Therese Kincade and Glory Kissel in 'Fiddler on the Roof.' News-Progress photo by Keith Stewart |
Who, day and night,
must scramble for a living,
Feed a wife and
children, say his daily prayers?
And who has the right,
as master of the house,
To have the final word
at home?
The Papa, the Papa!
Tradition.
The Papa, the Papa!
Tradition.
— “Tradition” from “Fiddler on the Roof”
By Dan Hagen
Just shy of its half-century mark, “Fiddler on the Roof” is now
part of the very tradition it celebrates and slyly subverts in a famous number
from the musical, a show that was the first to break 3,000 performances on Broadway
in its original run.
And kicking off the Little Theatre’s 2013 summer season,
this “Fiddler’ extends the tradition theme by casting Jack Milo and Therese
Kincade as Tevye and Golde.
Milo and Kincade have played husband and wife before, in
“Showboat,” and even this husband and
wife before, in an Eastern Illinois University production. They know the moves,
and it’s a pleasure to watch their practiced dance.
Tevye’s great affection for and witty wariness of his wife
and Golde’s no-nonsense regard for him are understated but obvious, the long
history between the actors making the long history of the turn-of-the-century
fictional couple easily credible.
Milo has, in fact, played this role in seven productions,
and that’s because he plays it extremely well. A poor Jew, Milo talks to God as
a friend, comfortable enough to joke slyly with his deity.
Although the story is set entirely in Russia, the magnetic
influence of America is felt throughout, finally pulling the hounded Jews to it
physically at the end of the show. But the shadow of America’s individualism
and self-assertion falls there earlier too, as Tevye’s daughters insist, one by
one, on picking their own husbands — each, from Tevye’s viewpoint, more
outrageous a choice than the last.
Milo portrays Tevye’s real apprehension at the possibility
of moral failure even as, each time, he nervously and finally errs on the side
of humanity, and thereby earns our regard.
This production, directed by Karla Shook, avoids a pitfall
I’ve seen in other “Fiddlers.” Sometimes, the three younger couples aren’t
entirely convincing. In a show that requires you to portray four sets of
romantic relationships, I suppose it’s pretty easy to go off track with one or
more of them. But Shook doesn’t.
And that’s thanks to having cast six assured and vital
performers in those roles — Kelsey Andres and Colin Shea Denniston as Tzeitel
and Motel; Lauren Patton and Will Skrip as Chava and Fyedka and, most
particularly, Sarah Ledtke and Joshua Phan-Gruber as Hodel and Perchik.
Ledtke and Phan-Gruber rise to the challenge of playing two
smart young people who barely hide their attraction to each other under an
exchange of insults and defiant chin-up challenges. The romance is engaging and
believable all around. In fact, this highly energetic production of this
venerable musical works on about every level.
The choreography by Sam Hay and the costumes by Jessica
Pautler get a star turn in the dream sequence, a fantasy concocted by Tevye to
get his wife to suggest a marriage he’s already agreed to. The costumes are an
eye-catching white, suggesting the surreal, and Hay’s choreography mimics puppets,
which is what these characters are here — not people but contrivances that are
a means to Tevye’s end.
The lighting, by Greg Solomon, is particularly effective at
setting a series of poignant twilight moods, this being not the sunrise but the
sunset of these Jews’ sojourn in Russia.
I always wondered, by the way, what that damn fiddler
(Sterling Stowell) is doing up there. I understand the original reference is to
a painting by Marc Chagall, but the metaphor of the fiddler always seemed
strained and kind of pointless to me.
Then my friend Paul Beals pointed out that perhaps the
fiddler is God. Only Tevye seems to see him. The fiddler never speaks but rains
music, which is the joy of life, on the villagers, watches them from above and
finally, at Tevye’s invitation, smiles, hops on the wagon and leaves with them.
A plausible theory, I’d say.
Incidental intelligence:
Fiddler on the Roof has music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick and book
by Joseph Stein. Set in Tsarist Russia in 1905, it’s based on “Tevye and his
Daughters (or Tevye the Milkman and Other Tales)” by Sholem Aleichem.
The cast includes Maddie
Keller, Zoe Bowers, Glory Kissel, Tommy Bullington, Andy Frank, Karl Skyler
Urban, Earl Halbe, Matthew Glover, Willie Mellina, Rachel Perrin, Ashley
Klinger, Tim Mason, Peter Marinaro, Connie Mulligan, Sam Mulligan, Brady
Wambach, Marty Harbaugh, Sydni Mulligan, Lori Harbaugh, Jane Blair, Sheryl
Snyder and Joyce Dively.
The show has scenic design by Matthew J. Fick and stage management by
Jeremy J. Phillips. The music director is Kevin Long.
Performances will run through June 16. Tickets may be purchased by
calling The Little Theatre on the Square Box Office at (217)-728-7375 or online
at www .thelittletheatre.org.
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