from left: Charlie Kuvangasan and Chris Bolduc, photo by Sara Gettys
from left: CGiselle Jensen and Jesse Morrow, photo by Sara Gettys
Reviewed by Alec Clayton
[title of show]— yes, that’s the title of the show, brackets, lower case
type and all. It’s a musical about how a musical became an Internet sensation
and ultimately . . . careful here, I’m giving away too much . . . suffice it to
say it is a show about the writing and production of itself. This show has won an
Obie Award and was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical.
Two young unknown writers, Jeff Bowen (Chris
Bolduc) and Hunter Bell (Charlie Kuvangasan) challenge themselves to write a
play and enter it into New York’s Musical Theatre Festival. The submission
deadline is a mere three weeks away. It is clearly an impossible challenge for
a pair of unknown and fairly inexperienced writers, which they express along
with their hopes and dreams in the song "Two Nobodies In New York."
With the help of two actress friends, Heidi (Jesse
Morrow) and Susan (Giselle Jensen) they write the story and songs, singing and
dancing and dealing with their personal joys and fears along the way. When
they feel down, unworthy and defeated, Susan encourages them to keep going and “kill
their vampires,” an uplifting song that is worthy of a big Broadway production
number thanks to video projections and great dance moves.
The story arc is typical of shows about the
entertainment industry: a rise from nowhere, personal conflicts and doubts, and
ultimate joy. There are hints at romance and same-sex attractions, but these
are kept at a minimum. Ultimately, [title of show] is a feel-good show filled
with music, physical comedy that verges on slapstick, and clever lines
delivered with pizazz by the young cast. It’s like a lightweight “A Chorus
Line” or “Tik, Tik, Boom.”
Half the cast, Bolduc and Morrow, are
experienced community theater actors, and half are SPSCC students who each also
have experience, and it shows. They, each and every one, dive into this
performance with enthusiasm, great moves and excellent singing.
The direction by Lauren Love is outstanding,
and choreographer Nicholas Main deserves kudos aplenty. The keyboard accompaniment
was played with style by Kyndal Meister; and a fifth character, Dr. John
Guarente as Larry, was in a small supporting role which worked well with the
others in the cast.
Love wrote in a program note: “It sings to the
‘showmo’ in all of us; it venerates our nerdiest fantasies; it celebrates our
adoration of this glitzy, gritty, glamorous North American form of theatre
through the rose colored and sometimes lovingly critical glasses of the queer
community. It inspires us to dream of a life where what we know, what we love,
and who we love are valued.”
Her statement sums it up beautifully, although
it implies a much greater emphasis on queerness than is in the show.
WHAT
[title of show]
WHEN
7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday
through May 29
WHERE
Kenneth J. Minnaert Center Black Box, South Puget Sound
Community College, 2011 Mottman Rd. SW., Olympia
INFO
360.753.8586.
COST
Suggested $15 donation