It may not be the age of Aquarius anymore, but American Theater Company is currently bringing back the days when hippies believed love was the answer for everything, the war in Viet Nam was being protested with demonstration after demonstration, racial barriers were being broken and psychedelic drugs were in fashion more than ever. HAIR represents a time and movement that has certainly gone down in history as one of the most influential to date in American culture and politics. HAIR is a story of peace, love and the acceptance of people for who they are.
From its opening number “Aquarius” to its big finale “Flesh Failures (Let the Sun Shine In)”, HAIR will have you longing for the days of yesteryear when flowers in your hair was as commonplace as “Make Love Not War” chants, or simply yearn for a time you never got to experience but always wanted to. As you walk into the theater you are immediately thrown into the midst of a late 1960s social as cast members in striped bell bottoms and paisley dresses donned in beads and headbands are scattered throughout interacting with each other and audience members.
PJ Paparelli does a great job in his direction but gets just the right support from his costume, hair and scenic designers to really make the era come to life. And you simply cannot pull off a successful production of HAIR without a good band and Sam Brownson’s fuzzy guitar leads the way along with John Lauler on bass, Matt Roberts on drums and Greg Woods doubling on piano and guitar.
And then there is the cast.
Zach Kenney is just terrific as “Claude”, who is conflicted throughout the show once he receives a draft card to serve in Viet Nam. Kenney shows a vast range of emotions and is also able to carry the role vocally with just the right amount of finesse. Sky Seals also shows off a good deal of talent in his role as “Berger”, pushing the boundaries any chance his character allows. From top to bottom, the HAIR cast gets the job done well and treats the audience to fantastic vocal harmonies and exciting dance numbers for an entire 140 minutes.
Though there were a couple moments in the show that dragged, they are quickly overcome with fun songs, good laughs and stimulating choreography. There is nudity in this show, so be advised if that makes you uncomfortable. But HAIR without nudity would be sacrilegious.
My take? HAIR is fun and it promotes a beautiful message. Go get your hippie on and get over to American Theater Company and take in a night of song, dance, comedy and most of all – love.
HAIR is playing at American Theater Company (1909 W Byron Street) through June 29th and tickets are priced at a reasonable $48. For tickets and/or more information, visit http://www.atcweb.org/ or call 773-409-4125.
*Photo by Michael Brosilow - Candace Edwards, Sky Seals, Zach Kenney, Ella Raymont, Mary Hollis Inboden - V