Okay.
So I am queued up in the theater at intermission, hoping the
line will move fast enough for me to get to the bathroom before they “flicker”
the lights and I have to return to my seat unrelieved, and all around me in line
– and later in the bathroom itself – there is identifiable chatter – and
remember we are in the theater of a Broadway musical – not about some “open audition” or a great place to buy leg warmers
– but about the recent firing of the Baylor
University football coach.
Truth be told, of the dozen or more men waiting to use the
bathroom, I was the only theatergoer in line unaware of the recent firing of
the Baylor University football
coach. Or, for that matter, where Baylor University is.
(I looked it up. It’s
in Waco, Texas.)
I don’t mean to appear prejudiced – especially if it turns
out I am – but in my mind, I do not readily associate hardcore Southern male
football enthusiasts with Broadway musicals.
I recall similar conversations emanating from the Men’s Room of Funny Girl or Hello, Dolly. Bright Star was demonstrably an
exception.
That’s when it hit me.
This musical was for them.
Unfortunately, it was not for us.
Or so we believed.
(Note: Forget
immediately that I said that, or it will spoil the surprise ending. I should probably leave it out. Unless you have already forgotten what I’m
talking about. Oh, you have? Good.
Then I don’t have to.)
I need to be careful here.
I am critiquing a musical whose target audience is “Not me.” It’s like attending a Christian religious
service and everyone’s exiting the church feeling spiritually uplifted and the
best I can contribute is, “That
reverend sure seemed to know what he was talking about.”
It’s a definite difficulty.
How do you accurately adjudicate a show intended, in this case, for
rabid southern university football fans?
By Broadway musical standards – and I may be flattering
myself believing I have any – Bright
Star’s first act had been less than encouraging. I mean, the cast was capable enough. The lead actress (Carmen Cusack), was, in
fact, an unqualified delight. I would
happily see her again. In something I
cared about.
The show‘s country inflected melodies (by Steve Martin and
Edie Brickell) were tunefully appropriate but… it’s not like you forgot them
after you listened to them; I forgot them while
I was listening to them.
And the storyline, which heated up in Act Two…
Bright Star is constructed with two interwoven narratives, the more dramatic one involving young lovers, an unwanted pregnancy, a forced adoption that ended instead with the inseminator’s father, in a misguided act of paternal protectiveness, tossing the illegitimate infant off of a train into a river, culminating with a surprise revelation and dual weddings.
What can I tell you?
This is what I can
tell you.
When the show ended, with the audience around me rising in
rapturous ovation, I discovered – swear to God – that there were wet tears
rolling uncontrollably down my cheeks.
I was genuinely incredulous.
Somehow, in its inherent purity, simplicity and unadorned humanity…
Bright Star had
sneaked surreptitiously up my arm, penetrating my cold and callused heart.
I felt incredibly embarrassed. I could not believe it. Had this cornpone confection actually melted
my emotions? When exactly did that
happen?
Reluctantly, I turned to Dr. M – a notorious hokum hater –
to accept my medicine for succumbing to this shameless sentimentality and –
swear to God once again –
Dr. M was blubbering as well.
“We’re so sappy!”
she sobbed, a mixture of tearfulness and surprise.
Who would ever have thunk it?
The show intended for them
turned out also to be for us.
Later that evening, I imagined running into Steve Martin,
who I am peripherally acquainted with, offering the capsulizing reaction that
came spontaneously to mind:
“You made two Jewish people cry.”
I was concerned he might be confused by my compliment. But that’s the beauty of imagining stuff.
No actual risk whatsoever.
I am happy we saw Bright
Star.
Although, wise as I am, I cannot for the life of me explain
why it got to me.
I mean, what’s next?
Debating the justification of the firing of the Baylor University football
coach?
I don’t even know his name!
Art Briles. And the President of Baylor also got whacked, a guy named Kenneth Starr. Yes, THAT Kenneth Starr. Not such a bright Starr any more.
ReplyDeleteI have a bad news/sorta good news Bright Star experience. Less than two weeks ago we ordered Bright Star tickets for mid-July. Five days later we learned that the show was being cancelled. That’s the bad news. The sorta good news is that the tickets cost $407 Cdn and a few days later a small dip in the dollar resulted in a refund of $412. I may have found a new form of arbitrage.
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