The Last Five Years
Jason
Robert Brown (music & lyrics)
The
widely popular, much-produced, two-person musical The Last Five Years (music and lyrics by Broadway veteran Jason Robert
Brown) came recently to San Francisco in a concert version for three
performances only. Even after just
one performance, social media sites lit up with “You have to go tomorrow to
see…” Supported by an excellent,
on-stage orchestra, two actors, Adam Kantor as Jamie and Betsy Wolfe as Cathy,
sing a story of love found, love solidified in marriage, and then love lost as
their two careers and lives go in opposite directions. What makes this telling so unique is
that each half of this couple tells the story from opposite timeline
beginnings. Cathy starts at the
sad end of their five years when the break-up is imminent; Adam, at the
exuberant beginning as he prepares for their first date.
The
stories proceed with their separate ups and downs, only meeting once as the
actual vows are declared. We watch
the emotions and moods of the two ends of the relationship unfold before us. When Cathy is ‘still hurting’ in the
opening song, Jamie’s opening is all about his excitement over his new ‘shiksa
goddess’ girlfriend. What is
interesting in this staging is that each actor continues to watch and react to
the other’s, opposite-end story.
Even when Cathy is hurting as the relationship is collapsing, she can
then smile and seemingly remember the good times that Jamie is relating as he
is telling the beginning of their story.
Later as he is having lots of doubts and frustrations, he can laugh
silently on the side and look lovingly at her as she tells her version of how
it all began.
Mr.
Brown’s lyrics and music are the stars of this show. All emotions of dating, moving in together, deciding to
marry, dealing with career issues and triumphs, doubts about self and partner,
and suffering through increasing conflicts and ultimate disillusion are
captured in songs that are appropriately snappy, funny, grand, aching, and
haunting. Even in concert format,
the exuberance and the torments of Cathy and Jamie are deeply felt by us all as
we really do get to know a lot about these two people and how they are so very
different. We easily begin to see
parallels to our own histories of convoluted mixtures of love and ambition, of
ego and loyalty, of blind trust and obvious betrayal.
Of course
what sells Mr. Brown’s songs and musical are two outstanding singers who can
also act convincingly. Few
complaints are possible about the amazing voices and delivery of Ms. Wolfe or
Mr. Kantor. The one minor fault is
that Ms. Wolfe seemed too quick and too often to belt, even blast her
numbers. As the concert/play
progressed, this tendency became a bit tiring and too expected.
In the
end/beginning of this musical, we as audience once again understand that no
relationship break-up is all black and white and that regret is usually shared
in the end as much as love is in the beginning. These stories are both tragic and familiar. That is probably why The Last Five Years continues to draw audiences to many theatres across
the nation.
Rating: 5 E’s
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