IF YOU GO
• WHAT: “Company,” a Stephen Sondheim musical about the ups and downs of married and single life in New York City.
• WHEN: 8 p.m. today through Saturdaynov8-10 and Nov. 15-17; 2 p.m. Saturday and Sundaynov10-11 and Nov. 17-18.
• WHERE: Leary Theater, located in Clet Hall on the Niagara University campus, Lewiston.
• COST: $19 general admission; discounted tickets to tonight’s premiere cost $6.
• MORE INFORMATION: Call the box office at 286-8622 for more information or to purchase tickets, or visit www.ticketmaster.com to buy tickets online.
CAST MEMBERS
• Nick Cocchetto, Arkport
• Caitlin Holland, Farmington Hills, Mich.
• Steven E. Sitzman, Alden
• Kimberly Jarmusz, Williamsville
• Preston Cuer, East Bethany
• Lisa LeCuyer, Getzville
• Nick Lama, Niagara Falls
• Cassie Gorniewicz, Liverpool, N.Y.
• David Avery, Farmington
• Adrienne Lewis, Buffalo
• Matthew Chavez, Amherst
• Lia Sumerano, Kingston
• JennaBeth Stockman, Grand Island
• Candice Kogut, West Seneca
BACKSTAGE
• Eric Appleton, set design
• Maureen Stevens, costume design
• Terri Filips, choreography
• Donald Shrimpton, music director
• Lynne Koscielniak, lighting design
• Amanda Serio of Rochester, stage manager
• Joanna Farrell of Tonawanda and Paige Mingus of Buffalo, assistant stage managers
• Doug Zschiegner, director
It’s all fun and games until Nick Cocchetto’s character has to go and turn 35.
Cocchetto, a 20-year-old junior at Niagara University, stars as Robert in the school’s latest musical production, “Company.”
The production is set at Robert’s 35th birthday party with his friends. When he tries to blow out the candles on his cake, they don’t go out. And that, Cocchetto said, sets into play a series of scenes and songs that take Robert on a journey as he decides whether marriage is right for him.
But, Cocchetto said, it’s not your typical musical.
“Don’t expect a sing-and-dance, fun-and-games kind of show,” Cocchetto said. “Even though it is fun, you’ll see something you don’t expect from a musical.”
Doug Zschiegner is associate director of Niagara University Theater and “Company” director, agreed.
“So many musical theater productions end with a big wedding, but this one asks the question: ‘Is that really the way to go?’ ” Zschiegner said.
Audience members — married and single alike — will find out one man’s answer tonight as the Stephen Sondheim musical opens for a preview performance at NU’s Leary Theater. Performances continue through Nov. 18.
The show originally opened in 1970 and has since been “rewritten and tweaked” to update it for modern times, Zschiegner said. In fact, in June the show won the 2007 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical.
“It represents a big, major shift in the history of musical theater,” Zschiegner said, “because it doesn’t really have an order of time.”
But how does that work?
“It’s a man on his 35th birthday deciding if he wants to get married,” he said. He examines the relationships of five married couples with whom he is friends. Does he want to stay single, or does he want to marry one of the three women he’s dating at the time?
Decisions, decisions.
While there are funny parts to the musical, Director of NU Theater Gregory Fletcher said it’s not a comedy, and it’s not a production meant for young audiences.
“I would definitely describe it as a musical theater piece,” he said. “There’s some comedy in it, of course, but it deals with some pretty heavy issues.”
Cocchetto, an Arkport native, stars as the lead character in the musical. But, Cocchetto said, his favorite part is sitting back and watching his fellow actors shine.
“I love the fact that I really get the chance — even though I’m on stage almost the whole time ... — to sit and listen to the other characters,” he said. “That really helps to get what is being conveyed, ... and I really get the chance to see the work that my classmates are doing.”
The bond between classmates is particularly strong, Cocchetto said, between the upperclassmen, and that helps the cast members to interact in their scenes together.
“It’s a really good opportunity to work with people that I know, especially in a show like this where there is so much emotional entanglement,” he said.
Zschiegner said the cast — composed of all theater students — has been rehearsing for one month, or about half the time the director has had to prepare casts for musicals at other schools.
“The skill level is very high at this school,” said the director, now in his first year at Niagara. Intense vocal, dance and acting training each semester is to thank for that, he said.
“It’s a real chance for the audience to see some real cutting-edge musical theater,” he said.
So if you’re looking for a reason to leave the house on this, presumably the first cold and snowy weekend of the season, Fletcher urges you to consider this: “For most people, (Sondheim) is ‘the’ Broadway composer. That in itself is a reason to go — just to see a Stephen Sondheim musical.”
Contact editor Laura Wahler at 693-1000, ext. 116.
Night & Day
INVITING 'COMPANY': NU theater students take on Tony Award-winning musical
- Night & Day
-
-
Hard Rock series lineup, other Old Falls Street activities announced
Canadian rock legends The Guess Who and Disco-era groovers KC and the Sunshine Band will headline the Hard Rock Cafe concert series on Old Falls Street this summer.
-
Artpark releases Tuesday, Wednesday concert schedules
While it's not free anymore, Artpark's Tuesday in the Park concert series offers a little something for everyone this year.
Among the acts are Sheryl Crow, Sublime, Heart, Yes and Huey Lewis & The News.
-
Lockport canal concert lineup announced
This year's Canal Concert Series features something old, something new, and some things that are blue, including a new major sponsor.
-
Cat tales - NACC comedy features woman who takes in stray cats
A comedy about a woman who takes in stray cats is making audiences laugh at the Niagara Arts and Cultural Center in Niagara Falls.
-
Warming up for the Main Street Music & Art Festival
People love free samples. So organizers of the second annual Niagara Falls Music & Art Festival are giving away musical tastes of the upcoming event by holding preview parties throughout the city, including on Thursday.
-
Wine on Third to show Jennifer Lee Morrow works
The artwork of Jennifer Lee Morrow begins a one-month engagement at Wine On Third on May 17 with an opening reception from to 6 to 9 p.m.
-
'Beyond the Barrel' looking for artists
The Niagara Arts and Cultural Center is once again hosting its Beyond the Barrel exhibit at the Pine Avenue facility — but it needs a few more artists for the show.
-
Jazz and Pasta mixes food and fundraising
Melissa Morinello remembers working the information booth at last August's Lewiston Jazz Festival when she got a sense of how big the event was getting.
-
Buffalo Niagara Film Festival reaches into Falls for finale
“Kaziah the Goat Woman” a film about an artist who has pledged to paint all of the fallen soldiers of the Iraq and Afghanistan war, will close the Buffalo Niagara Film Festival during awards ceremonies at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Rapids Theatre on Main Street, Niagara Falls.
-
Red Green: A one-man show by the one man who can do it
Get ready for an evening with an old friend, one who can tell you a few things about the lost art of being a man, offer some gentle lessons in the catch-all category of coping and offer some advice on the uses of the world’s most valuable commodity, duct tape.
- More Night & Day Headlines
-


