My Fair Lady may well be my favorite
Broadway-originated musical. (For musicals that began life on the big screen, I
reserve top honors for Singing in the
Rain.) It’s not just that the “book” borrows heavily and appropriately from
George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, but
that its songs—most of which entered the Great American Songbook long ago—long
ago seeped into my memory. Seldom have wit and heart become so conjoined in the
entire history of musical theater.
Those two qualities are what I have come back to,
again and again, in thinking of how much I enjoyed the revival of this great
musical—with the passage of time, still one of the half-dozen greatest in the
history of that art form, in my opinion—now taking place at Lincoln Center. The
show had already been running there since spring, and I counted myself lucky it
was still around for me to enjoy it.
As I write this review, it’s still open, but even
the best things in life don’t last forever, so I urge anyone who hasn’t seen it
yet—heck, anyone who has one of those days when they feel down at the mouth—to
run out and buy a ticket.
Not unlike the 1964 Oscar-winning film adaptation
starring Rex Harrison (repeating his Broadway triumph) and Audrey Hepburn, the
show at Lincoln Center’s Vivian Beaumont Theater is handsome, even highly
stylized. The costumes by Catherine Zuber are beautiful (especially in the
scenes at the Embassy and the Ascot races), and the sets by Michael Yeargan,
which move the action rapidly from scene to scene (particularly in Henry
Higgins’ house on Wimpole Street), are a marvel of economy in stagecraft.
But it is in fidelity to the book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and the music by Frederic Loewe that this show is best
served. Over the past few decades, changing attitudes toward sexual roles, race
and ethnicity have led a number of producers to embark on ill-advised
“revisals,” in which playwrights are commissioned to perform drastic surgery on
shows’ “books” (the spoken, non-sung portions, often called the “librettos”).
More often than not, these changes, rather than
enhancing the value of the songs that drew backers to the show in the first
place, call unnecessary attention to themselves through their anachronistic
interpretations.
But director Bartlett Sher sidestepped that danger. He left the libretto, from what I could see,
almost entirely intact. But, without changing a single word, he has changed the
interpretation of its famous ending (“"Eliza? Where the devil are my
slippers?"). In his non-traditional way, he has adhered closer to Shaw’s
original, almost perversely non-conformist spirit than any prior production.
The cast differed somewhat at this performance from
the start of its run last April. Not having seen the show when it first settled
in at Lincoln Center, I can’t say whether the replacements constituted an
improvement, but the actors certainly filled their roles ably.
Michael Williams stepped in for Mark Aldrich as Lord
Boxington, and, in a role with far greater visibility—and greater potential for
triumph or disaster—Adam Grupper—the understudy for Norbert Leo Butz (Alfred P.
Doolittle) and Allan Cordenur (Col. Pickering)—subbed capably for the latter.
Other cast changes were longer lasting. At this
performance, Becca Ayers took on the multiple roles of Mrs. Hopkins, Henry
Higgins’ maid, as well as understudy for Mrs. Parsee and an ensemble member. I
would have loved to have seen Diana Rigg as Mrs. Higgins, but how could I
complain about my longtime stage favorite Rosemary Harris (perhaps best known as Aunt May in the Tobey Maguire Spiderman film trilogy) in the role?
The most significant cast change involved Laura Benanti, who took over the role
of Eliza Doolittle from the acclaimed Lauren Ambrose. From having seen her in
the Roundabout Theatre Company’s terrific revival of the musical She Loves Me (see my review here), I
knew Ms. Benanti was a performer with considerable vocal prowess and acting
range.
True, in her late 30s, she is a full two decades
older than the Cockney flower girl she’s portraying (as well as the actress who
made her reputation in the original musical, Julie Andrews). She’s even a
couple of years older than co-star Harry Hadden-Paton.
But producers have found a way forever to make
audiences forget about age-appropriate casting for Eliza. The first Eliza, Mrs.
Patrick Campbell, was 49 years old when she originated the role in the original
1913 production of Pygmalion. Even on
the big screen, where age is harder to disguise, Audrey Hepburn was 35 when she
won the coveted role. It helps that musical-theater enthusiasts (especially
opera fans) have long been asked to engage in far more startling suspensions of
disbelief.
What this production has, in Ms. Benanti, is an
artist with the maturity to understand and convey Eliza’s struggle for
autonomy; of her pride in not simply passing for a “lady” but also learning a
new language to help her do so; and of her fury in being bullied and dismissed
not just by her no-account father but by the conniving bully like Higgins and
even the seemingly thoughtful Col. Pickering.
In other words, this is more than a show where
attention is more balanced than before between Eliza and Higgins; this is a
production which, like never before, belongs to Eliza and the actress
bringing her to life in the 21st century.
In its fall 2007 production of Pygmalion starring Jefferson Mays as Higgins and Claire Danes as
Eliza, the Roundabout opened my eyes to what had long seemed preposterous: that
a happily-ever-after ending for the professor and his pupil would not only have
been a stretch, but even preposterous.
The Lincoln Center production pushes that notion
even further. Hadden-Paton’s Higgins could be an Edwardian counterpart to Dr.
Sheldon Cooper of The Big Bang Theory: an
intellectual man-child with nearly zero emotional intelligence—and, thus, a
long-term indifference to how he might sound to others. This Higgins might be
missing a good deal of the charm that Harrison brought to the role, but it does
underscore that the professor’s emotional journey will take longer than
Eliza’s.
More than a decade ago, I took special delight in
the Tony Award-winning performance of Norbert Leo Butz in the Broadway musical Dirty
Rotten Scoundrels. But he may have exceeded that here as Alfred P.
Doolittle. The actor (who has now turned the role over to the equally estimable
Broadway veteran Danny Burstein) made of Eliza’s father a role to behold. Leading
his bar mates in his two big numbers, “With a Little Bit of Luck” and “Get Me
to the Church on Time,” he is as irresponsible a scamp who ever lived. But you
can’t help loving his brio—and chuckling on his predicament after an unexpected
windfall leaves him sputtering about the dangers of “middle-class morality.”
With his majestic voice, Jordan Donica demonstrated with the big number given to the young
aristocrat Freddy Eynsford-Hill, “On the Street Where You Live,” the great,
beating unconditional love that has been missing from Eliza all this time under
the thumb of her father and Higgins. Donica’s unabashed joy is enough to
convince the audience that, with all his faults (as someone who’s never worked
a day in his life, how can be expected to provide for her, let alone himself,
if they marry?), he presents Eliza with a credible alternative to life with
Higgins.
Sophisticated and hilarious, My Fair Lady continues to repay musical theater lovers’ attention.
Even as Eliza delivers a curtain response to Higgins that leaves the
linguistics professor uncharacteristically speechless, Benanti and Co. leave
the audience walking on air.
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