Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Nun but the Best in this Rousing Revival


 Nun but the Best in this Rousing Revival 

Joy Ellis

Meg Hopp

Sarah Marie Young (center)

Sarah Marie Young

Allen Cruz (center)


By Tom Wachunas

“…If you feel it, why conceal it, Let your soul rejoice! Raise the stakes! Raise your game! Raise your voice!..”  - Sister Act lyrics by Glenn Slater, from the song “Raise Your Voice”

    I raise my voice once more, as I did in response to the spectacular 2017 Players Guild mainstage production of Sister Act. The musical comedy, superbly directed by Jonathan Tisevich, was a grand success for the Guild. If you need a reminder, here’s a link to my synopsis and review:


   And thus a bar had been set, a bold standard met. Could, then, a revival of this show match that level of excellence?

   Yes, and then some. Talk about raising your game. In this iteration, exactly three years later, Tisevich has again directed a stunning cast, some reprising their 2017 roles, and all gifted with superlative talent.

   Joy Ellis reprises her role of Deloris Cartier, a wannabe disco diva, disguised as Sister Mary Clarence, hiding in a convent from her murderous, boogie-oogie club-owner boyfriend, Curtis (Mark Dillard). Radiant as ever, Ellis is a wondrously facile singer who exudes both muscular sensuality and compelling emotionality. Her voice saturates the very air with an electricity  that clearly charges the convent’s choir of nuns. In this wild narrative, Sister Mary Clarence teaches these tone-deaf sisters how to turn their bilious braying into beatific praying that soars to heights of heavenly harmonies, drawing not only new congregants to their floundering church, but the attention of the Pope himself.

   Meg Hopp has also returned, playing the wry and introspective Mother Superior. Here she gives us an even more poignant and sobering look at her character’s vexing questions and frustrations. Yet in the soulful weariness that seems to color the unique sonority of her voice, there’s remains a sense of strength and resolve. It’s simply intriguing to watch her.

   Likewise, Sarah Marie Young is commanding in her reprised portrayal of the convent’s shy, nervous postulant, Sister Mary Robert.  I don’t think I’ve ever heard Young sing – and I’ve heard her sing in many Guild productions - with more riveting fervor than in her heartfelt solo here, “The Life I Never Led.”

    Allen Cruz plays Eddie, the cop with a crush on Deloris. He’s a delightful combination of sincere ardor and lovable awkwardness.  In the show-stopping number “I Could Be That Guy” - featuring Cruz’s hilariously quick peel-away costume changes - he morphs from being a self-deprecating dreamer into a suave, hip-swaying crooner, imagining himself to be a star of stage and…life.

   Meanwhile, there’s no shortage of gut-splitting laughs when watching  Curtis’s bumbling trio of daffy thugs (Todd Cooper, Anthony Woods-Mitchell, Drake Harbert), especially when they perform an over-the-top parody of lascivious seduction in “Lady In The Long Black Dress.”

    Another endearing element of the production is the performative intensity of the nuns. Each individual is fully invested in, and enveloped by, her character, articulating a distinctive personality within the community.

   In the stirring song, “Bless Our Show,” we hear all of them joyously intone with infectious exuberance, “Bless each note, and each lyric, help us try to stay on key. Bless the lights and the soundboard, bless our choreography. From the top of the downbeat 'till the final curtain call - Bless the day, bless our show, bless it all!”

   And so, additional kudos to choreographer Lauren Dangelo, music director and conductor Steve Parsons, scenic designer Joshua Erichsen, lighting designer Frankie Castrovillari, sound designer Jake Brent, and costume designer Suwatana Rockland for their impeccable work.

   I don’t think it necessary or even accurate to call this event an outright “improvement” on the 2017 production so much as an augmentation and amplification of an already immensely entertaining enterprise. Forgive the pun, but offering consistently electrifying, artful entertainment has long been  a very admirable habit of the Players Guild.

   So here we are in 2020, blessed yet again. You could rightly call it a jubilant sensation of…déjà new.

PHOTOS: Thanks to Players Guild / Jonathan Tisevich
Sister Act, at Players Guild Theatre,  THROUGH March 15, 2020 / 1001 Market Avenue N., Canton, Ohio / Shows Fri. and Sat. at 8:00 p.m., Sunday at 2:00 p.m. / 2:00 and 8:00 on Sat. March 14 / Tickets: Single tickets - $34 ; 17 and younger - $27; Seniors -  $31 / Order at www.playersguildtheatre.com    or call 330. 493.7617 

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