Carmichael 'CJ' Blankenship as Black, Allison F. Rich as Queenie. All photos by Dave Lepori |
San Jose Stage
Andrew Lippa's The Wild Party
June 16, 2016
As it often does, San Jose Stage has found a provocative,
quirky musical, Andrew Lippa’s The Wild
Party, and given it the royal treatment, turning in a sexy and electric
performance.
The Wild Party is
a long-form poem by Joseph Moncure March, published in 1928 and filled with
that era’s libertine ideas and freedom-stretching urges. It gained newfound
interest in 1994 with the publication of a new edition with illustrations by
Art Spiegelman.
Lippa, known for his work on The Addams Family musical, debuted The Wild Party in 1999. The use of a poem for source material shows
immediate advantages. The opening piece, “Queenie was a Blonde,” is a direct
quote of the poem’s opening, and bits of March’s innovative rhyming make
appearances throughout, like the rhyming couplets in a Shakespeare play.
Courtney Hatcher as Kate, Noel Anthony as Burrs |
The cultural icon that is The Party goes beyond a specific
era, and Lippa underscores the universality with his musical choices. (The
first hint is the sound of Tony Frye’s electric guitar.) The styles range
widely, delving into era-proximate bits of gospel, jazz, blues and vaudeville,
but depending largely on modern American Musical Theater tropes to deliver the
dramatic goods.
The reason for the party is pretty universal, as well.
Queenie (Allison F. Rich) and her vaudeville clown lover Burrs (Noel Anthony)
are having third-year couple doldrums and decide on a soiree to kick themselves
back into gear. (And we all know what a bad
idea that sounds like.) What results, of course, is the age-old tug between
keeping the things we have and having the things we want, along with the deadly
everpresence of jealousy. At one point, Burrs is chasing a saucy minor
(Brittney Monroe), being chased himself by Queenie’s un-loyal friend Kate
(Courtney Hatcher), yet dropping all these pleasures at the entrance of
Queenie’s new interest, Black (Carmichael ‘CJ’ Blankenship). Such are the
unreasonable priorities of love and lust.
Allison F. Rich does a masterful job of moderating Queenie’s
temperature, starting the show at a slow smolder, warming up under the hand of
her new beau and flaming out in the tragic finale, “How Did We Come to This?”
Her voice has real power, but is often at its best in the low, witty quips
opened up by Lippa’s artful pauses.
My favorite voice belongs to Noel Anthony as Burrs. His
tenor carries a delicious forward quality, bringing a constant edginess to one
very erratic clown. His character conducts a fascinating oscillation between
pulling himself into the light and diving deeper into the pit.
Noel Anthony as Burrs |
As Kate, Courtney Hatcher is pure lightning, especially in
the second-act opener, “The Life of the Party,” which begins as Kate wakes up
in a bathtub. Being a true party girl, she relishes even this, and her
enthusiasm is infectious. (The red sequin dress from costume designer Abra
Berman is amazing.) Therese Anne Swain made the most of the show’s most
blatantly comic song, Madeline True’s paean to her lesbian predecessors, “An
Old Fashioned Love Song.”
CJ Blankenship is both condemned and blessed to play
ingenues, with a rich baritone that melts women’s… hearts and a floating head
voice that recalls the Ink Spots. He and Brett Blankenship handle the
choreography, a constant delight of small, intriguing moves from all eras,
delivered by dancers who show nary the slightest hesitation. (A couple
standouts were Brittney Monroe and Nathaniel Rothrock, who both have that
quality of not just performing but “selling” their moves.) The cast also gives
a lot of enthusiasm to the feigned sex acts that keep the party wild. Director
David Davalos does a brilliant job of both creating and controlling the chaos.
A couple moments in Lippa’s score stood out: a stunning a
capella section in “The Juggernaut” and a quartet, “Poor Child,” that was
almost Verdian in its dexterity. The stage mics suffered occasional bouts of
distortion, due somewhat to the big voices in the cast (sound design John
Koss). Michael Palumbo’s scenic design is an artful combination of chessboard
and boxing ring, with plenty of semi-hidden spaces for the bedroom retreats of
the classic house party. Conductor/keyboardist Lauren Bevilacqua did a magical
job of leading her jazz band, including guitar, bass, drums, reeds and
trumpets. (And I’m still trying to figure out where that banjo came from.)
Through July 24th, San Jose Stage, 490 S. First
Street, $30-$65, 408/283-7142, www.thestage.org.
The Stage’s 2016-17 season will include Jackie Sibblies
Drury’s We Are Proud to Present, Conor
McPherson’s The Night Alive, Ayad
Akhtar’s Disgraced and Donal
O’Kelly’s The Memory Stick.
Michael J. Vaughn is a thirty-year opera and theater critic
and author of eighteen novels, including ThePopcorn Girl (available at Amazon.com).
2 comments:
I played the banjo for that one tune.
Awesome! Couldn't spot it behind that screen. Great job.
Post a Comment