Friday, October 18, 2019

Miss Saigon at the Eccles

After I was able to see Les Miserables in London on a study abroad trip, Miss Saigon went to the top of the list of musicals I most wanted to see.  I finally had the opportunity to see it when the Broadway touring production came to SLC several years later and, while I absolutely loved the show, I was a little bit disappointed.  The Capitol Theatre stage couldn't accommodate the helicopter used in the fall of Saigon so a hologram was used instead.  I have always wanted to see the actual helicopter and I got my wish last night when a new production came to the Eccles Theatre.  This musical is based on Puccini's opera Madame Butterfly but it is set in Vietnam near the end of the war.  Kim (Emily Bautista) is a recently orphaned young girl who comes to Saigon from a rural village to be a bargirl at Dreamland, a brothel owned by the Engineer (Red Concepcion).  A U.S. Marine named Chris (Anthony Festa) is disillusioned by the war and is captivated by Kim's innocence.  The Engineer arranges for him to spend the night with Kim and they fall in love and begin a relationship.  Kim's cousin Thuy (Jinwoo Jung), to whom she was betrothed, has become an officer in the North Vietnamese Army and comes to Saigon to take her back home.  She refuses, believing Chris's promise that he will take her with him when he returns home, but he inadvertently leaves her behind in the chaos at the end of the war.  Three years later, the Engineer is in a reeducation camp but is asked by Thuy, now a commissar in the new Communist government, to find Kim.  When the Engineer finds her, Thuy is horrified to find out that Kim has had a son with Chris and tries to kill the boy.  Kim kills Thuy instead to save her son and turns to the Engineer for help.   He ultimately decides to help her because he believes that her son is his ticket to America and the three of them flee to Bangkok.  When Chris, who is now married to Ellen (Ellie Fishman), learns of his son's existence he travels to Bangkok to see him.  Kim believes that Chris is finally coming back to get her but, when she learns that he is married, she makes the ultimate sacrifice and begs him to take the boy with him.  The music in this show is incredibly beautiful and emotional and the principals all have amazing voices!  I especially loved "The Last Night of the World," "Too Much for One Heart," and "The American Dream."  Bautista's powerful rendition of "I'd Give My Life for You" made me cry (and I was not alone).  I loved the dramatic staging for "The Morning of the Dragon" and "Fall of Saigon." The helicopter is only on stage for a few minutes but it is absolutely spectacular and gave me goosebumps.  I loved this revival and I highly recommend it with the proviso that "The Heat is On in Saigon" and "What a Waste" are a bit raunchy (a couple sitting near me left after "The Heat is On in Saigon" which is the first number in the show).  It runs at the Eccles until October 20 (go here for tickets).

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