Theater Review -- Tom Titus
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Of all the musicals in the Rodgers and Hammerstein collection, the one
that must be considered their magnum opus is their third collaboration,
“South Pacific.” This is a show that offers the potential for
near-perfection in all its major elements -- music, drama and scenic
design.
It’s the latter quality that first captures the viewer in the glorious
revival now on stage at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. Derek
McLane’s series of tropical backdrops are stunning in their
three-dimensional beauty, challenging the company to match this level in
the other two categories.
This challenge is wholeheartedly accepted by director Scott Faris’
touring company, which revels in the best of all the Rodgers and
Hammerstein scores and delivers the message first essayed by author James
Michener with brute force and resounding conviction.
The issues of racial and ethnic prejudice -- elements decidedly
present in the America of the 1940s -- were tackled in the original 1949
production. They are powerful overriding forces in the current
incarnation.
The last time Center audiences saw Robert Goulet in a production
(rather than a concert), he was losing his quest for the impossible dream
in “Man of La Mancha,” a show demanding more physical energy than he
possessed. This time around, the aging Frenchman is more at home in the
role of an aging Frenchman, Emile de Becque, neutralizing the tenuousness
of his movements and superfluous hand gestures with a still-magnificent
voice that captures the audience when he booms out “Some Enchanted
Evening.”
The real star of the evening, however, is Amanda Watkins as the
much-younger, naive Navy nurse Nellie Forbush, who tumbles for the older
Emile, then is repelled by his past life with a Polynesian wife. This is
due to her Little Rock, Ark., upbringing, and Watkins is thoroughly
convincing as a hick, charming in her approach to the role and
beautifully executing the show’s now-classic vocal numbers.
Lewis Cleale delivers an excellent interpretation of Lt. Joe Cable,
the Marine Corps lieutenant who suffers the same prejudicial maladies as
Nellie, falling in love with an island girl (a radiant Kisha Howard) only
to spurn her because they just wouldn’t understand back in Philadelphia.
Cleale’s bitter rendition of “You’ve Got to Be Taught” firmly underscores
the show’s emotional theme.
The role of Seabee schemer Luther Billis can be splendid comic relief,
but David Warshofsky never really achieves that level, though he’s strong
and sassy on the surface. Gretha Boston is a marvelous Bloody Mary,
firing off the barbs of native humor with the same velocity she injects
into her “Bali Hai” solo.
Solid performances from John Wilkerson and James Judy as the island
commander and his executive officer lend further credence to the show,
and the chorus of Seabees who mourn that “There is Nothing Like a Dame”
couldn’t be better. Nellie’s nursing corps buddies supporting her on her
“Wonderful Guy”number are equally captivating, while Shelby Rebecca Wong
and Jeff Yalun are charming as Emile’s young children.
Audiences may note that Goulet has been given some extra lyrics for
his “This Nearly Was Mine” lament in the second act, but few will
complain, since his is one of the finest voices in the theater. The
show’s final scene, usually overly artsy in its execution, has been
strengthened just a bit by the physical elements of the lovers’ reunion.
“South Pacific” remains one of the true classics of the musical
theater, and the robust production at The Center is among the finest seen
in this part of the world. You’ll truly enjoy an enchanted evening.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “South Pacific”
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: 2 and 8 p.m. today, and 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. The 2 p.m.
performance today will be sign-language interpreted.
COST: $27.50-$62.50
CONTACT: (714) 556-2787 or www.ocpac.org
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