A few minutes into the first act, the Little Theatre’s “The
Sound of Music” turns perfect.
It’s the famous “Do-Re-Mi” number sung by the young would-be
nun-turned-governess Maria (Leah Berry) and Captain von Trapp’s children (Sam
Mulligan, Maddie Keller, Lukas Mills, Syndi Mulligan, Izzy Miller and Piper
Countryman).
In a lesser production, those children can be precocious
annoyances, too cute by half. But director John Stephens has given his cast a dazzling
clockwork charm here, and provided us with one of those live theatre moments
when audience and performers are in radiant unison.
This production, which opens today, will be quite the crowd
pleaser. Its quality is apparent in both the costumes (I admired the various
shades of green in the family’s outfits, designed by J. Malia Andrus) and the
set (the von Trapp mansion is a sweeping impression of elegance that converts
swiftly into the imposing arches of a convent, thanks to scenic designer Noel
Rennerfeldt).
The show is — let’s face it — a warhorse, always in danger
of sinking into a pool of its own alpine honey. But the warhorse can still be made
to work, and it does the job here.
I don’t envy Berry the task of playing a character as relentlessly
good as Maria. Think how difficult it is to make a part like that interesting. Yet
Berry can seem desperately earnest without being cloying, and sings us the
pantheistic anthem title tune to signal Maria’s transcendent love of life, a
force that will redeem a family situation darkened by death and political
upheaval.
Berry is supported by an able cast of pros, including Mary
Redmon as the housekeeper Frau Schmidt, the bittersweet voice of exposition,
and Mike Danovich as impresario Max Detweiller, a stylish cynic with airy charm.
I think this is Danovich’s best role this season.
Ann Borders, as the Mother Abbess, is a showstopper. She is convincingly
commanding and yet sympathetic in her role, an actress of great poise and ease
(even persuading us that she can barely recall the lyrics to “My Favorite
Things”).
Her first act curtain number, “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” always
amuses me a little, because the philosophy of embracing all the experiences
life has to offer is not something I expect to be sold by a nun. But sell it
Borders does, in a ringing voice that brought pounding applause from the
audience.
Finally there’s Andy Lebon as Captain von Trapp. The actor, fresh
from two years of playing Jud in the national tour of “Oklahoma,” has an imperious
but endearing manner that’s well suited for this role, and a powerful voice. He
and Berry are believable as attractive adults in love, something you don’t always
get in a musical.
Their love song, “Something Good,” ended with such dramatic
force that a small child sitting behind me said, “Is it over now?”
Not yet, kid. Gotta outwit the Nazis first by singing at
them.
Incidental
intelligence: “The Sound of Music,” with music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by
Oscar Hammerstein II and a book by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, runs
through July 27 at the Little Theatre.
This production has
lighting design by Mark Hueske, sound design by Patrick Burks, stage management
by Jeremy J. Phillips, choreography by Amber Mak and musical direction by Kevin
Long.
The cast includes Andy
Frank, Brady Miller, Colleen Johnson, Emily Rhein, Haley Jane Schafer, Hanah
Rose Nardone, Josh Houghton, Megan E. Farley, Niko Pagsisihan and Tim Mason.
The children’s roles
are double cast, and the alternate set of children are Zach Smith, Blaine
Lehman, A.J. Zaccari, Zoe Bowers, Brace Lynch and Callie Standerfer. For tickets, call The
Little Theatre On The Square Box Office at 217-728-7375.
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