The
dead people are singing up a storm in this haunting yet often pre-fab musical.
With book and lyrics by Marsha Norman and music by Lucy Simon, The Secret Garden is built around the
eponymous novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett. And
while Great Lakes Theater employs many fine voices in this production, directed by Victoria Bussert, the
repetitive songs and the predictable, largely humorless script eventually serve
to wear down any audience members seeking a bit more nuance.
Most
of the aforementioned ghosts are in the head of young Mary Lennox, a girl who
lost her parents and many other friends to a cholera epidemic in India. So
she’s moved back to England to live with her uncle Archibald Craven, a man
afflicted with a hunchback who’s mourning the loss of his own wife Lily a
decade before.
Sure,
it sounds depressing, but the show would benefit from hewing a bit closer to
the even darker original story. That book details how self-centered and
nasty Mary’s parents were, and how that turned Mary into a pint-sized hell on
wheels when she arrived at her uncle’s estate. All that is soft-pedaled in this
musical, with Mary pouting prettily at the start until a trio of jovial and
perceptive servants (are there any other kind?) bring her out of her mini-funk.
And then, to top it all, she manages to rescue Archibald’s son Colin from his
own chronic illness.
Mary
is guided by her chummy chambermaid Martha (Sara Masterson), Martha’s brother
Dickon (Colton Ryan), a lackey on the estate who teaches Mary how to talk to
the animals, and old Ben (Dougfred Miller), the gardener who spouts rural
wisdom and knows about the secret garden that Lily used to tend. And that is
where Mary is headed, to save herself and some others, including the ghosts who
are finally allowed to stop singing and proceed with their dirt naps. Depending
on your tolerance for fantasy, this is all wonderfully touching or insufferably
twee.
As
Mary settles into her new life, a Greek chorus of white-clad ghosts meander
about: singing songs, walking with measured steps and casting knowing glances
over their shoulders. It’s lovely enough, and the singing by Jillian Kates as Lily is stunning. But the symbolism—referring to the
memories we all carry with us—becomes a bit obvious and tiresome.
While
the material itself can get on some nerves, the performances under the
direction of Bussert are blameless. As Archibald, Stephen Mitchell
Brown sings beautifully and captures a fragment of the magic he manufactured in
last year’s Les Miserables. Indeed,
it seems he’s about to do the world’s first trans-character transition, from
Archie to Jean Valjean, during “Where in the World,” a very Les Miz-sounding ditty.
Playing
the kids, Giovanna A. Layne is more than downbeat than downright rotten as Mary,
which makes her transition a bit less dramatic. But she does an admirable job
overall, as does
Warren
Bodily as sickly Colin. And Tom Ford hisses effectively as Dr. Neville Craven,
scheming to take over his brother’s estate.
All
the villains and good guys are neatly delineated in this piece, which makes it
fine for kids but a bit less than engrossing for adults. In fact, when a nasal
Cassandra Bissell shows up as Mrs. Winthrop later on, it’s a treat. Even though
she’s a stock character in a brief scene, the harsh schoolmarm finally brings
out the worst in Mary and the audience applauds—relieved from the avalanche of
all that heart-string plucking.
Still,
the music is splendidly performed, the period costumes by Charlotte M. Yetman
are handsome, and scenic designer Jeff Herrmann’s entrance into the garden glows
like a pathway to heaven. It all may make you want to go out and work in the
dirt—not such a bad idea, after all.
And remember:
It's no secret that live theater intoxicates,
So vote yes, yes, YES on Issue 8!
And remember:
It's no secret that live theater intoxicates,
So vote yes, yes, YES on Issue 8!
The
Secret Garden
Through
October 31 at Great Lakes Theater, Hanna Theatre, 2067 E. 14th St., 216-241-6000.
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