THEATRE REVIEW:
“THE BOSWELL SISTERS” at the Globe Theatres
KPBS
AIRDATE: August 17, 2001
Okay, here's the
premise. A really tight-harmony singing group that ended its career prematurely
is getting ready to make a comeback. Sound familiar? It's awfully hard not to
make comparisons, no matter how much co-creator Stuart Ross protests. Though he
and partner Mark Hampton have been toying with the story of the Boswell Sisters
for years, it's impossible not to the think of that other Ross invention, the
ever-popular perennial, "Forever Plaid." Same story. Only that one
was pure fiction, and this one's based on fact, though it's mostly fantasy.
Martha, Vet and Connee
Boswell grew up in New Orleans, and made an enormous, musical splash in the
1920s and '30s, with their unique and original blend of jazz, blues, gospel,
harmony and humor. They became wildly popular millionaires, performing with
Bing Crosby, Benny Goodman, the Dorsey Brothers and Artie Shaw. They cut many
albums and influenced gobs of singers (from Ella Fitzgerald to those wacky
Plaids). But after only a decade together, they stopped singing in 1936, and
relegated themselves to the record remainder bin. Middle sister Connee
continued a solo career; Connee, the one with the physical disability, the one
who had special seats made to match her costumes so no one knew she was in a
wheelchair.
In this treacly,
invented plotline, Connee is asked to perform for a postwar March of Dimes
benefit, and she's afraid to appear onstage as some sort of 'poster child.' So
she calls her sisters back for a command performance. All three talk directly
to the audience, didactically delivering the requisite backstory and
exposition.
We're like voyeurs at a
family reunion which, except for the singing, is none too scintillating. We're
privy to a draggy, hour-long first act of do-you-remembers and coy rehearsal
resistance, mercifully interspersed with flawless harmonies on a catalogue of
songs taken from the Boswells' real-live repertoire: "Alexander's Ragtime
Band," "The Heebie Jeebie Blues," "When I Take My Sugar to
Tea," and 19 more. Thrilling vocal gymnastics, finger-snappin' syncopated
rhythms, a boffo backup band. But after awhile, it all starts sounding
soporifically similar -- slow starts building up to jazzy finishes. And it
sounds awfully similar to the Plaids -- even including a dorky audience
singalong. Although the arrangements are often heavenly and the voices are
divine, the script is tediously earth-bound and the whole venture might work
better as a one-act revue.
The set, lighting,
costumes and staging are generally uninspired. Even the characters are
ill-defined; we don't know much about who these women were at all, or why they
really broke up. Amy Pietz is most engaging as Martha, the earthy eldest sister
(who actually looks the youngest). The second-act solos are knockouts,
especially Elizabeth Ward Land's "Stormy Weather" and Michelle
Duffy's "Until the Real Thing Comes Along."
You'd kind of hope a new
musical would be exhilarating and extraordinary. Instead, as one opening-night
patron put it, "It's very relaxing."
©2001 Patté Productions
Inc