Date: Fri 16-May-1997
Date: Fri 16-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
theatre-Guthrie-
Full Text:
(rev "Woody Guthrie's American Song" @Danbury Theatre Co., 5/16/97)
Theatre Review-
Danbury Theatre Succeeds With An Important History Lesson
(with photo)
By Julie Stern
DANBURY - The Great Depression, which began with the Stock Market crash of
1929 and did not end until the country entered the Second World War, when the
need for military equipment generated production orders for stagnant factories
and jobs for unemployed workers, was a tragedy which impacted on society and
shaped the American character like none other, except perhaps the Vietnam War.
Because The Depression occurred before the days when television cameras could
flash live images of disaster into every living room, it became the province
of America's artists to record and interpret the human dimensions of the
catastrophe.
John Steinbeck's wrenching portrait of uprooted migrant workers in The Grapes
of Wrath, the haunting photographs of Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange,
Reginald Marsh's etchings of big city breadlines and Thomas Hart Benton's
paintings of stoical sharecroppers are both part of our cultural heritage and
lessons in history as well.
Into this category too falls the itinerant folk singer-songwriter Woody
Guthrie, father of Arlo, who traveled across the country, playing for handouts
and writing songs that articulated the experiences of the people he met, until
he was felled at age forty by Huntington's chorea (now better known as "Woody
Guthrie's Disease").
In Woody Guthrie's American Song , the Danbury Theater Company has mounted a
multi-media tribute to Woody. Originally created by Peter Glazer, the show
tells the story of Guthrie's life, in his own words, taken from his
autobiography, Bound for Glory .
While constantly changing images of period photographs and Benton paintings
are flashed on screens on either side of the stage, Bruce Hanson's clever
staging uses simple props to follow the sequence of Guthrie's hard travels.
When dust storms and bank mortgage foreclosures drove the farmers of Oklahoma
and Arkansas off their land, he followed them to the supposed promised land of
California.
Scenes change from a West Texas barn dance to a moving freight car filled with
an assortment of hobos, from a migrant "jungle" camp filled with homeless
people waiting for work that never materializes, and back across the continent
to New York City and the Bowery bars, where Guthrie teamed up with another
wanderer, Cisco Houston.
The cast, comprised of Timothy Russell, Michael B. Pasternack, Richard
Reimold, Lani Peck and Susan Lang, takes turns narrating passages from
Guthrie's writing, alternating with medleys that incorporate more than two
dozen of his most famous songs, beginning with "Hard Travelin'" and closing
with a smashing rendition of "This Land is Your Land."
In between we hear "I Ain't Got No Home," "Bound for Glory", "Grand Coulee
Dam", "Hard, Ain't it Hard", "Union Maid," "The Sinking of the Reuben James,"
"Nine Hundred Miles" and "Lonesome Valley," along with an extremely powerful
rendition of "Pastures of Plenty" which concludes the first act. In a jump to
modern parallels, the Guthrie-like ballad "Deportee" recounts a plane crash
that killed 32 Mexican aliens being deported by the INS.
The guitar playing is a bit rudimentary, but then maybe Guthrie's was as well.
At any rate, the voices of the five principals are clear and appealing, and
musical director Roger Kaplan's method of building from solos to increasingly
complex arrangements is very effective and exciting to listen to. The back-up
band that uses bass, guitar, fiddle, mandolin and harmonica is a good one,
too.
My radio station, and the recent proliferation of ads for "coffee houses,"
suggests acoustic guitars and "folk music" are undergoing a renaissance these
days. I am delighted to learn this (although unfortunately some of the stuff I
hear sounds suspiciously like self-absorbed drivel): All the more reason to
respond to Woody Guthrie's mission, which was to share the songs which express
people's feelings about work, their struggles, their wars and their dreams.
Woody Guthrie's American Song is as much a sorely needed history lesson as it
is delightful entertainment. As usual, the Danbury Theater Company has aimed
high and succeeded admirably. Go see it while you have the chance.
Curtain for Woody Guthrie's American Song is Friday and Saturday at 8 pm,
Sunday at 7, through June 7. Tickets are $15, $13 for seniors. The theatre is
in St. James Church, 25 West Street. Call 790-1161 for details.