A Night at the Theater
 
Our meeting this week was a field trip to Northern Stage in White River Junction. We gathered at 5:30 for a backstage tour that let us explore all the amazing space this theater has for set design, props and costumes (in the old Miller Auto buidling).  We got to see the rehearsal space, dressing rooms, the green room, the cross over space where the actors enter the stage from stage right or stage left.  We learned about the theater's design and the the catwalk space for special effects and lighting.  Following our tour we dined on food from Three Tomatoes in Lebanon. 
 
 
 
 
 

 

We then saw an wonderful production of Once, a musical.  This review by by Susan B. Apel in the Daily UV provides a great overview of the production: 
 

Once, a musical adapted from an earlier film of the same name, has just opened at Northern Stage. Its reputation, which preceded it from stints on Broadway and in London’s West End, is of a quiet, simple story, mercifully without extraneous bells and whistles (though Alexander Woodward’s eye-catching set composed of over 60 doors and windows is not without its symbolic depth.) Once is also touted for its music and its actor/musicians who do double duty as the production’s cast and on-stage orchestra.

Lily Talevski and Thom Miller. Photo by Kata Sasvari.

Northern Stage’s production begins on a Dublin street with Guy (Thom Miller), a musician who repairs vacuum cleaners to make ends barely meet. Girl (Lily Talevski) arrives with a faulty Hoover and a nose that quickly sniffs out Guy’s despair as well as his musical talent. Talevski portrays her character with an unlikely but effective pairing of Eastern European steel and a hopeful, never-say-die attitude. She is brassy but caring; he is woeful and taciturn. Act I provides some back story involving how each of them has been disappointed in love. Because it’s Dublin, add some ear-catching Irish-style music (watch for Eric Love wielding a wicked cello), and boisterous choreography. Surely then one sees this as the tried-and-true recipe for a romantic comedy.

It is Act II that saves Once by adding texture and ripping it from the expected rom-com conventions. The production turns, beginning with a quiet scene by the ocean between Guy and Girl, in which space is created to allow more authentic, less quippy dialogue. The two go on to plot musical success, working through the knots such as financing, studio space, musicians behaving badly. Meanwhile, love grows, and Guy and Girl are not quite sure what to do about that. Girl gets Guy to dream big (New York?), but then what?

Once Cast. Photo by Kata Sasvari

The ensemble cast plays the comedy broadly at times, and the music with considerable skill. Rachel Mulcahy as Reza (featured photo, top) fiddles and vamps in equal measure. Stephen Lee Anderson as Da provides one of the evening’s most touching scenes as he and his son discuss Guy's future.

There’s a beautiful melancholy to the play’s consideration of the tenacity of dreams and of the fragility of love. In the end, the soup’s not always what’s ordered, or even expected, but it’s warm and tender all the same.