Chad Jones

S.F. Theater Examiner
Chad Jones has been covering theater in the Bay Area since 1992. He was the theater critic for the Oakland Tribune, Tri-Valley Herald and the San Mateo County Times. His work has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle and Theatre Bay Area magazine and he is the author of Web site, Chad Jones' Theater Dogs.

  

Examiner Feeds

These websites were picked by the S.F. Theater Examiner as useful resources.

Bay Area Theater Tickets

SF Theater Examiner Reviews

Intriguing Interviews

Most Popular SF Theater Examiner stories

Bay Area theaters

Great theater news resources

San Francisco Examiners

Dino-Ray Ramos
S.F. Fashion Examiner
Most Recent Post
Tim Gunn and Macy's 'Make it work!'
Rob Calonge
Cal Bears Examiner
Most Recent Post
Montgomery has Bears on the 'right' track
Brad Kava
S.F. Radio Examiner
Most Recent Post
Top 40 Pioneer Dies
 
 

(i.e. Los Angeles hiking, Los Angeles parenting)

SF native Felciano rocks out at ACT

September 12, 10:53 AM
by Chad Jones, S.F. Theater Examiner
 
 

Manoel Felciano, a Tony nominee on Broadway for
"Sweeney Todd," returns to his hometown to star in
American Conservatory Theater's "Rock 'n' Roll."
Photo by Ashley Forette photography
Manoel Felciano, a San Francisco native, had to play Broadway before he could make his hometown professional stage debut.

He’s starring in American Conservatory Theater’s season-opening production of the Tom Stoppard drama “Rock ‘n’ Roll,” now in previews and opening Wednesday, Sept. 17 and continuing through Oct. 18.

And he says the role of Jan, a sort of stand-in for Stoppard himself, is a good fit.

“Jan is something of a nerd, an intellectual,” Felciano says. “He’s a huge rock fan, and he became politically activated later in life. That’s me as well. Politically, the last seven years have been a galvanizing force.”

Through the upheaval of the play, which documents Prague’s revolution in the ’60s and continues into the ‘90s, rock music provides a sort of connective tissue between the emotions and the politics.

“In some ways, “Felciano says, “music is a political action in itself. The act of playing a record loud where it is forbidden, is a subversive act. I love that, and it’s part of what makes doing this play here in San Francisco so perfect. This is where some of the music on the soundtrack came from.”

Felciano, known as Mano to his friends, was born 30-some years ago to a Portuguese father and a Swiss mother. He started playing the violin at 5 but later added bass and guitar to his repertoire because “the violin is no way to get girls.” While attending the bilingual French-American International School here in San Francisco, Felciano was tapped for a small role in San Francisco Opera’s “Carmen” because he could speak French.

“I was 10 years old, and backstage, I had the gall –or was it lack of superego? – to go up to Placido Domingo and in Spanish tell him that he sang Spanish very well.”

That was the last time Felciano was on a professional stage in his hometown. After graduating from Yale and beginning a life on Wall Street, Felciano got sucked into the world of musical theater when he was cast by Hal Prince in the ill-fated Washington, D.C. production of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Whistle Down the Wind.”

From there, he landed swing and understudy parts in “Cabaret” and “Jesus Christ Superstar,” among others. While in “Superstar,” and after he fell off the stage and into the orchestra pit, injuring his hand, Felciano decided maybe it was time for a little formal acting training.


Manoel Felciano played opposite Patti
LuPone on Broadway in "Sweeney Tood."

Grad school paid off handsomely with the plum role of Tobias in John Doyle’s acclaimed 2005 production of “Sweeney Todd” in which the actors also played all the instruments (Felciano played violin, keyboard and clarinet). The gig scored Felciano a Tony nomination for best supporting actor.

Now he’s back on familiar territory – at least geographically. Other than doing a scene from Stoppard’s “The Real Thing” in grad school, this is his first Stoppard play and first time working with director Carey Perloff.

To connect with his character Jan’s love of rock, he need look no further than his own love of rock, which began when his dad played him a Beatles song. Felciano was about 10 and immediately headed to Recycled Records, the neighborhood record store on Haight Street, where he bought “Introducing the Beatles.”

Felciano ended up working at Recycled for a number of years, and on a recent visit to the vinyl specialty shop, he recognized the same turntable he used to spin as an employee.

With his own vinyl collection now numbering in the hundreds, Felciano says his prize LP is the Beatles’ “Yesterday and Today” album with the “butcher cover,” the photo of the boys amid decapitated babies and meat that was almost immediately recalled.

During rehearsals, the cast has been listening to the music Stoppard mentions in the play, everything from the Beach Boys to Guns N Roses, with detours into the seminal Czech rock group, The Plastic People of the Universe.

Talking about music, Felciano grows fevered.

“Music, especially the way it’s used in this play, is everything it’s supposed to be: irrational, sexual, visceral, personal, hypnotic. It makes you want to move, scream, f—k, dance, break things. Music is such a primal force.”

Stoppard is one of the most complex playwrights working, and his blend of intellect, passion, politics, world history and human drama is deep and rich. It also means a whole lot for the actors to work through.

“I trust what Stoppard has written will carry me,” Felciano says. “It’s like with Shakespeare or a Sondheim lyric, it’s all there in the words. The historical, cultural and political context is important, but what really matters is the character’s need and what the conflict is. Audiences instinctively get that.”

After “Rock ‘n’ Roll,” Felciano will hang around San Francisco a little longer before heading home to New York. He’s appearing in the Oakland East Bay Symphony’s “Zipperz” on Nov. 14, which features music by his childhood friend Nathaniel Stookey and a libretto by one of his former French-American International School teachers, Dan Harder. (Visit http://www.oebs.org/page/nov.htm for information)

Visit Manoel Felciano’s Web site at http://mano.felciano.com/

And of special note, The Plastic People of the Universe just happen to be performing in San Francisco at Slim’s on Thursday, Oct. 9. Tickets are $15. Visit http://www.slimstickets.com/evinfo.php?eventid=27443&sid=

For more info: ACT’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll” continues through Oct. 18 at 415 Geary St., San Francisco. Tickets are $15-$82. Call 415-749-2228 or visit www.act-sf.org for information.

Topics: American Conservatory Theater , theater news
   Subscribe   Feed
 
 

Comments

Name:  
Email Address:  
Comments:  

More from S.F. Theater Examiner

`Chicago' still knows the way to San Jose

December 2, 10:44 AM
American Musical Theatre of San Jose announced Dec. 1 that it was ceasing operations effectively and that its slate of upcoming shows, both self-produced and touring, were canceled.A call today from the press office of the touring musical "Chicago"... Read More
Topics: theater news , American Musical Theatre of San Jose

American Musical Theatre of San Jose ceases operations

December 1, 4:05 PM
The final curtain has fallen abruptly on the American Musical Theatre of San Jose.The group sent out a press release today announcing that it will cease operations effective immediately and that their productions of “Tarzan” and “42nd... Read More
Topics: theater news , American Musical Theatre of San Jose

Theatrical gifts for World AIDS Day

December 1, 11:10 AM
Today is the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day, a sad anniversary but an important one. Would that we were celebrating the end of AIDS in the world, but we’re a long way away from that particular party.There are many ways to give to AIDS research... Read More
Topics: theater news , Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS

Sweet stage relief from Black Friday

November 28, 8:43 AM
The turkey is digested, the family is restless and Black Friday sales just won’t do the trick.Time for some live entertainment.Here are three options for every taste.- “Ben Franklin in Paris,” 42nd Street Moon – Our local gem... Read More
Topics: theater news , Thick Description , 42nd Street Moon , Un-Scripted Theatre Company

Calling all teen Shakespeares!

November 26, 8:13 AM
Berkeley Repertory Theatre is seeking local high school playwrights to participate in the seventh annual Target Teen One Acts Festival. Opportunities abound for teens who want to explore acting, directing, playwriting, and producing – and now is... Read More
Topics: Berkeley Repertory Theatre , theater news

B'bye Bay Area: Kent Nicholson's new Horizons

November 25, 10:27 AM
Mountain View's TheatreWorks has announced that Kent Nicholson will be leaving his post as director of new works to become the director of musical theatre development at Playwrights Horizons in New York.He will be transitioning into the position... Read More
Topics: TheatreWorks , theater news

Hello, Possums! Edna’s still a grand Dame

November 24, 11:18 AM
Nobody works an audience like Dame Edna.Ten years ago, Bay Area audiences were gleefully brutalized by Australian actor Barry Humphries’ most celebrated creation in Dame Edna’s “Royal Tour.” That show injected new life into the... Read More

Faeries flit, Shakespeare smiles in `Were the World Mine'

November 23, 12:34 PM
Forget about “High School Musical.” The real teen movie musical to see is “Were the World Mine,” a favorite of the gay film festival circuit that is now seeing wider release.While Disney’s “HSM” franchise exploits... Read More
Topics: Shakespeare , movies

Family is a life sentence in D'Amore's arresting `Parole'

November 22, 12:07 PM
Decked out in his glittery, color-splattered Ed Hardy shirt, Carlo D’Amore is a little like animation come to life in his energetic solo show “No Parole” now at The Marsh in San Francisco. And that’s a good thing when you need... Read More
Topics: The Marsh , theater review