Michael Weaver, Kelly Maier and Brady Miller in "Little Shop." Photos by Keith Stewart for the News-Progress. |
I’ve given you dirt.
You've given me
nothing
But heartache and
hurt.
— “Grow for Me” from
“Little Shop of Horrors”
By Dan Hagen
“Little Shop of Horrors” makes for a Little Theatre of Fun.
I’ve seen only bits and pieces of Roger Corman’s original
low-budget 1960 monster movie, or the 1982 Off-Off-Broadway musical based on
that, or the 1986 movie musical based on that, but I’ve seen enough of the
Little Theatre’s brisk little show to be well entertained.
Art by JimSamX |
It would be difficult to explain this pop cultural artifact
to someone who had dropped from the sky like Audrey II the man-eating plant.
Here we have the traditional tragedy of a man corrupted by the devil (a
vegetable devil, in this case) played out to its inevitable sad conclusion, and
yet played as a camp comedy with the sprightly
doo-wop music native to the era of the original film.
This tale of doom is balanced by the silliness of the
premise. The show can’t end happily, but the overall effect is happy anyway.
It’s upbeat doom, doom without gloom.
Directed and choreographed by Chad Alexander, the show’s
beginning neatly inverts a musical comedy convention. Instead of the song about
the character who loves life in the place he’s in (“Oh, What a Beautiful Morning,”
“Good Morning Baltimore”), we get a number about what an excremental place Skid
Row is (“Downtown”).
At 1313 Skid Row is a wilted flower shop owned by Mr.
Mushnik (Michael Weaver), who employs an earnest nebbish assistant/slave named
Seymour (Brady Miller) and a pretty girl of low self-esteem named Audrey
(Equity actress Kelly Maier). Audrey is the wilted flower Seymour treasures, a
woman battered by her sadistic biker-dentist boyfriend (Mike Danovich). The
uncanny plant Seymour names for her, Audrey II, will promise them salvation,
and provide them with destruction.
Marika Stephens’ cunning set features lighted second-story
windows and projections playing on a curtain. The songs by Alan Menken and
Howard Ashman are perfectly serviceable, if not memorable, and they help set a
pace that never flags.
What’s fun? Things like these:
• A tango between Weaver and Miller where the point is not
romance but a profitable adoption (“Mushnik & Son”).
• Danovich’s crowd-pleasing paen to pain, “Dentist.” I think
the time has come, though, for the American musical theatre to put the Elvis
Presley riffs on ice for a century or so. They’ve been overused for a long time
now.
• Maier and Miller, a well-matched and winsome pair. Maier
has the beleaguered urban charm of a Judy Holliday or Adelaide in “Guys &
Dolls.” Miller pitches Seymour perfectly, innocent without being insipid, cute
without being cloying. Together, the two are impossible not to like in numbers
such as “Suddenly Seymour.”
Brady Miller with little Audrey II |
The verdict: A fine cast in a fast, fun and fairly
kid-friendly show.
Incidental
intelligence: “Little Shop of Horrors,” a musical by composer Alan Menken and
writer Howard Ashman, is based on the 1960 black comedy film directed by Roger
Corman. The show runs through July
13 at the Little Theatre.
This production has
lighting design by Mark Hueske, costume design by Malia Andrus, sound design by
Patrick Burks, stage management by Jeremy J. Phillips and musical direction by
Kevin Long.
The cast also includes
Emily Rheim, Haley Jane Schafer, Hanah Rose Nardone, Josh Houghton, Megan E. Farley,
Niko Pagsisihan and Sidney Davis.
For tickets, call The
Little Theatre On The Square Box Office at 217-728-7375.
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