The Legend of Georgia
McBride
Matthew Lopez
![]() |
| Jason Kapoor, Adam McGill & Kraig Swartz |
Elvis shaking his legs in a white jumpsuit, studded with red
sparkles and flared in both sleeves and legs.
Drag queens in golden-yellow, butt-showing rain gear, popping their umbrellas
and singing of “men” raining from above.
Appearances by Judy, Barbra, Tammy, and a parade of other drag queen
faves. How else should a reputable,
respected theatre company named Marin bring its fiftieth year to a close?
Add to all this frivolity and fabulousness a storyline that
shows how the performing arts – even a small-town stage of drag queens -- can
bring together folks highly diverse in background, gender, gender identity,
race, and personality and turn them into one caring, loving family. The combination proves Marin Theatre
Company’s choice of Matthew Lopez’s The
Legend of Georgia McBride is nothing short of brilliant as a way to
celebrate the Company’s half-century of making magic on stage and changing the lives
of its audiences.
![]() |
| Adam McGill, Kraig Swarz & Jason Kapoor |
Casey’s vision is to be the best Elvis impersonator
ever. The fact he is now playing nightly
only to six or seven beer-sluggers at Leo’s Bar in Panama City, Florida does
not diminish his bright-eyed enthusiasm.
However, the fact he neither brings in many patrons nor takes home more
than a few bucks is enough to concern both his boss, Eddie, and his wife,
Jo. Eddie’s solution is to switch from
Elvis to Miss Tracy Mills, a drag-circuit queen who’s luck is down enough to
find herself playing in the boonies of Florida, bringing along her sidekick --
a vodka-and-pill-loving Miss Anna Rexia Nervosa (Rexy, for short). When Rexy’s bad habits land her mid-show on
the dressing room floor, Casey -- now a reluctant bartender – is soon even more
reluctant (think deer in headlights) as he is suddenly being readied to go on
stage in skirt, wig, and a face full of make-up to lip-sing a Piaf song – in
French. As Miss Tracy tells him, “Honey,
it is lip synch or swim ... If you can’t
remember the lyrics, ‘watermelon and motherfucker’ will get you through.”
Change is in the air, and his gig switch from Elvis to
Georgia McBride is just the tip of the iceberg for Casey, for Jo, and for
everyone else at the club. The journey
is going to be full of bumps and grinds (and not just those of queens in the
spotlight), and there will be a few bruises along the way. But a drag queen knows that life is about
going out “with our tits up and our dicks tucked” and that everything else will
eventually take care of itself.
Adam Magill brings a host of expressions – from 10-year-old
wonderment to teenage hurt puppy to twenty-something naiveté – to his role as
Casey. His tall, curly-headed, slim body
often seems and acts more like that of a gangly boy than that of a soon-to-be
father; and the charm of youth is written all over his very being. But when he discovers the feminine side of
his straight, cis self, his resurrection as Georgia is a wonder and delight to
watch. His confidence to snap and zeal
for sass is enough to make his drag mother, Miss Tracy, very proud.
As Miss Tracy Mills, Kraig Swartz has the cocky confidence,
the steady swish in six-inch heels, and that certain flip of wigged head to
prove this drag queen has been around a block or two (or probably a few hundred). With a deep voice of gravel that sounds as if
it could be that of some forgotten Aunt of one’s childhood, this brash,
take-charge queen also has the kind of heart and soul that those who know the
drag world, know is there in abundance.
![]() |
| Kraig Swartz & Adam McGill |
When Miss Tracy renders before our eyes the metamorphosis of
Casey from all-arms-and legs bartender into a beautiful (if still wobbly and
shell-shocked) Georgia McBride, the process is both jaw-dropping in its
fascination and back-slapping in its hilarity.
Amidst a constant barrage of one-liners, Miss Tracy does her magic while
Casey learns that putting on panty hose is not quite the same as hiking up a
pair of jeans.
![]() |
| Kraig Swartz, Jason Kapoor & John R. Lewis |
John R. Lewis is the club-owner Eddie; his own on-stage
mutations as announcer are an ongoing sequence of increasing fun and glamour as
his size of audience and revenues skyrocket and his own showmanship blossoms. The very southern-sounding Jo (Tatiana
Wechsler) grows in tummy as she approaches motherhood, but it is her
character’s growth in how she views life and its renewed possibilities for
herself and her husband that is the real story to watch.
Jason Kapoor plays the good, ol’ boy that is Casey’s
neighbor, Jason -- also Casey’s landlord who gladly offers a beer while
threatening eviction. Mr. Kapoor is also
the sometimes venomous, usually drunk drag queen, Rexy, who proves she too has
the possibility of some surprising shifts in character that are as spectacular
as her lip-singing rendition of Amy Winehouse.
The Marin Theatre Company production team comes close to
upstaging the queens themselves with its own flair for the fabulous. The many sequins, feathers, and colors of
satin and sheer that Kara Harmon finds to highlight the gowns of the performers
as well as the boots, heels, and wigs she adds for outrageous effects are
eye-popping and impressive (as are the drag-a-licious props of Devon
LaBelle). Kurt Landisman’s lighting is
often close to show-stopping in its effects, and the sound tracks and sound
management of Sean McStravick are any lip-synching queen’s dream. These ‘empresses in drag’ do more than just
stand still, and their snazzy movements in numbers like “It’s Raining Men” and
“Express Yourself” have been crafted by choreographer Dell Howlett.
All has been set in a split-stage by Jason Sherwood between the shabby, crowded dressing room that the queens share (packed with all the parts that eventually come together to spell ‘marvelous’) and the small, modest apartment inhabited by Jo and Casey. Kent Gash directs the entire show with an air for over-the-top sprinkled generously with outlandish. He ensures that laughs will be had by all and also provides for moments of soul-searching, truth, and ‘ah-ha’ self-discovery.
All has been set in a split-stage by Jason Sherwood between the shabby, crowded dressing room that the queens share (packed with all the parts that eventually come together to spell ‘marvelous’) and the small, modest apartment inhabited by Jo and Casey. Kent Gash directs the entire show with an air for over-the-top sprinkled generously with outlandish. He ensures that laughs will be had by all and also provides for moments of soul-searching, truth, and ‘ah-ha’ self-discovery.
The one directorial downfall is the decision to run the
two-hour-plus show with no intermission.
There appears a perfect moment of a surprise-filled discovery where a needed
break could be had -- one that would make the rather prolonged drag show at the
show’s end a little easier and more enjoyable to behold.
Lots of radical transformations occur during the course of
Matthew Lopez’s Legend – physical,
career, family, fortune, and more importantly, sense of positive self-image and
self-worth. Attitudes shift as
characters expand their universe of how far boundaries can be pushed into new
arenas in order to discover one’s true passion.
Stereotypes are challenged.
Assumptions based in exterior appearances and artificial persona are
dealt fatal blows. For all the fake
eyelashes flying about, size 13 high heels being tripped over, and falsies
being stuffed into glittering gowns, The
Legend of Georgia McBride takes time to make important points about the bonding
and love that happens behind the scenes among stage performers – even catty,
sassy drag queens.
Rating: 4 E
The Legend of Georgia
McBride continues in an extended run through July 9, 2017 at Marin Theatre
Company, , 397 Miller
Avenue, Mill Valley CA. Tickets are
available online at http://www.marintheatre.org or by calling the box office
Tuesday – Sunday, 12 -5 p.m.
Photos
by Kevin Berne




No comments:
Post a Comment