THEATRE PREVIEW
FEATURE ON JIM WANN AND “THE
PEOPLE VS. MONA”
Published in Pasadena Magazine
October 1999
Mavis and Mona; Pump Boys and Dinettes. Jim Wann has created them all.
Born in the small-town South, in the town of Lookout Mountain,
Tennessee (looking out for nearby Chattanooga), Wann's heart remains below the
Mason-Dixon Line, even though he lives in upstate New York. His musical compositions and theatrical
creations are rife with Americana, harking back to times of bench-seat diners
("Pump Boys and Dinettes"), intrepid explorers ("The Great
Unknown," about an 1869 expedition into the Grand Canyon) and
unforgettable outlaws ("Diamond Studs: The Life of Jesse
James"). His latest venture, for
which he served as composer, lyricist and writer, is "The People vs.
Mona." His wife, Patricia Miller, is co-writer.
The new musical is set in the present, but feels, Wann admits,
"like 'Mayberry RFD' thirty years later." We're back in the south, in a little town named Tippo. "There actually is a Tippo,
Mississippi," Wann explains.
"It's where jazz singer Mose Allison is from. I named my town in honor of my affection for
Mose's work. That's the inside
story."
The 'outside' story is that "Mona" is sort of a mystery,
comedy and musical combined, with emphasis on the narrative and the personal
relationships -- including interracial casting, a little class consciousness,
and some bite to some of the songs.
Most of the action takes place in the courtroom, during the steamy
murder trial of singer/actress Mona Mae Katt, the town's 'bad girl' who's
accused of killing her husband of ten hours, C.C. Katt, owner of Star
Records. In Tippo, this is the "trial
of the century." The defense attorney, Jim Summerford, our
storyteller/host, may have something going with the defendant, and with
the Prosecutor, Mavis Frye.
On hand to testify are a bevy of colorful locals, including a
gossip columnist, a parking violations officer, an evangelist, a coroner and a
dairy farmer. Needless to say, everyone
has a murder motive. So, the question
is not only who dunnit, but who's gonna win Jim Summerford.
The score leans heavily toward traditional American: primarily folk
and blues. The rousing gospel number, "You Done Forgot Your Bible,"
Wann explains, "is essentially a theological argument about punishment and
forgiveness. The prosecution vs. the witness.
The Old vs. the New Testament.
The pastor singing the song is a woman.
If the piece had been set in the fifties, as we'd originally intended,
it couldn't have a female pastor or a black judge."
The show is written for a cast of seven (most doubling up roles),
but according to Wann, "four or five of them have to be top-flight
musicians." That's Wann's signature
presentational style, what he calls "musician's theater," where most
of the actor/singers accompany themselves onstage. He originated the style in "Diamond Studs," and carried
it into his wildly popular "Pump Boys and Dinettes." Some consider these
pieces more like concerts than theater, but no one denies that they're
rollicking good fun.
Recruiting instrument-playing actors is not as big a challenge as
it sounds, says Wann. "Almost
every musical theater actor today has had experience in shows like 'Pump Boys
and Dinettes.' When I first started in the seventies, not a lot of people had
these skills." Some of the
specifics of who plays what are written into the script. The defense attorney/narrator should have a
folk-singing, guitar-playing, bandleader style (kind of like Jim Wann, who's
played the role). The court clerk is on
keyboards, and the judge plays percussion (including the gavel).
Last year, "Mona" was one of four shows chosen by ASCAP
for a musical theater workshop in L.A. Then there was a reading at the
Berkshire Theatre Festival. Paul Lazarus was there. Lazarus, a veteran of
theater and TV, is also former artistic director of Pasadena Playhouse, and he
soon signed on to direct the Pasadena production. Since the last workshop, Wann has written four or five new songs,
so Pasadena Playhouse is getting a new version of the piece.
Wann says his family has served as his inspiration. Like all good Southerners, he says, "we
naturally all had strong dramatic instincts." The singing talent came from
his father, the storytelling ability from his mother. But he was always convinced he was going to be a big league
baseball player. In high school, after
he threw his arm out, he bought a guitar from a pawnshop and taught himself to
play. "For years, it was mostly out of tune," he chuckles. He formed a group that played mostly folk
and rock, "essentially the same elements in my writing today. From the folksong tradition of
storytelling. Theater, of course is
telling stories."
To hone his storytelling acumen, he became an English major at the
University of North Carolina. In the
creative writing department, he says, "I was taught by some of the best
Southern fiction writers."
Wann stayed in Chapel Hill for awhile, putting together another
band. He had grown up on Woodie
Guthrie, Appalachian folk songs and bluegrass.
But he heard a lot of R&B and soul music on the radio. "And," he adds, "I grew up in
the sixties, very much influenced by Bob Dylan and the Beatles, Van Morrison
and Randy Newman, folks who took songwriting to a whole different place."
He and the band's pianist, Bland Simpson, started writing some
songs about Jesse James, and before they knew it, they had a "saloon musical,"
'Diamond Studs.' The show, which charmed critics off Broadway, ran for about
eight months in 1975, then went on the road, and now is having a gala 25th
anniversary re-mounting in Chapel Hill.
"It was a magical experience," says Wann. "I was 26,
I was a guitar-playing Jesse James. I'd
aim my guitar at the bankers and use the instrument as a prop. Here we were, these kind of
hillbilly-looking kids making $75 a week, and all of a sudden, we get great
notices in the New York Times. That's my version of show business. But I thought that was gonna be it."
Then, his 1981 musical revue, "Pump Boys and Dinettes,"
took New York by storm. It was so
successful off-off Broadway, it moved to off Broadway and then on to Broadway
itself, not to mention a TV special for NBC.
Over the years, it has turned into a little cottage industry.
"'Pump Boys' was much more of a New York kind of piece,"
says Wann, "even though it was set in the South. Everyone working on it lived in New York. It was developed in cabarets and clubs. It had a certain amount of New York hipness
and savvy."
Now, in his newest new musical, Wann is heading West. He's creating "The Great Unknown"
for the high profile theatrical producers, Dodger Productions. The piece
focuses on John Wesley Powell, the first explorer of the Grand Canyon, "a
complicated, dark character with kind of an Ahab-like obsession," as Wann
puts it. Bill Hauptmann, who wrote the
book for "Big River," is writing the book for the new show, which is
being shopped around to regional theaters.
"No nibbles yet," Wann says evenly. "This calls for a cast of 20. The bigger the show, the harder it is to get produced."
But at the moment, Wann's attention is on "Mona." And
he's convinced that "people will be able to walk out singing and humming
the tunes. Joy is something I know I
can bring to the musical experience."
©1999 Patté Productions Inc.