The King and I
Richard Rodgers (Music) and Oscar Hammerstein II (Lyrics
& Book)
Based upon the novel Anna
and the King by Margaret Landon
Jose Llana & Laura Michelle Kelly |
When a gloriously played overture pours forth hit after hit right
out of the Great American Songbook, there is no doubt that the musical to
follow is likely to be an evening to be savored. If the musical is one that has been revived
on Broadway four times since its 1951 debut, has won multiple Tonys in both the
premiere and subsequent outings, is now in its fifth national tour, and
continues to grace stages at every level many times each year, then
anticipation is even higher for a great evening with an old friend. The fact that the current touring show
landing at SHN’s Golden Gate Theatre comes with a spectacularly stellar cast in
an immensely impressive production means that Richard Rodgers’ (music) and
Oscar Hammerstein II’s (lyrics and book)
The King and I is a sure-fire guarantee to please both the first-timer and
the aficionado of the famed pair’s fifth, joint creation.
Based on a novel (Margaret Landon’s Anna and the King) that finds its roots in the actual King Mongkut,
ruler of Siam 1861-1868, and in the British governess, Anna Leonowens, whom he
hires to westernize his royal children, The
King and I finds some truth in its story how the King is desperately trying
to keep his country from falling under the rule of European powers as are many
of his neighboring nations. History
shows that the actual king in fact was able to keep tiny Siam independent
through his efforts. Other aspects of
the story Mr. Hammerstein pens are rooted in the historical occurrences,
including the fact that the first Anna did live in the palace grounds until a
brick house was built nearby for her.
Whether that Anna put up quite the fuss to get her own house that
Hammerstein makes so central in the telling of his Anna is doubtful – a battle
of wills between the King and the governess that begins almost as soon as she
steps off the boat and lets the awaiting Kralahome (the King’s prime minister) know
in no uncertain terms that she expects that contract promise to be fulfilled.
As Anna, Laura Michelle Kelly displays from the get-go upon
arriving in Siam her fiery defiance with a pointing finger, stern looks, and
firm vocals -- all aimed at the King’s shocked emissary (Brian Rivera). This almost cocky confidence leads her to
assert her demands for a private, brick house time and again, even to the King
himself. But this same Anna is also the one
that melts time and again to show another side of herself, softening her
stance, demeanor, and tone -- first when meeting some of the King’s sixty-seven
children and later as her liking and affection for the King himself clearly increases. Director Bartlett Sher clearly highlights
these contrasting aspects of Anna throughout this production – a decision that provides
much fun, nuance, and intrigue in the blossoming relationship between the King
and the Governess. (However, one has to
doubt if Mr. Hammerstein’s original storyline would have seen this English
woman take the same stance if the royal employer she faced were European versus
Asian – one troubling aspect of the story that a modern audience member must
gulp a bit in order to accept.)
When her desired house is not first and foremost in her
mind, Anna exudes a love and excitement for the adventure she has set upon with
her young son, Louis (Graham Montgomery).
Ms. Kelley’s first sung words spill out with crystal-clear chirpiness as
she and Louis duet in “I Whistle a Happy Tune.”
When she fondly reminisces of her late husband, Tom, and then calls out in
song to say, “Hello, Young Lovers” (“whoever you are”), she so easily allows
each note to float at a pace and with such distinctive singularity that as a
listener, there is an ability to grab hold and relish each rich, beautiful syllable. And just as wonderful, while she sings, her broad
smile reaches out into the outer and upper regions of the theatre – almost as
if she were actually looking at and smiling at every individual there. Ms. Kelley becomes an Anna to deservedly join
as an equal in a long line of all the famous ones before her (Gertrude
Lawrence, Eileen Brennan, Maureen McGovern, Angela Lansbury, and many more
including most recently, Tony-winning Kelli O’Hara).
Laura Michelle Kelly & Jose Llana |
One of her best moments is not when she is singing but when
she allows her total comedic side to shine as the King gets her finally to
agree never to have her head any higher than his royal noggin and then proceeds
to lower himself position by position until finally prostrate on the
floor. Anna, in her enormously hooped
skirt, becomes a mixture of Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett in her exaggerated
twists and flops, grimaces and grins, as she makes sure her head in fact does
not eclipse his.
Her royal partner in this charade of wills is Jose Llana,
who also played the King in the latest Broadway revival. Mr. Llana is richly and powerfully exact and
expressive in song (as in “A Puzzlement”).
But when his King speaks or sings, Mr. Llana’s ever-moving hands and
eyebrows say as much or more as anything that comes out of his mouth. This King has his own stubborn streak that
fully matches Anna’s; but he also has, like she, his own soft and humor-loving
side. This is particularly true when his
children parade in front of him in the eye-catching, warm-hearted, and funny
“The March of the Siamese Children” (one of several masterful sets
choreographed by Christopher Gattelli).
Equal impressiveness of voice and acting come from a number
of other key contributors. Lady Thiang, the
head wife that so deeply loves her kingly husband (even with all his faults that
she clearly acknowledges), delivers one of the evening’s highlights with
“Something Wonderful.” Joan Almedilla
explains to Anna her love for her King/husband with a voice that pleads in tone
for Anna’s understanding while it also teaches what true love really
means. With each ensuing stanza, a climatic
intensity slowly approaches note by note, totally revealing the depth of her
feelings for her husband.
Love, in this case a forbidden one, is also the focus of
relationship between Tuptim, the King’s newest wife and a ‘gift’ from the
Burmese king, and the Burmese envoy and student who brings her to Siam, Lun
Tha. Manna Nichols and Kavin Panmeechao
beautifully blend their voices in notes clearly interlocked in love as they
sing “We Kiss in a Shadow,” with Ms. Nichols reaching effortlessly to secure emotion-driven,
tonal heights. The two once again draw
huge audience praise as they sing of their doomed, not-to-be union: “In these
dreams, I’ve loved you so that by now I think ... I will love being loved by
you” (“I Have Dreamed”).
The Cast of "The King and I" |
And there is so much more that could be said in praise of
this magnificent musical and production.
The totally charming “Getting to Know You” featuring Anna, the royal
children and the wives; the visually, culturally, and musically show-stopper
ballet, “The Small House of Uncle Thomas” narrated by Tuptim and presented by a
host of royal singers and dancers; and of course the much-anticipated, fully appreciated
“Shall We Dance?” where Anna teaches the King to waltz as they both step close
to mutually expressed love – These are all favorite moments that returnees cannot
help but savor and first-timers will never forget.
Much of the evening’s impact also comes from a production
team that has brought the awe and quality of New York’s Great White Way to
Market Street’s Golden Gate Theatre in San Francisco. From the opening moments when a huge
sea-faring boat emerges to dock in a bustling, red-sky Siam harbor, the sets
designed by Michael Yeargan create an exotic set of scenes. His royal palace scenes majestically rise and
shift with tall, oriental columns that dance in a slow ballet across the wide
stage. Dotting the scenes with an array
of color and with an enchanting mixture of East and West are the costumes of
Catherine Uber. Donald Holder’s lighting
and Scott Lehrer’s sound designs further suggest a faraway dreamland of the
foreign but familiar. Bringing all the
atmospheric magic together is the underlying beauty of the mixed local and
touring orchestra, conducted by Gerald Steichen who clearly knows how to take a
Richard Rodgers score and ensure it both recalls what we fondly remember as
well as makes it all sound once again fresh and exciting.
And now this reviewer must confess: I love Rogers and Hammerstein musicals -- each
and all of them. I always enter with
both anticipation and with dread, hoping for another evening of being swept
away in the well-loved music and story and yet afraid that my expectations are
raised so high that disappointment is assured.
With the current SHN presentation of the touring The King and I, I walked away elated with not the slightest bit of
regret.
Rating: 5 E
The King and I continues
through December 11, 2016, at SHN’s Golden Gate Theatre, 1 Taylor Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available at Tickets are available at https://www.shnsf.com.
Photo
Credit: Matthew Murphy
Hey Eddie... your language skills are delightful. congratulations! looking forward to the show this wednesday...
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jack. That means a lot coming from you. Best.
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