Academy performers excel in ‘Evita’
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TOM TITUS
The Academy of Performing Arts at Huntington Beach High School has
demonstrated some formidable talent in the past, but the program has
outdone itself with its outstanding production of “Evita.”
This backhanded tribute to Argentina’s first lady of the late
1940s and early ‘50s, Eva Peron, by the celebrated duo of Tim Rice
and Andrew Lloyd Webber is not the easiest of musicals to produce,
but director Tim Nelson and his company have mounted a production
that soars to professional-quality excellence.
Blessed with a particularly proficient graduating class this year,
Nelson has taken six of his seniors and given them a running start
toward the big time with one of the musical theater’s most
challenging projects. The response is often electrifying.
You don’t produce a show like “Evita” without an enormously gifted
candidate for the title role, and in Nicole Gerardi, the Academy has
a talent to rival Patti LuPone, Madonna and any other actress who’s
ever taken on this larger-than-life character. Gerardi blends a
magnificent singing voice with a prodigious dramatic talent to create
a full-blooded characterization of this determined woman who slept
her way to the top of Argentina’s political ladder, only to succumb
to cancer at the age of 33.
What do you do when you have a killer male leading role and two
actors -- twin brothers -- both qualified to interpret it? If you’re
Tim Nelson, you cast them both, and this “Evita” has two Ches -- Alex
and Matthew Bartosch, alternating at first, then both performing at
once as Eva’s sarcastic antagonist. This works particularly well in
the Eva-Che “waltz” in the second act when Gerardi is penned in
between both adversaries, lashing out at each in turn.
A.J. Gutierrez excels in the role of Juan Peron, a brutal military
leader who becomes more sensitive and introspective once he’s
achieved power. His aching concern for his increasingly ill wife late
in the show is especially well portrayed.
Courtney Davis has just one scene, as Peron’s mistress and Eva’s
immediate predecessor, but she makes the most of it with her poignant
solo, “Another Suitcase in Another Hall.” Josh Allton impresses as
Eva’s first benefactor, a rather cheesy nightclub singer, while Lana
Brewster and Evan Strand shine wordlessly as a tango-dancing couple
injecting atmosphere into the production.
“Evita” is backed by some hugely talented ensemble work,
splendidly choreographed by Diane Makas-Weber, particularly in the
segments involving the military dancers in intricate movements. These
performers are abetted by a contingent of pit singers richly
conveying the Rice-Webber score.
The Academy orchestra, under the baton of Gregg Gilboe, is
constantly engaged, underscoring the historical drama with a vibrant
melodic presence. When all elements of the show are working in unison
-- as in the superlative closing number of the first act, “A New
Argentina” -- this school auditorium could well be a Broadway
theater.
The entire Academy for the Performing Arts organization can take
pride in its “Evita,” one of the most thoroughly realized works of
musical theater you’ll see all year. And keep watching for the name
Nicole Gerardi in the future. This young lady is going places.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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