Does
the world need a new Christmas stage musical? Hell, why not? The ones we have
are getting a little shopworn about now. But does the world need a musical
entertainment that, even with all its wonderful and heartfelt intentions, is the
theatrical equivalent of The Island of Misfit Toys. Well, probably not.
The
authors of Kris Kringle, The Musical,
now having its world premiere at Olmsted Performing Arts, are mostly to blame. Maria
Ciampi (book) and Tim Janis (music and lyrics) are no doubt splendid people
with hearts of gold. And we wish them all the best, good health, and joy this
holiday season. But the fact is their new show, which is opening here in
Cleveland and has aspirations of landing on Broadway, is about as enjoyable as
a large ball of melted tinsel—sparkly and colorful to the eye but dense, lumpy,
and rather sad inside.
However,
this is the Christmas season! So let’s begin with the good news, or what there
is of it. The basic idea of this apparently high-budget family show has potential.
A young toy inventor, named Kris Kringle, gets crosswise with an evil toy
company boss until he bonds with his grandfather, Santa, and everything turns
out great. If only Ciampi's tale were that simple.
Turns
out, Kringle is fired by the profit-hungry toy magnate R. G. Reedy (as we are
informed, it can be pronounced “Are Greedy.” Ho, ho…huh?) and then Kris gets a job
at Santa’s workshop and he's happy because that’s where they give toys away,
and he makes a wonderful toy that “can teach troubled hearts to be free,” but
then he faces the Kringle Curse that makes people freeze and it can destroy
Christmas and—wait! I haven’t told you yet about Ms. Emma Horn, who was the
head elf at the workshop but now she’s working for Reedy, while the current
head elf, Elmer, schemes to mess up Kringle’s plans. Hold on! There are also
the magic boots that Ms. Horn wears, as does Elmer, who has a few doppelgangers
who sing a song with him, and apparently Reedy’s shoes also have magic powers. Stop!
Did I tell you that Reedy is related to Santa, whose wife really runs the North
Pole, or that Kringle meets Evelyn Noel who teaches Santa’s apprentices how to
be elves or that…Halt!
If
this partial rundown of the plot sounds confusing, condensed as it is, it’s no
more explicable in the slightly more than two hour show. Indeed, the narrator (helpfully named Christmas
Spirit) comes on stage now and then to offer further exposition. In sum, Kringle is a mash-up of too many
complicated plot elements with a too on-the-nose presentation of its themes.
Janis’ songs are loaded with specific and literal statements about “bright and
sunny days,” and “be all I can be,” and “don’t ever stop believing.” Even
little kids in the audience can handle a little more subtlety than that. Then the show
concludes with a song about forgiveness which is titled “Forgiveness” and has
characters repeatedly singing “I forgive you!” at each other. Okay, got it.
One
flaw this show doesn’t have is a weak cast, since many of the area’s finest actors and singers are on stage. But even proven performers such as
Natalie Green, Greg Violand, Michael Mauldin, Kristin Netzband and Brian
Marshall can’t save this sentimental folderol from itself. In the title role former BW
student from Cleveland, Mack Shirilla, is an endearing and sympathetic Kris
Kringle. But sadly, their best efforts go for naught when the halting, pedestrian
melodies are linked, often awkwardly and in a forced manner, to the repetitive lyrics. And then it's all hitched to a story as complicated as an early draft of Ulysses.
There
are a couple cute lines, such as when Elmer is eavesdropping on others talking about
him and he whispers to an elf, “Do you hear what I hear!?” But those rare slivers of wit only serve to highlight how the rest of the show pounds you over the head with a two-by-four with its message.
Clearly,
many dollars and much energy have been expended on this enterprise. And the
accomplished director Pierre Jacques-Brault and noted musical director Charles
Eversole do what they can to keep the huge cast of 40-plus adults and kids
rolling. But this Christmas-kluge-on-wheels probably shouldn't be going anywhere, least of all Broadway, as it is currently
constituted.
Kris
Kringle, The Musical
Through
December 13 at Olmsted Performing Arts, 6941 Columbia Road, Olmsted Falls,
www.olmstedperformingarts.com/events/event/kris-kringle/
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