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By Eric Marchese Special to the Register
I
LOVE A PIANO
West Coast premiere of the revue
is a fitting tribute to the great composer's longevity.
Where
to start when formulating a revue of the music of
Irving Berlin? The guy wrote nearly 1,000 songs in
addition to the scores of 21 Broadway shows and 17
movie musicals - not just good but, more often than
not, great material. His catalog contains enough for
multiple anthologies.
In
creating their 1992 show "I Love a Piano," Ray Roderick
and Michael Berkeley took a fairly reliable approach,
appending a rather overworked - yet somehow within
this context endearing - gimmick. The schema is a
survey of Berlin's music from the early 1910s, when
he had already emerged as a master Tin Pan Alley songwriter,
to the late 1950s, by which time he was a living legend.
The gimmick is the "life" of a piano with a defect
- an apparently unfixable sour note - that keeps changing
hands through the decades.
The
device of tracing the fate of that little piano keeps
things moving in Roderick's Musical Theatre West staging,
the show's West Coast premiere, which fits some 64
Berlin songs into a briskly paced, generally tight
show.
Berlin
mastered numerous, time-honored genres of American
popular song - a fact Roderick and Berkeley were careful
to showcase when drawing from his catalog. "Piano"
has snappy dance tunes, romantic ballads, ragtime
songs, Tin Pan Alley tunes, Jazz Age ditties, heartfelt
torch songs, patriotic anthems, holiday songs that
long ago became standards, and Broadway-style numbers.
Roderick's staging and choreography, John Glaudini's
musical direction and the work of the cast is so self-assured
that if you weren't a fan of Berlin's music before,
you will be after seeing this show.
Too
numerous to catalog, the highlights include the flapper-era
feel of "Everybody Step" and "They Call It Dancing,"
the plaintive melancholy of "Russian Lullaby," an
elaborate medley of "I'm Steppin' Out With My Baby"
and "Puttin' on the Ritz," a re-creation of Judy Garland
and Fred Astaire as hobos singing "We're a Couple
of Swells" (from "Easter Parade") and an all-stops-out
rendition of Berlin's paean to his industry, "There's
No Business Like Show Business."
Paired
off into couples, Roderick's sextet of performers
are ingratiating musical-theater personalities with
solid vocal, dance and comedic skills. Stephen Breithaupt
and Julie Dixon Jackson portray seasoned pros Alex
and Sadie; Kevin Earley and Kathi Gillmore are leading
man George and leading lady Ginger; Dan Pacheco and
Jill Townsend are juvenile Jim and ingenue Eileen.
Considering these "characters" transcend the multiple
decades they're depicted in, this conceit is a bit
of a stretch. That it works is a tribute to the show's
overarching layout and to the flexibility of the larger
genre of musical theater.
Jackson has a substantial presence and voice, so it's
no surprise she's called upon to deliver a Kate Smith-style
rendition of "God Bless America." Breithaupt has a
pleasingly broad tenor and an equally elastic stage
persona. Earley is called upon time and again for
his expressive lead tenor vocals, repeatedly answering
the call. Gillmore's persona is generally pert and
saucy, and though Pacheco and Townsend provide youthful
energy, they never fail to come off as anything but
thoroughly professional. Roderick's expansive choreography,
meanwhile, uses the entire Carpenter Center stage
and its considerable breadth.
If
there's one criticism that can be leveled at "I Love
a Piano," it's that its first act is top-heavy, with
more than two-thirds of the show's musical numbers
shoehorned into its seven scenes. Once the World War
II, postwar years, early '50s and summer-stock sequences
arrive, though, the show hits an unstoppable stride,
bolstering it as a tribute to Berlin's musical ingenuity.
4/27/2006
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