THEATER REVIEW
Tom Titus
Don’t look now, but the 1940s are back -- at least here in Costa Mesa
where “The 1940s Radio Hour” is pushing nostalgia buttons at the Civic
Playhouse and the touring production of “Swing!” is kicking up its heels
with a vengeance at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Both shows are inspired by music from the World War II era (in fact,
“Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy” is featured in each), but “Swing!” puts its
emphasis more on the dances of the period. And its youthful, high-voltage
performers do things with their bodies that would leave most of us aching
and limping for weeks.
It’s a kick to watch, especially when the company breaks into creative
mode and offers a specialty number such as “Harlem Nocturne” (with
Michelle Marmolejo seducing a bass violin played by Greg Fiellin) in the
first act or -- in particular -- when the sultry Erin Davie undulates to
the sensuous trombone of Marshall Gilkes in the second, making audiences
forget Julie London as she belts out “Cry Me a River” like you’ve never
heard it before.
Jazz classics such as “It Don’t Mean a Thing,” “Blues in the Night”
and “Stompin’ at the Savoy” set the stage for some inventive movement
under the direction of Lori Steinberg and choreographer Kim Craven,
recreating the original Broadway dances of Lynne Taylor-Corbett. But the
best musical number -- “Sing, Sing, Sing” -- is justly saved for the
finale and features the entire company generating its special brand of
electricity.
Premier vocalist Clarolyn Maier showcases her talent on such numbers
as “I Won’t Dance,” “Blues in the Night” and the haunting “I’ll Be Seeing
You,” which highlights the first act. In the most original sequence, she
teams with industrious comic Charles Statham on Duke Ellington’s
“Blip-Blip,” in which the singers communicate entirely with sound
effects.
Rick Cornette serves as a sort of emcee, opening the show by strumming
a solo mandolin before the superlative band lead by Doug Oberhamer kicks
into high gear. This energetic combo spotlights a number of soloists and
combines for a particularly enjoyable rendition of Ellington’s “Caravan”
early in the second act.
The Glenn Miller sound enriches the first act when the show turns into
a USO spectacle and rocks out to “String of Pearls,” “Kalamazoo” and “In
the Mood.” The elegantly impressive Davie solos wonderfully on “Skylark.”
Director Steinberg keeps the surprises coming -- there’s even a
country-western segment and a pair of ladies on flying trapezes, which
more resemble dual bungee cords -- so there’s no danger of nodding off to
the “old” tunes of the 40s. As its title suggests, the main element this
show possesses is energy.
“Swing!” is the sort of show that makes you yearn for the youth and
vitality these splendid dancers exhibit, not to mention (if you’re old
enough) to recall a more tuneful, less complicated time in America’s
past. It’s nostalgia at its best and brightest.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
What: “Swing!”
Where: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
When: Closing performances at 2 and 8 p.m. today and 2 and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday
Cost: $20-$55
Call: (714) 556-2746
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