Sunday, September 15, 2024

Bright Star at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts

Even though I have now seen the musical Bright Star many times, I was still really excited when SCERA announced that it would be part of their fall season because it is such a beautiful story about love, loss, forgiveness, and redemption. I was able to see their production last night and it is amazing! Alice Murphy (Kelsey Mariner Thompson) is a young and rebellious teenager living in the small town of Zebulon, North Carolina in the 1920s and she regularly exasperates her mother (Shawnda Moss) and father (Mike Ramsey) with her wild behavior. She begins a romance with Jimmy Ray Dobbs (Christian Wawro) but his father, the Mayor (Ben Henderson), wants him to make a more advantageous match and conspires to separate them. Twenty-two years later, just after World War II, Billy Cane (Bryson Smellie) returns to his hometown of Hayes Creek, North Carolina to visit his father (Brian Tanner) and his childhood friend Margo (McKenna Thomas). He soon decides to try writing for a magazine in Asheville and meets Alice, now an uptight editor who mentors him. The narrative alternates between both timelines as Alice discovers a unique connection to Billy. I pretty much love every song in this show (the folk and bluegrass music is written and composed by Steve Martin and Edie Brickell) and everyone in the incredibly talented cast performs them beautifully. Thompson and Wawro, especially, give highly emotional renditions of "Please, Don't Take Him" and "Heartbreaker," respectively, which alternate between anger and pain and then the two of them reduced me to tears with their touching version of "I Had a Vision." I also loved Thompson's powerful performance of "At Long Last" and I was not alone because the crowd went wild at its conclusion! Shoutouts go to Jared Wilkinson and Colie Lemon as Alice's assistants Daryl and Lucy, respectively, because they provide a lot of comic relief and they are hilarious in "Another Round." The set features weathered doors and window frames suspended over the stage upon which various images are projected (my favorites were the stars during the song "What Could Be Better" and the moving train tracks during a climactic scene) and a wooden structure that is rotated to become the Murphy cabin, the Cane cabin, and Margo's bookshop. The staging is very clever because the ensemble is used to move props (the lanterns are particularly effective) on and off stage with choreography and bits of business that enhance the scene. I especially loved how they move in slow motion around Margo during the song "Asheville" because it emphasizes her longing for Billy and how they freeze around Mayor Dobbs on the train during "A Man's Gotta Do (Reprise)" to show how furtive his actions are. This is one of the best productions of this show that I've seen (on par with the Broadway cast) and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here). It runs at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts on Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays through October 5.

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