By Michael Buckley
10 Apr 2006
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| From Top: Brian Stokes Mitchell in South Pacific at Carnegie Hall; Richard Maltby, Jr. |
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| Photo by Joe Sinnott - Thirteen/WNET (top) |
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Prior to the June 2005 benefit concert of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic, Brian Stokes Mitchell had “never seen the play, or read the script. I’d seen parts of the film. I’d read and absorbed almost every musical ever made, but a few had slipped through my fingers—and South Pacific was one of them. As a result, I’d constructed a plot that was totally wrong. Who’s this? [He wondered], and who’s she going to wash out of her hair? And who’s this old fart, the French guy? Well, here I am playing the old fart.”
According to Mitchell, the experience was both “surprising and interesting. I had such a great time working with Reba McEntire.” Does he approach a concert differently than a regular musical? He laughs. “You prepare less.” Having the safety net of a script in hand, he claims, “gives you a false sense of security. The problem with a concert is that nobody wants to see you do it with your head buried in a script. That means you have to have most of it memorized. People, in general, are a lot more prepared than they appear.”
He’s appeared in three Encores! concerts (Do Re Mi, Carnival, Kismet). “They’re very similar,” admits Mitchell, “but they’re fully staged and choreographed. They’re really full productions [and have five performances]. Compared to Encores!, [South Pacific] was a walk in the park.”
“For me, that’s the money song in the show. I love that song. Everything in the show leads up to that moment. [The song] is incredibly beautiful. It’s a heartbreaking, romantic, sad, optimistic, gracious number; it’s full of complexity, and done in an absolutely simple manner. That’s a great song at its best!”
There have been rumors that Mitchell may star in the forthcoming Broadway revival of the show. “Nobody’s asked me,” he declares, “and I’m not sure that I would say yes. More people will end up seeing the concert on television than [would see] a full Broadway production, no matter how long it runs. Here, I have the best of both worlds. I didn’t have to work quite so hard; I didn’t have to do eight performances a week. And I get a huge orchestra in an incredible theatre, working with an incredible cast. That would be hard to beat.
“And, honestly, I don’t know how well the show would fare outside of a concert setting. It’s a problematic and difficult show. If I remember right, it’s the only major [Rodgers and Hammerstein] musical that’s never been revived [on Broadway]. It’s very much a show of its time, not only because of the racial issues involved, but also because of the sex issues. Women were in a very different place in society at that time. [The production premiered on Broadway in 1949.] The only way to be able to do this show is as a true revival. That’s what I would do, if I were directing it: ‘Here is a period piece. We’re not changing it; we’re showing it to you as it was.’ I don’t think it’s something you can update, and if you did try to update it, it wouldn’t be South Pacific. It’s of its era, of a particular time and sensibility. People forgive a concert in a way that they wouldn’t forgive a Broadway play.”
Since 1994, Mitchell’s been married to actress-dancer Allyson Tucker. Upcoming projects include his first solo CD (on the new Playbill label) to be released June 6. “I produced it, and arranged a bulk of it, and orchestrated about half of it. I sing a lot of different styles and arrangements. It’s an album that expresses who I am. Al Schmidt, who’s the best mixer in the world, mixed it. John Williams wrote my liner notes. It’s been a fantastic journey; I’m real happy with it.”
When I interviewed Mitchell during the run of Ragtime, he mentioned that he prefers the name Stokes to Brian, and that he might drop the first name. Reminding him of that, he replies, “That would have been too big a pain in the butt, so I decided to keep it.” Mitchell’s Broadway debut occurred in the 1988 musical Mail, for which he received a Theatre World Award. Since then, he’s appeared in Oh, Kay!; as a replacement in Jelly’s Last Jam and The Kiss of the Spider Woman; Ragtime (his first Tony nomination); the 1999 production of Kiss Me, Kate (for which he won the Tony); King Hedley II (his dramatic debut, and third Tony nomination); and the 2002 revival of Man of LaMancha (making him a four-time Tony nominee).
Which role has given him the most satisfaction? “That would be hard to say. It would be between Coalhouse Walker in Ragtime and Don Quixote. If I had to choose one, it would be Coalhouse.” I remark that I thought he deserved to win the Tony for Ragtime. Says Mitchell, “Kiss Me, Kate was my Ragtime Tony.”
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Featured in the concert are Jason Danieley (very good as Lieutenant Cable), Lillias White (a commanding Bloody Mary), and Alec Baldwin (a dese-dem-and-dose Luther Billis). Paul Gemignani conducts the orchestra, and Walter Bobbie directed.
Based on James A. Michener’s “Tales of the South Pacific,” the idea of dramatizing the collection of stories started with Kenneth MacKenna, head of MGM’s story department. After the studio rejected the project, MacKenna suggested it to director Joshua Logan as a stage vehicle. Logan, in turn, consulted producer Leland Hayward, and the duo then approached Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein about turning it into a musical. The four joined forces as co-producers, with Logan also directing and collaborating with Hammerstein on the book.
For the plot, they used two of the Michener tales: “Our Heroine,” which told of Navy nurse Nellie Forbush’s World War II romance with French planter Emile de Becque, and “Fo’ Dollah,” the ill-fated love story of Lieutenant Joe Cable and Liat, the daughter of Bloody Mary. Logan and Hammerstein combined the stories by having de Becque and Cable undertake a dangerous mission together.
Mary Martin, who had just toured in Annie Get Your Gun, a Rodgers and Hammerstein production, was assigned the role of the “immature and incurably green” Nellie. To play Emile, they chose Metropolitan Opera basso Ezio Pinza, who was interested in making a Broadway debut. The cast included Myron McCormick (Luther Billis), Juanita Hall (Bloody Mary), William Tabbert (Cable), and Betta St. John (Liat). (One of the nurses in Nellie’s group had the name Lisa Minelli, that’s Lisa with an ‘s’ and Minelli with one ‘n’). Martin was succeeded during its run (of 1925 performances) by Martha Wright and later Cloris Leachman; Pinza’s replacements were Ray Middleton and George Britton. Near the end of the run, Shirley Jones joined the cast as one of the nurses.
South Pacific was awarded the 1950 Pulitzer Prize for Drama (following 1931’s Of Thee I Sing as the second musical to earn the honor). Jo Mielziner won a 1949 Tony Award for Scenic Design, and the show received nine 1950 Tonys: Best Musical, Director, Score, Book, Producer (at that time a separate award), and the Best Actress (Martin), Actor (Pinza), Featured Actress (Hall), and Featured Actor (McCormick) in a Musical. It’s the only time, thus far, that the four acting categories in a musical were won by performers in the same show.
There were two New York revivals of the musical: in 1965, at City Center, with Betsy Palmer and Ray Middleton; in 1967, at Lincoln Center, co-starring Florence Henderson and Giorgio Tozzi. Richard Kiley starred in a 1985 revival that closed (prior to Broadway) on the West Coast.
Joshua Logan directed the 1958 movie version, which starred Mitzi Gaynor (Nellie), Rossano Brazzi (Emile), Ray Walston (Luther), Juanita Hall (Bloody Mary), John Kerr (Cable), and France Nuyen (Liat). Giorgio Tozzi supplied Brazzi’s singing voice, Bill Lee dubbed Kerr’s vocals, and (curiously) Muriel Smith sang for Juanita Hall. Doris Day would have been a better choice for Nellie, and Logan’s frequent use of color filters greatly diminished the film. A 2001 TV-movie starred a miscast Glenn Close as Nellie, with Harry Connick, Jr., playing Cable.
Among the songs in the classic score are “A Cockeyed Optimist,” “Some Enchanted Evening,” “Bloody Mary Is the Girl I Love,” “There Is Nothing Like a Dame,” “Bali Ha’i,” “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair,” “I’m in Love with a Wonderful Guy,” “Younger Than Springtime,” “Happy Talk,” “Honey Bun,” “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught,” and “This Nearly was Mine.”
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