Tuesday, July 10,
2001
'Charlie
Brown' a mix of good, grief
CCM production
searches for joy
By ByJackie Demaline
The Cincinnati
Enquirer
You can almost
hear Lucy, upon exchanging her psychiatrist booth for a seat
on the aisle, yelling down to the stage and the kid in the
yellow sweater with the black zigzag stripe. “You're a good
man, Charlie Brown, but you lack charisma!”
The affable Peanuts
musical has joined the Hot Summer Nights repertory at
University of Cincinnati's College-Conservatory of Music. It
stars, of course, Charlie Brown, Lucy, Linus and his blanket,
Shroeder and his piano, little sister Sally and Snoopy.
A collection of connected songs
and comedy sketches inspired by the comic strip world of
Charles Schulz plays out on a comic page-inspired stage.
We know Snoopy will battle the
Red Baron. Charlie Brown will sigh over the Little Red-Haired
Girl. Lucy will plot to be queen. Would we want it to be any
other way?
The Hot Summer Nights
production of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown gets a
lot of mileage out of our fond familiarity with the material.
But where is the zing?
Co-directors/choreographers
Richard Hess and Greg Hellems seem to have forgotten why
musicals exist. It's because they have to. It's because
sometimes feelings are so big they can only burst out in song
and dance.
This is a capable Charlie
Brown, but it is for the most part joyless. This student
company plans to go into the profession. Capable is not good
enough.
In the title role, sophomore
Beau Clark couldn't quite persuade me that he believes he's a
hapless but loyal and true little Everyboy. But he has years
of training ahead of him.
Jacquelyn Vanderbeck does have
the focus and the needed fire in the belly. She delivers
Sally's big solo “My New Philosophy” as the crowd-pleaser it
is.
Lisa Marie Morabito's Lucy is
as much forced as forceful. On opening night, Lucy featured a
pronounced lisp at the top of the show which then came and
went, suggesting a need for concentration to either keep it or
lose it.
Neal Shrader has an easy charm
as incipient philosopher Linus, but Blake Ginther falls back
on the tried-and-true as Shroeder. He's too much Matthew Perry
at his most bemused on Friends.
Will Ray has some nice moments
as Snoopy, but this gangbusters part culminates in the
showstopper “Suppertime.” The choreography is tepid,
considering Mr. Ray's ability as a dancer, and he doesn't sell
the song to the rafters.
The show looks exactly as it
should, the design team recovering from its surprising
missteps in Mattress.
You're a Good Man, Charlie
Brown, continuing in rep through Aug. 17, Patricia Corbett
Theater. 556-4183.
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