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- <text id=94TT0675>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: Theater:Miserably Ever After
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/THEATER, Page 68
- Miserably Ever After
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Stephen Sondheim's new musical is unremittingly grim
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III
- </p>
- <p> It says something about Stephen Sondheim that being in love
- for the first time in his 64 years--as he recently acknowledged
- he is--has evoked the darkest, most depressing show of his
- career. Passion, the only memorable musical of the Broadway
- season, portrays the romantic obsession of a penniless, ugly
- and dying woman for a kind, handsome and accomplished soldier.
- By the end, she is dead, he has been driven insane, the man
- who introduced them has been gravely wounded, and a doctor who
- fostered the relationship has been burdened with guilt that
- will last a lifetime. The audience isn't feeling any too chirpy
- either. Operas have been this grim, but Passion sets new marks
- for misery in musical theater. One might assume that such bleakness
- cannot be commercial. But the show had box-office sales of about
- $500,000 last week, and its advance was approaching $2 million.
- </p>
- <p> Artistically, Passion is one of the great turnarounds. During
- previews, it seemed hopeless. The obsessed woman struck spectators
- as akin to a stalker, too creepy to induce sympathy. Her unstinting
- devotion resembled emotional blackmail. The narrative, two hours
- without intermission, felt strained and wearisome. Many theatergoers
- fidgeted or tittered in the wrong places. (There aren't many
- right places to laugh in Passion, which makes no use of Sondheim's
- greatest gift--a talent for writing intricate comic lyrics
- that fit the characters.) Sensing disaster, Sondheim and director-librettist
- James Lapine revamped the plot, recast a major role, picked
- up the pace and added three songs. The show is vastly improved,
- but huge problems remain. The obsessed woman, stirringly acted
- and sung by Donna Murphy, is still difficult to like or admire.
- The man whom she chases spends most of the show eluding her,
- then shifts in a moment to loving her passionately. This transition--which also commits him to a duel--would be tough for anyone,
- and is utterly beyond the histrionic powers of Jere Shea, a
- handsome and harmonious hero but a wooden one. The message that
- love is unworthy unless it recklessly risks everything may fit
- the Anna Karenina-style sensibilities of 1863, when the show
- is set, but now it feels adolescent and irresponsible.
- </p>
- <p> Passion is ably staged but so austere that it provides little
- visual pleasure. The score similarly resists anyone's yearning
- to walk out humming, exceeding even the anti-showstopper standards
- of recent Sondheim: the melodies are elusive, and the program
- omits song titles. The only lush moment is the opening, a nude
- bedroom encounter between Shea and luxuriantly fleshy Marin
- Mazzie. It too soon goes sour. They sing liltingly of abundant
- happiness. Then she returns to her husband, her child and her
- hypocrisy, while he goes off to his new posting and his doom.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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