Theater Review: For All That
Published in the Weekly Volcano, May 7, 2015
Cast of For All That. Photos courtesy Centerstage |
Centerstage’s
For All That is a phenomenal show. I left
the theater wondering how I could possibly review it when it left me
speechless. In many ways this performance is the best thing I’ve seen on stage
in years, and the marvel of it is it was written by Centerstage Artistic
Director Alan Bryce.
For All That is a love story set
during World War I. It is a musical unlike any I’ve ever seen but with echoes
of such masterworks as Johnny Got His Gun
(the novel), Miss Saigon and Les Misérables. Bryce gave a hint of what was to come when he
ended his curtain speech by saying, “At this point I usually say enjoy the show
— but it’s not that kind of show.”
Immediately
thereafter a single actor came onto the smoky gray stage in a scene of horror I
will not describe, which soon gave way to a joyful scene of villagers dancing
and singing. Similar unexpected changes happened throughout the play, all
perfectly timed.
The
story begins in a small village on the Island of Lewis off the coast of
Scotland. As the play opens, Andrew (Joshua Williamson) has come home and hopes
to marry his old sweetheart, Mairi (Katherine Jett), but during the time he was
off at college his brother, Donald (Cooper Harris-Turner) has fallen for Mairi
and when he proposes marriage, a surprised Andrew reluctantly steps aside.
Andrew (Joshua Williamson) and Mairi (Katherine Jett), back: Donald (Cooper Harris-Turner) |
And
then war is announced and everyone’s lives are ripped apart.
As
brothers and best friends are sent off to war, Andrew declares himself as a
conscientious objector. He is rejected by family and sent to prison.
The
local boys go off to war and fight in the battle of the Somme, one of the most
horrendous battles in the history or warfare.
The
story is complex and beautifully structured. Bryce, a Scot raised in England,
based it on true stories taken from the War
Diary of the Seaforth Highlanders.
He spent a year researching. His research took him to the Isle of Lewis
and the Somme battlefield. He visited the Imperial War Museum, spoke to leading
historians of the period and interviewed scholars, soldiers, ministers and
musicians.
The
production is excellent in every aspect, from Craig Wollam’s gritty set with
its raked stage fronted by battered and rusted tin to Christina Barrigan’s
stunning lighting to Janessa Styck’s period costumes, to music by Joshua
Zimmerman and John Forster that ranges from lively folk jigs to tragic laments.
The
acting throughout, from the large ensemble to the principle characters, is
excellent. Williamson (whom I couldn’t look at without thinking of Alan
Cumming) plays the misfit Andrew with brilliant sensitivity. Randall Scott
Carpenter is terrific as Mairi’s brother, Malcolm, who starts off as loveable
and a highly entertaining goofball and is changed by the war into a confused
and emotionally scarred man. To a slightly lesser degree, Harris-Turner’s
Donald goes through a similar transformation, and both actors go through these
intense changes compellingly. Jett portrays a subtle spectrum of emotions as the
loving, strong, and often conflicted Mairi, as does Kate Witt as Donald and
Andrew’s mother.
Among
the musical highlights are the boisterous “Lewis Work Songs” by the entire cast
and the lusty “Mademoiselle From Armentieres” by Donald and the soldiers,
Harris-Turner Jett’s beautiful duet on “Ae Fond Kiss,” and Bridgid Abrams as
the lusty French barmaid singing “C’est Impossible.” And the most stunning of
all, Carpenter’s heart-wrenching solo on “Black is the Sun.”
For All That should go from here
to major theaters across the land. I advise you to see it while it is here.
For All That, 8 p.m. Friday and
Saturday and 2:00 p.m. Sunday through March 24, 2 p.m. May 14 and 23, $10-$30, Centerstage
at Knutzen Family Theatre, 3200 SW Dash Point Road, Federal Way, 253-661-1444, www.centerstagetheatre.com
1 comment:
My wife and I saw the premiere, and it was stunning. "For All That" has a complex, musical heart... but it is no musical. The staging, lighting and costumes are integral to the audience's "transportation" into, not just WWI, but the lives of people you will care for, but it isn't a "period" drama. "For All That" is frightening, sobering, lively, funny, and true to itself. I felt as if I were reading and listening and feeling the play, all at once. Mr. Bryce has created something dark and bright, terrible and wonderful; he has created a universe of what was and what might have been.
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