Falsettos
William Finn (Music & Lyrics); William Finn & James
Lapine (Book)
The Cast of "Falsettos" |
Facing us on the other wise dark, blank stage is one of the
four corners of a large, light-gray cube consisting of many large, various
shaped pieces fit tightly together like a puzzle. From that incredibly fascinating Rubiks-like
cube will emerge living rooms, doorways, beds, steps, and dozens of other
aspects of David Rockwell’s scenic design – all symbolizing a tight-knit group
of people we will get to know whose lives come apart and reassemble in various
and changing segments, only from time to time to emerge once again as a
whole. In William Finn and James
Lapine’s Falsettos – now playing on
tour at SHN’s Golden Gate Theatre – life and love; family and friends; new
lovers and ex-lovers; gay and straight, living and dying; happy, angry, and sad
are all part of the complicated ups and downs, ins and outs of growing up, of
being in relationship, and of finally feeling comfortable figuring out what it
means to be human.
Falsettos is an
all-musical journey through three years of the lives of Marvin, his ex-wife
Trina, his ten-year-old son Jason, his much-younger lover Whizzer, and his psychiatrist
Mendel. Neighbors and friends, Dr.
Charlotte and her life partner Cordelia, eventually round out the configuration,
resulting in many oft-changing patterns of sometimes intersecting and sometimes
non-intersecting relationships. William
Finn began exploring Marvin and his core family in the 1979 one-act musical In Trousers. Two years later, James Lapine joined him as
they penned March of the Falsettos,
followed in 1990 with the third edition – in the bleak peak of the AIDS crisis
– with Falsettoland. In 1992, the latter two one-acts were
joined into the present musical, Falsettos. The SHN production is a touring version of
the much-celebrated (and now much-seen on current, repeated PBS airings) of the
Lincoln Center Theatre, 2016 revival.
A story that has much pain, conflict, regret, and inevitable
sorrow threaded throughout also has loads of humor, lots of genuine caring, and
uplifting expressions of love that cannot help but touch hearts of those
watching. In other words, the story is
about life itself as most of us experience it in any of our own three-year
segments.
The other thread in this particular slice of these lives is
being Jewish, a source of much of the humor and a key element of especially the
plot in Act Two’s reenactment of Falsettoland. In fact, the musical begins with an
introduction of the kind of bickering we will see cropping up time and again as
the four men (with Trina chiming in from the sidelines) sing “Four Jews in a
Room Bitching,” all dressed as if they were part of the original Exodus and
taking time to tell a part of that story as the Red Sea suddenly appears and
splits before our eyes. We also get a
glimpse of the never too complicated but always clever choreography of Spencer
Liff as the shepherd staffs of these ‘ancient Jews’ become canes for a variety
of dance modes, moves, and styles.
Max von Essen |
As Marvin, Max von Essen steps forward to begin telling his
story in “A Tight Knit Family” – a story about a man who is leaving his life
for a gay lover but who will spend much of the next two hours still wanting
that ex-wife to be above all loyal to him.
That same Marvin ends his opening number with a repeated, “I want it
all.”
As the central character, Marvin is a man that is in many
ways hard to like very much. He is often
like a spoiled child, wanting to be the center of everyone’s love and attention
while himself finding it difficult to reciprocate without making accusations,
pouting off by himself in a corner, or erupting into a full-on shouting match
with almost any one of the others around him.
Mr. von Essen captures well the approach/avoidance nature of Marvin’s
struggles with everyone from his ex to his lover to even his son. From a delivery standpoint, his is the
weakest of sung vocals among this cast of outstanding singers; yet he rises
time and again effectively to sell numbers that serve as milestones in his
journey to come to grips with his decision to leave his wife Trina, with his
struggles to be a good father to Jason, and his difficulty to love fully and
unconditionally Whizzer.
The relationship between Marvin and Whizzer, as described in
a combative duet entitled “Thrill of First Love,” is one of hot passion in bed
and passionate arguing and fighting most of the time when not in bed. Theirs is much like a dad/teenage-son pattern
of ongoing bickering, with Marvin the provider and the demander and Whizzer the
one who never can meet the high standards his lover has for him.
Max von Essen & Nick Adams |
Quickly, Nick Adams establishes his easy-going, less
volatile Whizzer as amiable and a guy who knows himself pretty well, accepting
his own faults more easily than Marvin does his own. In “The Games I Play,” Whizzer bears his soul
to us in a song where he admits, “It hurts not to love him, it hurts when love
fades; it’s hard when part of him is off playing family charades.” We want to root for Whizzer even when we are
not sure at times if we do for Marvin.
As the second act progresses, however, Mr. Adams’ Whizzer becomes the
person all are there to support, with his gut-wrenching “You Gotta Die
Sometime” leaving a lasting, haunting impression as we cannot help but remember
his repeated, sung whispers, “Sometime, sometime, sometime.”
Thatcher Jacobs |
Whizzer’s biggest fan is Jason, a boy who has difficulty
relating to the father who left his mother but who finds in his father’s lover
someone he can talk to and feel heard. Young
Thatcher Jacobs is superb as Jason (a role he shares with Jonah Mussolino),
bringing big-sounding vocals and a giant personality to the small boy who goes
from ten to thirteen in the course of the evening. With a demeanor all-boy, he shrugs off with
little-to-no reactions his parent’s worries and question; yet it often seems as
if his Jason is the only adult in the room -- especially in the heat of the
planning of his bar mitzvah when in many ways the bar mitzvah seems to him as mostly
for his parents.
Each time Thatcher Jacobs’ Jason has a moment alone in the
spotlight, he commands in ways thrilling with a voice that pierces the auditorium
with electric energy. At the same time
and all the time, he is also just a boy’s boy who is trying his best to navigate
through the drama of his parents’ lives and the mysterious, sudden sickness of
his pal, Whizzer.
Thatcher Jacobs & Nick Blaemire |
Unlike her son, Trina does not find Whizzer a person she
wants to like, much less love – at least not until she begins to see him more
through the eyes of her son. Trina is in
the beginning totally pissed about the cards she has been dealt by Marvin and
seeks help from Marvin’s psychiatrist, Mendel.
Mendel uses his sessions with her to begin wooing her and uses his
sessions with Marvin to question about his ex-wife’s love of wearing negligee
and of her frequency of sleeping naked.
Nick Blaemire brings to his Mendel a mixture of something bordering on
sleaze, a bundle of boyish mannerisms, and yet at times all-out charm that
actually make him totally interesting and fun to watch as he progresses from
outsider to full member of the family – the latter once he and Trina become
much more than doctor/client. He sings
with a gusto and freshness of spirit and at times lets loose with exuberance
that even sells Jason that his new step-dad is a fun guy to have around (as
seen in their jumping, shaking, twisting “Everyone Hates His Parents”).
Eden Espinosa |
Even after finding a new husband, Trina – like Marvin – has
trouble letting go of their past and her lingering mixture of feelings alternating
between love and hate. Eden Espinosa
brings the same brilliant, beautiful powerhouse of a voice to the role of Trina
that she had as Elphaba in her two past visits to San Francisco, touring here
in 2005 and 2010 in Wicked. Her Trina is a complicated conglomeration of
feelings and reactions as a woman wracked with questions why did she once love
and marry a man who turned out to be gay and a cheat, why she now feels
inadequate to help her own son deal with feelings about his parents breaking
up, and why she is suddenly in love with a man who should not have come on to
her as her psychiatrist. When she takes
the spotlight for “Trina’s Song” and later for “Holding to the Ground,” we
cannot help but be in hushed awe of the tremendous range of emotions she brings
in both voice and facial expressions as she lays bear Trina’s admissions and
confession, fears and doubts, hopes and dreams.
Audrey Cardwell & Bryonha Marie Parham |
Rounding out the cast in the second act is the lesbian
couple, with Bryonha Marie Parham as Dr. Charlotte and Audrey Cardwell as
Cordelia. Particularly impressive is Ms.
Parham, whose rich, mighty voice shakes at the core with its foreboding
“Something Bad Is Happening” as her Dr. Charlotte knows that there is a
spreading disease “so bad that words have lost their meaning,” where “rumors
fly and takes abound, stories echo underground.” Her compassion for her patient
Whizzer, for his family and now her friends, as well as for her wanna-be,
not-too-successful wife as a caterer is heard in her sung lines and seen in her
solid persona, giving her Dr. Charlotte a position much bigger on the stage
than the rather few appearances that she makes during the evening.
Book co-writer James Lapine also directs this touring cast
and does so with many touches that make huge differences. Just the directed decision to have characters
often linger a sung note and let it waver in some emotion helps make the
all-sung, no-spoken- dialogue book zing with extra power of meaning and
effect. As part of “Marvin at the
Psychiatrist (A Three Part Mini-Opera),” his directing Mendel to use one hand
with out-stretched fingers to implant his therapy in the directions of either
Marvin’s or Trina’s head that then moves in a parallel trance to his slow-waving
hand is a fabulous way to show the questionable therapist’s manipulation of the
outcomes for the help each seeks from him.
The director’s orchestration of the constantly intricate movements and
manipulations of the set’s many puzzle-like pieces by the cast of seven
provides additional insights into the overlapping storyline’s complicated
relationships. His decision usually to
have in Act One all cast on the set always watching and reacting (and sometimes
interrupting) other scenes again re-emphasizes this same concept.
For anyone who is worried that a musical whose roots are
thirty-five-plus years old is now out-of-date, a visit to SHN’s Golden Gate
Theatre will soon destroy that fear.
William Finn and James Lapine’s Falsettos
is perhaps more relevant and meaningful than ever in a world where once again threatening
questions are being raised in this country and all across the globe of what
defines a real “family” and who legitimately and legally gets to love
whom. What Falsettos literally sings clearly is that love is love is love if
we just give ourselves time and permission to figure it all out.
Rating: 5 E
Falsettos continues
through April 14, 2019 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: Joan
Marcus
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