And
yet, here we are. Fortunately for me, ever since I began reviewing shows about
20 years ago, Martin Friedman has been directing musicals at Lakeland Civic
Theatre. And that has made my job both more enjoyable and easier, since his unabashed
love for the “art form” and his scrupulous attention to detail in rendering
Sondheim’s glorious ouvre, often carries the day.
This
is happily the case with Lakeland’s current production of A Little Nigh Music, the elegant and droll musical with music and
lyrics by Sondheim and book by Hugh Wheeler. Based on Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night, this show is
the rare example of a Sondheim show with a happy ending.
From
the vocal overture sung by a five-person chorus to that rom-com conclusion,
this production directed by Friedman (his 50th at this theater!) is
a nearly constant delight. Without going into details over which I have no firm
grasp, suffice to say that Sondheim’s waltz-inspired music is an auditory
feast. And thanks to Jonathan Cooper’s sensitive musical direction, the dozen
musicians in the orchestra perform most admirably.
For
a show about love and flirtation at the turn of the 20th century in
Sweden, Night Music feels remarkably
contemporary and witty. As the characters jockey for position emotionally, and
frequently amusingly, the music envelops their efforts in a cloud of effortless
pleasure.
Friedman
has assembled a most talented cast for this second staging of ALNM during his tenure. As Fredrik, the
middle-age man who is married to the jejune 18-year-old virgin Anne, Rob
Albrecht is a bundle of confusion as he tries to plan an amorous foray with the
youngster by reading something to her (“De Maupassant’s candor/Would cause her
dismay/The Brontes are grander/ But not very gay/Her taste is much blander/I’m
sorry to say/But is Hans Christian Andersen/Ever risqué?”)
Anne
is, as promised, a gaggle of squeals and giggles, and Sarah Clare is both
charming and irritating, as she should be. Meanwhile, Fredrik’s intense son
Henrik (an excellent Eric Fancher) is longing for Anne and waiting agonizingly
for his life to begin.
Much
of the drama swirls around Desiree Armfeldt, a renowned actress and Fredrik’s
former lover. Trinidad Snider has a deft touch with this woman whose sardonic
take on life eventually results in the hit song, “Send in the Clowns.” Snider
makes that familiar tune ache with longing, eschewing the drier and more world
weary tone that most singers employ.
Adding
immensely to the enjoyment are Ian Atwood as the pompous Count Carl-Magnus, Neely
Gevaart as his ever-snarky wife Charlotte, and Mim Goloboff in the role of
Desiree’s mother Madame Armfeldt, the matriarch of her family who is also
possessed of a sharp tongue.
A Little Night Music is a richly satisfying
production, and a fitting marker of Friedman’s ever-building legacy at
Lakeland. May the music play on, for us illiterates and others, for a long
time.
A Little
Night Music
Through
September 30 at Lakeland Civic Theatre, 7700 Clocktower Dr., Kirtland,
440-525-7134, lakelandcc.edu.
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