Date: Fri 21-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 21-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLK
Illustration: C
Location: A14
Quick Words:
Threepenny-theatre-MacHeath
Full Text:
(rev "The Threepenny Opera" @WestConn, 3/21/97)
Theatre Review-
Three Cheers For WestConn's "Opera"
By Julie Stern
DANBURY - Last year, WestConn's theatre arts department put on a most
ambitious production of Tony Kushner's A Bright Light Called Day , which
examined the impact of Nazi Germany on a small group of artistic bohemians.
The link to German cultural history is continued with this year's spring
musical, The Three Penny Opera , which is the most famous joint creation of
Bertold Brecht and Kurt Weill, political exiles whose works were banned by the
Nazi regime.
Originally written in 1928, Brecht's bitterly satirical portrait of Victorian
English lowlifes has been produced many times in this country, in a number of
translations, with a variety of performers in the leading role, ranging from
Jerry Orbach to Sting. As soon as they hear its opening notes, most people
recognize the haunting ballad of "Mack the Knife" - Oh the shark has, pretty
teeth dear/ And he keeps them, pearly white/ Just a jackknife, has MacHeath,
dear/ But he keeps it, out of sight...
But while the recurrent melody runs through memory easily enough, not everyone
attends to its message of murder, betrayal and amoral cruelty. MacHeath is a
classic anti hero - a thief, a pimp and a killer who has achieved fame and
fortune in the underworld through a combination of ruthless indifference to
others, and judicious bribery of the police commissioner.
Featuring nearly two dozen songs set to Weill's stridently compelling score,
the show is "an opera, conceived with all the grandeur that a beggar can
imagine at a price so low a beggar can afford it," as the ballad singer tells
the audience.
The narrator and cicerone - a Mr J.J. Peachum - along with his wife, runs a
store for beggars. In exchange for a percentage of the take, they provide
props and costumes that will make a beggar look pitiful enough to melt the
hearts of respectable Londoners.
The action begins when Peachum's daughter Polly elopes with MacHeath. Her
parents are furious, and not because MacHeath is a criminal or because he
already has a string of other women including all the inmates of a brothel in
Wapping, but because they had been counting on Polly to support them in their
old age.
By way of revenge the Peachums set out to get MacHeath hanged by bribing the
whores to betray him to the police. The ensuing story mixes pledges of love
and friendship with lies and backstabbing treachery, told through wonderful
songs and some comic routines, as in MacHeath and Polly's "marriage," catered
and decorated by Mack's gang of housebreakers.
Like many intellectuals of his time, Brecht was a Communist, and his point in
this play was that crime is the product of poverty and an unjust society in
which the wealthy and powerful capitalist class exploits the hapless poor.
Given that arrangement, he observes, why should we expect the bottom of the
social order to be any less greedy and selfish than their "betters"?
This is the message of songs with acerbic refrains such as "What keeps a man
alive? He lives on others..." or "The bulging pocket makes the easy life..."
("and even saintly folks will act like sinners, unless they've had their
customary dinners").
This show is an opera, rather than a musical comedy, of the type Western
normally stages in the spring. It is the songs (music and lyrics) that are
truly memorable, along with the pageantry and set pieces that feature Helen
Masterson's spectacular costuming.
What it does not have is dancing, and since choreography is generally one of
the most exciting parts of Western's productions, there are times between
musical numbers when the show feels a bit static. The principals have fine
voices but the spoken dialogue could use a bit more force.
As far as the leads go, it is Andy Honings, as Peachum, who ties it all
together with a dominating performance that gets Brecht's satirical point
across with elegant cynicism, overshadowing Mike Hartel as the irrepressible
Mack.
All three of Mack's women - Jessica Murphy as Jenny, Sara Constantinople as
Polly, and Cheri Lloyd as the police commissioner's daughter, Lucy - give
strong performances, and their songs - less Marxist in theme than plaintive
laments about the fallibility of romance - are truly memorable, especially the
"Pirate Jenny" fantasy of revenge by "the ship, the black freighter, with a
skull on its masthead" that sails into port one day and wipes out every man
who ever insulted her.
Three cheers to WestConn for taking on this challenge and for giving area
residents the chance to see this remarkably unique show.
WestConn's latest reason for applause, The Three Penny Opera continues at the
Berkshire Theatre until March 22. Performances are Wednesday through Saturday
at 8 pm. Tickets are $15 each, $12 for students, seniors and children; call
837-8732.
