Allison F. Rich, Adrienne Herro and Jill Miller |
San Jose Stage
Mamma Mia!June 1, 2019
Now that the musical with the ninth-longest
run in Broadway history has hit the age of twenty, it might be fun to consider
its place in musical theater.
The idea of using already-popular songs to
piece together a musical story is hardly new. The most famous example is John
Gay’s The Beggar’s Opera, a 1728 concoction that added new lyrics to ballads,
folk songs and hymns to create its narrative (the story would later be used for
Brecht and Weill’s Threepenny Opera). The first four decades of the 20th
century were filled with American musicals that followed the same
patched-together format.
But then came the mid-century invention of
“the band” – a musical unit that both composed and performed its songs. And
although The Who ventured into opera with Tommy, and Hollywood tried to paste
together a film version of The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,
nothing clicked quite so well as when the Swedish hitmakers ABBA and
book-writer Catherine Johnson created a musical with 23 ABBA songs. At the
time, it probably seemed like a preposterous idea (and certainly, early critics
were NOT impressed). But something obviously worked.
And what was that something? I’ve got some guesses.
Number one, Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus resisted the temptation to use
only their biggest hits, often deploying lesser-known songs that better fit the
story. Number two, Johnson’s book is quite clever in providing a plausible path
for the biggest of those hits. A trio of baby boomers reminiscing about their
wild youths? What better than “Dancing Queen”? A single mom scraping by as a
resort manager in the Greek Isles? Sounds like she could use “Money, Money,
Money.” That same woman running into her three potential babydaddies? “Mamma
Mia!”
Number three is the generalized nature of
ABBA’s songs. Like classic operatic arias, they don’t further the action so
much as comment upon situations and feelings. Thus, “S.O.S.” fits any number of
breakup scenarios, while “Take a Chance on Me” is an all-purpose
flirtation-song.
Stage’s production delivers abundant
energy, intensified by its cozy space. Keith Pinto’s choreography is endlessly
inventive and sexy, and the band led by Martín Rojas Dietrich delivers a
genuine ABBA sound.
The vocals are solid throughout, with a few
definite standouts. Playing the lead “father candidate,” Noel Anthony displays
a real talent for connecting song to character, particularly with “Knowing Me,
Knowing You,” a bit of fatherly advice for his potential daughter. Adrienne
Herro plays mother-of-the-bride Donna with a girl-next-door appeal (much
preferable to Meryl Streep’s annoying glamour-pus) and hits an emotional peak
with “The Winner Takes It All.” Both songs remind us that the ultimate Euro
party band could also deliver real heartbreakers.
The comic highlights come from Donna’s
gal-pals. Allison F. Rich invests Tanya with equal parts AbFab and Christine
Baranski, playing the cougar to the hilt. As Rosie, Jill Miller has both the
appearance and comic flair of Lisa Kudrow, taking a couple of small physical
bits (padding her hotel bed like a kitty-cat) to the level of hilarity.
As
director, Rich has a tremendous eye for detail. Even the furniture changes have
their own little ballets. During the barely controlled chaos of the Dancing
Queen scene, one could look anywhere on stage and find some little mini-drama
– exactly like a typical night at a disco. It was also fun to watch the
supporting cast in their Greek chorus mode – for example, in bride Sophie’s
(Allison J. Parker’s) truly disturbing nightmare scene. Bethany Deal’s costumes
were brilliant, particularly the ABBAriffic jumpsuits of the finale.
Through July 7, San Jose Stage, 490 S.
First Street. 408/283-7142, thestage.org.
Michael J. Vaughn is the author of 21
novels, including the rock band comedy Slow Children.
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