Anastasia
Terrence McNally (Book); Stephen Flaherty (Music); Lynn
Ahrens (Lyrics)
Lila Coogan & Stephen Brower |
Soon after a group of Bolsheviks brutally murdered Tsar
Nicolas II and his entire family on July 17, 1918, rumors spread faster than
the Revolutionary Guard could extinguish
them that Grand Duchess Anastasia had somehow escaped and was living in
hiding. So persistent was that rumor
that a number of young women through the years came forward claiming to be she
in hopes of inheriting the Romanov family fortunes, with it being DNA testing
that in 2007 that finally proved all members of the family, including
Anastasia, had died.
However, the idea that she might have escaped is just too much
like a fairy tale not to have spawned a number of movies and TV films from 1928
to the present, including a 1997 animated musical which then inspired a 2017
Broadway musical by the same name, Anastasia,
written by an all-star team of Terrence McNally (book), Stephen Flaherty
(music), and Lynn Ahrens (lyrics). Told
from the angle of a street orphan, Anya, suffering from amnesia who yearns to
know of her origins and who catches the eye of two Russian con men who also notice
her uncanny resemblance to the missing Grand Duchess, Anastasia arrives with its epic-size tale on the SHN Golden Gate
stage. The traveling production is mind-blowing with its spectacular video
projections; eye-popping with its glorious, period costumes; and completely
captivating with its mammoth cast of fabulous voices, talented dancers, and
actors excelling as they portray the story’s mix of drama, romance, and comedy.
Victoria Bingham (a previous Little Anastasia) & Joy Franz |
The story begins in 1906 as a five-year-old Anastasia (the
sweet-voiced Delilah Rose Pellow in alteration with Addison MacKynzie Valentino)
sings a tearful goodbye to her grandmother, the Dowager Empress (the
distinguished Joy Franz) who is leaving Moscow for a retired life in Paris. Before
the grandmother departs, she gives the young Grand Duchess (noting, “You are my
favorite”) a small music box to remember her.
Jumping to the fateful night in 1917 amidst a grand ball of dancing
Romanovs and counts and countesses all in Russian white, the musical’s stage
suddenly becomes an explosion of fire, brimstone, and bullets; and the family
all perish – or do they?
By the next scene in 1927 in Communist-controlled Moscow, impoverished
comrades roam the freezing street, with vendors trying to sell them supposed,
once-owned Romanov items. One young man,
Dmitry, buys for two cans of beans a music box he is promised is from the royal
family. Stashing that away, he and his
buddy, Vlad – an ex-member of the Imperial Court – join those on the street in
singing a gossipy “A Rumor in St. Petersburg” about the Princess who is said to
have survived. They also hit on a plan
for “the biggest con in history.”
Their sudden dream of illegitimate fortune and a ticket to
Paris leads them to audition in an abandoned ballroom of the now empty and
dilapidated palace girls in their late teens for the role of the missing
Anastasia. Finding no one, they are
about to give up when in comes one cold and hungry street-sweeper named Anya;
and immediately their plan springs back to life.
Not only does Anya remind Dmitry of the real Anastasia whom
he as a small boy once saw passing in a parade, she recalls things about the
Princess that her two tutors have yet to teach her – things like how to bow
with royal grace or recalled aspects of the palace ballroom and a long-ago night
of dancing there. Anya remembers
bit-by-bit a fateful night of “flashes of fire” and “echoes of screams” but
also of whispers by a bridge to “meet you right there in Paris.” As Anya, Lila Coogan sings about “the truth
in my dreams” in a beautiful voice that reflects Anya’s repeated, nightly
visions of horror and hope.
Stephen Bower & Lila Coogan |
Anya agrees to seek her fate through the outlandish scheme
of Dmitry and Vlad in order to get to Paris and meet who might be her actual
grandmother, the surviving Dowager Empress. The three sing a hilarious and physically
animated “Learn to Do It” as she receives lessons on family trees, proper tea tasting,
and the kind of dancing the Russian royals once did. Stephen Brower brings youthful energy and an
air of nervous excitement to his Broadway-voiced Dmitry while Edward
Staudenmayer plays the more senior, Vlad with gusto, flair, and built-in
confidence and a gruff but pleasing singing voice.
Jason Michael Evans |
As the three prepare to leave for Paris and a hoped-for
audience with the old, once-ruling Empress, rumors of their own surreptitious
activity have found their ways to the Communists officials. Enter the scene a young general named Gleb,
who brings in Anya for questioning.
Jason Michael Evans is strikingly impressive as the interrogating
investigator, his role made more intriguing when he identifies in song (“The
Neva Flows”) that it was his own sfather who shot the Romanovs as he as a boy
heard from another room the shots and the screams. With a voice that pierces the air with its
clarity and edge, his Gleb sings of those memories while warning Anya to give
up her dream of being the real Anastasia.
An initial attraction for Anya will continue to haunt Gleb
later as he weighs official duties and the tugs of his heart. With a distinctly unique voice, Gleb at one
point sings in torn misery, “She’s nothing but a child, a waif who needs
protection; I feel a strange connection I can’t allow.” In this role where duty to the Party and to
the legacy of his father struggle with his own humanity and unspoken love,
Jason Michael Evans gives us maybe the strongest performance of the evening
among many likewise impressive others.
Lila Coogan |
As the stage is set for a journey to Paris for a reunion
between a grandmother and the possible but improbable granddaughter she so
desperately wants still to be alive, this emotionally torn official named Gleb leaves
also to carry out a duty to ensure no Romanov child is still alive. The epic proportions of the resulting story
are reflected in what may be the most impressive video projections I personally
have yet to see in a stage production, all designed by Aaron Rhyne. Scenes of an attack on the palace in 1917
explode on stage in a fiery nightmare (supported by the bone-rattling sound
design of Peter Hylenski). A Communist
headquarters with skyscraper-tall halls of ominous-looking filing drawers is so
3-D real that one is sure the people on stage are actually walking in its
corridors. Both St. Petersburg and Paris
come to glorious life with colors and scenes so rich and beautiful that gasps
can be heard from audience members.
Dozens of likened scenes amaze as projected on three giant backdrops,
including an elevator ride up the Eifel Tower to behold the City of Lights like
a view none of us has ever seen before.
Maximizing the extraordinary videography to the hilt is
scenic designer Alexander Dodge whose clever elements pair with the films to
further wow those of us oft watching with open mouths. One of several examples is the train ride of
our scheming trio to Paris where they ride on a metal skeleton of a period
train-car with its wooden-bench seats – a rail carriage that swings in various
directions as videos of passing countryside add velocity, excitement, and
adventure while our threesome hang out windows singing a romping, anticipatory
“Travel Sequence.”
Edward Staudenmayer, Tari Kelly & Ensemble Members |
Paris brings its own scenes that also show the absolute
brilliance of the entire creative team, including the phenomenal range of
period costumes designed by Linda Cho and the imaginative, inspired direction
of Darko Tresnjak. A rousing evening at
a local nightclub frequented by ex-patriot Russians provides choreographer
Peggy Hickey yet one more chance to send the cast into a stage-filling round of
dances – this time not the Russian waltzes or polkas of earlier scenes but instead
the rambunctious, kicking, squatting dances we associate with Russian beer
halls. We even go to the ballet where
set design and video design bring alive the grandeur of the Paris Opera House
while Lyrica Woodruff (Odette), Mark MacKillop (Prince Siegfried), and Ronnie
S. Bowman, Jr. (Von Rothbart) burst in an exquisite ballet on stage to give us
a flowing glimpse of Swan Lake.
In Paris, our trio has collective and individual reunions
and new meetings with characters made memorable by the actors portraying
them. While we only see him a couple of
times, Fred Inkley provides us big laughs as Count Gregory, a pompous buffoon
who wants to be sure Anya is not determined to be Anastasia so he can inherit
his elderly Aunt’s fortunes. Joy Franz –
now more aged than when we first met her as Dowager Empress – is magnificent in
her grand display of past glory and in a strong singing voice that expresses so
well the life of living without but still futilely searching for her lost Anastasia
(“Close the Door”).
Helping elicit the evening’s biggest and longest-sustained
applause is Tari Kelly as the Dowager’s faithful attendant, Countess Lily, who
has her own wild and wooly side and who has a lip-smacking reunion with her old
fling, Vlad. Together, their song,
dance, and comedy-packed “The Countess and the Common Man” highlights two
commanding voices and stage presences along with a sustained, stage-kiss that
will forever be remembered by the laughing, clapping audience.
From the beginning, the orphan with clouded memories of her
beginnings is searching without much hope of finding three things she
desperately misses: home, love, and family.
As we see at the close of the first act, Dmitry and Vlad have implanted
in Anya hope and belief that her “Journey to the Past” – the Oscar-nominated
song Lila Coogan delivers to loud ovation – may lead to a destination where she
in fact finds all three. Act Two reveals
just how real the fairy tale ending might in fact be.
Anastasia is a
romantic adventure with a magnificent, historical ambiance where laughs and
tears live side by side. In its current
touring version at SHN, Anastasia a
must-see for anyone who loves the spectacle of live, musical theatre.
Rating: 5 E, “Must-See”
Anastasia continues
through September 29, 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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