The wonderous visuals of Disney's The Little Mermaid (Mark Kitaoka) |
Disney's The Little Mermaid
5th Avenue Theatre
through December 31, 2016
The new iteration of The Little Mermaid now at 5th
Avenue Theatre is entrancing and delightful! And it has so many local talents
who are going on a year-long national tour that it makes me so excited for
them!
Diana Huey, Dane Stokinger, Matthew Kacergis, Allen
Fitzpatrick, Connor Russell, Kristin Burch, Brenna Wagner, Becca Orts,
Taylor Niemeyer, Frederick Hagreen, and maybe others,
are all folks who have perhaps grown up here or at least have performed on
multiples stages here, and whom I have gotten to love seeing on stage.
The musical has all the songs you’d recognize from the hit
cartoon video and some more that add background and richness to some of the
favorite characters. Ariel (played with complete Disney-style enchantingness by
Diana Huey) has more reasons why she
doesn’t quite fit where she was born. Prince Eric (the dashing and to-die-for
baritone Matthew Kacergis) has some
lovely new songs to sing about how he loves the sea and looking for the voice
of his love.
Ursula gets a couple of more evil songs and has the
big-voiced Jennifer Allen channeling
her inner demon. Her electric eels, Flotsam and Jetsam light up with flickering
badness (Brandon Roach and Frederick Hagreen).
There are the “adults” who lose track of their power over
their adolescents, including King Triton (a buff and sympathetic Steve Blanchard), the blustery,
soft-hearted, Jamaican crab Sebastian (a comic Melvin Abston), and Grimsby, the hapless governor of the Prince
(our own Allen Fitzpatrick). I think
that Disney does that sort of storytelling to give kids the feeling that they
have some innate power in their relationships with the grown-ups in their lives
– it’s part of the themes Disney presents in their cartoons.
In key roles, Connor
Russell, another Seattle native who has moved to NYC to make a national
career in musicals, plays the lovable Flounder, and Dane Stokinger gets to cut up (it’s a bad pun…) as the Chef – a role
completely provided for comic relish. Stokinger gets a rather large part of the
fun in Act Two.
In addition to the stellar cast, the atmosphere of the
production is amazing. The colors are vibrant. The set is simple in some ways
(walls of watery bubbles, castle backdrop of lush-looking wallpaper), but streamlined
and very quick-changing. (Set credits are to Kenneth Foy.)
The costuming is a wonderful swirl of color and swishing
fabrics as everyone in the water has to seem to float (designed by Amy Clark and Mark Koss). Ursula’s squid costume is a marvel of legs, and
Sebastian is quite red and clawful.
And then there are times when huge puppets, like jelly fish
and other sea creatures swarm among the ensemble. They make more magic.
I have to shout out to the “flying sequence choreographer” Paul Rubin, who helped create the
visualization of Ariel and others floating and swimming through deep waters.
The fact that Huey (primarily) has to “swim” and sing absolutely perfectly at
the same time is quite a thing to see and hear!
It’s still a kid-show. Let’s be honest. But there is so much
to look at, marvel at and enjoy that parents and grandparents will have a great
time with their little ones, and those who love musicals will have a great time
alone, because you can ignore the weaknesses in the story and just enjoy the
rest of it.
Book writer Doug Wright seems to have significantly
strengthened the story, but it is never going to be not primarily a children’s
delight. There is so much more to like about the new Alan Menken/Howard
Ashman/Glenn Slater new songs, as well! Enjoy this extravaganza before it
embarks to the rest of the nation!
For more information, go to www.5thavenue.org or call 206-625-1900.
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