Strong performances mostly overcome problematic scenes
Review by Lauren Emily Whalen
Avenue Q has not aged well. At all. The puppet-based musical, co-written by Robert Lopez pre-Book of Mormonand Frozen, rocked off-Broadway in 2003 before winning the Best Musical Tony over frontrunner Wicked. Featuring dirty songs about loud lovemaking, surfing the Internet for porn and competitions on whose life sucks more, Avenue Q was a hit for Mercury Theater Chicago in 2014, netting four Jeff nominations along the way.
Some moments still ring true, however: "What Do You Do With a BA in English?" and "Purpose" hew close to the millennial experience of studying liberal arts and subsequently working one's tail off in multiple jobs, and for what, exactly? As recent college graduate Princeton, Jackson Evans reprises his 2014 performance in a way that's equal parts charming and moving. Fellow returning cast member Leah Morrowshines as Kate Monster, a kindergarten teaching assistant who has her purpose - a special school for monsters - but is too broke and love-challenged to really tackle it. Through Princeton and Kate, the audience can find the sweetest, most relevant moments of Avenue Q .
Until the job market is friendlier to Bachelors of Arts, we're all struggling to find our place in the world, and the closing song is both nihilistic and comforting, proclaiming "everything in life is only for now." Similarly, "You Can Be As Loud as the Hell You Want" is a certified jam, a celebration of noisy sex as enacted by puppets and tunefully trilled by David S. Robbins, as Avenue Q superintendent and former child star Gary Coleman. (And Robbins' Coleman impersonation is spot-on, particularly his facial expressions.)
If only the rest of Avenue Q weren't so problematic.
Though closeted gay Republicans definitely exist - I wouldn't be surprised if some current lawmakers fall under this umbrella - the plotline of repressed Rod (Christian Siebert), feels decidedly early 2000s direct-to-video movie. The gleefully nasty "Bad Idea Bears" (Stephanie Herman and Daniel Smeriglio) encourage Princeton to have sex with Kate because "she's wasted!" Never okay, this phrase is especially tasteless in the Me Too era, and though director L. Walter Stearns could have chosen to make Princeton appear just as drunk, he chooses not to.
The worst 2018 offender of all is the popular song "Everyone's a Little Bit Racist." This isn't on the cast and crew: legally, they probably can't cut the song, at least without facing audience backlash. And this version does change a statement about Mexican stereotypes to poke fun at Donald Trump's Wall. Still, "Racist" isn't a tongue-in-cheek reference to the fact that yes, we are all a little racist - instead, it celebrates casual racism and denigrates political correctness. Maybe this was funny when we had a very Christian, sober President, and then a black President. In the midst of Trump's reign of terror, it's not funny at all.
Clearly, is making money for Mercury, and of course a theater company must consider what will draw audiences. And an for the Trump era is plausible and could be interesting, though Lopez and company would have to rewrite quite a bit of the songs and characters. As a production, Mercury's is fine. Just fine. As a show, it may be making money, but at times it's very difficult to watch.
continues through November 5th at Mercury Theater, 3745 N. Southport (map), with performances Wednesdays-Fridays at 8pm, Saturdays 5pm & 8:30pm, Sundays 3pm & 7:30pm. Tickets are $35-$65, and are available by phone (773-325-1700) or online through their website (check for availability of ). More information at MercuryTheaterChicago.com. (Running time: 2 hours, includes an intermission. Note: This production may not be suitable for young children.)
Photos by Brett A. Beiner
Jackson Evans (Princeton), Matthew Miles (Brian), Leah Morrow (Kate Monster), Dan Smeriglio (Nicky, Bad Idea Bear), Christian Siebert (Rod, Newcomer), Audrey Billings (Christmas Eve), David S. Robbins (Gary Coleman), Jonah D. Winston (Trekkie Monster, Ricky), Stephanie Herman (Mrs. T., Bad Idea Bear, Lucy the Slut), John Gurdian , Andrew Lund, Maxton Smith, Janelle Villas (understudies), Stephanie Wohar (dance captain, understudy)
Linda Madonna (conductor, keyboard 1), Celia Villacres (keyboard 2), Scott Sedlacek (guitar), Cara Hartz (reeds), Lindsay Williams (percussion)
behind the scenes
L. Walter Stearns (director), Kevin Bellie (choreographer), Eugene Dizon (Music Director), Alan Donahue (scenic design), Dustin L. Derry (lighting design), Rachel Boylan (costume design), Carl Wahlstrom (sound design), Kristi J. Martens (production stage manager), Russ Walko (puppet design and creator), Rick Lyon (puppetry coach), Brett A. Beiner (photos)
Tags: 18-0638, Alan Donahue, Andrew Lund, Audrey Billings, Avenue Q, Brett A. Beiner, Cara Hartz, Carl Wahlstrom, Celia Villacres, Chicago musical theater, Chicago Theater, Christian Siebert, Dan Smeriglio, David S. Robbins, Dustin L. Derry, Eugene Dizon, Jackson Evans, Janelle Villas, Jeff Marx, Jeff Whitty, John Gurdian, Jonah D. Winston, Kevin Bellie, Kristi J. Martens, L. Walter Stearns, Lauren Emily Whalen, Leah Morrow, Linda Madonna, Lindsay Williams, Matthew Miles, Maxton Smith, Mercury Theater Chicago, post, Rachel Boylan, Rick Lyon, Robert Lopez, Russ Walko, Scott Sedlacek, Stephanie Herman, Stephanie Wohar
Category: 2018 Reviews, Extensions-Remounts, Lauren Emily Whalen, Mercury Theater, Musical, Robert Lopez