
Squishing the Patriarchy of Orlando Florida presented The Sting of Revenge: A Prequel of Sorts, at this year’s Orlando International Fringe Festival. I had sketched The Bugged Lady at a previous Fringe where she told a tale of revenge against a professor who abused her trust. That show was in a teaching lab at Leu Gardens which was perfect to present her creepy crawly arachnids.
Sandi Lynn wrote and starred in the play which was directed by her son Clark Levi. She played the part of the Bugged Lady and Robin Olson played the peppy high-school acquaintance.
The Bugged Lady ran into her old high school acquaintance, and they sat down for a coffee and a chance to catch up. The friend loved her high school days as a cheer leader, but the bugged lady only found her true passion when she started studying bugs as an undergraduate. She excelled at researching and understanding the power of venom.
The conversation turned to a boy in high school who got a girl pregnant and she had to drop out of school to have the child alone. The cheer leader wasn’t aware of this story and it turns out she ended up marrying the boy, who over time grew resentful and abusive. When the bugged lady learned of the abuse she began to convince her high school acquaintance that she had a deadly solution. The lights would flair a bright red and everything grew still as the bugged lady realized that her help was predestined.
The bugged lady had a clear box in her bag that had a scorpion inside. She took the box out and gently shook the container which resulted in the scorpion raising its poisonous tail. As she discussed her proposition, she walked the scorpion around the room so the people in the front row seats could get a very close look and feel rather uneasy.
I was disappointed to learn that this would be the final showing of the bugged lady. There is a visceral pleasure in having a middle-aged woman get away with murder, but it would be nice if an intelligent female detective could get close to discovering the venomous secret.
Robin Olson won a Critics’ Choice Award for Individual Performance in Drama for her portrayal of the emotionally distraught woman in the play. From where I was seated, I mostly saw the back of her head, but her performance as she weighed right and wrong was very convincing. Is murder the best solution to an abusive relationship? That is a hard sell. Maybe I only think that because I am a guy.
As I worked on this sketch, I ran out of water for my watercolors. I had to spit on my palette to add the final washes. This resulted in some rather sickly and rough washes. Maybe this messiness was meant to be for a show about planning a perfect murder.

At this year’s Orlando International Fringe Festival, SIN: A Modern Musical featured Jesus Christ (JC’s) return to a world that worships branding and social media relevance over faith. JC had to choose between building a fan base or finding love with a disciple named Judas. The actor playing Judas was particularly memorable in how he belted out his songs.
Erika McDonald has a squinting smile that is hard to forget. I have seen past Orlando International Fringe shows in which she performed and I was never disappointed. I therefore decided it was Teatime. This performance was at the Savoy in the Starlight Room which is a short hike from the Fringe lawn. The room was packed.
The Unbothering set consisted of hundreds of knick knacks hanging on screens at the back of the stage. Post its were pasted in an intricate pattern in an attempt to find order in the chaos. Marie was up against a website design job deadline that she has been putting off. Her boss was losing patience and ready to let her go. She was late on her rent and any time she started to focus on the website another advertiser or debt collector would break her concentration. From all the visual clutter and the attempts to find order in the chaos, it became clear the Marie has ADHD.
This two man show at the Orlando International Fringe Festival was quite hilarious. The show features Ashley Jones and Darren Stevenson using acrobatics, clowning, and physical theater to deconstruct and skewer outdated stereotypes of manhood. To start they asked all the men to stand in the audience. In one point in the play there was to be a call and response, and the men of the audience had to grunt out their response as loudly as they could. The second acrobat was pulled out of the audience making it seem like he was your average man.

The acclaimed one-woman show Private Parts: The Secrets We Keep, was written and performed by female actress and masterful storyteller Joanna Rannelli in Ten10 Brewing at this year’s Orlando International Fringe Festival. Her show was candid, raw and often funny.