
THE COLOR PURPLE
1st National Touring Company
Cadillac Palace
Theater, Chicago, Ill.
REVIEWED 05/05/07
PERFORMANCE
_______________________THE COLOR
PURPLE_______________________
The journey for THE COLOR PURPLE (TCP) started back in the fall of 2004
where it had its world premiere at Atlanta's Alliance Theatre. After much
retooling, the musical finally opened on the great white way at the Broadway
Theater in December 2005, where it is still playing today.
Come Tony Awards time, the epic tale of Celie set to music would rack up
eleven nominations; it would lose the award for Best Musical to JERSEY BOYS.
In a strange coincidence, the motion picture which was directed by Steven
Spielberg would rack up the same number (11) of nominations come Academy
Awards time. But would go home empty handed, unlike the musical, which did
win one award, Best Actress in a Musical for its star LaChanze.
Now TCP is having its national tour kick off in Chicago, home of its most
powerful producer, Oprah Winfrey. Previews ran through April 27th and had
its opening night on May 3rd, 2007.
I first saw TCP during its Broadway preview run in November 2005, then just
a month later would see it just a couple of weeks after it opened. Observing
the changes and tweaks they made between the two were visible but not that
drastic, primarily it was just blocking and staging. The major change was in
Mister's solo in Act Two.
Thus I l flew to Chicago for my first trip ever to the windy city to review
the opening weekend of its national tour.
As it happens all the time, physically there are some changes in scenery
from the Broadway production. There is no longer a turntable dead center
that created scene transitions with quiet ease. The tour now has scenery
gliding from the wings. Another deletion is the automobile that Shug
receives in Act Two as a wedding present. It no longer rolls on stage like
it does at the Broadway Theater. For the tour it is now referred to off
stage left from which we hear car noises. Finally the huge tree that
occupies stage right in which young sisters Celie and Nettie play is gone
for the road company. Now it is a small, fence like set piece that is
covered in purple flowers for Act Two.
Outside of those changes, the physical aspects of the show are still intact.
There is Brian MacDevitt's lighting design of gorgeous hues of purples,
blues, oranges, and other bright colors splattering the stage. John Lee
Beatty's scenic design is a combination of miniscule set pieces and
framework (houses, the dress shop, etc.) that work marvelously in taking the
audience from scene to scene. Finally we still have Paul Tazewell's period
costuming that is perfection. From the colorful hats to Shug's gold beaded
gown, they all look smashing on stage.
Special kudos go to Musical Director Sheilah Walker. The music fills the
mammoth Palace wonderfully. But what makes her musical direction stand out
is how she allows the performers to vocally explore the score. She conducts
the orchestra to follow the singer, never rushing or slowing down. Both
voice and orchestra work like a well oiled machine. A special touch in her
musical direction is how she follows the vocalists to crescendo and sustain
a belting note to the very end. The cut offs, underscore, and other musical
elements are conducted with slick professionalism and finesse technique by
Ms. Walker.
The entire cast is superb, from principals to the ensemble. Their energy
needs to be boxed and sold to those productions that are in dire need of eye
blinding energy, because this company has it in abundance. The commitment to
their characters is immensely entertaining to watch. Even if some don't have
lines, their reactions and concentration to the scene adds so much to the
emotions of the piece.
From the Broadway cast, the producers brought two of the three original
church ladies that provided some of the biggest laughs of the night.
Virginia Ann Woodruff and Kimberly Ann Harris originated these women who
serve as narrators, but with a snippy, gossipy tone that is downright
hilarious. I thoroughly enjoyed these two on Broadway, so it was a wonderful
surprise to see them on the tour. Joining them is Lynette Dupree, who
matches her two cast members perfectly. From their facial expressions to
their soaring vocals, these three women give scene stealing performances.
On Broadway I had the unique opportunity to see understudy Kentra Miller and
original star LaChanze perform the role of "Celie", now it was Jeannette
Bayardelle's turn to tackle the role. She understudied and also performed
the role on Broadway.
Ms. Bayardelle has certain physical features that do resemble Whoopi
Goldberg, which gives the role a more familiar connection between audience
and character. Another stand out is her approach to the comedy, she makes
this "Celie" find much more laughs than the previous two actresses.
Bayardelle achieves thunderous laughter with her attack on the comedy
elements, but it is never over the top. It is done as an afterthought, by
total accident. She incorporates subtle facial expressions with precise
comedic timing, pace, and delivery that result in resounding laughter from
the audience.
Her dramatic work is organic, painfully honest, and riveting. She will
break your heart with her emotional, multi-layered, textured performance.
And can the girl sing! A powerhouse voice that effortlessly fills the
elephantine Palace Theater with a sublime soprano voice. Her 11:00 O'clock
solo "I'm Here" brings down the house. The emotion and belting voice combine
a magical theatrical moment the audience will always remember. Ms.
Bayardelle is superb.
Michelle Williams (from the world famous singing group, Destiny's Child)
portrays "Shug", the blues chanteuse who steals every man and woman's heart
she comes in contact with. Ms. Williams gives a youthful performance that
seems to use an aura of innocent playfulness to create her characterization.
That actually works. She steers from making Shug right off the bat a sensual
hot momma, but instead a lonely woman who uses that sensuality as a mask to
hide the pain and loneliness. Her chemistry with Bayardelle is faultless.
One of my favorite songs in the score is the duet "What About Love?" which
both ladies sing with such passion and vocal strength that it will leave a
lump in your throat. Williams does allow her sex kitten to purr, sway, and
seduce with the erotic infused number, "Push Da Button". She is another
standout within this glittery company.
AMERICAN IDOL finalist Latoya London gives a heart tugging performance as
"Nettie", Celie's sister who is forced to leave her. Ms. London's voice is a
pristine, crystal clear soprano voice that brings magical beauty to her
songs. Her chemistry with her co-star Bayardelle is both honest and
touching, which at the end has the entire audience wiping tears of joy.
Finally, we come to Felicia P. Fields, who originated the role of "Sofia" on
Broadway, which was rewarded with a Tony nomination. When I saw the
production on Broadway during previews and after it opened, both times Ms.
Fields portrayed the role. She stole the show those two times, as she once
again does here in the national tour.
You would think that after doing this show from its very beginning, then
going on to doing eight shows a week on Broadway for over a year, you would
think she would be burned out and exhausted. Judging by Ms. Fields
performance, that is so not the case here, in fact she is even fresher and
funnier that before.
This talented actress has found the solid foundation and arc within her
characterization and is firmly secure within it. She has discovered new
dramatic, powerful subtext in the darker second act of her character that is
marvelous to watch unfold.
She is a comedic force that leaves the audience rolling the aisles in her
path. Her number "Hell No" is a musical number that every actor dreams of
having. It is a rip roaring, defiant song that has the audience laughing,
cheering, and screaming at the top of their lungs. There are very few
performances that I have seen in my life in which a character's introduction
song is met with cheers and applause between verses. Ms. Fields was
magnificent on Broadway, and she is here as well in this national tour.
Within the large cast there are performances full of brilliance, energy,
vitality, and naturalism, including: Rufus Bonds, Jr. as the Machiavellian
"Mister", Stu James as Sofia's henpecked husband "Harpo", Stephanie St.
James as "Squeak", Lesly Terrell Donald as "Ol' Mister", and Quentin Earl
Darrington as "Pa".
Director Gary Griffin had the monumental task of bringing a much beloved
film to new life on the stage, and he succeeds superbly here. He keeps the
pace moving the exposition briskly along, and instills within his cast to
provide performances that are rooted in organic truth.
He did not take out his Broadway notes and keep the tour as is; instead I
saw new changes in blocking, staging, and performance that actually improved
on the original production.
In particular the ending. On Broadway towards the final measures of the
gospel flavored number, "The Color Purple", two little girls do the hand
clapping game that Celie and Nettie did as children. For the tour, it is the
much older Celie and Nettie do the hand clap game center stage. The audience
quietly gasped and you just felt the entire piece come back in full circle.
It was that moment that was missing from the Broadway production. Here it is
so deeply powerful that you are wiping tears of joy during the final notes
of the song. How rare to see that kind of reworking and retooling that
actually surpasses the original.
THE COLOR PURPLE is a musical that fills your heart with love and with this
fine talented company they will take you on an emotional journey that you
will treasure from its overture to the finale.
GRADE: A
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THE COLOR PURPLE National tour is currently playing at the Cadillac Palace
Theater, 151 W. Randolph St, Chicago, Ill.
Purchase tickets online: Visit Ticketmaster.com
Order by Phone: Call Ticketmaster at 312-902-1400
Order in Person: Visit Any Broadway In Chicago box Office
John F. Garcia, Jr.
Executive Director/Producer, "THE COLUMN ONLINE"; Theatre Awards Editor &
Founder of THE COLUMN ONLINE; Texas Regional Theater Critic for
www.talkinbroadway.com