The Wiz at Tacoma Musical
Playhouse
Published in the Weekly Volcano, June 2, 2016
from left: Charles Simmons as Scarecrow, Jimmy Shields as Tinman, Alexandria Henderson as Dorothy, and Matt De La Cruz as Lion. Photo by Kat Dollarhide, courtesy Tacoma Musical Playhouse |
The Wiz hit Broadway like “Soul Train” on steroids in 1975, winning
seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical. It was followed-up three years later
by a popular film version starring Diana Ross and Michael Jackson. To ask any
community theater to follow that is a tall order. Tacoma Musical Playhouse
gives it a good try with an elaborate production that hits a few high notes but
does not consistently reach the high-energy level the show demands.
What does meet high marks is the
work of the technical crew and designers: sets by Bruce Haasl, lighting by John
Chenault, and a whole lot of fabulous costumes by Jocelyne Fowler — from
costumed Munkins on rolling chairs hidden by flared skirts to the costumed
ensemble as a field of poppies and the yellow brick road and green-clad
citizens of the Emerald City.
Having dancing actors as part of
the set was ingenious. It originated with the Broadway show. Director Jon
Douglas Rake said when he first saw the national tour he was fascinated by the
Yellow Brick Road being played by dancers and the Tornado becoming a dance
number as well. TMP added crows to the Scarecrow number, which was not in
the original show.
The magnificent giant
wizard-head puppet build by Haasl was wonderfully designed and effectively lit.
Congrats all around to the tech crew.
The Wiz was written for
an African-American cast by William F. Brown (Book) and Charlie Smalls (music
and lyrics). It is an urbanized retelling of Frank Baum’s classic, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. TMP’s cast
is not wholly African-American but mostly people of color. It’s good to see
such a racially diverse cast.
The show gets off to a rather
slow start and doesn’t pick up until the first time they do the oft-repeated
theme song “Ease on Down the Road.” Dorothy (Alexandra Henderson) has a
beautiful voice, but she doesn’t begin to show her range until this song, which
rocks the house ― as it should.
The true stars of the show are
Charles Simmons as Scarecrow, Jimmy Shields as Tinman, Matt De La Cruz as Lion,
and Jamelia Payne as Evillene, the Wicked Witch of the West. Shields, who is
also co-choreographer with Rake, is one of the best singers in the show and has
a helluva repertoire of expressive dance moves. Simmons also shows off some
mean moves, and Payne’s earth-shaking guttural and gospel-tinged singing on
“Don’t Nobody Bring Me No Bad News” is one of the musical highlights of the
show, along with Henderson’s final song, “Home,” nicely done as a
front-of-the-curtain solo, a lovely change-of-pace ending for a show made up of
large production numbers.
One thing different that I have
to point out is that a major character was played by an understudy the night I
attended. Marion Read usually plays Aunt Em, but was unable to perform that
night, and her part was played by Lanita Hudson, who did a great job of filling
in. Hudson is in the ensemble and was also a standout performer in a number of other
scenes.
Despite overall excellent
technical work, there were some uncomfortably long scene changes and, at one
point, disturbing backstage noise during a scene change. Hopefully these
problems will be worked out for future performances. Overall, it is an
entertaining show.
The Wiz, 8 p.m.
Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, 2 p.m.
Saturday, , through Dec. 20, $22-$31, Tacoma Musical Playhouse at The Narrows
Theatre, 7116 Sixth Ave., Tacoma, 253-565-6867, http://www.tmp.org.
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