Broadway has returned to the Kennedy Center, and it’s music to our ears — really good music, in fact, courtesy of Anaïs Mitchell’s tuneful Hadestown (★★★★☆). Winner of eight Tony Awards in 2019, including Best Musical and Best Original Score, the show, which is back on Broadway following the months-long shutdown, launched its national tour in the Opera House with a performance that brought the opening night audience to its feet.
Only the fourth musical in Broadway history to have a woman as solo author, Hadestown boasts a score full of actual songs. In an era populated with musical scores that sound like stream of consciousness set to snippets of melody, or with lyrics that might have been dispensed by rhyming software, Mitchell gives us rich, atmospheric New Orleans jazz and blues, and rootsy folk-rock that fill the house and transport the imagination. Providing a firm bed of sex and syncopation for the show’s poetic retelling of the romantic myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, Mitchell’s score sounds fantastic live, but could live anywhere.
Mitchell herself recorded a Hadestown concept album that’s well worth a listen, and director Rachel Chavkin’s Broadway cast, including stage legend André De Shields, earned a 2020 Grammy Award for the Original Cast recording. So this touring company follows some auspicious history, and still must rise to the occasion, which they do — literally, atop the wooden risers and wrought iron balconies of Rachel Hauck’s Tony-winning scenic design. The cast are joined onstage by six pieces of the fabulous orchestra (minus a percussionist offstage), creating an atmosphere of our characters singing and dancing at the cosmic crossroads between a Big Easy dive bar and the underworld.
Hadestown: Levi Kreis, Morgan Siobhan Green, and Nicholas Barasch — Photo: T Charles Erickson
In this realm of gods and men, fates and muses, Orpheus and Eurydice meet and fall in love, intertwining their fates, and the gorgeous voices of Nicholas Barasch and Morgan Siobhan Green, playing the tragic lovers. His sparkling tenor captures poor Orpheus’ longing and wide-eyed optimism, while she caresses each melody with a tenderness conveying Eurydice’s heart and hurt. Oddly, the score, for all its merits, doesn’t offer a duet to surpass the highs that either hits with their solo ballads. A few times, Barasch holds the audience in the palm of his hand, along with his guitar, performing parts I-III of “Epic,” the song Orpheus composes in the hopes of bringing light and spring to their cold, dark world.
“Epic” chronicles the tormented love story of gods Persephone (Kimberly Marable) and Hades (Kevyn Morrow), another couple who have their strongest onstage musical moments while leading the company in their respective solos. With dramatic chops and personality more than with pristine pipes, Marable, a member of the original Broadway cast, presents a Persephone who dawns brightly into her power as “Our Lady of the Underground.” Her hellacious partner Hades hits his bottom notes powerfully, too, with Morrow’s sonorous bass building like a storm in the first-act closer “Why We Build the Wall.”
Hades somehow seduces Eurydice away from her beloved and to a hell of eternal factory labor, with some help from the Fates, played by the talented trio of Belén Moyano, Bex Odorisio, and Shea Renne. Always tight on their harmonies and movement, the Fates exemplify the humor and precision in David Neumann’s choreography, also brought to dazzling life by the company of Workers, and by Levi Kreis as the god Hermes. A Tony winner for his performance as Jerry Lee Lewis in Million Dollar Quartet, Kreis grabs the crowd with the swinging opener “Road to Hell,” and holds the reins throughout as soulful emcee, although lacking the world-weary edge De Shields exuded in originating the role.
The production, ultimately, seems to have smoothed its edges for travel, not delivering the denouement with the full force of doom and death underlying the legend. Perhaps there’s too much joy in it, or in experiencing it, to feel too down about Orpheus and Eurydice. Rather than the story’s tragic loss of faith in love, it’s the love in Mitchell’s music that will send audiences on their way home singing.
Do we never tire of Stephen Sondheim's music? Not if it is performed with flawless finesse by a troupe of performers who breathe fresh interpretations into the songs that musical theater lovers have heard umpteen times.
Lucky for us, this is the case with the new Broadway revue, Stephen Sondheim's Old Friends, a two-and-a-half-hour soiree that showcases the late composer.
Director Matthew Bourne was tasked with a near-quixotic challenge to whittle down Sondheim's body of work into one show. Some will leave the theater not having heard their favorites.
Still, there is more than enough to satisfy even the most ardent acolyte. Even the three shows for which Sondheim contributed only the lyrics: West Side Story, Gypsy, and The Mad Show are represented.
To enter the fanciful kingdom of Arcadia, in Constellation Theatre's delightful, if uneven, musical romantic-comedy Head Over Heels, is to fall in love again with the music of The Go-Go's. If you ever loved them, and were around in the '80s when the quintet was fresh and riding high on the charts, the songs sound solid here, maybe in need of a little octane.
The reputed most successful all-female rock band of all time provides the music for this madcap romance, conceived and with a book by Avenue Q Tony-winner Jeff Whitty, based on Sir Philip Sidney's 16th-century classic The Arcadia, and adapted by D.C. native James Magruder.
If there is one opera lost or won by its chorus and characters, it's George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess. In this perfect storm of a story, it's all about the tight-knit fishing community that cradles, carries, and sometimes condemns its own. It's only if you believe in their hardscrabble lives and insistence on dignity that you feel what it means to lose them. In this respect, the Washington National Opera's Porgy and Bess absolutely nails it.
Of course, it starts with the vision of director Francesca Zambello and her talent for bringing intimacy to grand themes. Here, those themes run the gamut of ill-fated love: Porgy's tragic devotion, Bess' addiction to the dangerous Crown, and the reality that no union can outrun death.
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