Such a thing as being too close
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Tom Titus
Togetherness, normally a very positive condition, is a wonderful
thing in friends, lovers or siblings. In some cases, however, it can
be a nightmare.
“Side Show,” the new musical being presented by the Academy for
the Performing Arts at Huntington Beach High School, examines the
nightmarish quality of two Siamese twin sisters, joined at the hip,
who are transformed from freakish attractions at a side show to
vaudeville luminaries.
Daisy and Violet Hilton were real people, conjoined twins born too
early in the century to benefit from advanced surgical procedures.
Their story inspired this intriguing musical from Bill Russell (book
and lyrics) and Henry Krieger (music), which has been given a
masterful staging by the academy’s Tim Nelson.
For a youth production group, even one dedicated to preparing
students for careers in professional theater, this is a monster of a
show to mount successfully. Not only does it demand a huge cast, most
of which project one type or another of deformity, it requires superb
singing voices, particularly in the case of the twin sisters whose
diverse personalities scratch and claw at the love they bear for one
another.
Nelson and his company have conquered these obstacles
spectacularly, in particular with the young actresses who play the
unfortunate twins. Amie Shapiro excels as the more ambitious of the
pair, yearning for show business stardom, while Nicole Gerardi is
equally powerful as a more down-to-earth, homebody type. Both have
the normal yearnings of the heart, and these are met in varying
degrees of devotion by the two young men who take them from the side
show to vaudeville stardom.
“D” Pull is splendid as Terry Connor, the bottom-line agent
fighting his attraction to Daisy (Shapiro), while Matt Bartosch
renders a sincere portrayal of his partner, willing to go through
with a marriage ceremony with Violet (Gerardi), despite his
uncertainties.
Behind these principals, there is a company of nameless side show
attractions, roustabouts and reporters who fill the Huntington Beach
High School stage to overflowing. Anthony Page appears late in the
show as real-life movie director Tod Browning, who will cast the
girls in his cult-status movie “Freaks.”
The orchestra, under the baton of Gregg Gilboe, is a powerful
presence -- often too powerful for the actors’ lyrics to be fully
understood. The show’s musical highlights come in the sisters’
passionate duets -- “Who Will Love Me As I Am?” and the ironic “I
Will Never Leave You.”
Choreographer Diana Makas-Weber brings rhythmic order to the large
and disparate collection of human attractions with some intricate
stage movement. Kathleen Timm has created some uniquely colorful
costumes, especially the outfits Daisy and Violet appear in,
connected only by the force of the actresses’ will.
“Side Show” is an ambitious undertaking, terrifically realized by
the equally ambitious company. Trust me, audiences will love them as
they are.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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