By Dan Hagen
Ordinarily, I don’t give standing
ovations. I think they should be reserved only for rarities, for extraordinary,
dazzling performances. Yet last night, I rose to my feet, applauding.
I’ve seen several productions of
the musical Oklahoma!, but the one
now playing at the Little Theatre in Sullivan is the best of them.
Over seven decades, this show has
become encrusted with so much cheese that it might as well be called Wisconsin! But this production is
vibrant and vivacious, and finally gives me a hint of what all the fuss was
about when this Rodgers and Hammerstein musical first wowed Broadway in 1943.
And the credit is due to two
things, I think. One is the fact that director Peter Marinaro has managed to
add a subtle and persistently dark chord to this sometimes saccharine musical.
In many productions, the American
future that stretches ahead of these settlers comes off as confident and
assured. But here, their All Er Nothin’
gamble on the barren prairie seems just as likely to leave them empty-handed. The
marginality and sketchiness of these settlers’ lives is somehow suggested,
along with the note of nervousness that underlies all their bravado.
Kincade and Cyphert as Aunt Eller and Will |
As veteran actress Therese Kincade
says in her best scene: “Oh, lots of things happen to folks. Sickness, er bein’
pore and hungry even — bein’ old and a-feared to die. That’s the way it is, cradle
to grave. And you can stand it. They’s one way. You gotta be hearty, you got to
be. You cain’t deserve the sweet and tender in life less’n you’re tough.”
Corny? Not when Kincade says the
words. She gives the speech reality, making it both chilling and bracing. That IS the way things are, and the audience
knows it — whether it’s 1906 or 1943 or 2019.
And that’s the other big advantage
of this production — top talent in all the principal roles.
Kincade could play the irascible-but-wise-and-lovable
Aunt Eller in her sleep, but keeps the audience awake with her verve, as when
she fires off a gun to halt a brawl and booms, “They ain’t nobody goin’ to slug
out any thin’! This here’s a PARTY!”
As the peddler Ali Hakim, the
angular Tyler Pirrung is as sharp in his retorts as he is in his business
practices.
Ambler and Cyphert as Ado Annie and Will |
I’ve seen how easily Equity actor
Jordan Cyphert can play smooth and debonair. But here, as cowboy Will Parker, he’s
convincingly dim-witted, yet still as bright as them newfangled electric
streetlights over to Kansas City.
Will Parker’s pert and promiscuous
lady love, Ado Annie, is played with flawless comedic flourishes by Brittany
Ambler, an actress who never wastes a gesture, never fails to reward the
audience’s wandering eye.
The young cowboy hero Curly McLaine
is required to sell you on his love of life in the first moments of the show,
and this one, Trevor Vanderzee, does the trick. The handsome actor even seems
to have the glint of that morning sun he’s singing about in his eye.
Turner and Vanderzee as Laurey and Curly |
Vanderzee’s performance suggested
something of what might have been missing in all those other Curlys I’ve seen.
For example, when Curly is selling his “kinda nice horse, gentle and well broke”
Dun to prove his love for Laurey, Vanderzee makes his sadness about that necessity
quietly palpable.
But Kate Turner, as Laurey
Williams, is worth it. What Turner brings to the proceedings is an Ellen
Burstyn-like recognizable reality.
For most of this musical, Curly
and Laurey act like the silly, self-defeating teenagers they are, full of pride
and prejudice. But Turner makes her character so emotionally real in her hopes
and hurts that you simply have to root for the young couple.
Over the decades, I have surprised
myself by realizing that my favorite of the show’s several hit songs is now Many a New Day, Laurey’s breezy,
fancy-free, proto-feminist anthem (check out Daryl Sherman’s jazzy version for
a treat).
The heavy darkness of Jud Fry, the
psychopathic farm hand who is obsessed with Laurey, is the anchor that
stabilizes the show, giving it gravitas and freeing it from the silliness of
some productions I’ve seen.
Alhough Jud’s loneliness and agony
are sometimes poignant, actor Nicholas Carroll never lets us forget how
rattlesnake-dangerous this insular, increasingly deranged predator is.
The funny business of Poor Jud Is Daid seems almost out of
place with this Jud Fry. He’s just
too menacing and too tortured a man to laugh at.
Glancing at the sweeping,
impressionistic prairie landscape behind the actors, you’re impressed. And then
you’re more impressed when you notice that the clouds are moving. Noel
Rennerfeldt’s impressive set is frequently filled with the whirling exuberance
of Kristen Brooks Sandler’s choreography, including the dream sequence with
dancers all in white.
When this cast sings the familiar,
rousing title tune, you believe they really do
love the land in this, the most American of musicals.
Once, this show resonated with the
economic optimism and conformity of postwar America. Now, in expert hands like
these, it can be made to reflect the vast landscape of hard facts that is on the
21st century American horizon.
I always knew Oklahoma! could entertain. But I never knew it could grow.
Incidental intelligence:
Oklahoma! runs through July 14.
For tickets, call The Little Theatre On The Square Box Office at 217-728-7375.
Musical direction is by Kevin Long,
with lighting design by Zach Pizza and costumes by Jana Henry Funderburk.
The talented cast includes Rich
Beans, Emily Bacino Althaus, Mandy Modic, James Garrett Hill, Jaimar Brown,
Corey John Hafner, Lars Kristian Hafell, Garrett Griffin, Mason Phipps, Heather
J. Beck, Emily Long, Emily Miller-Amato and Madilyn Keller.
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