Review for beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN

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MARK HIS WORDS  by Adrienne Cea  5/24

Some people are a jack of all trades but a master of none, while others, like
the cast of BeTwixt, BeTween and BeTWAIN, appear to have seamlessly mastered a dizzying assortment of trades. Take, for example, the production's musical director, Danny Ashkenasi. He is also the writer of the play's book, lyrics and music, and is featured throughout the performance as a piano player and performer.

BeTwixt, BeTween and BeTWAIN also has
a strong multi-talented ensemble in Aaron Piazza, Jennifer Eden, Alexander Gonzales, Rachel Green, Andrea Pinyan and Michael Satow. There seems to be no end to the number of instruments this troupe can play: piano, flute, violin, accordion, oboe, clarinet, triangle, guitar, harmonica, maracas, wooden frogs – even forks and knives.

The ensemble never loses their zest or energy, an incredible feat considering the demands placed on their abilities in this packed night of music. The evening begins with some of Mark Twain’s lighter tales: The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, A Genuine Mexican Plug, and Blue Jays. Ashkenasi’s musical adaptation of these tales highlights Twain’s humorous eye for life’s small details and people’s unique oddities. He has chosen works with topics that one would never imagine anyone could write a story about, let alone a musical. 

The mood turns slightly bleaker in The Californian’s Tale; a mysterious account of a town mad with love over a young woman suspiciously absent from the scene, and Cannibalism in the Cars, a darkly comedic song that Satow delivers with the
perfect blend of hilarity and horror. Act one concludes with Life on the Mississippi, a soft, trance-like tribute to the river that has become synonymous with the name Mark Twain.

The second act is a musical adaptation of Twain’s popular travel literature, The Innocents Abroad (or The New Pilgrim’s Progress), chronicling the adventures of tourists as they trek through Europe in search of the Holy Land. Each stop on the tour is told through a series of songs,
the most comical being Italy’s Michaelangelo, where the tourists have some fun with their stuffy museum guide asking if everything from Egyptian artifacts to pieces created a million years ago were created by Michaelangelo. Remember Me is another stand-out, addressing the somber moment every bright-eyed tourist encounters when their travels take them to Pompeii.

The length and complexity of each song does give the latter part of the evening a longer, heavier feel, especially given that these are not fluffy commercial jingles, but compact musical stories. But, while some musical interludes may feel weighty and unnecessary, none are uninspired. T
he actors appear to be having a great deal of fun with their roles. They commit to them without reserve, unafraid to twist their handsome features into ridiculous, ugly expressions.

Rachel Green, in particular, has a funny visual moment where she stands hunched over on a chair, neighing like a lame horse while simultaneously playing a violin, infusing a beautiful classical soundtrack into her own silly scene.

As the backbone of the production, Ashkenasi has an absorbing stage presence. When you have an artist this involved in their work you know you are seeing a fully realized vision that is deeply personal to that artist. There are special moments in beTwixt, beTween, and beTWAIN, outside of the story, where it is fun to watch Ashkenasi close his eyes on the sheet music and play the melody he hears in his head.

Mark Twain may have written the tales, but t
he collection of tunes belong to Ashkenasi and the six person ensemble of DiPiazza, Eden, Gonzales, Green, Pinyan and Satow, whose combined efforts give this production a fun and energetic life.
Connect to Ashkenasi Pages:
RESUMES:
Actor - Composer - Teaching Artist -
SHOWS:
beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN - The Tell-Tale Heart - Beyond - The Song of Job
Danny Ashkenasi
COMING SOON:
Danny's musical adaptation of Herman Melville's
Cock-A-Doodle-Doo!
featuring Danny Ashkenasi, Aaron DiPiazza, Rachel Green & Andrea Pinyan
part of the
Metropolitan Playhouse's Melvillapalooza Jan 12-25, 2009
Danny's new musical:
beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN
"Evocative and exciting ... gorgeous ... beautiful ...
A musical voice that commands attention" - NYtheatre.com

read the rave reviews on the right and on the Twainpage
To contact Danny, send an email to
admin@ashkenasi.net,  
or call 718 789 1149
Danny's award winning The Tell-Tale Heart - a musicabre
was performed Oct 29 by the
Tryptych Theater in Toronto
Audience response:
"A real Tour de Force" ; "This one should tour"
"Really pulled out all the stops in this one"
OMG! 
Danny's first musical "Once Upon a Frog" will receive its German language world premiere produced by the Quick Change Musicals Wetzlar
at the Wetzlarer Festpiele July, 2009
artwork: Derk Scholtz
Composer

in New York:
beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Song of Job
Beyond - a little night opera
Boroughed Tales - Lucky Hans
When Thou, My Music,
Music Play'st
a.o.

recipient of FringeNYC 06's
Award for Outstanding Achievement in Music and Lyrics


in Germany:
Once Upon a Frog
Gurkenkoenig
Jenseits
a.o.

Only composer represented twice at the Hamburg Musical Festival
(1997 and 2000)

for more see resume
beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN
nytheatre.com review 
Martin Denton · May 17, 2008


Danny Ashkenasi's
beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN brings several stories by Mark Twain to the musical stage. It is at its best when plumbing the substance of Twain's populist, humanist philosophy; some of the songs that Ashkenasi has written for this show  are transcendent, lovely, and moving.

The first act is entitled "Journey Through America" and combines material from Life on the Mississippi with several other Twain tales set in the American West.
Several songs about pilots navigating the vastness of the river ("Let the River Flow," "Mississippi Song," and "Sunset on the River") are evocative and exciting. I also enjoyed some of the less familiar material, especially "Blue Jays," a fanciful number about a methodical bird who thinks he's filling a hole with nuts but turns out to be doing something entirely different.

The second act takes us to Europe and the Middle East, following the outline of Twain's travelogue to present his excursions to France, Italy, Turkey, and the Holy Land.
Twain's observations about American tourists on the loose are sharp and funny and in many ways still ring true.  The visit to the ruins of Pompeii (in a gorgeous song called "Remember Me") is enormously moving. And the sequence in Palestine, especially a journey through the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, is presented with a simplicity and clarity in Ashkenasi's music ("Jerusalem, Jerusalem" and "Sea of Galilee") that makes it profound.

Ashkenasi's compositions are often beautiful, and the arrangements for piano, keyboard, recorder, guitar, oboe, flute, accordion, clarinet, and harmonica—all played variously by the composer and the other six members of the cast—are impressive. His is a musical voice that commands attention.

beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN is quite
a charming evening, and it showcases some fine performers in addition to Ashkenasi, including Andrea Pinyan, who sings beautifully, and Alexander Gonzales and Aaron DiPiazza, whose talents as musicians and singers are similarly strong. Ashkenasi is an ingratiating presence on stage as actor and musical director, and his promise as a musical theatre composer is clear.
Director/Producer

Directed and Music Directed most of his own musicals as well as many other productions.

Founded
Fredrick Byers Productions
with his husband Edward Elder, mounting many concerts, workshops, and full productions of musical works in New York.
Actor:

Film/TV:
Normandy (the Great Crusade)
Rote Erde
Kraftprobe


Musicals:

beTwixt, beTween & beTWAIN

The Tell-Tale Hear
t
Kidnapgirl
Heidi
a.o.

Classical:

Richard II
Macbeth
The Merchant of Venice
Doctor Faustus
a.o.

Dramas:

Nosferat
u
Garbage, The City and Death
Salem
A (A Scarlett Letter Carnival)
a.o
.

Comedie
s:
LibidOff
Selftorture and Strenuous Exercise
Landscape of the Bo
dy
Bohemia on Wry
a.o
.

for more see resume



Teaching Artist:

Resident Artist with the Metropolitan Opera Guild
and
Manhattan New Music Project

Choral Director at the Children's School in Brooklyn

for more see resume
Photo of Danny Ashkenasi and Edward Elder
by Anne Megyas