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“The Light in the Piazza” is charming operatic fable about romance.
A fanciful Florence and thrilling voices provide the magical setting.
By Lucy Komisar
The fifties of the novel on which this musical play is
based was the era of “Three Coins in The Fountain” and “The Roman Spring of Mrs.
Stone,” a time when Americans mused about finding sensitive lovers and romance
in Italy. Playwright Craig Lucas has kept that sense of fifties fantasy which
fits perfectly with Adam Guettel’s operatic score and lyrics. A story of wild
“love at first sight” might appear unlikely in a realistic script, but it’s what
opera thrives on.
And the production directed by Bartlett Sher is a delight.
His actors whirling through and around the ochre stone archways and towers of
Florence, into museums and elegant palazzos, are colorful flights of imagination
and whimsy that feed day dreams.
Into this fanciful summertime city comes Margaret Johnson
(the vivid soprano, Victoria Clark), a Southern woman whose marriage is a
disappointment, and her daughter Clara (Kelli O’Hara, with a rich, sweet
soprano). She is a “special” young woman of 26; a childhood accident affected
her mental and emotional development. This is barely perceptible except that she
often lacks adult social inhibitions. She says what she thinks, which is not
always à propos, though it certainly is refreshing.
But mother runs interference, seeking to protect her. Then
Clara meets the charming Fabrizio (Matthew Morrison, with a melodious operatic
voice and an appealing style) who knows only a smattering of English. Mother
faces a critical problem. Should she stop the romance? Should she tell the boy’s
dominating father (a moody, forceful Mark Harelik), who runs a men’s
haberdashery?
The surprise of the story hangs on the different attributes
Americans and Italians of the time valued about women. And it suggests gently
that love can be found by everyone. The play is affecting without being
sentimental.
Some of the lines are spoken or sung in Italian, which
offers a curious realism in the midst of the reverie. The music is modern, the
lyrics poetic and intelligent. It’s a wonderful summertime fable for New York.
“The Light in the Piazza.” Book by Craig Lucas based on a
novella by Elizabeth Spencer. Music and lyrics by Adam Guettel. Directed by
Bartlett Sher. Sets by Michael Yeargan. Costumes by Catherine Zuber. Musical
staging by Jonathan Butterell. Starring Michael Berresse, Sarah Uriarte Berry,
Victoria Clark, Patti Cohenour, Beau Gravitte, Mark Harelik, Matthew Morrison,
Kelli O'Hara, Felicity LaFortune, Joseph Siravo.
Vivian Beamont Theatre at Lincoln Center, 150 West 65th
Street. Tue - Sat at 8pm; Wed, Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm. Running time 2:15. $65 -
$90. 212-239-6200. Through September 4, 2005.
Images by Joan Marcus
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