Bloody Bloody Andrew
Jackson
Alex Timbers (Book); Michael Friedman (Music & Lyrics)
James Grady & Cast Members |
If there is anyone who is curious why President Trump has a
picture of Andrew Jackson watching over him in the Oval Office, that person
need only sit through a production of Alex Timbers’ (book) and Michael
Friedman’s (music and lyrics) Bloody
Bloody Andrew Jackson, now playing at Custom Made Theatre Company. Lyrics like the following make that pretty
clear, as Jackson at one point sings,
“So we’ll ruin the bank, and we’ll
trample the courts,
And we’ll take on the world for
America’s sake.
And we’ll take all the land, and
we’ll take back the country,
And we’ll take, and we’ll take,
and we’ll take, and we’ll take.”
Nick Mandracchia, Rachel Richman, Rae Coksky & James Grady |
Much like Trump’s ascension to the White House, Andrew
Jackson became the seventh president despite virtually all of Washington past
and present working against him, with our hearing several times from the likes
of John C. Calhoun (Nick Mandracchia), John Quincy Adams (Gabriel J. Thomas), and Henry Clay (Rachel Richman) as they rail against him
(including in a silly but telling ditty entitled “The Corrupt Bargain”). Trump’s idol won by taking his case to the
common people whom Washington – both the first president himself and the
politicos of the Capitol – had too long ignored those first few years
of the new country,
with the opening full ensemble singing in angry punk-style rock,
“Take a stand against the elite,
They don’t care for us
And we will eat sweet democracy
And let them eat our dust.”
Director Brian Katz emphasizes the populist revolt and
deep-seeded anger/angst of those in the neglected frontiers of Tennessee,
Georgia, the Carolinas, and Alabama (Sound familiar?) by producing this 2010,
Broadway, rock musical in hard-stomp, harshly sung punk. These oft-tattooed politicians, soldiers,
Native Americans, and citizenry are all bedecked in black from head to toe in
their lipstick and eye make-up, hole-infested netting on legs and arms, and
skin-tight leather (costume design by Rachael Helman). Punk King among them is a tattooed, black-nailed,
blood-smattered Andrew himself whose first words to us are a defiant
declaration of “I’m wearing some tighty-tight pants ... I’m your president.”
While the choice of audaciously sung punk fits in so many
ways the dark humor of a musical about a president nearly causing complete
Native American genocide and that same president ignoring Supreme Court and
Congress to rule autocratically, unfortunately too often this hard-working,
rambunctious cast cannot deliver musically.
Too many voices – including that of James Grady as Jackson – go flat as
they increase in volume and scale.
Harmonies of the ensemble are a mixed bag in terms of blend and effect;
and songs are more often than not amplified through hand-held mikes to the
point of distortion because voices often cannot match the demand of such miked
power.
James Grady & Maya Michal Sherer |
There are notable exceptions. As Jackson’s wife, Rachel, Maya Michal Sherer
brings a clear, piercing voice that has the ability to both shock and
soothe. When she meets Andrew, the two
court each other during a love session of cutting and bleeding in order to heal
the sickness of the love in their veins (the show’s punk motif fitting
particularly well here), with Rachel singing in raw tones her attraction to
Andrew with “Then why do I feel sick when I look at you?” Later as the ignored, disillusioned wife of a
newly elected president, her Rachel sings a beautifully pining “The Great
Compromise” in which she lists all the dreams she has given up so that her
husband can follow his own.
In general, the women of the cast fare better than the men
in terms of their vocals. Various ones
of them enter to sing in solo and harmony the sadly truthful “Ten Little
Indians” where a children’s song (“One little, two little ...”) is turned
upside down to count-down the nations of Native Americans being eliminated
one-by-one through bullets, white man’s diseases, and forced relocations.
James Grady & Salim Razawi |
While sometimes lacking the vocal accuracy the part
requires, James Grady does bring the haughty cockiness, the sheer-blooded and heartless
meanness, and at times, the emotion-packed regret that make him a notable
choice for this punk-rock version of Andrew Jackson. At times he is like a spoiled brat as he
throws tantrums when he is not getting his way (Again, sound familiar?). At other times, he can make your blood curl
as he laughs off or completely ignores the suffering he brings on the Native
Americans, keeping one Creek leader as his bosom buddy to do all his dirty work
with the other leaders of tribes and nations (Black Fox played with both heroic
and betrayal-filled attributes by Salim Razawi).
Chris Morell & James Grady |
The choice of a nerdy narrator whizzing around on a
light-blinking scooter wearing a pink helmet (Teri Whipple) adds bizarre humor
while also seeming a bit out of place and a distraction. A much more successful move by the director
is to cast Martin Van Buren as an obsequious, adoring fan and yes-man of
Jackson’s, with Chris Morell giving one of the evening’s best performances with
just enough swish and eye-blink to make his character truly interesting.
Sarah Phykitt’s scenic design has the appropriately dark
tones of an American flag backdrop with its black-and-red stripes and its
splatters of dried mud and blood. Large
black-and-silver boxes move and stack to become the bulk of the small, bare
stage’s furnishings – all lit in oft-in-your-face spots and brightness by Aaron
Curry. Leslie Waggoner’s choreography
has moments of its own dark satire and punk-rock stomp while the music
direction of Armando Fox has its most success as he conducts and serves as a
member of the three-piece, on-stage band.
While musically not consistently a triumph, there is much
both to learn and to enjoy about Custom Made’s Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson. The
show is a perfect bookend to Marin Theatre’s current Sovereignty in which another historical and current view of
Jackson’s assault on Native Americans and specifically on the Cherokee Nation’s
lands and rights are given theatrical treatment.
Rating: 3 E
Bloody Bloody Andrew
Jackson continues through October 27, 2019 at Custom Made Theatre Company,
533 Sutter Street, San Francisco.
Tickets are available online at www.custommade.org
or by calling 415-789-2682 (CMTC).
Photo Credits: Jay Yamada
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