A stunning and powerful opening night performance of the 2010 Pulitzer Prize and multiple Tony Award winning musical Next to Normal received a well-earned spontaneous ovation from its full house audience at the Cloverdale Playhouse.
Meticulous direction by Randy Foster and Eleanor K. Davis guided an exceptional six-member ensemble through the rigors of a demanding vocal score [most of the 2+ hours playing time is sung, with little spoken dialogue] that tells the story of a suburban family grappling with the wife/mother's bipolar depression and the medical treatments she undergoes long after a traumatic event many years ago.
Groundbreaking in its time for stretching the content of musical theatre to objectively and compassionately portray the causes and effects of depression on ordinary families through Tom Kitt's rock-influenced score and Brian Yorkey's insightful lyrics, the Cloverdale Playhouse production rivets audience attention and challenges us to invest our own experiences with what happens on stage.
Arguably one of the most provocative adult-themed of the River Region's productions in recent memory, Next to Normal's center is Diana [Sarah Housley] who attempts to identify the cause of her depression, the effects it has on her family, and the increasingly aggressive methods the medical experts use to alleviate her condition.
Ms. Housley's exceptional performance [she sings with power and clarity, and portrays Diana's mental confusion and changing family relationships with subtle nuances] compels audiences to weigh each ambivalent moment as she carries them on her disorientating journey of self-discovery.
As her always supportive husband Dan, Gage Leifried elicits the conflicting impulses of a strong duty-bound spouse and father who doubts his ability to keep it all together. -- Tenth-grader Bella Posey as their over-achieving teenaged daughter Natalie delivers a mature debut performance at the Playhouse that belies her years and promises a bright theatrical future. -- Natalie's boyfriend Henry is an ingratiating Graham Butler, who becomes a counterpoint to Dan through his persistence in helping Natalie through her own emotional rollercoaster. -- As their son Gabe, Reese Lemaster's enigmatic portrayal is by turns a measure of Diana's condition and its cause, a help and a hindrance to her depression. -- And John Selden's dual roles as Diana's doctors [a "rock-star" and a "psychopharmacologist"], add some levity to the proceedings while also highlighting the seriousness of the medical profession's achievements and limitations.
With some 39 songs listed in the program, what we can and cannot know about our own or others' conditions is investigated and strategically dramatized in "You Don't Know", "I Am the One", "Superboy and the Invisible Girl", "Make Up Your Mind/Catch Me I'm Falling", "Song of Forgetting", among others. Individually and collectively, the ensemble actors interpret the informative lyrics with spot-on dramatic intention as well as with musical confidence.
The character driven costumes [Ms. Davis], evocative lighting [Chris Roquemore] and minimally appropriate props [J. Scott Grinstead/Sam Wootten] -- and the performances of the acting troupe -- are enhanced by another masterfully inventive set designed by J. Scott Grinstead: a multi-leveled exterior of a blue house architecturally defined by white trimming that has several cleverly disguised moving parts to define spaces and seamlessly segue from scene to scene.
Next to Normal stages a profound analysis of grief, depression, suicide. drugs, and medical ethics through an all-too-familiar scenario. The Cloverdale Playhouse's production targets our emotions and our appraisal of mental disease while leaving us with a suggestion that hard decisions determined by love can open the doors to a satisfactory resolution.