Friday, December 13, 2024

Kimberly Akimbo at the Eccles

Last night I went to see the Broadway touring production of Kimberly Akimbo.  This was one of my most anticipated shows this season because it won so many Tony Awards and, even though it is very dark, I liked its quirkiness and message about living life to the fullest.  Kimberly Levaco (Carolee Carmello) is a teenager with an unnamed disease that causes her body to age four times faster than normal and will soon prove fatal.  She also has a dysfunctional family with an alcoholic father named Buddy (Brandon Springman) and a narcissistic mother named Pattie (Dana Steingold), who are having another baby to replace her, as well as an aunt named Debra (Emily Koch) who is a criminal and may or may not have necessitated a hasty move by the family to New Jersey.  Kimberly is now trying to navigate the normal travails of adolescence in a new school with these added issues but, when she meets the nerdy Seth (Miguel Gil), who speaks Elvish, plays the tuba, and loves anagrams, and four members of the show choir, Delia (Grace Capeless), Martin (Darron Hayes), Teresa (Skye Alyssa Friedman), and Aaron (Pierce Wheeler), who act as a Greek Chorus, she decides to experience everything the world has to offer while she can.  All of the shifts in tone really work in this show.  Kimberly's fate is tragic and her family members are despicable but humor (I laughed out loud multiple times, especially at a running joke about the unrequited feelings the members of the show choir have for each other) is one of the ways she deals with her situation and she is ultimately able to thrive (the morality of what she does may be up for debate but I loved the feel-good ending).  I definitely don't think the music in this show is strong enough to warrant the Best Musical Tony but I did love "Father Time," which Pattie sings as a lullaby to her unborn child but is really a plea for more time with Kimberly, "Good Kid" in which Seth laments that he has always done the right thing but it hasn't made much of a difference, and "Our Disease" in which Kimberly realizes that getting older is her disease but it is the cure for everything that plagues her friends.  Carmello does an outstanding job portraying a 16 year old trapped in the body of a 70 year old but I didn't always love her vocal performance (it was sometimes very strident).  Gil is amazing as the irrepressible Seth (it was his performance that really drew me in) and I also really loved the young ensemble.  The set design is simple but really creative (I loved the ice skating rink because it appears as if the characters are actually ice skating) and I was especially impressed by the seamless transitions between scenes.  The costumes are perfect for the 90s setting.  I enjoyed this and recommend getting a ticket to one of the five remaining performances at the Eccles Theatre (go here) with the proviso that there is quite a bit of profanity.

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