It’s being produced by the Universal Music Group with the cooperation of Sinatra’s daughter, Tina, and will premiere in October in Birmingham, England. Playing Malvolio, Olivia’s pompous steward, is Greg Germann, of Fox’s “Ally McBeal.”Īfter finishing up “Twelfth Night,” Marshall will focus her directorial energies on her next big project, a new bio-musical about Frank Sinatra in his younger recording years. Starring in the production as Duke Orsino is Biko Eisen-Martin, who recently played Olympic sprinter John Carlos in the Globe’s “The XIXth (The Nineteenth).” Viola/Cesario is played by Naian González Norvind of NBC’s “Amsterdam” Olivia is played by Medina Senghore of SYFY network’s “Happy” and Sebastian is played by San Diego actor Jose Balistrieri. There are delightful comic moments, but also real genuine emotion with these characters longing for something they don’t have.”Įdelstein said he loves the work that Marshall has done at the Globe, creating what he calls “beautifully upholstered productions” that possess “an elegance and a beautiful sense of wit.” They’re trying to fight their way to their joy and sunshine. “They’re lost in some way and they have a void they’re trying to fill. “They are all searching for something,” she said. Marshall said she loves “Twelfth Night” for its characters. There’s a fluidity and elegance about it, but it’s relaxed.” An original score is being composed for the show by Miriam Sturm and Michael Bodeen, who collaborated on the Globe’s “The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci” earlier this year. Marshall has set her “Twelfth Night” in something like the Regency era because “it was a looser time that didn’t have the stiff formality of the baroque period before it or the Victorian period after it. Then Sebastian turns up alive, looking identical to his disguised twin sister, causing more romantic confusion. Instead, Olivia falls in love with Cesario and Viola is secretly in love with Orsino. Viola disguises herself as the boy page Cesario and is tasked by the Illyrian Duke Orsino to woo the Countess Olivia in his stead. We are a concerted threat to legacy media organizations, and proudly so.Set on the Illyrian seacoast, “Twelfth Night” is the story of young adult twins Viola and Sebastian who become separated in a shipwreck and each presumes the other dead. SanDiegoVille reports fairly on the top entertainment happenings and small businesses doing it right, while not shying away from hard topics and questions you won’t read in local publications where editorial direction is ultimately steered by the sales department. We pound the pavement for our exclusive coverage instead of waiting for permission to break news from the fancy public relations firms that regularly spoon-feed mainstream media sources their story ideas, influencing journalists’ opinions with freebies and fanfare. We are a different kind of news site with no desire to conform to antiquated ideas of how many believe journalism should be. SanDiegoVille was created in 2010 to report about all the fun & delicious happenings taking place around America's Finest City and we quickly earned a reputation for being a news source for and by those that shun archaic journalistic practices in pursuit of reporting the real story.
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