THEATRE REVIEW:
"SHOW
BOAT" at the Lawrence Welk Resort Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: January 2, 1992
Fish gotta swim,
birds gotta fly. And Lawrence Welk
hadda do "Show Boat" sooner or later. Actually, it's surprising that it's so much later, since
the ground-breaking musical opened on Broadway in 1927, and the Welk has a
penchant for multiple recyclings of its musical hits.
"Show Boat" is based on
Edna Ferber's sprawling novel of life and the floating theaters on the
Mississippi. It was quite an
unconventional creation by composer Jerome Kern and librettist Oscar
Hammerstein II. A first on
Broadway: a true musical play based on
a novel, with dimensional characters, a believable human story, and songs that
dramatized events, illuminated character and provided local color. The show gives a real feel for the time --
both when it took place and when it was written.
The action spans the decades from
the mid-1880s to the late 1920s.
Needless to say, that renders some of the musical less than
""politically correct.''
We meet a
stereotypically lazy but overworked black man (whose lot in life is compensated
by getting to sing the classic ""Ol' Man River" -- four
times). And there are women hopelessly
devoted to their irresponsible men (a timeless condition which thankfully left
us the legacy of "Can't Help Lovin' That Man"). Another timely issue, though a little less
inflammatory today, is misegenation, or interracial marriage, which sparks a
sad turning point in the play and precipitates the downhill slide of the
mulatto woman, Julie (warmly played by Fiama Fricano), who does a moving
rendition of the soulful "Bill.''
These heavy issues give rise to some mighty powerful and memorable
songs.
And the singing
is the best part of the Lawrence Welk production. The lead actors do the music justice -- although I might have
hoped for a little heavier emotional load in Joseph Craiger's resonant
renditions of "Ol' Man River."
What's missing,
as is not unusual in Frank Wayne's direction at the Welk, is the sharp
conceptual edge of the piece, which is sanded down here to a smooth bump. But the entertainment value is high, the
production is spirited and the costumes are colorful.
Only problem
is, this show should send you out thinking, not just humming. But well, one out of two's not bad.
I'm Pat Launer,
for KPBS radio.
©1992 Patté Productions Inc.