Theater Review
Tom Titus
If you think you’ve seen the musical “Cabaret†-- and since it’s been
around for nearly 35 years with generous local exposure, you probably
have -- you still haven’t witnessed a production quite like the version
now being presented at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
It’s almost inaccurate to refer to this touring show as a “revival,â€
since director Sam Mendes (an Oscar winner for “American Beautyâ€) and
codirector and choreographer Rob Marshall have injected a visceral
sensation of in-your-face power and brilliance into the John Kander/Fred
Ebb musical, which had done pretty well on its own back in the 1960s.
This “Cabaret†seethes with hedonistic decadence. Set in Berlin just
prior to the Nazi takeover, the show mixes elements of the movie version
(Cliff’s bisexuality, Sally’s haunting solo “Maybe This Timeâ€) that
weren’t present in the original play. The emcee also has a more dominant
role, even orchestrating the action outside the Kit Kat Klub like a
sadistic puppeteer.
Fortunately, the show’s adapters didn’t repeat the mistake made by Bob
Fosse’s film version by eliminating the aging German landlady and her
Jewish fruit merchant suitor. Their heart-rending subplot is crucial to
any production of “Cabaret,†and it’s especially relevant in this one.
“Cabaret†is set in 1929-30 Berlin, years before Hitler predicated
World War II and slaughtered millions of Jews. Yet the ominous harbinger
of coming events pervades the show and, in a stunning final tableau, adds
a terrifying epilogue. The music, heavy on drums and brass, is strident
and insinuating, punctuating the seething elements of its familiar, but
here often expanded, story line.
This might be the last place you’d expect to find a recent Miss
America belting out the title tune, but Kate Shindle -- who won the crown
just two years ago -- tears into her round-heeled, coke-snorting Sally
Bowles character with a vengeance. Shindle renders an achingly honest
portrayal of the cabaret songbird and devotee of o7 la dolce vitaf7 ,
and no one from Liza Minelli on down ever has injected the title number
with such raw, shudder-inducing forcefulness.
Jay Goede contributes a strong, solid counterpoint as the American
novelist who seems to be the only prescient character on stage and whose
outrage at the spread of Nazism is emphatically delivered. That his Cliff
tends to cruise both sides of the Autobahn, sexually, seems irrelevant
and even detracts somewhat from his moralistic persona.
As for emcee Jon Peterson, playgoers would be advised to leave the
kids home before savoring his performance. Peterson expands on the
heretofore only suggested erotic aspects of his role (the “Two Ladiesâ€
are one of each gender), gloriously reveling in his sensual nature, and
his showmanship in the cabaret numbers is splendid.
Alma Cuervo as the world-weary landlady presents a powerful argument
for accommodation and her singing voice is on a par with Shindle’s. As
her gentle Jewish suitor, Hal Robinson is one of the few who exhibits
genuine compassion and he impresses even without his lighthearted solo,
“Meeskite,†which has been excised from the program. Nothing lighthearted
about this “Cabaret.â€
The frisky Fraulein Kost is remarkably played by Lenora Nemetz, whose
Broadway debut came in “Cabaret†-- the first version (1966). Nemetz also
doubles as a Kit Kat chorine and chills her audiences at the close of the
first act with a haunting rendition of the Nazi anthem “Tomorrow Belongs
to Me.â€
Tomorrow, and considerable days, weeks and months afterward, should
belong to this robust revival, which writhes with a syncopated fury under
the baton of music director Patrick Vaccarriello’s superbly brassy
orchestra. It may be a period piece, but this “Cabaret†packs an
exclamation point.
CUTLINE: Kate Shindle portrays the sensuous singer Sally Bowles in the
touring production of “Cabaret,†now at the Orange County Performing Arts
Center.
WHAT: “Cabaretâ€
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 660 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
WHEN: Final performances at 2 and 8 p.m. today, and 6 p.m. Sunday
HOW MUCH: $28.50 to $62.50
PHONE: (714) 556-2787
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.