Mary Zimmerman's The Jungle Book |
The musical has a tepid book which never manages to make its child hero (played alternately by Roni Akurati and Akash Chopra) appealing: Mowgli spends almost the entire second act whining because Bagheera and eventually Baloo are promoting the idea that he’d be better off growing up among other humans. And though as a director Zimmerman is justly famous for her eye, the play goes flat every time two or three actors are on stage exchanging dialogue, and the comedy tends to be forced, sometimes painfully so. Directing actors isn’t one of Zimmerman’s gifts, and so the acting in The Jungle Book is erratic. Even some of the better performers – Ally, Yando, Carolan and Thomas Derrah (always a welcome sight) as the cobra Kaa – have trouble negotiating some of the scrappy scenes she’s written for them. Fortunately the singing and dancing are consistently delightful. And at the center of the show is the great André De Shields, who plays both Akela, the aging lone wolf, and, tossing a regal headdress of dreadlocks, King Louie, monarch of the monkeys. That’s the role Louis Armstrong voiced in the movie, and briefly but memorably De Shields even channels Satchmo.
The jungle in this show is Indian, and Zimmerman and her designers, Daniel Ostling, Mara Blumenfeld and T.J. Gerckens, make the most of the setting. Ostling’s set is a series of pastel-colored cardboard-cut-out drops that shift constantly, both vertically and horizontally. A swing embroidered with cushions stands in for all the trees inhabited by animals, and every now and then a gilded cage flies down, containing perhaps a musician in Indian dress, perhaps a visiting god. Musicians make frequent appearances in the midst of the action, playing brass or drums on the elephants’ march – the elephants are employed wittily as suggestions of the English Army in Kiping’s colonial India – or perhaps sitar or Carnatic violin; Doug Peck, who orchestrated (superbly), underscores the Indian sounds and includes a wide range of eastern and western instruments. (The orchestra, a dozen musicians led by conductor Rick Hammett, is fantastic.) A sublimely silly sun with the face of a bejeweled Indian shines over the second-act opening; Blumenfeld has outfitted three twirling butterflies in a variation on traditional Indian garb, and one of them, Alka Nayyar, doubles as a doe who dances kathak. All of these touches are utterly charming. There are other entrancing visuals, too, like the marionettes fashioned from what look like tissue-paper blossoms that give fire (known to the terrified jungle creatures as “the red flower”) an almost human form, and the blue-confetti water drops. When Baloo makes his second-act entrance with a beehive under his arm, bees on strings swirl around it like the parts of a mobile.
The Indian theme presents a challenge for the choreographer, Christopher Gatelli. The score that Richard M. and Robert B. Sherman wrote for the movie, featuring songs like “Bare Necessities” and the monkeys’ anthem “I Wanna Be Like You,” is jazz-inflected, i.e., African, whereas the new tunes, which are credited variously to Richard M. Sherman, Terry Gilkyson, Lorraine Feather and Paul Grabowsky, are Indian in flavor. So on some of the songs that would be familiar to audiences (and which you certainly wouldn’t want to lose) Gatelli doesn’t seem to have settled on a style. But he’s one of the most talented and inventive choreographers working in the theatre right now, and even his mishmashes yield an array of delights. When one of his numbers really takes off – like the second-act monkey number, which includes both tap and acrobatics, and the grand finale, “Jungle Rhythm” – he can kick an audience straight up to heaven. (Ally doesn’t get to dance much until “Jungle Rhythm,” but when he finally does you wish Gatelli had given him something to do in the earlier numbers.)
The addenda to the score includes one misstep, Shere Khan’s “Your Unexpected Friend,” which brings the second act to a standstill. It’s not Yando’s fault; self-defining villain songs almost never work in musicals (think of “Those Were the Good Old Days” from Damn Yankees), perhaps partly because for some reason they always seem to show up in the middle of the second act, when the last thing an audience wants is a solo from the bad guy. But I wouldn’t trade a single one of the dances, or the barbershop quartet by the vultures, “That’s What Friends Are For,” which also showcases my favorites among all of Blumenfeld’s marvelous costumes: the vultures are top-hatted, their necks wrapped in white boas, and under wings that look like ominous black humps they wear half-tuxes over disheveled black-and-white-striped shirts. Both visually and musically, this Jungle Book offers much to revel in.
The much-sought-after Québecois director Robert Lepage brought The Blue Dragon to this year’s Next Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Written by Lepage and Marie Michaud, who also make up two-thirds of the cast, performed in French with supertitles and set in China, it’s a kind of étude on the subjects of abandoned and reclaimed children and – a variation on that theme – abandoned and reclaimed artistic talent. Lepage plays Pierre, an émigré Quebecer who trained as an artist but gave it up to open a gallery in Shanghai. There his protégé and girl friend, a young woman named Xiao Ling (Tai Wei Foo) whom he met when she was working as a tattoo artist (she’s responsible for the dragon inked on his back), is about to open an exhibition of her work, forceful paintings based on highly emotional photographs of herself. Michaud plays Claire, Pierre’s best friend and sometime lover, who stops in to see him when she arrives in China to pick up the daughter she has just arranged to adopt. For reasons we don’t learn right away, the adoption falls through. Meanwhile Xiao Ling discovers she’s pregnant, though she isn’t sure who the father is – she has another boy friend Pierre may or may not know about – and she doesn’t think she wants to keep the baby. Pierre’s relationship with his own difficult father is messy and unresolved; they’ve had no contact for years, but now his father is dying and wants Pierre to come home to Quebec City.
Lepage and Michaud develop their theme not only through the narrative but also in a series of beautiful images that occasionally evoke Chinese calligraphy – Pierre’s hobby, which we see projected onto the screens that form the major vertical element of Michel Gauthier’s set. The set is more horizontal than vertical, though, which is a trademark choice of Lepage’s. It’s divided into two tiers that sometimes function as Pierre’s split-level Shanghai flat, sometimes as frames that intercut two spheres of action; at the climax the action shifts from one to another among a series of four frames while the others go immobile, blanketed in static (or snow). At the foot of the screens is a track along which miniature vehicles sometimes glide. I’ve seen only four of Lepage’s pieces, but I always have to get used to his preference for the horizontal – which in this case picks up an aspect of Chinese art (and especially, of course, calligraphy) – and I generally do; after a while what seemed at first like a flattening out of the visuals begins to produce its own distinctly cinematic surprises. It’s true here, and it was also true of his staging of Berlioz’s La damnation de Faust at the Metropolitan Opera, though I saw it in HD, and the reduced dimensionality of the set felt right at home on the movie screen. (Friends who saw it live were less enthusiastic than I was.)
All three of the actors perform well, though Tai Wei Foo (who also dances) is less comfortable with the style – naturally – than Michaud and Lepage. She has the most affecting scene, though. There’s a break of a year in the action in the middle of the second act: Claire, who has returned to Montreal, comes back to China on business (once an artist herself, she chose to make her life in advertising) and looks in on Xiao Ling, who has walked away from her burgeoning career as an artist and is working in a shop in Shenzhen copying Van Goghs for customers. Her reunion with Claire ends in an eruption that inspires the actress’s most effective physical work.
At one point Xiao Ling tells Claire a story about a young woman who gives birth to a baby and sets it afloat on a river, abandoning it to the fates. There are, Xiao Ling explains, three possible outcomes: the baby will drown, or be carried to a new home and family, or circle back to its mother. The Blue Dragon finds a way to dramatize the fable; Lepage and Michaud even provide three possible endings to the tale of Pierre, Claire and Xiao Ling. This is a minor work, perhaps, but I found it very satisfying.
The jungle in this show is Indian, and Zimmerman and her designers, Daniel Ostling, Mara Blumenfeld and T.J. Gerckens, make the most of the setting. Ostling’s set is a series of pastel-colored cardboard-cut-out drops that shift constantly, both vertically and horizontally. A swing embroidered with cushions stands in for all the trees inhabited by animals, and every now and then a gilded cage flies down, containing perhaps a musician in Indian dress, perhaps a visiting god. Musicians make frequent appearances in the midst of the action, playing brass or drums on the elephants’ march – the elephants are employed wittily as suggestions of the English Army in Kiping’s colonial India – or perhaps sitar or Carnatic violin; Doug Peck, who orchestrated (superbly), underscores the Indian sounds and includes a wide range of eastern and western instruments. (The orchestra, a dozen musicians led by conductor Rick Hammett, is fantastic.) A sublimely silly sun with the face of a bejeweled Indian shines over the second-act opening; Blumenfeld has outfitted three twirling butterflies in a variation on traditional Indian garb, and one of them, Alka Nayyar, doubles as a doe who dances kathak. All of these touches are utterly charming. There are other entrancing visuals, too, like the marionettes fashioned from what look like tissue-paper blossoms that give fire (known to the terrified jungle creatures as “the red flower”) an almost human form, and the blue-confetti water drops. When Baloo makes his second-act entrance with a beehive under his arm, bees on strings swirl around it like the parts of a mobile.
The Indian theme presents a challenge for the choreographer, Christopher Gatelli. The score that Richard M. and Robert B. Sherman wrote for the movie, featuring songs like “Bare Necessities” and the monkeys’ anthem “I Wanna Be Like You,” is jazz-inflected, i.e., African, whereas the new tunes, which are credited variously to Richard M. Sherman, Terry Gilkyson, Lorraine Feather and Paul Grabowsky, are Indian in flavor. So on some of the songs that would be familiar to audiences (and which you certainly wouldn’t want to lose) Gatelli doesn’t seem to have settled on a style. But he’s one of the most talented and inventive choreographers working in the theatre right now, and even his mishmashes yield an array of delights. When one of his numbers really takes off – like the second-act monkey number, which includes both tap and acrobatics, and the grand finale, “Jungle Rhythm” – he can kick an audience straight up to heaven. (Ally doesn’t get to dance much until “Jungle Rhythm,” but when he finally does you wish Gatelli had given him something to do in the earlier numbers.)
The addenda to the score includes one misstep, Shere Khan’s “Your Unexpected Friend,” which brings the second act to a standstill. It’s not Yando’s fault; self-defining villain songs almost never work in musicals (think of “Those Were the Good Old Days” from Damn Yankees), perhaps partly because for some reason they always seem to show up in the middle of the second act, when the last thing an audience wants is a solo from the bad guy. But I wouldn’t trade a single one of the dances, or the barbershop quartet by the vultures, “That’s What Friends Are For,” which also showcases my favorites among all of Blumenfeld’s marvelous costumes: the vultures are top-hatted, their necks wrapped in white boas, and under wings that look like ominous black humps they wear half-tuxes over disheveled black-and-white-striped shirts. Both visually and musically, this Jungle Book offers much to revel in.
The Blue Dragon |
Lepage and Michaud develop their theme not only through the narrative but also in a series of beautiful images that occasionally evoke Chinese calligraphy – Pierre’s hobby, which we see projected onto the screens that form the major vertical element of Michel Gauthier’s set. The set is more horizontal than vertical, though, which is a trademark choice of Lepage’s. It’s divided into two tiers that sometimes function as Pierre’s split-level Shanghai flat, sometimes as frames that intercut two spheres of action; at the climax the action shifts from one to another among a series of four frames while the others go immobile, blanketed in static (or snow). At the foot of the screens is a track along which miniature vehicles sometimes glide. I’ve seen only four of Lepage’s pieces, but I always have to get used to his preference for the horizontal – which in this case picks up an aspect of Chinese art (and especially, of course, calligraphy) – and I generally do; after a while what seemed at first like a flattening out of the visuals begins to produce its own distinctly cinematic surprises. It’s true here, and it was also true of his staging of Berlioz’s La damnation de Faust at the Metropolitan Opera, though I saw it in HD, and the reduced dimensionality of the set felt right at home on the movie screen. (Friends who saw it live were less enthusiastic than I was.)
All three of the actors perform well, though Tai Wei Foo (who also dances) is less comfortable with the style – naturally – than Michaud and Lepage. She has the most affecting scene, though. There’s a break of a year in the action in the middle of the second act: Claire, who has returned to Montreal, comes back to China on business (once an artist herself, she chose to make her life in advertising) and looks in on Xiao Ling, who has walked away from her burgeoning career as an artist and is working in a shop in Shenzhen copying Van Goghs for customers. Her reunion with Claire ends in an eruption that inspires the actress’s most effective physical work.
At one point Xiao Ling tells Claire a story about a young woman who gives birth to a baby and sets it afloat on a river, abandoning it to the fates. There are, Xiao Ling explains, three possible outcomes: the baby will drown, or be carried to a new home and family, or circle back to its mother. The Blue Dragon finds a way to dramatize the fable; Lepage and Michaud even provide three possible endings to the tale of Pierre, Claire and Xiao Ling. This is a minor work, perhaps, but I found it very satisfying.
– 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 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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