[NEohioPAL] Berko review: HAIR @ Blank Canvas

Allen White via NEohioPAL neohiopal at lists.neohiopal.org
Mon Sep 8 10:23:40 PDT 2014


Sorry Chris, but you forget that there was a thing called the “draft”, and
those of us of age were required to report. Claude didn’t enlist, he was
drafted. The return rate from Viet Nam for those drafted was not very good,
and college deferment wasn’t available to those of us who came of draft age
by the early 70s.  I attended anti-war protests in college because we had a
voice – it wasn’t just “privileged” people, it ran the gamut of society.
Once television started bringing the war into our living rooms the feeling
of the whole country changed.  Sadly, we treated those who did go poorly,
and I’m glad we corrected that error, but that war was all about making
money for the military-focused industrialists, not about winning.

 

That said, I didn’t get a chance to see Blank Canvas’ production (nor will
I) due to my travel schedule, but I know Patrick, and I know that he digs
deep into the internal motivations that make characters do what they do, and
find Mr. Berko’s review less than credible.  This show is one of my
favorite, and I took the time to see the Broadway revival in 2009 (in which
Cleveland’s Andrew Kober gave a stellar performance) and loved every minute
of it. I expect that the Blank Canvas production to be at that level.

 

Allen White

 

From: NEohioPAL [mailto:neohiopal-bounces at lists.neohiopal.org] On Behalf Of
Christopher Fortunato via NEohioPAL
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2014 12:12 PM
To: Sergio Iriarte; Roy Berko; post at neohiopal.org
Subject: Re: [NEohioPAL] Berko review: HAIR @ Blank Canvas

 

I don;t know.  I think I'm with Berko on this one.  Musicals like "Hair"
have an attraction to nostalgia for those in the arts that were not alive
when the sixties were happening.  The "revolution" of sorts was a top-down,
upper middle class affair where pampered kids that went to places like
Denison, Kenyon and Oberlin decided to rebel notwithstanding they really had
nothing to rebel about since they were not part of the oppressed.  How
within one generation the children of parents that sacrificed during the
Great Depression and World War II turned into the most narcissistic
generation this country produced will be the topic of discussions in
graduate school seminars for decades to come.

 

Thankfully, the protagonist in the musical followed the law and enlisted.
Not all of us smoked up and tuned out in those days.

 

Christopher Fortunato

  _____  

To: royberko at gmail.com; post at neohiopal.org
Date: Sun, 7 Sep 2014 19:43:22 -0400
Subject: Re: [NEohioPAL] Berko review: HAIR @ Blank Canvas
From: neohiopal at lists.neohiopal.org

That was the snottiest, most useless review of a show it has ever been my
displeasure to read. And considering the source, that's saying a lot. That's
5 minutes of my life I'll never get back.  

"Sorry, my naïve young man, since the you were not yet born..." Seriously?
You actually took the time to think of, and then write that?

It's time for you to get over yourself. 

Sergio Iriarte
NOT a critic, just a guy who likes theatre.

  _____  

From: Roy Berko via NEohioPAL <mailto:neohiopal at lists.neohiopal.org> 
Sent: ‎9/‎7/‎2014 2:51 PM
To: post at neohiopal.org
Subject: [NEohioPAL] Berko review: HAIR @ Blank Canvas


•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

No bombs greet this version of HAIR, just heat and a simulation of an era

 

Roy Berko

(member, Cleveland Critics Circle, American Theatre Critics Association)

 

Theatre is representative of the era from which it comes.  Seeing a play
that reflects a specific time period can reveal the cultural attitudes of
the people and society of that period.

 

Seeing HAIR, “The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical,” can give a film clip
of the 1960s and early 70s in the U.S.  It was the era of the anti-war
movement and rebellion against traditional societal patterns.  It was the
time of sit-ins on college campuses, hippie communes, flower children, pot
smoking, tie-dyed clothing, long hair, swearing and public nudity.  It was a
period of rage against the military-industrial complex. It was the time of a
clear generational divide.  If the young people could find a way to upset
their elders, it was the “in” thing to do.  

 

Written by Gerome Ragni and James Rado, the show’s book was put to music by
Galt MacDermot.  Its slim story was based on the authors’ personal
experiences.   It centers on Claude, a member of the hippie community, who
sells out and allows himself to be taken into the Army rather than burn his
draft card or flee to Canada. 

 

When the show first opened, it engendered strong protests.  Yes, protests
about the protests.  On April 25, 1971, for example, a bomb exploded in
front of Cleveland’s Hanna Theatre during the Age of Aquarius show’s run at
that venue.

 

HAIR broke all sorts of theatrical traditions.  Members of the cast, known
as the “tribe,” constantly jumped off the stage and interacted with members
of the audience, invited patrons to dance with them, and they gave flowers
and hugs to  the unsuspecting.  The U.S. flag was used as parts of costumes
and burned.  There was full-frontal nudity and simulation of sexual acts.
There was an intentional ignoring of theater’s proverbial “fourth wall,” a
separation of the stage actions from the audience.   This was a musical that
broke from the tradition of the “nice” musical and took on controversy and
started a trend in musical theatre of taking on contemporary and
controversial issues.

 

This is not a well-written book musical.  The plot meanders, some of the
songs don’t fit into the story, often do nothing to move the plot along.
Again, a break from the traditional musical of the day. Though often
referred to as the “grand daddy of the rock musicals,” it’s a mélange of
music and imagery.  The sounds change from rock to country to ballad to
African American rhythms. 

 

The highlight of action centers on Claude’s hallucinatory drug trip in Act
II where a series of horrifying visions, loaded with historical figures, are
presented in the oddest contexts. It’s a microcosm of the whole show, which
essentially unfolds like a tune-filled acid trip that gives HAIR its
distinctive period edge.

 

So, how does the show wear over all those years?  The times they have
changed.  Reaction to swearing, smoking of pot, nudity, and protest are
mundane by today’s standards.  Many of the references are beyond the
knowledge of the younger members of the audience.  Unless you are an uptight
conservative or an evangelical, who are not candidates to attend this show,
the goings on won’t evoke much reaction.  Only the wonder of “what was all
the fuss about?”

 

Some of the music has lost its luster.  Aquarius didn’t send me off onto a
journey of effervescence.  Hashish, in this age of rampant drug usage, is
just a song.  On the other hand, I Believe in Love, Easy to be Hard, and
Good Morning Starshine, have held up due to their timelessness. 

 

The Blank Canvas cast, under the direction of Patrick Ciamacco, was
enjoyable, with two glaring flaws.  First, Ciamacco states in his director’s
notes:  “I was drawn to produce “Hair” because I feel our country is going
through a very similar movement as we did in the 60’s.”  Sorry, my naïve
young man, since the you were not yet born when the anti-war demonstrations
and flower-child rebellions were going on, you are not aware of the
dynamics, power, and out-of-control motivations that lead to whole college
campuses shut down due to sit-ins, and the take-over of buildings due the
anti-war vehemence.  Nationally, buildings were burned, students were shot
for civil-disobedience (e.g., the Kent State massacre).  There may be some
uprisings and protests today due to individual events, but the 60’s
movements were national events.  The portrayals by the young cast, not
imbued with the true feelings the play reflects, were on the surface, acting
what they thought their characters went through, but not identifying with
the real motivations, therefore not feeling the actual angst.

 

Second, the small space, over sold-out audience, sweating actor’s bodies,
real smoking, and 80+ degrees of heat outside, led to a sweltering theatre.
When the cast shed their clothing at the end of the first act, many in the
audience were tempted to join them, just to get some personal heat
reduction.  Either the theatre needs to find a way to cool the space more
effectively, or change its schedule and avoid producing summer time shows.
Whew!

 

Brad Wyner and his band were excellent, wisely avoiding letting loose with
the heavy rock sound and drowning out the singers.  Jessie Cope Miller’s
choreography was creative, especially considering that she was working with
a large cast on a postage stamp sized stage.  The moves on “Abie Baby” were,
in era language, “mellow.”

 

Perren Hedderson’s projections added to the creation of visual realism.

 

Though the choral vocal sounds were mostly volume over blendings, there were
both individual strong singing and acting performances.

 

Scott Esposito was well focused as Claude.  Who knew that this stalwart of
local dramas (he gave a ”bravo” performance last season in Ensemble’s “The
Normal Heart”) could sing so well?   Becca Frick (Jeanie) did a nice job
with “Air,” Jessie Cope Miller, she of big and well-toned voice, wailed in
“I Believe in Love” and “Good Morning Starshine.” Neely Gevaart (Chrissy)
tenderly sang “Frank Mills.”  “What a Piece of Work Is Man” was the show’s
musical highlight.

 

CAPSULE JUDGEMENT:   HAIR is a classic musical, which entered the theatre
into an era of reflection of the turbulent era of the 60s and broke many
traditional theatrical formats.  For those who want to relive the era, or
who want to generally get an idea of what was going on during those times,
the Blank Canvas staging gives an opportunity to take a seldom reprised trip
through the times.  Due to a generation gap in understanding the true angst
of the era, this isn’t a great production, but it is entertaining.

 

Tickets for HAIR, which runs through September 13, can be ordered at
440-941-0458 or  <http://www.blankcanvastheatre.com/>
www.blankcanvastheatre.com

 

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• <http://www.blankcanvastheatre.com/> 

 

 <http://www.blankcanvastheatre.com/> 


 


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