Sondheim’s A Little Night Music at New Milford’s
TheatreWorks: Wow!
David Begelman
Don’t
be surprised at that cold draft around your feet when taking in Stephen
Sondheim’s A Little Night Music at New
Milford’s TheatreWorks. Because this
is one show that is bound to knock your socks off. It’s that good, thanks to
gifted director Bradford Blake, and a cast that is so accomplished on stage,
it’s hard to believe the performers are a group of community players, and not
some professional company jobbed in from the Great White Way.
Sondheim’s
musical is based on Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles
of a Summer’s Night. The film is a comedy of manners in which its
characters find themselves paired with lovers or spouses who are uncomfortable
fits. What looks at first like frivolous ventures in sexual exchange and couplings
is in reality the desperate search for the right love connection, a more
serious quest.
The
Bergman film and the Sondheim show are somewhat dissimilar treatments of the same
theme; the musical is in a lighter mode than the Swedish director’s
masterpiece. All the same, the somber overlay we are accustomed to in such
films as Fanny and Alexander and Winter Light is accentuated in the
musical in the form of Henrik Egerman, a bible-thumping and suicidally disposed
young man (played with callow ardor by Brendan Padgett). A cellist, he has the
misfortune of being immersed in a strict Lutheran religious code, while having
the hots for his stepmother, Anne (played without a trace of guile by the
radiant Jessica Stewart).
Anne
is married to an attorney, Fredrik (played extraordinarily well by Bruce
Tredwell) for 11 months in a relationship that is unconsummated for reasons
that are unclear. Her eyes are finally opened to new romantic possibilities
with an adoring stepson who cottons on to the advantage of sinning over
salvation.
New
Milford’s production of A Little Night
Music is such a happy combination of direction, performing, and production
values, the occasional lapses into sharps and flats are barely noticeable. And
performers are backed up by an equally impressive team: musical director
Charles Smith, costume designer Lesley Neilson-Bowman, set designer Paula
Anderson, and the superb lighting design of Scott Wyshynski.
Director
Blake’s ingenuity in staging the musical is everywhere in evidence. He makes
stunning use of a turntable on which groups of performers rotate on stage
in clockwise motion and exit behind a
curtain when their scenes end. The device is dramatically effective, as was his
unusual staging of a dinner scene in which all principals sat in a row with
their backs to the audience. Curiously, their repartee was as vivid here as it
would have been had they been turned around, facing the audience.
Performances
without exception were—excuse the redundancy—exceptional, from the lovely cameo
portrayal of ingenuous Frederika Armfeldt by the 12 year-old Becca Myhill, to
the accomplished characterization of Mademe Armfeldt by the area’s theatrical
treasure, Jane Farnol. Ms. Farnol’s Mademe Armfeldt was a delightful study in
irony and crustiness—from a wheelchair, no less. When prompted by Frederika to
cheat at cards to ensure the desired outcome, Mademe counters, “Solitaire is
the only thing in life that requires complete honesty.”
Equally
impressive were performances by Susan Pettibone as Desirée Armfeldt, the
sometime mistress of Fredrik and Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm (played with his
customary commanding, and in this case imperious, presence by Mark Feltch).
Desirée—as if you wouldn’t have guessed it from the getgo—is an actress.
Despite the fact she has distinguished herself in plays by Racine and Ibsen,
she has a reputation for promiscuity (Ingmar Bergman’s sidelong glance at the
traditional gossip about performers down through the ages, although his traveling
clown threesome in The Seventh Seal
was among the spiritually elect in this searing film).
A
highlight of the show was Ms. Pettibone’s rendition of its most popular song, Send in the Clowns. Responding to the
impending termination of her affair with Fredrik, she delivers an
interpretation of the song that is vocally accomplished and suffused with
emotion and subtext.
Outstanding
portrayals are also turned in by Priscilla Squiers as Countess Charlotte
Malcolm and Jackie Decho-Holm as Petra, a servant girl. Charlotte is a wife
forever bewailing her husband’s philandering ways, and whose occasional
flirtations outside of marriage belie her steadfast commitment to her
blustering and duel-inclined Carl-Magnus. With a realistic grasp on the thing
she has with her husband, she complains, “You’re a tiger, I’m a hawk; together
we’re a zoo.” Ms. Squiers turns in a performance that is charismatic and
beautifully focused, while Ms. Deco-Holm’s opened-faced interpretation of The Miller’s Son toward the end of the
musical was delightfully earthy.
All
principals were backed up by vocally accomplished performers like Ron Dukenski,
Greg McMahan, Catherine McCollian, Jessica Smith, and Jody Bayer, whose
presence on stage enhanced the action. Lest it go unnoticed, this is a cast
that looks terrific doing the occasional waltz, a tempo favored in this most
sentimental of Sondheim works.
If
area theatergoers miss this show, it will be their loss and this reviewer’s
profit. So they would do well to get on the stick and see this dazzling
production.
A Little Night Music opened at New
Milford’s TheatreWorks, on September 26, 2008. It runs until October 25, 2008.
Performances on Fridays and Saturdays are at 8:00 PM, Sunday matinees at 2:00
PM. Tickets are $26 and may be purchased online at www.theatreworks.us, or by calling
(860)-350-6863.
No comments:
Post a Comment