Monsoon Wedding
Sabrina Dhawan (Book); Vishal Bhadrwaj (Music); Susan
Birkenhead (Lyrics)
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| Members of the Cast of Monsoon Wedding |
With one grand splash of kaleidoscopic colors surrounded by
pulsating beats of uplifting music and bodies moving and dancing in all directions,
one opening number (“Song of My Heart”) tells us all we need to know that the world premiere Monsoon Wedding is going to be a jaw-dropping, wow affair. Overlooking the domes and spires of a Delhi
skyline, workers and family members bustle about while joyously singing, “Let
the music fill the air, happiness is everywhere” in busy preparation for two
families separated by an ocean about to unite in their children’s matrimony. The Indian-American groom-to-be arrives for
his arranged marriage, singing with a big, goofy smile, “Everything I’ve
dreamed is here.” Meanwhile, his young, Delhi-native bride-to-be is tearfully
pleading with her married, TV-host boyfriend to leave his wife and marry her,
saving her from this arranged, sure-to-be disaster arriving from (Can you
believe it?) New Jersey.
Oops! Yes, in one
opening number we have all the tantalizing set-up needed to hook us right back into
the story that Sabrina Dhawan first introduced in her 2001 movie of the same
name, Monsoon Wedding. Once again employing the wondrous creativity
and inventive genius of Mira Nair as director and now also bringing in Vishal
Bhadrwaj and Susan Birkenhead respectively to create music and lyrics, Berkeley
Repertory Theatre has seemingly spared no expense for this first staging of the
film-turned-musical. The colors and
glamour of Arjun Bhasin’s exotic, flowing costumes are immediately eye-popping
and continue to amaze scene after rainbow-hued scene. The sets and settings designed by Mikiko
Suzuki Macadams are massive in scale and wondrous in detail, constantly
shifting magically and effortlessly; and they are enhanced in fun and often-funny
ways by the projections of Peter Nigrini.
Lighting by Donald Holder is whimsical, adding its own color, Far Eastern
feels, and wonder. And Scott Lehrer has
ensured that city, storm, and celebration sounds surround us from all
directions at just the right moment.
All in all, the premiere of Monsoon Wedding repeatedly takes us to the brink of sensory
overload, ensuring our eyes are always open wide in amazement, our toes are
often tapping as our bodies are gently swaying, and certainly that the grins on
our faces are wider than a Cheshire Cat’s.
The only real issue with this premiere version of Monsoon Wedding is that many – but certainly
not all – of Ms. Birkenhead’s lyrics are frankly too close to being banal. Stuck in rhyming schemes better suited to
children’s nursery poems, lines are too often predictable and frankly, just a
bit silly. In one otherwise delicious
number by all the women of the bride’s family (“Aunties are Coming”), the
clever choreography with its comedic whimsy loses some of its edge with lyrics
like “Long ago I was yummy, now he calls me Mummy.” In another number delightful in the
choreography of Lorin Latarro where the married couples of the two families
dance in the styles and moves of when they first met/dated (“You Will Learn”),
it is hard not to roll eyes at the repeated rhymes such as “You will learn to
love each other, like I did with your mother.”
With such lines, some of the twenty-plus songs do not
actually do much to enhance the musical’s progression, but serve only fill up
space. What often saves them and helps
us ignore their lyrical content are all the production elements that engulf us
with an array of colors and pulsing movements along with a score that is both
contagiously exciting and hypnotically mesmerizing. And then there is the fact that the songs are
delivered by a cast of overall superb, near-perfection voices
and talented band members (under the music direction of Greg
Kenna).
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| In Foreground, Kuhoo Verma & Michael Maliakel |
Tops among those vocal performances are the four leads who
play the upstairs/downstairs love duos of the musical: Arranged-marriage pair
Hemant Rai and Aditi Verman plus event planner PK Dubey and household servant
Alice. As the tall, slender Hemant,
Michael Maliakel immediately establishes himself as the voice of the
night. From his opening notes, he
delivers a rich clarity that causes one to lean in, not wanting to miss any of
the nuances he brings in the vocal waves, tremors, and melodic glides that
bridge in sound and approach his American and Indian backgrounds. When joined by the voice of Kuhoo Verma
(Aditi, his intended) – a voice that is light, young, and sweet while also
blossoming into full maturity as her character’s convictions for true love
solidify – the two shine in numbers like “Could You Have Loved Me” and “Breathe
In, Breathe Out.”
As the wedding planner PK Dubey, Namit Das is both endearing
and altogether hilarious with his fast, clipped talk; his wild hamming up of
songs and dances; and his puppy-love-filled eyes when he is around the woman
who captures his heart, Alice (Anisha Nagarajan). Each also has a singing voice that strikes
all the right chords time and again.
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| Namit Das |
When PK is joined by three workers (Ali Momen as Congress,
Andrew Prahshad as Tameesuddin, and Levin Valayil as Lottery) in “We Are Like This
Only,” the four are clown-like in their horsing around as they use every,
possible body muscle to accentuate their fine harmonies in coordinated,
exaggerated arm-and-leg-filled dances. And
speaking of horses, PK and Alice are joined by a cartoon-clad cluster of
travelers as he chases after her train on a horse (of sorts) in a number
(“Chuk, Chuk”) that is like watching live animation – especially with the
thrilling projection, set, and lighting magic that is brought to bear.
The four would-be lovers who will undergo twists, turns, and
traumas before solidifying their marital choices join together in one of the
musical’s best numbers, “Neither Here Nor There.” Individually, as twosomes,
and finally as a quartet, their voice swerve and swell in haunting, moving
waves of India-induced harmonies. The
effect is emotionally stunning.
But there are many other outstanding performances among this
large cast. Foremost is Sharvari
Deshpande as Ria Verma, the orphaned niece whom Aditi’s parents have raised as
their own. There is a sad and secret
story within her that emanates throughout her seamless traverse of sung scales
high and low -- particularly in the arresting, intense “Be a Good Girl” where
travails long held deep inside burst into the open. Her courage of revelation and the impact it
has on her family – especially Aditi’s father, Lalit (Jaaved Jaaferi – is one
of the most impressive, memorable, and importantly serious parts of this,
Bollywood-like fairytale.
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| Palomi Ghosh & Namit Das |
In a story sometimes half-sung, half-spoken, but concluding
in a rich, deep voice coming from her heart, PK’s ‘nanni’ (played by Palomi
Ghosh) tells of her own bout with forbidden love in “Love is Love” as PK
struggles what to do as a Hindi guy who has fallen for a Christian gal. (Ms. Ghosh is also amusing and heart-warming
as a humped-over, but vigorous grandmother always on her cell prodding her
grandson toward the altar -- any altar -- before she dies.)
And it would be a sin to overlook the repeated fun and joy
that Monsoon Bissell brings to her role as “Auntie” Shashi. Her bigger-than-life presence in body, heart,
laugh, and even song is yet one more reason this cast is a total winner in
selling the story and delivering the production numbers of Monsoon Wedding.
So in the end, the lyrics may sometimes be silly and a few
numbers may seem to be last-minute add-ons as a new musical is born; but the
hypnotic music itself, the overall grandeur of the production, and the fabulous
insights of the director in bringing a talented cast to stellar heights of
performance make Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s world premiere maybe the biggest
must-see of the season.
Rating: 4.5 E
Monsoon Wedding
continue in an extended, premiere run through July 2, 2017 , in production on the Main
Stage of Berkeley Repertory’s RodaTheatre, 2015 Addison Street, Berkeley,
CA. Tickets are available at http://www.berkeleyrep.org/ or by calling 510-647-2975
Tuesday – Sunday, noon – 7 p.m.
Photo Credits: Kevin Berne




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