Cast weaves show together
Tom Titus
Just because “Quilters” has paused its covered wagon at most of the
community theaters and colleges in the area doesn’t mean that the
musical focusing on pioneer women of the 19th century can’t be done a
little differently.
At the Huntington Beach Playhouse, where the show will be in
residence in an expanded engagement through Aug. 17, director Marla
Gam-Hudson has virtually doubled the cast, adding a six-girl “young
daughters ensemble” to the seven-woman company. These ubiquitous
young ladies back up the principals in the ensemble numbers and
function as cows, horses -- whatever is required.
The result is a richer, more enjoyable version of the Molly
Newman-Barbara Damashek musical than any in recent memory. In a few
of the scenes -- the windmill number and the horrific fire sequence,
for example -- the presence of additional players adds layers to the
production.
The all-female show depicts the often-unbearable hardships of
pioneer life, especially on the women, who were expected to produce
and raise children while taking on their share of the physical toil
-- and create quilts for posterity in their spare time. This latter
task they tackle with enthusiastic glee. The only “men” in the
production are those impersonated on occasion by one or another of
the actresses.
The Huntington Beach version benefits from Andrew Otero’s
utilitarian setting and a three-piece orchestra under the direction
of Crystal Barron, which provides musical accompaniment and
background noises crucial to the stories. Michael Lopez’s
choreography is graphically effective, carrying out the hardscrabble
mood of the show, but with an occasional nod to the heart.
The cast is a beautifully drilled ensemble, but even in such a
well-ordered unit, there are bound to be standouts. At Huntington
Beach, the superlatives must be reserved for Tree Hanson, who creates
an awesome collection of characters both comic and dramatic with the
unbridled aplomb of a young Carol Burnett. Hanson’s rubbery facial
features elicit howls (as a bratty teenager) and heartache (as an
elderly spinster reflecting on her lost love) among many others,
including a swaggering cowboy.
Jasmine Curry tears at the heartstrings as a demented unwed
mother, among her well-executed oeuvre, which also includes a
hilarious put-down of the “Sunbonnet Sue” quilting pattern. Maureen
Lawrence plays blooming youth and advanced age with equal dexterity
while Dyan Hobday-Brant graces the show with flirtatious charm.
Tiffany Berg enacts a rebel tomboy daughter with slightly
restrained glee and Samantha Bullat is button-cute, but needs work on
her diction. As the matriarch of the clan, Grace Lynne is somewhat
uneven in her early delivery, though she fleshes out a memorable
character as the show progresses.
The Young Daughters Ensemble, an inspired addition, is composed of
Melissa Nicole Ames, Kimberly Bower, Manika Garg, Jordan Leanne
Green, Jordan Snyder, Tori Vollmer and Kimberly Wong. These splendid
supernumeraries enrich the show without uttering a word, weaving a
memorable tableau just as their elders stitch their memory quilts.
Musicians Scott Kelly (piano), Damjan Rakonjac (guitar and
percussion) and Stacy May (violin/viola) back the show with inspired
audio accompaniment. The show is less a musical than a historical
perspective with music, which often takes the form of sound effects.
You’ve probably viewed “Quilters” on more than one occasion
locally, but the imaginative Huntington Beach Playhouse production
stands a cut above the others and is well worth another look.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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