THEATRE REVIEW:
“CRAZY FOR YOU” at the Civic
Theatre & “GUYS AND DOLLS” at the California Center for the Arts -
Escondido & “THE NORMAL HEART” at the SDSU's Experimental Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: October 19, 1994
(MUSIC... Theme from "The Good, the
Bad and the Ugly")
The good, the
bad and the ugly pretty well sums up this week in theater. Two musical road shows rolled into town, and
one local drama about the AIDS epidemic has some ugly facts placed in a
beautiful production.
The very, very
good part of the week was "Crazy for You," a new/old musical inspired
by "Girl Crazy," written in 1930 by George and Ira Gershwin, and
mounted on Broadway in 1992 to tremendous critical acclaim. The story-line is silly beyond words, as
only old musicals and modern movies can write them.
A rich New York
guy falls for a poor, small-town girl, and they live happily ever after, in
Deadrock, Nevada, but not before he saves the town by refurbishing the old
theater and staging a Ziegfeld-style follies that revives the spirit and the
economy. The story is more than salvaged
by the incredible score (songs like "I Got Rhythm," "Nice Work
If You Can Get it" and "They Can't Take That Away from
Me"). And the production --
outstanding. Five hundred glorious
costumes, and some of the best choreography, singing and dancing you've ever
seen. As an extra added bonus, the
multi-talented stars are home-grown:
Beverly and Kirby Ward, son and daughter-in-law to Starlight's long-time
directing duo, Don and Bonnie Ward, gave the production believable chemistry
and a fabulous feeling of local pride.
From there, it
was a drive north but a long way down to the theatrical opener at the new
California Center for the Arts, Escondido.
It's hard to miss with "Guys and Dolls," the brilliant, funny,
Tony-grabbing 1950 Frank Loesser musical.
Everything about the show is right, and everything about this production
is wrong. It makes a feeble attempt to
emulate the spectacular 1992 Broadway revival, but it looks like a rinky-dink,
basement-budget mishmash.
This is a
non-union, non-Equity production, and it shows. Everyone is miscast. The
center-stage females shift bumpily from their chest voices to their head
voices, and none of the leads can act.
Worst of all, it's not even vaguely humorous. Also making its San Diego debut is the 12-acre Escondido Center
and its 1500-seat concert hall. The
look is gorgeous. But the theater
design leaves a lot to be desired. The
rows are too close, there's no access from one side to the other, and there are
so many staircases, the place could've been designed by M.C. Escher. Maybe the show just set my teeth on
edge. I certainly hope the November
theatrical offering, "Evita," can rise above.
The SDSU Drama
Department has certainly managed to rise above and meet a daunting challenge in
its staging of Larry Kramer's "The Normal Heart." First produced in 1985, the controversial
piece was one of the first to confront the AIDS crisis head-on.
Kramer, the
activist-provocateur, has written forcefully of his own experiences, forming
the Gay Men's Health Crisis and then being banned from it, agitating New York
Mayor Ed Koch and his own compatriots by exposing the government's infuriating
denial and the gay community's refusal to consider even temporary sexual
abstinence.
Rick Simas'
taut staging heightens the tension. Set
changes are made by a somber, masked-and-gloved cadre in scrub-suits. With each scene, there is a growing number
of San Diego names projected on the rear wall, dramatizing the mounting AIDS
death-toll. Guest Equity actor Barry
Mann is riveting as the play's centerpiece, the angry young writer Ned
Weeks. The rest of the cast is
dead-on.
What's most
disturbing, of course, is that, ten years later, nothing much has changed. And that makes the piece a fitting addition
to AIDS Awareness Week on campus. In a
chilling postscript, current and projected statistics are recited by the
cast. Almost a quarter of a million
have died so far. You owe it to
yourself and to your society to see this play; it’s not just about them
any more.
I'm Pat Launer, KPBS radio.
©1994 Patté Productions Inc.