Leonardtown, MD – Mark your calendars for these community events!

Twin Beach Players in North Beach, is looking for volunteers for the current production of Neil Simonโ€™s Barefoot in the Park which opens April 13 and runs through April 22. One free ticket is earned for the show for your help.ย ย 

Southern Maryland Traditional Music and Dance will hold a Contra Dance Workshop featuring caller Jason Little and live music by Southern Maryland Open Band on Saturday, April 14 at 7 p.m. at Christ Episcopal Church Parish Hall in Chaptico. The charge is $6 for members, $10 for non-members; band members and children under age 17 are admitted free of charge. An Ice Cream Social will also be held that night. For more information you may contact: www.smtmd.org.

Historic St. Maryโ€™s will hold a Little Explorers event from 10 to 11 a.m. on Wednesday, April 18. Meet first at the Shop at Farthingโ€™s Ordinary and then proceed to the Town Center for a talk about the alphabet. Tickets are $4 per child for non-members, and $3 for Friends; accompanying adults are admitted free. This charge includes all-day admission to the museum. Bring a picnic and spend the day! For more information you may contact Sharol at 240-895-4980;

There will be a Lecture on Thursday, April 19 at 7 p.m. This free lecture celebrates archaeology conducted at HSMC, honoring the rich legacy of work done over the past 50 years. For more information you may contact: 240-895-4990.

Godโ€™s Favorite continues at the Three Notch Theatre in Lexington Park

Godโ€™s Favorite, a three-act comedy by Neil Simon, runs through April 22 with Thursday, Friday and Saturday performances at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees beginning at 3:30 p.m. For tickets and for more information you may contact: www.newtowneplayers.org, or 301-737-5447.

Loosely based on the Biblical Book of Job, the play opened on Broadway on December 11, 1974 and ran for 119 performances with Vincent Gardenia as Joe, and Charles Nelson Reilly as Sidney Lipton. It is set in early March of 1975 within a lavish North Shore Long Island mansion (beautifully re-created for this production by NPT Board of Directors member Dave Kyser, and longtime NTP volunteer Linda Sanborn โ€“ at least 2 of Lindaโ€™s paintings adorn the setโ€™s living room walls; she has painted over 25 sets at Three Notch Theatre). The mansion is inhabited by the pious Joe (Robert Rausch), his long-suffering wife, Rose (Robin Finnacom), the โ€œtwinsiesโ€ โ€“ Sarah (a perky Mallory Turvey-Manthorne) and Ben (a stoic Lewis Beckley) โ€“ , โ€œprodigal sonโ€ David (Nick Wood), along with Mady (Millie Coryer-Dhu), the maid, and Morris (Larry Silvestro), the butler. The Act I and Act II set depicts a cozy, comfy, living room with a sofa, a lighted fireplace, a well-stocked bar, and curtained French doors. The play begins on one cold and snowy midnight when a suspected burglar (James LePore) turns out to be messenger-from-God Sidney Lipton, who has come to offer plenty of temptations to Joe to entice him to renounce God. Joe refuses, and afflictions result.

Clive Barnes, reviewing Godโ€™s Favorite for the New York Times after its Broadway debut, described this play as being not one of Simonโ€™s better works. He criticized the opening as โ€œslowโ€. But the Broadway version featured a collapsing mansion in Act 3 which should have more than made up for the perceived โ€œslowโ€ opening scenes.ย  Simon has said that he wrote this play as his reaction to his wifeโ€™ untimely death from cancer. It is considered to be his โ€œdarkest-themedโ€ work.

A few examples of Simonโ€™s less somber, pre-Godโ€™s Favorite plays are Barefoot in the Park (1963), The Odd Couple (1965), and The Sunshine Boys (1972). Among his post-Godโ€™s Favorite comedies are: Rumors (1988), and Laughter on the 23rd Floor (1993). The Three Notch Theatre version of Godโ€™s

Favorite is directed by Rick Thompson who states that the theme of this show is โ€œlove and faithโ€. Thompson first directed this play in 1976 not long after its Broadway run; he subsequently acted the role of Joe in 2006. Mr. Thompson is an NPT veteran, both onstage and behind the scenes, and will be remembered by audiences for his role as Dr. Einstein in Arsenic and Old Lace, and for directing The Man Who Came to Dinner.ย  It is obvious that he has directed Godโ€™s Favorite with tender, loving care and with a desire to showcase his talented ensemble cast. He is also a meticulous soundtrack designer and audiences will enjoy hearing selections as diverse as Andrew Lloyd Webberโ€™s โ€œLove Changes Everythingโ€ from Aspects of Love, โ€œWhat the World Needs Now is Loveโ€, and that earworm pop version of The Lordโ€™s Prayer.
As Joe, veteran actor Robert Rausch is impressive in this role โ€“ especially during his Act I monologue describing his early upbringing and subsequent wealth (โ€œbeing rich is as much a burden as being poorโ€); he is most effective as the tortured servant of God in Act III. This is his 10th NPT production; he has appeared as El Gallo in The Fantasticks as well as in another Simon play โ€“ Barefoot in the Park.

His vivacious wife, Rose, is portrayed by ebullient actress Robin Finnacom, who reveals a sparkling and humorous delivery style with quick comic timing. Robinโ€™s previous roles with NTP have been in The Man Who Came To Dinner, and Steel Magnolias. She is also the Producer for Godโ€™s Favorite and is a member of the NTP Board serving as the theatreโ€™s Grants writer. The crux of the play is as follows: will Joe renounce God when disaster strikes? โ€œNo!โ€ says Joe. And then his cardboard box plant down by the water burns to the ground. And Joeโ€™s uninsured. โ€œThatโ€™s your mistake,โ€ quips Sidney, โ€œeven Godโ€™s with John Hancockโ€.

After the first Intermission, the action resumes two weeks after the fire. More โ€œplaguesโ€ have surfaced: water and heat have been turned off, the phoneโ€™s about to be disconnected along with the electricity. Joe valiantly tries to explain his test of faith to his family but they do not take it well. The frequently-drunk David (a flippant, disrespectful, playboy bum with three college degrees, played with a definite swagger and โ€˜tude by Nick Wood) manages to provoke God into creating a thunderstorm which prompts the return of Sidney. (In his bio notes, Nick describes himself in this role as a โ€œdrunken smartassโ€. He was previously seen at NTP as Dawson in A Few Good Men). Sidney pleads with Joe to sign a paper renouncing God which will be โ€œofficiallyโ€ published in the New York Times. Even cursed with unbearable itching, bursitis, tennis elbow, and hemorrhoids, Joe refuses to sign.
After the second Intermission, a dramatic stage revolve shows us โ€œHellโ€ in the form of the burned-out Benjamin mansion. A disease-ravaged Joe hobbles into the scene, leaning heavily on his walking stick.ย  Rose begs him to renounce God so that the suffering will end, lamenting that she wishes he just โ€œhad a mistress, like other menโ€.ย  She leaves, taking the twins along with her. Sidney returns, convinced that Joe is finally ready to throw in the towel, but Joe stubbornly maintains that he will not do so. Sidney leaves for good (so he says). But a few surprises are left to this story as the โ€œprodigal sonโ€ returns โ€“ along with the rest of the family and Mady and Morris, leaving Sidney to implement the playโ€™s final โ€œtwistโ€.

Playing twins so identical that even Mady canโ€™t tell them apart are Mallory Turvey-Manthorne (seen last summer as Jaquenetta in Loveโ€™s Laborโ€™s Lost) and Lewis Beckley as Ben, the reliable son. Mallory exhibits her charming verbal and non-verbal skills whenever she describes fantasies of being โ€œrubbed all overโ€ฆup and down, and up and downโ€, and Lewis has the distinction of portraying the most โ€œnormalโ€ character in the play, a role he seems to have carefully craftedย  โ€“ that of the grounded and faithful son. (Lewis is an NTP veteran and has been seen in Picnic, The 39 Steps, and A Few Good Men).

Millie Coryer-Dhu and Larry Silvestro provide the โ€œcomic reliefโ€ in this dark comedy and are a well-matched team, which is evident from their first hilarious entrance early in Act I as they prepare to attack the burglar with a broom and a baseball bat. Mille, an NTP veteran, has directed, produced, acted, served as costume designer, and has been an Executive Board Member and Treasurer since 2012. Mr. Silvestro is known for his many theatrical performances throughout the area and was seen at NTP as Huckabee in The Fantasticks. Four of his children have also performed on the NTP stage.

You may submit items for Parks and Points to: LynnieBDavis@gmail.com