![]() ![]() Pinafore or, The Lass That Loved a Sailor is a comic opera in two acts, with music by Arthur Sullivan and a libretto by W. The audience of 1,100 or so received the show warmly, laughed quite a bit, and gave the cast and crew an extended ovation.H.M.S. ![]() The rented costumes were standard-issue nautical, and Jan Delovage’s makeup ranged from wryly savvy (Porter as a jovially over-painted Gustav Aschenbach figure) to deliciously macabre (Deadeye’s gorily offset eye) and doll-like (Rackstraw’s rosy cheeks). The agreeable rented set by Gary Eckhart featured a horseshoe-shaped dual staircase leading up to a central bridge, with sweeping sails above and rudimentary scalloped waves behind. Mark Ferrell’s musical direction was purposeful and with well-gauged tempos and mood shifts, though one regretted the scary near-collisions between singers and orchestra in Act 1. It was only when he and his players added strained asides that the opera began to look like an episode of “Laugh-In”: Deadeye getting repeatedly knocked overboard (with grand splash), the endless ironic salutes, the cawing crow finally shot down and landing with a plop on the deck. Stage director William Theisen was able to move unwieldy groups around the Lyric’s tight stage efficiently and with a dash of humor, and he worked naturally with soloists and small ensembles. ![]() Matthew Treviño’s snarling, phrase-chewing Dick Deadeye was an audience favorite as well. Deborah Fields’ opening aria as Buttercup (“I’m Called Little Buttercup”) was filled with quirks and coy glances that ultimately detracted from the song’s impact, though in general her detailed performance was a hit with the audience. In ensembles she soared deliciously above the rest of the texture, and her big Act 2 aria was suitably “operatic.” But she looked out-of-character in some of the broader farcical bits, like the hip-hop neck-swivel in “Never Mind the Why or Wherefore.” Daniel Belcher made the role of Captain Corcoran into something resembling gay camp, with hyperactive comic touches that were sometimes elegant but painted in broad strokes. Vocally speaking he mopped up the stage.Īva Pine sang Josephine with a sweet, silvery soprano that was pleasing to the ear but lacked variety. But the nicest surprise came when he opened his mouth: Ball possesses a splendid bel canto tenor voice, clear and natural and with a dark sort of pathos beneath his brief arias piqued my curiosity to hear him in more serious roles. Jon-Michael Ball conveyed Ralph Rackstraw’s “high” birth the moment he set foot onstage, with a regal bearing that made us question, and quite rightly so, what he was doing in a sailor suit (though his unflattering costume with its half-length waistcoat looked too sloppy to be that of a gentleman). Of course Porter has the fortune of getting to sing the opera’s most winning satirical number, “When I was a Lad,” which Brand made into a surprisingly subtle comic tour de force. He found humor in details - a face drawn tightly at the right moment, a sissified wave, a stiffened gait that stopped just short of shtick. Robert Gibby Brand displayed to marvelous advantage his well-known comedic flair as Sir Joseph Porter, very nearly stealing the show from his younger, operatically trained colleagues. Nevertheless this was, in many respects, a highly accomplished Pinafore. If the physical comedy kept the eye busy and the funny-bone tickled - incessant dancing and slapstick gags pushed to vaudeville extremes - it rarely achieved the level of sophistication of the inherent humor, and grew contrived by the end. ![]() Gilbert’s peerless lyrics, set to music with blinding cleverness by Arthur Sullivan. The Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s production of HMS Pinafore, which opened November 6 at the Lyric Theatre, was most convincing when it stood back and let us listen to W.S. Gilbert & Sullivan’s operettas are so durable that directors succeed best when they go easy on shtick and focus on dead-on execution of the shows’ intrinsic rich humor. ![]()
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