fractured fairytale
Published
in the Weekly Volcano, June 23, 2016
Clockwise: Arwen Dewey, Nick Clawson, Niclas Olson, Deanna Martinez and Tasha Smith. Photo courtesy New Muses Theatre Company. |
New Muses Theatre Company’s Into the Woods
at Dukesbay Theater is the third version of this popular Stephan Sondheim
musical I have reviewed, and it is quite different in some important ways,
primarily in that it is scaled down with a much smaller set in a smaller space
with fewer actors, and those actors are physically much closer to the audience.
I like the closeness and the scaled-down set with cheap but highly inventive
props (a flock of origami birds dropped by a rope pulley operated by actors on
stage in full view of the audience, a white chair on rollers as a cow, and a
picture frame as a harp; I only wish the babies had been equally inventive
objects instead of baby dolls).
Sondheim and book writer James Lapine cobbled
together a cast of well-known fairytale characters into a dark fantasy morality
tale set to music.
A malevolent witch (Brynne
Geiszler) cast a spell on a baker (Nick
Clawson) and his wife (Arwen Dewey) making them infertile. She tells them the
only way they can break the spell is to go into the woods and get a
milky white cow, a blood red cape, hair the color of corn, and a slipper as
pure as gold. Finding these items is a snap, but to get them they have beg, buy
or steal them from their owners, who are reluctant to give them up. The cow is
the property of Jack from “Jack and the Beanstalk” (Niclas Olson). The blood red cape belongs to Little Red
Riding Hood (Sammy Cattin); the hair the color of corn is Rapunzel’s (Jenna
McRill); and the slipper as pure as gold is Cinderella’s (Tasha Smith).
In a
play filled with comical and dramatic clashes with temptation, the baker is too
nice to swindle or steal these items, but his wife is much more willing to do
whatever it takes to get what she needs so she can have a baby. She’s also
easily tempted by the seductive prince (Derek Mesford) who is in love with Cinderella but
doesn’t hesitate to two-time her (princes use their charms to seduce. That’s
what they do). This prince has a brother (played by Olson ) who is in
love with Rapunzel, and both princes are charming, sleazy, arrogant
narcissists, as portrayed with great comic effect by Olson and Mesford, whose
duet on the song “Agony” is the comic highlight of the show.
The
music throughout is wonderful. Highlights include the wolf’s flirtatious “Hello
Little Girl” as sung by Mesford to Cattin, “A Very Nice Prince” as sung by
Dewey and Smith, and Dewey’s “Moments in the Woods.” The choreographed movement
of the entire cast popping in and out like so many Jack-in-the-Boxes ads a
magical quality.
Clawson,
Cattin, Dewey and Chris Serface as the narrator and “Mysterious Man” turn in
marvelous acting jobs. It is particularly nice to see Serface, Tacoma Little
Theatre artistic director, back on stage.
Olson,
founder of New Muses, not only sings and acts wonderfully in multiple roles,
but he is also does a great job of directing of this show, rising to the
challenge of scaling down a big stage production to fit in a small house.
The
house, which seats only 40, was sold out opening night, so I highly suggest
getting advance tickets.
Into the Woods, 8 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and 2 p.m.,
Sunday through July 3, $10-$15, Dukesbay Theater, Merlino Arts Center, 508 S.
Sixth Ave., Tacoma. www.NewMuses.com.
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