THEATRE REVIEW:
“ALICE IN CONCERT” at the Lamb's
Players Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: June 30, 1993
All right,
class. It's time for a review. What are the four branches of
arithmetic? Good, you remembered: Ambition, Distraction, Uglification and
Derision. Well, that's what the Mock
Turtle says in "Alice in Wonderland," anyway.
No matter what
form you hear them in -- movies or cartoons, stage plays or songs -- Lewis
Carroll's thoughts and words are brilliant, and his creations, though a century
and a quarter old, are timelessly fantastical and fantastically timeless.
Personally, I
always got a kick out of the colors in the Disney version, and my favorite
musical rendition is The Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit," which
had, for me, the requisite psychedelic surrealism.
But now, in
National City, at the Lamb's Players Theatre, we have "Alice in
Concert," a small-cast concert musical that draws from both "Alice in
Wonderland" and its sequel, "Through the Looking Glass." The words are all there, and a lot of the
wonderful, wacko characters. But it
doesn't stack up to the original in any way.
Part of the problem
is the play itself. Elizabeth Swados
wrote the piece in 1980, and Meryl Streep was her first Alice. Even so, the play didn't last long or go
far. The music is extremely varied --
every genre in the book, to be precise -- but not very memorable. And the story-line would probably be a lot
easier to follow and appreciate if you have a strong memory of the source
material.
The Lamb's
Players love to breathe new life into small theater pieces that barely survived
their births. Last summer, they tried
to resurrect "The Utter Glory of Morrissey Hall." And though they brought a great deal of
energy and enthusiasm to the piece, it still wheezed and sputtered, crumpling
under its own light weight.
They've brought
the same spunk to "Alice," and it works better because there's more
substance to begin with. But Deborah
Gilmour Smith's direction ranges from reverential cum religious to amateurish,
to creative and inventive. That about
matches the musical range, from jazz to blues to country, pop, calypso, waltz,
you name it. Some works, some doesn't.
But what works
like crazy is the ensemble. Drawn
mostly from the Lamb's stable (no pun intended), the cast is highly talented,
and the singing is excellent. Kudos to
Mary Kidd for musical direction, and to the onstage band for super backup and
cute contributions to the dramatic action.
Sarah Zimmerman
is a magnificent Alice. I don't know
what Meryl Streep was like, but this 17 year-old brings all the delightful
ingenuousness and moxie the character demands.
And her voice is as magical as her adventures. The rest of the cast of eleven is dynamite, with standout acting
and vocal versatility from Jeanne Reith, Nathan Peirson, Mark Jobson, Damon
Bryant and Leigh Scarritt. When
Veronica Murphy gets into elaborate head-pieces, her costumes are a hoot.
This isn't
child's play, you should know. But the
kids might enjoy it. I've always found
the humor too sophisticated for children, but childlike innocence wouldn't
hurt. Overall, this production is
light, tasty summer fare; it's not too filling, but it's sweet, and it goes
down easily.
I'm Pat Launer,
for KPBS radio.
©1993 Patté Productions Inc.