49. AROUND
THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS
If
you’re looking for something a little different Off Broadway, yet in the
Broadway district, I’d advise you to get on board the speeding trains, boats,
and elephant (well, speeding for a pachyderm) racing from London to Suez to
Bombay to Calcutta to Hong Kong to Yokohama to San Francisco and across the
USA on the way back to London in this charming revival of AROUND
THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS. Mark Brown’s adaptation of Jules Verne’s 1873 novel about
Phileas Fogg’s race to win a £20,000 wager by doing what the title says was
first seen locally at the Irish Repertory Theatre in 2008; while I didn’t catch
that version, a little research reveals that the new production, staged with terrific
originality by Rachel Klein, is a totally different beast, although the
original also was lauded for its creative staging and performances.
John Segarra, replacing Bryce
Ryness, who left early in the run to star in Broadway’s upcoming FIRST DATE,
plays the cool-as-ice, stiff-upper-lip Englishman, Phileas Fogg, who never
meets a problem he can’t resolve by naming the right price, while an
energetically versatile team of four others portray multiple roles, the most
protean being Jimmy Ray Bennett in 16 parts. Each of the others has a principal
role in addition to smaller ones, with the acrobatic John Gregorio
concentrating on Passepartout, Fogg’s French valet; the determined Steven
Guarino on Detective Fix, following Fogg on his journey because he suspects him
of a bank robbery; and the physically striking Shirine Babb on the Indian
princess, Aouda, who provides the romantic interest. Everyone is called on to
use multiple accents, especially high British ones, and they are all required
to go through complexly choreographed theatrical high jinks with perfect
timing.
The New Theatre on 45th
Street, a depressing hole in the wall when I visited it last season, has been
transformed into a remarkably eye-catching space in which there is not only a wonderfully
realized, two-level stage set (by Robert Kovach), with compasses, ropes, steering
wheels, staircases, doors, and windows, but also delightfully painted side walls
that surround the audience with the gears, steam pipes, tubes, and other
paraphernalia of a 19th-century English factory. The theatre’s seats
have been attractively reupholstered to match the décor, and a 6.1 surround
sound system has been installed to totally immerse the audience in the unique
sound effects created by Sean Hagerty. Whereas photos of the 2008 production
show the actors wearing authentic-looking clothes from the 1870s, designer Kae
Burke and director Klein have gone a step further in this production, giving
the period costumes numerous theatrical flourishes that say both when the play
is taking place and that nothing should be taken seriously. I especially liked
Passepartout’s toque and matching jacket, whose lozenge-like pattern reminded
me of Arlecchino from the commedia dell’arte.
Of particular note in this mélange of
cartoonish inventiveness is a huge clock overhead at stage left, on which an
animated Victorian clock face is used not only to tell the passage of time but
to serve as the screen for Kate Freer’s inspired projections that map the
journey of Fogg as he circumnavigates the globe. And, pulling it all together,
is the awesomely adaptable lighting of Ben Kato.
This is the kind of show that allows
the director to pull no punches in displaying her ingenuity, using minimal
props to suggest multiple ideas, such as the dryer hose that represents an
elephant’s trunk, or the revolving parasols that evoke a train’s spinning
wheels. The action, which combines both narration and dialogue, is almost
entirely at breakneck speed, and the actors must not only move like the wind, but
practically dance their characters and speak clearly while shooting out their
words like machine gun bullets.
Some, like me, may find the relentless pace a tad overwhelming and hope for some reprieve, but they will be disappointed because the only opportunity to relax comes with the intermission. I suspect that the breathless staging may have made the fun less funny for me than it was for others, but the rest of the audience seemed to be having a terrific time, so why bother quibbling?
Some, like me, may find the relentless pace a tad overwhelming and hope for some reprieve, but they will be disappointed because the only opportunity to relax comes with the intermission. I suspect that the breathless staging may have made the fun less funny for me than it was for others, but the rest of the audience seemed to be having a terrific time, so why bother quibbling?
There’s a lot to like here, and
young audiences especially should get a kick out of this tour de force. I don’t
know how long it’s going to run, but, if I were you, I wouldn’t wait 80 days to
see it.