Oklahoma
‘Oklahoma!’ revival show promises same iconic, American tale with a brand new vision
TEMPE, AZ (3TV/CBS 5) – “Oklahoma!” is probably going a kind of Broadway exhibits that involves thoughts once you consider true-blue American musicals. The present shattered expectations when it first hit the stage and when it arrived on the massive display screen in 1955, audiences flocked to see it.
In lower than every week, the 2019 Tony-winning, off-Broadway revival of “Oklahoma!” is able to shatter your expectations once more because it goes “sweeping down the plain” into Arizona State College’s Gammage Theatre. Directed by Daniel Fish, this present guarantees “a brand new imaginative and prescient on a basic story” because it weaves the story of a neighborhood hostile to an outsider who’s made their method into slightly frontier city within the Oklahoma territory.
Actor Hennessy Winkler stars as Will Parker within the manufacturing, a prize-winning steer roper who simply received the $50 he must marry his sweetie Ado Annie in a contest. Winkler mentioned he’s discovered his function extra than simply one thing fulfilling, he says it’s affirming. Winkler is a transgender man who transitioned a decade in the past.
“It’s been such a present,” Winkler mentioned. “Earlier than I began transitioning, my repertoire was all lady stuff. I didn’t wish to begin over. My voice was loopy. However after I began transitioning years in the past, I began getting roles.” He mentioned portraying Parker has been a number of enjoyable since he’s such a memorable character.
“He loves his lady! It’s been actually enjoyable to play him. We’ve quite a bit in widespread,” Winkler mentioned. “He’s actually written for levity and comedian reduction, which is a present for me.”
He mentioned within the time he’s been on tour, he’s had a number of transgender youth inform him that he’s been an inspiration to them. “We’re trans, we’re out right here, we do good work. You could be watching the present, and chances are you’ll not know that somebody is trans whereas they’re performing, however we carry ourselves to those characters.”
With regard to how completely different this revival is from previous productions, Winkler mentioned he believes good theatre is one thing that may be revived and tailored to suit with what’s wanted for the instances. “The director has taken this piece by conserving the textual content and music the identical, however shifting it to see a facet of the musical that we don’t often deal with,” he mentioned. “It’s stripped down, it’s horny. If you happen to’re searching for the film, you’re not going to seek out it.”
In accordance with Winkler, Fisher’s “Oklahoma!” brings sure parts to the forefront that audiences could have missed in previous iterations. “We’re not altering the story, simply highlighting parts to the story that’s fairly actually sung and danced over. This revival simply lets us get into the characters much more than these earlier exhibits did.”
Winkler mentioned he’s effectively conscious that viewers members will reply in a visceral method. “Since you’re taking one thing that’s thought of a basic, one thing that’s a part of individuals’s cultural expertise and upbringing and bringing change to it, it’s laborious for some viewers members who could really feel as if we’re doing one thing to their classical musical that by no means must be modified or touched.”
He mentioned the forged has already seen many viewers members grow to be responsive in quite a lot of methods. “Folks actually like it or actually hate it,” Winkler mentioned. “However, it’s like Curly says within the present, ‘Nation’s changin’ gotta change together with it.’” He mentioned the Rogers and Hammerstein Property has given Fisher’s revival their stamp of approval and believes the forged is doing proper by the unique iteration of the present.
“If something, you’re seeing an actual piece of New York theatre,” Winkler mentioned. “It’s actually cool to see one thing like this coming to Arizona.” As for what he hopes audiences take away with them from the present, he mentioned he actually hopes individuals perceive the story the forged is attempting to inform.
“I hope that individuals prefer it and revel in it. I hope individuals respect all of the work we’ve put into it and the story we’re attempting to inform,” he mentioned. “I hope [the audience] sees somebody like them on stage. I hope it sparks a hearth for theatre and appearing in anyone younger prefer it did for me after I was youthful.”
Opening night time might be Tuesday, Oct. 18, beginning at 7:30 p.m. on the ASU Gammage Theatre. Get your tickets right here.
Copyright 2022 KTVK/KPHO. All rights reserved.
Oklahoma
40 Years Later: Oklahoma Parole Board To Review Case Of Teen Who Killed Brother-In-Law
A man convicted of first-degree murder will stand in front of the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board to seek early release during a Stage 2 parole hearing on Tuesday.
Wayne Thompson was convicted at age 15 for the 1983 murder of his sister’s alleged abuser.
Thompson’s case gained national attention and influenced juvenile justice after the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1988 ruling in Thompson v. Oklahoma, which deemed it unconstitutional to execute offenders under 16.
His death sentence was commuted to life with parole eligibility. Now 57, Thompson cleared Stage 1 of the parole process late last year.
The murder, committed in Grady County, involved Thompson and accomplices beating, shooting, and disposing of Charles Keene’s body in the Washita River.
Thompson and his accomplices admitted to being under the influence of drugs while committing the crime.
Keene was alleged to have abused Thompson’s sister for nine years.
The Department of Corrections investigative report provided to the board does not recommend parole.
Thompson has sought parole twice since the 1990s, citing remorse and rehabilitation, though previous attempts were denied due to the crime’s violent nature.
Tuesday’s hearing comes as the board works through a backlog of cases from late 2024 and early 2025 following the resignations of two board members.
Oklahoma
No. 3 Oklahoma State overpowers No. 5 NC State wrestling 34-3 in Stillwater
The NC State Wolfpack won the first bout in their match against Oklahoma State, but those three points were the only ones NC State would earn all night, as the Cowboys dominated the Pack 34-3 in front of a wild home crowd.
Cael Hughes put the Cowboys on the board first with six huge team points via a pin over two-time All-American No. 7 Kai Orine of NC State; teammates No. 15 Carter Young and No. 14 Caleb Fish also added decisions in the first half of the dual at 141 and 157 pounds, respectively. No. 4 Tagen Jamison, meanwhile, added five points at 141 pounds with his fiery tech fall against Tyler Tracy of NC State.
Oklahoma State’s 197-pounder Luke Surber headlined the second half of the dual with his technical fall over No. 26 Christian Knop 18-2 for five team points of his own, while all four of his other teammates — No. 6 Cameron Amine, No. 3 Dean Hamiti, No. 3 Dustin Plott and No. 3 Wyatt Hendrickson — settled for decisions.
The Pack wrestled Oklahoma State tough, particularly in the heavyweight match where U23 world champion Isaac Trumble had fellow U23 world champ Hendrickson in some trouble, but Hendrickson survived and held on to his undefeated record.
The Cowboys win over NC State gives the program its ninth victory against the Pack and a second dominant ACC win over a top-ten team this season. Oklahoma State will have No. 22 West Virginia and No. 7 Northern Iowa next on the schedule though the match that will be circled on the calendar now is the Cowboys’ meeting with the No. 2 Hawkeyes on Feb. 23.
Complete results:
WEIGHT | BOUT RESULT | TEAM SCORE |
---|---|---|
125 | No. 11 Vince Robinson over No. 2 Troy Spratley, 7-3 | 3-0, NC State |
133 | Cael Hughes over No. 7 Kai Orine, FALL | 6-3, OSU |
141 | No. 4 Tagen Jamison over Tyler Tracy, 21-5 | 11-3, OSU |
149 | No. 15 Carter Young over No. 33 Koy Buesgens, 5-2 | 14-3, OSU |
157 | No. 14 Caleb Fish over No. 12 Ed Scott, 12-5 | 17-3, OSU |
165 | No. 6 Cameron Amine over No. 32 Derek Fields, 5-2 | 20-3 OSU |
174 | No. 3 Dean Hamiti over No. 19 Matty Singleton, 8-4 | 23-3, OSU |
184 | No. 3 Dustin Plott over No. 11 Dylan Fishback, 5-0 | 26-3, OSU |
197 | No. 7 Luke Surber over No. 26 Christian Knop, 18-2 | 31-3, OSU |
285 | No. 3 Wyatt Hendrickson over No. 4 Isaac Trumble, 10-4 | 34-3, OSU |
Oklahoma
Oklahoma women’s basketball NCAA Tournament resume for March Madness: Jan. 13
Jennie Baranczyk recaps OU women’s basketball win vs. New Mexico State
Jennie Baranczyk recaps OU women’s basketball win vs. New Mexico State
The Oklahoma women’s basketball team split a pair of SEC games last week.
OU (14-3, 2-2 SEC) suffered an 81-77 road loss to Mississippi State on Thursday. It then bounced back with a 77-62 home win over Texas A&M on Sunday.
OU dropped from No. 10 to No. 13 in the AP Top 25 Poll. It was ranked No. 11 last week in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll, which will release this week’s rankings on Tuesday.
Each week, The Oklahoman will take a look at OU’s recent results, break down how its NCAA Tournament resume has changed and compare it to the competition. Here’s where the Sooners stand as of Monday:
Oklahoma basketball results last week
Jan. 9: Mississippi State 81, Oklahoma 77
OU stumbled in its 81-77 road loss to Mississippi State on Thursday. The Sooners committed 21 turnovers, which the Bulldogs converted into 25 points. This marked OU’s first loss to an unranked opponent this season, and the team dropped to 1-2 in SEC play.
Jan. 12: Oklahoma 77, Texas A&M 62
OU bounced back by earning a 77-62 home win over Texas A&M on Sunday. Raegan Beers recorded 16 points and six rebounds, but she exited the game with an apparent shoulder injury late in the third quarter and didn’t return. OU head coach Jennie Baranczyk didn’t have an update after the game on Beers, who’s averaging team highs of 17.2 points and 9.2 rebounds.
Oklahoma basketball NET rankings: No. 12 (last week: No. 11)
- Quad 1 record: 3-3
- Quad 2 record: 1-0
- Quad 3 record: 1-0
- Quad 4 record: 9-0
Bracketology projections
ESPN: No. 4 seed vs. No. 13 Drake in Norman (Region 3) as of Jan. 10.
Next up: Missouri
Matchup: Oklahoma (14-3, 2-2 SEC) vs. Missouri (11-8, 0-4 SEC)
Tipoff: 6 p.m. Thursday; Lloyd Noble Center in Norman
Livestream: SEC Network+
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