Disappointed? Yes, Siam
Written by Mike Schulz
When you visit the Clinton Area Showboat Theatre, you know you won't get much in
the way of spectacle - the intimate stage space is charming, but limited - so,
instead, you look for inventiveness, especially when the production in question
generally thrives on spectacle.
Last season, CAST's Beauty & the Beast made up for a lack of large-scale
production design through witty staging and even wittier performances, and The
Sound of Music - a show that has become its own kind of spectacle - felt nearly
revelatory, as if every aspect of this warhorse musical was re-imagined for its
space and ensemble.
Subsequently, I was overjoyed to be returning to the theatre for its 2006 season
opener, The King & I, even though it's a show that I - and probably many of you
- feel I've already seen a few times too many. If any organization could put
original life into this theatrical staple (even without the requisite Rodgers &
Hammerstein grandiosity), it would be the Showboat. And the production itself is
perfectly acceptable.
What it isn't, though, is inventive. CAST's King & I, helmed by the theatre's
artistic director, Jay Berkow, is pleasant, and it showcases some lovely voices.
Yet its moments of true inspiration are relegated to the cosmetics - Erica Eng's
costumes (particularly the spooky-funny masks worn in the show's "Small House of
Uncle Thomas" ballet) have an original vibrancy that's mostly missing from this
King & I. The show feels reverent and dutiful, and might be just what King & I
fans want from it. (Clearly, the devoted are imposing on the production happy
memories of their own, as evidenced by Friday's audience, who began applauding
the familiar "Shall We Dance" pas de deux practically before it started.) But
the show, for all its professionalism, isn't alive - it feels like a copy of a
copy.
There is one element of the production that's unexpected, but I'm not sure it's
a good sort of unexpected. Benjamin Cole, portraying the King with curt
authority, appears to be a focused performer, and his quick line deliveries
yield some laughs, as when Anna (Nicole Horton) describes the King's barbaric
reputation as a lie and he spits out, "Is false lie." But Cole's decision to
play him as a scowling, barking despot only works if the King eventually
changes; at some point, we need to see another side to the man who inspires Lady
Thiang (Thea Engelson) to sing "Something Wonderful." (For her part, Engelson
sings the role beautifully.) While a definite deviation from the norm, Cole's
one-note Fu Manchu impersonation grows tiresome, and it's hard to fathom what
about him eventually melts Anna's steely disposition.
Thankfully, Nicole Horton does a fine job of acting charmed. She's also in
terrific voice - never better than when performing the comedic pique of "Shall I
Tell You What I Think of You?" - and carries off her dramatic moments
impressively, and better yet, she's not alone; Maggie Mountsier and Paul Luoma
are terrifically sweet as the ingénues, and Jeffrey Fauver, Colin Douglas, and
Jami Fry (a fine dancer) are all welcome presences.
But for its considerable strengths, The King & I, in general, doesn't allow its
supporting performers much individuality - they're all forced into playing
varying degrees of repression - and oddly enough, the most joyful performances
in CAST's The King & I came from the little kids on the stage; they seemed
blithely unaware of the show's imposing notoriety, and just had a blast up
there. I wish the adults involved with the show had done the same.