Michael
Ricca performed his new one-man show, ‘What Matters Most’at the
Central Square Theater in Cambridge from March 6-8.
After a week of Super Tuesday shock and disappointment, working on a grueling but rewarding project, and reports of the increasing number of Coronavirus cases close to home, being a recluse on Friday night was certainly tempting. But seeing singer Michael Ricca perform his new one-man show, What Matters Mostat the Central Square Theater in Cambridge to a packed house was exactly what the doctor ordered to elevate my mood.
Christmas celebrations are everywhere in Boston this month.
There’s new life to downtown streets as shoppers flit in and out of stores.
There are colorful lights on the Common, events for children, holiday parties
at local eateries. And there are shows scheduled back-to-back at the Emerson
Colonial (Dolly
Parton), Irving Berlin’s White
Christmas at the Boch
Wang Theatre, and at other smaller venues in and out of town.
Amidst all this fanfare, throughout this month, there’s the
venerable Holiday
Pops at Symphony Hall featuring maestro Keith Lockhart, the Boston Symphony
orchestra, the Tanglewood Festival Chorus, and, of course, Santa Claus.
There are many reasons to attend, and here are three of
them:
Symphony Hall is gussied up in bright reds,
greens, and golds, with wreaths and holly everywhere, a feast for the senses.
Inside, the light show continues with a palette of colors projected on the
walls high above the stage and a sound system that enhances, but does not
distract, from the famed acoustics of the hall itself.
A dramatic reading of The Polar Express, Chris von Allsberg’s classic tale of Xmas
wonderment, read aloud from the stage, during the performance I attended, by
veteran Boston actor Will LeBow who gives a flawless delivery of the text by
endowing the words with the excitement of a child’s discovery of his wintry
world.
The musical selections themselves which include
a sing-along of Christmas favorites.
In years past, I have applauded the surprises that Lockhart
brings to Holiday Pops. These have included photography projected on a large
screen – of the winter landscape of Concord, Mass. and the Asabet, Sudbury and
Concord rivers by BSO’s talented principle horn player Richard “Gus” Sebring,
for example, and a film of the northern lights dancing in the winter sky above
Yellowknife, Alberta, way up north in Canada.
If I were to have a Xmas wish, it would be to encourage
Lockhart to program more of these visual surprises, especially among the players
of the orchestra itself, who he has long championed.
(There is a visual surprise that closes the concert, and I
will not give it away so as not to be a spoiler, but here’s a hint: in a city
that has long been torn by racial discord, the end-of-concert images are
unifying and healing).
Attending the Holiday Pops is an annual tradition for many,
including this reporter, who finds his seat on the floor, orders a cup of
holiday grog, and basks in the warm tones of the musicians and their instruments.
It is an event I look forward to every year, and I strongly encourage you to
make it part of your Xmas list, too. For tickets and information, go to: https://www.bso.org