Even 40 years later, the AIDS crisis continues to shape American life. Long before Hollywood brought AIDS stories to the cultural mainstream, the theatre was a safe place for actors and writers to explore their fears and sense of injustice for a mass audience.
‘Falsettos’ playwright William Finn began working on what would become the now classic musical in the 1970s, as a response to the gay liberation movement. The play started as a series of one-acts concerning Marvin, the show’s protagonist as he navigates leaving his family for his male lover. Initially the first installment, ‘In Trousers’ was a critical and commercial failure. Finn considered abandoning theatre entirely, but instead collaborated with lyricist James Lapine to create ‘Falsettos’. A musical that would explore both gay liberation and the early years of the AIDS epidemic through the vantage point of Finn’s character Marvin.
Court Theatre and TimeLine Theatre team up for a joint revival of ‘Falsettos’ at the Hyde Park theater. With a 70s-themed set, audiences are transported back to 1979 where they meet Marvin, the play’s central character played by Steven Schellhardt. Not only is this a play about gay culture, but it’s also a celebration of the Jewish-American experience. The show begins with a song ‘Four Jews in a Room Bitching’ that introduces the sing-songy musical style that permeates throughout.
Marvin is leaving his wife Trina (Sarah Bockel) for his new lover Whizzer (Jack Ball). Trina is taking up with the family psychiatrist Mendel (Jackson Evans). Their son Jason (Charlie Long) is caught in the middle as his parents duke it over his approaching bar mitzvah. Marvin wants it all, his perfect nuclear family and his new lover, at whatever emotional cost that comes to his son, his lover and Trina. What’s so striking about the first act is how modern the themes are. Perhaps in a world without the specter of AIDS hanging over it, this odd family arrangement would have eventually worked itself out. Act I essentially lives in a vacuum uninfluenced by the coming epidemic. Act II catches up with the characters two years later. Things have slightly improved for Marvin and his family but another grim reality emerges. Whizzer becomes one of the AIDS epidemic’s first victims. This 11’o clock tone shift admittedly feels jarring especially against the chipper upbeat music. Though, it makes this musical feel unique as far as AIDS literature goes. It’s not the AIDS musical per se, but rather a musical about the gay experience that features AIDS. In this story, the virus is so new it doesn’t even have a name or a course of treatment.
Lyricist James Lapine crafted words for Sondheim classics like ‘Sunday in the Park with George’ and ‘Into the Woods’. His signature rhyming scheme are both a blessing and a curse for ‘Falsettos’. Sarah Bockel is undeniably this production’s strongest asset, especially during numbers like ‘Trina’s Song’ showcase her talent as a singer and physical performer. However, the lyrics feel outdated as any sort of feminist anthem.
The play is aptly titled ‘Falsettos’ as the characters are often singing in a much more upbeat style than the content of the lyrics. Sometimes it works, and sometimes the rhyming feels like a reach. The musical style works well in big cast numbers like ‘Falsettoland/It’s About Time’, but when the play takes on a more serious tone the format feels contradictory to the plot.
Director Nick Bowling and music director Otto Vogel present a faithful, high-end revival that will delight fans of the musical. The cast rises to the occasion wonderfully, especially child actor Charlie Long as the hopelessly awkward teen caught in the middle of his parents’ drama. Putting ‘Falsettos’ into the context of today’s more accepting world, it feels like a victory lap, a reminder of how far society has come. It’s a celebration of love in all its forms.
Through December 8 at Court Theatre. 5535 S Ellis Ave. 773-753-4472.
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