Violet
Brian Crawley (Book & Lyrics): Jeanine Tesori (Music)
Based on the The Ugliest Pilgrim by Doris Betts
Based on the The Ugliest Pilgrim by Doris Betts
Juliana Lustenader |
It’s September 4, 1964 in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, as a wide-smiling,
young woman with a small suitcase packed full of anticipation and hope boards a
Greyhound bus. Bound for the church of
Hope and Glory in Tulsa, Oklahoma, she seeks a miracle healing of “the scar
that cuts a rainbow across my cheek.”
As her fellow passengers bounce on their suitcases (serving
on this stage as bus seats), our feet begin to tap while they sing a richly robust,
“I’ll find out where this highway takes me; you know I got to travel on.” With voices rising in great waves of a cappella
harmony, it becomes difficult not to hum along as we each realize, like they, that
on this bus we have “left my troubles all behind me, back there when I climbed
on board.”
Fortunate for us, we are about to journey with these fine,
Southern folks – blacks and whites recently integrated to sit side-by-side --
across the states of Tennessee and Arkansas into Oklahoma. We are all in fact “On Our Way” in Bay Area
Musical’s rousing, uplifting, and glory-hallelujah production of Violet, the 1997, award-winning
Off-Broadway and 2014 Broadway musical by Brian Crawley (book and lyrics) and
Jeanine Tesori (music).
Twenty-something Violet has a horribly disfigured face that
causes everyone who meets her to turn away in shock, scorn, and/or pity – a
childhood wound from a sudden-flying ax-head in a wood-chopping accident that
scars both her and her regret-filled father’s lives. That scar is invisible to us since before us we
only see a sunny-faced, golden-haired Violet who is visibly excited to be
heading to Oklahoma to feel the healing hand of the evangelist whose miracles she
has supposedly witnessed on her small-screened TV.
Even the skepticism of fellow passengers she meets and their
sometimes laughter and kidding of her naivite about such a sudden-cure cannot
lower Violet’s unbounded optimism for receiving a new face – one that Violet
describes while looking at movie magazines as borrowing hair from Elke Summer,
chin from Judy Garland, and nose from Grace Kelley. As Violet, Juliana Lustenader employs
beautifully pure, hope-filled vocals to sing in “All to Pieces” how, after her
miracle, she could then “shine like a moonbeam on the silk of a ball gown” and
“could be someone lovely, turning heads on her first night in town.”
Juliana Lustenader, Kim Larson, Jon-David Randle & Jack O’Reilly |
Juliana Lustenader’s Violet is indeed intent on being
outwardly pretty even as she meets people who -- once they are over the initial
shock of seeing her -- soon forget the scar and begin to see how fun and
attractive she actually is as a person.
Over a game of poker where she uses the skills taught her by her father,
Violet wins both money and two new friends -- young soldiers, Flick and Monty,
traveling to Fort Smith, Arkansas. To
their surprise, each begins to find this bold, brassy gal to be one that is
somehow stirring feelings within them.
Jon-David Randle & Jack O’Reilly |
Jack O’Reilly’s Monty is a show-off, tease, and jokester who
brings a crooning, tenor voice full of cockiness and confidence as he battles
wits with Violet in “Question and Answer.”
As the miles and time together accumulate, his bickering and poking at
Violet begins to shift into genuine desire and longing as together his voice
and demeanor soften into a plea-and-love-filled “Promise Me Violet,” singing
“I’ve been waiting for a lifetime to get your sweet kiss.”
But by then, his buddy, Flick, is
also finding he has growing love for Violet. However, Flick’s approaches are more on the subtle
sidelines since he is black; she is white; and this is 1964 in the South. Less scornful of her blind faith in the powers
of the TV evangelist than the fully doubting Monty, Jon-David Randle as Flick
encourages her to pursue her dreams and to be the kind of person who says yes
rather than no. He brings a trumpeting,
triumphant voice to “Let It Sing,” with his own evangelical spirit and
intensity growing to a heart-pounding level, suddenly jumping to heaven-high,
sweetly soft notes to convince Violet, “You’ve got to give it room and let it
sing.” Time and again throughout the
journey and show, Mr. Randle’s vocals electrify the atmosphere.
Likewise, Ms. Lustenader shows
immense abilities to deliver in every bend of the journey’s road the country,
bluegrass, honky-tonk rock, and blues melodies of Jeanine Tesori with striking
clarity of purpose and tone. She also
gives us a Violet that we never question her internal strength, her natural
likeability, her sure-fired wit, or her deep-held hurt from an outward wound
she dares not look in a mirror to see.
Clay David & Choir |
When Violet finally does reach
Oklahoma, we meet in person the Preacher we have earlier seen in one of her
dreams but who turns out in real life to be more of a nightmare. Clay David – whom earlier has played both a
gruff and gravelly-voiced bus driver and a sparkle-suited radio singer – comes
close to stealing the entire show as an arm-flailing, high-stepping, glory-screaming
evangelist whose well-practiced performance reaches levels of sheer ecstasy for
his TV-studio audience (i.e., us). With
a back-up of eight, robed choristers – themselves soon jumping, shuttering, and
spinning near out-of-control – this Preacher moves into our aisles and comes
close to having us walk the aisles for Jesus, so convincing is he. That is especially true when he is joined by
the exuberant choir and by the Mahalia-Jackson-like, gospel vocals of soloist
Lula Buffington (an impressive Tanika Baptiste). But for all the show-stopping antics of this
so-called preacher, Violet soon learns that if there is to be a miracle
performed, it will not be by this buffoon but will be manifest through her own
self-determination and the transformation others will immediately see in her.
Eric Neiman & Miranda Long |
From the beginning of the journey,
a young Violet roams the bus, shadowing her grown version. The Young Vi looks intently at each passenger
and especially at the older Violet with a mixture of curiosity, amusement, and
maybe just a bit of skepticism. Scenes
of Violet’s younger life intermingle throughout the trip, including the horrors
of the accident itself and its aftermath.
Miranda Long brings not only a sparkling voice and spunky spirit as
Young Vi but also an acting and singing maturity that goes well beyond her
youth.
As Violet’s Father, Eric Neiman
embodies a man tortured by both the premature loss of his wife and of the
horrific accident his hands enacted on his daughter. His moving moment of mea culpa comes when he
sings to Violet during a dream in a sad, remorseful, but totally glorious voice,
“That’s What I Could Do,” asking her, “Forgive me, you’re my only star ... look
how bright ... you are.”
Like the afore-mentioned Clay
David, many of the actors play as many as five different roles. Notable cameos include those by Shay
Oglesby-Smith who is both a babbling, nosy, but generously kind Old Lady on the
bus (and one with a great singing voice) as well as a hooker on the streets of
Memphis. Jourdán Olivier-Verdé, Kim
Larson, and even freshman-aged Tucker Gold each get their turns as bus driver
while also taking on roles as varied as radio singers, choir members, and of
course, various sorts of bus passengers.
Dyan McBride directs this large,
talented cast of fifteen with many touches of genius. Besides brilliant uses of space and suitcases
to create a swerving, bouncing bus, the director makes wonderfully effective
use of stage-frozen moments to highlight an isolated scene. She breaks the fourth wall to bring us as
audience into the play as the evangelical congregation and also ensures bus
stops along the way occur seamlessly and in seconds to reveal stage-filling
cafes, hotel rooms, and TV studio.
Those scenes of the South’s rural
and urban ‘60s as well as a see-through back wall of wooden slabs and multiple
doorways have been cleverly designed by Matthew McCoy, who also choreographed
the ecstasy and the electricity of the ensembles’ forays into both revival and
nightclub settings. The lighting of Eric
Johnson creates colorfully magical transformations on the slatted backdrop of
the stage. Anton Hedman’s sound design
ensures not one lyric of this fine-voiced cast is lost or out-of-balance with
the sounds of Jon Gallo’s excellent band of six. Finally, Brooke Jennings and Jacqueline
Dennis respectively deserve abundant accolades for the array of 1960s attire
and wigs that bring back – for some of us at least – many memories of growing
up in those times when puffed-up hair, Sunday-go-to-church clothes, and hats
and gloves made their way onto Greyhound buses.
Violet is a
musical whose combination of church-aisle, back-ally, and hillbilly styles
departs from the normal Broadway fare (especially when first produced in
1997). Violet is also a story of one young woman’s journey to discover
where her true beauty lies and in doing so, to find true love and acceptance in
a place and person most unlikely for the times.
Bay Area Musicals uplifts this already inspiring story to a truly
memorable, exciting level through ingenuous direction; soaring voices and
instrumentation; and character depictions full of quirk, heart, and genuinely
believable emotion.
Rating: 5 E
Violet continues
through March 17, 2019 as a production by Bay Area Musicals at the Alcazar
Theatre at 650 Geary Street, San Francisco.
Tickets are available online at http://www.bamsf.org/assassins/
for performances Fridays, 8 p.m.; Saturdays, 2 and 8 p.m.; and Sundays, 2 p.m.
Photo Credits: Ben Krantz
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