Joseph Allen and Nicholas Ward. Photo by Randy O'Rourke |
How do you respond to an impressively talented cast charged with bringing to life a mediocre musical? Well, I guess you just sit back and enjoy what’s there to be enjoyed. Yes, Big River won numerous Tonys when it opened on Broadway in 1985 (the competition was Grind, Leader of the Pack and Quilters, so…) and has had many revivals, but that doesn’t preclude the fact that it is a patchwork piece with a book by William Hauptman that is mostly monologue, based on Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, and songs by Roger Miller that often do little to move the plot forward and sometimes seem to be inserted just for the hell of it. Up at the Sharon Playhouse, director John Simpkins has done what he can to make this three-wheeled wagon roll along as entertainingly as possible. The audience was appreciative on opening night, the cast was superb, and the social issues were out there for all to see and ponder.
Okay, as you traveled through the American education system
you were probably introduced to Twain’s novel, much esteemed and often vilified
for, among other things, its use of the “N” word (whether you actually read the
novel remains to be seen). So, you know about Huck, a barely “civilized” lad,
and Jim, a runaway slave, and their trip down the Mississippi
River on a raft (the river being a metaphor for being free from
civilization, while what awaits on the shore is human perfidy, racism and
skullduggery). It’s essentially a coming of age story, with Huck opting to defy
social mores and “go to Hell” to help Jim.
The novel was written in the first person – hence the
monologue form used by Hauptman. Yes, Huck tells his story, but often what
might be dramatized is simply described, which leads to the musical often floating
into some backwaters. Then there are the songs. The rousing “Do You Wanna Go to
Heaven?” utilizes the entire cast in the opening number, and it’s a real
foot-stomper, backed by a nine-piece orchestra that sounds bigger than it is.
It frames Huck’s dilemma: does he accept being “civilized” or revolt? All well
and good, as are the wonderful “Royal Nonesuch” number, the haunting “River in
the Rain” and the risible “Guv-ment,” all of which develop character and move
the plot along, but then there are the throw-aways: “Hand for the Hog,” “Arkansas ,” and the
totally show-stopping (the phrase used in the pejorative sense) “You Oughta Be
Here with Me.”
So, the musical is flawed, but the cast is excellent. Joseph
Allen, as Huck, is sprightly and ingenuous, and tells his story with just the
right amount of pluck. Playing against him, Nicholas Ward, with his marvelous
bass voice, is a sensitive, world-wise Jim. Yes, he plays a slave, but the
essence of the musical, and the novel, is that Huck comes to realize that Jim
is not property to be bought or sold but a human being, a man, and Ward ably
allows for this transformation in Huck’s thinking.
Doing double duty, Travis Mitchell plays Pap, Huck’s father,
with just the right amount of inebriated evil (the cabin scene is both
disturbing and frightening) and the King, the purported lost son of Louis XIV,
a huckster in cahoots with the Duke, Thomas Cannizzaro, who nails the fractured
Hamlet soliloquy. The two cavorting in “The Royal Nonesuch” is a delight. The
agile Alex Dorf creates a believable Tom Sawyer, though he might pull back a
bit on the “corn-pone” delivery of lines, and Carrie Lyn Brandon is delightful
as the grieving Mary Jane Wilkes. All are supported by a talented cast that
brings to life the story of Huck and Jim and their journey towards friendship
and understanding.
The staging, by and large, captures the feel of the period,
as does the costuming by Michelle Eden Humphrey. There is, however, one
head-scratcher, and that’s the use by scenic designer Josh Smith of trees
(really branches) on rolling platforms to signify the land bordering the Mississippi . Each is
rolled about by a cast member and is awkwardly worked into several scenes, more
a distraction than anything else…and totally unnecessary. One might also have
expected some projections to enhance the feel of the raft floating down the
river, but perhaps it just wasn’t in the budget.
All in all, Big River
is a case of a cast overcoming the limitations of the material it has to work
with to deliver an enjoyable if not gripping evening of musical theater. If you
don’t question some of the decisions made – like dance hall girls in full
regalia suddenly appearing in a backwater Arkansas
town -- and don’t mind that many of the songs, as tuneful as they are, simply
don’t make much sense -- then you’ll have a good time in the lovely northwest
corner of Connecticut .
Big River runs
through July 31. For tickets call (860) 364-7469 (ext. 201 in the summer/ext.
100 in the winter) or go to http://sharonplayhouse.org/theatre/tickets/
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