Theatrius
  • NOW PLAYING
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!
  • Search Icon

Theatrius

Theater Reviews – San Francisco and Beyond

“Press Here, the Musical”—Kids Join Eagerly, at BACT, Berkeley

“Press Here, the Musical”—Kids Join Eagerly, at BACT, Berkeley

April 4, 2019 Rosa del Duca

Millennial Notes

Quick & Meehan Turn Toddler Book into Wacky World

by Rosa del Duca

If you’re familiar with Hervé Tullet’s award-winning picture book Press Here, you can understand my skepticism as I sat down with my three-year-old daughter and one-year-old son. How exactly would Bay Area Children’s Theatre turn a book with no story line into an hour-long musical?

The book guides young readers through a series of activities using yellow, red, and blue dots on the page, including pressing, tapping, tilting the book, and blowing the darkness away. I wasn’t the only one wondering.

Page and Turner, dressed all in black and white, looking like artsy, sophisticated clowns, arrive late—confused about when the show starts. The usher points to the program and sings, “Press Here!” Page (warm, spirited Rosemarie Star Kingfisher) and Turner (master of dry wit Andrew P. Quick, a ) smile politely. “Yes, we’re here to see ‘Press Here.’” The usher keeps singing: “Press Here.” It dawns on us to activate the play by pressing a dot on our programs and singing, “Boop!”

Kailah Cayou, Kris Anthony Williams, & Chelsea Wellott.  Photos by Alessandra Mello

“Is this one of those audience participation shows? Then I’m sitting in the back,” Turner announces, striding up the stairs. This line is particularly ironic, since Quick, the actor, actually wrote this imaginative, wildly-entertaining musical for toddlers.

Once the story line is activated, we meet the dots. Yellow Dot (friendly, inviting Kailah Cayou), Blue Dot (sweet, except when she’s being mischievous Chelsea Wellott), and Red Dot (goofy, animated Kris Anthony Williams) are always together. They morph from barbershop trio, complete with straw boaters, to glowing orbs, to devious troublemakers with easy, addictive energy.

Page and Turner find themselves preparing the Grand Opening of Mom & Pop’s Dot Shop.  But… every time they get things perfect, the dots burst out of ball-pit boxes, causing a mess, and refuse to go back.  “Uhhhh, no,” they say in unison. They run off stage, so Page and Turner chase them all over town before finally admitting defeat.

Andrew P. Quick (Turner) & Rosemarie Kingfisher (Page)

Like the book, where readers are invited to do it all over again, Page and Turner decide to go back to Mom and Pop’s Dot Shop to take another stab at a perfect grand opening. Each time is faster and wilder, and more kids race onstage to help clean up the ball mess. My daughter took this task very, very seriously.

Playwright Andrew Quick, director Nina Meehan, and music/lyrics strongman Austin Zumbro combine into a creative powerhouse. The endearing, engaging story, the fantastic acting, the staging, props, and musicality thrill us all!

At one point, Page invites us to learn the “Song for When Things Look Dark”:  “I see that you’re feeling blue,” the lyrics begin. “Sometimes I feel that way too. / We’re in this together, so don’t be afraid. / Just take a deep breath, / and blow all the darkness away.”

A few scenes later, when Page and Turner need a little encouragement, the melody plays and the audience joins in with barely a prompt, singing the entire song, pitch perfectly.  We feel that close  to Page and Turner,  part of their adventure. That’s a rare kind of magic for both kids and parents to find in a children’s production.

As a parent of two and veteran of BACT shows, we all heartily recommend the joyous, immersive “Press Here, the Musical,” a really fun show.

 

“Press Here, the Musical,” directed by Nina Meehan, book, music, and lyrics by Andrew Quick and Austin Zumbro, adapted from the book by Hervé Tullet,  at Bay Area Children’s Theatre, Berkeley, weekends through Sunday, May 12, 2019.  Info: bactheatre.org

Cast: Kailah Cayou, Rosemarie Kingfisher, Chelsea Wellott, Kris Anthony Williams, and Andrew P. Quick.

Moves to Sunnyvale: May 25 – June 2,
and moves to San Francisco: June 8 – 30.

Sign up for FREE reviews
in your mailbox.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.


Kids, Musical, Plays

Post navigation

NEXT
“Company” Unites Us in Quest for Love, at Altarena, Alameda
PREVIOUS
“Home” Invites Us to People & Parties, at Berkeley Rep
Comments are closed.

Current Shows

  • “Hamlet” Highlights Corruption in Surveillance State—at SPARC
  • “Goat Blood” Conjures Mixture of Race, Lust, & Demons—at Rhino
  • “Absolutely Science Fiction!” Blasts Off with Strangely Familiar Futures—at Z Space
  • “The Fre” Shows Conformity at Its Most Foolish—at OTP
  • “Arab Spring” Wrestles with Tradition vs. Modernity—at Golden Thread
  • “What Is To Be Done?” Fights Depression & Fascism, Brilliantly—at The Marsh
  • “Romeo & Juliet” Illuminates Personal & Political Connections—at The Public
  • “A Few Good Men” Engages in Hard Struggle for Truth—at Royal Underground
  • “Tiny Beautiful Things” Reveals Healing Power of Listening Deeply—at Town Hall
  • “Flight Risk” Offers a Master Class in Empathy—at The Marsh
  • “Girl, Interrupted” Exposes Machinery of Madness—at The Public
  • “The Lunchbox” A Musical Triumph Over Loneliness—at Berkeley Rep
  • “The House of Bernarda Alba” Exposes the Tragedy of Absolute Power—at OTP
  • “Dracula, A Feminist Revenge Fantasy, Really” Bends Genders for Juicier Stakes—at SF Playhouse
  • “Hamnet” Looks at Shakespeare through Women’s Eyes—at ACT

Menu

  • NOW PLAYING
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!

About us:

If you want to see the best plays & performances around the San Francisco Bay or beyond, read our reviews. We promise to give you a true report on the best shows.
Bay Area Critics Circle

Barry David Horwitz, Editor of Theatrius, is a Voting Member of the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics' Circle, SFBATCC.

Sign up for FREE reviews!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© 2026   All Rights Reserved.