‘Little Women’ stirs nostalgia at arts center
- Share via
The Orange County Performing Arts Center has, in recent years,
brought its patrons to the cutting edge of musical theater with shows
such as “Rent” and “Urinetown.” The current offering qualifies as
something completely different, a genuine blast to the past.
“Little Women” is about as far from the 21st century as you can
get without Marty McFly’s time machine. This stage version of the
classic Louisa May Alcott novel exudes familial warmth and proper
decorum, yet many of its themes remain constant and universal.
This story of four Massachusetts sisters during and just after the
Civil War, cared for by their loving mother whose (never seen)
husband is serving in the Union forces, will need little introduction
to many people who grew up with the ambitious and headstrong Jo, the
eldest Meg, the frail and dutiful Beth and the bratty youngest
sibling Amy.
This musical production, deftly directed by Susan H. Schulman,
comes direct from Broadway on its national tour and is headed by
Maureen McGovern, probably best known for her rendition of the
Oscar-winning song “The Morning After” from “The Towering Inferno.”
As Marmee, the maternal center of the girls’ lives, McGovern reflects
a contagious charm along with her superb vocal stylings.
While McGovern receives top billing, the show belongs, part and
parcel, to Kate Fisher’s incendiary Jo, who stirs the other sisters
into action and pens purple prose that would have been considered
florid and overripe even in the mid-19th century. Fisher -- who bears
a strong resemblance to Winona Ryder, Jo in the 1994 movie version of
the book -- is a force of nature on stage, with an exceptionally
strong singing voice to augment her performing skills.
Renee Brna charms as Meg, the eldest and more conventional sister.
Autumn Hurlbert is captivating as the fragile Beth. Gwen Hollander
virtually steals the show as the incorrigible junior member of the
foursome, Amy, whose life change is the most pronounced of the four.
The girls’ fearsome, crotchety aunt is taken to the edge -- and
occasionally pushed over it -- by Louisa Flaningam. Michael Minarik
is fine as Meg’s suitor, while Stephen Patterson is quite engaging as
the neighbor boy whom the girls accept as an honorary brother.
Tops among the supporting players is Robert Stattel as Patterson’s
grandfather, a powerful figure whose demeanor melts at the sound of
Beth’s soothing piano music. Andrew Varela completes the cast as a
shy professor of German who finally gathers the courage to court Jo
in a scene resembling two magnets approaching one another.
Musically, the score by Jason Howland and Mindi Dickstein nicely
augments the story without dominating it. Particularly impressive are
Fisher’s solos “Astonishing” and “The Fire Within Me,” along with
McGovern’s strong rendering of “Days of Plenty.”
“Little Women” is unabashedly old-fashioned and often deliberately
leisurely in its novelistic depiction of a highly familiar family.
Yet its characters come across with more structure and heart than
many of today’s more upbeat creations.
And next time around, Kate Fisher will be the headliner.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.