunshine crunch that goes slinking through the forest, wildly different compared to the brooding shades of bros in flannel in the decade’s dominant grunge groove (but no shade on those shades). Calobo’s crunch tastes like it is some of the crunchiest, layered in keyboards & multiple vocalists & I love every direct hit from what feels like a decade long dance party.

The Recipe - Drink the Wine (1996)
This is some wild & weird West Virginia folk-rock that called itself “porch music,” foreshadowing how much the downhome vibes of Appalachian bluegrass would be fully integrated into the jam scene by the days of Trampled By Turtles, Greensky Bluegrass, & of course, Billy Strings. 

From Good Homes - Cool Me Down (1995)
This is such a happy hooky song from lifelong New Jersey jammers who identify as combining “rock, jazz, folk, celtic & jam-band influences under one umbrella.” Their bio suggests the group’s name comes from a judge, when they were young & in trouble, but got some leniency based on their backgrounds. Suffice to say, the mild mischief of the jam scene is a communal tangent for the relatively privileged, that always maintained a side of wholesome goofiness that clearly vibrates from this track.

God Street Wine - Don’t Tell God (1996)
“Don’t Tell God” expresses such a bold & basic sentiment of us mere mortal humans. GSW are another New York band, another “amalgam of rock, jazz, bluegrass, funk, psychedelia, pop, Americana, reggae, progressive, & more.” It strikes me into my dancing bones how many of these artists distinguish themselves with striking blends of many instruments, yet it seems keyboards, pianos, & organs are as prominent as electric guitars, fueling the catch honky-tonky grooviness needed to keep their fans outta their seats & on their feet. 

Say Zuzu - Better Days (1995)
Originally based in New Hampshire, Say Zuzu come from the roots & alt-country side of things with a needed & timeless anthem of hope. Guitars & harmonicas & relentlessly delicious vocals carry this track straight to my hungry soul, direct from an album with the wanderlust title of Highway Signs & Driving Songs. Beyond the music, bandleader Cliff Murphy completed the PhD at Brown in American Music, later serving as the state ethnomusicologist for the State of Maryland. Today, Murphy is the director for Smithsonian's Center for Folklife & Cultural Heritage.

Cravin Melon - Come A Day (1997)
Like Calobo above, Cravin Melon were one of the first bands from this period that I started listening to intently in 2023. Coming from Charleston, they seem to be a bridge between the southern jangle pop thing made famous by R.E.M. & the adjacent jammier heights. “Come A Day” & other tracks on the album Red Clay Harvest really layer some harmonies in a thick honey that sticks to you in the best way. It’s so bright & refreshing & like the track about sweet tea, it’s an album of comfort songs to return to again & again.

Donna the Buffalo - Sacred Ground (1993)
I still can’t believe how many of these lesser-known smaller-market acts built the small-town scene. Oh, what a glorious hippie-dance-party institution are these cats called Donna The Buffalo. The female vocals & reggae groove immediately set this track apart on this setlist. 

Leftover Salmon - River’s Rising (1997)
The folk & bluegrass connections with the jamband seen have followed a long & delicious trailway. “Jamgrass” doesn’t necessarily capture it, but it’s as helpful a tag as any. I don’t think the 90s pioneers could have ever foreseen the massive popularity of Billy Strings. The infectious “slamgrass” inflections of Leftover Salmon were the first slinky dance of this muse to find me around the turn-of-the-century, unlike some of the other iterations on this playlist that only found me more recently on these archival digs. 

Widespread Panic - Wondering (1993)
The southern-rock-to-jamband connection runs as deep as our muddy creeks after a downpour. I remember first learning of Widespread Panic from some of its fans whose paths crossed mine in Murfreesboro way-back-then. The Georgia rock scene was a gift that just kept giving. One time around 2008, the last summer before getting clean & sober, I might have watched the trees in Rothbury, Michigan bend to meet the sonic reverberations at a Panic show. It was as if their entire concert were one with the earth & sky & I was all about it. This playlist would be incomplete without their longevity & legacy 

Phish - Train Song (1996)
In Vermont’s “northern kingdom,” between Burlington & the Bread-&-Puppet theater space, an alternate world was blossoming at the end of the 20th century. Any 1990s jammy mix that leaves out Phish would be negligent, as this band, as this movement, as this scene have been epic torchbearers in the epic extended universe that Jerry built.

The Grapes - Drift Away (1991)
1970’s “Drift Away” is a classic song from the larger American songbook & the classic hippy soundtrack. Until hearing this version, I always loved the interpretations by Dobie Gray & John Henry Kurtz. Now, this lost version from Atlanta’s The Grapes will reside right there with the classic renditions. 


This playlist, essay, & annotations were a labor of love.


Thursday, February 13, 2025

Theater By Full Immersion: The Transformative Medicine of “Every Brilliant Thing”

 

From the time when my parents started dragging me to in-person theater as a young child, I knew that I was walking through a portal to visit a made-up magical world where things were simply not the same. But also, I was just a child. Sometimes my patient parents had to deal with me talking back to the cast, as I did at Godspell. Sometimes they had to deal with me falling asleep, because a dark room with gently spoken lines felt like nap time to me.  

But this time I am dragging my now 80-something mother to a dress rehearsal for “Every Brilliant Thing” (by Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe) at the Cookeville Performing Arts Center (CPAC), and I had no idea how wide the portal could be opened. “Every Brilliant Thing” is far too intense and emotional and fun for anyone to fall asleep, but you better believe that you might see the crowd talking during the show. 

That’s right, this is not your normal night at the theater, as the proverbial “fourth wall” has fully fallen. The audience members are the actors, and the actor is a nameless narrator with so much to say. If you have been to CPAC Backstage show before, you now intimate it can feel, but I promise that with this show, they take all that to the next level. 

A night (or afternoon) out that is this interactive and immersive has enough to recommend it, simply for the ways that it is gently subversive with the format alone. No two shows of the eight-show run will be the same, and the imperfection of audience members becoming impromptu actors will be as awkward as it is vulnerable as it is beautiful. 

But add to all this the simple premise of the show: we are making a collaborative list of “Every Brilliant Thing” about being alive. Yes, it is as sweet and silly as it sounds, but the reasons we are making this list are quite serious. When the play begins, we learn that the nameless narrator almost lost his mother to death by suicide. Every aspect of this performance is community medicine. Every word spoken is part of the medicine and a gift to our collective mental health. This is theater as a living art as life-affirming care. 

If that all sounds too triggering or weird, I promise you that it isn’t. When I was invited into the show, the adrenaline rocked me out of my seat and into an uncertain moment,  but it felt amazing. The narrator is really going through it, and now, I was going through it with him.

For Cookeville’s version of this widely acclaimed one-man show, two actors will alternate days as the narrator. The show that I attended featured Michael Evanichko, who already blew my mind late last year in The Kitchen at the Wesley Foundation. Interacting with him when I realized that I was part of the show felt surprisingly natural and only a little wonky. I feel like I have to go back to attend again on a day that Patrick Mannle is acting, plus there are so many aspects of the show that I simply want to experience with a different crowd.

But it’s not just the play that involves everyone and everything, the entire venue has been configured and reimagined in such a fashion as to make every space and place, from a trip to the bathroom or to the bar, into a truly enlightening experience. Even though there is technically only one person named in the program as a performer per se, it’s clear that the production staff are all part of the show too. This includes the more than capable director Jennifer Williams, and the producer of all official CPAC events, Rachel Wingo. Attending this show is the theatrical equivalent of touring a chocolate factory where the chocolate is being made, and you get to eat the chocolate.

As serious as some of the topics addressed are, the play is full of joy and whimsy. Everyone should making lists like the one upon which the play is based.  Because life is filled with brilliant things, and Cookeville’s vibrant theater community has always been on my list of things to be thankful for, one of the things that makes life worth living. 

Local teacher, DJ, and poet, Andrew William Smith has been reviewing local theater in Cookeville for almost 20 years.

Content warning for discussion of suicide and self-harm. 

Shows are on February 14, 15, 18, 20, 21, and 22 at 7pm as well February 16 and 22 at 2pm at the Cookeville Performing Arts Center at 10 East Broad Street.

Tickets available at the door when a show is not sold out or in advance online here:
Cookeville Performing Arts Center Tickets

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Infinite Space (TOTR 487)

 


-originally aired on WTTU 88.5 FM The Nest on Saturday, February 8, 2025
-this episode begins a series of shows situated in the 1990s, to coincide with this semester’s “American Mixtape” class
-show dedicated to the memory of a dear friend that we recently lost too soon

Rusted Root - Infinite Space 
Ekoostik Hookah - Harmonic Convergence 
Poi Dog Pondering - Everybody’s Trying
Rheostatics - Alomar
Rheostatics - Jesus Was Once A Teenager Too
The Silos - Anyway You Choose Me 
Giant Sand - Year of the Dog
Grant Lee Buffalo - The Shining Hour
Trip Shakespeare - Lo0k At The Moon
The Bogmen - It’s A Fast Horizon
Rheostatics - Dope Fiends and Boozehounds
Golden Smog - Nowhere Bound
Cracker - Trials & Tribulations
Shiva Burlesque - Mercury Blues
Palace Music - Riding
Poi Dog Pondering - Praise The Lord
Toad The Wet Sprocket - Pray Your Gods
Calobo - Share The Light
Crash Vegas - Sylvie
Cowboy Junkies - To Live Is To Fly
Poi Dog Pondering - Bury Me Deep
Rusted Root - Back To The Earth

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Do It For The Song (TOTR 486)


[Flamy Grant supporting Adeem the Artist, Basement East, May 2024]

-originally aired on WTTU 88.5 FM The Nest on Saturday, February 1, 2025
-all views on the show represent Teacher On The Radio & the artists & guests, not WTTU staff, the communications department, or the university

Derek Webb - Some Gods Deserve Atheists (2023)
Semler - Amen (2025)
Flamy Grant - Do It For A Song (2024) 
Interview with Flamy Grant - part 1
Flamy Grant - I Am Not Ashamed - with Jennifer Knapp & the Girl Rapper (2022)
Flamy Grant - Last Days - with Chris Housman (2024)
Interview with Flamy Grant - part 2
Flamy Grant - Old Religion - with Crys Matthews (2024)
Jennifer Knapp - Neosho (2014)
Jennifer Knapp - Martyrs & Thieves (2008) 
Crys Matthews - Like Jesus Would (2025)
Melody Walker - Jesus Was A Drag Queen - with Mercy Bell, Mya Byrne, Aaron Lee Tasjan, Autumn Nicholas (2023)
Pistol Pete & Popgun Paul - Jesus Loves the Little Fairies (1998)
Pistol Pete & Popgun Paul - wearing an angel’s wings (2000)
Red Moon Road - Beauty in These Broken Bones (2015)
hONEyhoUSe - Pray (2104)
Wild Remedy - Wild Remedy (2024)
Alice DiMicele - The Hounds of Winter (2024)
Jess Reimer - Spring Columbine (2010)
Cordelia’s Dad - How Can I Keep From Singing? (1998)
Amy Ray - North Star - with Phil Cook (2022)
Sweet Honey In The Rock - Deportees (1985)
Nina Simone - New World Coming (1971)

-thank you to Flamy Grant for appearing on the show!
-Go see Flamy Grant on Thursday night, February 6 at Benton Chapel on the Vanderbilt Campus for FREE, supporting Jennifer Knapp
-please visit their website: Flamy Grant