Date: Fri 03-Sep-1999
Date: Fri 03-Sep-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Cline-Cabaret-Stern
Full Text:
THEATRE REVIEW: As Always "Patsy Cline" Offers Perfection For Cabaret
Audiences
(with cut)
By Julie Stern
BRIDGEPORT -- If Johnny Cash was famous for "walking the line," you might say
Patsy Cline straddled it -- in the sense that the body of her work transcends
the limits of country music and crosses over into pop. Always... Patsy Cline,
the exciting new production at Downtown Cabaret Theatre, conveys this through
the 26 songs that make up the score of this musical retrospective.
From "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" and "Your Cheatin' Heart" to
"You Belong to Me" and "True Love," this tribute to the little girl from
Virginia who finally made her breakthrough on the Arthur Godfrey show with
"Walkin' After Midnight" is a trip down memory lane to anyone who listened to
the radio between 1957 and 1963, when Patsy was killed in a plane crash at age
30.
Written, and originally directed, by Ted Swindley, the show is based on the
true story of a Houston housewife named Louise Seger who had her ultimate
fantasy come true when she went to her first live concert as a devoted fan of
her favorite singer and got to make friends with the star in 1961.
Before the show and during the intermission, Patsy sat at Louise's table.
Afterwards she accepted Louise's invitation to come to her house for bacon and
eggs. The two women sat and talked for hours -- about their children, their
rocky love lives and the music, until they were like sisters, or best pals.
They never saw each other again, but Patsy wrote and called Louise regularly
over the next two years until her death.
It is Louise's reminiscences that structure the show in Bridgeport. Against
the background of a six-piece orchestra, Louise narrates and re-lives for the
audience the most important event of her life beginning with the moment she
hears Patsy's voice on the Arthur Godfrey show as she is washing the breakfast
dishes, through the 1961 concert, culminating with the radio news flash that
informs her of the accident.
Misty Rowe plays the comic role of the ditzy but spirited Louise with broad
pizazz. As Patsy, Cindy Summers belts out the songs and conveys the shadowed
character of the singer who endured poverty, pain and loneliness but had the
pride that came of belief in herself and what she was doing. It is the weight
of these experiences that give her music the emotional depth and power that
made the real Patsy so wildly successful with audiences.
Every seat in the house was taken when we saw the show last Sunday during
opening weekend, and the rapt attention on the faces of the crowd showed they
all still remembered what Patsy Cline and her songs meant to them 35 years
later.
A fleeting thought went through my mind at the time. Thirty-five years from
now, would a retrospective of Limp Bizkit evoke the same mix of joy and
nostalgia in a comparable audience? Don't think so.
This is a typical Bridgeport Cabaret production, directed and performed to
perfection. Go see it.
(Performances of Always... Patsy Cline continue through October 31. Curtain is
Friday at 8 pm, Saturday at 5:30 and 8:30, and Sunday at 5:30. Call the
Cabaret box office, 576-1636, for ticket information or reservations.)