The cast of Irving Berlin's White Christmas. (Photo: Kevin White) |
The stage adaptation of Irving Berlin’s 1954 movie musical White Christmas toured the country for a couple of seasons before opening for a limited Broadway run in 2006. I caught it in Boston nine years ago and found it so satisfying that, when it came through again this Christmas, I went back for a second look. The original production carried a directing credit to Walter Bobbie, with Randy Skinner listed as choreographer; Skinner is now listed as director, too, but the show is almost exactly the one I remembered.
Part of the reason I checked in with the musical again was my disappointment at the Goodspeed’s attempt to do something similar with Berlin’s other Christmas perennial, Holiday Inn. (The song “White Christmas” was written for Holiday Inn and won the 1942 Academy Award, though most people associate it with the later picture.) To be fair to Gordon Greenberg and Chad Hodge, who adapted Holiday Inn (Greenberg also directed it), the source material, though perfectly adequate for one of the tossed-off musicals Paramount specialized in during the thirties and forties, is awfully thin for the stage. White Christmas, by contrast, was overstuffed as a movie and distinctly on the sappy side, but it has just about the right weight for a musical evening in the theatre. And David Ives and Paul Blake, who wrote the playscript, have dried it out a little. The plot about the song-and-dance men, Bob and Phil, who discover the general they served under in World War II moldering away as the proprietor of a nearly bankrupt Vermont inn and conspire to rescue it – and him – doesn’t strong-arm you the way it does in Michael Curtiz’s movie.
Trista Moldovan and Kaitlyn Davidson (Photo by Kevin White) |
My one love affair
Didn’t get anywhere
From the start
To send me a Joe
Who had winter and snow
In his heart
Wasn’t smart
(It’s the way Berlin uses the
winter/snow motif from “Snow” and “White Christmas” for the opposite effect, to
suggest a romantic freeze-out, that gets to me.) Moldovan is more than up to
the challenge of standing in for the ineffable Clooney – plus she’s a better
actress. It’s a backstage-musical number – Betty sings it at a Manhattan
nightclub – with a dramatic context: Betty has run away from Bob due to a
misunderstanding, and he’s chased her down here. The stage version gives Bob an
answering song, “How Deep Is the Ocean,” a Depression-era Berlin gem that might
be the most haunting melody he ever concocted. As performed by Moldovan and
Clow, this medley is, as intended, the emotional high point of the show.
When
I saw White Christmas in 2005, my
only complaint was that Bobbie and Skinner fell short of providing the dramatic
finish the show merited. When the cast gathered on the stage of the barn on the
inn property – the setting of Bob and Phil’s theatrical – to reprise the title
song, I thought the back door should have swung open to reveal a snowy
landscape. To my delight, that’s precisely what happens now, and Ken
Billington’s lighting enshrines the Hollywood-soundstage image, an ideal ending
to an evening that never once shortchanges its audience
– 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 Movie.
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