‘Stars in Your Eyes’ twinkles in Huntington premiere
Tom Titus
On one hand, “Stars in Your Eyes,” now in its West Coast premiere at
the Huntington Beach Playhouse, is an attractive new musical. On the
other, it’s a throwback to the days in the 1940s when Judy Garland
and Mickey Rooney were “putting on shows.”
Though the show, written entirely (book, music and lyrics) by Chip
Meyrelles -- who was in attendance opening night -- is only a few
years old, it will thrust its audience, or at least those more
seasoned members, back to an era when cotton candy musicals were all
the rage. It’s a simple, carefully crafted romantic comedy of the
type that’s been in all-too-short supply these days, with more edgy
musical fare like “Rent” and “Miss Saigon” holding sway over
Broadway.
“Stars in Your Eyes” does take us back, but only 42 years to the
Kennedy era and America’s preoccupation with space. The show centers
on a high school science teacher and his campaign to save the town’s
observatory, all the while drifting from one romantic commitment to
another. Meyrelles’ characters would fit comfortably into the early
‘60s, when the world was a more innocent place and Dobie Gillis was
at the cutting edge of undergraduate humor.
Director Robert Rotenberry, himself a high school teacher
(Huntington Beach High School’s Academy for the Performing Arts),
imbues Meyrelles’ musical with just the slightest of 21st century
edges and musical director Bill Wolfe provides a solo piano
accompaniment that still manages to assert itself, primarily over the
dialogue segments. A little restraint in this area would render the
show more appreciable.
The science teacher, whose head remains in the clouds as critical
events unfold around him, is nicely rendered by Kurt Jarrard, who
attempts to humanize a role that has “geek” written all over it. His
determination to “get with it” by taking dance lessons before his
upcoming wedding to a snobby rich girl is particularly effective.
However, it’s not the high-society maven (Susan Scanaliato) that
the audience roots for, but the dance instructor -- a tall, lovely
blond (Kim Short) who facially resembles a young Debbie Reynolds.
Short excels as both the “right type” for the science guy and a
fierce guardian of a super-brainy student (Nicole Weber) who’s out to
become the first coed at an all-boys’ college.
Overseeing all this intellectual and emotional turmoil is the
observatory caretaker, Mr. Moon, rendered by James C. Mulligan as
sort of an “Our Town” stage manager, only applying his considerable
vocal talent in the process. The role must be a breeze for Mulligan,
who in his last incarnation at the former Trilogy Playhouse would
design and build the sets as well as play a major role in the show.
Robert Purcell handles much of the comedy as a retiring school
principal with a passion for gardening -- which his love interest, a
vegetable-hating dance studio owner (Karen Merrill), is out to
divest. Merrill also functions as the “voice of reason” in the
on-again, off-again romance between Jarrard and Short.
Scanaliato, though stuck in a stereotypical role, sharply nails
the stuffy fiancee who’s better suited for fellow idle rich guy, Ryan
McCarthy. Together, they offer an amusing spoof of the privileged
class enjoying its privileges, as Jimmy Stewart once observed an eon
ago in “The Philadelphia Story.”
Webber gives her brainy student a good, hard attitude, but the
problems with her character are beyond Webber’s control. Her subplot
simply wasn’t introduced soon enough in the story, and thus comes off
as more of an addendum or an afterthought.
Backing up the principals are five young ensemble members who
function both as students and (in one rather bizarre case) college
interrogators. These talented supernumeraries are Courtney Gates,
Dani Kerry, Rich Moss, Nathan Singh and Neil Starkenberg, whose
primary task is presenting choreographer Jimmy Hippensteil’s catchy
dance moves.
“Stars in Your Eyes” is something of a dichotomy, an old-fashioned
musical written in the 21st century. The Huntington Beach Playhouse’s
pleasantly un-edgy production demonstrates that there’s still room
for a little warmth and fuzziness in musical theater.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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