Wednesday, March 20, 2019

There's Still Plenty of Pulse, Energy, Angst and Vocal Magic in Jonathan Larson's Iconic 1996 Musical "Rent"



By James V. Ruocco

The lyrics for "Rent" are unmistakably familiar, catchy, inspiring, and still relevant, 23 years later.

"There's only us, there's only this.
Forget regret, or life is your's to miss.
No other path, no other way.
No day but today"


"How do you document real life
When real life's getting more like fiction each day?
Headlines, bread-lines blow my mind
And now this deadline, eviction or pay rent"


"Five hundred twenty-five thousand Six hundred minutes
Five hundred twenty-five thousand
Moments so dear
Five hundred twenty-five thousand
Six hundred minutes
How do you measure - measure a year?
In daylights - in sunsets
In midnights - in cups of coffee
In inches - in miles
In laughter - in strife"


And bloody hell, they should be.

"Rent" was...."Rent" is...."Rent" remains the celebrated, iconic work of  Jonathan Larson, the 35-year-old composer/lyricist and author who died of an aortic aneurysm on January, 25, 1996, just days before his exhilarating, ground-breaking rock opera made its official big debut off-Broadway to heightened fanfare and subsequently, was later transferred to Broadway in April of the same year, where, it became the "Hamilton" of its day.

Of course, this came as no surprise to anyone in the cast, in the audience, in the producer's chair or on the creative team.


Back then, the two-act musical, which won the 1996 Tony Award for Best Musical and Best Musical Score, among others, transformed the face of musical theater with its unexpectedly catchy, musical score of salsa, reggae, opera, electric rock, pop and Sondheim-tinged eclecticism. Its complicated, angst-filled story of gay and straight characters fighting for life and survival in N.Y's bohemian milieu of St. Mark's Place, was fueled with grit, hope, pulse, desire and unabashed vitality. And when the "Rent" cast stood on the edge of the proscenium stage facing the audience at the start of Act II and sang the soul-searching "Seasons of Love," a tearful reminder of living and measuring life on borrowed time, your heart just about broke and broke....and broke.


I remember it well
Sitting there, fifth row orchestra center (on the aisle, of course) at the Nederlander Theatre, just two days after its big Broadway bow, I remember thinking, "How bloody lucky am I to be sitting here watching this musical event unfold" and..."How bloody lucky are those people on stage ...Anthony Rapp, Adam Pascal, Idina Menzel, Wilson Jermaine Heredia, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Fredi Walker, Taye Diggs, Jesse L. Martin...to get to do something as wonderful and exciting as this eight times a week."

Twenty-three years later, "Rent" still works and reworks that same theatrical magic on today's adrenaline-fueled audience as it did for first-timer's on 79 East Fourth St in the East Village and at the Nederlander Theatre on Broadway. The cast is new. The production is new. The perspective is new. The sets, the sound and the lighting are new. The costumes are new.
But make no mistake, this is "Rent" the way it was meant to be seen....in all its colorful, gritty, heartfelt, cinematic-like glory. It snaps. It pops. It tingles. It seduces. It invigorates. It gets the pulses racing.


One major difference, however.

This time around, however, the audience.....well, at least 85 percent of them, anyway... come to "Rent" knowing every song and lyric, every line of dialogue, every characterization, every plot twist, every heartbreak, every revelation, every drum roll, every tick, every kick, every beat, every nuance, every dance move, every shock, every sexy moment and every surprise. They also know all the inhabitants of Larson's colorful East Village bohemia (artists, drag queens, drug addicts, homosexuals, lesbians, songwriters, dancers, filmmakers, homeless people and those living with HIV) and how they evolve during both Act I and II.
But it doesn't really matter. When the house lights dim, you can sense the buzz immediately as they are ready to take hold of "Rent" lock, stock and barrel...one more time. They applaud all the entrances and exits of the main characters. They sing out loud. They laugh. They cheer. They jump out of their seats. They lovingly shout the names of who's who on stage. They lose control when their favorite moment comes. They go absolutely crazy when a song starts or finishes. And they cry...they cry..oh, God, how they cry.



Some are actors, Broadway groupies, musicians, college students, buskers, homosexuals, grandmothers, high school students, drag queens, transgenders, pink-haired lesbians, business executives, fresh-scrubbed kids, Jamie Campbell wannabees or just die hard theater buffs who live, eat and breathe all things musical.
And let's not forget those mad but merry RENT-heads, who still follow the show from city to city and have seen "Rent" more than 500 or 600 times (the stage musical, the 2005 film adaptation and the recent-not-so-live "Rent Live!" on Fox Television). They set the tone for the entire LIVE performance. They encourage the on-stage actors to pump things up and get ready to go. And then, it happens. "Rent" begins. "Rent" entices.  "Rent" explodes. And, what an explosion it is.


Inspirational.
Frenzied.
Stirring.
Humorous.
Savvy.
Resilient.
Heartbreaking.
Solidified.

On the road, the 2019 National Touring edition of  "Rent" more than delivers its emotional wallop of snap, dazzle, crackle and pop. It works everyone on stage and off into a fervent, often playful lather of invigoration and delirium, which, when you think about it, is probably what Larson envisioned all along. It ironically stands the testament of time as it deals openly and creatively with stories about grief, rage, addiction, eviction, materialism, struggle, heroism, comfort, survival, legacy, sexual identity, transgender activism, death, poverty, individualism, urban redevelopment and AIDS. Its raw  adult language ( "fucking weird," "fucking bitch," "dildo," "clit club," "mucho masterbation," "to sodomy, it's between God and me," "who the fuck do you think you are?" for example)  hits hard and home without hesitation. The characters themselves are full-bodied and reflective of their East Village milieu. Nothing is taken for granted or thrown in to knock the audience off balance or on its ass. It looks at life. It is full of life. It celebrates life. It is life.

The experience itself, however, is different, from city to city, depending on the actual size of the theater, its proscenium stage and the actual seating capacity for the audience. In a theater that houses more than 3,000 people, "Rent" is big, grand, splendid and eye-popping. It also thrusts itself forward in a 3-D cinematic style not found in smaller, intimate theaters. It's still the same story, but much more larger-than-life. Regardless, large house or small, "Rent" is so thrilling to watch, there are times when you wish you could hit "rewind" and watch certain scenes or musical numbers again and again.

That said, this "Rent" is not a copycat, paint-by-numbers incarnation of the original 1996 Broadway musical conceived by Michael Greif or its 1998 London/West End counterpart. Here, "Rent" director Evan Ensign isn't interested in dusting off the blueprints of those two works to the point where his version of "Rent" is nothing more than a nostalgic, affectionate tribute to times long gone by. Instead, he puts his own thrilling, unique stamp on the new production without resorting to overkill or updating any of the dialogue, which every RENT-head in the audience could recite verbatim. He changes some of the original stage movement because  this is 2019 and not 1996, so that's to be expected. He thrusts the action forward at a much brisker pace. He brings some of the upstage action downstage, a directorial conceit that makes it much more effective, edgy and shadowy for both actor and audience. He also respects and understands each of the conflicted characterizations that Jonathan Larson created and only fleetingly, makes a minor tweak or two with some of the core characters.


Elsewhere, he lovingly preserves some of the original staging created by Greif, most noticeable in the pulsating opening "Rent" production number, the poignant "Light My Candle" exchanges, the wickedly feverish "La Vie Boheme," which closes Act I and "What You Own," a catchy, character-driven song of self-discovery between Mark and Roger in the middle of Act II.
Marlies Yearby's crazed and frenzied dance movement and choreography ("Tango Maureen," "Today 4 U," "Out Tonight," "La Vie Boheme") provides the necessary pulse, momentum and spirit to get the juices flowing. It is energetic. It is modern. It  fits perfectly into the dramatic spine work of the story. And when necessary, things are purposely amped up keep "Rent" fresh and exciting. Regardless, Yearby's choices, nonetheless, reflect the intentions and concept thrust forward by the show's originators.

Directorially, Ensign also brings an unabashed playfulness and zesty spin to "Rent's" many verbal and musical voice mails, phone calls and celebratory pronouncements, all of which are effectively staged and performed by members of the ensemble cast who tackle many, many different roles (waiters, parents, cops, bohemians, life support members, squatters, to name a few) and costume changes with the creative genius and passion of those who originally created the roles or played them in other productions of "Rent" all around the world. They have fun. We have fun. They get excited. We get excited. More importantly, no one in the audience flips through their playbills, checks their watches or looks confused by the onstage action. If they did, the RENT-heads would cause a bloody riot and go ballistic. Here, Ensign, as director, is at the top of his game, and it shows.


Then and now, the heart, drive and defining pulse of the show is Larson's inventive, intricate, character-driven musical score. His creative, definitive mix of anthems, duets, ballads, rock songs, plot-driven laments and lively showstoppers is unbeatable. "Rent," "One Song Glory," "Out Tonight," "I'll Cover You," "Take Me or Leave Me," "Another Day," "Without You," "Santa Fe," "Over the Moon," "What Your Own," "Tango Maureen," "Seasons of Love." The list goes on and on and on. And nothing gets lost in the translation. Larson's recurring themes: living on the edge, taking chances, fighting for survival, shielding loved ones from danger in the face of death and adversity are emotionally and melodically revisited by musical supervisor Tim Weil whose expert handling of the "Rent" material unfolds like great art that would make Larson ever-so-proud.


As "Rent" moves from scene to scene, Weil and his fine orchestral team are scrupulously attentive to Larson's music, the singers, the story and its rapid evolution. Here and there, they take risks with the tempos to give them a more contemporary feel. When necessary, they squeeze a little bit of extra pulp juice out of certain single phrases to make them more palpable. They also target certain songs with additional depth, beauty, confidence and flexibility. And, despite the show's familiarity, in everyone's more than capable "band/musician" hands, this incarnation of "Rent" sounds fresh, spunky, witty and surprisingly new.

Casting for the 2019 national tour is exceptional. For many "Rent" cast members, this is their first "on the road" experience. So yes, they want to thrill and electrify the audience, offer their own individual take on each of the now-iconic characters and when permissible, perhaps change a line of two to deliver uniquely different interpretations all together. As the two-act musical evolves, the principal, supporting and ensemble cast members connect seamlessly.  They are young, attractive, intuitive, charismatic and diverse. They also represent the "Rent" milieu set forth by Jonathan Larson in terms of size, shape, gender, color and sexuality. They get "Rent." They understand "Rent." They are "Rent."

No one could play the part of relentless Jewish documentary filmmaker Mark Cohen like Anthony Rapp who created the role in the original 1996 Broadway production. That was a once-in-a-lifetime performance that has withstood the test of time. The good news about this "Rent" is that the very charismatic and likeable Logan Marks opts not to copycat his predecessor. Like Danny Harris Kornfeld who played the part in the 2017 national touring company of "Rent," Marks steers clear of all things Rapp.  Instead, he offers his own take on Mark, his role in the evolution of the "Rent" story and his interaction with all of the other characters. It's a real, raw, hip and energetic performance fraught with appropriate passion and emotion. He nails all of the familiar character traits that Larson set forth for Mark. He takes chances and runs with them. Vocally, he's pitch-perfect and never once misses a beat. His portrayal of Mark is so invigorating (he doesn't just play the part, he owns it), you are never once reminded that this iconic character was once played by Anthony Rapp in the original Broadway production and the 2005 film adaptation.


Is Javon King's sassy, sparkly, flamboyant and colorful portrayal of Angel, the young gay drag queen who is dying of AIDS as sensational as Wilson Jermaine Heredia who originated the role on Broadway and David Merino who played the same role in the 2017 touring edition of 'Rent?" You bet it is. As shaped and molded by King, it's a dizzying, showstopping full-bodied performance of high kicks, sentiment, individuality and transgender allure that the actor invests with wild abandon, multi-colored dazzle, spirit and flamboyance. It's also a refreshingly unique conceit that King uses to full advantage throughout "Rent" and in his showstopping musical turns "Today 4 You" and "I'll Cover You." And yes, the audience is with him every step of the way. It's impossible not to love or want to hug Angel. Then again, that's the point, isn't it?



A Jonathan Jackson type with a rich, powerhouse singing voice that earns him thunderous applause
whenever he cuts loose vocally, Joshua Bess is the perfect fit for the part of the troubled singer/ songwriter Roger whose previous girlfriend committed suicide once she learned of her AIDS diagnosis. His anguished, emotional, emblematic ballad "One Song Glory" is rendered with appropriate pain and pathos as is "What You Own," his big, fiery, harmonious duet with Mark in the middle of Act II.  Vocally, his rock-style voice is controlled, expressive, dynamic and well-nuanced. He's as versatile and energetic as Adam Pascal was in the original 1996 Broadway production, using a crisp, polished musicality, depth, confidence and edgy clout to sell every one of his songs. And just in case he should take a tumble down a stairwell or trip over a pile of props, understudies Chase McCall and Sean Ryan are waiting in the wings to fill his shoes as this is a LIVE production. Nothing pre-recorded or re-blocked here.

As Mimi, the drug stoked dancer with a heroin habit, Deri' Andrea Tucker is sexy, lively, slippery, sensuous and alluring. Dancing wise, she cuts all the right moves liked a skilled acrobat. Her singing, however, lacks an emotional depth and verve that is particularly noticeable in her wildly erotic solo "Out Tonight," which is designed solely to turn the head of every straight male in the audience, But sadly, it doesn't quite deliver. It's good, but not great. Elsewhere, she redeems herself much later with "Without You," a savvy duet with Roger that catches fire and melts your heart, the way it was intended. Her performance, as a whole, however, lacks the spunk, frenzy and hotness that Daphne Rubin-Vega and Renee Elise Goldsberry brought to the Broadway production and Skyler Volpe kept ablaze in the 2017 national tour.


Lencia Kebede and Lyndie Moe create all the right sparks as the touchy-feely lesbian couple Joanne and Maureen. They have plenty of earthy, sexually charged energy, power and charisma. Their big raging break-up duet "Take Me or Leave Me" unfolds with enough sizzle and snap (kissing, ass-grabbing, breast-touching and simulated cunnilingus, to boot) to cause a power outage. "Over the Moon," Maureen's wonderfully wicked protest number is so unbelievably timed, both comically and vocally, it deserves a standing ovation in itself. And perhaps, an encore of sorts. That's how much fun it is.
Devinre Adams, as Tom Collins, is both heartfelt and endearing as Angel's newfound boyfriend and lover. He plays the part with a sweet sincerity that works especially well. And when it comes time for him to sing his character's big Act II showstopper "I'll Cover You (Reprise)," Adams stops the show with this tear-drenched rendition. His serious vocal heft makes this particular song soar and wound with chilling resonance.  

Theatergoers, new to "Rent" will easily embrace this peppy, sensuous, hyperactive touring edition of the celebrated musical, which, in 2019 (and long before that), has become its very own brand name. And why not? Its inspired enthusiasm extends far beyond the proscenium wall of every theater that it plays with a sparkling urgency, depth and command that's pretty hard to resist. The familiar story of East Village bohemia is inhabited by a new group of excited and energetic performers who live, eat, sleep and breathe "Rent." The musical score by the late Jonathan Larson is smooth, ragged, raw and emotional. It gets the juices flowing. It seduces and invigorates. It gets you thinking. It also makes you happy that you bought a ticket.
No broken foot or sound glitches here either (i.e., "Rent Live!"). First time, second time, 100th time, "Rent" still electrifies. What fun! What joy! What a resurrection! Bohemia, thank the Lord, is not dead. It's alive and well with no sign of slowing down anytime soon.


"There's only now, there's only here.
Give in to love or live in fear.
No other path, No other way
No day but today"



"In these dangerous times, where it seems the world is ripping apart at the seams, we can all learn how to survive from those who stare death squarely in the face every day and [we] should reach out to each other and bond as a community, rather than hide from the terrors of life at the end of the millennium."
Jonathan Larson, author/composer of "Rent"


Friday, August 24, 2018

A Thrilling, Compassionate and Dazzling "West Side Story" (A Review) (Barrington Stage Company)





By James V. Ruocco

With music by Leonard Bernstein, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by Arthur Laurents, "West Side Story" arrives on the doorstep of Barrington Stage Company fifty-one years after its Broadway debut. But there is nothing tiresome or dated about this story of doomed love set against the background of gangland warfare on the streets of New York's upper west side, circa, 1957.

If anything, this production not only reaffirms the musical's greatness, but like "Company," the year before at Barrington Stage, it creates its own magic, its own physical poetry, its own sense of style and its own emotional power.

Thrilling.
Passionate.
Creative.
Dazzling.
Evocative.
Poignant.

This "West Side Story" has it all.


It's a show rich in theatrical brilliance as well as something deeply human and deeply moving. It contains extraordinary performances from its equally brilliant cast. The songs strike sparks in all the right places. And the dancing is simply magnificent.

In short, what's not to like?

Julianne Boyd, the director of "West Side Story," knows she has a Broadway classic in her hands and therefore, remains faithful to the original 1957 production. That said, she crafts an exuberant, heartfelt, dutiful production of high energy, pulse, sentiment and dimension. Her instinctive connection to the piece, the characters, the story, the music and its clash of cultures is real and achingly heartfelt. Nothing is sugar-coated. Nothing is taken for granted. Nothing is downplayed, changed or reinvented. The prejudice of the times, its ugliness, its verbal abuse, its hypocrisy and its obvious sneer at minorities is front and center. The "Romeo and Juliet" romance between Tony and Maria, the two lovers of different social, economic and racial backgrounds is also rife with reason, energy, drama and timelessness.


To many, the story of "West Side Story" is pretty much indestructible. It's big, yes. It's amazing, yes. It's loved, yes. The songs, the dances and the characters are legendary. Regardless, Boyd is not one to rest on her laurels. Nor is she one to copycat the original stage production or the 1961 Oscar-winning movie. There's a lot going on here, but she is never once daunted, intimidated or over anxious. It's her show and she works effortlessly to pull it all together, and pull it all together, she does.

Key narrative moments have real purpose, meaning and importance. The action is fast, fluid and well-defined. The songs and dances fit seamlessly into the framework of the story. And every actor on the Barrington stage (lead, supporting or ensemble member) is firmly rooted in the time period of the actual story, circa 1957.  Boyd wouldn't have it any other way.


Here, as in last year's "Company," Boyd is a force to be reckoned with. Staging the two-act musical, she embellishes the territorial, troublesome underbelly of the composer's and author's vision, its streetwise language and gangland bravado, its well-plotted scene structure, its flip sarcasm, its cowardice, its boldness and its surprise twists of fate. She also knows how to build and develop a given scene, how to thrust each principal character or supporting character into the spotlight, how to introduce an individual song or production number without calculation and how to embellish the vision set forth by the show's creators.

Boyd is such a clever, ingenious auteur, this "West Side Story" springs to life in every color of the spectrum imaginable. Even if you've seen the movie or some incarnation of the much-loved stage musical before, with Boyd pulling the strings, you forget all of that. Just as "Company" cast its spell, so does "West Side Story." At Barrington Stage, it's as if you're seeing this classic Bernstein/Sondheim musical for the very first time.


Then, now, tomorrow and the day after that, the strength and heartbeat of any production of "West Side Story" lies in Jerome Robbins' ground-breaking, original choreography, a hypnotic mix of urban cool and street-wise, dark and moody, breezy and erotic and factual and real. Here, choreographer Robert La Fosse takes hold of the master's shifting, pulse-quickening dance moves, maneuvers and dance patterns and plunges head-first into the fiery, passionate, testosterone-charged territory made famous by Robbins, bringing depth, heat and urgency to the opening "Prologue," the tangy "Dance at the Gym," the poignant, hopeful "Somewhere" ballet, the pungent "America" and the icy-hot "Cool."

In this production, La Fosse masterfully recreates the original choreography set forth by Robbins for the 1957 Broadway production that starred Larry Kert, Carol Lawrence, Chita Rivera, Michael Callan, Tony Mordente, Ken LeRoy and Marilyn Cooper. It is eye-popping. It is exhilarating. It is edgy. It is dynamic. It is explosive. It is fiery. It is passionate.


But La Fosse is no imitator. He's his own person. He connects all the right dots and uses all the right colors. Working from Robbins' blueprint, he crafts brilliant, dance moves that not only soar, entice and excite, but leave you completely awe stuck, begging for more, wanting more and crying for more over and over. This is "West Side Story" like you've never seen before. La Fosse is a master craftsman who produces some eclectic moments of macho swagger and turbulence, balletic elegance, touching playfulness, sexy spontaneity and street-wise edge and brutality. But the combinations, the set ups, the positions, the framing, the cross-cuts, the beats, the pauses and the rhythms, are so precise, natural and revelatory,  memories of every other "West Side Story" fade completely to black immediately.


This, of course, is bolstered by the rhythmic, snappy brilliance of Bernstein's flavorful musical score and the eloquent, expressive, poetic beauty of Sondheim's lyrics. Then and now, "West Side Story" comes gift wrapped with a visionary line-up of showstoppers that include "Tonight," "Maria," "America," "I Feel Pretty," "Something's Coming," "Cool," "Somewhere," "One Hand, One Heart" and "Gee, Officer, Krupke."

At Barrington Stage, Darren R. Cohen breathes new life into the popular "West Side Story" score in ways that would make its creators proud. Every showstopper, every song and every production number is rife with imagination, purpose and spirit. The vocally difficult "Quintet" is furiously delivered by the entire cast who never once step out of line, miss a beat or forget a lyric. Elsewhere, songs like "Maria," "Tonight," "Cool" and "America" are freshly delivered and performed with genuine ardor, sensitivity, compassion, gusto and yearning.


That said, this "West Side Story" never feels stuck in a musical time warp of nostalgia. Cohen completely understands the song material and the tragic, sincere and emotional dimensions built into the music and lyrics by Bernstein and Sondheim. Yet despite its familiarity and its very hummable lyrics, it all sounds very, very new. That is quite a feat to pull off, but Cohen does it quite splendidly.

Casting the right actor in the right part is crucial to the success of any production of "West Side Story" and Boyd, La Fosse and Cohen have done themselves proud. At Barrington Stage, everyone is so very right for their respective roles from lead and supporting players to members of the "West Side Story" ensemble. This cast far surpasses that of the 2009 Broadway revival which starred Matt Cavenaugh, Karen Olivo, Josefina Scagloine, Cody Green and George Akram and any subsequent National Tour in the last decade or two.
They are extraordinary. The skill, the sincerity, the mindset and the magic they each bring to this adrenaline-filled story fascinates, entertains, excites and enthralls. There's also a breathless rush and exhilaration to everything they say and do in a broken, confused and prejudiced world that never stops them longing for a better life far beyond their blue collar/immigrant, gang-ridden neighborhoods of the late 1950's.


The character of Tony, as written by Laurents, is not an easy role to pull off. Most often, the part is played with one-note charm from song to song or scene to scene with almost nothing to propel you into his story, his romance or subsequent death at the end of the musical. To pull it off, you need an actor who is not only charming, likeable and sincere from the moment we first meet him, but someone who can act, sing, dance and make even the most stilted or silliest of dialogue sound completely instinctive and believable.

Luckily, for us, "West Side Story" director Julianne Boyd saw fit to cast the very personable and charismatic Will Branner as the troubled, lovesick, kind-hearted romantic. The actor not only  possesses the boyish, laid-back charm, spirit and innocence that embodies Tony, but gives him equal dimension, color, personality, shading and presence.


He's not only the best Tony out there, but he's every inch the wide-eyed hero, the heartthrob, the dazed romantic and the mediator that Laurents envisioned the character to be. He makes us believe that love can (and does) happen at first sight. His stand against the ugly prejudice of the times is believably projected with pulse, concern and authority. And when he kills Bernardo in a fit of rage during the brilliantly staged "The Rumble" at the end of Act 1, his cry for help, namely "Maria," is so real and frightening, it's impossible not to be shaken or moved.

Vocally, Branner dazzles. He oozes sweetness. He oozes charm. He is in perfect pitch, utilizing his smooth, irresistible sound to such full effect, he could probably reduce Sondheim to tears if ever the composer was in the audience (he was there for "Company," so who knows?). Branner also gets the lyrics. He gets the music. You never doubt him for a moment. With "Something's Coming," he sings with excited certainty and curiosity. With "Maria," his astonishing vocal purity and power magically captures the wonderment of first love and the endless possibilities that will follow. And his "Tonight" duet with his very attractive co-star (Addie Morales) is hauntingly beautiful.


One of genuine pleasures of Boyd's "West Side Story" is the casting of Addie Morales as Maria. This too is not an easy role to play, but the sweet, enigmatic Morales takes hold of it and shapes and molds it into one of the most magical, enchanting and alarmingly real performances the musical has to offer. She is charming. She is innocent. She is radiant. She is compassionate. She is lovely. She is also an actress of intelligence, depth, drive and perseverance. And like Branner, she completely gets and understands the character she is playing and her role in the advancement of the actual story. Maria's desolate grief at the end of Act II is so realistically conveyed and projected, it's impossible to take your eyes off the actress for a second. She really makes you feel her pain, her anguish and her loss. Simply amazing.

When asked to perform Maria's many "West Side Story" vocals, Morales does so, every so agreeably, in ways that are charming, alluring, intoxicating and playful. Her thrilling, delightful rendition of "I Feel Pretty," is rife with charm, whimsy, color and imagination. "Tonight" and "One Hand, One Heart," the hauntingly beautiful romantic ballads she shares with Branner, are just as pungent and beguiling as the day they were first written. "A Boy Like That/ I Have a Love," the fiery, heated duet about first /lost love she sings and shares with the citrusy  Skyler Volpe (Anita) floats the voice, the concern and urgency of the song exactly as intended by Bernstein and Sondheim.

Anita, the fiery, sultry girlfriend of Maria's brother Bernardo, is played with passionate vitality, allure and temperament by the equally alluring and passionate Skyler Volpe who recently starred as Mimi in the 20th Anniversary National Tour of Jonathan Larson's feverish musical "Rent," where she dazzled and rocked audiences night after night with her thrilling performance.


Like "Rent's" Mimi, the part of Anita is tailor-made for Volpe. She dazzles, flirts, charms and glides herself through this colorful role (she's also an incredible dancer) with just the right emotion, pulse, depth and personality to pull it off. We get her. She gets us. We love her. She loves us. Her performance is so lusty and so powerful, we are never once reminded of Chita Rivera who originated the role of Anita in the 1957 Broadway production or Rita Moreno who assumed the role in the 1961 Oscar-winning movie musical.


Volpe's seamless, flavorsome rendition of  "America," performed, in part, with the fine-voiced Shark Girls, brilliantly captures the sardonic wit and contempt of life in both the USA and Puerto Rico with icy imagination. Much later, when the Jets taunt her with twisted racial slurs and a simulated rape that director Boyd builds and builds to a frightening crescendo, Volpe's anger is real, raw and warranted. It's an amazing piece of drama that gives additional edge to the story and its eventual dramatic conclusion.

Sean Ewing, as Bernardo, the leader of the Sharks, the brother of Maria and the boyfriend of Anita is right in sync with Laurents' bold, intense interpretation of the iconic street gang character who dies at the end of Act I. Vocally, he stands tall in the brilliantly staged and sung "Quintet," which is performed by the entire cast. But, sadly, he does not perform in "America" like George Chakiris did in the movie version. Here, the popular musical number adheres to the original staging and concept (women only) of the original 1957 Broadway musical. In short, no Bernardo. No male Sharks.


For the part of Riff, Boyd has cast the versatile Tyler Hanes to play the leader of the Jets gang. Perfect casting. Most definitely. The actor makes all the right moves, from Riff's take-charge persona and urban vulnerability to the character's heated restlessness, short-changed hostility with the Sharks and the kind-hearted buddy-buddy camaraderie he shares with the Jets gang. The actor also brings a real sense of tireless, palpable humanity to the showstopping "Jet Song," performed with jazzy snap  by members of the Jets gang and danced to ovation worthy perfection under Robert La Fosse's choreographic tutelage.

Often, in "West Side Story," the parts of Doc (Gordon Stanley), Glad Hand/Lt. Schrank (Douglas Rees) and Officer Krupke (Christopher Tucci) get lost in the shuffle or are played by actors who simply are unable to get past the one-note mechanics of their characters or the writing. Not so, at Barrington Stage. Here, under Julianne Boyd's watchful eye, this trio of actors not only offer bold, full-bodied performances, but fit seamlessly into the framework of the story and its dramatic evolution.


"West Side Story" is an exciting fusion of music, romance, dance and story. It is a great American musical, reinforced by Julianne Boyd's gutsy, determined direction, the jazzy brilliance of Robert La Fosse's choreography and the vocal pulse and precision of the popular Bernstein/Sondheim score. It is an emotionally-ridden work, populated by an exceptional team of actors, singers and dancers, all of whom work tirelessly to bring the charm, menace, melody, angst and social concern that is "West Side Story" to life. It is also the only production where Chino's murder of Tony by gunshot at the end of Act II leaves the audience completely shaken. Then again, Boyd as director, wouldn't have it any other way.

"West Side Story" photos by Daniel Rader


"West Side Story" is being showcased at Barrington Stage (Boyd-Quinson Mainstage, 30 Union St., Pittsfield, MA), now through September 1.
For tickets or more information, call (413) 236-8888.
website:barringtonstageco.org.

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Aaron Tveit in Vegas, in Boston, and in "Moulin Rouge!"



By James V. Ruocco

If you were lucky enough to catch Aaron Tveit in Barrington Stage's exhilarating revival of Stephen Sondheim's "Company" last year or you were able to secure a ticket to his sold-out concert at Lincoln Center’s Appel Room this past February, then you already know he can act, he can dance, he can move and he can sing like an angel.

In concert, he's humble, emotionally honest and instinctive. He uses music and its many styles to resonate the magnificent range of his voice. He also possesses a natural, infectious energy and enthusiasm that brightens up whatever song he sings.

In short, what's not to like?

This September, Tveit will play two very intimate concerts at the Smith Center (361 Symphony Park Ave., Las Vegas, NV). The event will take place in the Center's Myron Cabaret Jazz Room, a 240-seat venue, where you can grab a bite to eat, savor the drink of your choice and enjoy the ultimate cabaret-style experience up close and personal.


The actual concert is still in the planning stages.
But it should include most of the songs and show tunes that Tveit performed in concert at Lincoln Center's Appel Room on Feb. 9, 2018.
Among them:
“Live in Living Color” from Catch Me If You Can.
“Fight the Dragons” from Big Fish.
“Somebody to Love” by Freddie Mercury.
“I Miss the Mountains” from Next to Normal.
“Thunder Road” by Bruce Springsteen.
“Take Me or Leave Me” from Rent.
“One Song Glory” from Rent.
“Che gelida manina” from La Bohème.
“Maria” from West Side Story.
"Sandy" and "Heart and Soul” from Grease.
“Open Arms” by Steve Perry and Jonathan Cain.
“Beautiful City” from Godspell.
“Being Alive” from Company.
“Do You Hear the People Sing” from Les Misérables.


You can also expect Tveit to perform songs from "Moulin Rouge!" the Broadway-bound musical adaptation of  Baz Luhrmann's celebrated 2001 movie classic. The production, scheduled to open July 10 in Boston,  casts Tveit as Christian, a young, handsome English poet and writer who falls madly in love with Satine, the beautiful, vivacious star of the famed Paris-based Moulin Rouge cabaret.

Performances of "Aaron Tveit in Concert" are 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 29 and 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 30.
Tickets are $39-$59.
For $250, you can purchase the Aaron Tveit Meet & Greet VIP Package. It includes:
- One (1) VIP Reserved Seat
- A photograph with Aaron Tveit
- A meet & greet with Aaron Tveit
- A VIP Laminate
- An exclusive Autographed Event Poster

Please note: This fee does not include a ticket to the actual concert. Those tickets are sold separately.
For reservations or more information, call (702) 749-2000.


Meanwhile, back in Boston, rehearsals continue for Tveit and company in "Moulin Rouge!" which was originally scheduled to open June 27th. Technical issues, however, forced the production to delay its opening. According to the production crew, a new steel grid above the stage at the newly revamped Emerson Colonial Theatre  had problems holding up an operational system designed for the production's stage scenery and lighting. Therefore, rehearsals and design construction were temporarily halted.

The new dates for the world premiere engagement of "Moulin Rouge!" are as follows:

Tuesday, July 10, 2018 at 8pm
Thursday, July 12, 2018 at 8pm
Friday, July 13, 2018 at 8 pm
Saturday, July 14, 2018 at 2 pm and 8 pm
Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 7 pm
Wednesday, July 18 at 2 pm and 8pm
Friday, July 20, 2018 at 8pm
Saturday, July 21, 2018 at 2pm and 8 pm
Sunday, July 22, 2018 at 1pm and 7 pm
Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at 8 pm
Wednesday, July 25, 2018 at 8pm
Thursday, July 26, 2018 at 8pm
Friday, July 27, 2018 at 8pm
Saturday, July 28, 2018 at 2pm and 8 pm
Sunday, July 29, 2018 at 7 pm
Tuesday, July 31, 2018 at 8pm


Wednesday, August 1, 2018 at 8 pm
Thursday, August 2 at 8pm
Friday, August 3, 2018 at 8pm
Saturday, August 4, 2018 at 2pm and 8pm
Sunday, August 5, 2018 at 1 pm and 7 pm
Tuesday, August 7, 2018 at 8pm
Wednesday, August 8, 2018 at 2 pm and 8pm
Thursday, August 9, 2018 at 8pm
Friday, August 10, 2018 at 8pm
Saturday, August 11, 2018 at 2 pm and 8 pm
Sunday, August 12, 2018 at 3pm
Tuesday, August 14, 2018 at 8pm
Wednesday, August 15, 2018 at 2 pm and 8 pm
Thursday, August 16, 2018 at 8pm
Friday, August 17, 2018 at 8pm
Saturday, August 18 at 2 pm and 8pm
Sunday, August 19, 2018 at 7 pm

Set against the backdrop of Paris' most famous and glittering dance and music hall at the turn of the century, "Moulin Rouge!" charts the very passionate love affair between the lovesick writer Christian and the alluring chanteuse Satine. The production, directed by Alex Timbers, will feature several songs from the 2001 movie along with additional musical numbers pulled from the "Billboard" charts of recent years. Sonya Tayeh serves as choreographer and John Logan is musical director.



Cast members are Aaron Tveit as Christian, Karen Olivo as Satine, Danny Burstein as Harold Zidler, Sahr Ngaujah as Toulouse-Lautrec, Ricky Rojas as Santiago, Robin Hurder as Nini and Tam Mutu as the Duke of Monroth.

Tveit was last seen as Bobby in Barrington Stage's 2017 revival of Stephen Sondheim's "Company," directed by Julianne Boyd. His Broadway credits include Gabe in "Next to Normal," Frank Abagnale, Jr. in "Catch Me If You Can," Fiyero in "Wicked" and Link Larkin" in "Hairspray."

Olivo's Broadway credits include Faith in "Brooklyn," Anita in "West Side Story" and Vanessa in "In the Heights." On Broadway, Burstein has played Tevye in "Fiddler on the Roof," Herr Schultz in "Cabaret," "Luther Billis in "South Pacific," Buddy Plummer in "Follies" and Aldolpho in "The Drowsy Chaperone."

Rounding out the ensemble are Dylan Paul, Jacqueline Arnold, Olutayo Bosede, Kyle Brown, Sam Cahn, Joe Carroll, Holly James, Max Clayton, Natalie Cortez, Jennifer Florentino, Benjamin Riv, Paolma Garcia-Lee, Bahiyah Hibah, Ericka Hunter, Jodi McFadden, Brandon Leffler, Reed Luplau, Jeigh Madjus, Daniel Maldonado, Morgan Marcell, Brant Martinez, Kevyn Morrow, Fred Odgaard and Klori Petinaud.


Musical numbers include "Come What May," "The Show Must Go On," "Rhythm of the Night," "Roxanne," "Like a Virgin" and "One Day I'll Fly Away."

"Moulin Rouge!" is being staged at the Emerson Colonial Theatre (106 Boylston Street
Boston, MA).
Tickets are $59.50-$209.50
For reservations or more information, call (888) 616-0272.
website:www.emersoncolonialtheatre.com.

Following its world premiere engagement in Boston, the two-act musical is expected to transfer to Broadway. No dates or theaters have been confirmed as yet. 


Friday, April 6, 2018

Primary Stages presents "Feeding the Dragon" starring Sharon Washington (Cherry Lane Theatre) (Off-Broadway)

 

 By James V. Ruocco
 
"The building was closed. The other kids had long since packed up their school bags. The librarians had gone home. It was just 8-year-old Sharon, alone, in the shush-less quiet of an empty building on Amsterdam Avenue."  (Sharon Washington)
  
It's a personal story told from the heart.
It is one that is very beautiful whether you're seeing it for the first time. Or in this case, the second time, which, as the saying goes "is quite the charm."
And, it's a true one.
 
The tremendously gifted actress/ writer Sharon Washington actually grew up in the St. Agnes branch of the New York Library on Manhattan's upper west side.
Really?
Yes, really.
She actually lived there....in the caretaker's spacious, vast, three-bedroom apartment...with her father (he was the custodian for the library), her mom and her grandmother. And what a wonderful and interesting life it was!

In "Feeding the Dragon," the intuitive, exciting and very personable one-woman show, which she wrote and stars in, the actress turns back the clock in time to retrace those early years and others with loving, determined and honest affection.
She laughs. She cries. She dances. She dazzles. She excites. She conjures up one memory after another. And, lastly, she leaves no stone or remembrance unturned.

It's all here: the books, the books and the more beautiful books. Plus the wealth of knowledge that they provided including Dr. David Reuben's "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask)," the 1969 bestseller she began reading at the tender age of eleven.

 
With Washington, as both guide and auteur, the audience is also privy to life on New York City's  Amsterdam Avenue, the stores, the restaurants, the people and the shop owners and what is was like "being colored" or "Negro" in the late '60's and '70's. The actress also sheds light on how she became a scholarship student at the prestigious Dalton School, why her dad became restless and dependent on liquor and how her mom coped with everyday life living above the library and how she often wore thrift-store dresses to school meetings.

"Feeding the Dragon" also comes packaged with lots of clever, well-orchestrated banter about relatives, road trips, buying fresh watermelon and shrimp off passing trucks, wearing Fiorucci jeans, Piggly Wiggly grocery stores, Pentecostal Church going, Christmas hams, disco, family confrontations, coal furnaces, period hair styles, her pet dog Brownie, his bout with peanut butter and dozens and dozens of other choice topics and lovely, beautifully-written conversations .

But first, let's backtrack.

Staging a one-woman show can be especially problematic, especially if the director is not up to the challenge of the material, the actual staging and the mechanics of keeping the entire project afloat while using only one actor...and one actor only....for the play's allotted running time. It can be dangerous. It can be daunting. It can be suicidal from a professional standpoint. And, it can be completely disastrous if the bond between actor and audience is broken...just for a second or two...causing complete separation.


Luckily, for us, that was not the case when "Feeding the Dragon" was staged earlier this year at Hartford Stage. And at the Cherry Lane Theatre, the experience itself is similar, heightened by the theater's quaintness, closeness and intimacy.  The production itself fascinates at every turn.

The enlistment of Maria Mileaf  as director of "Feeding the Dragon" is a stoke of genius. She's brilliant. She's creative. She's cheeky. She's intuitive. She's crafty. She's focused. She's dynamic. She's original. She is respectful. She is appreciative. She is full of surprises. And that, in a nutshell, is why this production, in terms of staging, is bloody, bloody marvelous.

Think about it, for a moment.
One actor. One play. A 90 minute running time with no intermission. Crikey! How do you get the ball rolling? And keep it rolling and rolling and rolling.
Mileaf does just that. And so much more.

 

Her directorial take on the play is clever from start to finish. Everything that happens on Tony Ferrieri's colorful, handsomely designed set is beautifully planned, executed and exhibited, with some neat, choice one-on-one touches that beautifully underscore the play's underlying themes, its well-paced shifts in time and place, its dialogue and its many, many exchanges and memories.
Yes, we are in a theater. Yes, we are watching a play. Yes, we are watching an very accomplished actress bare her heart and soul. But with Mileaf as orchestrator, we are so attuned to what is actually happening, we forget all of that and bond so closely with Washington and her story, it's as if she's talking only to us. Just us.

Again, the intimacy of the Cherry Lane Theatre heightens that experience.

Pretty unique, don't you think?

Timing, of course, is everything.

That said, "Feeding the Dragon" also benefits from Mileaf's seamless teamwork with her lighting designer Ann G. Wrightson (great atmospheric touches) and original music/sound designer Lindsay Jones (very moving and heartfelt sound and music cues). All three work effortlessly throughout the play's 90 minutes to create a storytelling process that is real, raw, timely and awe-inspiring. A sound cue, a light cue, a music cue, a change in the play's gorgeous color palate...all of this heightens the aura and dynamics of the piece at every single twist and turn. Nothing is lost. Nothing ever stops. It just keeps evolving and evolving until the play ends and Washington takes center stage for the standing ovation she so rightly deserves.

 
"Feeding the Dragon" star Sharon Washington is a major force to be reckoned with. The fact that she is able to commit to a role that asks her to play not only herself, but so many other characters of different ages and genders is a mammoth undertaking indeed. But the piece itself is so endearing, personal and revelatory, she is completely at ease no matter what the situation is, what the dialogue is, what the character is and what the remembrance is.

No matter what she say and does, she gets the message across with an evident style and relish that is truly amazing. She can shift gears within a split second. She can jump back and forth into the voice and body of every character she creates with a snap, crackle and pop that is absolutely incredible to watch. She knows how to get a laugh. She knows how to make you shed a tear or two. She knows how to bring a smile to your face. She knows exactly how to keep you riveted and spellbound.

As actress and storyteller, Sharon Washington is genuine. She is real. She is uplifting. She is passionate. She is fiery. She is affectionate. She is childish. She is wild. She is satiric. She is dramatic. She is sassy. She is fascinating. She is beguiling. She is a natural-born entertainer. And finally, she gives "Feeding the Dragon" its dramatic sweep, momentum and fire. I just can't say enough.

 
"Feeding the Dragon" reaffirms Primary Stages long-running commitment to theater. It is a fiery, powerful, passionate and entertaining work. It is well-written and directed. And the chemistry between Washington and her audience makes it a production not to miss. And one, you'll probably want to see again.

The Primary Stages production of "Feeding the Dragon" is being performed at the Cherry Lane Theatre (30 Commerce St., New York, N.Y.), now through April 27.
For tickets or more information, call (212) 352-3101 or 866-811-4111.
website:  primarystages.org.