MN "Enchanted Evening" Fades Aug. 12 , But South Pacific Tour Dawns in Fall | Playbill

Related Articles
News MN "Enchanted Evening" Fades Aug. 12 , But South Pacific Tour Dawns in Fall The Ordway Center for the Performing Arts revival of South Pacific, elements of which will head out on a 50-week tour in September, ends its resident run in St. Paul, MN, Aug. 12.

The Ordway Center for the Performing Arts revival of South Pacific, elements of which will head out on a 50-week tour in September, ends its resident run in St. Paul, MN, Aug. 12.

The upcoming touring revival of South Pacific, produced by Barry and Fran Weissler and Clear Channel Entertainment, got its first public preview with the original Ordway staging July 24, although contractually the Ordway staging is considered distinct and Ordway is billed as the tour's originating producer. Ordway is committed to presenting tours and creating new work — "Ordway originals" — at the Minnesota venue. The resident St. Paul staging was already in the works when the Weisslers, who had planned a 2001-2002 tour, asked to partner on production elements.

Following Minnesota, the production loses Richard Stilwell as Emile de Becque and gains Michael Nouri (who starred as King in Broadway's Victor/Victoria) as the romantic lead for the yearlong tour. The run begins with a tech process and two public performances Sept. 21-22 at the Auditorium Theatre at Indiana University in Bloomington, IN.

The official tour begins at the Palace Theatre in Columbus, OH, Sept. 25. For the road, Angie Ha and Jeff Yalun join the company as Ngana and Jerome, respectively.

* Ordway is billed as the production's original producer, and the Weisslers and Clear Channel (producers of Seussical) are taking the show on the road. The tour has the same creative team as the St. Paul staging — Jerry Zaks (Guys and Dolls) is billed as "production consultant" on the staging directed by Scott Faris. Erin Dilly (the touring Martin Guerre, Broadway's Follies) is Nellie Forbush in Minnesota and beyond. The physical production will also tour.

The 1949 Pulitzer Prize-winning show concerns a 50-ish French planter (de Becque) who falls in love with a Navy nurse on an island during World War II.

Gary Chryst is choreographer. Designers are Derek McLane (set), Ken Billington (lighting), Gregg Barnes (costumes) and Jonathan Deans (sound design).

An ABC television movie musical version of the classic aired in spring 2001 starring Glenn Close (who also co-produced) as nurse Nellie Forbush and Harry Connick Jr. as Lt. Cable, a rich Philadelphia-raised officer who falls for an island girl and struggles with his feelings of racism. Some cuts and changes were made for the TV version.

The company of the Ordway production and tour includes Lewis Cleale as Lt. Cable, Armelia McQueen as Bloody Mary, Kisha Howard as Liat, John Wilkerson as Capt. Brackett, David Warshofsky as Luther Billis, and James Judy as Harbison. The ensemble includes Jody Ashworth, Melissa Rain Anderson, Frank Baiocchi, Justin Bohon, Kevin Covert, Lenny Daniel, Jessica Ferraro, Steve Hogle, Stacie Morgain Lewis, Tony Lord, Dan Maceyak, Emily Rozek, Roland Rusinek, Brandon Singleton, Dana Steer, Kate Strohbehn, Debra Walton and Shelby Rebecca Wong.

The hit Broadway musical with songs by composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II was drawn from James Michener's "Tales of the South Pacific." The plot-specific numbers managed to leap into the public consciousness, and the Hit Parade: "Some Enchanted Evening," "Younger Than Springtime," "Bali H'ai," "A Wonderful Guy," and more. Mary Martin and Ezio Pinza were the original stars.

Director Scott Faris started his career as an actor and would go on to become a Broadway and touring stage manager. He was part of the production team that created Siegfried and Roy at the Mirage and he helmed EFX! starring Michael Crawford. He has also directed Chicago internationally.

Jocef Baquilod and Joreen Baquilod played Jerome and Ngana, respectively, for the Ordway.

*

South Pacific was considered groundbreaking for the commingling of an exotic wartime locale, its romantic plot and score and its serious exploration of racial bigotry, summed up in the Hammerstein lyric, "You've Got to Be Carefully Taught." That song is generally thought to be the reason the musical captured the Pulitzer Prize. Co-librettist Josh Logan's direction was hailed for its fluidity and sense of cinematic flow.

Ordway tickets range $24-$55. Tickets were available for the final weekend. The Ordway is at 345 Washington Street in St. Paul. For information, call (651) 224-4222 or visit the website at www.ordway.org.

— By Kenneth Jones

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!