Melissa Errico and Ryan Silverman, in Classic Stage Company's new production of Passion (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
No other American musical works in the same way as Passion, with its uncharacteristically subdued score by Stephen Sondheim and its book by James Lapine, who also did the elegant spare staging in the original Broadway version, in 1994. (That production was broadcast on PBS and is available on DVD.) Written in one intense act, Passion – which is currently being given an excellent revival by New York’s Classic Stage Company, under John Doyle’s direction – is a genuine oddity: a short-story musical (it’s single-themed and single-plotted) that operates exactly at cross-purposes to what it appears to be doing, and builds power by not delivering the emotional satisfaction it appears to promise.
This plot summary makes Passion sound like a fable of romantic transcendence
and transformation, a piece of fairy-tale romanticism – Beauty and the Beast in drag, though with the melancholy
ending Hans Christian Andersen might have given it. But Stephen Sondheim isn’t
a romantic by temperament or style; he’s a neoclassicist, more turned on by the
somber splendor of strictures than by the prospect of breaking loose from them.
Give Sondheim an opportunity for uplift and he becomes banal, New Age-y, fake;
he comes up with something like “Move On” from Sunday in the Park with George or “Children Will Listen” from Into the Woods. Or the finale of Passion, where Fosca, in a letter to
Giorgio that he reads after her death, discovers, “[T]hough I want to live / I
now can leave / With what I never knew / I’m someone to be loved /And that I
learned from you.” The music critic Francis Davis, in his review of the
original-cast CD of Passion in The
Atlantic Monthly, observed that “the song with which Giorgio expresses his
love for Fosca isn’t ablaze with the rest of the score’s sixteenth-note rhythms
and sustained chords. It’s inorganic. So is “Loving You,” the show’s big
takeout ballad [which I’ve just quoted] . . . added to the score at the last
minute, in order to make Fosca more sympathetic.” Passion is very brilliant, I think, but as a tribute
to the transformative power of romantic obsession it’s certainly not
convincing. The music – at least, to my untutored ears – fiercely denies us
anything like the grandeur and sweep the narrative seems to demand, and it
fails to suggest the transition in Giorgio’s feelings that the plot hinges on.
Watching the musical, or even listening to the CD, you feel you must have missed
something – that he and Sondheim omitted the moment of truth for their hero.
And since Passion is an extraordinarily accomplished piece of
work, I’d guess Sondheim left out the transition because he couldn’t get
himself to believe in it. The finale, “Loving You,” is merely a substitute – a
plastic limb he provides for the musical to hobble away on at the end.
Ryan Silverman and Judy Kuhn (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
The hero of Pedro Almodóvar’s film Law
of Desire writes passionate love
letters to himself that he wishes his absent lover would send him. In the
movie’s terms, this invention by the protagonist (who is a famous gay erotic
film and stage director) is a cop-out, an act of intellectualized rather than
genuine desire, and at the end of the picture, having finally realized the difference,
he hurls his typewriter out the window. But in Passion, the letters continue even
after Fosca is dead. These expressions of passion, as beautiful as they are,
are ghosts trailing across the stage. And that’s the visual form the Broadway
production took, too. Clara, clad in pink beneath a parasol or in ice blue and
white (Jane Greenwood designed the sumptuous costumes), strolls through
Giorgio’s consciousness, interrupting his conversation with Fosca. Later the
image of the sickly, white-faced Fosca, staggering brokenly down the stairs, a
twisted figure clutching a letter, hovers over the love duets between Giorgio
and Clara. Adrianne Lobel’s original set was heavy on scrim, which threw a haze
over everything, and the backdrop was like a Turner canvas, with the contours
of a ruined castle dimly visible.
Over and over, the sexual union of the opening returns to us shrouded in
illness and impending death. When Giorgio finally makes love to Fosca, their
sex kills her. Passion in this play is all bound up with the tomb; it's tentacled, like the sexual obsession
Beatrice Johanna and De Flores share in The
Changeling. Romantic longing that embraces the grave and creeps out from
beyond it, back to its object on earth, is a mainstay of a certain kind of
romanticism, of course (the gothic), but in Passion the vision of sex entwined with death is
seen in tandem with repression and restraint, not as a force that crashes
through barriers.
Ryan Silverman, Melissa Errico and Judy Kuhn |
I loved John Doyle’s 2005 revival of Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd with Michael Cerveris and Patti LuPone and the production of Frank Loesser’s Where’s Charley? he staged for Encores! in 2011, but Passion is the only other one of his shows I’ve
responded to, despite the critical praise for his version of Company (with Raúl Esparza) and an irritatingly
affected, substance-less collection of Rodgers & Hart tunes, Ten Cents a Dance, that he mounted at
Williamstown two seasons ago. At CSC the musical has been pared down
considerably: the set consists only of chairs that the small (five-man) chorus
of officers moves around the stage. But the intimate space (where the audience
is seated in three-quarters) is elegantly appointed in black and gold, with two
lamp-lit gold-framed mirrors at the back, and Ann Hould-Ward’s costumes please
the eye, especially Melissa Errico’s gowns. The economy of the staging seems to
suit the material, as in the scene where Giorgio writes the letter for Fosca:
he kneels down right, at the edge of the stage, directly across from her “bed”
(a pair of chairs) up left, so they are as far away from each other as they can
be in this space yet they’re linked on the diagonal. The acting and especially
the singing are very fine; Rob Berman, who usually conducts the Encores! shows,
has taken charge of the musical direction, and the nine-person band does superb
work with the Sondheim score. (At the matinee I attended, Greg Jarrett
substituted for Berman as pianist/conductor.) Judy Kuhn, her hair abruptly
razor-cut and parted in the middle so that she looks like a rather forbidding
governess, her eyes heavy-lidded, with deep red furrows beneath, is a marvelous
dramatic singer and her line readings are often enormously clever. She doesn’t
have the ability of the original Fosca, Donna Murphy, to suggest a level of
irony so dazzling that it carries its own dark glamour, and she doesn’t
approach the role with the barely banked savagery that Murphy brought to songs
like the character’s first, “I Read,” but no one can be like Murphy, and Kuhn
wisely doesn’t try. However, she gives a powerful performance – descending on
Giorgio in their first encounter like a witch when she bristles at what she
hears as insensitivity, even cruelty, in his talk of love – and she doesn’t
make Patti LuPone’s mistake in the concert version of trying to make Fosca a
diva role. (Generally I think LuPone is a knockout, but she was badly miscast
here.)
Melissa Errico in Passion (Photo by Joan Marcus) |
Doyle makes a virtue of necessity by double-casting four of the five
officers (Jeffrey Denman, Jason Michael Evans, Ken Krugman and Will Reynolds)
as the figures in the flashback: Colonel Ricci’s story, told to Bachetti in
confidence, of the phony, bigamous count who courted Fosca in her youth and
swindled her parents out of their savings before abandoning her. The fact that
two of these men play women lends the episode the quality of masquerade that,
along with the echo imported by the sound designer, Dan Moses Schreier, and
Jane Cox’s lighting, recapture the ghostliness that Lapine’s production achieved
through different means. The male ensemble (Orville Mendoza is the fifth
member) sings exquisitely, especially when they get to harmonize at the end of
the flashback. I liked both Bogardus and Nelis, too, though the role of Dr.
Tambouri has always been a puzzlement to me. It’s he who asks Giorgio to visit
Fosca in her room when he believes (erroneously, as it turns out) that she’s
close to death, and the next day he commends the young captain’s courage in
doing so. But he insists that he’s not a procurer, that he merely wanted to
give the unhappy woman some meager portion of pleasure, and when Bachetti
ferries her back to the post and then cuts his sick leave short, Tambouri
bemoans the state to which she has brought him. When Ricci discovers Fosca’s feelings
for Giorgio – and the letter he wrote at her behest – and challenges him to a
duel, Giorgio demands that the doctor gain him admission to her chamber again
that night, but Tambouri refuses, protesting, “No, I will not participate in
this madness!” I’d be curious to know what Nelis, or either of the other actors
I’ve seen try this role (Tom Aldredge and Richard Easton), think this character
is up to – or, for that matter, how Sondheim and Lapine might explicate his
role in the narrative.
All three versions of Passion mount considerable power over the course of
its uninterrupted hundred minutes. And partly this is the consequence of
Sondheim’s putting himself in the musical in a way that he usually doesn’t do.
The arctic chill Sondheim’s detractors feel in his work blows off a kind of
chic non-engagement that can be unpleasant. It isn’t just his brittle
cleverness – you wouldn’t complain of that quality in Noël Coward or Lorenz
Hart. But you can always feel the scars in their songs – evidence that they’ve
earned the right to be caustic. When a Sondheim character quips, “It’s the
neighbors you annoy together / Children you destroy together / That make
perfect relationships” or lists the little deaths she experiences every day,
the emotions seem inauthentic. In Passion Sondheim focuses on the notion of beauty and
erotic obsession as tools of power, and he makes no excuses for the behavior of
any of the characters. And since he’s showing us a world we sense he feels he’s
a part of, there’s an honesty about the musical that’s bracing and finally
quite affecting. The only other Sondheim show that has felt to me to be so
close to his bone is 1984’s Sunday
in the Park with George, and that was a different case: it was his defense
against the critics who’ve complained of his cold brilliance, his emphasis on
technique rather than emotion. For all the virtues of its first act, the aspect
of Sunday in the Park that has
always made me uncomfortable is that it’s awash in excuses. “Don’t blame me;
I’m an artist and art is easy,” it says, through its hero, the unyielding
painter Seurat. “Don’t blame me; I’m a very emotional guy – you just don’t
understand how to read me. I live in my paintings.” “Don’t blame me; we just
have different priorities. You want to go to the Folies Bergère, but I need to
finish this hat because my muse comes first.” “Don’t blame me; one day people
will look at this painting and see you all over it, and recognize how much I
love you.” In Passion Sondheim
brings himself into his work in an entirely non-egotistical way – by taking a
story of romantic extremism and twisting it into the baroque form that best
expresses his own vision of the world (and, by extension, his vision of art).
You get the heat of his commitment to that vision, and it sparks the play.
– 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 and The
Boston Phoenix 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment