THEATRE
REVIEW:
“THE
WHO'S TOMMY” at Copley Symphony Hall
KPBS
AIRDATE: August 31 1994
MUSIC.... 'SEE ME, FEEL ME')
Tommy is back. And he
demands to be seen, felt, touched
and experienced. The Who'
Tommy," written in 1969 and newly reborn at the La Jolla Playhouse two
years ago, has been transported back to the place of its birth. San Diego is another brief stop on an
18-month national tour, after the electrifying production wowed them on
Broadway, winning five Tony Awards. For
"Tommy," it's a homecoming.
And for the San Diego audience, it's a double treat.
First, it's kind of exciting to see something that started here go on
to much greater glory. Even though,
with Pete Townshend heavily involved in the production, it had a guaranteed
life after La Jolla.
But second, the show is even better than before. And when it began, it was one of the most
mind-boggling musicals to hit the stage in a long time.
When La Jolla Playhouse director Des McAnuff collaborated with
Townshend on the first Who-approved stage version, the first act was dazzling
and the second was murky. I personally
complained that the production had taken all the sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll
out of the original, which was what the whole thing was supposed to be about to
begin with.
Well, I'm happy to report that all my concerns have been
obliterated. The rewrites, tinkering,
fixing and revisions the piece went through before Broadway are marvelously
recreated for the road show. We don't
miss much -- only the ho-hum flying of Tommy, and the one most incredible,
breath-taking special effect I'd ever seen -- the onstage parachute jump.
But we get a lot that's new and so much better: tremendously pumped-up choreography -- a
whirlwind spin through all the dance and clothing crazes from the forties to
the sixties. Pumped up volume in the
pit, too. Now it really sounds
like a rock musical, though the acoustics in Symphony Hall left a great deal to
be desired. The music sounded superb,
but you couldn't make out the lyrics.
Review your liner notes before you go.... What surprised and delighted me:
not only has the rock n'n roll returned to the sound, but the sex and
drugs are back a bit, too.
After Tommy watches his father kill his mother's lover, he
withdraws into himself, becoming deaf, dumb and blind. His parents take him to all sorts of
healers, including the Acid Queen, who's once again, as she should be, much
more than just a gypsy. He is subjected
to physical abuse by his cousin and sexual abuse by his Uncle. All these events are, aptly, more menacing
in this revision.
Then Tommy becomes a pinball wizard and a leader of men,
miraculously regains his faculties and then his sanity, after disillusionment
with media mania and crowd adoration.
(MUSIC... "I'm
Free")
What this new Tommy learns is that "freedom lies here in
normality." Those lyrics aren't in
the original. And they change the whole
piece. But they also make the revised
ending more understandable, when Tommy reconciles with his dysfunctional
family.
The whole second act is vastly improved. The story line is clarified, and we get fresh insights on the
piece as a direct reflection of Townshend's life; the guru/ rock star
mentality, the religious fervor. Then,
the ultimate realization: that there is no guru, that you yourself have the
message.
The medium here is the message, too. The techno-wizardry is so spectacular you're just plain nuts if
you miss seeing it. And it's a
spectacle for everyone: both
aging rockers and the MTV generation, with nonstop visual imagery and movement
complementing a score that still sounds fresh and terrific. It's a feast for all the senses. The orchestrations and the singing are
sensational. The direction, the video
projections, the costumes, the dancing, the special effects -- all stunning.
MTV-VJ Steve Isaacs isn't as agile and athletic a Tommy as Michael Cerveris
was. But he looks great and his voice
is thrilling.
All that and much more that's emotionally engaging in this
incarnation of the play. At its
inception, it was exciting but not involving.
This time, there's much more to hang onto than just spectacle. We get the music. And we get the heat.
MUSIC....
"Listening to You....."
I'm Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1994 Patté Productions Inc.