Shenandoah (Retrospective Series)

Set in Virginia during the Civil War, Shenandoah was a musical based on a 1965 Jimmy Stewart movie.  Opening in 1975, the show played for 1,050 performances on Broadway.  While it lost the Tony for Best Musical to The Wiz, John Cullum won for Best Actor and it also won Best Book.  For this Retrospective Series, I was able to view a 1994 production at the Goodspeed Opera House (East Haddam, CT) which has been preserved in the New York Public Library’s Theater on Film and Tape.  Having just recently revisited The Wiz, I believe Shenandoah is the better musical.

“Raise the Flag of Dixie” opens this show with Confederate and Union soldiers setting the action.  We quickly go to the Anderson’s 500 acre family farm.  Charlie Anderson is a widower with many sons and a couple of daughters.  As to why the family is ignoring the war despite its proximity, Charlie sings “I’ve Heard It All Before” noting “they always got a holy cause that’s worth dying for.”  In the local church, the preacher condemns the northern barbarians and clearly states that the congregation’s duty is to God, to our neighbors and to the state of Virginia and our way of life.

Shenandoah’s plot then takes off with the family visited by some Confederate soldiers attempting to recruit Charlie’s sons into the war.  An excellent scene is punctuated by “Next to Lovin’ (I Like Fightin’),” as the sons sing “next to smelling me a rose, I like thumpin’ on some toes.”  Famous horseplay choreography follows with a recognizable nod to Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.  As this story unfolds, the Anderson’s are drawn into the conflict which surrounds them and threatens their family and farm.

There are two meditations in this show, one in each Act.  Charlie talks to his dead wife Martha.  “Virginia’s gone crazy, ma.  Everybody’s screaming state’s rights, war.”  In the song “Meditation” we hear that “this farm don’t belong to Virginia…. my sons bleed, but not for the South.”  While Shenandoah is definitely a period piece, its messages still have relevance today: “there’s always one trouble with the truth, once you see it you’re stuck with it.  And it’s always in the middle, right between two angry ideas.”  Given our current political climate, it would seem that now is exactly the right time to revive this show.

Shenandoah is a well-written story.  There are romances, newborns and friendships.  The strength of the book is this juxtaposition of family, values and a war which does and does not concern them.  The youngest son Robert has a black best friend Gabriel who gets to sing the show’s most famous number  “Freedom” with Robert’s sister at the start of Act II.  Things get darker while Charlie tries to convince his grown children that “Papa’s Gonna Make It Alright.”  In the final meditation, Charlie summarizes “it’s like all wars, the undertaker is the winner.”

The critics were a bit mixed in their reviews of Shenandoah ranging from dumb story to very likable to first-rate.  This Goodspeed production makes a strong case for this show.  The family relationships, in particular the nearly grown adult children, come across organically.  That is obviously a credit to the actors and director.  Because of that, the story picks up emotional depth and dimensions on the path to its climatic ending.

As a musical, I’d say The Wiz has far better tunes than the country and western tinged score of Shenandoah.  As an evening’s entertainment, I’d say that Shenandoah is the stronger piece overall.  This story about civil rights, family values, states’ right and war remains relevant.  A show primed and ready for a new generation of theatergoers to experience.

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/retrospectiveseries/thewiz

Young Frankenstein (Old Town Playhouse, Traverse City, MI)

Parked “Up North” with friends, we decided to take in a local production of the musical Young Frankenstein.  The venue was the Old Town Playhouse in downtown Traverse City.  The company’s mission is to be a volunteer-based organization promoting quality community theater experiences for the people of Northwest Michigan by providing educational opportunities and entertainment in the theatrical arts.  I saw the original Broadway cast of this show and thought it a rather bland affair.  This version was infinitely more entertaining and, importantly, much more fun.

Young Frankenstein is based on the very funny Mel Brooks film from 1974.  The movie was a riff on 1930’s horror films heavily doused in Borscht Belt humor.  Young Victor Frankenstein, a brain surgeon in New York, is the only remaining heir and has inherited the family castle in Transylvania.  The musical added in songs of varying quality, the best one (by far) is “Putting On The Ritz.” That song was also in the movie.

Why is the Old Town Playhouse’s version of this show much more enjoyable than the original?  This musical seems much funnier in a more intimate setting.  Broadway’s Lyric Theater is ginormous, this venue is 277 seats.  The very funny “Roll in the Hay” performed on a traveling wagon was lost on the big stage.  Here the number is staged up close, the moving wagon is pantomimed and as Inga, Danielle Pelshaw yodeled like a pro.

On the whole, the singing in this production was excellent.  Inspired clowning all around, especially by Steve Ford as Igor.  I have to give the best in show award to John Klapko who played Frankenstein’s Monster.  This character can make you laugh out loud.  In the hands of Mr. Klapko, the laughs were elevated into guffaws.  His vocalizations, physical movements and facial expressions hit the comedy bulls-eye.

The creative team has staged a high quality production.  I particularly loved the set design by Matt McCormick.  He not only captured the essence of the castle and the laboratory,  but he also allowed for cleverly efficient scene changes for what I imagine was a relatively modest budget.  For a troupe of volunteer players putting on a nicely orchestrated musical with a $28 top ticket price, this Young Frankenstein is a grand value.  I will be back to the Old Town Playhouse.  Kudos to them and their donors who keep our theaters alive.

www.oldtownplayhouse.com

Carousel

Broadway is filled with magical wonders this spring.  There is the literal magic performed by wizards within the groundbreaking stagecraft of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.  Elsa’s got a way with ice in Frozen.  There is the spectacular watery wonderland of SpongeBob SquarePants.  Now I can add Carousel to this list.  The magic here, however, is defiantly and ingeniously old school.  Santo Loquasto’s scenic design harks back to Broadway magic from when this show originally ran in 1945.  This version is a scintillating combination of placing both the story and its staging in the past (cleverly painted backdrops) but adding some modern flourishes (opening carousel).

Time magazine named Rogers and Hammerstein’s Carousel the greatest American musical of the 20th Century.  Having never seen this show before, I’m glad I waited for this avalanche of greatness.  The book, music and lyrics are so well integrated from light-hearted comedy to the broodingly darker scenes.  The melodies are gorgeous while the words give insight into these characters and their complicated feelings.

Joshua Henry (Violet, The Scottsboro Boys) plays the tightly wound but irresistible carnival barker Billy Bigelow.  Jessie Mueller (Waitress) is our comparatively innocent Julie Jordan who falls for him right from the start.  Both sing beautifully and the acting is so natural and detailed that these character’s personalities are heartbreakingly alive and electrically charged.  The chemistry on display propels all of which follows.  And that chemistry extends across all the principal performers and a superb ensemble.

Carousel and its predecessor Oklahoma are famous for their Agnes De Mille ballets.  The show opens with a prelude “The Carousel Waltz” choreographed by Justin Peck.  The dancing in this show is extraordinary.  It’s original yet harkens back to its ballet heritage.  The movement from these dancers precisely aligns with the musical notes while embracing emotion and never breaking character.  Hands down the finest choreography in years.

Another big highlight is Lindsay Mendez (Significant Other) as Julie’s best friend Carrie Pipperidge.  Carrie has great songs and the best jokes.  Ms. Mendez nails everything perfectly in character.  The first song in the show is her duet with Ms. Mueller called “You’re a Queer One, Julie Jordan.”  I found it remarkable that these two actresses sounded like they were singing in a long ago style.  When you add in the visual surroundings of this old school musical, the rewards are seemingly endless.  We just have to thank director Jack O’Brien (The Coast of Utopia, Hairspray) for an awesome revival of a masterpiece of American musical theater.  This Carousel is essential viewing and a very special brand of magic.

www.carouselbroadway.com

Happy Birthday, Wanda June

On the cover of the program, a girl in pigtails is wearing a happy birthday paper hat posed with a rifle in her hand in front of green balloons.  Presumably she is the titular character in Happy Birthday, Wanda June, a play by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.  Originally produced off-Broadway in 1970,  Mr. Vonnegut was at the height of his fame having just written Slaughterhouse Five.  This play about a bombastic war hero who glistens with violence and oozes Neanderthal levels of testosterone had to speak loudly to the burgeoning anti-war sentiment in America at the time.

Almost fifty years later the play speaks as loudly but differently.  The plot here is loosely based on Homer’s Odyssey.  Harold Ryan is a decorated war hero having killed more than 200 people and countless animals for sport.  He and his buddy (the man who dropped the bomb on Nagasaki) travelled to the Amazon Rainforest in search of diamonds but are now missing for eight years.  His wife, similarly named Penelope, and their twelve year old son have been waiting in an unchanged home.  Taxidermied heads on the walls.  The son hopes for dad’s return.  The wife is juggling suitors.

Mr. Vonnegut’s messaging here was directly addressing the violence of men and warmongering.  In 2018, the play miraculously appropriates the Trump era and enriches this wildly absurdist dark comedy.  When Harold returns, we meet a raging egomaniac.  His third, much younger wife has grown significantly between 1962 and 1970.  She is now educated.  He says that educating women is akin to pouring honey on a Swiss watch.  They both don’t work.  Gargantuan brutishness and bluster with a complete lack of self-awareness dominates this character’s revoltingly hilarious persona.

In a tiny off-off Broadway theater, Wheelhouse Theater Company has blasted a home run out of the park.  Jason O’Connell plays Harold Ryan.  The performance is a combustible combination of star turn and train wreck resulting in one of this year’s most exciting actor/character matches to appear on any New York stage. The creative team excelled at striking the right tone visually and in words.  Jeff Wise, a founding member of this company, confidently directed and cast Happy Birthday, Wanda June.  All of the actors were excellent, nicely balanced between convincing and cartoonish.  Brittany Vasta’s scenic design and Christopher Metzger’s costumes were spot on, complementing the period and riffing on the absurdity of the situations.

Is the play a bit creaky and old?  Not a chance of coming to that conclusion with this production.  Blogging multiple times a week, I see a lot of theater.  Sometimes you take a shot and hit the bulls-eye.  When that happens, you remember the company’s name, Wheelhouse, and you commit to seeing their next project.  Happy Birthday, Wanda June is one of the best surprises of my theatergoing year.

www.wheelhousetheater.com

Me and My Girl (Encores!)

Christian Borle is always so much fun to watch on stage.  From his Tony winning turns in Peter and the Starcatcher and Something Rotten to last year’s Falsettos, he has built a very impressive theater resume.  Casting him as Bill Snibson in the Encores! staging of Me and My Girl seemed an inspired choice.  Based on a 1986 Broadway re-imagining of a 1937 musical by Noel Gay, the show is a chance to prance through old school, grandly silly entertainment.  With Christian Borle in the captain’s seat, the production is a smooth ride.

Our hero, Bill Snibson, is a Cockney lad who finds out that he is the long-lost fourteenth Earl of Hareford.  As the sole heir, he inherits the manor, the fortune and the title, with one stipulation.  He must become a proper English gentleman as judged by his Aunt Maria, the Duchess of Dene played by the grand ham Harriet Harris (Thoroughly Modern Millie).  What will happen to his Cockney girlfriend Sally?  Add in a butler, a vampish gold digger and assorted characters from both sides of society, stir the pot and watch them all strut their stuff in the show’s famous number, “The Lambeth Walk.”  Try to forget that tune when you leave this show.  It’s both catchy and ridiculous.

Me and My Girl is certainly a swiftly paced piece of smile-inducing goofiness.  The best moments included the Act II opener, “The Sun Has Got His Hat On.”  As the Honorable (but not rich) Gerald Bolingbroke, Mark Evans (The Play That Goes Wrong) delivered a public lesson in show stopping madcap frivolity.  Laura Michelle Kelly (Finding Neverland) beautifully sings the excellent “Once You Lose Your Heart.”  As the Lady Jaqueline Carstone, Lisa O’Hare (A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder) makes a great villainous gold digger, gorgeously costumed by Emilio Sosa.

I saw this production and Robert Lindsay’s Tony Award winning performance during the original run.  His Bill Snibson was also a clown but perhaps more debonair than Mr. Borle’s physically rougher, but still hilarious, interpretation.  For an evening of escapist silliness, this Encores! version of Me and My Girl was an agreeable pleasure.

www.nycitycenter.org

Frozen

The Academy Award winning song “Let It Go” from the colossal hit movie Frozen closes Act I.  Memorably staged and sung by Cassie Levy (Les Miserables, Wicked, Ghost) as Elsa, the moment is hugely successful.  The audience comes alive and the enormous expectations are fulfilled.  I did not see this movie so my review comes largely from a place of fresh discovery or new fallen snow.  Overall, I’d say Frozen was just ok.

This musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale The Snow Queen has enjoyable and fun stretches.  Both of the non-human animated characters Sven (the reindeer) and Olaf (the snowman) are cleverly rendered and performed.  The young men in the center of the story are nicely played by Jelani Alladin (Kristoff) and John Riddle (Hans).  Both developed great chemistry with the other sister Anna, who despite being less magical has the far more interesting storyline.  In the performance I saw, understudy Aisha Jackson was confident, funny and heartwarming as sister Anna.  “Love Is an Open Door,” the duet sung by Hans and Anna is a high point.  

Some of the effects that turn our Norwegian town of Arendelle into a frozen winter are quite cool.  Given the visual competition this year on Broadway, notably from the watery wonderland that is SpongeBob SquarePants and the magical wizardry of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, the scenic design and projections of Frozen suffer a bit by comparison.  There are certainly good moments executed.  The whole experience though falls a touch flat as if  we are watching a really well-executed theme park experience.

Frozen’s creative team is normally top notch, from Director Michael Grandage to Choreographer Rob Ashford.  I just wasn’t sure if they committed to the important decision of which cartoon style they were showcasing.  The trolls from the movie here are outfitted as the humans from the movie Planet of the Apes with tails added on.  Their song “Fixer Upper” would not be out of place in a Lion King spinoff.  In that scene, I could not sense Norway anywhere.  The ensemble here sing and dance without representing much of anything.  They are boring save for the second act opening which was truly surprising and very witty.

All of that puts a lot of pressure on our sisters to carry this show.  Ms. Levy is a beautiful singer but Elsa’s brooding needed a bit more sparkle (and edge?) to help enhance what is oddly the far weaker side of this tale.  Her sister Anna’s more mortal adventure with her cartoonish companions was clearly the journey I wanted to be on.  One sister has the better adventure.  One sister has the magical visuals and gets to belt the big song.  Frozen never quite pulls everything together.  So I have to firmly land on “just ok.”

www.frozenthemusical.com

Three Tall Women

Two time Academy award winning actress Glenda Jackson (Women in Love, A Touch of Class), returns to the New York stage after a 23 year run in the British parliament.  She plays the 91 (or is it 92) year old “A.”  Laurie Metcalf of the newly rebooted Roseanne and last year’s Tony winner for A Doll’s House, Part 2 plays B, a 52 year old woman.  Alison Pill (The Lieutenant of Inishmore) is the 26 year old C.  Edward Albee  wrote Three Tall Women years after he had fallen out of favor.  It was a triumphant return to form.  Originally staged in 1994, he was awarded his third Pulitzer Prize.

The play opens with three women conversing in what is obviously a home of considerable wealth.  Ms. Jackson plays the cantankerous older woman, regaling stories of the past while curtly admonishing her caretaker played by Ms. Metcalf.  Ms. Pill is the lawyer who has been summoned to try to clean up the discarded unpaid bills and unsigned paperwork.  An adopted child of wealthy parents, Mr. Albee was famous for  his conflicted relationship with his mother.  In Three Tall Women, he explores her attitudes and feelings through various stages of her life.

An exceptional piece of theater is given a grand staging.  The set (Miriam Buether) and costumes (Ann Roth) are memorable.  Under Joe Mantello’s fine direction, the story unfolds simply at first before turning boldly theatrical.  This play is thoughtful, funny and rich with ideas while being elegantly introspective.  These actresses get to entertain us, shock us, make us laugh and, best of all, give us insight into the human condition from the perspective of wisdom that only experience can muster.

I’ve now seen Laurie Metcalf on the stage a number of times.  Given how famous she is I find it fascinating that somehow her well-known voice and body language somehow transforms from instantly recognizable to slowly morph into whatever character she is playing.  Glenda Jackson’s A, however, steals the show here.  Her role is rich with biting one-liners and hilarious life stories juxtaposed with encroaching senility and, inevitably, impending death.  Her performance is crisp and heartbreaking.  Three Tall Women is an excellent play given a sterling production.  I hope I’ll get to see Ms. Metcalf tackle A in a couple decades.

www.threetallwomenbroadway.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/adollshousepart2

The Birds

A comedy by the Greek playwright Aristophanes, The Birds was first performed in 414 BC.  The play begins with two middle-aged men stumbling across a hillside wilderness.  They are in search of the  legendary Thracian king Tereus who once was metamorphosed into a hoopoe bird.  Both are fed up with Athens, its law courts, politics, false oracles and military antics.  A brilliant idea is born.  The birds should stop flying about and build a grand city in the sky.  Not only would they be able to lord over men, they could also blockade the Olympian gods.  No sacrifices from humans means the gods would starve into submission, much like the Greeks had recently done to the island of Melos.

Staged in the large St. Ann’s Warehouse, this production has been co-produced by the Onassis Cultural Centre-Athens.  With the exception of bird caws, the entire play is performed in Greek with English subtitles.  There is a band on stage for the semi-successful yet indulgent musical interludes.  The original also had a Chorus and songs.  Scholars have debated whether this piece was a political allegory or simply escapist entertainment.  Characters who are fed up with law courts, politics, false oracles and military antics?  2500 years later and thrust into cray cray America, The Birds feels like both.

How to describe this production?  We begin with the two men cluelessly wandering around as if this were a Greek production of Waiting For Godoh.  (Except it should been renamed Waiting For Dodo.)  Toss in bizarre visuals which would be completely at home in any episode of David Lynch’s Twin Peaks.  Add a dash of silent movie realness and a little French-inspired surrealism.  Wrap all of this in a very modestly budgeted but cleverly executed Cirque de Soleil environment.

The Birds is the longest of Aristophanes’ surviving plays.  Parts of this exercise are fun to watch.  Other sections drag on and on.  While The Birds is creative, amusing and historically interesting, it is also just too long.  Might this artistic Greek cassoulet be best appreciated by elite intellectuals?  Like the man sitting next to me repeatedly checking his phone throughout the performance?  When it was over he leapt to his feet loudly shouting “bravo, bravo.”  I sensed a false oracle in our midst.

www.stannswarehouse.org

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Parts One and Two

#KeepTheSecrets is the message delivered at the end of both parts of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.  No worries here as will you not need any spoiler alerts.  That is a major reason I started theaterreviewsfrommyseat.  Theater, especially Broadway, is a sizable investment and too many reviews contain detailed plot summaries which I believe unnecessarily spoil the experience.  As a fan and reader of all the books, I was eagerly anticipating this full day extravaganza.

The Showbill contains a four page “Journey to the Eighth Story” which acts as a refresher and a brief primer for muggles who arrive not knowing the significance of the lightning bolt scar.  We are told that this play takes place nineteen years later.  Harry is now 37 years old.  He, Ginny, Ron and Hermoine watch their children board the Hogwarts Express.  It certainly helps to know this series though.  When the audience gasps, it’s more fun to know why.

What’s the verdict?  First and foremost, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is beautifully faithful to the tone of the series and its characters.  There’s still a young adult vibe.  The patented mixture of humor, drama, magic, friendship, adolescent angst and adventure is all there.  The play was written by Jack Thorne based on an original story he co-created with J.K. Rowling and the Director, John Tiffany.  The result is a believable continuation to the series in combination with the required theatrical magic expectations of a nostalgic, well-informed audience.

What turns this play into riveting fantasy isn’t simply our good fortune in spending more time with these characters.  The creativity is everywhere.  The set design by Christine Jones is remarkable.  The original score by Imogen Heap is cinematic and breathtaking.  Steven Hoggett’s choreography is stunning and inventive, nominated for a Tony despite this not being a musical.  The visual effects raise the bar for Broadway magic.

And the actors deliver the goods.  Jaime Parker (Harry Potter) and Noma Dumezweni (Hermoine Granger) were especially fine.  The casting of Alex Price as Draco Malfoy and Paul Thornley as Ron Weasley are ideal.  But it is Anthony Boyle’s portrayal of Scorpius Malfoy that steals the show in a bravura performance.  This epic has a forty person cast.   Mr. Tiffany’s direction paces this grand adventure’s plot to maximize the seemingly unending peaks and stunning surprises; no small achievement. 

Any problems to note?  The five hour experience does contain some story exposition here and there.  Every minute cannot be thrilling, extraordinary and astonishing.  I do have a favorite scene which blew me away.  Oh, that does not really narrow it down very well.  I was continually impressed by an avalanche of truly memorable moments.  Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is a supremely creative fresh new monument to this beloved series.  You’ll have to see it for yourself to guess my favorite scene.  My pick will undoubtedly be in your top five, guaranteed.

www.harrypottertheplay.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/puffstheplay

Summer and Smoke (Classic Stage Company)

Finally there is a production in the 50th anniversary year of the Classic Stage Company worth shouting about.  Thanks to Director Jack Cummings III and his Transport Theater Group’s co-production, Summer and Smoke is a triumphant reconsideration of a Tennessee Williams’ play not often listed amongst his classics.  In 1948 this drama followed A Streetcar Named Desire on Broadway and was later made into a film starring Geraldine Page (Oscar nominated for Best Actress).  The part of Alma Winemiller is that good and in this production Marin Ireland (reasons to be pretty, Ironbound) cements its reputation as a great role in an exceptional piece of theater.

Summer and Smoke takes place in Glorious Hill, Mississippi from the turn of the century through 1916.  Alma is a music teacher and a reverend’s daughter, impressed by the grandeur of Gothic cathedrals.  All her life she has grown up next door to John Buchanan, a doctor’s son, who is more interested in women and gambling than academic studies of human anatomy.  Naturally we are in unrequited love territory.  He accuses her of relying on that “worn out magic.”  Nathan Darrow (Richard III, House of Cards) plays John and the chemistry between he and Ms. Ireland are electric, tense and crackling.  Both performances are stellar.

When you surround these fully realized characters with an excellent supporting cast and a production this fine and focused, the result is simply extraordinary entertainment.  Transport Theater Group is known for staging re-imagined American classics such as last season’s flawless Picnic and Come Back Little Sheba.  The commonality between all of these productions is deceptively simple presentations.  Sets and scenes are suggested with as few props as possible.  The words and the characters are the central focus.  When the acting can rise to this challenge, you are rewarded with quality as high as this production of Summer and Smoke.

www.classicstage.org

www.transportgroup.org