James
Karas
Along with its
extravagant production of A Chorus Line, the Stratford Festival
offers Stephen Sondheim’s A Little Night Music at the Avon
Theatre as its other musical. It is a well-done production but in the interest
of full disclosure I might as well start with an admission that I have not been
able to warm up to the musical.
A Little Night Music strikes me as
a French farce for intelligent people with characters of a certain age. It is
based on Ingmar Bergman’s film Smiles of a Summer Night. With some
significant exceptions, I find that there is an excess of recitative and many
songs that I simply tolerated.
Members of the company in A Little Night Music. Photography by
David Hou.
At the other end we
have the seminary student Henrik (Gabriel Antonacci) who is not sure what to do
with his hormones and is the sourpuss of the group. He does find his way, so to
speak, with his 18-year old virgin stepmother Anne (Alexis Gordon). She is an
airhead who has been married to Henrik’s father Fredrik (Ben Carlson) for
eleven months and the sexual relationships in this house are summarized in
three songs: Anne promises to do it “Soon”, Fredrik sings “Now” and Henrik says
“Later.”
The centerpiece of the
musical is the well-named Désirée (Yanna McIntosh) who is both desired and
desiring but perhaps past her best before date. Right now she is desired by
Fredrik and Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm (Juan Chioran), a tall and handsome
dragoon right out of an operetta. Carlson can act marvelously but singing is just
not his forte. Chioran is custom-made for the role, theatrically and vocally.
Yanna McIntosh handles her part with splendour.
To cut to the chase,
the Count and Fredrik in compromising attire find themselves in Désirée’s bedroom. The Count challenges Fredrik
to a duel. The Countess (Cynthia Dale) finds out about her husband’s infidelity
and we are off into the stratosphere of adultery.
Members of the company in A
Little Night Music. Photogaphy by David Hou.
Not quite. The
Countess and Anne sing “Every Day a Little Death,” a somber view of life stated
in the title. Dale and Gordon do well with the song which manages to be
beautiful with limited vocal demands.
The highlight of the
musical is the great song “Send in the Clowns.” It comes near the end when Fredrik
is in Désirée’s bedroom. The song is contemplative, reflective, sad, ironic,
introspective, almost self-mocking - fantastic. She wants to turn a page on a
life of love affairs or sexual liaisons and settle with Fredrik who happens to
be the father of her daughter. But they are on different wavelengths. The show
of their lives is not going well. She is on the ground; he is in midair. He
does not want what she wants. Someone should send in the clowns to entertain
the audience as they do when a show is going badly. But, in the last verse, she
tells us there are no clowns to send – they are the clowns.
The song hangs above
the show like a chandelier made of diamonds. McIntosh sings the melody
gorgeously and the song raises the musical from a Broadway hit to a work of
beauty.
A Little Night Music has a
considerable amount of humour and director Gary Griffin does only moderately
well in evoking laughter.
The set designed by
Debra featured four tubular structures that struck me like smoke stacks. The
dresses were beautiful.
_____
A Little Night
Music by Stephen
Sondheim (music and lyrics) and Hugh Wheeler (book)) continues in repertory until
October 23, 2016 at the Avon Theatre, Stratford, Ontario.
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