The Oklahoman

From classics to innovators, Lyric Theatre’s 60th season at a glance

- Brandy McDonnell The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

Oklahoma’s official theater is raising the curtain on a celebrator­y 2023 season worthy of a milestone birthday.

Lyric Theatre embarks on its 60th anniversar­y season Feb. 16 with a family-friendly version of “Big River,” the esteemed musical adaptation of Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberr­y Finn” featuring music by Oklahoma’s own Roger Miller. It will be the first of seven shows the venerable company will perform on two stages: its own 278seat Plaza Theatre and the 2,477-seat Civic Center main stage.

“This is one of Oklahoma’s favorite shows: ‘Will Rogers Follies,’ ‘Oklahoma!’ and ‘Big River’ are the three big madein-Oklahoma musicals,” said Lyric Producing Artistic Director Michael Baron.

Founded in 1963, Lyric is Oklahoma’s largest live theater company, annually serving more than 100,000 people statewide. The state Legislatur­e designated it Oklahoma’s official theater in 2022.

“Lyric is such a staple of the community. Without it, I don’t think as many Oklahomans would be experienci­ng as much theater as they’re able to,” said Ashley Mandanas, who will play Annie in “The Play That Goes Wrong.”

Here is a sneak peek at Lyric’s 60th anniversar­y season:

‘Big River: Theatre For Young Audiences Version’

When and where: Feb. 16-March 11, Plaza Theatre.

An add-on to the five-show mainstage season, the family-friendly hourlong version of the 1985 Tony Awardwinni­ng musical is the fifth installmen­t in Lyric’s Theatre for Young Audiences series, which was shelved for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Like Twain’s popular and frequently banned 1885 novel, the musical takes audiences on an adventure down the mighty Mississipp­i River while celebratin­g the unlikely friendship between Huck and Jim. But the production will update the two main roles and make “adjustment­s for period-specific language.”

‘ The Play That Goes Wrong’

When and where: April 5-23, Plaza

Theatre.

Lyric will stage the Oklahoma City profession­al premiere of this recent Broadway smash as the first show of its 2023 subscripti­on season. The Tonywinnin­g comedy chronicles the Cornley University Drama Society’s ill-fated and accident-prone attempts to put on a 1920s murder mystery, as their efforts are hampered by a dead body who can’t play dead, an unconsciou­s leading lady and actors who trip over their lines and everything else.

‘ The Sound of Music’

When and where: June 27-July 2, Civic Center.

Lyric will open its three-show Civic Center summer run with Rodgers and Hammerstei­n’s iconic family favorite, which spun off the equally enduring 1965 film.

For its first production of “The Sound of Music” in 16 years, the OKC company is assembling a 75-member cast and live orchestra to perform the Tony-, Grammy- and Oscar-winning score, which includes “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do Re Mi,” “Edelweiss,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number.

‘ The Prom’

When and where: July 11-16, Civic Center.

Baron will direct the Oklahoma premiere of this high school musical, which was nominated for seven Tony Awards for its 2018-2019 Broadway run and spun off a 2020 Netflix film adaptation starring Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, James Corden, Keegan-Michael Key, Andrew Rannells, Ariana DeBose, Kerry Washington and Jo Ellen Pellman.

The riotous show follows four pasttheir-prime Broadway stars who travel to Indiana to insert themselves into a small-town controvers­y making national headlines: a lesbian student’s fight for the right to bring her girlfriend to her high school prom.

“Showing a queer relationsh­ip on stage — on the big stage ... on the main stage in the Civic Center — that’s huge, especially for a theater as big as Lyric,” said Mandanas, a nonbinary actor, singer and dancer based in Edmond.

‘Ain’t Misbehavin’’

When and where: July 25-30, Civic Center.

Lyric will return to 1920s Harlem with the 1978 winner of the Tony Award for Best Musical, which pays homage to the music of jazz innovator Fats Waller. Monique Midgette will direct Lyric’s Summer at the Civic Center finale, which features lively hits like “Honeysuckl­e Rose,” “Your Feet’s Too Big” and “T’aint Nobody’s Business if I Do.”

“It’s going to be really an event. ... We haven’t done the show in a long time. It’s a great songbook, and what Monique has done with the show is new in my mind in that it is not just a toe-tapping revue of jazz songs. She really puts you in a nightclub in that period, and you’re experienci­ng ‘Ain’t Misbehavin” in a new 360-way,” Baron said.

World premiere of ‘Concerto’

When and where: Sept. 13-Oct. 1, Plaza Theatre.

As part of its ongoing New Works Initiative, Lyric will return to the Plaza District with the world premiere of Alan Olejniczak’s fact-based musical drama, which centers on famed Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsk­y and Nadezhda von Meck, the patroness who supported him.

Directed by Baron and produced in collaborat­ion with OKC Philharmon­ic Music Director Alexander Mickelthwa­te, the play will take audiences behind the scenes as Tchaikovsk­y works on his “Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35.” The only violin concerto he composed, the polarizing 1878 piece is now regarded as a masterwork and has become one of the most beloved violin concertos in music history.

‘A Christmas Carol’

When and where: Nov. 24–Dec. 24, Plaza Theatre.

After staging the yuletide classic outdoors at the Harn Homestead for the past three years due to the pandemic, Lyric is taking its 13th annual production of Charles Dickens’ often-adapted “Ghost Story of Christmas” back indoors. In November, Devon Energy announced a $1 million gift to help the nonprofit arts organizati­on return the show — another add-on to the subscripti­on season — to the Plaza Theatre.

“It’s exciting because technology has made leaps and bounds since we first did the show 12 years ago, so we’re able to do things (that are) more spectacula­r, but also easier than we had before,” Baron said.

For tickets and informatio­n, go to https://lyrictheat­reokc.com.

 ?? K. TALLEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Clockwise from top:
W. Jerome Stevenson stars in Lyric Theatre’s 2020 outdoor production of “A Christmas Carol” at the Harn Homestead.
K. TALLEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Clockwise from top: W. Jerome Stevenson stars in Lyric Theatre’s 2020 outdoor production of “A Christmas Carol” at the Harn Homestead.
 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON/NETFLIX ?? Directed by Ryan Murphy (“Glee”), the 2020 Netflix film “The Prom” is adapted from the Tony Award-nominated musical of the same.
MELINDA SUE GORDON/NETFLIX Directed by Ryan Murphy (“Glee”), the 2020 Netflix film “The Prom” is adapted from the Tony Award-nominated musical of the same.
 ?? PROVIDED BY MIKI GALLOWAY ?? Mariah Warren plays The King in Lyric Theatre’s production of “Big River: Theatre For Young Audiences Version.” Performanc­es are Feb. 16-March 11 at the Plaza Theatre.
PROVIDED BY MIKI GALLOWAY Mariah Warren plays The King in Lyric Theatre’s production of “Big River: Theatre For Young Audiences Version.” Performanc­es are Feb. 16-March 11 at the Plaza Theatre.
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