As You Like It: A New Musical
William Shakespeare (Book & Lyrics); The Kilbanes [Kate
Kilbane & Dan Moses] & Phil Wong (Music & Lyrics); Rebecca J.
Ennals (Adapter)
Regina Morones & Michael Barrett Austin |
As part of what many consider his most joyous and romantic
comedy, William Shakespeare includes several songs, making the ever-popular As You Like It one of his most musical
plays. San Francisco Shakespeare
Festival has taken his cue and expanded his vision by creating a world premiere
As You Like It: A New Musical for its
2019 “Season of Free Shakespeare in the Park,” calling upon San Francisco and
Oakland favorites – The Kilbanes (Kate Kilbane and Dan Moses) and Phil Wong –
to compose the music and add more lyrics to those the Bard already includes in
his script. The resulting musical
employs a mixture of folk and country/western sounds with a little ‘60s-style
rock mixed in, all which fit wonderfully for a play that takes place largely in
the magical forest of Arden where urban-made troubles are healed and
sought-for-naught loves are sealed.
MIchael Barrett Austin |
How can we not immediately like our story’s Number One hero,
Orlando (Michael Barrett Austin), as we meet him as a pleasantly smiling,
casually dressed busker on the street, singing in an attractive twang with a
touch of Texas in it, “Second Son.” It
is a song where he honors the memory of his father whose kind legacy he means
to carry on as he declares, “Gotta make my own way.”
His good-nature, down-home demeanor is in big contrast to
his older brother, Oliver (Rondrell McCormick), who struts into the scene with
a villainous air, berating his younger brother for his street singing while himself
donned in gaudy, bright blue clothing and black leather. Oliver then plots to have the court wrestler
of the current, equally detestable Duke Frederick (a viperous Dave Sikula) kill
Orlando in a court-sponsored wrestling match later that day. A wonderfully outlandish Le Beau (Gwen Loeb)
with blue eyelashes two-inches long, feathered hair, and an outfit wildly
splattered in color sings in a deep and punchy voice “The Ballad of Charles the
Wrestler.” She croons to introduce the
hilarious wrestling/boxing match, with our hero, Orlando, of course winning
over the fetish-attired-in-leather Charles (a deliciously cocky and confident
Annika Bergman).
Regina Morones & Anne Yumi Kobori |
Because Orlando is the son of an enemy of the evil Duke,
match-winner Orlando is banished from the court, but not before he and Rosalind
– daughter of the also banished older brother of the Duke (a kindly,
free-spirited Duke Senior whom we will later meet, also played by Dave Sikula)
– have met eyes and fallen immediately in love.
Rosalind has been tolerated at court because she is like a sister to
Frederick’s daughter, Celia; but when she declares defiantly to her uncle that
if Orlando goes, she goes, the Duke banishes her only to see his daughter
prefer to follow Rosalind than remain with her ego-centered, dark-hearted
father. In a folksy duet of close-placed
harmony, Celia (Anne Yumi Kobori) and Rosalind (Regina Morones) sing “I’ll Go
Along with Thee,” joined by Orlando and his faithful, elderly servant, Adam
(Norman Gee) as all four sing on their way to Arden Woods, “Out in the trees,
we will be free.”
Michael Barrett Austin, Regina Morones & Anne Yumi Kobori |
But as any Shakespeare fan knows, now the story becomes a
true comedy in full Bard fashion.
Rosalind decides its time to disguise as a man (Ganymede) and Celia as a
poor woman (Aliena) so that she can follow Orlando without his knowing and learn
if he really does love her or not. Orlando becomes a love-sick puppy, writing
awful but syrupy-sweet, love poetry to his Rosalind and polluting the forest by
hanging them on every tree he can find.
Ganymede becomes Orlando’s love counselor, even offering to be a
stand-in for Rosalind so that Orlando can practice wooing him (her). Together, they sing one of the show’s best
songs, “Carry My Love to Me” with its strong-pounded beats revealing two hearts
full of love but currently disguised.
They follow with a cute ditty, “The Madness of Love,” reflecting their
own mad way of forest courtship.
Their circuitous search for fulfilled love in the forest is
not the only pairing in the making.
Shakespeare populates the woods with would-be pairs galore. In the case of country shepherds Phebe and
Silvius, the bespeckled Phebe can only see hearts for the pretty youth she met,
Ganymede (who is actually Rosalind, of course), totally ignoring the gaga looks
and love pining of Silvius. Annika
Bergman (who was earlier the beefed-up Charles the Wrestler) is a total giggle
as Phebe, the epitome of awkward moves and stumbles in her love-sick state for
Ganymede. Akaina Ghosh as Silvius is the
kindest of hearts and the most persistent of woo-ers as he continues to pursue
a woman who only insults and shuns him.
Together, they sing a hilariously staged “Phoebe’s Lament” (one of the
musical’s several songs that utilizes lyrics by both Shakespeare and The
Kilbanes).
A country wench with gusto running naturally through her
veins named Audrey (played by Gwen Loeb, the earlier and equally funny Le Beau)
sets her eyes on Touchstone, a wildly dressed wit who woos in clownish fashion
by calling her a ‘slut,’ to which she retorts proudly, “I am not a slut but I
thank the gods I am foul.” Touchstone
becomes half of a commenting duo with Jaques who wears a skull-decorated shirt
and says of his persistently melancholy nature, “I love it better than
laughing.” The two have a heyday
comparing the merits of court versus forest life; but as Jaques, Maryssa
Wanlass knocks it out of the ballpark as she uses a wide mixture of voices and
manners to describe “the ages of man” in Shakespeare’s famous “All the world’s
a stage” speech.
The final love pairing is between the ever-faithful cousin,
Celia – whom Anne Yumi Kobori plays with purely delightful aplomb with many
non-verbal expressions that are rib-tickling – and the unlikeliest of lovers,
Oliver, Orlando’s evil brother who enters the woods to kill Orlando but is
cured of his bad ways by the forest’s healing powers. Rondrell McCormick (who doubles in roles as
the country bumpkin with a sunny disposition, Corin) succeeds in convincing us
of Oliver’s transformation, delivering with Celia the show’s best-sung number,
a reprise of “I’ll Go Along with Thee” during which his powerful, beautiful,
and rich voice blends with Anne Yumi Kobori’s sweet, softer one.
Like in most productions of As You Like It, it is Rosalind who in the end rules the day; and
Regina Morones ensures that tradition is not broken in this outing. Her Rosalind from Moment One is bold and
courageous, determined and delightfully devilish, hilariously dramatic with
purposeful exaggeration, and animated to the point of proving the actor’s
natural, comedic flair. She delivers all
the fabulous lines Shakespeare awards her with ease and confidence, deploying a
myriad of voice, style, and stance variations.
She is a perfect yin to Orlando’s mild-mannered, more bashful yang. Together, they are a pair that we can imagine
will in fact live happily ever after with much fun and laughter along the way.
Director Rebecca J. Ennals readily uses the expansive,
outdoor park space to provide a forest’s depth and breadth beyond the stage of
some twenty-five tall, wooden poles that Neal Ormond has created to represent
the Forest of Arden. The Director
ensures the five acts flow with ease as the cast comes and goes from every side
as most of them play double roles with tongue-in-cheek often built into the
pairings. Susan Szegda’s costumes are
full of their own laugh-producing powers, employing everything from lace and
leather to feathers and frills to spruce up costumes often in the loudest of
hues. Max Krongaus deserves a special
bow as sound designer as the fog-powered winds at the Parade Grounds of the
Presidio became a major challenge to the show’s sound system the entire
afternoon. Finally, Music Director
Brendan Getzell has assembled eight musicians – with some actors also playing
everything from piano to accordion to ukulele – whose music not only
accompanies the show’s fifteen songs and reprises but also often serves as a
background, musical score to the shenanigans on stage.
This traveling troubadour of actors, musicians, and singers
is in the final month and last two, San Francisco venues of a summer’s journey
of shows in parks that earlier included Pleasanton, Cupertino, and Redwood
City. All shows are free; and judging
from the Labor Day opening crowd at the Presidio, they are finding their packed
and grateful audiences.
This new musical version of As You Like It is overall enjoyable, largely due to a cast that
knows how to deliver Shakespeare’s prose and verse with great skill and
style. The music is pleasant throughout,
although the non-Shakespeare lyrics at times do not match the Bard’s cleverness
nor add enough always to the story’s flow to warrant inclusion. But at the same time, music does seem a
natural inclusion to this story of comic romance; and kudos is well deserved to
the Company for giving the Bay Area this summertime gift of a new look at an
old friend.
Rating: 4 E
As You Like It continues
at the Presidio Main Parade Ground Saturday and Sunday, September 7 and 8, 2
p.m. before moving to its last venue of the season, McLaren Park, Jerry Garcia
Amphitheatre, various times and days September 14 – 22. All performances are free and require no
tickets. Check the website www.shshakes.org or call (415) 558-0888 for
more information on exact times and dates.
Photo Credits: John Western
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