Copious Notes

The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture

  • Jul
    16
    Heather Parrish as Patsy Cline and Billy W.H. Mason as her guitarist in "Always . . . Patsy Cline." Photo by Mark Cornelison | Herald-Leader staff.

    Heather Parrish as Patsy Cline and Billy W.H. Mason as her guitarist in "Always . . . Patsy Cline." They are also in the band June July, which resumes gigs after "Cline" closes Aug. 2. Photo by Mark Cornelison | Herald-Leader staff.

    Wednesday performances are unheard of at Studio Players, but that is what Always . . . Patsy Cline has pushed the Bell Court troupe to do.

    After opening night, the theater which regularly presents performances Friday through Sunday, added Thursday shows July 23 and 30. That still left Studio with a 15-page waiting list, so it added shows Wednesdays, July 22 and 29. Studio board member Bob Singleton said those will probably be the last added performances and the wait list is currently closed because it is still so long. The show adds to what has been a very successful 2009 for Studio, which has had sell-outs and added performances for its previous three shows this year starting with The Last of Mrs. Lincoln in February.

    Folks who don’t get in to see Patsy might want to check out June July, the band fronted by Heather Parrish who plays Cline and has several members in the Patsy Cline band. The group’s next show is 9 p.m. Aug. 21 at Natasha’s Bistro and Bar, 112 Esplanade, and Parrish says they will be doing some Patsy Cline tunes in their upcoming sets. Admission is $6, and if you miss that one, June July bassist Ethan Hayen says the band is getting swamped with booking requests, so you’ll probably see them around.

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  • Jul
    10
    Billy H.W. Mason and Heather Parrish perform with June July on June 27 at Lower 48. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    Billy H.W. Mason and Heather Parrish perform with June July on June 27 at Lower 48. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.com.

    While she was in rehearsals for Studio Players production of Always . . . Patsy Cline, we caught up with Heather Parrish to talk to her about playing the country music legend and how it impacts her own band, June July. Here’s a podcast of a portion of our chat with Heather:

    Further reading:

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  • Jul
    9
    Heather Parrish portrays the lead in the Studio Players production of Always ... Patsy Cline. The musicians include, from left, Anna Hess, fiddle; Rick Hudson, drums; Scott Wilmoth, double bass; Jon Grossman, piano; and Billy W.H. Mason, guitar. Photo by Mark Cornelison | Herald-Leader staff.

    Heather Parrish portrays the lead in the Studio Players production of "Always ... Patsy Cline." The musicians include, from left, Anna Hess, fiddle; Rick Hudson, drums; Scott Wilmoth, double bass; Jon Grossman, piano; and Billy W.H. Mason, guitar. Photos by Mark Cornelison | Herald-Leader staff.

    It would have been enough for Heather Parrish to come out and deliver a spot-on, genial performance as Patsy Cline.

    With a neat wig, big black eyelashes and ­costumes topped off by a red ­cowgirl outfit, Parrish looked every bit like the pride of ­Winchester, Va. And then she opened her mouth.

    Parrish has turned the heads of local theatergoers before with performances such as Mary Magdalene in the Lexington Shakespeare Festival’s Jesus Christ ­Superstar. But she has never had a stage like this or ­material more suited to her voice than Cline’s big, belty ballads and barn burners.

    Give Parrish a couple of hours to sing I Fall to Pieces and You Belong to Me, and you have a great night.

    But she is only half of Studio Players’ production of Ted Swindley’s Always … Patsy Cline.

    Melissa Rae Wilkeson plays Louise Seger, the fan who forms a strong bond with country music legend Patsy Cline.

    Melissa Rae Wilkeson plays Louise Seger, the fan who forms a strong bond with country music legend Patsy Cline.

    The other half is ­Melissa Rae Wilkeson as Cline’s ­biggest fan, Louise Seger. She is what turns this show from a night of music into a night of theater, and ­Wilkeson’s performance makes the show a hoot and a heartbreaker. She’s also what makes this show a must, even if you aren’t a big Patsy Cline fan.

    Imagine if your favorite music act came to town, and you ended up hanging out backstage, getting pulled onstage during the show and going home with them for some late night breakfast and a heart-to-heart. You wound up as BFFs.

    That’s the story of Seger, a Houston woman who first saw Cline on Arthur Godfrey’s show and then ­harassed the disc jockey at a local country radio station into playing Cline constantly. Seger met her idol when Cline came to play a Houston honky-tonk, and they formed a bond that lasted until Cline’s untimely death in a 1963 plane crash.

    “She was 30 years old!” Wilkeson’s Louise screams, slamming a kitchen chair into the floor in a moment of pure anguish.

    It is a moment born of an hour and 45 minutes of Patsy and Louise bonding over music, motherhood and the mutual heartbreak of failed relationships. The key ingredient to Wilkeson’s ­performance is a complete lack of self consciousness as she throws herself into ­delirious fandom, dancing around, telling her story and driving her car, which she calls “sexy dude,” to the beat of Rick Hudson’s drums.

    The five-person band, led by pianist and music ­director Jon Grossman, added a tight, authentic sound to the show, and there was ­essential ­support in Bob Kinstle’s set design, Craig King’s ­thoughtful light design and the team of costumers.

    But what makes ­director Tonda-Leah Fields’ ­production one of the best nights of Lexington theater in recent memory are Parrish and Wilkeson giving career-topping performances in roles that play to their strengths.

    They give you more than enough reasons to see this show.

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  • Apr
    8

    Folks who consider Patsy Cline’s voice divine might find Studio Players‘ choice to play the country music legend somewhat appropriate.

    Heather Parrish.

    Heather Parrish.

    Heather Parrish, whose last big Lexington stage splash was singing the role of Mary Magdeline in the Lexington Shakespeare Festival’s  2004 production of Jesus Christ Superstar, will play Cline in Studio’s production of Always . . . Patsy Cline, slated for July 9 through Aug. 2 at the Carriage House Theatre.  Joining Parrish will be busy local actor Melissa Wilkeson who will play Louise Seger, the Houston woman whose pen-pal relationship with Cline is the basis for the show.

    Parrish’s rendition of I Don’t Know How to Love Him was one of many highlights of Superstar, and she also impressed local theatre fans in Actors Guild of Lexington’s production of The Taffetas. She is the singer for June July, a Lexington-based band that will have a role in Always, as Parrish says the group will be Cline’s band in the show.

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  • Mar
    2

    Studio Players has announced its summer musical, and now it’s looking for a star.

    Always, Patsy Cline will be the show, July 9-12, 17-19, 24-26, 31 and Aug. 1-2 at the Carriage House Theatre. It’s a two-person show about the country music legend told from the point of view of one of her biggest fans.

    So, if you’ve always dreamed of stepping into the honky tonk angel’s boots, auditions are at 1 p.m. March 28 and 6 p.m. March 29 at the Carriage House. They are looking for one woman to play Patsy Cline and one woman age 35 to 55.

    If you have questions, contact the show’s director Contact, Tonda Fields, at tondafields@yahoo.com or 859-230-9605. Ellen Hellard will be the music director.

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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. MORE | E-mail Rich


 

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