Sunday in the Park
with George
Stephen Sondheim (Music & Lyrics); James Lapine (Book)
John Bambery as George |
“Order.”
“Design.”
“Tension.”
“Composition.”
“Balance.”
“Light.”
As each word is announced by the artist whose science of
painting is guided by these exacting principles, the members of his most famous
composition move into place, aided by his adjustments as needed to get just the
right placement of head, hem, or parasol.
And then when he finally he says, “Harmony,” Stephen Sondheim’s glorious
“Sunday” sounds forth as a magnetic set of waves that draws us quietly toward an
eventual climax of beautifully blended voices in a suddenly arresting volume,
“People strolling through the trees
Of a small suburban park
On an island in the river
On an ordinary Sunday.”
The Cast of Sunday in the Park with George |
For me, no matter how many times I see this incredibly
moving sequence, I cannot hold back the tears streaming down my cheek. The creation of art that occurs in front of
our eyes in Stephen Sondheim (music and lyrics) and James Lapine’s (book) Sunday in the Park with George is
unmatched in any other play or musical (in my opinion). Under the inspired direction of Bill English
where loving strokes of genius abound, the current, visually awakening
production at San Francisco Playhouse does not disappoint as George Seurat’s
painting, A Sunday Afternoon on the
Island of La Grande Jatte, becomes three-dimensional reality in each act’s
emotional and harmonious conclusion.
George-Pierre Seurat (1859-1891) was a post-Impressionist painter,
famous today as the creator of the pointillist technique of painting where
hundreds of thousands of multi-colored dots blend at a distance into a picture
full of rich hues, light, and shadows.
During his too-short lifetime, he was largely shunned by the established
art community and never had a major exhibit.
The near-maniacal approach to his dotted painting, the
adherence to a non-stop work ethic that precluded much time away from his
sketchbook or canvas, and the obsession for perfection that meant minute
attention to every detail of a model’s being are all magnificently captured in
the music and lyrics by Sondheim in a song like “Color and Light.” As George stabs his brush as if piercing the
canvas with a sharp tool, he sings in rapid progression, “More red, a little
more red, blue, blue, blue, blue ... There’s only color and light, yellow and
white.”
John Bambery & Nanci Zoppi |
John Bambery captures George’s fanatically determined
approach to art and life as he both sketches on the shores of the river or as
he works from a ladder on the massive canvas in his darkened studio. Taking strong jabs on an imaginary canvas
between him and us as audience, he sings with a voice crisp, clear, and
convincing of his character’s compulsive nature. He clips off the Sondheim rush of lyrics with
ease and yet with purpose, digging into the notes zeal and intensity with a
voice that can both belt and whisper with the same rich array of tones.
When George is sketching on a Sunday in the park amongst a
bevy of lovers, soldiers, strollers, and even his mother and her nurse that
will eventually make it onto his completed canvas, he at one point becomes two lazing
dogs (Spot and Fifi) who yap and yep, ruff and gruff together about their
Sunday adventures and woes. John Bambery
delights us with his puppy antics and his duo ventures into falsetto squeaks
and basso wallows.
Later in his studio, his intensity of voice and manner only
increase with wonderful vocal gymnastics that speak of satisfied victory as he
delivers “Finishing the Hat” (“Look, I made a hat ... where there never was a
hat”). Continuously, Mr. Bambery is a
George Seurat that we can believe he is actually that now-icon of the art world
who largely ignored the rest of his life in order to create art unlike any that
had ever been created before.
John Bambery & Nanci Zoppi |
And in doing so, George loses Dot, the woman who adores him
even as she dislikes the hours of modeling in the hot sun in her black, bustle
dress. Nanci Zoppi brings vast amounts
of fun and frustration into the role of Dot as she does all she can to turn
George’s attention – at least for a few moments – from his brushes to look and
be with her. With time at the Follies
being more to her liking than another night watching George try to get the
right shade of black out of red, yellow, and blue, Dot weighs sticking with
George or taking up with the more boring, but also much more affectionate and
attending Louis the baker (a jolly, twinkle-toed Anthony Rollins-Mullens).
While in songs (like her opening “Sunday in the Park with
George”) Ms. Zoppi rattles off the rapid lyrics without one word being missed
by us as audience, she sometimes veers vocally into too much nasal qualities or
syllables that waver into areas not as attractive as desired. The result is that her Dot is wonderfully
acted (as in a parallel sequence of applying in poking motions her powder puff
at the mirror as George punches his paint brush in “Color and Light”), but she
is not consistently able to sell completely some of her big numbers – although
she comes close -- like “We Do Not Belong Together” or the second act’s
climatic “Move On.”
Where Nanci Zoppi does excel in particular is in the second
act when she becomes an old lady in wheelchair who is supposedly the daughter that
Dot and George have before Dot leaves George.
In this role, her astute acting abilities are matched by a voice that
fits perfectly as an aging grandmother singing the touching “Children and
Art.”
John Barbery as the Modern-Day George |
In this second act, the elderly Marie tells her mother, Dot
-- now embedded behind her on the wall, forever in the famed, Seurat picture --
of her grandson, also an experimenting, controversial artist named George. That second George’s challenges as an artist
who must also worry about the business matters of pleasing money-generous
patrons and foundations is the focus of Act Two, with John Bamberry once again
being impressive in every regard as the great-grandson of the earlier
George. He and the entire company are
especially exceptional – particularly because of Director Bill English’s astute
choices – in “Putting It Together,” where the business of making art becomes
all too real as a pressing pack of patrons want to be in-your-face close to the
artist they support while he would himself rather be anywhere else but in their
midst.
The parallels between the two Georges’ mannerisms and
talents, their doubting critics, and their lost loves are the crowning touches
in James Lapine’s book that combine with Stephen Sondheim’s astounding music and
clever-beyond-words lyrics to make the musical such a favorite among many
self-declared fanatics of the modern musical (including yours truly). Like in many productions prior of Sunday in the Park, the Creative Team of
San Francisco Playhouse also insures that the musical is one as visually as
remarkable as it is musically and story-wise.
Bill English not only directs but has created a simple but effective set
design the allows the projections and videos designed by Theodore J.H. Hulsker
to reign supreme in not only re-creating elements of the famed painting, but
also of the artist’s studio, the actual park and river, and of the modern
George’s controversial Chromlolume #7.
Michael Oesch has created his own artistic wonders in a
lighting design that turns a wooden stage into a lush lawn of green grass, gently
dappled in sunlight – one of many beautiful touches where the light so
important to George Suerat is able to take a starring role in this
production.
The costumes of Abra Berman bring the Seurat painting into
reality as its late nineteenth-century characters move off the canvas onto the
stage. At the same time, she adds much
humor to the early 1980s where patrons at modern George’s art exhibit are
clearly dressed to be on full exhibition themselves.
John Barbery & Maureen McVerry |
Besides Mr. Bambery and Ms. Zoppi, seventeen other actors
fill the staged canvas of the first act and the modern art show of the second,
ably playing characters often full of delightful quirk, spunk, and
peculiarity. Maureen McVerry is a
firm-minded, Old Lady on the lake’s shore who is actually George’s mother,
combining with him in “Beautiful” with a voice that bemoans all the changes
around her – one with touches of sung melancholy, desperation, and urgency – as
she finally urges George to capture the scene of life around her before it (and
perhaps she) fades away.
Ryan Drummond is a rather pompous, fellow artist named Jules
who, along with his wife Yvonne (Abby Haug), sings among despairingly “ah’s”
and “oh my’s” in “No Life” concerning how his friend George’s room-filling
painting has “no presence.” But Jules is
also flirty in the park, sneaking off behind the bushes with the Old Lady’s
feisty Nurse (Michelle Drexler).
Xander Ritchey |
On the shaded shore of the lake, among others, are also a rough-edged
Boatman (Xander Ritchey) whose gruff singing voice challenges George’s artistic
perception in “The Day Off;” a smoothly crooning and courting Soldier 1
(William Giammona) and his silent, signing pal Soldier 2 (Elliott Hanson); and
their new-found girlfriends who reel them in while fishing at the shore,
Celeste 1 (Emily Radosevich) and Celeste 2 (Corrie Farbstein). All of these and the rest of the cast double
in other, modern-day roles once the Act Two scene shifts to the second George’s
exhibition.
While there a few times when the pace and action of the
production seems to slow in pauses between scenes, there is no quarrel that in total-cast
numbers like “The Day Off,” “It’s Hot Up Here,” and the aforementioned “Putting
It Together,” Director English and Choreographer Kimberly Richards know how to
keep our interest and tickle us a bit with humorous interactions, complaints,
and unsaid thoughts made public. But in
the end, it is the combination of a fine orchestra’s music (under the direction
of keyboardist, Dave Dobrusky) and the strongly sung harmonies of the Chorus as
a whole in those two renditions of “Sunday” that will be most relished by audience
in the days following, just as been the case of all past productions of Sunday in the Park with George.
In its annual, summer, musical gift
to the Bay Area, with this Sunday in the
Park with George San Francisco Playhouse leaves us with warm feelings and
overall happy memories of a sunny afternoon stroll while also reminding us that
there is no more sublime subject for a staged work of art than one about the
creation of art and the artist behind it who sacrifices all to bring that work
to life.
Rating: 4 E
Sunday in the Park
with George continues through September 8, 2018 at San Francisco Playhouse,
450 Post Street. Tickets are available at http://sfplayhouse.org/ or by calling the box office at
415-677-9596.
Photos
by Ken Levin.
The final tableau of the signing of the Decoration of Independence in the musical "1776" moves me just like that Sunday scene.
ReplyDeleteAgree! :-)
DeleteI absolutely loved Nanci Zoppi as Dot and loved the twist on the voice that she chose to do. I only wish that I had a cast album recording!!
ReplyDelete