TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
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Several years before James Cameron proclaimed himself “king of the
world,” playwright Peter Stone (“1776”) came up with the idea of making a
musical about the world’s most infamous ocean voyage.
But by the time he brought it to the stage, it was known as “that
other Titanic.”’
Still, the Tony Award-winning stage version currently at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center is a seaworthy event, even if it doesn’t
contain any songs you’ll likely be humming on the way home or riveting
individual performances like those of Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet,
or even Billy Zane. The unsinkable Molly Brown -- deemed important enough
for her own musical by “Music Man” creator Meredith Willson -- didn’t
even book passage on this voyage.
“Titanic” the musical is a series of vignettes, offering views of the
1912 tragedy from contrasting vantage points and social classes. If
indeed there is a central figure, it is William Parry’s stern,
conscientious captain, coaxed away from retirement for the maiden voyage
at the helm of the world’s largest and finest passenger ship.
The villain, of course, is the iceberg, but an equally chilly
performance is delivered by William Youmans as J. Bruce Ismay, the
self-absorbed White Star Lines executive who goads the captain into
increasing the vessel’s speed, possibly to the point where it could not
avoid the collision.
The third member of the topside triumvirate, ship’s architect Thomas
Andrews, elicits the most empathy in an agonized performance by Thom
Sesma.
The young lovers in steerage, their romance inspired by her pregnancy,
are well played by Tom Gamblin and Stacie Morgain Lewis, and the show
might have benefited by greater emphasis on their situation.
Also quite watchable are the second-class couple -- the hardware store
owner played by David Beditz and his social-climbing wife, Christa
Justis, who fights to be in the same lifeboat with Mrs. Astor.
Matthew Stocke renders one of the ringing individual moments as
Frederick Barrett, delivering an “Old Man River”-type solo on his lot in
life as a stoker and joining telegrapher Dale Sandish on intertwining
hymns to the richer life they’ll never enjoy.
Joe Farrell exhibits understated strength as the ship’s first officer
with the credentials, but not the intestinal fortitude, to command a ship
of his own.
The elderly Macy’s owner and his wife, Isador and Ida Strauss, who
elect to meet their fate together, are charmingly enacted by S. Marc
Jordan and Kay Walbye. And Scott Burkell lends a touching light moment as
a tardy passenger who, quite fortunately, literally misses the boat.
The sinking itself may not possess the stark, terrifying drama of the
movie version (how could it short of adding real water?), but it is
projected effectively by the tilting of the stage, sending actors sliding
downward, presumably to their doom. And suggestion is all that really is
required, since the story is well known to everyone above grade-school
age.
Musically, apart from Stocke’s show stopper, the evening belongs to
the ensemble with rousing choral renditions of “Godspeed Titanic” and “In
Every Age,” a reprise of an opening solo by Sesma that becomes its
penultimate melody.
The formula Stone utilized, most successfully with “1776” --
recapturing a historical milestone with a series of personalized
incidents -- is repeated in “Titanic,” substituting tragedy for triumph.
It’s a fitting companion piece to its cinema cousin.
*
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* WHAT: “Titanic”
* WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
* WHEN: Today at 2 and 8 p.m. Last performances Sunday at 2 and 7:30
p.m.
* HOW MUCH: $28.50 to $62.50
* TICKETS: (714) 740-7878
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