Showing posts with label victor hugo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victor hugo. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Theatre Review: A disappointing "Les Misérables" opens the 2024 Muny season

First things first: I love the 1985 French opera/musical “Les Misérables.” Based on Victor Hugo’s justifiably popular 1862 novel of the same name (Upton Sinclair is said to have described it as "one of the half-dozen greatest novels of the world"), “Les Misérables” (usually translated as "The Outsiders" or "The Dispossessed") is, in my view, one of the most effective pieces of musical theatre of the late 20th century.

L-R: John Riddle, Ken Page, Cecilia Snow
Photo: Philip Hamer

From the opening prisoners' chorus through the sublime finale three hours later, the show's canny combination of a conventional but memorable score (music by Claude-Michel Schönberg and English lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer) with compelling characters and situations grabs and holds your attention and emotions. Plus, its cry for social justice (which it shares with the novel) and presentation of two sharply contrasting versions of Christianity make it a work that appeals to the head as well as the heart.

Or at least it should. Certainly every one of the four previous productions I have seen since the first tour came through town in the late 1980s has done so. I had hoped the new Muny production, which runs through Sunday June 23rd, would as well.

But, as the Stones song says, “you can’t always get what you want.” On the Muny’s massive stage “Les Misérables” felt diminished. Even in a large house like the Fabulous Fox (capacity around 5,000) the show has an immediacy and emotional power that felt dissipated in the open-air theatre with over twice the seating capacity of that theatre, not counting the 1500 free seats at the back. The big ensemble scenes such as the Act I finale “One More Day” and the normally harrowing battle at the barricades lacked their usual punch, and the intimate moments (the deaths of Fantine and Éponine come to mind) felt lost.

L-R: Jordan Donica, John Riddle
Photo: Philip Hamer

Ann Beyersdorfer’s scenic design doesn’t improve matters. The main set pieces, including the usual rotating structure on the turntable, are all bare-bones ladders and stairs. Everything looks unfinished and everything looks the same. That could have been ameliorated by making more use of the Muny’s projection capabilities, especially in scenes like the Paris sewers sequence and Javert’s suicide. The latter was especially bizarre, with Javert turning and walking upstage into a bright light instead of throwing himself into the Seine.

But apparently Beyersdorfer and director Seth Sklar-Heyn wanted a stripped down minimal look, so that’s what we got. In fact, some of the more intimate scenes take place on a bare stage, robbing them of much of their power.

But enough of that.  Let’s talk about what works: Jesse Robb’s choreography and the cast. The former perfectly matched the emotional content of every scene and the latter was uniformly great.

Teal Wicks
Photo: Philip Hamer

John Riddle, a St. Louis Theater Circle award winner from last season’s “Chess,” is Jean Valjean, the ex-convict serving time for stealing bread for his starving family. He eloquently captures the character’s pain at the persecution he suffers after his parole, his change of heart after being shown mercy by the Bishop of Digne (a warmly sympathetic Ken Page), and his fierce determination to fight injustice. His voice is powerful almost to the top of its range and his acting is always convincing.

Jordan Donica is Valjean’s nemesis Javert—inflexible, fixated on sin, and convinced he’s doing God's duty by punishing the wicked. Donica’s “Stars,” Javert’s declaration of that belief, is powerful and a bit frightening, as it should be. He and Riddle are a good match, vocally and physically.

Emily Baustista
Photo: Philip Hamer

Teal Wicks is a vulnerable and moving Fantine, for whose early death Valjean is an unwitting catalyst. Emily Bautista is Éponine, dying of unrequited love for the student Marius and, eventually, from a National Guard bullet. Her “On My Own” was a true star turn, enthusiastically applauded by the audience.

Peter Neureuther’s Marius is a bit on the monochromatic side, but his Act II “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables,” in which he laments the deaths of this fellow radicals at the barricades, was quite well done. As his true love Cosette, adopted by Valjean as a deathbed promise to her mother Fantine, Gracie Annabelle Parker is a model of the clear-voiced, winsome heroine.

L-R: Noah Van Ess, Dan Klimko,
Peter Neureuther
Photo: Philip Hamer

Red Concepción and Jade Jones are the comically reprehensible Thénardier and Madame Thénardier, shameless champions of enlightened self-interest. They’re played just broadly enough to be funny, and they do it consistently. Alas, some of their best lines were garbled by the Muny’s sound system—a problem for much of the evening.

There are two important children’s roles in “Les Misérables”: Little Cosette and the streetwise Gavroche. As Little Cosette, Kate Appel is utterly charming in her solo “Castle on a Cloud.” As Gavroche, Will Schulte is astonishingly good. He steals every scene he’s in with his strong stage presence and fine voice.

Will Schulte and the company
Photo: Philip Hamer

The decision to add members of the St. Louis Symphony Chorus to the big ensemble numbers gives those moments impressive power, but even their famously clear enunciation can’t get past that sound system. I’m beginning to think the Muny (and possibly the Fox) should consider following Opera Theatre’s lead by using projected text.

Under the baton of Music Director James Moore, the orchestra sounded polished and powerful. And while I don’t think much of director Sklar-Heyn’s design choices, he certainly keeps the show moving and creates fine stage pictures.

John Riddle, Gracie Annabelle Parker
Photo: Phlilip Hamer

If you have never seen “Les Misérables” I doubt that this production will make you a fan. And if you’re already a fan, I suspect you might feel as disappointed as I did. Still, the message is one we all need to hear.

“The Christian ideal,” wrote G.K. Chesterton in 1910, “has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult and left untried.” Certainly both Victor Hugo’s novel and the musical based on it are testaments to how difficult it is, while our current political culture seems to demonstrate what happens when it’s left untried. I’d like to believe that a show like “Les Misérables” can change hearts and minds, but given the infinite human capacity for compartmentalization and denial, I’m not sanguine about that notion.

“Les Misérables” continues at the Muny in Forest Park nightly at 8:15 through Sunday. For information on this and upcoming productions, visit the Muny web site.

This article originally appeared at 88.1 KDHX, where Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Christian values

Les Misérables promotional video

What: The 25th Anniversary Production of Les Misérables
When: October 16 – 28, 2012
Where: The Fox Theatre
When: October 16-28, 2012

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The 25th anniversary production of Les Misérables is a few minutes shorter than the original and makes clever use of sophisticated video projection technology that wasn't available in 1985, but it's otherwise every bit as much of a well-oiled theatrical machine as it was the first time I saw it back in the late 1980s.

From the opening prisoners' chorus (moved, in this smart new staging, from a prison yard to a slave ship) through the sublime finale three hours later, the show's canny combination of a conventional but memorable score, compelling characters and situations (the source is, after all, a literary classic), and fluid staging (made even more so by the projected video) grabs and holds your attention and emotions. It remains, in my view, one of the most effective pieces of musical theatre of the late 20th century. No wonder it's now the world’s longest running musical, dethroning the seemingly eternal Cats.

Based on the Victor Hugo novel, Les Misérables focuses on the conflict between the former jailer Javert and the ex-convict Jean Valjean. The former is inflexible, fixated on sin, and sees himself doing God's duty by punishing the wicked. The latter is compassionate, unselfish, and understanding. He's convinced God gave him a second chance so that he could help others.

When Javert prays, it’s for vengeance. When Valjean prays, it’s for someone else’s life. Valjean is pursuing the luminous ideal, Javert its dark opposite. Both claim to be Christian. When, in the final moments, the chorus sings “to love another person is to see the face of God”, there’s not much doubt about which side the show favors.

It is, in short, a powerful refutation of smug self-righteousness and laissez-faire ruthlessness, both of which have been poisoning domestic political discourse for many years. Its appearance locally just a few weeks before an election that pits “every man for himself” against “we’re all in this together” could not be more timely.

As Valjean Peter Lockyer shows not only a ringing head voice and well-integrated falsetto (not surprising, given that his impressive credentials include a stint as Marius, a role that lies more in the tenor than baritone range) but solid low notes as well. He’s a little less physically imposing than I’d expect for a character who is supposed to have nearly superhuman strength, but he’s so thoroughly invested in the role that I quickly set that aside.

Andrew Varela looks every inch the stocky and brutish Javert and matches it with a powerful voice. He brings a bit more depth to the character than I have seen in some previous performances, which greatly enhances his confrontations with Valjean and makes his eventual suicide (beautifully staged here with the help of a flying rig) that much more plausible.

As Fantine, for whose early death Valjean is an unwitting catalyst, Betsy Morgan makes the transition from fresh-faced and healthy to downtrodden and dying very effectively, and the deathbed scene in which Valjean promises to make amends by protecting her daughter Cosette is appropriately moving (don’t come to this show without a hanky). Lauren Wiley is most winning as the adult Cosette, while Hannah Isabel Bautista as Little Cosette had a nice star turn on opening night with “Castle on a Cloud” (she alternates in the role with Abbey Rose and Erin Clearlock).

Max Quinlan’s Marius is charming in his early scenes and, more importantly, convincingly tragic in “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables”—sung here on a bare stage with Marius surrounded by the ghosts of his fallen comrades from the barricades of the ill-fated 1832 revolution (hanky time again). Brianna Carlson-Goodman is a particularly intense Éponine, dying of unrequited love for Marius and, eventually, a National Guard bullet. “On My Own” (a favorite with young musical theatre singers) is the character’s big Act II number and she makes the most of it.

Timothy Gulan and Shawna M. Hamie play the comic villain roles of Thénardier and Madame Thénardier (those champions of enlightened self-interest) a bit too broadly for my taste, but they do so with such perfect consistency that I expect my quibble is with director James Powell (who otherwise seems to have made excellent choices) rather than with the actors. Besides, the opening night audience loved them.

Other strong performances include Marcus D’Angelo’s courageous urchin Gavroche (he alternates with Joshua Colley) and Jason Forbach’s doomed Enjolras, although in the final analysis there’s really not a weak link anywhere.

New staging ideas aside, much of this new Les Mis looks familiar. The biggest change is probably the absence of the turntable and the use of the aforementioned video projections to provide a sense of movement in key scenes. That’s particularly noticeable in the Act I finale, in which the actors appear to be marching through the streets of Paris, and in the progression of Valjean and Marius through the sewers in Act II. Fans of the show will be happy to see that none of their favorite moments are gone and that some (such as Javert’s suicide) have been enhanced. The sound mix—always an iffy proposition at the Fox—was quite good, at least from where I sat in row F.

“The Christian ideal”, wrote G.K. Chesterton in 1910, “has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult and left untried.” Certainly both Victor Hugo’s novel and the musical based on it are testaments to how difficult it is, while our current political culture seems to demonstrate what happens when it’s left untried. I’d like to believe that a show like Les Misérables can change hearts and minds, but given the infinite human capacity for compartmentalization and denial, I’m not sanguine about that notion.

Still, this is a moving and entertaining show regardless of your political color, and I just can’t recommend this new production highly enough. Go see it. It’s fun. It’s a terrific story and it’s filled with great music. And if it convinces you that we really are all in this together, so much the better.

Les Misérables continues at the Fox in Grand Center through October 28th. For more information: fabulousfox.com.