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A musical at South Coast Repertory is a rarity, and in the case of the currently running A Little Night Music, it is a cause for celebration--well cast, beautifully performed and (especially in the second act) gorgeous to look at.
Stefan Novinski, a director better known for his straight plays—Around the World in 80 Days (Colony Theater), The Skin of Our Teeth (Evidence Room), and The Time of Our Lives (Open Fist)—was also responsible for 2005’s exhilarating J.O.B. the Hip-Hopera. Here he takes a more traditional approach to musical theater, staging A Little Night Music like a straight play with musical interludes. Though at least for one friend of mine this approach didn’t work, I found it quite successful. The dialog scenes play like something out of Chekhov, and because the cast is made up of some of our best musical theater talent, the singing is consistently lovely.
A Little Night Music is, of course, Stephen Sondheim’s 1973 “waltz musical,” all songs being written in three quarter time. Based on Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night, it features a cast of romantically mismatched characters who meet for “a weekend in the country,” at the end of which almost every one of them has paired up with someone other than the person he/she arrived with.
We meet these characters in the opening number, in a series of beautifully staged tableaux. There’s glamorous stage star Desiree (Stephanie Zimbalist), her former lover Fredrik (Mark Jacoby), Fredrik’s “child bride” Anne (Carolann Sanita) and his sexually frustrated son Henrik (Joe Farrell), and Desiree’s current lover Carl- Magnus (Damon Kirsche) and his disillusioned wife Charlotte (Amanda Naughton). There’s also Desiree’s mother Madame Armfeldt (Teri Ralston) and teenage daughter Fredrika (Katie Horwitch), as well as the saucy servant girl Petra (Misty Cotton). Enacting a number of peripheral characters and serving as a kind of Greek chorus are the quintet made up of Christopher Carothers (Five Course Love), Karen Culliver, Kevin McMahon (The Full Monty), Ann Marie Lee, and Tracy Lore (The Full Monty).
This was my second A Little Night Music. The first one, sixteen years ago, featured Broadway’s original Desiree (Glynis Johns) as Madame Arnfeldt (a role originated by Hermione Gingold) and, coincidentally, South Coast Rep’s Madame Arnfeldt, Teri Ralston, was also part of that original Broadway cast, in the role currently played by Culliver. Ralston brings a crusty quality to Madame Armfeldt as well as a fine singing voice (unlike either Johns or Gingold), which adds greatly to Madame Armfeldt’s signature number Liasons, in which she recalls her randy younger days.
Desiree is a star, and here she is appropriately portrayed by TV star Stephanie Zimbalist, who, in the years since Remington Steele, has proved herself an accomplished stage actress. Zimbalist possesses the requisite glamour for the role, and she is also a good comedienne, which serves her especially well in a comic scene involving Jacoby, Kirsche, and a soaking wet suit of clothes. A Lttle Night Music’s most famous song, Send in the Clowns, is Desiree’s, written to be performed by an actress who was not a strong singer. Neither is Zimbalist, but no matter, she sing/acts the song memorably, and receives deserved applause.
Damon Kirsche is about as handsome a leading man as we have in musical theater, but he is also great at poking fun of his image, as he does in his comic soliloquy In Praise of Women. (“She wouldn't...therefore they didn't... So then it wasn't...not unless it...would she? She doesn't...God knows she needn't...therefore it's not.”) Mark Jacoby, star of half a dozen Broadway musicals, is a suitably stuffy Fredrik, with a gorgeous voice. Kirsche and Jacoby’s duet It Would Have Been Wonderful is a special delight, slightly reminiscent of the two princes’ duet Agony in Sondheim’s Into the Woods, each man being so full of himself. (“If she'd only been vicious... If she'd acted abused... Or a bit too delicious... Or been even slightly confused... If she had only been sulky-- Or bristling-- Or bulky-- Or bruised-- It would have been wonderful.”)
Carolann Sanita is a giggly, giddy Anne, Joe Farrell is an amusingly frustrated Henrik, Amanda Naughton brings touching poignancy to Every Day a Little Death, and Misty Cotton (The Last Five Years) is an earthy, slightly tomboyish Petra, whose 11th hour The Miller’s Son is a showstopper. The “Greek chorus” harmonize beautifully, and have fun playing servants, guests, etc.
Sibyl Wickersheimer has designed an appropriately Swedish-wood toned first act set depicting the homes of the various characters, and in the second act, a woodsy outdoor set complemented by Christopher Akerlind’s exquisite lighting. There’s a rosy-gold glow to everything as the Swedish summer “white night” progresses, the nighttime sun sending its light through the trees, casting pastel shadows on the ground. Shigeru Yaji’s costumes are richly elegant and character and period appropriate. Drew Dalzell’s sound design is top notch.
Musical director Dennis Castellano, leading a seven piece orchestra, brings to life Sonheim's delicate melodies. Choreographer Ken Roht has, as would be expected, gotten his cast waltzing to Sondheim’s melodies, but there’s also a delightful bit of hand choreography to A Weekend in the Country (I couldn’t help recalling Hand Jive from Grease, even though the hand movements are quite different, and definitely more refined, here.)
Stephen Sondheim shows have become a musical theater staple, popular everywhere from community theaters to scaled-down 99-seat productions. But it’s always a special pleasure when they get a fully staged large theater production. South Coast Rep may not do musicals often, but when they do them, they do them right. A Little Night Music is well worth a drive down to the OC.
Segerstrom Stage, South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa CA 92626; September 7 - October 7, 2007 (see website for complete schedule); Tickets to A Little Night Music may be purchased online at www.scr.org, by phone at (714) 708-5555 or in person at the SCR box office.
--Steven Stanley Photos: Henry Di Rocco
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