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WPCNR Stage Door Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey, February 11, 2011:
Hey Mom, hey Dad snow got you down? Tired schlepping kids to activities, slipping on ice? Climbing ski slopes to put change in the parking meters? Back aching from shoveling? If you have one more snow you’ll go insane?
Look! Down there on the

Who, in the secret identity of Bess Weldon, mild-mannered housewife from
As a 2011 version of “Our Gang”-like music introduces the show, The Passion of the Hausfrau captures your interest from the first segment when The Hausfrau is taking kids to the supermarket and they don’t want to go(remember that torture?) You can catch Ms. Weldon in last two showings of The Passion of the Hausfrau at
Ms. Weldon holds on and sells every scene on the “Momma Coaster”– the creative metaphor that co-author Nicole Chaison has created to symbolize the never-ending drama of everyday motherhood and fatherhood, sustains your interest throughout. What a Ride it is!
About 20 different scenarios are portrayed by Ms. Weldon in this show. They are breezy, dramatic, to the point where you feel the pain and sense of frustration of the housewife, but never losing that feeling of amusement. It’s a fine line here that Ms, Weldon tightropes. She rides the Mommy Coaster and never jumps the track.
Chaison, the author, Weldon, the Co-writer/actor, and Annette Jolles, the Co-Writer/Director have cut a sophisticated, punchy script delivering pathos that’s palatable, understanding that is not sentimental, and still genuinely originally funny, that is (for a change} really laugh-out-loud funny. It captures the joy of babies in spite of their perpetual aggravating idiosyncracies.
Ms. Weldon, solid in the role, brings back snippets about your marriage and raising children. Hausfrau is a Valentine show giving young lovers and the newly married a textbook on how to handle and what you can expect when the + sign comes up on the baby tester.
The Hausfrau, more than any show here since the WPPAC revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, delivers the genuine guffaw; the open mouthed wonder of, well, what is going to happen next.
The mark of a good comedy is delivering the real laughs with a peppy message: It takes a superheroine and a superhero that can keep her sanity and Weldon, with the mugging of the late Gilda Radnor, the over-the-top faces of Lucille Ball, and the zaniness of Imogene Coca harnesses this script. She paints understanding and meaning in the parent chaos that will almost make you want to go back to baby days again – to discover yourself as the heroine in this “must-see” does. (Almost.)
That’s The SuperPower of The Hausfrau. She’ll bring back the passion of your life, your kids and your era.
I know. One hilarious vignette brought back memories of exactly what Weldon was talking about when daughter Dora,was scribbling a magic marker on the walls . I can remember an incident that is similar when my little creative daughter and her friend carved their initials on a priceless antique. That is all part of the wonderful world of raising kids.
Ms. Weldon is The Hausfrau, rivets you with one scene after another that could seem eerily similar to many incidents in many marriages and family experiences on her every word as she goes through scenarios of motherhood that anyone who has ever been a mother or dad raising children will instantly recognize. See yourself and remember incidents in your raising children that will make you laugh and even conjure up memories.
It is a unique show, based on a graphic novel created by Nicole Chaison. It’s easily the funniest new production, we’ve seen at the WPPAC.
The set gains lots of laughs from the original drawings by Nicole Chaison, the original author of the graphic novel from which this play was developed. Very funny cartoons, drawn by Chaisson of the Mommy Coaster illustrate the points of Ms. Weldon’s monologue, which goes on for an hour and a half. It’s genuine laughter. You won’t have to chime in with polite chuckles.
WPCNR is pleased WPPAC reached out and invited us. The Passion of the Hausfrau is the kind of good new work that needs exposure and if this is going to be the mission of the theatre, Hausfrau (which has performed in
Bring Bess Weldon too, an actress who is just so believable in the part. The audience can identify with this woman. Bess Weldon is the real deal.
She delivers a fast-moving very short hour and a half without interruption. The incidents go on and on – not missing a nuance: fighting with the kids in the car fighting with the kids in the supermarket in during your mother’s acid criticisms of the way you manage your home. The delightful memories of your grandmother. The joys of pregnancy. The jealousy and the pang of perhaps losing the career you thought you once would have had and how you can recapture it.
I mean, Ms. Weldon’s imitation of the deadpan husband’s, “Hey, hon, how you doing?” will bring sheepish grins to any husband. Well, it is so typical. Anyway, I chuckle as I write this, but this is unlike a lot of shows you will see.
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The unique thing about this is if you’re a young couple thinking about having children. This may scare you off. On the other hand, it points out the real pleasures to be had in a family, how a person can grow and find themselves and perhaps find their true mission.
Sometimes she talks and she delivers her lines a little too fast and we miss one or two, but that may simply be due to timing, and my hearing. The lines are so good. The production is quite sharp. It does not drag
How the passion of the hausfrau came to be is a story all in itself. Two housewives,living in
Call Buddy Fidler!
Where is Mr. DeMille? They’re ready for their close-up!
And get me Sondheim for the score.
And you Mr. and Mrs. White Plains can say you saw it when The Passion of the Hausfrau got its start.
To inquire for tickets about Saturday evening’s show and the Sunday matinee contact, WPP a C at 877-548-3237 or contact the box office before the show, the box office phone is 3281 600 extension 13 or go to the WP PAC website at www.wppac.com
WPPAC Footlights:
Sunday evening after the matinee performance of Hausfrau, The WPPAC will present its annual fundraising gala at 6 PM, honoring Margaret Preston of U.S. Trust Bank of
The evening begins with a wine and hors d’oeuvres reception and silent auction which includes a wide range of items from sports memorabilia to family vacation and entertainment options, restaurant, spa and hotel certificates and designer jewelry to cultural and sporting events. The program for the evening will be the award ceremony followed by a Gala musical performance hosted by Tony Award® and Emmy Award® winner (and new WPPAC Board member), LaChanze (The Color Purple). Joining LaChanze will be Broadway performers Carter Calvert (It Ain’t Nothin’ but the Blues), Darius de Haas (Rent), Kecia Lewis-Evans (The Drowsy Chaperone), Cady Huffman, (Tony Award® Winner, The Producers), and J. Robert Spencer (Jersey Boys and Tony Award® nominee, Next to Normal) as well as Jazz Vocalist and International Recording Artist, Gregory Generet. Regular tickets are $125.







