Mixed Nuts
“In the name of Vermont we defy all the world!”
Mixed Nuts from Earnest Productions is a screw-ball musical comedy with music from the 20s and 30s, and a cast of independence-minded eccentrics from the Vermont State Hospital who have prepared a vaudeville review directed by Dr. Elizabeth Darcy. The bizarre crew of entertainers is lead by a re-incarnated, unpredictable, and loveable Ethan Allen.
My family and I will be at the Unadilla Theatre in East Calais next week. I’ve read the script… it’s awesome. Such serious times, we need some comic relief. This is comedy that makes us think, challenge our assumptions about what is sane and what is insane.
Mixed Nuts will run in central Vermont at the Unadilla Theatre in East Calais, August 24-31, 2010. Showtime is 7:30 PM. Reservations and Information: (802) 456-8968
The Unadilla is the theatre that brought King Lear, The Gondoliers, Uncle Vanya and When We Are Married to Vermont audiences. Their website is at Unadilla.org.
Reservations and Information: 802-456-8968 or at : unadilla@pshift.com
Jim Hogue portrayed Ethan Allen at my son’s school, and in many public venues in Vermont and worldwide.
Directions from Middlebury: Click the link to the left… then follow the directions from Montpelier
Directions From Montpelier: take Rt 2 East to East Montpelier, then Rt 14 North to North Montpelier. One mile North of North Montpelier turn right on Max L. Gray Road and follow it for 5 miles to the theatre.
From St Johnsbury: Go to Marshfield Villege on Rt 2 West. In Marshfield Village turn right on Creamery St (sign East Calais) Go up hill bearing left onto the Calais Road. At third 4 corners turn right on East Hill Road. Follow to Blachly Road and the theatre.
From the Vermont Commons website:
Is Mixed Nuts about secession? It is, in the same way that Pygmalion is about linguistics. But this is what Mixed Nuts is really about: the courage and camaraderie of a few people, and how music and dance can move us. And Pygmalion is about the courage of Liza Doolittle going up against the brilliant, cold, and uncompromising Henry Higgins. Whether Higgins succeeds in pulling off his experiment of teaching Liza “to talk proper,” or whether the inmates of Mixed Nuts succeed in their secession are both beside the point. Both these plays (and any play worth going to, for that matter) are about something more than their basic themes and plots.
I tell people who ask that Mixed Nuts is a screwball musical comedy about six inmates who escape from the custody of the Vermont State Hospital in order to make Vermont an independent republic. That is the kind of answer that one must give because people need to know the genre, the plot, and the motivation of the main characters before anything else.
The answer I want to give to that question is that Mixed Nuts is about dancing. But that is nothing to hang your hat on, and it would be doing the play a disservice because such an answer is so open to interpretation as to be meaningless. My elevator speech would end in failure, as you will see. But we, you and I, are not in an elevator. And I am now writing this so as to seduce you into believing that this play is worth doing because it is the stuff of dreams.
And what is dancing that it is worth your time? Is it learning a few steps and moving around a dance floor? Sure. Is it “a language to whisper private and sacred things . . . the expression of a search for a passion that might be spiritual or romantic or uncategorizable, but that, in any case, is an antidote to the harsh facts of an earthbound existence?” Sure.
The play opens with “Let Yourself Go,” a dance and a song about dancing. The next song is also about dancing: “In me you see a sinner, and dancing is my crime . . .” The Green Mountain Boys get “Happy Feet” in their exhilaration. The play ends with a dance. So the play is about dancing.
It’s also about camaraderie, courage, independence, conviction, reason, control, power, love, and the old horses: sanity versus insanity, reality versus superstition, and the blending of life and art.
But every character in the play is dancing. It is a dance from start to finish.
As you listen to the band don’t you get a bubble?
As you listen to them play don’t you get a glow?
If you step out on the floor you’ll forget your trouble.
If you go into your dance you’ll forget your woe.
So . . . – Irving Berlin




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