Pirates of Penzance, like all of Gilbert & Sullivan’s operettas, is a very silly story. When the story opens, Frederic, accidentally apprenticed to pirates as a child, is finally turning twenty-one. While in his apprenticeship, he was bound by his sense of duty to be a full-fledged pirate, but once released, his sense of duty means that he must be their enemy (beginning at 12:00 on the dot). Frederic quickly falls in love with a young maiden and is eager to leave his illegal ways behind, but the pirates find a complication – Frederic was born on February 29th in a leap year, meaning that his 21st birthday is still decades away! Will his fiancée wait for him until he’s 84? Will the local constables arrest the pirate band (Frederic included)? Will the Major-General ever assuage his conscience after telling the pirates a lie? Will any of the characters learn the folly of their black-and-white thinking??? (To that last one: absolutely not.)
This play was my first introduction to Arts Garden, a
theater company that’s focused on making theater, especially older works,
accessible to performers, creators, and audiences. Pirates of Penzance was presented for
free, with some outdoor performances, some indoor performances, and one livestream. This production was abridged by Kat Felicis
Ioco, Kati Hoehl, Shannon Johnson; some less-essential songs were cut (such as
the song about Ruth’s looks) and many others were trimmed down. I’m not overly familiar with the show, but I
could recognize for example that some of the more esoteric verses of “I Am the
Very Model of a Modern Major General” were cut, to no one’s detriment. In all I was very satisfied with the
abridgment; the plot was easy to follow and the story moved along at a tidy
pace.
Under Kati Hoehl’s direction, the pacing was lively and the
show was constantly funny. Hoehl’s
staging played up the humor of moments like Frederic attempting to embrace
Mabel in “Poor Wandering One” and the pirates loudly “sneaking” to commit a
robbery. Kat Felicis Ioco music directed
and edited the backing tracks for this version. I was impressed by the
coordination of the vocalists with the recorded music, because many of the
songs had little to no prelude. I was
also impressed by the balance of the singers; it’s easy for a soprano to
overpower lower voices, but that was never an issue here, even with gender-blind
casting. Jason Moyer was the technical director;
the set was simple but charming, with some rocks and a stump setting the scene
for most of the play. The costumes by Kari Grundmeier, Kati Hoehl, and Shannon
Johnson included a nice blend of pirate accoutrements, and coordinated looks for
the Major General’s daughters. I liked
the subtle differences in the military looks, and the Major-General’s oversized
nightshirt and cap were a delightful choice. Kat Felicis Ioco and Jason Moyer designed the sound; for the indoor
performance, the actors could have probably performed without microphones, but
the mics aided vocal balance and presumably made a big difference for the livestream.
As Frederic, Shelby Anderson had a nice tenor tone that felt
masculine but natural. Anderson was hilarious
throughout, whether deadpanning a ridiculous line to the audience or attempting
to woo a maiden. As Mabel, Grace Walker demonstrated
a lovely soprano resonance, with an especially nice bit of aria in the finale. Walker’s
Mabel was sweet and open-hearted, and just a little oblivious in “Poor
Wandering One,” making for a very funny interacting between her and Anderson.
Kari Grundmeier played Ruth, the maid who mistakenly apprenticed
Frederic to a pirate in the first place (she misheard the word “pilot”). Grundmeier
played Ruth’s devious streak with a light hand, and she made a great team with
Jacob O’Connor (the pirate king) as they subtly coerced Frederic back into piracy in
“When You Had Left Our Pirate Fold.” O’Connor’s delivery of those wordy lines
was excellent; overall he gave off
a charming sense of nobility as the somewhat principled pirate king. Jamie
Allman’s Major-General was a pompous show-off in his first appearance, where
Allman sang the linguistically complicated "I Am the Very Model of a
Modern Major-General” with ease. Allman's later emotional struggle over telling a single lie was a fun contrast to the earlier scene.
The actors playing the pirates made a spirited group, at
times swashbuckling and at other times overly tender-hearted, especially pirate
lieutenant Samuel (Kelly Lynn Graf). “With
Cat-Like Tread Upon Our Prey We Steal” was one especially fun number; the
whirlwind of emotions and revelations in the finale was also very entertaining. Sarah Irish, Lisa Stauter, and Molly O’Connor
played Mabel’s sisters and were particularly good at enunciating the fast-paced
lyrics, no matter the speed. The three
sounded great together in all their songs. A group of constables led by a Sergeant
(Amy Stauter) rounded out the cast. They
entered their first scene with confidence, and it was hilarious to watch them gradually
lose their nerve as one character after another cheerfully described the mission as
deadly. The constables’ unison responses
only added to the humor.
All in all, I thought this was a very successful version of Pirates of Penzance, at a length that felt positively refreshing. I haven't laughed this much at a play in a while! I certainly look forward to seeing what Arts Garden does next.
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