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A CurtainUp Review
Voices From the Hill by Les Gutman
I am pleased to report that it has done astonishingly well. Choosing keenly from the poem's myriad characters, it has fashioned an elegant, interesting portrait, part staged poetry reading, part song cycle. It is visually quite stunning, as staged by Gregory Wolfe, choreographed by Jena Necrason and lit by David Sherman. I should also note quickly that this is no casually slapped together substitute; it reflects all of the well-thought-out, inventive attention to detail that has marked Moonwork's previous efforts. First introducing "The Hill," from which the dead speak from their graves, the eight actors read and sing as over 60 of the Spoon River characters. (There are also well-placed selections from a handful of Walt Whitman poems.) The performances by the ensemble (Mason Pettit, Aloysius Gigl, Jena Necrason, Elizabeth Zins, Noel Velez, Jeannie Goodman, Victoria Adams and Christopher Yates) are, without exception, excellent, their readings and singing splendid. Some pieces have been set into dance, and a good deal more of them are interwoven quite artfully and theatrically. As the local laundress, Edith Conant, tells her story ("And I, who went to all the funerals/Held in Spoon River, swear I never/Saw a dead face without thinking it looked/Like something washed and ironed."), for instance, she picks the others off the ground and hangs them on the clothes line, where they remain until Mr. Wolfe manages to morph them into the flames of the fire set by Nancy Knapp. There is no set, save for an upstage scrim onto which David Sherman projects various colorations and abstract images. Everyone had the good sense to know nothing more was needed. The costumes by Oana Botez-Ban and June Wolfe are more specific, and perfectly evocative of 19th Century small town America. The music, mostly by Rusty Magee and Andrew Sherman, who have effectively become Moonwork's resident composers, is well-suited and highly melodic if a bit too anthemic for my taste. It shows off the fine voices of cast members particularly well. The company recorded a CD of its musical adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream a few seasons ago; I wouldn't be at all surprised if this one is preserved in like form. I'm not sure Voices From the Hill captures Spoon River quite as fully as a reading of Masters' masterwork would, but it is a most enjoyable and successful endeavor. LINKS TO OTHER MOONWORK PRODUCTIONS What You Will Romeo and Juliet A Midsummer Night's Dream Richard III
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