(Trinidad Snider as Francesca and Shane Patrick O'Neil as Robert)
Who
doesn’t love a good love story? Apparently no one, considering the track record
of success enjoyed by this property. Originally written as a novel by Robert
James Waller, it stayed on the New York Times’ bestseller list for more than
three years. Then it went on to more success as a movie starring Meryl Streep
and Clint Eastwood. Then it became a Broadway musical.
And
that is the version, written and composed by Jason Robert Brown with a book by
Marsha Norman, which is now on stage at the Lakeland Civic Theatre at Lakeland
Community College. Francesca Johnson is an Italian war bride who came back with
the American soldier named Bud, to live with him and raise a family in Iowa.
But on one fateful day in the 1960s, Bud and the kids hike off to the state
fair to try to win a blue ribbon. That’s when a sexy visitor named Robert stops by the house
to ask Francesca for directions. He's photographing covered bridges in the area for the National Geographic magazine, but once he spies Francesca he screeches to an f-stop and focuses on her.
There
ensue multiple songs that graph the relationship between Francesca and Robert.
So let’s make one thing perfectly clear: One could not ask for a more beautiful
musical rendering of this show, since the two leads, Trinidad Snider as
Francesca and Shane Patrick O’Neil as Robert, deliver Brown’s evocative songs
with power, tenderness and deep feeling. Indeed, the entire cast under the
well-crafted musical direction of Jordan Cooper has a chance to display their
estimable vocal talents in a number of genre-varied tunes.
Had
this been a concert, this review could end here quite happily. Unfortunately,
it’s theater and it must be said that, on the acting side of the
equation—particularly with regard to the love story—this production falls short
of the mark. Snider and O’Neil never seem to be swooning head-over-heels for
each other, as their early physical stiffness lingers throughout the
proceedings.
Since
director Martin Friedman is a consummate professional, and quite adept at
staging many different types of American musicals, one must rack up this
failing to the mystery of stage chemistry that sometimes never comes to a
boil…or even a simmer. The scenic design by Trad A Burns is an impressively faithful, if
oversized, recreation of the ribs of a covered bridge, but it tends to dwarf
and confine the performers, further reducing their impact.
Fortunately,
those in supporting roles all sing splendidly and otherwise do what they can to enliven the show. Scott Esposito strides about purposefully as Bud, and Amiee
Collier and Brian Altman craft an affecting portrait of neighbors who are a bit
nosy but good-hearted. Collier, equipped with binoculars and a fierce
curiosity, lends the show some much-needed levity. Frank Ivancic and Anna
Barrett bicker nicely as the Johnson kids, and Amanda Tidwell fills in deftly
in multiple roles.
However,
this is a love story and one yearns to feel that hot, visceral, untidy emotion come
spilling out over the footlights. Instead, this production of Bridges is brilliantly crooned but way too
bloodless in the clinches (ie. after their first night together, we see Robert
and Francesca in bed and the sheets aren’t even messed up!). That won’t win a
“Gettin’ Busy” blue ribbon at any state fair.
The
Bridges of Madison County
Through
February 19 at Lakeland Civic Theatre, 7700 Clocktower Drive, Kirtland, 440-525-7134.
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