Thursday 16 April 2009

Sherie Renee Scott is Ravishing in Everyday Rapture

I sure hope Sherie Renee Scott doesn't have any plans after May 31st when the limited run of Everyday Rapture at off-Broadway's Second Stages ends because this phenomenal play, in my opinion, is Broadway-bound. How do I describe it? It's a musical but not a musical. It's a play with music. That's probably the best description but not like any play with music I've ever seen. It's a one-woman show with a cast of four. Sherie Renee Scott wrote this semi-autobiographical piece with Dick Scanlon, who previously wrote the book and lyrics to Thoroughly Modern Millie. Miss Scott plays herself with Lindsay Mendez and Betsy Wolf playing her backup singers/quasi-spiritual leaders, The Mennonettes, and Eamon Foley playing broadwayislove09@earthlink.net, a 15 year old obsessed with musical theatre who posts a video of himself on youtube lip-synching to Sherie Renee Scott singing "My Strongest Suit" from Aida in which she starred as Princess Amneris. But it's mostly Miss Scott taking the audience anecdotally through her life from her rural Kansas childhood to her adult life in Manhattan through soliloquy and parodies of familiar songs from Judy Garland's "Dear Mr. Gable" to George Harrison's "Give Me Love". And she does it brilliantly. How much of it is true and how much is artistic license, one doesn't know for sure but who cares. This is great theatre. She tells of her childhood growing up half-Mennonite (the lower half) with some of her fondest memories watching Judy Garland movies with her full-Mennonite cousin Jerome who was later shunned by this branch of the Christian church historically known as a peace church given their commitment to nonviolence and pacifism. Then to her 27 year Rumspringer (the time in which Mennonite young adults are permitted to "experience the real world" before deciding to join the church) in Manhattan where she discovers what it really means to live.

I didn't realize until I was riding home on the train and reading the playbill that the play was directed by Michael Mayer who directed another favorite of mine, Spring Awakening. Ironically throughout the show there were things that reminded me of Spring Awakening. The simplicity of the sets for one and the efficiently beautiful orchestrations presented with only a guitar, a bass, a violin and drums.

There's only one problem for Sherie Renee Scott, if Everyday Rapture does make the jump to Broadway she'll have to commit to it for the long run because no one could play her like her. And Eamon Foley as the youtube boy on the internet would be hard to replace as well. The faces alone that he made were so funny I had to look away so I wouldn't embarrass myself laughing hysterically. We saw him in 13, The Musical and he was a standout in that show too. We had met him and I had taken a picture of him with Jade which we brought with us to have him sign which he did graciously. He's absolutely adorable and I'm sure has a bright future ahead of him. There's a new picture of Jade with him sporting a new haircut. Check it out on page 14 of The Matinee gallery at http://www.matineeshow.co.uk/.

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