Storm Dever as Wendy, and the chorus from the La Jolla Playhouse production of "Fly". All photos by Kevin Berne. |
However, the by-product or bonus in their play season’s selections and productions under the aegis of savvy artistic director Christopher Ashley, always provides a road map toward New York and Broadway when warranted. Their trophy case attests to their many awards for excellence.
Many of Mr. Ashley’s directing productions include: “Memphis”, a red hot musical that successfully made the leap from La Jolla to Broadway running for three years nabbing two Tony wins for Best Musical and for Outstanding Director of a Musical in the process.
In 2017, the heart-warming, inspirational 9/11-infused musical “Come From Away”, transferred its smash-hit La Jolla Playhouse production to Broadway; once again winning Tony Awards for Best Musical, with Mr. Ashley winning another Tony as Best Director.
There’s no doubt about it. Tony Awards are no strangers to the 73 year-old acclaimed La Jolla, California-based theatrical company founded in 1947 by Hollywood actor/stars Mel Ferrer, Dorothy McGuire, and Gregory Peck.
Eric Anderson as Captain Hook faces off against Lincoln Clauss as Peter in "Fly" at the La Jolla Playhouse |
All children have a secret desire to be able to fly, as do some adults (at least in our dreams). In “Fly” it’s strictly a kid’s world forever… well, maybe not forever. Remember, as Dorothy says in the Wizard of Oz “there’s no place like home Toto.”
Lincoln Clauss as Peter and Storm Lever as Wendy in "Fly" at La Jolla Playhouse |
Wendy becomes the protagonist while Peter is downgraded to a co-protagonist status with Hook remaining the antagonist. Hook now sports ‘mummy’s boy’ vs. complex societal issues. Whether these changes alter the dramatic intention of Barrie's original story version remains to be seen, but hope springs eternal for the purists.
Although it’s a 21st century produced production, there’s nary a line of “questionable dialogue” to be heard. Rare these days from the pens of some playwrights and directors who are determined to break theatre decorum barriers in the name of ‘honesty and the reality in life’. That being said, I don’t need to experience the reality of a ‘character’ suffering from diarrhea to actually display that action on stage or any other similar character traits in the name of ‘reality’ or ‘truth’; thank you very much.
When inevitable societal changes come, as they must, to audiences of all of the art forms, resistance on the part of the “purists” can be fierce. I’m sure there are some today who would prefer to see Shakespeare performed in an Arden-like forest setting as it was 500 hundred years ago. They forget, however, that all of the roles then were performed by men. It was English law in the era of the Divine Right of Kings. Thankfully those laws are no longer practiced or viable. But we live in uncertain and perilous times, so stay tuned.
Eric Anderson as Captain Hook and the pirate crew in "Fly"at the La Jolla Playhouse. |
When “King Kong, the Musical” debuted on Broadway in November 2018, I made a pact to review it with my Massachusetts-based theatre critic colleague Charles Giuliano, founder and editor of Berkshire Fine Arts website of which I am a contributing critic.
I was intrigued about how the producers of ‘King Kong’ were going to stage this legendary behemoth of the jungle. The on-stage ‘Kong’ was a 2000 pound, 20 foot tall character/puppet that required a crew of seven to bring him to life every night. The technical obstacles of the production were staggering; nonetheless, ‘Kong’ ran for nine months and it was jaw dropping in its execution.
My thought was to review the production from a ‘technical’ point of view on how the technical aspects enhanced the overall theatrical experience. Charles Giuliano’s thrust would cover the production from the performance assessment of the story adaptation, singers, dancers and actors. We wrote two separate reviews that appeared in our separate publications. Mine being the Desert Star Weekly in Palm Spring California as well as on desertlocalnews.com website. Mr. Giuliano’s appeared on Berkshire Fine Arts website in Massachusetts; our collaborative efforts 3000 miles apart worked beautifully.
Isabelle McCalla as Tinker Bell, Nahal Joshi as Smee and Eric Anderson as Captain Hook in "Fly" at the La Jolla Playhouse |
“Fly” is a sensationally performed musical that encompasses all of the components necessary to transfer the show to Broadway; probably they were looking at an October 2020 or February 2021 opening. The creative team boasts enough Tony-winning and Tony-nominated artists with the energy and horse-power to field a Major League Baseball team. So another La Jolla Playhouse production had its creators packing their bags for Broadway following the LJP run and, then the coronavirus pandemic engulfed the entire globe.
These are fixable issues that director Seller and his creative team of Librettist Rajiv Joseph, Composer Bill Sherman and Lyricists Kristen Childs and Rajiv Joseph, will no doubt judiciously solve before opening night, whenever that takes place. Right now, all theatre productions have been cancelled in California and New York, with more cities and states following suit weekly.
The Peter Pan-Wendy-Tinker Bell-Captain Hook story has been a children’s favorite since its debut more than 115 years ago. Multiple Tony-winning Director Jeffrey Seller is blessed with a cast of some twenty-five plus artists who dance, sing, and perform Andy Blankenbuehler and Stephanie Klemons’ flat-out sensational choreography to the hilt.
Lincoln Clauss as Peter and Storm Dever as Wendy in "Fly" at the La Jolla Playhouse |
Director Seller also has his principles performing light-comedy turns instead of the nuanced darker sides of playwright Barries’ story that previous productions have mounted. Liisi La Fontaine, in a strong performance as Crocodile, sports a creative, shimmering dress designed by Tony Award winning designer Paul Tazewell, who does the same costume magic for the ensemble dancers and the pirates. Tony Award winner Howell Binkley’s lighting design allows to us appreciate the amazing aerial designs and choreography of Pichon Baldini, whose balletic-like moves for Wendy, Peter, Tinker Bell, seem natural in their execution of “flying”. The Music supervision, arrangements and orchestrations are by Will Van Dyke, the Scenic design is by Anna Louizos, with Sound Designs by Nevin Steinberg.
Nehal Joshi as Smee and Eric Anderson as Capain Hook in "Fly" at the La Jolla Playhouse |
Remember… a great nation deserves great art. Support the Arts.
-- Jack Lyons