When ‘Follies’ is enough entertainment
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JOSEPH N. BELL
I got re-connected with Stephen Sondheim last Friday at UC Irvine’s
Irvine Barclay Theater by a group of remarkably vital old pros who
know Sondheim and his work close-up and not from a generational
distance.
The vehicle was “Follies” -- which contains some of Sondheim’s
most pungent and poignant lyrics -- and the primary driving force in
bringing it to us as a fully produced show was its director, Teri
Ralston, who called on some of her show-biz pals to reprise their
work in Broadway musicals on the Barclay stage. All this was aided
and abetted by a passel of talented students from the newly minted
California Conservatory of the Arts in San Juan Capistrano.
I had multiple reasons for not missing this show. First off, I’ve
been suffering from Sondheim withdrawal for well over 10 years --
since his last two produced musicals, “Passion” and “Assassins,”
which left me with a feeling of guilt for longing for the good old
days of “Company” and “A Little Night Music.” Then, too, because I
saw the original production of “Follies” in New York more than 30
years ago and have been wanting to see it again ever since. And,
finally, because the 87-year-old John Raitt -- who lives among us
here -- was cast as the Florenz Ziegfeld character, and I go back
with him all the way to his leading role in the first national
company of “Oklahoma.”
So I was prepared to enjoy uncritically -- and did. “I’m Still
Here” was just as defiant, “Too Many Mornings” and “Losing My Mind”
just as wistful, and “Will I Leave You” just as angry as I
remembered. The only disappointment was the absence of John Raitt,
who had appeared on opening night but disappeared Friday. I still
have my “Oklahoma” playbill from the Erlanger Theater in Chicago in
1944 with a youthful John Raitt on the cover, and I still hope I
might be able to show it to him.
I have long been fascinated with the lyricists who were the poet
laureates of my generation. I’ve been privileged to meet and write
about several of them -- Oscar Hammerstein, Alan Jay Lerner, Sheldon
Harnick -- but I’ve never interviewed Sondheim and have seen him only
once, when he was working and re-working “Into the Woods” in San
Diego in 1987. While my wife and I were watching it there, we were
also acutely aware of Sondheim pacing the rear of the house taking
notes, especially during the second act, which still needed work when
we saw the show again in New York several months later.
Things have not been going as well for Sondheim since the success
of “Into the Woods.” “Assassins” didn’t make it to Broadway the first
time around, and the run of “Passion” was short by Sondheim
standards.
Meanwhile, Sondheim has spent much of the intervening decade
trying to launch a musical based on the lives of Wilson and Addison
Mizner called -- successively -- “Wise Guys,” “Gold” and “Bounce.” In
its latest reincarnation, it played in Chicago and Washington, D.C.
to reviews negative enough to kill its planned trip to Broadway. So
the only certain Broadway entry Sondheim currently has going is a
revival of “Assassins,” which is scheduled to open in New York next
month.
This decline of Sondheim’s commercial fortunes offers a dramatic
example of the need of highly creative people -- in Sondheim’s case,
genius -- to constantly reach for new challenges beyond whatever
success they may be enjoying. Sondheim caught that in one of his song
titles: “I Never Do Anything Twice.”
Sondheim’s creative explorations have mostly been commercially
successful, even though they universally led rather than followed his
audience. “Merrily We Roll Along” was the only real flop; it broke
too many rules too soon, but was later resurrected to acclaim.
“Sweeney Todd” was an opera with a rational -- if bizarre -- plot
line and singable music. “Sunday in the Park with George” was an
esoteric look at the world of art and the people who make and sell
it. Each time, we had to stretch, but we continued to puff along
behind him.
But then came “Assassins,” an ironic and dark depiction of the
people who killed -- or tried to kill -- our presidents, followed by
an agonizing look at the power of passion in an unattractive woman to
seduce an unlikely lover. These two have been playing out on
television and college campuses while Sondheim aficionados like me
try to warm up to them.
Meanwhile, Sondheim -- soon to be 74 years old -- is reportedly
looking back to the roots of his early shows as he struggles to come
to creative grips with the Mizner brothers.
I’m not sure of the lesson here -- and whether it has anything to
do with the aging process. Clearly, the creative juices don’t dry up.
They push and prod until they are recognized and exercised. But
should that energy be expended on tilting at new windmills or
examining old ones from the new perspective of age?
Of one thing I am sure. My generation owes an enormous debt to
Sondheim. We grew up on the music of the Broadway theater, a uniquely
American product offered up by the likes of Irving Berlin, Cole
Porter, the Gershwins, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Jerome Kern, Johnny
Mercer, Harold Arlen and so many others. Sondheim joined that club
late, and as his older associates began to die off, Sondheim remained
and finally stood almost alone in preserving the Broadway musical and
providing a bridge for a group of new young composers to cross to his
side.
And while we’re at it, we can thank the people who devoted so much
time and energy to staging “Follies” in our backyard last week.
It was the beginning of a mixed cultural weekend for me. It
continued at Disney Hall, where the Los Angeles Philharmonic
delivered Berlioz’s “Symphonie fantastique” to wild -- and
well-deserved -- acclaim, and ended quickly and decisively with the
Super Bowl half-time show, which I turned off as quickly as possible
after I checked out the balloon screen my friend and neighbor, Treb
Heining, had created. So I missed the Janet Jackson episode, but I
heard and saw enough to hope devoutly that the people who brought us
“Follies” can preserve that heritage against the noise and chaos and
bad taste that would replace it.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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