"THE RED SCARE IN SHERIDAN SQUARE"
One sign of the cultural difference between Las Vegas
and New York is which dead performer it never stops impersonating. In Vegas, of
course, it’s Elvis Presley, and in New York—at least of late—it seems to be
Billie Holiday. Last season alone, there were two major musical biodramas about
Lady Day on New York stages. Well, now she’s back again, if only in a supporting role,
in CAFÉ SOCIETY SWING, a cabaret-style revue at 59E59 Theaters that’s nicely
sung, is musically vibrant, but is stuck with a lumbering narrative.
Allan Harris. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
An ensemble of three excellent singers, Cyrille Aimée,
Charenee Wade, and Allan Harris, is backed by a swinging eight-piece band made up of black and white, male and female musicians all of whom deserve to be named: Benny Benack III on trumpet, Mr. Harris on guitar,
Mimi Jones on bass, Shirazette Tinnin on drums, Camille Thurman on tenor sax, Bill
Todd on alto sax and clarinet, Brent White on trombone, and Alex Webb, the
musical director, at the piano.
Evan Pappas, who also sings a couple of numbers, delivers the tired narrative. In Act 1 he's a right-wing Commie-baiting reporter assigned to do a hatchet job on Josephson, that “pinko bagel-bender,” but--surprise!--he winds up learning to admire the guy. In Act 2, Mr. Pappas continues with the biographical spiel, this time in the guise of the nightclub’s white-aproned barkeep. His by-the-numbers anecdotal material includes several lethal attempts at humor. When the bartender mentions having a half-Japanese, half-black kitchen worker, he cracks that “Every December he attacks Pearl Bailey.” Da-da-bum.
Evan Pappas, who also sings a couple of numbers, delivers the tired narrative. In Act 1 he's a right-wing Commie-baiting reporter assigned to do a hatchet job on Josephson, that “pinko bagel-bender,” but--surprise!--he winds up learning to admire the guy. In Act 2, Mr. Pappas continues with the biographical spiel, this time in the guise of the nightclub’s white-aproned barkeep. His by-the-numbers anecdotal material includes several lethal attempts at humor. When the bartender mentions having a half-Japanese, half-black kitchen worker, he cracks that “Every December he attacks Pearl Bailey.” Da-da-bum.
Mr. Pappas frequently interrupts his biodata to introduce some famous entertainer, such as Holiday,
Josh White, Billy Strayhorn, Big Joe Turner, Lena Horne, or Sarah Vaughan, as well as such less well-remembered names as Susie Reed and Nellie Lutcher. The respective artist—dressed,
of course, in attractive period wear (David Woodhead did the costumes)—then steps
up to the standing mic and sings. Director Simon Green stages the songs straight, not as “production numbers.”
Many are familiar but always welcome blues and jazz standards, like “What a Little Moonlight Can Do,” “Stormy Weather,” “Rockin’ Chair,” “One Meat Ball,” “What Is This Thing Called Love?,” “Lush Life,” and, of course, “Strange Fruit,” the powerful anti-lynching song, which Holiday introduced at the club in 1939. Predictable as it may be, “Strange Fruit” closes the show on an appropriately emotional level. The very talented Ms. Wade, portraying Holiday, enters with the singer’s trademark gardenia in her hair and delivers the goods in a somewhat exaggerated but reasonably effective emulation of Lady Day’s unique vocal style.
Many are familiar but always welcome blues and jazz standards, like “What a Little Moonlight Can Do,” “Stormy Weather,” “Rockin’ Chair,” “One Meat Ball,” “What Is This Thing Called Love?,” “Lush Life,” and, of course, “Strange Fruit,” the powerful anti-lynching song, which Holiday introduced at the club in 1939. Predictable as it may be, “Strange Fruit” closes the show on an appropriately emotional level. The very talented Ms. Wade, portraying Holiday, enters with the singer’s trademark gardenia in her hair and delivers the goods in a somewhat exaggerated but reasonably effective emulation of Lady Day’s unique vocal style.
Charenee Wade. Photo: Carol Rosegg. |
There are few surprises here, although there’s a substantial
number of less well-known tunes on the bill, including several new ones in
period mode by Mr. Webb himself. A few come with satirical political messages,
such as Willie Johnson’s “Stalin Wasn’t Stallin’” Webb’s “Red Scare” and Harold
Rome’s “The Investigator’s Song,” sung by Mr. Pappas. Zero Mostel originally performed
the latter at a Madison Square Garden rally, not the nightclub, making its inclusion here a bit questionable. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t fun hearing the question, “Who’s gonna investigate the man who investigates the
man who’s investigating me?” Mr. Pappas, though, is no Zero Mostel.
David Woodhead’s minimalist set—illuminated by Maruti
Evans’s usual lighting magic—provides a bandstand for the musicians, with the
piano down right, and a desk down left in Act 1, replaced by a small bar in Act
2. Hanging vertical banners that back the musicians include highlights from the
once-famous mural cartoons by Syd Hoff that satirized the swells of
what Clare Boothe (before she added Luce to her name) called “café society.”
Shows like this, which gain much of their éclat from the
singers they resuscitate, always face the dilemma of how closely they should attempt
to recapture the sound of those artists. It seems to me that if the singer’s
voice and style can’t be invoked, then the focus shifts to what they’re singing.
However, when the presence of a very particular star is emphasized, the
audience expects to hear something that somehow resembles what that person is famous
for. In CAFÉ SOCIETY SWING, the only singer who sounds at all like the original
is Ms. Wade, when she does Billie Holiday. Her Sarah Vaughan has nothing of that distinctive chanteuse's quality, nor, if you were blindfolded, would you recognize
Lena Horne singing “Stormy Weather” other than by identifying the singer with
the song.