THEATRE REVIEW:
“SHOW BOAT” at the Civic Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: JANUARY 7, 2000
SONG:
"Ol' Man River"
Ol' Man River nearly
slowed to a standstill. In the sluggish
touring production of "Show Boat" now at the Civic Theatre, neither
the Mighty Mississip nor anything else just kept rolling along. And since this pared-down production came so
close on the heels of the brilliantly inventive, multiple award-winning Susan
Stroman revival, which went on tour from Broadway but never stopped in San
Diego, we got a double dose of disappointment.
The promotional material
was so nebulous that it was never made clear that this was NOT that other,
blockbuster production, with its fabulous, moving-river set and its 75
ebullient performers. No, this one's a
tiny, 27-member non-Equity production, meaning that these aren't the high
caliber, union actors we expect from San Diego Playgoers' Broadway-quality,
high-ticket road shows. It should never
have drifted in.
Virtually nothing was
done to enhance this solid-gold standard.
Instead, it feels clumsy and outmoded. The sets are static and
unimaginative, the direction and acting are wooden, and the choreography is an
embarrassment, likely because there are no dancers in the cast, despite the
requirement of a dancing chorus and two hoofers as secondary leads. Even the music from the pit, a wan 7-piece
ensemble, is so muffled and passionless, it sounds for all the world like
piped-in, pre-recorded accompaniment.
This makes mincemeat of Jerome Kern's lush and magnificent score.
The first act is
interminable, 90 minutes of non-engaging pap.
The focus is on the singing, but there's no heart behind it. Even that seminal showstopper, "Ol' Man
River," the philosophical musings of a black dockworker, fails to inspire,
though Philip Lamar Boykin has a rich and melodious voice. The pace picks up a bit in the second act,
when the high drama kicks in, with a marital separation and an alcoholic
downslide of a leading lady. Tragic
Julie La Verne, the outcast mulatto, gets two of the best songs in the
show: "Bill" and "Can't
Help Lovin' Dat Man of Mine."
Siphiwe McKenzie has a lovely look and a charming voice, but she doesn't
give much nuance or new interpretation to her numbers.
"Show Boat" is
a classic by any definition, a recognized landmark in American theatre. It's got a bevy of beautiful songs,
including "After the Ball," " Make Believe" and the
humorous "Life Upon the Wicked Stage." It has a book and lyrics, by
Oscar Hammerstein II, that are still an astonishing achievement almost 3/4 of a
century later. When it opened in 1927,
it was a groundbreaking departure from the frothy musicals of the past. The characters were more three-dimensional,
the music was more skillfully integrated into the libretto, and the plot dared
to deal with such serious subjects as unhappy marriage, interracial love and
the hard life of blacks in the South.
In this production, the
characters are played either as cardboard or caricature. Only the ingénue Magnolia feels real. Jennifer Evans has a mellifluous voice, and
her luscious reprise of "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man" is the high-point
of the evening. For some reason,
though, the musical director obviously encouraged old-fashioned crooning, so
all the leads cloyingly slide through every tone on the way from one note to
the next.
Overall, the
group vocals are good, but the energy is so forced, the pace so plodding, that
this production could easily be retitled, "Slow Boat."
©2000 Patté Productions
Inc.