The Cast of Rent: 20th Anniversary Tour |
Twenty years ago, onto a Broadway stage burst a sexy, soaring musical daring to give unforgettable faces and personalities to seven artists struggling to survive not only their East Village poverty, but also the plague of AIDS/HIV that appeared ready to wipe out an entire generation. Two decades later, Rent is no less relevant and timely than when it won multiple Tonys in 1996 (including Best Musical), as witnessed by the stunningly superb, heart-warming, and heart-breaking production now on tour at SHN Golden Gate. The characters and their stories that are largely based on Puccini’s 1896 opera La bohème still bring both laughter and tears in great quantity as they did in ’96; but in early 2017, the musical seems particularly apropos once again.
Danny Harris Kornfield & Kaleb Wells |
With his camera ever in hand, aspiring documentarian Mark sets out to record a year in the life of his current and former artistic roomies and their lovers and friends. Danny Harris Kornfield is joined by a stage full of his cohorts climbing, jumping, kicking, and literally flying in all directions while urging him on in “Rent,” singing in loud, rambunctious voices multiple protests of their plights: “We’re not gonna pay last year’s rent, this year’s rent, next year’s rent … ‘Cause everything is rent.”
Jasmine Easler & Katie Lamark |
The over-powering personality and attractive dynamism of Maureen eventually splashes in full body gyrations and over-the-top poses as Katie Lamark comes close to bringing the audience to its feet in her avant-garde rendition of the child’s rhyme, “Hey Diddle Diddle” in her performance of “Over the Moon.” As the year progresses and her relationship with Joanne begins to look like a yo-yo as they habitually attract and repel each other, the two electrify the entire auditorium with their sexual, sensual, and entirely sensational, “Take Me or Leave Me.” In doing so, they also provide a key theme and message of Rent, “Take me for what I am, for what I was meant to be.”
Kaleb Wells |
Other pairs of lovers are equally impressive in the story’s telling. Mark’s roommate, Roger, who is depressed about his HIV and a girlfriend’s recent suicide, strums repeatedly a few chords on his guitar in “One Song Glory” as Kaleb Wells introduces us to his captivating, soul-stirring voice while he searches for “one song before this virus takes hold … one song to redeem this empty life.” Into his life comes a erotic dancer of seedy nightclubs, Mimi, shivering in the heatless, dark warehouse where they are both seeking refuge. Mimi seeks a match to “Light My Candle” as well as Roger’s warm body for comfort. With a voice that mixes teasing seduction, tongue-in-cheek humor, and starving desperation into one bundle of stellar performance, Skyler Volpe fails to win Roger this time; but she is not one to give up. Her drive is fully witnessed as we see her dressed in skin-tight blue in a cheap club scene singing “Out Tonight” in a voice meant for Vegas while dancing as if making love to the balcony’s bars in front of her.
Skyler Volpe |
The two will struggle to find their relationship equilibrium and will deliver some of the evening’s more heart-piercing, deeply emotional, and truth-telling numbers – ones like “Another Day” and “Without You” that are now iconic among the musical’s fans. Each singer performs with a genuineness that reaches to the farthest, back seat in the balcony. Kaleb Wells in particular brings rock-star quality time and again to his singing and probably has the best voice in a cast where every person is a winner in song.
David Merino & Aaron Harrington |
A cross-dressing street drummer — racked by AIDS and hunger — finds an injured, mugged philosophy teacher on the street named Tom Collins, a friend of Mark’s and Roger’s. There is immediate attraction between the giant of an African American man more teddy than grizzly in his huge form and the undersized, dangerously thin drag queen performer, Angel (David Merino). The story of their love and devotion is at the core of Rent’s emotional pull on its audience. Aaron Harrington’s voice flows deep like a river as he describes his dream of going to “Santa Fe” to Angel and his friends, leading the two of them to soar in one of the musical’s best love songs, “I’ll Cover You,” in which Angel sings, “Live in my house, I’ll be your shelter” and Tom replies, “Open your door, I’ll be your tenant.” Angel’s glittering red lips and outlandish elf attire and Tom’s look of lumberjack cement into a tender love to inspire even the hardest of hearts.
The Cast in “La Vie Bohème” |
To balance the gripping moments of personal, romantic, and social-issues drama threading throughout Rentare small and big numbers often full of humor and winks to the audience. Homeless gather to sing about Christmas coming, always ending with a funny, but cynical remark comparing the world’s celebrating to their street-bound non-party. Nasal-sounding parents with aristocratic airs leave phone messages from far-away resorts to their almost-homeless and rebelling kids. But it is when the whole cast executes with full gusto the gymnastic choreography of Marlies Yearby that fireworks truly happen. The Last Supper imitation of twelve friends gathered in a café after Maureen’s concert on Christmas Eve is a fabulously produced rock number (“La Vie Bohème”) with its hilariously and precisely coordinated movements of necks, shoulders, fingers, heads, hips, and abdomens along with a dozen bodies gyrating in chairs, on and under the table, and over the entire floor.
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