Bright Star
Steve Martin (Music, Book, Story) & Edie Brickell
(Music, Lyrics, Story)
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Carmen Cusack |
Upfront, let’s just admit that some of the lyrics are full
of more corn and clichés than a barn’s loft and that the story’s twists and
turns are so unbelievably fantastical that even the audience laughed when the
story’s dramatic ‘big reveal’ was reenacted.
And there is an earworm of “A Man’s Gotta Do” (“what a man’s gotta do”)
that invades every listening ear and stubbornly remains even as one can do
nothing but groan when the irritating song sung by a group of old, white men is
reprised.
But then suddenly one notices that my toes have not stopped
tapping, that my hand is patting my leg keeping time with the music, and that I
seem to have this perpetual and sheepish grin glued on my face. Further, the energy in the entire Curran
Theatre is fully charged; there is a constant whirling of bodies, set pieces,
and even an entire house on the stage; and the star (nominated just last year
for a Tony Outstanding Actress in a Musical) is one of the most impressive to
land on a SF stage this year. Yes, Steve
Martin’s and Edie Brickell’s Bright Star
has some musical numbers that are bland and mundane, some moments syrupy sweet
as molasses or overdone as a 1890s melodrama, and a progression toward the
inevitable happy ending that makes highly unlikely leaps to get there. But hey, this is after all a musical; and on the Curran stage, this
touring production with many of its original New York cast is in the end a humdinger
barnstormer of a show that is a holiday gift not to be missed.
Taking place in the hills of North Carolina, Bright Star jumps back and forth between
two time periods and two groups of characters that may have more connections
between them than just geography. A guy
in his early twenties, Billy Crane, arrives home in Hayes Creek from World War
II duty, finding his mom now is a grave and a childhood friend, Margo, with
eyes and hopes focused totally on him. However,
Billy announces his design to move to the metropolis of Ashville to pursue a
desired career as a writer and uses an outlandish lie to get attention of the
editor of The Ashville Southern Journal. Alice Murphy is
known as hardline as they come, having caused even Ernest Hemingway to collapse
crying at her desk in order to get into her publication. Billy Crane’s lie and his charm somehow find
a soft spot inside that hard exterior (Miracle Number One of this
fairytale-like musical); and a bond is struck that eventually leads to Billy’s
first publication.
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Carmen Cusack & Patrick Cummings |
Alice’s advice to Billy is to write about what he knows, his
home; from her view, “It would be easier to get Lincoln on Mt. Rushmore than to
get home out of a Southern writer.” That
advice leads her to relive in her mind and on our stage scenes from 1923 in her
hometown of Zebulon when she was just leaving her teen years and still living
at home with her Bible-thumping parents.
A moonlit tryst down by the pond with the town’s hunkiest and likely richest
boy, Jimmy Ray Dobbs, leads to the unintended outcome other, equally innocent,
good girls have found themselves. In
this case, while Jimmy Ray is more than willing to marry Alice, his
business-minded daddy and her Bible-righteous father have other ideas what
should happen to the result of a kiss gone too far. Neither baby nor boyfriend is seen again by
Alice, who heads to Chapel Hill and eventually to her 1945 position as the journal
editor.
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The Swirling Musicians of Bright Star |
Two separate stories, two different towns, and two time
periods interlock as the musical unfolds.
The stories swirl back and forth under the fabulously inventive and
energetic direction of Walter Bobbie and the constantly shifting, high-spun
choreography by Josh Rhodes. A large
ensemble of townspeople watch with us as the stories evolve, and they continually
enter as not only passer-by witnesses and participants, but also as stagehands
to position Eugene Lee’s creative set pieces, as the deliverers of props that
float from one hand to the next in the blink of an eye, and as background
scenes that illustrate and enhance lyrics of a front-stage song. When called upon to be center stage, the
ensemble in full and in subsets moves, glides, jumps, and dances with the
full-body-and-soul enthusiasm of a Saturday night hoedown. All the while the stage is often full of the
swirls, leaps, and twirls of the ensemble, a house full of bluegrass music
instruments and their players is constantly on the move, circling around more
times that even Dorothy’s house in the midst of its tornado. (Tremendous kudos goes to Music Director P.
Jason Yarcho and his string-picking band of six.) The result is one of the highest energy generating
stages I have witnessed in a long time -- all done without ever taking focus away
from the spotlight on the principals’ current songs or dialogues.
When Alice opens the entire show singing, “If you knew my
story, you’d have a hard time believing me,” we know immediately that Carmen
Cusack is going to reign supreme on the evening’s stage. Her voice has that perfect country/bluegrass music
sound with notes emerging from somewhere deep in the throat and making their
way out with just the right warbles, lingering tones, and slightly sharp edges
that ensure us this is not going to be a normal, Broadway diva musical. As the roller coaster ride of a story progresses,
Ms. Cusack only becomes stronger in not only the clarity and punch of her
singing but also in the authenticity of both her 1923 and 1945 selves. The face of her Alice is
one Norman Rockwell would have surely painted had he met her. Its expressions, longing looks, and both
smiles and tears leave lasting impressions on an audience whose final applause
of appreciation is given standing.
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A.J. Shively |
Likewise impressive is A.J. Shively as Billy Cane, who
delivers the musical’s title song with a brightness of tone and manner that
totally works, even as we know his youthful unbounded optimism of “I’m on my
way, bright star, keep shining on me” has yet to be tested. Mr. Shively is the All-American guy in a such
an innocent way that -- for this particular make-believe story -- we forgive
him for being white, male, and full of luck-and-promise in a 1940s Southern
world where – if we were to think about it – things are not going so well for a
lot of other residents (none of whose darker skin colors is represented in this
particular story or this touring cast).
Each of these two leads of the parallel stories has a love
interest who fully fits the required bill to flutter audience hearts. Patrick Cummings is the handsome Jimmy Ray
who teases the Younger Alice in “Whoa Mama,” singing what we know he does not mean, “You’re pretty as a
daisy, smell like a rose, make a man crazy, but it won’t be me.” Maddie Shea Baldwin sparkles as the hometown
bookstore clerk, Margo, who has high hopes about a certain author on the rise;
and she proves her own vocal mettle in a late musical duet with Billy, “Always
Will.”
The musical’s best-known number, “Sun is Gonna Shine” kicks
off Act Two in a rousing way worthy of any barn-raising party. Alice’s mom (played by Allison
Briner-Dardenne) delivers one of the more inspirational moments of the evening
as she gives that kind of heart-felt encouragement to a daughter that every kid
striking it off on their own should receive: “Something tells me, it’ll be all
right ... the sun is gonna shine again.”
Daddy Murphy, as played by Stephen Lee Anderson, wins many
audience hearts after first across as totally hard-hearted. As Daddy Cane, David
Atkinson uses his grainy, back-hills voice to convey authentically a
mountaineer’s sad truth to his son in “She’s Gone.”
Nothing short of funny and quirky are Kaitlyn Davidson and
Jeff Blumenkrantz as Lucy and Daryl, office associates of Editor Alice, who
join Billy for a night of hilarious drinking on the town in “Another
Round” -- a song full of bland clichés
about drinking but one also accompanied by skirt-lifting, leg-splitting, and
body-twirling jitterbugging.
The lighting and sound designs of Japhy Weideman and Nevin
Steinberg are knockout winners in this production. Both continually amaze and capture the
shifting times, moods, and energies of the production. The costumes of Jane Greenwood are picture
perfect for both the ‘20s and ‘40s and often are changed even as people are
walking from one era into the next.
Many of the songs in this Steve Martin/Edie Brickell musical
will soon be forgotten. What will be
long remembered is the sheer energy generated by a banjo-and-guitar-picking
score that excites and by a director’s genius for keeping two stories literally
swirling in front of us with no confusion occurring amidst what could be a very
confusing plotline of unbelievable leaps and unlikely bridges. And when a superb cast headed by the
incomparable Carmen Cusack is added, any occasional faults of lyrics or book
are quickly and forever forgiven and forgotten.
Rating: 4.5
Bright Star
continues through December 17, 2017 at the Curran Theatre, 445 Geary Street,
San Francisco. Tickets are available at https://sfcurran.com/get-tickets/?page=event&eventId=401
or by calling the Box Office at 415-358-1220 between 10 a.m. and 6 pm. Monday
through Friday.
Photo Credits: Craig Schwartz
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