Tony Castellanos & Neil A. Casey in "Road Show" (photo: Maggie Hall) |
now being presented by Lyric Stage. The same might be
said for the creators of the show. As Stephen Sondhiem, who wrote the
score for the show, described in a very lengthy essay (no fewer than
a hundred pages in four chapters or “acts” in his seminal work,
Look I Made a Hat) this musical has had a complicated gestation. It evolved
from its workshop reading to its first production (then entitled Wise
Guys), then briefly as Gold, on to its revised form as
Bounce, to the “final” version (if anything by
composer/lyricist Sondheim has a real “final” form) as Road
Show. Its Off-Broadway premiere by the Public Theater in 2008
lasted barely two months. A large part of its acceptance (or lack
thereof) may be that Sondheim and his Book author John Weidman never
quite managed to embrace the basic reality that their two lead
characters, based on the real-life scheming Mizner Brothers, aren't
very likable, to put it mildly. The form in which they first appeared
in Wise Guys was transparently as two vaudevillian brothers:
Wilson (here portrayed by Tony Castellanos) and Addison (here brought
to life by Neil A. Casey).
Patrick Varner & Neil A. Casey in "Road Show" (photo: Maggie Hall) |
The problems with the Book have only partly been solved; what remains is lack of involvement in the lives of these two con men. The vaudeville elements are still discernible in the first half of this ninety minute production (wisely kept as an intermission-less piece) which, for those unfamiliar with the story, may be a true challenge. There are clues dropped in the opening songs, way too rapidly, so that one might miss the fact that the play opens in the afterlife with the death of one of the brothers and that each has had a lifetime of ups and downs. It doesn't help that Sondheim steals music (abetted by Orchestrator Jonathan Tunick) from some of their own past work, most notably from their collaboration on Assassins, in the song It's in Your Hands Now, sung to the brothers by their Papa (Sean McGuirk).
It isn't until their Mama (Vanessa J. Schukis) sings the
plaintive number, Isn't He Something, about Wilson, that the
story begins to move us (and seems borrowed from Children and Art
from Sunday in the Park with George). The alterations to the
plot, making it move perhaps too quickly in the second half of the
story, are rather extraordinary even for a work in progress. Arguably
the most striking example of plot revision is the sudden introduction
of a love affair between Addison (a closeted gay man in real life)
and a rich young man named Hollis Bessemer (Patrick Varner). This
resulted in a change from a heterosexual love song between Wilson and
his girlfriend Nellie, a character from Bounce
who was dropped for Road Show,
to a love song between the gay lovers, Addison and Hollis, by far the
most beautiful song in the show,You Are the Best Thing That
Ever Has Happened. Also
dropped, incidentally, was an oft repeated refrain, “bullshit”
(just as well, since the expletive might be rightly deemed too
presidential these days). Though the lyrics soar, they don't add any
heart to the show, which had just portrayed their first meeting as a
promising business relationship in another lovely song, You.
All of the characters, without
exception, seem bent on (to use the current buzz word) being
transactional. Sondheim refers to them as the “community of
suckers”, from the Alaskan Gold Rush to the sales of Florida swamp
land and lots of other destinations along the way.
The Cast of "Road Show" (photo: Maggie Hall) |
Thanks to Co-Directors Spiro Veloudos and Ilyse Robbins, (with Choreography by Robbins), to the Music Direction by Jonathan Goldberg, and to the technical crew: Scenic Design by Cristina Todesco, Costume Design by Amanda Mujica, Lighting Design by John R. Malinowski and Sound Design by Elizabeth Cahill, things are about as clear as they may ever be, and make for mandatory viewing and hearing for any Sondheim buff. It's certainly not his best work, but it has some of his loveliest music and stinging lyrics, delivered by a talented cast of eleven in some three dozen roles.
Mention is made in the program notes that this show is
about the warping of the American Dream and the need people seem to
have to leave their mark on the country's culture. That the show ends
up with crooked real estate developers overstaying their welcome may
feel too close to home right at the moment. This shouldn't dissuade
one's attendance, however, but increase the motivation for seeing
this latest work (a decade ago!) from theater's greatest living
composer/lyricist.
Let there be one caveat, in the words of Addison
(who briefly became a Broadway play producer): “a drama critic is a
person who surprises the playwright by informing him of what he
meant”.
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