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NY Theater: “The Miracle Brothers” hits wrong note in Brazil slavery tale
Cast’s talented singers and dancers entertain more than the material
By Lucy Komisar
“The Miracle Brothers” is a pastiche of Brazilian slavery
history and modern sensibility that arouses your interest but never fulfills its
promise. Kirsten Childs (book, music and lyrics) and director Tina Landau seem
not to have figured out what they wanted to do—create a serious
musical-dance-theater piece integrating Brazilian music with a mythical tale of
slavery or produce a quirky modern confection loosely based on a cruel era in
Brazil’s past.
The
device is that a school of dolphins morphs into humans who end up in
17th-century Brazil, some of them slaves, others oppressors, and a few of them
characters who regard the system with 21st century sensibilities, establishing
interracial liaisons with hardly a thought to the consequences.
If the aim was to present serious myth, one might have
expected something on the order of Greek theater. One could have figured out
places there for the brutal libertine slave-owner, his unhappy wife, his affable
but insecure son, the child of his black mistress, and a sadistic overseer. But
what do you do with a sassy, sexy señorita disguised as a man and a jokey pirate
chief?
The book and lyrics are trite, not up to the serious
conception. But attempts at a serious side are so leaden, that the quips are
welcome. When the slave mistress Felicidade (Cheryl Freeman), the mother of
Green Eyes (Clifton Olivier), arrives as a spirit and he disagrees with her, she
suddenly declares, in modern parlance and inflection, “I will beat you upside
your head!”
The
best part of the show is the dancing, including the jumps and kicks of the
Capoeira in which Green Eyes teaches his white half-brother Fernando (Tyler
Maynard) this fusion of dance and martial art.
Olivier, an attractive singer and dancer with star
presence, puts enthusiasm and energy into the role of the young slave, which
makes one forget that the part lacks substance.
Anika Larsen as Juan, a Spanish woman in male guise, has
the best number, a comic, Broadway-style “It’s Really All Right With Me,” which
showcases her as an appealing and talented musical comedy performer.
Cheryl
Freeman is a standout as the best singer of a company, her jazzy sultry voice in
“A Mother’s Lament” giving a fine rendition of the blues.
Nicole Leach is a sexy, sassy Ginga, on the search for
Palmares, where slaves live free.
Jay Goede as nasty slave-owner, Lascivio, and William
Youmans as evil overseer, Rancor – appropriately named -- are caricatures who
don’t get much more to do than figuratively twirl their bad-guy moustaches.
Childs’ music is a lively combination of jazzy Brazilian
Samba, rock and show-tunes, though the changes in style follow no particular
logic and get in the way of artistic continuity. The performers are fine
dancers, so it is disappointing that choreographer Mark Dendy does not present
real Bahia dancing.
Even so, the production works best in moments when it
concentrates on jazzy song and dance and forgets the hackneyed story.
“The Miracle Brothers” Book, music and lyrics by Kirsten
Childs. Directed by Tina Landau. Starring Clifton Olivier, Tyler Maynard, Anika
Larsen, Nicole Leach, Kerry Butler, Cheryl Freeman, Jay Goede, William Youmans,
Davin Richards, Darrell Moultrie, Karen Olivo, Gregory Treco.
Vineyard Theatre, 108 East 15 Street. Tues. 7 pm, Wed-Sat 8
pm, Sat & Sun. Through Oct. 16, 2005. 3 pm. Running time: 2:15. $60.
212-353-0303.
http://www.vineyard.org.
by Carol Rosegg
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