At long last, East Lansing’s Wharton Center’s Broadway series finally opened on Tuesday night. Everyone in attendance was eagerly looking around to see how big the house was, understanding that Michigan’s Covid numbers are stubbornly high. Well, it looks like folks have a great need to have their spirits lifted with singing and dancing and good stories.
“Hadestown,”
the Tony award winning spectacle, filled about 1100 seats (out of 2500) at the
Cobb Great Hall – about normal for Covid times.
Although
many people didn’t know what to expect from this oddly named musical, the
13-member cast dispelled all apprehensions at the very beginning. They entered
the stage as a group, smiling and waving to the audience enthusiastically. And
the audience smiled and laughed back. I saw the 4th wall crumbling.
“Hadestown” is an upbeat and inspirational show based on Greek mythology but is told with so much flare and creativity that everyone will get it easily.
The
brilliant writer (music, lyrics AND book), Anais Mitchell, chose to use New
Orleans jazz to tell the story. And it did have a Mardi Gras feel, as well. The
costumes were funky and the stage movements were quirky and fun.
But more
than anything, the mostly young cast seemed to be having a blast telling us
this mythical tale of the naïve/poet Orpheus, his fiancée Eurydice, the rich
and evil Hades, his wife Persephone, the dapper Hermes who acts as the storyteller
and the three Fates.
The music is
rollicking (mostly acoustic)and very accessible. The on-stage band features, of
all things, a jazz trombone played by Audrey Ochoa. She plays lots of hard-charging
solos and even joins the cast with some dancing while playing her horn.
When the
band took their seats after intermission, the trombonist received an ovation –
maybe a first.
The story is
loose and fairy tale-like, but we are drawn in by the love story. The tough
girl Eurydice (Morgan Siobhan Green) is immediately proposed to by boyishly
charming Orpheus (Nicholas Barasch). But there is darkness too - after all the
show’s name is Hadestown. It’s all about the struggle between cynicism and idealism
– two sides of the same coin.
The voices
in this top-drawer cast are uniformly excellent, but Barasch gets the highest
marks. He sings many ballads, using his
very high tenor range and they are all compelling. Barasch comes to the show
from doing a star turn in a recent revival of “She Loves Me” on Broadway. The Barasch/Green
couple is sweet and captures the audience.
Other standouts
are Kimberly Marable (direct from the Broadway cast) and Kevyn Morrow, a
Broadway veteran whose bass voice makes the rafters shake.
Leading us through
the proceedings is Hermes (Levi Kreis) with a smashing R&B voice and great
dance moves.
Watching the
creativity of this show reminded me of the vast variety of styles Broadway musicals
offer. Every show seems to be totally unique and searching for new ways of crafting the theatrical exsperience.
And with “Hadestown,”
I felt that it was as current as TODAY. The music, the messages, the diversity,
the style, and the dancing all speak eloquently about what is going on in current
culture. Why, one character even had a
song about building a wall.
In this
production the imaginative directing by Rachel Chavkin was just as important to
the show’s success as the words and music. There was movement and motion
happing throughout every minute of the show, never letting the audience loose
concentration.
“Hadestown,”
winner of eight Tony Awards, runs through December 12. Whartoncenter.com for
tickets.
3 comments:
Dad would have loved this article, especially the bit about the standing ovation for the trombone!
Saw it last week at the Fisher Theater in Detroit and I hated it. To each his own.
Love this review. I live in Florida and will not be able to see this show, but, gosh, your pleasure in being entertained by such fun makes me jealous and anxious to renew my own theater-going after over a year of indoor activities. Thanks, Ken.
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