By Dan Hagen
Child labor hasn’t been this much
fun since Annie.
The Little Theatre’s current
production is the first time I’ve seen Newsies
in any form. And a labor-based musical, however fanciful, is an occurrence rare
enough to deserve some consideration. Bart Rettberg reminded me about the 1954
Broadway musical The Pajama Game, but
no others spring readily to mind.
The real-life New York City Newsboys
Strike of 1899 inspired this confection, which was a 1992 Disney movie before
it moved to the stage.
The show’s setting is remote
enough in time not to raise any eyebrows for siding with the literally unwashed
masses against capital. But it also retains an afterglow of urgency from the
fact that none of these issues has ever really gone away. The fight for a
living wage is still a live wire here.
The opening songs focus on that
that staple theme of American entertainment, good old feel-good poverty. It
isn’t until Joseph Pulitzer (Gus Gordon) cuts the newsboys’ meager wages,
sparking an impromptu strike, that the story really engages our interest.
Teddy Roosevelt (Marty Harbaugh)
serves precisely the same role here that his fifth cousin Franklin Delano
Roosevelt did in Annie — the
powerful, benevolent deus ex machina that
neatly ties up the package by siding with the underdogs. The show taught me
some history. I did not know, for example, that a teenager’s drawings caused
Teddy Roosevelt to clean up the New York State penal system.
Director Peter Marinaro’s
production cannot completely mute the factory whistle of manufactured merriment
that is so often built in to a Disney show. The music by Alan Menken, Jack
Feldman and Harvey Fierstein is not immortal, but it is serviceable.
Alexander Capeneka’s moveable set,
backed by a projection screen, skillfully suggests elevated train tracks and
city rooftops.
And while this production may be
short on spectacle, it is long on talent.
A Little Theatre veteran, Gordon
gives an assured performance as the newspaper magnate Pulitzer, perfectly
puffed up with his own power.
Garret Griffin is Crutchie, the
Tiny Tim of the piece, whose job it is to be a buoyantly optimistic boy because
he’s the one nearest to drowning. That’s a role that could easily be cloying,
but Griffin gives it heart.
Ironically, Equity actress Alex
Kidder is Katherine, the Lois Lane of this show. Plucky and pretty, she’s an aspiring
reporter who gives as good as she gets.
Equity actress Heather Beck is
Medda Larkin, the Ethel Merman/Reno Sweeney of this show. She pulls in the
audience by belting out That’s Rich,
a saucy song that is one of the production’s best numbers (“I live in a mansion
on/Long Island sound. I pulled up a weed, they/Found oil in the ground./But you
telling me you don't/Want me around — Now, honey, that's rich.”)
Tyler Pirrung plays Davey, the
newsboy who’s relatively wealthy only because his impoverished parents are
still alive. His best turn comes in Seize
the Day, a stompy strike dance with helicoptering legs that shows off Joey
Dippel’s choreography to good effect.
One of my favorite performers,
Corey John Hafner, is the streetwise newsboy Race. He shines in the look-at-me
number King of New York, and it’s not
every actor who can make an audience roar merely by pronouncing the word
“oyster.”
New York actor Bradley Cashman, as
the newsboys’ champion Jack Kelly, has the requisite roguish charm, and his
feisty romance with Kidder is more credible than most. Cashman impresses the
audience at the curtain of the first act with his soaring tribute to his Shangri-La,
Santa Fe.
Funny to think that if Jack had
ever realized his young man’s dream of going west, he might have run into
Curly, Laurey, Jud, Will and Ado Annie, the characters from the Little
Theatre’s previous production, Oklahoma!,
which is dramatically contemporary to Newsies.
They might have looked oddly
familiar to him.
Incidental intelligence: Newsies runs through July 28.
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 Mitchell Ost.
The talented cast includes Cian
Lynch, Jordan Cyphert, Trevor Vanderzee, Nicholas Wilson, Nicholas Carroll,
Emily Long, Emily Bacino Althaus, Kate Turner, Mandy Modic, Brittany Ambler,
Madilyn Keller, Bradyn Wambach, Jaimar Brown, Lars Kristian Hafell, James
Garrett Hill, Izzy Miller, Madeline Cohoon and Grace Lynch.
No comments:
Post a Comment