66. SHIDA:
THE MUSICAL
Jeannette
Bayardelle is an exceptional performer. She is a passionate, committed, and
versatile actress, and is gifted with a voice powerful enough to make you both remove
your assisted listening device and let the sound waves blow-dry your hair. In
her new, one-woman musical, SHIDA, at Ars Nova on W. 54th Street, she
has added to those talents the accomplishments of book and lyric writer and composer.
Backed by a four-piece ensemble of keyboard, drums, guitar, and bass, on a
simply designed set that places the musicians upstage behind translucent
plastic panels, with a semblance of a fire escape downstage right, she tells the
story of Shida, a high-IQ African-American girl who grows up in the Bronx wishing to
be a writer and struggles to overcome the difficult circumstances she encounters.
It is a story of survival despite all odds. As demonstrated by the
truly appreciative applause the night I saw it, when many theatre professionals
were present, some audiences will surely find it moving and inspirational. Others, like
me, may find it predictable and clichéd. I have a
feeling I’m in the minority, but so be it.
Ars Nova on W. 54th between 10th and 11th Avenues.
To tell this purportedly true story she plays half a
dozen characters, shifting from one to the other rapidly and with the simplest
means, as in so many other shows requiring an actor to play multiple roles
(MURDER FOR TWO being a recent example). We first meet Shida as a surprisingly well-read,
fourth-grade school child at St. Mary's Catholic School, where she meets Ms. Smalls, the sensitive teacher
who encourages her interest in writing poetry like Phillis Wheatley. At school
she is befriended by Jackie, a double-dutch
jumping home girl embodying stereotypical speech and physical mannerisms—smarmy
side to side head movements, disingenuous eye popping, both hands flipping the
second through fourth fingers open and shut, swaggering hair tossing, and
calling Shida “girl” on every other line. Jackie, for all her jiving
attitudes, becomes Shida’s lifelong and sincerest pal and is there to help her
when things come crumbling down. And they certainly do when, after five years
of sexual abuse by her mother’s boyfriend, “Uncle Steve,” an abortion, her
mother’s losing battle with cancer, a failed relationship
with a woman who looks like a man, crack addiction, prostitution, and beggary,
she questions God’s existence but ultimately finds redemption during a stint in rehab.
Shida eventually emerges on top, ready to move forward at City College and take
advantage of her abilities.
We’ve seen stories like this before, and there
are no surprises in store. The minute little Shida begins talking to her “Uncle
Steve,” who is helping her prepare for her spelling bee, you know where the
relationship is going. Still, even after five years of his being “on top of me,”
to which her mother turns a blind eye, she seems to overcome her trauma; after
initially falling off in her grades, she turns things around and becomes a straight-A
student. When she enters NYU on a scholarship and befriends Joe, a nice white
guy who tutors her in math, you know something not kosher will happen, which
does when he turns out to be a drug dealer and, despite her protestations, talks
her into getting high. This, of course, starts her on the road to perdition, largely,
it seems, because she can’t shake the traumas of her childhood and her
mother’s death, which, tragic as they are, seem, given the strength of Shida’s
character, forced motivations. Her mother remains sainted in
her eyes, even though it took her five years before she kicked out the freeloader
who was serially raping her daughter; it seemed to me that this was something she might have figured out earlier
despite Shida’s keeping silent about it. In other words, common as such
experiences may be in many people’s lives, they appear contrived here for the
sake of dramatic expediency.
Although there are spoken passages,
most of the show is sung, with 20 songs listed in the program, each marking a
step in Shida’s evolution as a young woman. As the show’s press release notes,
they cover a variety of styles, including rock, jazz, R&B, and gospel music;
there is also a bit of hip-hop from one of Shida’s boyfriends, but its
inadequacy is recognized by Shida herself and quickly ended. All the songs are
listenable, but too many sound alike, and some seem to have been written merely
to offer Ms. Bayardelle opportunities to demonstrate her ear-splitting belting powers in the vein of DREAMGIRLS’ “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.” So
assured is Ms. Bayardelle of her vocals that in one number, while she is in the
middle of one of her highest and loudest notes, she actually breaks character
along with the fourth wall to encourage the audience to clap! I wasn’t sure how
we were supposed to take her story seriously after that. Director Andy Sandberg never should have condoned such self-promotion, regardless of the audience's laughter.
SHIDA deserves to be seen for the
performance of Jeannette Bayerdelle. The friend I saw it with, an experienced
young theatre professional, was extremely impressed. Like me, she was
disappointed in the material, but that didn’t seem enough to dampen her strong
enthusiasm. Hopefully, that will be your reaction as well. Ms. Bayerdelle deserves to be seen (and, more
importantly, heard). Her show? Well you can't get one without the other.