Theater review: âMiss Saigonâ at La Mirada Theatre for the Arts
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The heat is on in La Mirada, where âMiss Saigonâ blows into the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts and transports the audience skyward. Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel SchĂśnbergâs phenomenally successful Vietnam War-era gloss on âMadama Butterflyâ receives a sleekly staged, wonderfully performed revival that heightens this critic-proof poperaâs strengths and obscures its frailties, to impressive effect.
Joseph Anthony Foronda conveys spontaneous wit and sardonic grit as the pimping, visa-obsessed Engineer. This character, the eveningâs emcee and narrative engine, could descend into leering hamminess, but Foronda expertly balances sleaze, pragmatism and realism, from the opening âThe Heat is On in Saigonâ onward.
That milieu-setting number, where gyrating hookers vie for the highest bidder, introduces virginal 17-year-old heroine Kim, played here by the luminous Jacqueline Nguyen. Reportedly the first Vietnamese actress to star in a major âSaigonâ production, Nguyenâs emotional acuity and water-clear soprano convinces throughout, especially in tandem with golden-voiced Kevin Odekirk as American G.I. Chris, their duets soaring and potent.
So is the whole ensemble, committed to Dana Solimandoâs adroit choreography, gorgeously harmonizing under musical director John Glaudiniâs baton. Lawrence Cummings as Chrisâ buddy, Aidan Park as Kimâs betrothed and April Malina as the winner of the titular contest have such vocal and dramatic intensity you wish their parts were larger. Preternaturally poised Ken Shim as the 3-year-old plot pivot steals every heart, and Cassandra Murphy gives the thankless role of Chrisâ American wife a full-throated conviction that wouldnât shame Idina Menzel.
Director Brian Kite shrewdly streamlines Nicholas Hytnerâs original staging without losing iconic quality. Designer Dustin J. Cardwellâs rolling screens and sliding pieces are sparer than some productions, but they put the characters and situations into full focus. Mela Hoyt-Heydonâs effective costumes, Julie Ferrinâs thunderous sound and Steven Youngâs spectacular lighting commingle to create some sensational stage pictures, and not just the celebrated helicopter that delineates the fall of Saigon.
SchĂśnbergâs lush, leit-motif-heavy melodies rarely rival his âLes Mizâ tunes, but in William D. Brohnâs string-laden orchestrations they land with the fervor of vintage Romberg or Rodgers and Hammerstein. The biggest liabilities, as always, are Boublil and Richard Maltby Jr.âs prosaic lyrics, sometimes prolix, often downright clunky, and a libretto than can feel less based on grand opera than soap opera, though certainly its war-survivor and immigration aspects remain topical. In any event, this solid reading will surely engross general audiences, even if they do exit with âSun & Moon,â âLast Night of the Worldâ and âThe American Dreamâ fixed in their brainpans.
â David C. Nichols
âMiss Saigon,â La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts, 14900 La Mirada Blvd., La Mirada. 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays. Ends May 6. $35-$50. (562) 944-9801, (714) 994-6310 or www.lamiradatheatre.com. Running time: 2 hours, 35 minutes.