Betsy Wolfe, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Colin Donnell, Celia Keenan-Bolger & Adam Grupper in Merrily We Roll Along. |
The Stephen Sondheim musical Merrily We Roll Along, which was revived over the last two weekends at New York’s City Center by Encores!, flopped on Broadway in 1981, closing in two weeks after receiving punishing reviews. In the intervening decades Sondheim aficionados have struggled to reclaim it as a lost treasure wrecked in the original production by disastrous production decisions. (It ended the partnership of Sondheim and director Harold Prince, who had staged all of his seventies musicals: Company, Follies, A Little Night Music, Pacific Overtures and Sweeney Todd.) The source material is a play of the same name that George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart wrote together in 1934, their second of their half-dozen collaborations and a distinct comedown after their classic hard-boiled comedy Once in a Lifetime. The subject is the ruined friendship of three once-inseparable comrades, a playwright, a painter and a novelist, and the gimmick is that the action runs backwards, beginning when all three are middle-aged and miserable and winding up with a glimpse of who they were when they started out. It’s a terrible play in which almost every one of nine scenes ends with a melodramatic punch, and the reverse flow of the narrative – the idea that drew Sondheim and book writer George Furth to the material nearly half a century later – is intractable. The characters are so dislikable that by the time we discover what bright-eyed idealists they were in their youth we’ve already written them off.
In the musical the protagonists have become Frank Shepard, a composer, Charlie Kringas, his playwright-lyricist collaborator, and Mary Flynn, a novelist turned theatre critic. Their story, looked at chronologically, centers on Frank’s quickness to trade his integrity for the promise of fame and fortune. First he persuades Charlie to put the political musical they’ve put the best part of themselves into on the back burner and write a commercial musical comedy for producer Joe Josephson and his actress wife Gussie Carnegie. Then he coaxes him to help him turn it into a movie. Finally he abandons songwriting altogether to put his name to superficial Hollywood pictures. Meanwhile his personal life is a shambles. His wife Beth, at one time the third member of a satirical revue trio with Frank and Charlie (which Sondheim and Furth may have based on The Revuers, made up of Betty Comden, Adolph Green and Judy Holliday before they all landed on Broadway in the 1940s), divorces him when he begins an affair with Gussie and she gets custody of their little boy. He ends up marrying Gussie but by the time he’s joined the Hollywood elite their relationship is dead, and so is her career. By this time Frank and Charlie no longer speak to each other because of the public trouncing Charlie gave him on a talk show, satirizing his slavish devotion to financial success and his indifference to the creative process that brought them together in the first place. And Mary, at one time a bestselling fiction writer, has become a helpless drunk embittered by a long unrequited passion for Frank that everyone seems to know about but him.
Jim Walton, Ann Morrison & Lonny Price in 1981 (Photo: Martha Swope) |
It’s called what’s your choice?
It’s called count to ten.
It’s called burn your bridges, start again.
You should burn them every now and then
Or you’ll never grow!
Because now you grow.
That’s the killer is,
Now you grow.
Celia Keenan-Bolger, Colin Donnell & Lin-Manuel Miranda |
The Encores! version was directed by Lapine, and according to the program notes some of his touches originated in La Jolla. It’s a brilliant production: as I’ve indicated above there are problems inherent in the show that simply can’t be fixed, but Lapine has certainly succeeded in lessening them. A newsreel montage of the years between 1957 and 1976 (when the musical now begins, the frame in which Frank gives a commencement address at his old school having been dispensed with long ago) with the three protagonists woven in provides a sense of who they were and how strong their friendship used to be, so the audience doesn’t have to wait until halfway through the show to find reasons to care about them. It doesn’t solve the problem, but it establishes a tension between past and present and builds in the loss and regret that Sondheim always meant to be the emotional core of the musical.
Elizabeth Stanley and cast (Photo: Joan Marcus) |
The real miracle worker in the cast is Celia Keenan-Bolger as Mary. This character is usually infuriating – full of showy put-downs and theatrical self-loathing – and Furth doesn’t do much to show us how she feels about Frank. (When “Not a Day Goes By” is reprised in act two as a duet for Frank and Beth, Mary sings along from across the room; up to then we only know she carries a torch for Frank because other characters say so.) Keenan-Bolger, who is a fine comic and dramatic actress as well as a gifted dramatic singer, underplays Mary’s more brittle lines and emphasizes her heartbreak, less over Frank’s obliviousness to her feelings for him than over the loss of the camaraderie that defined her younger years with him and Charlie.
The production has humor (not just the bitchiness that passed for wit in earlier versions), and some real moments of inspiration, like the choice to give Zachary Unger, the young actor who plays Frank and Beth’s little boy, a solo in one of the reprises of the title song so that we keep in mind that he’s the character worst hit by their marital break-up. This is one of those cases where the intelligence and invention of a revival are so significant that they can almost convince you that the play is the misunderstood gem that so many people want to believe it is. But Merrily We Roll Along is dross. Lapine and his cast can’t transform it, but they can certainly make it shine.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and The Christian Century and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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