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What a difference a director makes! Cabrillo Music Theatre’s production of Jekyll & Hyde towers over all others, including FCLO’s excellent revival just five months ago, and the #1 reason can be summed up in a single name: Nick DeGruccio. Following his brilliant direction of The Last Five Years, Beehive, and Zanna Don’t (all of them cited on LAStageScene’s Best Of The Year lists), DeGruccio now does quite possibly his best work yet, taking a show which detractors have called “bombastic” and “boring” and electrifying it, clarifying its themes, heightening its drama, and above all making it human. These are real people we are seeing on stage, from its trio of star roles (or should that be quartet?) to even the bit players at The Red Rat, in St. Jude’s Hospital, or on the streets of London.
Key to DeGruccio’s electrification of J&H is its casting, and in Robert J. Townsend, we have a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde to excite, involve, and move us. Finally, J&H has a true leading man in the Hollywood tradition of Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn, and Robert Taylor. It’s not enough for Jekyll and Hyde to be portrayed by an outstanding singer and powerful actor, though Townsend is both. J&H’s leading man should also be young, vibrant, and hot (as were his Tinseltown predecessors in their heyday). At last we have a Jekyll we can root for, empathize with, and fall a bit in love with. (No, the last is not a personal confession, though I’m sure that more than a few audience members left the Kavli with a bit of a crush on the good doctor.) Townsend shows us the caring physician willing to sacrifice himself for the good of his patients, the compassionate man who sees in Lucy someone other than a lady of the night, and the incarnation of evil that is Mr. Hyde. If this towering performance doesn’t guarantee Townsend a year (and beyond) full of other great roles, there is no justice. CLOs take note!
Add to Townsend a superb supporting cast and you’ve got a stage filled with brilliantly realized characters.
As Lucy, Lulu Lloyd may well be the musical theater discovery of 2008. This is a Lucy who could just as easily have been the girl next door, had life not dealt her an unfair hand. With her statuesque cuteness and glorious voice, combined with acting chops that make our hearts bleed for her, the very young Miss Lloyd is poised for a stellar career in musical theater.
Beth Obregon does lovely work as Emma, Jekyll’s well-bred fiancée, and demonstrates a beautiful singing voice in “Once Upon A Dream.” When Obregon and Lloyd duet in “In His Eyes,” it is heart-stopping. As Simon Stride, golden-voiced Douglas Crawford (whom I saw as Nick Massi in Jersey Boys) is a perfectly villainous foil for Townsend, tall, handsome, and dastardly, and someone who’d make an excellent Jekyll & Hyde himself. Completing the quintet of principals as Jekyll’s best friend John is Aaron Phillips, a fine singer/actor whom any leading man would want to have by (and on) his side.
Back to master director DeGruccio, who has not only cast his leads to perfection but has filled the stage with real actors and not just set pieces. This applies not only to the fine performers who portray Jekyll’s nemeses at the hospital (Terry Fishman, Mona King, John D. LeMay, Ron Rezac, August Stoten, and Tony Teofilo), Emma’s father (Jack E. Curenton), and bawdy madam Nellie (a particularly gorgeous-voiced Caitlin McGinty) but to every other cast member who is up onstage acting and being, and not just taking up space while the leads perform. Kudos to them all for their committed work here: Paul Bartlett, Brandee Berndt-Aguirre, Becca Cornelius, Tess Ferrell, Cristie Grissmer, Kasi Jones, Jill Kocalis, Chandler Krison, Daniel Ross Noble, Cory Pearce, Nuno de Sousa, Alex Spencer, Greg Thompson, Bobby Traversa, Philip Wieck, and Katie Young.
Standout DeGruccio (and performance) moments in this production include: • the fine acting done by the tragically mad patients in the Violent Ward at St. Jude’s, • a "working boy" plying his trade amongst the "working girls" of The Red Rat (fine, courageous work by Daniel Ross Noble), • superb background performances by The Red Rat denizens, with not a one of them simply standing about doing nothing, • an exquisitely sung (and acted) “Girls Of The Night” (kudos to the fine female ensemble), • a “This Is The Moment” which brings shivers and tears, • Jekyll’s smooth voice becoming a devil’s/animal’s rasp as he transforms into Hyde, and Townsend’s handsome face becoming frighteningly hideous without the aid of makeup (how does he do that?), • Lulu Lloyd’s “Someone Like You,” which has you falling in love with the singer and wanting to shout “a star is born!” • the violence (and terrifying inventiveness) of Hyde’s murders which involve ingenious uses of canes, knives, diamond necklaces, and even eyeglasses…and a severed head, and • a very sexual reprise of Hyde and Lucy’s “Dangerous Game” ...to name just a few.
Steven Applegate leads a gorgeously rich 17-piece orchestra and Roger Castellano has done excellent work with the musical staging. Steven Young’s lighting design is (as always with the talented Mr. Young) Broadway-ready, as are Jonathan Burke’s sound design and Jeffrey S. Marsh’s special effects. The uncredited set design has the high quality usually found only in major national tours. The costumes supervised by Christine Gibson are richly elegant and deliciously tawdry. (The mid-calf skirt Lucy wears when visiting Dr. Jekyll is the 19th century equivalent of a 21st century young woman arriving at the front door of an elegant Bel Air mansion wearing hotpants. Quel scandale!) T. Theresa Scarano designed the show’s many props and Karen Zanki has done fine work with hair and wig design.
Ultimately, though, the success of this production of Jekyll & Hyde comes down to Nick DeGruccio and his stellar cast. As fine as our CLO productions can be, rare is one which could just as easily be an all-Equity First National Tour. This Jekyll & Hyde is that magical exception, made even more praiseworthy by the fact that only three of its cast members (Townsend, Lloyd, and Crawford) have their Equity cards, and proof that when talented performers get expert direction, miracles can truly take place.
Kavli Theatre, 2100 Thousand Oaks, Boulevard, Thousand Oaks. Through March 16. Thursday, Friday, Saturday at 8:00. Saturday and Sunday at 2:00. Reservations: (805) 583-8700.
--Steven Stanley March 9, 2008 Photos: Ed Krieger
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