Andrew Foote as Jekyll/Hyde |
There’s
nothing like a Manichaean musical to brighten up your day…or more likely your
evening. You can ponder the eternal battle between the light and the dark,
compare the body count to that in “Sweeney Todd,” all the while enjoying some
rather fetching melodies. This opportunity is being offered by Norwalk’s Music
Theatre of Connecticut as it opens its 37th season with “Jekyll
& Hyde,” a loose reworking of the 1886 novella by Robert Louis Stevenson, the
show under the direction of Kevin Connors. This exercise in the dissection of
the human psyche and soul is often quite entertaining, but its inevitable
conclusion (and the time it takes to get there) may have audience members
leaving the theater in search of a good stiff drink.
Many
who attend the show may not have read the original novella, but odds are they
are familiar with the book’s main plot point: good doctor Henry Jekyll, seeking
to understand the workings of the human mind, experiments on himself with a
potion of his own creation. Instead of scientific revelation there is the
emergence of Jekyll’s darker side in the form of the murderous, maniacal Edward
Hyde. What follows is Jekyll battling for his soul against his alter-ego. It
remains to be seen who actually wins the battle.
After a
long period of development, regional productions and a national tour, the
musical, originally conceived for the stage by Frank Wildhorn and Steve Cuden,
with music by Wildhorn, a book by Leslie Bricusse and lyrics by Wildhorn,
Bricusse and Cuden, opened on Broadway in 1997 and enjoyed a four-year run. It
has been described aptly as a “musical horror-drama,” a phrase that might seem
a bit oxymoronic if not for the success of its kissing cousin, “Sweeney Todd,”
which opened on Broadway several decades before.
The MTC
production captures the dark nature of the musical and visually reinforces,
especially in the final Jekyll-Hyde conflict (compliments of lighting director
Michael Blagys) the metaphoric battle between the light and dark aspects of
humanity. Central to the success of any production of “Jekyll & Hyde” is
the casting of the male lead, and Connors wisely chose Andrew Foote to take on
the task. Foote is, as the need arises, suave and sophisticated and, at other
times, essentially demonic, and he delivers several of the show’s signature
songs, chief among them “This is the Moment,” with almost overwhelming energy.
It’s always interesting to see how
a production of the musical handles the Jekyll-Hyde transformation. In the case
of MTC, it’s done simply by an unraveling of Jekyll’s hair queue to create a
wild mane that almost covers Hyde’s face, as well as a demonstrative change in
body language (Jekyll stands upright; Hyde often crouches). Do we, the
audience, believe in the transformation? Absolutely, much to Foote’s credit.
For those familiar with MTC, the
idea of a “big production” doesn’t immediately come to mind, but given the
theater’s confines, Connors, casting 13 actors, often fills the stage, making
the ensemble numbers – “Façade,” and “Murder, Murder” – very satisfying, and
the five musicians situated up-stage often give the impression that there’s a
full orchestra hidden somewhere.
Carissa Massaro |
Supporting Foote in his dynamic
take on the Jekyll-Hyde character are Carissa Massaro as Emma, Jekyll’s
intended bride, and Elissa DeMaria as Lucy, the prostitute whom Jekyll
befriends and Hyde, well, uses and abuses. Although one might quibble about the
vocal range of these two ladies, Massaro and Foote offer a lovely duet with
“Take Me as I Am” and Massaro touches the heart with “Once Upon a Dream.”
Elissa DeMaria |
If there’s any problem with “Jekyll & Hyde” it has
nothing to do with MTC’s staging of the musical, but rather with the book
itself, which has been fiddled with numerous times. Quite simply, it’s too long
and suffers from redundancy. As for length, the set-up leading to the
Jekyll-Hyde transformation is over-stated – we get the premise early on (in
fact, most come into the theater already understanding the premise), and so
several of the songs (it’s essentially a sung-through musical) that reinforce
Jekyll’s desire to plumb the depths of the human psyche seem superfluous. Then
there’s the transformation, which everyone in the audience is waiting for. Late
into the first act a thought arises: when the hell is Jekyll going to become
Hyde? That’s what we’ve all come to see so let’s get on with it.
Thinking about the musical and its emotional trajectory, it
might be better if it was re-thought as a one-act production, with a lot of the
‘fat’ cut away. After all, the source was a novella, not a novel. However,
Connors and company must deal with what they’ve been given, and the effort is
often quite pleasing. There’s a sense that, walking out of the theater, you’ve
seen a “big” musical on a relatively small stage, which is one of MTC’s fortes.
“Jekyll & Hyde” runs
through October 14. For further information or ticket reservations call the box
office at: 203.454.3883 or visit: www.musictheatreofct.com.
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