Julie Benko, Peyton Lusk, Lori Wilner, and Ned Eisenberg
in BAR MITZVAH BOY
Photo by Ben Strothmann
|
The York
Theatre’s minimalist Musicals in Mufti production of the rarely seen Jule Styne
musical Bar Mitzvah Boy reveals no rediscovered gem from the
composer of Bells Are Ringing, Funny Girl,
and Gypsy. But if the company has not managed to pull the
rabbi out of the hat with this one, Bar Mitzvah Boy’s place
in the composer’s canon, along with a book that does a fine job of capturing
all of the mishigas surrounding that mix of religious rite-of-passage and
social event in the life of pretty much every 13-year-old Jewish boy, makes it
a must-see for Styne fans or for seekers after elusive musicals.
Despite its
weaknesses, Bar Mitzvah Boy is exactly the kind of work that
fulfills the mission of Musicals in Mufti. Broadway it ain’t, nor is it meant
to be. Rather, it provides a showcase
for bare-bones presentations of little-known shows that are often to be found
in the footnotes of musical history. Although the original 1978 London production
was recorded, it is out of print (high-priced copies are available on the
secondary market). So most visitors to the York will be hearing it for the
first time, myself included.
Musically,
it seems that Styne and lyricist Don Black were constrained by having to
shoehorn their songs into an already extant work. Bar Mitzvah Boy
was written as a BBC television play in 1976 by Jack Rosenthal. It was very
well received at the time, a bittersweet story, realistically told, about a
working class British family planning on a bar mitzvah for their son. The script,
which has been revised, adapted, and otherwise tinkered with on several
occasions (the book for the current version is credited to David Thompson),
manages to stay anchored with a blend of warmth, humor, and family tsuris that
co-mingle without flying completely over the top, even when things begin to
melt down as the big day approaches. Yet when Styne and Black were invited to
join the team bent on inflating the show into a full scale West End musical, it
does appear they were directed to write a utilitarian score to fit what was
already in place.
To be
sure, in the Mufti production the songs are not exactly being presented in the
best possible light. The “orchestra”
consists of a piano (played by Darren R. Cohen), the lyrics are sometimes muffled,
and several of the cast members were chosen more for their acting chops than
for their singing skills. Yet, the characters are well drawn, and the cast does
a good job conveying the story with scripts in hand.
Eliot, the
boy on the cusp on manhood, is effectively captured on paper and in the fine
performance by Peyton Lusk, who, in a happy bit of fun fact, was understudy for
the role of Jason, the bar mitzvah boy in the recent Broadway revival of Falsettos.
The script beautifully expresses the churning experience of young adolescence. Eliot
is something of a smartass, a bit defiant, floored by the religious meaning of
the bar mitzvah, scared about what the responsibilities of “manhood” will
entail, and increasingly cynical about what he sees as the hypocrisy of the
adults around him as they show themselves to be imperfect.
Also quite
good are Lori Wilner and Ned Eisenberg as Eliot’s parents, who sing the bouncy
number “This Time Tomorrow,” a mixture of pride and relief that all the
planning and plotzing will finally come to an end (“No more rotten relations.
No more dizzy sensations. All my heart
palpitations gone”).
A fine supporting cast is also on hand, with Tim Jerome as Eliot’s grandfather, Julie Benko as Eliot’s sympathetic older sister Lesley, and Neal Benari as the rabbi, who offers up a touching song about the universal presence of God, which makes for a satisfying ending after Eliot flees the synagogue on the big day. Also on hand are Casey Watkins as Eliot’s Christian schoolmate, and Ben Fankhauser as Harold, Lesley’s nebbishy boyfriend and the designated peacemaker whenever things get too tense. As a nice touch, the show, directed by Annette Jolles, is sprinkled with authentic portions of Hebrew liturgy and Yiddish expressions that everyone pronounces with the right inflection.
A fine supporting cast is also on hand, with Tim Jerome as Eliot’s grandfather, Julie Benko as Eliot’s sympathetic older sister Lesley, and Neal Benari as the rabbi, who offers up a touching song about the universal presence of God, which makes for a satisfying ending after Eliot flees the synagogue on the big day. Also on hand are Casey Watkins as Eliot’s Christian schoolmate, and Ben Fankhauser as Harold, Lesley’s nebbishy boyfriend and the designated peacemaker whenever things get too tense. As a nice touch, the show, directed by Annette Jolles, is sprinkled with authentic portions of Hebrew liturgy and Yiddish expressions that everyone pronounces with the right inflection.
No one is
likely to argue that the world needs another large scale production of Bar
Mitzvah Boy, but thanks and Mazel Tov to the York Theatre Company for
giving us the opportunity to catch this piece of musical history as part of its
three-show tribute to Julius Kerwin Stein, aka Jule Styne. Next up: a Musicals
in Mufti production of Subways Are For Sleeping.
________________
Feel free to share this blog with your friends, and to offer up your own theater stories by posting a comment. I also invite you to check out the website Show-Score.Com, where you will find capsule reviews of current plays from Yours Truly and many other New York critics.
________________
Feel free to share this blog with your friends, and to offer up your own theater stories by posting a comment. I also invite you to check out the website Show-Score.Com, where you will find capsule reviews of current plays from Yours Truly and many other New York critics.
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