Review: '1776,' When all men, and only men, were created equal

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, May 18, 2024


Review: '1776,' When all men, and only men, were created equal
Carolee Carmello, center, as the Pennsylvania holdout John Dickinson in “1776,” in which the performers identify as female, transgender and nonbinary, at the American Airlines Theater in New York, Sept. 15, 2022. The Broadway revival of the musical about the Declaration of Independence underlines the gender imbalance among the Founding Fathers, and everything else, writes Jesse Green, the chief theater critic for The New York Times. Sara Krulwich/The New York Times.

by Jesse Green



NEW YORK, NY.- A transformation that is either wondrous or scandalous, depending on your taste, occurs less than a minute into the Roundabout Theater Company’s otherwise disappointing Broadway revival of “1776.”

Barely a line has been uttered or a note sung when the performers, who identify as female, transgender and nonbinary, and are wearing more-or-less contemporary streetwear, hike up their black tights and white socks to simulate breeches, don buckle shoes in place of clunky boots, step into frock coats of various colonial cuts and become (thanks to Emilio Sosa’s outstanding costume design) our Founding Fathers. That includes Elizabeth A. Davis, who makes a very visibly pregnant Thomas Jefferson.

Although some will see the casting — which is diverse not just in gender but in race and ethnicity — as a stunt and a travesty, I’m in the wondrous camp. Neither the 1969 musical nor (as “Hamilton” has proved) history itself is so frail as to crumple under new ways of looking at our theatrical and national past. Anyway, if you prefer, you can simply ignore the fact that these fathers aren’t men, and focus — or try to — on the plot, which encompasses nothing less than the months of negotiations and maneuverings that led, just barely, to the Declaration of Independence.

But if you are willing to allow yourself a double vision, as directors Jeffrey L. Page and Diane Paulus clearly hope, you can take independence a step further. The white maleness of the characters becomes a semi-translucent screen through which we see the many other people, including people like the cast, whom the Declaration never even considered.

For me, that double vision is the best thing about the production, which opened Thursday at the American Airlines Theater. In theory, it deepens the ideas being batted about in the hot, fetid, fly-infested Philadelphia summer. So the “obnoxious and disliked” John Adams, as played by Crystal Lucas-Perry, who is Black, is not just an abolitionist on principle but in essence. And when Sara Porkalob, as the pro-slavery Edward Rutledge, dissects Adams’ hypocrisy in the song “Molasses to Rum” — showing how the North benefits from the slave trade as well as the South — the fact that she is Filipino American both intensifies and complicates the argument.

If that sort of complication were itself great theater and not just a promising premise, this “1776” might be amazing. That the production is instead so overpumped and overplayed as to be hardly comprehensible is the result of a fundamental misunderstanding of the musical, which is plenty complicated as written — if not so much in its few and often trite songs, by Sherman Edwards, then at least in Peter Stone’s book, a masterpiece of condensation without diminishment.

At first dismissed as bicentennial-era pageantry, “1776” has survived all the ensuing upheavals of American history precisely because it is, within the confines of the genre, remarkably sophisticated about the forces at play in forging a nation from colonies harboring antithetical philosophies — and in forging a musical from similarly unlikely and conflicting raw materials. An Encores! production in 2016, which featured a racially diverse cast but the usual gender assignments, showed it could be modern and yet thoughtful and moving.

But the current revival seems interested in the cast’s experience at the expense of the audience’s. I can understand that impulse, especially when creating space on a major stage for actors who rarely get it.

Still, the best interpretations are those that, regardless of the performer’s professional history, find feeling in the specific actions of the text rather than in their personal feelings of exclusion from it. Broadway veteran Carolee Carmello thus creates the character of the Pennsylvania holdout John Dickinson mostly by holding back on the outrage and offering smiles and politesse in its place. And as Abigail Adams, Broadway newcomer Allyson Kaye Daniel is gently firm and dryly touching, achieving a lovely, modest balance in those contradictions.




More often, though, the performances are so vastly histrionic and unchecked by the social situation (this is Congress, after all) that they seem inside-out. Adams jumps on tables to make points. Patrena Murray so emphasizes Benjamin Franklin’s winky sententiousness that he seems like a joke, not a brilliant tactician. Eryn LeCroy makes of “He Plays the Violin” — a dainty minuet in which Martha Jefferson sings of her love for Thomas — a full-on psychodrama.

It does not help that the new arrangements and orchestrations, aiming to refresh the songs’ profiles in the way the casting is meant to refresh the story, merely make them muddy — and make many of the lyrics unintelligible.

If that’s not always a great loss, it certainly detracts from the show’s most powerful number, “Momma, Look Sharp.” A simple minor-key air sung from the point of view of a dead young soldier, it is performed here (by Salome B. Smith) as a belty anthem, complete with a moaning and heaving ensemble and a figure apparently representing Momma. (She’s looking! She’s crying!) When performers mime the emotions we should be having, the storytelling contract has been broken.

Nor do Page (who is also the show’s choreographer) and Paulus (who has directed Broadway revivals of “Pippin” and “Porgy and Bess”) show much interest in the show’s humor. As some of it is ribald and sexist — probably accurately so — they prefer to defuse it by winking as if to say: Don’t worry, we don’t mean any harm. What a wasted opportunity! In dealing with such material, a nonmale cast might mean harm in the best way, forcing us to think about the character of men in their time and ours, and providing the kind of added value a regendered revival seemed to promise.

Instead, we get subtracted value. I don’t mean for the cast, who deserve the opportunity, or even for the theater as an industry and an ecosystem. As historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar said in a New York Times roundtable discussion about putting history onstage, there is merit in “moving people into the center of narratives who have never been there for the public to see.” I agree. And if those narratives sometimes fail, well, so do most others; we might as well be open to everything.

But underlining one’s progressiveness a thousand times, as this “1776” does, will not actually convey it better; rather, it turns characters into cutouts and distracts from the ideas it means to promote. The musical even shows us that. It’s only when Adams stops yelling and starts plotting that he begins to turn the tide toward ratification. Just so, theater makers should have enough faith in the principles of equity and diversity to let them speak for themselves. Are they not, as someone once put it, self-evident?



‘1776’

Through Jan. 8 at the American Airlines Theater, Manhattan; roundabouttheatre.org. Running time: 2 hours, 40 minutes.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 8, 2022

What is "southern photography"? The Georgia Museum of Art tries to answer in a new exhibition

Gagosian opens an exhibition of new sculptures by Setsuko

The Holburne exhibits a bequest of 35 objects from the estate of sculptor Dame Elisabeth Frink

Sotheby's to auction Abstract art pioneer Piet Mondrian's signature grid masterpiece this November

Golden Boy Gustav Klimt inspired by Van Gogh, Rodin, Matisse in new exhbiton at the Van Gogh Museum

Oolite Arts adds works by eight artists to its collection

Newly discovered work by Sebastiano Ricci on view in New York for the first time

Toledo Museum of Art names 2022-2024 Brian P. Kennedy Leadership Fellows

Modern + Contemporary Art + Design sale at Clars, totaled over $1.3M across 230 lots

New-York Historical Society presents "The Salem Witch Trials: Reckoning and Reclaiming"

Important works by James Turrell and Judy Chicago highlight Moran's Autumn Modern & Contemporary Fine Art Sale

Georgian artist Tekla Aslanishvili presents 'A State in a State' at the Fundació Antoni Tàpies in Barcelona

Hastings Contemporary presents the first major survey show of the work of Caragh Thuring

The reimagined museum of Islamic art reopens in Doha ahead of FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022

JAM, a gate-crashing gallery, expanded the idea of Blackness

Second City to open its first New York outpost

Exhibition is first ever to explore the symbolism of the guitar in American art

Review: '1776,' When all men, and only men, were created equal

From her Algerian family's living room to the dance stage

One of the world's great maestros is suddenly a free agent

Unraveling one of rock's deepest mysteries: Les Rallizes Dénudés

Jacob Lawrence's Nigeria series brings together African American artist's work with selection of African contemporaries

MECCA x NGV Women in Design Commission: Tatiana Bilbao

NFL linebacker revealed as owner of rare, $1 million Pokémon card

Venus Over Manhattan now representing Keiichi Tanaami

Top 3 Online Fabric Store Where You Can Sell Your Pattern

How to Turn Angry Customers into Loyal Customers │ Helpware




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful