A million little things have to go right at any given performance of The Play That Goes Wrong for the hilariously crowd-pleasing farce to fall to pieces with precision.
The show’s perfect storm of mishaps that bedevil a college drama society production of an old-fashioned murder mystery requires spot-on timing and physical readiness from its game cast.
In the Mischief Theatre touring company currently bringing down the house at the Kennedy Center, that cast includes Harlem native Kai Heath, who portrays Annie, the overtaxed stage manager for The Murder at Haversham Manor, the play within the play.
Anni is also, according to the cheeky Playbill within the Playbill, “the unsung hero of the Society.” She’s designed, built, painted, stage-managed, and costumed every drama society production for the last three years. So she’s responsible for all those Haversham Manor sets, props, decor, and costumes that go completely, madly haywire.
The Play That Goes Wrong — Photo: Jeremy Daniel
Some might say, then, that Annie is to blame for a lot of what goes wrong in The Play That Goes Wrong. Is she a secret saboteur?
“I’ve yet to hear that viewpoint,” says Heath, with a laugh, though she’s serious about standing up for her character. “This particular Annie — the Annie that is played by moi — I believe is coming in kind of last-minute.”
As Heath attests, and as anyone who’s seen the play, written by Henry Lewis, Jonathan Sayer, and Henry Shields and directed by Matt DiCarlo, would agree, Annie is most definitely a team player.
“[She] pops right on in to be a part of the team to complete the story,” says Heath. “This [show] was a last-minute thing for Annie, just trying to meet some last-minute requirement, pick up a little job, but it ends up requiring a lot more of her than what she expected.”
The only cast member who hadn’t done the show before this run, Heath can relate to the team spirit, noting that she feels like a rookie among all-stars. “In a way, I feel in such safe hands,” she says. “But [I’m] also like, ‘Hope I don’t mess up what you guys got going, that’s got you winning all these championships.'”
There wasn’t much time to get up to championship speed, with Heath afforded just two weeks of rehearsal. “When someone from the cast was like, ‘Normally I have five weeks.’ I was like, ‘Whoa!’ That does make me feel like I’m not going so crazy.”
Judging by the extremely funny onstage results, she’s clearly hit her stride. “The first week [of rehearsal], it was myself and the understudies, just so I could learn my way around the set,” says Heath, who started working with the rest of the cast in week two of rehearsal. That was the first of two key pieces to cracking the code of going wrong, she recalls.
“Because they’re just so much,” Heath marvels. “The audience response is fueling what I’m doing, particularly for Annie. So yeah, those are the two big missing pieces that when they finally came, made me feel like, ‘Okay, I think I got this? I think I got it.'”
The Play That Goes Wrong runs through August 13, in the Kennedy Center’s Eisenhower Theater. Tickets are $39 to $159. Call 202-467-4600, or visit www.kennedy-center.org.
Not for anything I've said over the course of our lively hour-long phone interview one recent Saturday, but for this magazine's past transgressions.
This issue, you see, marks Cho's fourth appearance on a Metro Weekly cover in three decades, and I'm sheepishly begging forgiveness for how we handled the previous headlines, bastardizing her last name for the sake of a pun.
"Cho-Zen."
"On With the Cho."
"Cho Girl."
"It's all good," she laughs, taking it in stride. One thing about Margaret Cho is that she doesn't offend easily, if at all.
For true fans of live music, and the whole concert-going and festival-going experience, Spring 2025 in the DMV is shaping up to be a banner season. And for those who're also fans of queer music and of seeing LGBTQ performers live in concert? Well, we're about to experience a real embarrassment of riches in that regard. And no, not just because of all those coming to town for WorldPride 2025. In fact, the number of out artists stopping through the area both before and after Pride this year is impressive.
Melissa Etheridge is one. Bob Mould another. Also due to visit is Allison Russell, John Grant, Rahsaan Patterson, Halsey, and Lucy Dacus. Not to mention Kylie Minogue, who's got local gay hearts beating padam padam for sure. Down the road, once Pride is a wrap, it'll be Ty Herndon's turn. Also Brandy Clark's. The Indigo Girls, Pink Martini, Laura Jane Grace will all also follow suit. Oh, and Cyndi Lauper will also return to have a little more fun -- and say farewell one more time, after time.
With the well-timed arch of an eyebrow, or just a sharp glance, Nathan Lee Graham can command a scene in silence, well before he unleashes some artful, perfectly enunciated turn of phrase.
The actor has been brandishing his enviable diction and expressive mien for decades on Broadway, in The Wild Party and Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, in films from Zoolander to Theater Camp, and on TV shows, like the new Hulu sitcom Mid-Century Modern, where he stars with Nathan Lane and Matt Bomer as three mature gay friends who move in together à la The Golden Girls.
These are challenging times for news organizations. And yet it’s crucial we stay active and provide vital resources and information to both our local readers and the world. So won’t you please take a moment and consider supporting Metro Weekly with a membership? For as little as $5 a month, you can help ensure Metro Weekly magazine and MetroWeekly.com remain free, viable resources as we provide the best, most diverse, culturally-resonant LGBTQ coverage in both the D.C. region and around the world. Memberships come with exclusive perks and discounts, your own personal digital delivery of each week’s magazine (and an archive), access to our Member's Lounge when it launches this fall, and exclusive members-only items like Metro Weekly Membership Mugs and Tote Bags! Check out all our membership levels here and please join us today!
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