Today is the anniversary
of 9/11.
Although the twin towers tumbled
down in flames 18 years ago, Americans have not agreed on how to best commemorate
this tragic day in history.
Mid-Michigan audiences
will be able to remember the event in a unique and wonderful way tonight. They will be able to see the hit Broadway
show “Come From Away” at Wharton Center (through Sunday, 9/15). And they will learn that maybe a musical is
the perfect way to tell the 9/11 story.
Everything about the show
is real. The amazing story, the music,
and the emotion.
When the towers were
attacked from the air, the FAA closed all American airspace for the first time
in history. Incoming aircraft from
abroad had to land in other, non-US, airports.
All of a sudden, the town
of Gander, Newfoundland (pop. 7000), came to life. It is home to one of the
largest airports in North America, built during the age of European bound planes
refueling before jumping the pond.
On the morning of
September 11th, Gander suddenly played host to 38 planes which
landed in their near- vacant airport, doubling the town’s population in a few
hours. And the Gander townspeople made
it their business to take care of all the people who “came from away”.
To tell this powerful
story of human caring and kindness “Come From Away” uses only 12 actors, each
one playing several parts. They change
hats, coats, shirts, accents and physical mannerisms and totally become
different people.
Each actor gets into his
or her character with such commitment that we must try to remember what their previous
character was. To tell the story, the actors talk to other characters, to
themselves or to the audience, but the narrative is always impactful and
effective.
We hear about a woman who
is desperately trying to contact her firefighter son in New York, the Muslim
who is often feared by everyone else, the gay couple who are afraid to reveal
themselves to the Canadians.
But through all the
personal anxieties of the flyers, the good people of Newfoundland welcome them with
love, understanding and openness. It’s a true story for our age.
There are no glamorous Broadway stars here. They look like real
folk. The women are in slacks and jeans. Men are in flannels and baseball hats.
And they make up the full
assortment of human variety of ages and body sizes. But don’t let that fool
you. They may not look like the Rockettes, but they all dance and move with
great energy and Newfoundland style
The performers – a true
ensemble cast – are all stunning. When they sing solos they are strong and in
character, but when they sing as a chorus, which they do often, they blend
together like the best church choir you’ve ever heard.
This brilliant show grabs
the audience emotionally from the very outset. The stress and anxiety of the
passengers who don’t know what’s going on, to the townspeople who are just trying
their best to feed and house 7000 strangers – plus their animals.
The fact that the actors
play both the travelers and the locals
is a potent device of
telling the story. Towards the end of
the show after a passenger is thanking a local profusely for what he did for
them, the townie answers “You would have done the same”. But, in fact, the same
actors were playing both parts and they WERE doing the same.
The music is raucous Cape
Breton-style folk music, with the expert musicians on stage (and after the
final curtain, there’s a mini concert).
The backdrop is open and evocative of natural wood and trees. And the set itself is nothing more than a
bunch of simple chairs and tables.
But director Christopher
Ashley (Tony winner for this play) somehow arranges his actors, along with
those chairs and tables and other props into scenes which make us see: an
airport, a restaurant, a plane, a bar, a bus, a car, a hockey ring and a
highway.
This musical has no love
ballads, no flashy tap numbers, and no high heels, but “Come From Away” touches
a tender place in the hearts of all Americans in a way that makes it one of the
most entertaining and deeply-felt plays I’ve ever seen. And on opening night,
the audience responded with screams and howls, not just applause.
3 comments:
Going to this play on Friday and now I'm even more excited to see it. Thanks for the review!!
We saw it in Toronto. I have rarely been moved by a play the way I was moved by this one. It stirs up every emotion and leaves you remembering that at heart, people are good and generous - both in material ways but also emotionally generous.
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