NEW YORK, NY.- When the homophobic, God-fearing, Tyler Perry-loving mother of Usher, protagonist of remarkable musical A Strange Loop, describes her sons art, she uses the word radical. She doesnt mean it as a compliment.
But A Strange Loop, Michael R. Jacksons Pulitzer Prize-winning meta musical about a Black queer mans self-perception in relation to his art, is radical. And I definitely mean that as a compliment.
This musical, a production of Page 73, Playwrights Horizons and Woolly Mammoth Theater Company, forgoes the commercial niceties and digestible narratives of many Broadway shows, delivering a story thats searing and softhearted, uproarious and disquieting.
A Strange Loop, which opened Tuesday night, isnt just the musical I saw in the packed Lyceum Theater a few evenings ago; its also the musical Usher (Jaquel Spivey), a 25-year-old usher at the Broadway production of The Lion King, is writing right in front of us.
Hes facing a few hurdles, namely his intrusive thoughts, embodied by the same six actors who originated the roles in the 2019 off-Broadway premiere: L Morgan Lee, James Jackson Jr., John-Michael Lyles, John-Andrew Morrison, Jason Veasey and Antwayn Hopper. They give voice to his anxieties of being a plus-size Black queer man, his alcoholic fathers constant denigration and his mothers pleas to stop running up there in the homosexshalities and produce a wholesome gospel play instead.
Through scenes that move between Ushers interactions with the outside world, like a phone conversation with his mother or a hookup, and a constant congress with his most devastating notions of himself, A Strange Loop pulls off an amazing feat: condensing a complex idea, full of paradoxes and abstractions, into the form of a Broadway musical.
Jacksons script for what Usher calls a big, Black and queer-ass American Broadway show and Stephen Bracketts lively direction both cleverly find comedy, critique and pathos in contradictions. A Strange Loop shrewdly negates itself at every turn: Usher may resent the shallow pageantry of commercial theater, poking fun at such tourist bait as The Lion King, but he also steals the names of Disneys favorite wildcats for his family, calling his father Mustafa and his mother Sarabi. (Its satisfying to note that A Strange Loop is playing just down the street from the Minskoff Theater, which has housed the Broadway goliath since 2006.)
Theres something almost naughty about the shows subversions. Im sorry, but you cant say N-word in a musical, says one of Ushers thoughts, imagined as the chair of the Second Coming of Sondheim Award. But the 100-minute show is comfortably potty-mouthed, containing repeat utterances of that very N-word, as in the catchy yet malevolent chorus to Tyler Perry Writes Real Life.
The paradox at the center of it all, of course, is Usher himself, whose brazen theatricality and caustic wit lies beneath his meek exterior. Though a newcomer this is not only his Broadway debut but also his first professional gig after graduating from college in May Spivey gives an earnest, lived-in performance. He shrinks away, tucks his chin, rounds his back into the concave silhouette of a turtle shell and gives bashful sideways glances so tender they could melt an ice cream cone in winter.
But theres also a thorny underside to Spiveys Usher; he spits out phrases, pops his hip and snaps his head in a scathing display of Black stereotypes. His most searing jokes leave a satisfyingly sour aftertaste, like the bitters at the bottom of an unmixed drink. When a cute guy on the train asks him, Did you see Hamilton? Usher responds with an offhand sneer, Im poor.
Ushers thoughts are vibrant foils, each confidently strutting the stage in Montana Levi Blancos wide-ranging costume designs (coordinated ensembles in neutral colors, neon and glitter-speckled accessories, fishnets and latex fetish gear) and twerking and thrusting in Raja Feather Kellys uninhibited choreography.
A whirligig of worries, memories and concerns, Ushers thoughts spin daily in his head. Jackson nails his comic beats in a piquant performance, full of withering looks and haughty snickers, while Veasey is suitably horrifying when he embodies Ushers father, drunkenly questioning his son about his sexuality.
Hopper, who most recently appeared as the monstrous pimp in the New York City Centers production of The Life and has a bass voice with the richness of hot honey, is downright viperous in the musicals most harrowing scene, set ironically to an upbeat country rhythm. Its is one of the best examples of the scores incongruous approach.
Exile in Gayville, in which Usher hesitantly logs into a flurry of dating apps only to be flooded with rejections, is buoyant pop-rock. And when Usher encounters a slew of disapproving Black ancestors like James Baldwin and Harriet Tubman, the song (Tyler Perry Writes Real Life) is a slow, steady creep. The whimsical woodwinds and skippy beat of Second Wave undercut its lyrics about loneliness and, well, ejaculation.
In one instance, however, the production strikes a simple note. In one scene, Lee portrays a Wicked-loving tourist who gives Usher a pep talk, urging him to tell his truth in a sincere, optimistic song that recalls that shows Defying Gravity. Given the calculated sharpness of the rest of the musical, especially regarding the commercialism of Broadway, such a carpe diem song feels out of place. The balance is sometimes off in other respects too: On the night I attended, the cast was ever so slightly off-tempo, and some lyrics were muffled by the bombast of the orchestra.
Arnulfo Maldonados set design aptly captures the many entryways A Strange Loop opens into its protagonists and playwrights mind. Throughout most of the show Usher stands before a simple brick backdrop with six doorways through which his thoughts pass in and out. That is, until the stage transforms speedily into a grim spectacle of neon lights and exaggerated embellishments, reflecting everything Usher refuses to produce in his own art. The lighting (design by Jen Schriever) which frames the stage in concentric rectangles is a nod toward the shows nested conceit, and the gradual fade-outs and the blitz of radiant hues complement the sections.
The tricky task I face as a critic is figuring out how to write about a work whose brilliance has already been noted. The New York Times named the show a critics pick in 2019, and I wrote briefly about the shows Broadway tryout in Washington this fall. Its already won the Pulitzer.
And yet, it seems as if there is no measure of praise that could be too much; after all, this is a show that allows a Black gay man to be vulnerable onstage without dismissing or fetishizing his trauma, desires and creative ambitions. Now thats some radical theater.
Production Notes:
'A Strange Loop'
Tickets At the Lyceum Theater, Manhattan; strangeloopmusical.com. Running time: 1 hour 45 minutes.
Credits: Book, music and lyrics by Michael R. Jackson; directed by Stephen Brackett; choreographed by Raja Feather Kelly; sets by Arnulfo Maldonado; costumes by Montana Levi Blanco; lighting by Jen Schriever; sound by Drew Levy; hair, wigs and makeup by Cookie Jordan; vocal arrangements by Michael R. Jackson; orchestrations by Charlie Rosen; music coordinator, Tomoko Akaboshi; intimacy director, Chelsea Pace; associate director, Nemuna Ceesay; associate choreographer, Candance Taylor; production stage manager, Erin Gioia Albrecht; music supervisor, Rona Siddiqui. Presented by the Shubert Organization (Robert E. Wankel, chairman and chief executive; Elliot Greene, chief operating officer; Charles Flateman, executive vice president), Barbara Whitman, Pasek, Paul & Stafford, Hunter Arnold, Marcia Goldberg, Alex Levy and James Achilles, Osh Ashruf, A Choir Full Productions, Don Cheadle and Bridgid Coulter Cheadle, Paul Oakley Stovall, Jimmy Wilson, Annapurna Theater, Robyn Coles, Creative Partners Productions, Robyn Gottesdiener, Kayla Greenspan, Grove Entertainment, Kuhn, Lewis and Scott, Frank Marshall, Maximum Effort Productions Inc., Joey Monda, Richard Mumby, Phenomenal Media and Meena Harris, Marc Platt and Debra Martin Chase, Laurie Tisch, Yonge Street Theatricals, Dodge Hall Productions/JJ Maley, Cody Renard Richard, John Gore Organization, James L. Nederlander, RuPaul Charles, Alan Cumming, Ilana Glazer, Jennifer Hudson, Mindy Kaling and Billy Porter.
Cast: Jaquel Spivey, Antwayn Hopper, James Jackson Jr., L Morgan Lee, John-Michael Lyles, John-Andrew Morrison and Jason Veasey.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.