Showing posts with label Les Miz Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Les Miz Chicago. Show all posts

Monday, May 05, 2014

24601derful: Drury Lane Oakbrook Stages a Fully Masterful 'Les Misérables' -- Chicago Theater Review

Theater Review

Les Misérables
Drury Lane Oakbrook
Thru June 8
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"It's as good as Broadway," was the first thing I heard when the lights came up at Intermission, from the woman sitting next to me, although she was actually speaking to her two companions.

So I turned to her and said, "I saw it last year in London and this is every bit as good."

When I returned to my seat for the start of Act 2, the man sitting on the other side of me asked, "Did you say you saw it in London and this is just as good?"

To which I explained that there was something really cool about seeing Les Misérables in London, where the original production has been running since 1985, and that there--as on Broadway and in downtown Chicago theaters on multiple tours--it can be presented on a considerably grander scale.

But without being able to recall with any exactitude the vocal timbre or acting quality from character to character, I don't think that had I seen the Oakbrook performance in London I would have loved it any less--or vice-versa any more.

And it--my pick for the best musical of all-time, but my second favorite (behind The Producers)--was absolutely fantastic in London, as well the last time I saw it in Chicago, in a revamped, slightly smaller version for the 25th Anniversary U.S. Tour. I have also seen the show on Broadway and several other times in Chicago.

So it is really saying something to note how thoroughly terrific it is at the Drury Lane Oakbrook.

Not this should sound all that surprising to those--including a large subscriber base--who have patronized (in a good way) the venerable venue now in its 30th year in operation, or those who know that Drury Lane Theatres have been part of the Chicagoland scene since 1949.

Although DRO has a smaller proscenium stage than at large Broadway, West End or Chicago theaters, it has a capacity around 950, which is more than several official Broadway theaters and within 150 seats of many others. All the seats for Les Miz looked filled on Sunday evening, and extrapolated over 80 performances, that's up to 76,000 people who may see this show, many more than a typical 2-week downtown run of a non-blockbuster Broadway tour reels in.

So the stellar work regularly being presented at Drury Lane Oakbrook under the auspices of Kyle DeSantis, who took over after his legendary grandfather Tony passed away in 2007, shouldn't shock those who have paid attention.

Over the past few seasons, I have seen sublime, world-class renditions of Ragtime, Cabaret, Singin' in the Rain, Sweeney Todd, Hairspray, The Sound of Music and Next To Normal, and I no longer live 15 minutes away, as I did when I first went to DRO in 2001.

Yet something about the suburban location, the theater being housed within a multi-use banquet facility and the reasonable ticket prices may prompt some incredulity about Drury Lane staging Broadway-quality productions. (Though prices have increased with the quality of the shows, Les Misérables can be seen for $45 through the DRO box office and considerably less on Goldstar, my option.)

I am sure there are many avid musical theater lovers in Chicago who will go to New York--where Les Miz has been remounted--or London before they even contemplate heading to Oakbrook Terrace.

That's their loss.

And while I hope those attending the four parties simultaneously taking place at Drury Lane--on arriving, I saw many dressed to the nines--had the time of their lives, I feel a bit bad that they were oblivious to the magnificence taking place just a few yards away.

Though spatial restrictions didn't allow the scenery to quite match that of Les Miz in London, on Broadway or on tour, it the best and most elaborate set I've every seen at DRO. The staging didn't need to be quite as inventive as at Marriott Lincolnshire--where I saw a spectacular in-the-round production in 2008--but it's nonetheless rather brilliant.

Rachel Rockwell is probably Chicago's best musical theater director this side of Gary Griffin and she makes several clever choices I don't recall being previously incorporated into Les Misérables, which only adds to the emotional heft of Victor Hugo's famed storyline and Claude-Michel Schonberg's astonishing musical score. (Alain Boublil is credited as the original musical's co-creator, with Herbert Kretzmer writing the English lyrics.)

Though I always innately admire the work of set and lighting designers, here it was so good as for me to make a point of noting and citing Scott Davis and Greg Hoffman, respectively. Video projections to support the set, created by Sage Marie Carter, were also superb, as was the costuming by Erika Senase and Maggie Hoffman.

The 16-member orchestra, under the musical director of Roberta Duchak and conducted by Ben Johnson sounded strong if--likely due to spatial limitations--not as robust as larger ones in bigger venues.

Yet while all the people behind the scenes and in the pit undoubtedly contribute greatly to just how great this production is, it is the cast and their vocal prowess that most acutely renders apt the comparison to London and Broadway.

Ivan Rutherford, who plays Jean Valjean here, has played the role on Broadway, as well as on tour and at other regional theaters, more than 2,000 times in total.

He is terrific, and delivers "Bring Him Home" as well as I can recall.

Only devout Les Miz lovers may truly get this, but a large part of how I perceive any production of the show--from Broadway to high schools, where I've also seen it--is in how well the spotlight numbers are delivered.

And every one at Drury Lane is excellent, including Jennie Sophia (Fantine) singing "I Dreamed a Dream," Mark David Kaplan and Sharon Sachs (the Thernadiers) on "Master of the House," Quentin Earl Darrington's (Javert) "Stars," Skyler Adams and Emily Rohm (Marius and Cosette) dueting on "In My Life/A Heart Full of Love" and Christina Nieves (Eponine) emoting "On My Own."

This doesn't even include the best voice of the whole bunch, Travis Taylor as Enjolras, who spearheads the trio of great choral numbers at the end of Act I. Though I've only seen Taylor in supporting roles around Chicago--Sweeney Todd at DRO, Now and Forever, an Andrew Lloyd Webber revue at the Marriott Lincolnshire--each time he has demonstrably stood out enough for me to remember his name and wonder why he isn't a leading man on Broadway.

The child actors rotate performances, but the ones I saw--Charlie Babbo as Gavroche, Ava Morse as Young Cosette--were also splendid.

I'm running out of unused adjectives, but I think I've made my point.

Les Misérables is one of the greatest artistic works of both the 19th and 20th century--the 2012 movie is also wonderful--and while I suspect the musical will play grand opera houses in years to come, it is now being licensed to regional theaters.

It cannot be an easy musical to do justice, but the Drury Lane Oakbrook more than does.

If you love Les Miz, it is well-worth the $36 (incl. fees) I paid to see how well it translates here.

And if you've never seen the show--like the guy next to me, who loved it but wondered if he was seeing it in representative form--this is a truly marvelous introduction.

Either way, you'd be folly to "Miz" it. 

For "at the end of the day," culture and community are what will save us from artifice and avarice. Les Misérables not only promotes this notion, but when staged terrifically--as here--best exemplifies it.



Monday, November 19, 2012

C'est Magnifique: The Power and the Glory of Les Misérables -- Chicago Theater Review

Theater Review

Les Misérables
Cadillac Palace Theatre, Chicago
Thru December 2
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Christmas Day will bring the opening of the movie version of Les Misérables. I intend to see it and hope it does justice to two of the greatest artistic creations of the past 150 years: Victor Hugo’s 1862 novel, which I’ve admittedly never read, and the stage musical on which the movie is more directly based.

First staged in English in London in 1985 and on Broadway in 1987, Les Miz stands as one of the most popular musicals ever created, and in my opinion, the very best. (Although it did not quite top My 100 Favorite Stage Musicals of All-Time list, I believe it is the art form’s greatest achievement.)

Les Miz has played in Chicago numerous times since its creation and is back again at the Cadillac Palace. It is still on its 25th Anniversary Tour, a bit revamped and slightly downscaled from earlier touring versions, but still rather majestic nonetheless.

I was originally a bit slow on the Les Miz uptake, ignoring chances to see early tours in Chicago and L.A., but first saw the show on Broadway in 1998 and on multiple tours since. So I’ve seen it at full tilt, but also thoroughly enjoyed a regional in-the-round staging at Marriott Theatre Lincolnshire and even a high school version I caught last year at New Trier.

In February 2011, I saw the current touring version—with a different cast for the most part than the one now in town—also at the Cadillac Palace. Though it was a magnificent reminder of the greatness of Les Misérables, it felt slightly lesser than past productions.

That still might be true with the rendition now playing to full houses in Chicago, but if Les Miz isn’t quite as good as it once was—and my eroding memory doesn't allow me to remember many specific shortcomings—it is still better than almost anything else you can see on a theatrical stage.

Given Chris Jones’ rave review in the Tribune, rather than it just being my perception that this rendition is particularly great from beginning to end, it seems an even more discerning critic believes that the current production and cast are especially scintillating.

For all the Miz-ciples who care about these things, the only latter-day concession of consequence that I noticed in again witnessing the 25th Anniversary Tour is that without the stage turntable of old, the “Look Down” chants within the Prologue at the beginning aren’t as boisterous or as menacing as I remember them. (The prisoners are now seen rowing, rather than pounding the ground.)

Otherwise, for whatever Les Misérables may no longer be, as exemplified from the stage and orchestra pit of the Cadillac Palace, it is utterly majestic.

Every song in the show is excellent. The full orchestra made Claude-Michel Schönberg’s score sound exquisite. And while I am impressed by anyone who can sing in tune—thus my commonly being quite laudatory about talented folks in community theater productions—a Broadway-caliber voice (and many in this Equity cast have Broadway credits) goes beyond being tuneful. For lack of a better way to explain it, there is a richness to the vocal timbre, with the ability to not only emote, but be truly evocative.

And singer after singer sounded absolutely sensational. The choral or group numbers—the Prologue mentioned above, “At the End of the Day,” “Master of the House,” “The People's Song,” “One Day More” —were sublime and the solo or duet numbers—“I Dreamed a Dream,” “Stars,” “On My Own,” “Bring Him Home” and more—were uniformly every bit as good as I could have hoped.

Peter Lockyer is a bit slighter a Jean Valjean than I've usually seen, but was quite strong of voice, as was Andrew Varela as Javert (I'm pretty sure Russell Crowe won't sing that good in the movie). Briana Carlson-Goodman delivered an astonishing “On My Own” as Eponine and Timothy Gulan & Shawna M. Hamic made for fun Thernardiers. Max Quinlan, who's done a lot of work in Chicago area theaters, was excellent as Marius, Lauren Wiley complemented him well as Cosette, Betsy Morgan (introduced as a Chicagoan during the post-show appeal for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS; hence the signed Playbill shown above) was a stellar Fantine and Jason Forbach as Enjolras was just one more example of great voices up and down the cast.

Tickets for this rather brief run of Les Miz appear to be rather scarce and/or pricey. If you have to wait for the movie, so be it. But if you love this musical and/or want to see it the way it deserves to be seen, by all means, don’t Miz it.