|
TM
Artistry and Politics
Animate This Season’s Musicals
By Lucy Komisar
Forget the morose assertions that the musical is
doddering or dead. It has never been more relevant and alive. Whether they
are new works or revival or adaptations of novels, when musicals dare to
confront real social issues, they are vibrant and exciting and – if the
music and lyrics and acting keep pace – they make exhilarating theater. Look
at four good examples that came to the stage this season. Their excitement
comes from a mixture of artistry and politics.
“Wonderful Town”: Two young women conquer New York.
With the backdrop of 1935 Greenwich Village and the
sounds of thirties jazz, this affectionate feminist confection tells what
happens to sisters Ruth ( Donna Murphy) and Eileen (Jennifer Westfield) when
they arrive from the provincial mid-West and discover, one, a pervasive
contempt for women intellectuals, and two, the casting couch.
It’s all done with clever pulsating dance numbers and
witty tuneful songs. A smashing opening ballet is a brassy pastiche of
village people. Director-choreographer Kathleen Marshall gives the show a
zingy elegance. The sisters warble about “Ohio yo-yo-yo.” They harmonize in
rich soprano and alto tones.
There are lessons in songs such as “One Hundred Easy
Ways” to lose a man. They all involve showing woman letting it show that she
is smart. That’s Ruth, a sharp lady who wants to be in publishing.
Eileen’s troubles start when she looks for an acting
job and discovers that producers want to hold auditions prone.
There’s a clever lampoon of macho Hemingway mixed with
the sense of a Noel Coward divertissement. And a good humored joke about
ethnic stereotyping when a line of policemen do an Irish jig; one of them is
black.
“Wonderful Town” is funny, witty, clever, joyous. It
makes you think. It’s subversively feminist. It lifts your spirits. The
sultry, jazzy dancing doesn’t hurt. Nor does Leonard Bernstein’s
scintillating sounds. John Lea Beatty’s pastel sets are so evocative you
wish you could buy copies at the annual art show at Washington Square Park.
“Wicked”: Witch fights privilege and repression in Oz.
This behind the scenes revisionist prequel of “The
Wizard of Oz” is a political allegory about racism and discrimination. It’s
fascinating as a literary work and stunning as theater. Based on the book
by Winnie Holzman, it’s an updated Animal Farm. It’s a play that exists on
two levels, one for the kids and another for adults, who will find it
intellectually stimulating. It’s Oz before Dorothy got there.
You might think this was a typical high-tech Broadway
extravaganza. After all, a dragon belches smoke from the top of the
proscenium and a huge witch’s hat flies around. (The set wizardry is by
Eugene Lee.) Susan Hilferty’s costumes are great gobs of color and feathers.
But then there’s the subversive ironic story of the
self-absorbed good-girl (good witch) Glenda (Kristin Chenoweth) who is so
full of herself she declares, “It’s good to see me isn’t it?” Then, “No need
to respond, that was rhetorical.” Glenda is utterly self-involved, has 24
pairs of shoes, and is popular and empty-headed – though good natured.
Her princely boyfriend, by the way, is appropriately
shallow and pretentious.
Expect a lot of tongue-in-cheek references. There’s the
bedraggled 19th-century mob, for example.
So, getting down to the racism: Elphaba (Idina Menzel)
the wicked witch is green! And there is privilege and discrimination
aplenty. The girls go to a private school for the upper classes, where
Elphaba is a charity case.
The rich kids don’t like to be reminded of how these
class divisions happened: “I don't see why you can't just teach history,
instead of always harping on the past.”
The professor (William Youmans) is a goat who, like
many other animals, has forgotten how to speak. He writes on the blackboard
that animals should be seen and not heard. By the way, animals are also
forbidden to work. Well, what can they do? The professor declares, “There is
so much pressure not to.” Elphaba is indignant: “It can't happen here.”
This is the lightest, frothiest political treatise you
ever saw, with a bubbly Chenoweth holding forth in a lilting soprano, and
stomping about with cute, quirky gestures. Idina Menzel is a passionate,
intelligent Elphaba.
The vividly green Elphaba sets out for the Emerald City
where wizard Joel Grey is out to stop subversive animal activity. His
tactic? Inventing an enemy for people to coalesce against; he even puts
wings on monkeys and makes them spies. Storm troopers chase around and
arouse shivers. The wizard’s contraption of cogs and wheels makes us wonder
about the evils of industrial society. His snooty press secretary spins
lies.
It appears that people are willing to grovel and submit
to feed their ambition, that they are not comfortable with moral
ambiguities. A message for our times, for all times. And a superb Broadway
show.
“The Boy from Oz”: Celebrities self-destruct on
self-involvement.
What can you say about the message of real life? This
is a different kind of Oz – Australia. The story perhaps is how overriding
ambition takes over the soul and can destroy all in its wake. Or, more
generously, about the unyielding dedication of artists.
I never saw Peter Allen, about whom the play is made,
but Hugh Jackman who portrays him is a consummate artist, a charmer, a
showstopper, so here’s where art seems to excuse the pecadillos of life.
The charming boy singer -- there’s an engaging bit by
the young Peter (Mitchel David Federan) at an Aussie saloon -- had a
protective mother and an alcoholic father, and got out of the outback as
soon as he could.
The problem with artists is that their egos demand
audiences, not other artists. Liza had to deal with the added neurosis
provoked by an overwhelming Judy Garland.
Allen (Jackman) fell into a family stalked by tragedy,
so it’s eerily unsurprising that this bisexual man saw his main chance in
connecting with Garland (Isabel Keating) by marrying her daughter (Stephanie
Block). They never really had a chance. Liza and Allen were both fixed on
their own career successes, and then he turned out to be bisexual. Poor Liza:
“If it wasn't for sex, we’d have been so happy.” If only she had had the
character and fortitude of the fictional Ruth, Eileen or Elphaba!
Though the story gets a bit melodramatic, well, hokey
even, and it never makes me overcome my basic disinterest in the career
paths of pop singers, Philip McKinley’s staging is deft and entertaining.
There’s a witty satire of bandstand singers, smart sets by Robin Wagner,
including tunnels that turn into a New York skyline, and all the voices are
smashing. Jackman is sensual and riveting. Keating is stunning as Garland,
and Block could be a double for Liza Minnelli.
“Fiddler on the Roof”: Making a revolution in old
Russia.
There’s no dearth of strong women in this fine revival
of the 1964 play about Russian-Jewish peasants confronting modernity and
pogroms. And they are partnered by some very strong men.
“Fiddler” has always been anchored as an ethnic play,
but this production makes it clear that the themes speak to all societies in
social and political conflict. What rural society hasn’t had a conflict over
the role of women? What minority in an autocratic land hasn’t suffered
discrimination and reprisals? The value of “Fiddler” is that it speaks to
this human condition, not to the experience of one group alone.
Demonstrating how it resonates, Angel Kreiman, former
chief rabbi of Santiago, Chile, told me that some time after the 1973 coup,
dictator General Augusto Pinochet called him to lunch. Pinochet, concerned
about the influence of Jews around the world, wanted to explain why he had
banned the 1971 film of "Fiddler on the Roof." Pinochet said, "You know,
there are people running around with red flags against the Czar. I wouldn't
like to show that to the Chilean people!"
This is why I was astonished by the hurt cries from
some critics that this production isn’t “Jewish” enough! “Fiddler” will live
because it is universal; that makes it a classic.
The story of, of course, is both ordinary and
exceptional. Tevye (Alfred Molina) and Golde (Randy Graff) worry about
marrying off their daughters and get constant advice and suggestions from
the Yente the Matchmaker (Nancy Opel) who proposes, for the eldest, a rich
old man. The marriageable girls, alas, fall in love with youths who are
inappropriately poor or of the wrong religion or have dangerously radical
views.
Director David Leveaux seems to want to emphasize that
their problems are part of a wider experience. The action takes place in an
ethereal and glittery wood of birches often lit by glittering stars –
evoking the familiar sets of plays by Chekhov. The men are boisterous in
their drinking, not so different from the soldiers who first appear
threatening, but then join them in dance.
Indeed, the book by Joseph Stein based on stories by
Sholom Aleichem in turn-of-the-century Czarist Russia seems to be a tug
between the humanity of everyone pulling together – of the radical Jewish
scholar and one daughter going off to join the revolutionaries, of the
Christian soldier tk going off to wed another daughter, and of the family
finally setting off for America, where they’ll still be a minority but one
(relatively) at peace with Christian neighbors.
Alfred Molina is warm, vulnerable Tevye, who doesn’t
need much manipulating by his clever partner. Randy Graff leavens Golde’s
toughness with sensitivity. They do the famous musical numbers – “If I were
a rich man,” “To Life,” “Do You Love Me?” – with charm and conviction, even
if nobody brings down the house. Nancy Opel nearly does that with her
“Topsy-Turvy” ditty with two busy-body compatriots. With his comic angular
movements, John Cariani turns Motel the tailor into an unforgettable
character.
The Jerome Robbins ballets are still dazzling. And
Leveaux outdoes himself in the dream sequence when Tevye conjures up a
ghostly vision that combines the woodland creatures of “A Midsummer Nights
Dream” with a levitating apparition that rises heavenward in smoke.
Other long-running musicals worth seeing: “Chicago,”
“Gypsy,” “Hairspray,” “Movin' Out,” “The Lion King,” “The Producers,” and
“Thoroughly Modern Millie.”
Musicals I wish were still running: Quirky, clever “Urinetown;”
the stunning Baz Luhrmann production of “La Boheme;” the amazing “Les
Miserables,” and “Amour” (libretto by Didier van Cauwelaert, music by Michel
Legrand and direction by James Lapine), whose sophisticated French critique
of society and politics alas was not appreciated by most American critics
and theatergoers.
"Gypsy." Book by Arthur Laurents. Music by Jule Styne.
Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Suggested by the Memoirs of Gypsy Rose Lee.
Directed by Sam Mendes. Starring Bernadette Peters, Tammy Blanchard, John
Dossett, Kate Reinders, Brooks Ashmanskas, Kate Buddeke, David Burtka,
Heather Lee, Michael McCormick, William Parry, Heather Tepe, Addison Timlin,
Gayton Scott. Choreography by Jerome Robbins.
Sam S. Shubert Theatre, 225 W. 44 St. Mon-Sat 8, Wed &
Sat 2. Running time: 2:45. $61.25-$101.25. 212-239-6200. Web site at
http://www.gypsythemusical.com.
“Wonderful Town.” Book by Joseph Fields & Jerome
Chodorov. Lyrics by Betty Comden & Adolph Green. Music by Leonard Bernstein.
Script Adaptation by David Ives. Directed and choreographed by Kathleen
Marshall. Starring Donna Murphy, Jennifer Westfeldt, Gregg Edelman, David
Margulies, Michael McGrath, Raymond Jaramillo McLeod, Peter Benson, Nancy
Anderson, Ken Barnett, Randy Danson, Stanley Wayne Mathis, Linda Mugleston,
Timothy Shew, Ray Wills.
Al Hirschfeld Theatre, 302 W. 45 St. Tue - Sat at 8pm;
Wed & Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm. Running time 2:30. $51-$101. 212-239-6200.
“Wicked.” Book by Gregory Maguire. Music & Lyrics by
Stephen Schwartz. Directed by Joe Mantello. Starring Kristin Chenoweth,
Idina Menzel, Carole Shelley, Norbert Leo Butz, Joel Grey, Michelle Federer,
Christopher Fitzgerald, William Youmans. Musical Staging by Wayne Cilento.
Sets by Eugene Lee.
Gershwin Theatre, 222 W. 51 St. Tue at 7pm; Wed-Sat at
8pm; Wed & Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm. Running Time 2:45. $40-$100.
212-307-4100.
http://www.wickedthemusical.com/.
“The Boy From Oz.” Book by Martin Sherman. Music &
Lyrics by Peter Allen. Directed by Philip William McKinley. Choreographer
Joey McKneely. Starring Hugh Jackman, Stephanie J. Block, Jarrod Emick, Beth
Fowler, Isabel Keating, Michael Mulheren, Mitchel David Federan.
Imperial Theatre, 249 W. 45 St. Tue-Sat at 8pm; Sat at
2pm; Sun at 3pm. Running Time 2:30. $50-$90. $30.25 student rush (Tue-Thu).
212-239-6200.
http://www.theboyfromoz.com/.
“Fiddler on the Roof.” Book by Joseph Stein. Music by
Jerry Bock. Lyrics by Sheldon Harnick. Directed by David Leveaux. Musical
Staging by Jonathan Butterell. Choreographed by Jerome Robbins. Starring
Alfred Molina, Randy Graff, Stephen Lee Anderson, David Ayers, John Cariani,
Nick Danielson, Philip Hoffman, Laura Michelle Kelly, Sally Murphy, Tricia
Paoluccio, Robert Petkoff, David Wohl.
Minskoff Theatre, 200 W. 45 St. Tue-Sat at 8pm; Wed &
Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm. Running Time 2:45. $35-$100. 212-307-4100.
Images by Joan Marcus
Back to
TravelLady Magazine |