Shipoopi!
THE MUSIC MAN
Book, Music and Lyrics by Meredith Willson
Direction by Mark Rosenstein
The St. Jean’s Players (http://saintjeansplayers.org/)
167 East 75th Street
Non union production (closed)
Review by David Mackler
St. Jean’s
Players doesn’t take small bites. Gypsy, Footloose, Annie, Where’s Charley?
– and now The Music Man. The virtues of this well-known property are
many, but it also has detractors. The
quality of the show is not under discussion here; it is what it is, you either
love it or don’t. What makes a
difference is how well it comes over, and with this production – filled with
pros, semi-pros, and lots of first timers – when it comes across well, there’s
nothing like it. As was mentioned in the
review of their Annie (http://www.oobr.com/top/volTwelve/nine/annie.htm),
the St. Jean’s Players have a knack for recruiting good singers, and when the
stage is full (the cast numbers around 40) and voices are blending, harmonizing
and emoting, not even the shall we say limited acoustics of the space can put a
damper on the enthusiasm and energy waves pouring out. And The
Music Man has plenty of numbers where the whole town gathers and
sings. So with the Salesmen and their a
capella “Rock Island,” there starts
a charge that rarely lets up. “Iowa
Stubborn,” one of those here’s-who-we-are scene setting numbers, is full of
charm and fine harmony.
There’s also plenty of opportunity for ham, from the young (Allison Snyder’s Amaryllis) to the
older (Lucy Apicello’s Eulalie
Mackecknie Shinn), and it’s just what’s needed – this isn’t Hamlet, after
all. Sharon Lowe’s fine voice captures the longing of “Goodnight My
Someone,” and if Charles Mobbs’
Harold Hill has a tendency to stand and declaim his songs (even when he’s
moving), when the townspeople chime in with their parts, the sound of
“Seventy-Six Trombones” is vibrant and sweet.
The Music Man also
manages to turn novelty songs into character- and plot-advancing numbers, and
with Richard Haslow, Rob Weinstein, James Lane,
and Matthew P. Fisher as the
barbershop quartet, “Sincere” was a fine expression of sentiment and vocal
talent. Larry Hirshik’s Marcellus really did seem like a former con-man
tired of being on the run, Jay Fink’s
Mayor Shinn was as self-importantly pompous as the mayor would be, and well
matched to his missus. The townswomen
were wonderful (Camber Carpenter in
particular), and the combination of their “Pick-A-Little, Talk-A-Little” with
the quartet’s “Goodnight, Ladies” was terrific.
“Marian the Librarian” was well served by Lowe’s alternately sweetly
resisting and enjoying the Professor’s attentions as the well-choreographed (by
Jennifer Hoddinott) number takes
over the library. Lowe also came alive
with the wistful “My White Knight,” a song that usually lies there, but here
was good character revelation. (She also
had the good fortune to be playing opposite the sweetly funny Sarah Vidal as her mother.) The “Wells Fargo Wagon” excitement was
palpable, with the stage again full of wonderful voices, especially with the
scene stealing antics of Apicello’s Eulalie Mackecknie Shinn (just saying the
character’s name make you smile).
The quartet’s unexpectedly funny “It’s You” preceded a
rousing “Shipoopi” that had plenty of ham, uh, scene-stealing antics,
particularly the wide-eyed wonderment and stage-wide smile of Cathy Carrey-Aquino’s Ethel
Toffelmier. Nothing could top the
exquisitely lovely “Lida Rose/Will I Ever Tell You” of Lowe and the quartet,
but the impossibly precocious ham (oh, you know) of Kyrian Friedenberg’s “Gary, Indiana”
sure tried. A sweetly staged musical
interlude led beautifully into Lowe’s quite lovely “Till There Was You,” which
led into an effective, funny chase.
For this Music Man it’s all about the music, and director
Mark Rosenstein handled his cast well. The
band’s sound often got swallowed, and if a player or singer missed a note,
well, what’s a missed note among friends?
Because that’s the feeling that comes through most. That, and a tinge of regret that the cakewalk
never came back into style.
Also with (deep breath) Edward
Knauer, David Thomas Crowe, Patrick Doss, Geoffrey Hill, Marcello Padilla,
Angela Theresa Domingo, Megan Myers, Abigail Shuppy, Sharon O’Neal, DeVette Pia
LoVerde, Pamela Robbins, Kristin Stang, Elizabeth Eiel, Josh Bowen, Kristina
Osterling, Nicholas E. Page, Megan Peterson, Nell Brennan, Molly Hirshik, Erin
Moriarty, Sebastian Aristizabal, Sonia Brozak, Sloan Cooper Cherry, Henry
Hicks, Charles D. Moxley, Lenard C. Moxley, Isaac Youki Pettigrew, Ikey
Schultz. Razy Jordan, Alicia Rau, Heather Diehm, Linda Blacken, Harriet Levine
and James Lane
were the band. Jay Fink set the lighting, Greg
Guiteras put together a creditable River
City, and M.C. Waldrep wrangled the spiffy costumes.
Box Score:
Writing: 2
Directing: 1
Acting: 1
Sets: 1
Costumes: 2
Lighting/Sound: 1
Copyright 2007 David Mackler
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