READ TODAY'S STORIES AND E-EDITION
SUBSCRIBE
|
CONTACT US
|
SIGN IN
news
sports
business
scene
opinion
obits
blogs
comics
multimedia
weather
jobs
autos
homes
pets
classifieds
search
Your bookmark will appear on your Profile page. Please give it a title,
and short description so that visitors to your page will understand where
the bookmark leads.
Bookmark Title :
Bookmark Text :
REVIEW -- "Gypsy"
Published:
6/17/2012 1:11 PM
Last Modified:
6/17/2012 1:11 PM
A gypsy — by name and by nature — tends to wander. LOOK Musical Theatre’s production of “Gypsy: A Musical Fable” does a bit of roaming of its own, in search not so much of a home as a strong, definite sense of purpose.
While there is much to enjoy and admire about this production, which opened Friday at the Tulsa PAC, one comes away from “Gypsy” with the sense that all the pieces do not quite fit together into a complete and satisfying whole.
This 1959 creation by composer Jule Styne, lyricist Stephen Sondheim and playwright Arthur Laurents — inspired by the memoir of burlesque queen Gypsy Rose Lee — is considered one of the greatest musicals of the American theater. Former New York Times critic Frank Rich went so far as to call it the American musical’s answer to Shakespeare’s “King Lear.”
Much of this is due to the character of Mama Rose, played here by Melissa Parks, a star-struck and stardom-0bsessed woman determined to channel her dreams and ambitions through her two daughters, the precociously talented June (Rachel Womble) and the less obviously gifted Louise (Sarah Smith).
Rose herds her daughters through an endless array of venues, from lodge halls to vaudeville circuit theaters, always doing variations of the same, lame act: a little singing, a little dancing, an appearance by a pantomime cow, all predicated on presenting June and Louise — neither of whom are certain how old they really are — as if they were “babies.”
Along the way, Rose attracts the attention of a former talent agent, Herbie (Ron Loyd), who helps the family get bookings even as he tries to convince to leave the show-biz gypsy life behind.
But nothing is going to stop Rose from achieving her dream of turning one of her “babies” into a star — not June running off to marry a dancer named Tulsa (Stephen Glasco), not rejection after rejection, not even Herbie leaving when Rose pressures Louise into stripping on stage, simply because she’ll be taking “the star’s” place.
It’s one of the most demanding and wide-ranging roles in musical theater. Rose is on stage for much of the show’s three hours, and runs through a gamut of emotions, all of them expressed in either trumpeting tones or soaring songs. She has to be likable and loathsome in almost equal measure — a silly stage mother one minute, a complete monster of ego the next.
Parks, however, seems to be after a kinder, gentler Rose, a mother more misguided than monstrous. And this, unfortunately, blunts the story’s power. Rose becomes just another stage mother who goes off the rails a bit later in life, rather than a truly tragic figure.
Still, Parks has the vocal chops to invest songs like “Some People,” “Everything’s Coming Up Roses” and the climactic “Rose’s Turn” with impressive emotional power.
Smith handles the transitions Louise goes through — from awkward and shy youngster to a woman assured enough of herself to start taking her clothes off on stage — with a winning subtlety. She makes the song “Little Lamb” and her wistful mirroring of Glasco’s movements is “All I Need is the Girl” moving without becoming maudlin.
Loyd’s Herbie is such an even-keeled fellow that his final outburst as he leaves Rose and her world behind is properly startling. And one wishes that the show gave him more opportunities to sing beyond the few snippets in “Small World” and “Together, Wherever We Go.”
Womble is very good as the perpetual child June, gamely trouping through Rose’s ridiculous act year after year. The ensemble of Glasco, Sam Beasley, Russell McCook and Philip Skinner as the various “boys” dancing behind June perform the “official” routines with the proper amount of nervous ineptitude, then prove in numbers like “Mr Goldstone, I Love You” that they truly can dance.
“Gypsy” has a large cast, and director Eric Gibson makes excellent use of this highly talented ensemble. Alixe Ward, April Golliver and Heather Harris tear up the stage as strippers informing Louise that “You Gotta Have a Gimmick” (Harris is equally good as a no-nonsense secretary).
Derick Snow handles the roles of a beaten-down theater owner, a buttoned-down hotel manager and a bevy of boisterous announcers with great gusto. Payton Sipes and Noa Pettit are very good as the younger versions of June and Louise — all the children in the production do very well — and Jenny Guy is hilarious whether she goes by the name of Agnes or Amanda.
Andy Anderson guided the LOOK orchestra through a rousing performance of the Jule Styne score, although the configuration of the pit’s opening made for an unbalanced sound — it’s not often that woodwinds can almost drown out the brass section.
“Gypsy” continues with performances through July 8 at the Tulsa PAC. For tickets: 918-596-7111, tulsaworld.com/mytix.
Reader Comments
Show:
Newest First
Learn About Our Comment Policy
To post comments on tulsaworld.com, you must be an active Tulsa World print or digital subscriber and signed into your account.
To sign in to your account, go to
tulsaworld.com/signin
.
To activate your print subscription for unlimited digital access and to post comments, go to
tulsaworld.com/activate
.
To purchase a subscription, go to
tulsaworld.com/subscribe
.
Submitting your comment, please wait...
ARTS
James D. Watts Jr. has lived in Oklahoma for most his life, even though he still has people saying to him, "Don't sound like you're from around these parts." A University of Oklahoma Phi Beta Kappa graduate, Watts has received the Governor Arts Award, Harwelden Award and the National Conference of Christians and Jews Beth Macklin Award for his writing. Before coming to the Tulsa World, Watts worked for the Tulsa Tribune.
Contact him at (918) 581-8478.
Subscribe to this blog
Archive
Past Articles By James D. Watts Jr
2/15/2013
'Concept/OK' exhibit ends Saturday
2/14/2013
Symphony to host piano soloist
2/14/2013
Broadway tours bring 'Shrek,' improv musical to Tulsa area this weekend
2/14/2013
Arts roundup: Improv reigns at several upcoming theater events
2/14/2013
'Lion King' returns to Tulsa PAC June 4
2/12/2013
Review: Signature Symphony reprises '100 Years of Oklahoma Music'
2/11/2013
Tulsa Symphony's concert salutes diverse American music
2/10/2013
Cherokee artist weaves messages into baskets
2/10/2013
Tesla Quartet set for Tulsa residency next week with variety of activities
2/10/2013
Jim Murphy wins 2013 Anne Zarrow Award
2/10/2013
LBJ chronicler Robert Caro to speak at TU on Tuesday
2/9/2013
Theater review: Playhouse makes "Barefoot in the Park" believable
James D. Watts Jr's Blog Archive:
2/2013
1/2013
12/2012
11/2012
10/2012
9/2012
8/2012
7/2012
6/2012
5/2012
4/2012
3/2012
2/2012
1/2012
12/2011
11/2011
10/2011
9/2011
8/2011
7/2011
6/2011
5/2011
4/2011
3/2011
2/2011
1/2011
12/2010
11/2010
10/2010
9/2010
8/2010
7/2010
6/2010
5/2010
4/2010
3/2010
2/2010
1/2010
12/2009
11/2009
10/2009
9/2009
8/2009
7/2009
6/2009
5/2009
4/2009
3/2009
2/2009
1/2009
12/2008
11/2008
10/2008
9/2008
8/2008
7/2008
6/2008
5/2008
4/2008
Home
|
Contact Us
|
Search
|
Subscribe
|
Customer Service
|
About
|
Advertise
|
Privacy
Copyright
© 2013, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved.