Wednesday, October 8, 2014

82. Review of YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU (October 9, 2014)

82. YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU
 

 
What can a Johnny-come-lately reviewer add to the cacophony of praise being showered on the new Broadway revival of YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU, at the Longacre Theatre? Unless he has a totally different take, he can add very little, and, in this case, he doesn’t. The show, apart from the usual unimportant quibbles, is every bit as delightful as most critics say. So instead of rehashing those opinions, I’m offering, for the most part, a revision of what I wrote about the play in my book The Encyclopedia of the New York Stage, 1930-1940 about the 1936 production. At the end are a few personal reactions to the current production. The original show ran 837 performances at the Booth Theatre, won the Pulitzer Prize for 1936-1937, and was one of the 10 Best Plays of the Year. For a memorable photo of the entire original company, with Kaufman and Hart standing proudly up center, click here.
YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU, by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart (the program actually credits them in the reverse order), one of the all-time popular Broadway comedy hits—which has been given countless productions in amateur and professional theaters over the years—has had three (or four, depending on how you’re counting) previous Broadway revivals. In 1945 it had a very short run in a slapdash production at the City Center, starring ex-vaudevillian Fred Stone as Grandpa Vanderhof; in 1965 the APA Repertory Theatre did a fine production at the Lyceum, with Donald Moffat as Grandpa and Rosemary Harris as Alice; in 1967, the company returned to the Lyceum with the same basic production; and in 1983, Jason Robards as Grandpa Vanderhof led a terrific cast in a revival that tallied 312 performances at the Plymouth and Royale Theatres.
From left: James Earl Jones, Kristine Nielsen, Fran Kranz, Will Brill, Annaleigh Ashford, Patrick Kerr, Mark Linn-Baker. Photo: Joan Marcus.
What Kaufman and Hart contrived was a zany but heartwarming farce about a wildly unconventional family who live in the shadow of Columbia University. There’s the crustily individualistic, snake- and stamp-collecting Grandpa Martin Vanderhof (James Earl Jones), who retired 35 years earlier, gets much pleasure from attending Columbia’s commencement exercises, and refuses to pay income tax; his crackpot amateur-painter daughter, Penelope (Kristine Nielsen), who started to write plays (unproduced) when a typewriter was accidentally delivered to the house eight years earlier, and who asks the dipsomaniacal actress Gay Wellington (Julie Halston) to help get her scripts in shape; Penny’s husband, Paul Sycamore (Mark Linn-Baker), who manufactures firecrackers in the basement, aided by a onetime iceman, Mr. De Pinna (Patrick Kerr), who long ago attached himself to the household; candy-making, 29-year-old daughter Essy Sycamore (Annaleigh Ashford), who’s practicing ballet dancing under the tutelage of an emotional Russian, Boris Kolenkhov (Reg Rogers), and who performs to the xylophone playing of her screwy husband Ed (Will Brill), who prints radical statements; pretty daughter Alice (Rose Byrne), straighter than the rest, a bit embarrassed by her family’s oddities, and in love with Tony, the son of her Wall Street boss; and black domestic, Rheba (Crystal Dickinson), and her welfare-receiving boyfriend, Donald (Marc Damon Johnson).
Much of the action involves the contretemps that arise when Tony’s socially conscious parents arrive at the house (there’s supposedly been a mix-up in arrangements and they confront the ménage at its most outrageous). Ed’s inflammatory tracts and the discovery of the gunpowder in the basement result in everyone’s being arrested by three government agents (Nick Corley, Austin Durant, and Joe Tapper), and Alice’s decision to break off her engagement. Grandpa, however, steps in and applies his homely wisdom to straighten matters out, and everyone settles down happily to a meal of blintzes cooked by Olga (Elizabeth Ashley), a former Russian aristocrat working at the Child’s Restaurant in Times Square.
The play was completed in only a month, and went through titles such as GRANDPA’S OTHER SNAKE, MONEY IN THE BANK, FOXY GRANDPA, and THE KING IS NAKED before the authors came up with its perfect name. When it was awarded the Pulitzer, a few critics grumbled because they felt the piece, for all its humor and charm, was too obviously a commercial work without serious social import. The critics loved the play’s affectionately drawn eccentrics, its risible incongruities, its avoidance of superficial wisecracks, and its marvelous cast. Weaknesses cited included lack of social significance (its theme of the evanescence of material wealth was not much thought of) and its flimsy story.
As you watch this old chestnut unfold, you may wonder during the early parts of Act one (there are three) where all the hype comes from about how funny it is. There are some rib-tickling moments in this act but much of the time we’re busy learning who these folks are and about the essential conditions surrounding them. Act two explodes in more ways than one, and gets funnier and funnier, especially during a game that Penny initiates in which people write down the first word that comes to mind when she says a word at random. The scene is comic genius and I’m chuckling now as I recall it. Act three, while not without plenty of hilarity, is mainly concerned with resolving what’s come before, bringing everything back down to earth in a good-natured and emotionally satisfying way.
Despite the play’s being so inextricably a part of the mid-Depression, it’s amazing how well a splendidly staged and acted production of YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU can not only keep you in stitches 78 years after it was first produced, but even induce tears of joy (yes, that actually happened to me) with its sweetly sentimental, feel-good idealism.
Nearly everything here works, starting with David Rockwell’s elaborate set, which replaces the curtain with the dollhouse-like façade of the Vanderhof home. Squeezing it at either side are imposing brick and mortar buildings that slide off when the action begins so the house can revolve and display its elaborate interior, every nook and cranny filled with the resident’s accumulated bric-a-brac. Broadway tunesmith Jason Robert Brown has created a sensational background score that captures the period tone and atmosphere, while Jane Greenwood demonstrates with her mid-30s garments why she still reigns as the queen of Broadway costume design. Jon Weston’s lighting, Donald Holder’s sound design, Tom Watson’s wigs, and the special effects of Hudson Theatrical Effects (all those firecrackers!) are all to be commended for what they contribute to this hellzapoppin’ production.
Scott Ellis’s direction flawlessly sews together an ensemble of comical maestros, each with their own eccentricities, but all perfectly attuned to the play’s dramatic needs. I’ve already taken up too much space and each of the actors has been praised to the sky by earlier reviews, so rather than enumerate the individual actors, of which there are 19 (count ‘em), let me say that they’re all joyously wonderful, and leave it at that. After you’ve seen this loving revival, you can take it with you in your memory for years to come.