Theater review
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Tom Titus
After nearly 40 years, there are few surprises left in “The Sound of
Music,” except perhaps that this final collaboration of Richard Rodgers
and Oscar Hammerstein II has aged so gracefully.
In the superlative touring production now at the Orange County Performing
Arts Center, headlined by Richard Chamberlain, the fact-based story -- of
a young woman who leaves a convent to become the governess of an Austrian
captain’s brood and instead becomes his baroness as World War II erupts
all around them -- has rarely been in better hands.
Backed by Heidi Ettinger’s magnificent backdrops highlighting the
Austrian Alps, the “Sound of Music” truly climbs every mountain in the
areas of musicality, dramatic interpretation and pure, solid
entertainment, splendidly staged by Susan H. Schulman. No matter how many
times you’ve experienced it, this show will bring a lump to your throat.
Often accused of being an acceptable sugar substitute, “The Sound of
Music” does indeed revel in the cuteness of the seven children in Maria’s
charge. But this element does not preclude the deadly serious business of
the Nazi encroachment, and the presence of three giant swastikas at the
music festival offers a jarring note of reality.
While Chamberlain is the “name” star, the production’s true centerpiece
is Meg Tolin’s winning performance as Maria.
She brings music back to the captain’s home and defrosts his hardened
heart.
Tolin -- who’s a ringer for another perky, blond, Meg Ryan -- is simply
enchanting, with the vocal pipes of a spirited nightingale. She conveys
the fresh, energetic quality her character must possess, while bringing a
convincing inner agony to her life-changing decision.
As the militaristic head of the Von Trapp household, Chamberlain casts a
particularly authoritarian shadow, making his conversion to humanity that
much more effective.
Since he could be home collecting Social Security, his liaison with the
twentysomething Tolin does make Hollywood pair Michael Douglas and
Catherine Zeta-Jones seem like contemporaries by comparison. Yet their
romance is rendered credible by Chamberlain’s boyish approach to the
romance and well-preserved physical appearance.
The Mother Abbess role demands a world-class singing voice to scale the
peaks of “Climb Every Mountain,” which closes both acts. And Jeanne
Lehman scores mightily in this department, as well as in her ability to
express the kindly wisdom of this rather fearsome nun. Sylvia Rhyne’s
sympathetic Sister Margeretta is equally well-presented.
The plum roles of showman Max Detweiler and wealthy widow Elsa Schraeder,
who’s set her cap for the captain, are particularly well-interpreted by
Drew Eshelman and Rachel de Benedet. Eshelman manages to espouse
accommodation to the Nazi regime without losing empathy, while de Benedet
projects a polished aloofness with the children that might have sealed
her fate even without Maria’s presence or the convenient political
differences that divide them.
The children, of course, swipe a significant portion of the show, with
Kate Reinders’ blossoming young-woman Liesl a natural charmer. Tracy
Alison Walsh stands out in the usually submerged part of the intuitive
Louisa, while tiny Madeline Martin is a hit as the precious youngest
child, Gretl.
The Nazi intrusion is effectively represented by Ben Sheaffer’s teenage
messenger -- who joins Reinders in a delightfully dizzying rendition of
“Sixteen Going on Seventeen” -- and Robert Stoeckle, chilling as a
no-nonsense German high official.
Tad Ingram and Joy Franz lend solid support as the household staff, the
latter resembling Cloris Leachman’s demented domestic in “Young
Frankenstein.”
“The Sound of Music” is an enduring favorite in America’s musical theater
annals, and the touring production at The Center is one that Rodgers and
Hammerstein would look down on from above with pride and approval.
It has, wisely, been booked for two weeks rather than the customary one
and should provide new generations with the sheer joy of this timeless
love story, anchored as it is in grim reality.
“The Sound of Music”* WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 2 and
8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays until April 2
* WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
* COST: $18 to $52
* CALL: (714) 740-7878--------
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