Last night I went to CPT with my sisters and my nephew to see the first of five productions of A Christmas Carol that I have scheduled this holiday season. This version is a musical, with music by Alan Menken and lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, and I have to admit that it was not my favorite adaptation of the novel by Charles Dickens but I enjoyed this production because it got me really excited for Christmas. As the rest of London celebrates the coming of Christmas, Ebenezer Scrooge (Nick Cash) berates his clerk Bob Cratchit (Nathan Sachs) for wanting the day off, refuses an invitation to dine from his nephew Fred (Paul Dixon), and ignores a debtor (Josh Lee) seeking relief. He also has interactions with a lamplighter (Dylan Floyd Panter), a man wearing a sandwich board advertising a Christmas show (Logan Stacey), and a blind beggar woman (Abrielle Hambleton) who eventually become the the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future. When he arrives home, the Ghost of Jacob Marley (Brett Klumpp), his former partner, warns that he will be visited by these three ghosts in order to reclaim his soul. Scrooge takes their messages to heart and strives to make amends. Many of the interactions between Scrooge and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future deviate from the source material and some of them really worked for me, such as having Scrooge's father put in debtors' prison (which is reportedly based on an incident from Charles Dickens' life), and some of them didn't, particularly a big production number involving tap dancing toy soldiers (I didn't know there were Rockettes in Dickensian London). Even though there are some incongruous elements, I really enjoyed all of the enthusiastic performances because the cast does a great job with the material. I also loved quite a few of the songs because they are beautiful, especially "You Mean More to Me" by Bob Cratchit and Tiny Tim (Ross Clemens), "A Place Called Home" by Young Scrooge (Grayson Farr) and Fan (Liza Akerlow), "Christmas Together" by the Cratchits, Fred and his family, and the people of London, and "God Bless Us, Everyone" by the entire company. The staging of "Dancing on Your Grave" with the Ghost of Christmas Future and a group of monks and pallbearers is incredibly dramatic and I love how the scene transitions into Scrooge's reclamation in "Yesterday, Tomorrow, and Today." My favorite part of this production is the absolutely amazing set which brings Dickensian London so vividly to life (I especially loved the Christmas decorations at Fezziwig's factory) and the incredibly immersive projections (those used during Jacob Marley's visit are very effective). The period costumes are very impressive, although the ghosts during the song "Link By Link" looked more like mental patients to me and I was confused by the showgirls in the scenes with the people of London. Even though I didn't love the show itself I did enjoy everything CPT did with it and the message is so heartwarming that it is the perfect way to usher in the holiday season. It runs on the Barlow Main Stage through December 21 but act quickly because tickets (go here) are going fast.
Note: I'm so glad that my nephew came with us. He has a lot of Christmas spirit this year and it is making all of us excited for the holidays.