Jordan Cyphert and Megan Farley in the Little Theatre's "Swing!" News-Progress photos by Keith Stewart |
By
Dan Hagen
The
scene: an urban night club during World War II, and if the atmosphere is
particularly realistic, that’s because the bricks and the loading dock are the
actual back wall of the Little Theatre, cunningly incorporated into the scenery.
More
than Jen Price-Fick’s set is cunningly done in this musical, Swing!, directed and choreographed by Amber Mak and Todd Rhoades.
Unencumbered
by plot in any but the most abstract sense, Swing!
swings from bebop to scat singing to torch songs at a brisk pace that never
flags.
Sound
problems lost us Brady Miller’s Boogie
Woogie Country during the dress rehearsal, but those ought to be fixed when
the show opens today.
Colorfully
costumed by Jeannine La Bate (orange shirts, blue fringed cowboy jackets, the
works), this show is all song and — particularly — dance, and as my friend Bart
Rettberg pointed out, a great deal could have gone wrong with the show that
didn’t. The dancing is furious yet fairly flawless.
Lee Ann Payne and John Stephens perform ‘All the Things You Are’ |
I
think two of the songs bookend World War II particularly well. One is the
high-octane delivery of Boogie Woogie
Bugle Boy by Megan Farley, Danielle Davila and Chloe Kounadis, a number
particularly fixed in time that is nevertheless curiously timeless. The other
is I’ll Be Seeing You, sung by Lee
Ann Payne and illustrated with a ballet by Cameron Edris and Davila. The
bittersweet reality of wartime loss remains haunting in that song.
I
want to single out three of those dancers — Edris, Miller and Daniel Gold. They
rocket across that small stage, leapfrogging people, backflipping and
self-trampolining spread-eagled in a try at defying gravity. Edris and Davila
also charm in the pantomime-like Dancers
in Love.
Lyrics
aren’t always necessary. Jordan Cyphert, so naturally sunny, slinks well past
sundown in an Apache dance with Farley to the tune of Earle Hagen and Dick
Rogers’ 1939 jazz standard Harlem
Nocturne (you know, the Mike Hammer theme). And the singers and dancers
take a break to let the onstage orchestra shine in the jazz standard Caravan. Adam Blakey and Robert Brooks
have a couple of fine saxophone solos during the evening.
John
Stephens and Corbin Williams take the period love songs in easy stride. While
Williams is sweetly cynical in Throw That
Girl Around, the clarion-clear Stephens sings the lovely Jerome Kern-Oscar
Hammerstein number All the Things You Are.
The
dance finale, with all the dancers popping like corn, is one crowd-pleasing
highlight of the show. Another more intimate one is a pair of favorite done-her-wrong
songs played as a dialogue between youth and a sadder, wiser maturity.
Colleen
Johnson belts out the great torch song Cry
Me a River (really written in the 1950s but perfectly at home here) and is
answered by Payne with what her mamma done told her in the equally lyrical Blues in the Night. When Johnson hammers
the “NOW you say you love me…” lyric,
she finds us a frisson.
You
know, the last six decades haven’t only seen corn and soybeans blooming in the
Central Illinois summer sun, but professional theatre too, thanks to the Little
Theatre in Sullivan.
Art
in the rural Midwest. We tend to forget what a rare, exotic and delicious crop
that is, if only because the unlikely longevity of that theater has made us so
familiar with it.
But
we shouldn’t forget that. The day-to-day courage of theatrical professionals
always impresses me. They work hard. Their lives are bright and busy and
lonely, their defeats public and their triumphs ephemeral. They take risks we
probably wouldn’t, enduring chancy incomes and itinerant existences to fulfill
the incandescent promise of their own talent. And they share the resulting light
and warmth with us a dozen times a week on stage, in the children’s show and
the main musical, all for nothing more than a Visa charge and an ovation.
However
any particular evening’s performance goes, I always appreciate that, and wanted
to take this opportunity to say so.
Incidental intelligence: Swing!, a
musical conceived by Paul Kelly, spotlights the music of the Swing era of jazz
(1930s–1946) and artists like Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Benny Goodman,
and continues through July 12.
The show has lighting design by
Michael Cole, stage management by Jeremy Phillips and musical direction by
Kevin Long. The performers include Danielle Jackman, Mollyanne Nunn and Collin
Sanderson, and the musicians include Colin Rambert, Erik Opland, Dan Wendelken,
Austin Seybert and Chris Hartley.
For tickets, call The Little Theatre
On The Square Box Office at 217-728-7375.
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