There are several interesting story
lines to Mirvish Productions’ revival of the grand musical Les
Misérables, which opened last week at Toronto’s Princess of
Wales Theatre. First there is the fact that it has been rethought and
reconfigured from its previous incarnations, in Toronto and
elsewhere, by directors Laurence Connor and James Powell, and
designer Matt Kinley. Then there is the return to Toronto of
the leading man, Ramin Karimloo, raised in Peterborough and Richmond
Hill, who went to England to pursue a career in musical theatre, and
who eventually starred in London’s West End with the title role in
Phantom of the Opera. And of course there is the musical’s
story itself, inspired by Victor Hugo’s epic novel, a tale
encompassing love, revenge, revolution, social justice, politics,
poverty, crime and punishment, all delivered by an enormous – and
in this case enormously talented – cast of characters. The redesign, said to be inspired by
Hugo’s own illustrations for the novel, is wonderful. In the
magic-box set, a variety of “locations” – homes, street scenes,
an inn, a cathedral and assorted city buildings, as well as the
famous barricade and the eerie sewers of Paris – are established
with intricate precision, all supplemented and loaned detail by
large-scale back projections.
Ramin Karimloo as Valjean |
The story is complex, but well told and
accessible. The desperate Valjean is given a bed and a bite to eat by
a compassionate bishop (Andrew Love), and repays him by stealing
silver plates and cups. Caught by the implacable policeman Javert
(Earl Carpenter), Valjean is given a break by the bishop, who tells
Javert that he gave the silver to Valjean, and that, in fact, the
former prisoner had forgotten to take the silver candlesticks he had
also been given. Javert is suspicious, but can’t call the bishop a
liar. Eight years later, Valjean has changed
his name and become a well-thought-of businessman and the town’s
mayor. When one of his former employees, Fantine (Genevieve Leclerc),
falls on hard times and is on her deathbed, he swears he will take
care of her daughter, Cosette (the young Cosette was played by Saara
Chaudry on opening night; the grown-up role is played by Samantha
Hill). Javert recognizes Valjean and is about to arrest him, but he
escapes again.
Cosette has been boarded with the
Thénardiers, innkeepers, thieves and con artists, who use her as
cheap labour while spoiling their own daughter, Éponine (Ella
Ballentine as the child on opening night; Melissa O’Neil is the
grown-up). After eight years, Valjean, once again prosperous, appears
and “buys” Cosette back from the Thénardiers to take her back
with him to Paris where, for the next nine years, he raises her in
comfortable middle-class respectability.
Meanwhile, there is insurrection
brewing. A group of young men and women, including Éponine, plot a
revolution. One of the revolutionaries, Marius (Perry Sherman), falls
in love with Cosette at first sight. Somehow not noticing that
Éponine is in love with him, he asks her to act as his messenger,
carrying love letters and arranging meetings. But before the affair
can amount to anything, the popular leader General Lamarque dies,
politics heat up and the students take to the barricades.
(Photo by Michael le Poer Trench) |
Not surprisingly, the young rebels all
die when attacked by the army and the police, and Valjean manages to
carry the badly wounded Marius into the Paris sewers, where
Thénardier robs the two of them as they lay unconscious. All’s
well that ends well, of course, and Marius and Cosette are finally
married, the Thénardiers get their comeuppance, Javert – finally
admitting that Valjean is a good man and doesn’t deserve to be
harassed – kills himself. Valjean goes into hiding again, and years
later, as he lays dying, tells Cosette the story of her life.
That’s a lot of plot, but it unfolds
briskly and with unremitting drama. The cast is excellent from top to
bottom, but for me the standouts, besides Karimloo, include: Earl
Carpenter, who somehow invests Javert with considerable humanity amid
his unbending righteousness; Cliff Saunders and Lisa Horner as the
hilariously nasty Thénardiers, master and mistress of physical
comedy and purveyors of most of the show’s much-needed laughs;
Melissa O’Neil as Éponine, singing her heart out and delivering a
wholly credible range of emotions; Genevieve Leclerc’s Fantine, who
stands up for herself and her daughter, and somehow keeps her pride
even as she is forced by circumstances to sell her jewelry, her hair
and, finally, her body.
There are good reasons that some
musicals become classics, and all of those reasons are on display in
this production of Les Misérables. Fans of the show will be
thrilled, and if you haven’t seen it yet, this 25th-anniversary
production is a superb place to begin. But beware. It could become a
habit.
- Jack Kirchhoff is a Toronto arts
writer and editor.
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