By Mervyn Rothstein
The heart of Pippin holds "a powerful story," says Paulus, a Tony nominee in 2009 for Hair and last season for The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess — both Tony winners for musical revival, the latter originating at A.R.T. "Pippin, for me, is about how far we go in our lives to prove we're extraordinary. Pippin tracks the story of a young man trying to find the meaning in his life, but it's an emblematic journey, almost like a pageant play, a morality play. So yes, it's a young man's journey, but for me it can speak to anyone, whether you're like me — a mom in my 40s thinking about my life and my choices — or an 18-year-old. It can speak across generations. It takes that theme and expresses it completely through theatre, as a play within a play, using the metaphor of theatre — a troupe of players comes to town to do this show."
The revival's choreography, in the Fosse style, is by Chet Walker. Then there's something Paulus says makes her Pippin different from others — "circus choreography" by Gypsy Snider of Les 7 Doigts de la Main, a Montreal circus troupe.
"Taking the Fosse and expanding it to include a vocabulary of circus is thematically totally connected, because the life of an acrobat is literally 'How far will I go to prove I'm extraordinary? Will I stand on my head on top of someone else's head, will I jump through a hoop, will I walk on a tightwire? How far will I push myself physically?' The circus metaphor reinforces the thematic issues."
02 Jan 2013
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Matthew James Thomas in the title role.
photo by Michael J. Lutch
Is Broadway in this Pippin's future? "Right now we're completely focused on A.R.T. Our mission is to expand the boundaries of theatre. And having acrobats standing on their heads singing choruses is definitely an expansion of musical theatre."
(This feature appears in the January 2013 subscription issue of Playbill magazine. Want to subscribe?)
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