110 in the Shade
N. Richard Nash (Book); Harvey Schmidt (Music); Tom Jones
(Lyrics)
Based on the Play, The
Rainmaker, by N. Richard Nash
Elliot Hanson, James Schott, Andrea Dennison-Laufer & Jesse Caldwell |
Even in the best of productions – like the outstanding 2007
Roundabout revival in New York starring the incomparable Audra McDonald along
with Steve Kazee and John Cullum – it takes a miracle for 110 in the Shade not to come off as The Music Man-“Lite.” After
all, N. Richard Nash’s storyline for both the musical and his original, 1954
play, The Rainmaker, also details a
huckster coming to a town with a promise to solve a big problem – in this case
a drought – through a cock-eyed method that should send everyone running (this
time the suggestion of drumming, flagging, and rattling into the cloudless
sky). And of course there is once again
the local young woman who seems destined to spinsterhood – a fate deemed of
course worse than death in both 1950’s storylines – and who is clearly going to
fall in love with the new arrival who is a big fake on the run from the
law. But unlike The Music Man, Harvey Schmidt (music) and Tom Jones (lyrics) failed
in coming up with songs like ”Seventy Six Trombones,” “Wells Fargo Wagon,” or
“Til There Was You,” thus also failing to lift the predictable, too-familiar
story to something more memorable.
The miracle that saved the 2007 New York production
unfortunately does not repeat itself in the current 42nd Street Moon
revival of 110 in the Shade. While there are certainly moments of sheer
fun and some noteworthy individual performances, the normal Moon level of
consistent excellence musically and choreographically is too often missing,
with the 42nd Street Moon production suffering its own temporary
drought. The show is mildly entertaining
and engaging throughout but rarely rises to a level where audience response is
more than just a polite patter.
Andrea Dennison-Laufer & Brian Watson |
The show opens promisingly enough with Sheriff File (Brian
Watson) bringing one of the night’s two best voices to bear in leading the
people of this Depression-era, Southwest town in “Another Hot Day,” where
raised harmonies reach their peak in singing wave after wave of “when the rain
comes.” The menfolk of the Curry family
also have raised hopes that daughter/sister Lizzie is about to get off the
arriving train with her newly acquired betrothed, their having sent her on a hunt
for one to distant family members in a nearby town. Their excited eagerness of her return becomes
a jumping, stomping, circling creation of choreographer Scottie Woodard as they
rip out “Lizzie’s Coming Home.”
Each Curry male quickly establishes his show-long
persona. Jimmy (Elliot Hanson) is an
excitable, life-loving puppy dog kind of guy whose testosterone-bursting energy
fills the stage whenever he is present and whose vocals have a pleasing if not perfect
effect of freshness. On the opposite end
of the scale is older brother, Noah (James Schott), who brings a resounding
voice big enough to burst any bubble of optimism and hope with his skeptical, oft-cynical
listing of stark realities. Father H.C.
(Jesse Caldwell) stays more in the background as much as he can, trying to maintain
some peace between the warring brothers and not making much impression one way
or the other – especially in this particular production.
Andrea Dennison-Laufer |
When Lizzie returns alone and with no prospects, the
brothers plot how to make a match with Sheriff Fife, a divorcé and town loner
who has unsuccessfully tried to fool everyone he is actually a widower. Even with a rather hilarious, knee-slapping
“Poker Polka” where the boys tempt him in every way they can to come have lunch
with Lizzie, Brian Watson brings his point-direct, fine vocals as File to say
no, no, and no.
As it turns out, Lizzie Curry has convinced herself – after
too many experiences of being ignored by the boys of her town – that she is not
beautiful and will probably never marry.
And while she tells her dad, “I am so sick and tired of being me,” the
sting of hearing brother Noah bluntly tell her, “Lizzie, you are plain” and
“You will be an old maid” is a verdict that she is clearly not ready to hear
and maybe not to accept.
While less appealing in many of her musical numbers where
over-singing (sometimes near-screaming) too often mars her delivered message, Andrea
Dennison-Laufer is totally successful in her role as actor as she embodies a
young woman who struggles with her own self-image as well as the well-meaning
but too-controlling efforts of her family to make her happy. Her Lizzie grows in front of our eyes as she becomes
more and more determined to find her own route to happiness – a route that even
she seems to find incredulous ins taking but one that causes a visible
transformation to occur as Lizzie comes to understand what “beautiful” really
means for her.
The Cast of 110 in the Shade |
That route comes in the form of a big-boasting, wild-promising
Bill Starbuck whose Las Vegas-like entrance in glitzy coat of purple fires the
entire town into revival ecstasy in a stage-packed, frenzy-filled “The Rain
Song.” The suddenly arriving Starbuck
quickly finds willing converts galore to believe that for $100 he can produce
rain in twenty-four hours. The one
person (besides Noah, of course) who does not believe him is Lizzie, and it
will take all that Keith Pinto as Bill Starbuck can muster to win this last but
most important member of his believing congregation.
Keith Pinto |
Aiding greatly in that effort is the evening’s finest
singing voice, with Keith Pinto delivering in Act Two in a searching, lonely
voice an “Evenin’ Star” that finally echoes magnificently with the quality
audiences expect from 42nd Street Moon. His Starbuck often sings looking with a
half-smile into some distant horizon, searching for a dream he begins to hope
has finally arrived in the form of this woman who easily matches him with her
strong will, sense of independence, and ability to steer her own destiny rather
than be led by the morals and wishes of others.
The range of vocal prowess that Mr. Pinto brings is further witnessed in
a highly animated, story-rich song, “Melisande,” in which he woos Lizzie by
encouraging her to find a new dream and follow it.
The Set Design of Brian Watson & Lighting of Michael Palumbo |
One of the issues for this production of 110 in the Shade is that the intimate
Moon stage itself becomes too crammed when the entire cast of sixteen is on
stage, particularly given the real estate necessary for the inspired set design
of Brian Watson (a stage full of Great Plains-plain wooden structures and
fencing, including a dominating, twirling wind mill and an accompanying water
tank). That lack of room makes some of
the full-cast choreography difficult to pull off without looking like everyone
is about to bump into and run over others.
But Michael Palumbo’s lighting design does totally work wonderfully
against the scenic setting of Mr. Watson, with touches like focused, downward
spots from metal shaded lamps and beautifully dappled shadows on a stage that
change hues as day becomes dusk becomes night.
Where the Nash/Schmidt/Jone musical and this 42nd
Street Moon version come together for the best moment is in the next-to-last,
plot-climactic number, “Wonderful Music.”
Here, Lizzie’s strength of character really comes to the fore as
Starbuck and File vie in their respective actor’s big and convincing voices for
her love. The staging by Director Josh
Marx and the performances of all three main characters are an evening highlight
and a great way to leave a good, audience impression as the full cast performs
also at its evening’s vocal best for a reprise finale of “The Rain Song.”
In one final note never to be overlooked at 42nd
Street Moon, the piano accompaniment of Music Director Dave Dobrusky is once
again superb, adding its own effecting touches to enhance and elevate an
otherwise soon-forgettable score.
Rating: 3 E
110 in the Shade continues
through May 12, 2019 in production by 42nd Street Moon at the
Gateway Theatre, 215
Jackson Street, San Francisco. Tickets
are available at http://www.42ndstmoon.org or by calling the box office at
415-255-8207.
Photos
by Ben Krantz Studio
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