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The blue and the gray
Article Last Updated: 02/18/2008 08:43:19 AM MST
Merrill Osmond stars in the Hale Centre
Theatre's production of "The Civil War."
Like the rest of his musical family, Merrill Osmond has spent most of
his life on the world's stages, singing at presidential inaugurations and
producing theatrically staged concerts. Yet in singing lead in his
family's brother act, Osmond mostly has played a bigger version of
himself, one that would read to the rafters.
In portraying Captain Emmett Lochran in the Hale Centre Theatre's
production of the musical "The Civil War," Osmond is learning how to
create a character.
"This is my first time doing anything like this," Osmond, 54, says.
"It's a challenge and a half, but I'm loving it to pieces. I'm loving the
idea that you are actually taking on the role of an individual who lived
during what was probably the most horrific emotional time on the planet,
and to stay in that role for the entire two hours."
After Donny's stint in "Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat" and Marie's
in "The Sound of Music," Merrill Osmond has called upon his younger
siblings for acting advice, particularly strategy for memorizing lines. If
Donny can play Joseph, then his own full, gray beard might qualify him to
fill another biblically sized role, that of Moses, Osmond jokes.
Osmond, in an interview during his first week of rehearsals, said
working on the community theater's technically complex $1 million stage
was another kind of revelation. "There's the memorization, and then making sure the songs you sing are on tune and that the
character's coming through," he says. "But then you've got an entire stage
that's moving around you, up and down, and if you step in the wrong place,
you're going to go down in the pit."
Osmond leads a cast that includes 24 men, 23 of them tenors, with a
score by Frank Wildhorn, noted for the musicals "Jekyll and Hyde" and "The
Scarlet Pimpernel." The show ran on Broadway in 1999 and wasn't
particularly beloved by critics, who opined that its blend of pop music
and its historical montage style of storytelling seemed more jarring then
emotionally stirring.
That juxtaposition at the heart of the
script - building a musical on the foundation of our country's grim
brother-against-brother war - seems odd on its face, director Andrew Barrus agrees. But as a CivilWar buff, he was intrigued by the
storytelling possibilities.
First was the challenge of finding the right
cast who could deliver that distinctive music, blending a pop-belting
style rooted in bluegrass twang. "[Wildhorn] did not write this for normal
people - it's really, really high," Barrus says. "The whole company is
really stretching themselves musically throughout the play. I've always
found that to be an exciting thing."
To help the cast reach the deeper meaning within the music, Barrus
assigned poetry readings, ranging from Walt Whitman to Maya Angelou, that
the actors will perform for each other in the green room before shows.
Another unique aspect of the production are the cast's replica costumes
and weapons, which were purchased from a Tennessee sutler that has
provided military provisions continuously since the 1800s.
As part of his immersion in the script, Barrus, dramaturge Jamin
Merton and a photographer traveled to the six battlefields that provide
the story's setting, staying in inns established before the Civil War.
Landscape photos from that fact-finding trip - which Barrus terms "a
dream come true" - have become part of the production's extensive variety
of video projections, including images that will wrap around on the
theater's back walls. The director hopes the images, with an overlay of
dates and historical facts, will create a grounded timeline for the
musical's story, which is crafted out of snippets from period journals,
poetry and letters.
The script hits some melodramatic notes, but Barrus hopes staging choices will help theatergoers tap into the story's
core, rather than the too-easy, saccharine emotions invoked by the subject
of a bloody, tragic war.
"You get the sense of authenticity wrapped around inside all of these
projections," the director says. "This show is built to make the audience
member cry. We could do it at the drop of a hat, but honesty changes your
life."
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* ELLEN FAGG can be contacted at ellenf@sltrib.com or 801-257-8621.
Send comments to livingeditor@sltrib.com.
* "THE CIVIL WAR" opens Tuesday and plays through
April 5 at the Hale Centre Theatre, 3333 Decker Lake Drive, West Valley
City. Curtain is at 7:30 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays, with 12:30 and 4
p.m. matinees on Saturdays, and occasional 4 p.m. weekday shows.
* TICKETS ARE $21 to $25 (children $15 and $16), by
calling 801-984-9000.
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