THEATRE REVIEW:
“QUILTERS” at Lamb's Players Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE: MAY 4, 2001
A quilt is made up of
little pieces, stitched together to form a picture or pattern. And so it is
with "Quilters," the musical revue by Molly Newman and Barbara
Dameshek. It's a series of songs and vignettes, threaded together by 16
different quilt designs, each representing ages and stages in the lives of
American Pioneer women. It's a sweet, pleasant premise, focusing on those
unsung heroines, the stalwart women who cooked and cleaned and birthed untold
babies; those child brides who toughed it out across the country on rocky
roads, in ghastly weather, to make a home and a fresh start in a new land.
Theirs were the unheard voices, but as Newman and Dameshek would have it, these
women expressed themselves in color if not sound --- sewing their hearts and
heartache into quilts, often in a group effort that was part communal
celebration, part commiseration.
It sounds fascinating,
and it is, for awhile, though it often sags and the patterns too often repeat.
The mostly country/folk music is lively, a pastiche of plaintive ballads and
spirited group numbers, frequently sung a capella. Scott Lacey's musical
direction is masterful, the onstage band is a delight, and the singing is
outstanding. But we don't really learn anything new, and isn't that what the
best of theater is all about, expanding your mind and making you think? Well,
maybe not. Sometimes it's just to entertain, and Lamb's Players Theatre has
found this little revue entertaining enough to bring it back several times.
This new production is
more elaborate than ever, with Carrie Sefcik's woody, rough-hewn set, Nathan
Peirson's sunny lighting, and an excellent ensemble, deftly directed by Robert
Smyth, though Pamela Turner's choreography dwells too dizzily on circling and
spinning. After awhile, we fatigue and the women start to blur, though the
quilt patterns remain unique. But then, they come together, in the piece de
resistance of the evening: the joining of those separate segments into one
colossal Quilt. This huge, 30 by 30 foot masterwork, designed by Aina O'Kane
and costumer Jeanne Reith Waterman, swoops down from the fly-space, practically
into the audience. It's an 800-hour effort created by four modern women whose
blood and tears undoubtedly are sewn into the fabric along with their
forebears' heart-rending narratives. When this glorious flag unfurls, it makes
the over-long evening worthwhile.
"Quilters" is a
patchwork production -- bright, colorful sections alternating with drab spots,
warm but not weighty, a light covering of hard times.
©2001 Patté Productions
Inc.