THEATRE PREVIEW
SONDHEIM
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine March
1992
If you drop the
name of Stephen Sondheim, be prepared for an explosive response. No one who knows anything about music or
theater is wishy-washy on the subject; people have volcanic reactions to the
man and his work. Hailed as the most
important composer-lyricist of his generation or damned as overly dark,
cerebral, atonal and inaccessible, the supremely clever 61 year-old Pulitzer
Prize-winner can certainly be said to have “chutzpah”: Who else would write musicals about
cannibalism and presidential assassins?
To show that Sondheim
has more than an interminable fascination for the macabre, Paul Lazarus and
Paul Gemagniani put together, in 1983, a revue of thirty songs representing
twelve shows and displaying the positive face, the up-side, of Stephen
Sondheim. First produced as a
fundraiser for
Guest director
Jack Montgomery is given to hyperbole on the subject of Sondheim, whom he
considers "the most exciting musical composer of our era, much more
profoundly important than Andrew Lloyd Webber.
In the next century, Stephen Sondheim will be the centerpiece of what
will be remembered as the 20th century musical.''
Leon Natker,
artistic director of the Comic Opera, agrees.
"No one uses voices and words like Sondheim," he says. "I was searching for something in the
comic opera or operetta tradition that's forward-looking. And this was perfect. When it first opened in
But Natker did
secure some other local talents, to help with the narration in the show. For each of the six performances, a media
personality will appear (gratis), to provide the background, song-linking
narrative. This will include Channel
10's Lisa Kim and Channel 8's Hal Clement and M.G. Perez (who's coming back
from his new job at KGO-TV in
The evening
samples a wide range of Sondheim creations, from his very first musical effort,
“Saturday Night” (he had earlier written scripts for the TV show,
"Topper"), to “Primrose”, which aired on television's "U.S.
Steel Hour," to [“Frogs”, a musical version of the Aristophanes comedy
originally produced around the swimming pool at Yale in the early 1970s,
through better-known plays such as fi]A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
Forum”, [“A Little Night Music”, “Sweeney Todd”, “Follies” (whence the title
song), “Sunday in the Park with George” and “Into the Woods”.
One song, from
“Merrily We Roll Along”, is called "Old Friends." It could be written about Montgomery and
Natker, who've shared a reciprocal theatrical relationship for eighteen years,
beginning in summer stock in
Meanwhile,
Sondheim is getting attention elsewhere in
Down in
Natker is quite
excited about the production. It's
another step toward re-framing the Comic Opera (formerly known as the Gilbert
and Sullivan Society), expanding the repertoire and drawing in a younger
audience. "Stephen Sondheim has a
good track record in
©1992
Patté Productions Inc.