Thursday, March 3, 2022

Bright Star at HCTO

I fell in love with the musical Bright Star when I saw a production at PTC a few years ago which featured most of the original Broadway cast, including Carmen Cusack as Alice Murphy.  I was, therefore, really excited to see this show at HCT Orem last night and I loved what they did with it!  The story takes place in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina during the 1920s and just after World War II.  After the war, Billy Cane (Zack Elzey) briefly returns to his hometown of Hayes Creek to visit his father (Sanford Porter) and his childhood friend Margot (Maren Miller) but he soon decides to try writing for a magazine in Asheville where he meets the uptight editor, Alice Murphy (Anya Young Wilson), who once made Hemingway cry.  When Daryl (Dayne Joyner) and Lucy (Kelsey Phillips Harrison), staff members at the magazine, tease Alice about her boring existence, she transforms in front of our eyes into a wild and rebellious young girl in the small town of Zubulon.  She begins a romance with Jimmy Ray Dobbs (Benjamin Henderson), much to the chagrin of his father Mayor Josiah Dobbs (Stephen Kerr) who tries to separate them.  The narrative alternates between the two timelines as Alice suffers an unimaginable loss and then is unexpectedly made whole again.  The story is very powerful and heartwarming with amazing bluegrass music written by Edie Brickell and Steve Martin.  My favorite songs are "If You Knew My Story," "Asheville," "Sun's Gonna Shine," and "I Had a Vision."  Wilson has a beautiful voice and her emotional rendition of "Please Don't Take Him" brought tears to my eyes.  When she first appears on stage as the older Alice I was so impressed by her portrayal of the emotionally restrained professional woman that I wondered if she would be able to pull off the reckless teenage girl but she transitions seamlessly between the two with just a change in expression (and some quick costume changes).  The rest of the cast is really strong but the other standouts for me were Miller, as a young woman afraid that she will lose the one she loves to the big city, and Kerr, as a father who thinks he is doing the right thing for his son.  The staging of this show in such a small and intimate space is so clever!  The set includes the facade of a rustic cabin with a fenced in porch, where a three piece band (featuring Braden Williams on fiddle, Marcus Williams on mandolin, and Taylon Mann on banjo) performs, as well as an attached platform and a grassy area where the action takes place with the addition of portable set pieces and projections to denote the bookstore where Margot works and the office of the magazine.  I also really liked the use of vintage light bulbs. The members of the ensemble move props on and off stage very effectively and I was really impressed with how a key moment on a train is portrayed.  This is a wonderful production that should not be missed (go here for tickets).

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