photo by Joan Marcus
The Robber Bridegroom is a story about
Jamie Lockhart, “a gentleman by day and a bandit at night” set in 18th
century Rodney, Mississippi. This southern musical will fill your heart with
joy and it will be extremely hard to keep from dancing to its cheerful
bluegrass soundtrack.
The
modern Robin Hood, Jamie Lockhart
(Steven Pasquale), has a plan to marry Rosamund (Ahna O’Reilly), the
daughter of local planter, Clement
Musgrove (Lance Roberts). But one night he meets a beautiful girl in the woods
and falls in love with her, not knowing that the two ladies are the same
person. Rosamund is also torn apart by the necessity to marry Jamie Lockhart
and her love for a bandit of the woods who’s name she doesn’t know and who’s
face she never saw because it’s stained with berry juice.
The story of two double-identity lovers also
features a series of comical side characters trying to interfere. Like a
lot of fairytales this one also has a stepmother, Salome, hilariously portrayed
by Leslie Kritzer. Every number of this greedy and lustful woman is a
showstopper as are her outfits “for special occasions”.
The
director Alex Timbers fills the show with practical jokes like the local fool,
Goat, posing for the reflection of Salome when she is admiring herself in the
“mirror” or dropping a box with metal parts every time something is being
dropped on stage. Timbers transforms the space by making actors drag wooden
planks and blocks around to create an interior or a landscape. The good, old trick
of branches being moved around Rosamund by other actors to symbolize her
movement in Nothin’ Up, and it’s good
to see that Timbers is lighthearted about it.
The
stage design, by Donyale Werle, brings the action closer to the audience by cluttering
the stage with all sorts of junk, which makes it look like a barn. The presence
of the band on stage helps to create the atmosphere of a village festival.
Little DIY-style lighting effects like Mason jars with candles hanging from the
ceiling in the orchestra, flashlights in the hands of actors, and Christmas
lights imitating stars, create a homey yet magical effect.
The Robber Bridegroom by Roundabout
Theater Company is funny and dynamic. The production is stylish and the entire
cast is very charismatic. The only person who didn’t bring up his highest game
was, surprisingly, Steven Pasquale as Jamie Lockhart who is supposed to be over
the top sexy and charming because everybody else plays his or her characters
with quite a bit of self-irony and exaggeration. Pasquale seemed a bit heavy
and reflective as a bandit of the woods making almost no distinction between the
two sides of his character’s nature.
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