LIZZIE BORDEN LIVE Saturday, November 15, 2008
Posted: Mon Nov 17, 2008 2:52 pm
The theatre was on a street in Providence featuring an occasional Greek Revival house in between more substantial, beautiful dwellings. On the way into the lobby we happened upon LeeAnn Wilber, looking as pretty as we've ever seen her. She told us we'd see Stef and Shelley and the rest upstairs, and we surely did.
Jill Dalton was riveting as our lady of Fall River; her Lizzie is perhaps a gayer, more deliciously witty creature than the real Miss Lizbeth, but perhaps, having bought that mansion, Lizzie did become the social butterfly she had always felt herself to be! That forced gaiety is also a shield against the anguish this Lizzie (whether innocent or not) lives with every day.
Ms. Dalton's play tells the difficult and detailed story well, and even dares to do it non-linearly. The nearly full house was most appreciative, and it was wonderful to finally see this production after having to miss it a few times. Between meeting Jill and her director and lighting and sound designer afterwards, and chatting and posing for pictures with Stef and Shelley and the gals, it felt like old home week for this Bordenian!
Jill Dalton was riveting as our lady of Fall River; her Lizzie is perhaps a gayer, more deliciously witty creature than the real Miss Lizbeth, but perhaps, having bought that mansion, Lizzie did become the social butterfly she had always felt herself to be! That forced gaiety is also a shield against the anguish this Lizzie (whether innocent or not) lives with every day.
Ms. Dalton's play tells the difficult and detailed story well, and even dares to do it non-linearly. The nearly full house was most appreciative, and it was wonderful to finally see this production after having to miss it a few times. Between meeting Jill and her director and lighting and sound designer afterwards, and chatting and posing for pictures with Stef and Shelley and the gals, it felt like old home week for this Bordenian!