It begins when you are sitting in Row “YY”, closer to our
car in the parking lot than we were to the stage.
There is a definite “Distancing Effect.”
The sensation is compounded by the fact that not long ago,
we saw the actual Carole King (in
concert with James Taylor at the Hollywood
Bowl) and felt the visceral connection between the singer-songwriter (or
more accurately songwriter-singer) and her material, notwithstanding the fact
that she was in many cases fifty years away from the original conception. She was an electrifying septuagenarian. (In contrast to some (unnamed) audience
members who felt proud to just still be awake
at that hour.)
Added to that is – which may some day be a musical of its
own and one possibly worth seeing – the
performer playing Carole King in the touring company of Beautiful: The Carole King
Musical currently in Los Angeles was Abby Mueller, the older sister of
Jessie Mueller who won the 2014 Best Actress in a Musical Tony Award starring in the original Broadway production.
An unusuality of this nature sets my imaginatorial head spinning. What was I actually witnessing here, an older
sister’s interpretation of a younger sister’s interpretation of Carole
King? Or did the older sister “return to
the source” and make her interpretation of Carole King different from her
younger sister’s interpretation of Carole King?
Or did she eschew “interpretation”
completely, offering instead a studied Carole King “sound-alike”?
IMAGINED ABBY MEULLER RESPONSE: “The
answer is neither, if “neither” can include three options, which I do not
believe it can, but anyway. Although I
have enormous respect for Carole King and an enormous respect for my younger
sister – and I sincerely mean that; the detectable edge in my voice comes from
the exhaustion of performing eight days a week rather than sisterly envy
because she played the character on Broadway and I’m touring the hinterlands in
a road company and that “Tony” should definitely be mine! …I’m sorry, where was
I? Oh yes. What I am offering is neither an
interpretation of my sister’s interpretation of Carole King nor a knockoff
imitation of Carole King, but instead a “take” on the role that is organically
my own. You understand?”
Whatever she was
doing, I was two women away from the actual person.
So, between sitting in Row “YY”, my familiarity with the actual
Carole King and watching the star’s sister’s
traveling presentation, as the above title reflects, I felt “so far away”. From anything genuine, meaningful or
emotionally involving.
Yet the audience around me was roaring with approval.
I get tired of not liking stuff everyone else is bowled over
by (although the New York Times
review for Beautiful was enthralled only by the lead actress’s performance,
finding the production itself, to paraphrase his more erudite evaluation,
artistically underwhelming.)
There is a moment near the end of the show where “Carole
King” informs her best friends that she is relocating to Los Angeles,
reassuring them of the eternality of their friendship by going to the piano and
singing, “Winter, spring, summer or fall, all you have to do is call”…
There is a lot of that
in the show. Cues for songs from the
“Carole King Playlist.” (It’s like the Abba musical but less danceable. And less fun.)
There are flashes – I don’t want to do a review; okay, just
this… and maybe one more thing – eliciting hopeful sparks off possibility.
In an early scene reflecting the explosion of creativity emanating
from the offices of a single mid-Manhattan office building, little boxes on the
set light up, offering a cleverly arranged medley of hits from the fifties –
“Splish Splash (I was taking a bath…)”, “Yakkety Yak (don’t talk back)” Oh,
Carol (I am but a fool)” that momentarily brought the proceedings and my
expectations for the evening toe-tappingly to life.
Then they went back to the accommodating girl with the
prodigious talent for songwriting. Writerly
Note: Recessive characters engender
uninspiring storytelling. (And a
boatload of “Sleeping Giant clichés.)
“She has to be
accommodating for the ‘turn’ when Carole finally stands up for herself and the
audience goes wild!”
Yeah, I know, but it’s boring and it’s predictable. I audibly groaned at the manipulation. (While the audience around me erupts with “You
go, girl!” enthusiasm.)
What was my other “Theater Critic’s Hat” point?....
I forget. Summing up,
the show just never got to me. (Maybe
I’d have been more “into it” if I had seen the other sister.)
By the way – this may be picky but it confuses me. How is “You make me feel like a natural
woman” (the crescendoing number in the musical) feministically empowering? Relying on someone else – imaginably a man –
to make you feel like a natural woman.
Shouldn’t you just feel like a
natural woman, without outside affirmation?
I’m just asking…
On the “up” side, the Beautiful’s
musical numbers are the always
welcome soundtrack of my youth. Though
to be honest, I prefer hearing them sung by the original performers on PBS fundraisers (even if the original
performers are dead, their replacements are at least the same age) rather than
by age-challenged mimics in a Broadway musical.
There is a final reason the evening’s experience left me “so
far away.”
Although the people who put this show together and I were
ostensibly in the same business, I could never do “corny.” Seeing lightweight confections like Beautiful: The Carole King Musical I am
dispiritingly reminded that “corny” invariably sells.
Leading me to wonder wistfully – and hardly for the first
time – whether I had gone into show business by mistake.
It was an understandable career choice. I thought I was entering a field where
originality was what we were supposed to be shooting for.
And there is no job called “Professional Grump.”
4 comments:
I have the same problem you do with what they call "cover bands". A venue near me does outdoor concerts in the summer, so I've had to suffer through a number of these due to audio spill. I realize that Abba, Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles, etc. are no longer together. But why would I want to listen to imitations when we have recordings of the originals, especially since those originals are still alive?
wg
Just back from NYC. Went to the theatre a few times and noticed that younger audiences who presumably have not seen a lot tend to be easier to please whooping as they applaud and leaping to their feet the instant the show ended. One off Broadway show we went to attracted an older audience who applauded politely at times and, when deserved, were more vigorous in their appreciation. At intermission, instead of gushing, they were analyzing and critiquing. Earl, I'll bet the audience around you roaring with approval was comprised of people younger than you who have not been seeing Broadway musicals since they were kids.
Is "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" a feminist song? I'm asking - I genuinely don't know. I've always thought it was just a love song. Someone was wandering through their life, feeling down. Then they met the "right" person. And now they're expressing their joy about being so lucky. (Heh, kind of ties in with your Alain De Botton stuff)
The question I've always had is: Why are people who *need* people the luckiest people in the world?
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