Lizzie:
The Musical at The
Beck Center, February 4-27
Review
by Laura Kennelly (Roger Mastrioanni, photo)
Did
“Old Maid” Lizzie Borden kill her father and step-mother in 1892? Lizzie:
The Musical offers a rock (and roll) answer in the show now playing at the
Beck Center in collaboration with Baldwin Wallace University.
No
one knows. Lizzie is not a detective mystery, but instead a screaming plunge
into evil in Fall River, Massachusetts.
Using
tools available--gossip, witnesses, testimony—officials conducted a thorough
investigation. However, this story unfolded in pre-DNA days. The one sure fact
is that Mr. and Mrs. Borden were brutally murdered in their home. (Strange
thing, everyone complained of an upset stomach several days before and Lizzie
had purchased rat poison early that same week.)
Only
Lizzie and the victims will ever know the truth.
But
never mind. It is rock music we are here for. And we get it. Director Victoria
Bussert, with her trademark gusto, allows the four dynamic female leads to do abundant
screaming. A few lyric pieces (“Sweet Little Sister”) offer welcome contrast,
but major angst suffered by all four characters soon offsets peaceful moments.
A
small onstage ensemble led by Matt Webb provided backup and a loud relentless
beat when needed (which was often). Rock was most obvious in rhythmic numbers
such as “The House of Borden,” “What the Fuck Now, Lizzie,” and—of course, the
earworm, “Forty Whacks.”
This
excellent four-woman show is double cast. On the Saturday night I went, it was
the “Blood” cast. Lizzie Borden (a forceful Alexa Lopez), Emma
Borden (a melodious Kris Lyons), the Borden’s neighbor Alice Russell (a naive
and lyric Audrey Hare), and Bridget Sullivan (a practical and saucy Gracee
Street) enacted the terrible story.
For
alternate performances the “Axe” cast features Jessi Kirtley (Lizzie Borden), Autumn
Key (Emma Borden), Andie Peterson (Alice Russell), and Colette Caspari (Bridget
Sullivan).
As
the Borden’s Irish servant girl, Street reveled in her character’s caustic
side, especially revealed when she continuously had to remind the casually
racist Borden household that her name was “Bridget,” not “Maggie.” In Fall
River all Irish looked the same.
While
the “Sweet Little Sister” duet with Lopez and Lyons stays sarcastically sweet,
watch out for the driving thump of “Lizzie Borden took an axe, gave her mother
forty whacks, and when she saw what she had done, gave her father forty-one.”
It may become an earworm.
It’s
an active musical, near Olympic, and Lopez, Lyons, Hare, and Street moved with
grace (when called for) and vigor (most often called for) as guided (and
required) by Greg Daniels’ challenging choreography.
One
major feature on the set, employed to great effect by the actors, was a
thronelike wooden chair placed front and center in the set designed by Jeff
Herrmann. The throne was sturdy enough for two or more cast members to simultaneously
stand on it and roomy enough for two to snuggle. It anchored the stark setting.
If
this is not your first Lizzie (it is my third local production so it might not
be new to you either), the answer to the obvious question about spatter is: “Yes.”
Yes,
there is a splash scene. This time blood did not fly everywhere—the blood (yes
of course there was blood), stayed safely onstage thanks to a splash screen. (Intermission
brought a bit of mopping for the hardy stage crew.)
The
only sour note the night I attended was produced by a clique of super-loud
student fans who shouted encouraging cheers no matter what was happening on
stage. (OK, maybe they thought it was a rock concert, I get that, but it was not,
it was a small theatre show.) The real problem was that even thoughtful ballads
triggered loud whoops, so much so that they upstaged performances. With luck,
the screamers will not appear at subsequent shows.
BOTTOM
LINE: Lizzie lives again thanks to beautiful, capable, and talented
young performers in a smoothly directed and produced musical. But do not forget
your earplugs if you want to preserve your hearing.
IRONIC
SIDE NOTE: Do not, I repeat, do not research genealogy to trace Lizzie Borden’s
descendants. While she remained childless, as far as we know, numerous figures
are said to be related to the prominent New England family. Highlights?
Elizabeth Montgomery (who played Lizzie in a TV biopic), Winston Churchill, and
(the best one), serial killer Charles Manson. Some stones seem best unturned.