Saturday, July 14, 2018

An Exuberant Woody Guthrie’s American Song Soars at Dramaworks



A rollicking, moving songfest of fellowship bursts forth on the stage of Palm Beach Dramaworks inspired by the life, words and music of Woody Guthrie.  This high-energy production of Woody Guthrie’s American Song, as conceived by Peter Glazer, is particularly poignant and relevant to our times.  Does history change to remain the same?  Must there always be a disenfranchised faction of Americans? 

Woody Guthrie was first and foremost a poet of the people; ”people’s songs” as he called them, the aggrieved and the downtrodden, migrant workers, busted union members, and victims of income inequality by birth.  They were our farmers, our steel workers, our coal miners, one might say the very builders of our great country, but victimized by bankers, politicians, the Great Depression, and, then the final blow, a severe drought that hit the Southern and Midwestern plains creating hoards of “Dust Bowl refugees.”  It may be the dark side of the American Dream, but Woody had a dream of “A Better World” and the goodness of the man and his dream shines through.

Guthrie presages such “peoples” performers as Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and most recently receiving the Woody Guthrie Prize, the rocker John Mellencamp.  His spirit endures and this show preserves it.

Peter Glazer’s musical was adapted entirely from Guthrie’s words and music.  It features five gifted actors & singers who are backed by the musical ensemble of the three Lubben Brothers (local multi-talented musicians and singers), playing a number of instruments which amplify and elevate this memorable production.  They serve as backup singers and musicians on most songs, giving this production a special inspirational quality at times and at others a downright knee slapping driving force. 

The simplicity and the beauty of the music evoke those of gospel songs and hymns.  It is astounding what Guthrie could do musically with just a few chords, songs sometimes just a variation on the others.  His heart-rending words take flight in this production.

Glazer’s work is not a mere hootenanny; it is musical theatre.  The “book” in musical parlance is about Guthrie at different stages of his life, and the turbulent times in which he lived, the Gibson guitar being handed off as a baton from one actor/singer to another.  He thematically ties all these pieces together into a chronological narrative, a Prologue, On the Plains – the Early 1930s, A Train Heading West, The California Line, The Jungle Camp, New York City, Middle 1940s, and then an Epilogue.

Director Bruce Linser is also obviously intent on making this a meaningful show, not just a concert, working with the actors and the technical crew to create an atmosphere of drama for each scene.  He ensures that even though there are more than a score of songs, the ensemble group holds together as an honest to goodness musical, true to storytelling, making homogeneity out of a mosaic.

The actors start with the words of Woody, defining what it means to be a ballad singer: The ballad singer is a mystery to everybody except maybe his own self…. What heart of the people has he found, what passport, what ticket, what philosophy, what religious faith has he found that takes him out to the roads and the trails again?

The words morph into one of Woody’s most famous ballads which summarize the travelogue basis of the show and the hardships of those years, the entire cast singing “Hard Travelin’” with exquisite harmony.

The stage is now set to trace Woody’s life.  Representing Guthrie earlier in life is Jeff Raab also known as “the Searcher,” singing a lick of the touching dust bowl ballad / waltz ” “So Long, It’s Been Good to Know Yuh,” and then a reprise of “Oklahoma Hills.”  This culminates in the song “Dust Bowl Disaster.”  Later in the show he is “Cisco.”.  He has a fine voice and plays the guitar, banjo, and harmonica.

Don Noble, Joshua Lubben, Jeff Raab, Michael Lubben,
Sean Powell, Cat Greenfield, Tom Lubben, Julie Rowe
Photo by Cliff Burgess

One of Guthrie’s best known songs “Bound for Glory” is sung by the entire cast on a freight train with a hobo and “cripple Whitey.”  The train is bound for the “glory” of California and is amusingly choreographed as the actors are singing as the train is moving at 60 mph.  At the California line the rousing and ironic “Do Re Mi” (what you had to have to get into California) is sung by the five actors with gusto.

Sean Powell plays the next stage in Guthrie’s life with a jovial exuberance, now that he is established as a bona fide folksinger.  Powell is also the Musical Director of the show and as such brings together the cast’s wonderful harmonies.  He plays seven different instruments in the show while having orchestrated it at the same time.  His work is as important as the Director’s and it is seamless throughout.

One of the two women in the show is Cat Greenfield who comes from a blue grass background and cabaret theatre, exhibiting a fine, commanding soprano voice, as well as playing the guitar, banjo, mandolin, and the spoons (yes, the spoons, a real hoot).   PBD veteran Julie Rowe also triumphs in a number of roles, giving heart tugging renditions of some songs and comic turns in others (she makes a great saloon singer later in the show).  They both add a harmonizing poignancy to other songs, “Ain’t Gonna Be Treated This Way,” “End of My Line,” and ”Grand Coulee Dam,” culminating in the moving “Pastures of Plenty” at the end of Act I.

Cat Greenfield, Joshua Lubben, Michael Lubben,
Tom Lubben, Don Noble, Sean Powell, Julie Rowe,
Jeff Raab Photo by Cliff Burgess

The second act brings the musical to another level.  While “Grand Coulee Dam” was the employment they sought, Act II opens with the dark “Ludlow Massacre” which is about a miner’s union strike during which 13 children were killed by National Guardsmen, Greenfield and Rowe carrying the leads with the imaginative and effective playing of the instruments in percussion, its military rhythm driving the song forward. 

After that incident, the folksinger says the months flew past and the people faster. The coast wind blew me out of San Francisco, over the hump to Los Angeles and all the way to New York…. I run onto a guitar playing partner standing on a bad corner. His name was Cisco Houston, and he called his self the Cisco Kid.”

The “kid” introduces him to New York, and its saloon halls, his next stop in his ramblin’ life, amusingly singing “New York Town” together, vying with one another for sidewalk tips.  They strike up a friendship with Cisco offering a line that could summarize the show:  As long as we've got wrecks, disasters, floods, trade union troubles, high prices and low pay and politicians, folk songs are on their way in.

The talk turns political and Guthrie’s “Union Maid,” is sung with the catchy refrain, “Oh, you can’t scare me, I’m sticking with the Union.”  This is a song for the entire cast but is enthusiastically led by Cat Greenfield and Julie Rowe.  Here the audience is invited to sing along, and sing along they did with gusto.

Now we come to the tragic story of the Reuben James, the first military vessel sunk by the Germans in WW II (Guthrie served in the Merchant Marines).  The folksinger explains that the sinking happened before Pearl Harbor by a German U-Boat.  He goes on to say I can't invent the news but I do my job, which is to fix the day's news up to where you can sing it.  A roar of laughter came forth from the audience, acknowledging that in this respect times have changed.

Don Noble Photo by Cliff Burgess
But not all that much.  Here the show transitions to the mature Guthrie as “the writer” played by Don Noble.  Noble is a veteran of Broadway with a commanding bass voice, and comes to the show with guitar and mandolin skills as well.  Among other songs, he introduces what, to me is the show stopper, perhaps the most moving Guthrie folksong, “Deportee” and as explained, A chartered Immigration Service plane crashed and burned in West Fresno County this morning, killing 28 Mexican deportees, the crew and an immigration guard.  The “deportees” were illegal immigrants and the song is about their stark anonymity to history and an indifference to them as human beings.

The song itself is sung primarily by Cat Greenfield, silhouetted by a spotlight, with the cast joining in.  The parallels to our time are unmistakable with barely a dry eye in the audience.  From the lyrics: Some of us are illegal, and some are not wanted, / Our work contract's out and we have to move on; / Six hundred miles to that Mexican border,/ They chase us like outlaws, like rustlers, like thieves….We died in your hills, we died in your deserts,/ We died in your valleys and died on your plains. / We died 'neath your trees and we died in your bushes, / Both sides of the river, we died just the same.  The song’s Chorus, heartbreaking, devastating…Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye, Rosalita, / Adios mis amigos, Jesus y Maria; / You won't have your names when you ride the big airplane, / All they will call you will be "deportees".

The show gathers momentum to a happier conclusion, with “Better World”, and the iconic “This Land Is Your Land.”  There are many comic moments too, one of which Director Linser has the cast singing a lick of song, lined in a row facing the audience with their steel stringed instruments, one hand working the frets and the other strumming the strings of the musician next to him or her!  A crowd pleaser. 
Julie Rowe, Jeff Raab, ,Don Noble, Cat Greenfield,
Joshua Lubben, Sean Powell, Michael Lubben ,Tom Lubben
Photo by Alicia Donelan

A complex show such as this also succeeds because of the technical staff, Palm Beach Dramaworks’ being second to none.

Photo by Robert Hagelstein

Scenic Design by Michael Amico was influenced by the American painter and muralist, Thomas Hart Benton whose work focused on the mid West.  He was able to transfer the sense of Benton’s color and movement to a barn siding, depicting Guthrie’s “journey” from west to east. 

This gave Costume Designer Brian O’Keefe colors to work with and as the journey takes place over a lifetime, multiple costumes for the characters, adding still another layer to the production.  The costumes reflect the threadbare realism of the characters' hard times and their regionalism.

John D. Hall’s lighting design is careful not to wash out the colors, but highlight the action.  Brad Pawlak’s sound design finds ways to provide depth to the sound, especially when the show reverts to narrative.  And what further accolades can be said about veteran PBD Stage Manager of more than fifty shows, James Danford, other than his self deprecating comment at a talk back, “I only said ‘start’ some 300 times.”

This is a feel good musical, filled with both pain and joy.  As the show ends with his most easily recognizable “This Land Is Your Land" you’ll find yourself emerging from the theatre savoring the words or singing them out loud as the audience did last night, celebrating what it means to live here in this great land, even perhaps with a sense of optimism in the headwinds of history and our times.

Monday, July 2, 2018

Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press


How about by Presidential Executive Order?  Or just behavior?

I’m still recoiling from the murders of five employees of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis including a feature reporter, Rob Hiaasen.  Hiaasen’s career began at the Palm Beach Post, our local paper.  We all feel a personal connection. Writers there remember him and one, Howard Goodman, has written the definitive article on the incident: The targeting of journalists has to end

As Representative Gerry Connolly, D-Va., said on CNN “This president plays with fire. He has deliberately demonized the press and journalists. To call them the enemy of the people is a remarkable statement from the head of our government. And that puts every journalist at risk. Now, he didn’t do what happened yesterday in Annapolis, but he certainly helped create a climate … where it’s fair game to go after the press. And where does that end? And that’s what I worry about, that sooner or later it leads to this kind of tragedy.”

This is essentially reiterated in Goodman’s article:  “No one has inflamed the present atmosphere more than he, this man who occupies the highest office in our land. He has set a tone which he feeds at every rally and almost every day on Twitter.”

“I am not blaming him for Thursday’s tragedy in Annapolis. But I do charge him with injecting a sense of hatred into the soul of this nation that journalists do not deserve and which — in a country with more guns than people — may all too easily turn into bloodshed.”

However, is it no wonder?  Consider what has come before:

"Never forget. The press is the enemy. The establishment is the enemy. The professors are the enemy. Professors are the enemy. Write that on a blackboard 100 times and never forget it."  -- Richard Nixon to his national security adviser Henry Kissinger in a taped 1972 Oval Office conversation

“I have a running war with the media. They are among the most dishonest human beings on earth.” --- Donald J. Trump

“The media has zero integrity, zero intelligence, and no hard work. You’re the opposition party. Not the Democratic Party. You’re the opposition party. The media’s the opposition party.”   --- Stephen Bannon

And the award for the most disingenuous goes to Kellyanne Conway:  “You [the press] always want to go by what’s come out of his mouth rather than look at what’s in his heart.”

We have looked and found the heart of darkness.

This is where the lines converge, a 2nd amendment run amuck and the perpetual debasing of the 1st amendment, lambasting the press.  Until we can get our priorities straight, expect more gun violence and subsequent “thoughts and prayers.”

Journalists must be protected.

Bills have been introduced in the House and Senate, one in February and the other in May.  The Journalist Protection Act would make it a federal crime of certain attacks on those reporting the news. They’ve merely been “referred to committees on the Judiciary”:

Sponsor:              Rep. Swalwell, Eric [D-CA-15] (Introduced 02/05/2018)
Committees:      House - Judiciary
Latest Action:    House - 02/05/2018 Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.


Sponsor:              Sen. Blumenthal, Richard [D-CT] (Introduced 05/24/2018)
Committees:      Senate - Judiciary
Latest Action:    Senate - 05/24/2018 Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

Which will pass first, this Act or a Trump appointment to the Supreme Court?  As our 1st amendment is undermined, and any action on the banning assault weapons unlikely, what kind of a nation are we becoming?

For an answer, the cautionary words of Mahatma Gandhi, captured in art by Jani Leinonen, “Your Beliefs” ---

Your beliefs become your thoughts,
Your thoughts become your words,
Your words become your actions,
Your actions become your habits,
Your habits become your values,
Your values become your destiny.


Saturday, June 30, 2018

Woody Guthrie’s American Song to be staged at Palm Beach Dramaworks


Poster art by Caroline Von Feilitzsch

The ensemble musical revue opens on Friday, July 13 for a three week run.  American Song is a celebration of the life, writings, and music of Woody Guthrie, as well as the vibrant American spirit.

The musical, which was conceived by Peter Glazer, features more than two dozen of the legendary balladeer’s songs, including his best known piece,  “This Land is Your Land,” as well as many other favorites such as “Do Re Mi,” “Bound for Glory,” “Hard Travelin’” and "Union Maid.”  In addition, all the dialogue was compiled by Glazer from Guthrie’s writings.  He was a folksong poet, with an uncanny ability to capture the vernacular and the travails of the common man. 

He describes his symbiotic relationship with “his” people in a 1946 poetic ode called “The People I Owe,” which is excerpted in the opening speeches of the show:

. . . I have heard a storm of words in me, enough to write several hundred songs and that many books. I know that these words I hear are not my own private property….I borrowed them from you, the same as I walked through the high winds and borrowed enough air to keep me moving. I borrowed enough to eat and drink to keep me alive. I borrowed the shirt you made, the coat you spun, the underwear you fixed, and those socks you wove. I went on and walked down my road, you went on and walked your path. And the weather's winds, snows, sleets, ices, and hailstones cut down the oat straw, beat through the car top, knocked holes in shingles and went through awnings broke window lights, but never separated our works. Your works and my works held hands and our memories never did separate. I borrowed my life from the works of your life. I have felt your energy in me and seen mine move in you.

There are obvious comparisons of Guthrie’s experience to the contemporary world’s divisiveness, income inequality, and immigration woes.  But this musical revue is apolitical and instead is a celebration of what brings us together as a nation, of what it means to be human.

Bruce Linser is the show’s Director.  Linser is the manager of Dramaworks’ The Dramaworkshop and just came from  a very successful production of Avenue Q which he directed for the MNM Theatre Company.  When asked about the upcoming show, Linser said “this is an experience to bring people together.  I hope audiences will be surprised by the sheer joy and relevancy.  Guthrie was incredibly passionate about storytelling.  And what he was saying he was also singing, making this ensemble theatrical experience moving.  Even though an ensemble, I approach it as he would any musical: it must tell a compelling story.  Ironically, Guthrie’s tragic flaw, his restlessness, might have deprived him of even more fame when he lived.  But that was his strength, telling the tales of people who were marginalized from all over the nation, from the migrant workers to those toiling in factories organizing unions.”

Four families, three of them related with fifteen children, from the Dust Bowl
in Texas in an overnight roadside camp near Calipatria, California
  Dorothea Lange, Photographer, March 1937

The cast of five actor/musicians features Cat Greenfield, Don Noble, Sean Powell (who is also the musical director), and Jeff Raab, all making their PBD debuts, and PBD veteran Julie Rowe.  They will be joined onstage by musicians Joshua Lubben, Michael Lubben, and Tom Lubben, West Palm Beach-based triplets who are familiar to many South Floridians as The Lubben Brothers.
Woody Guthrie

The actors supply the drama and the poetry while the energy of Guthrie’s songs is amplified by the Lubben Brothers, all classically trained musicians, but drawn to the American Folk Tradition.  It is their own mission statement: “Music brings community.  As a family that plays music together, we desire to bring others into the same unity we have come to love.”  Talk about type casting!

When asked about their feelings about Guthrie and this show in particular they said (singularly of course, but one might begin a thought while another completes it): “This is the first time we’ve gone so deeply into Guthrie’s’ music.  We’re familiar of course with his big name standards, “This Land Is Your Land,” “So Long It’s Been Good to Know Yah” and see him in the great American tradition of folk storytellers.  He tells the story of a part of America that has been forgotten.  The images in the show are very powerful and organic, demonstrating a disenfranchised people’s faith and hard work, trying to build their lives and make a better one for their children.  Guthrie eloquently expresses the essence of the American Dream in his folksongs.”

“Although at times we find ourselves going back to our classical roots, performing classical concerts as well, we always get together at least once a week to sing folksongs, from Afro American spirituals to folk songs of today.  We simply love to discover ones from America’s past and to sing them.”

“We think this experience is going to be very different than the usual concert performance.  The latter must just sound good, one off, but playing each day in a structured show allows development and of course, as you are playing before a different audience each day, those performances can be slightly different, responding to the audience.  We love the way the actors in the play depict three different periods in Guthrie’s life, a moving way of showing a multifaceted human being.”

The joy and the energy of the Lubben Brothers can be seen in their rehearsal of Guthrie’s “Do Re Mi” about how dust bowl migrant workers were turned away or poorly treated at the California border.  Sound familiar? So before Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, there was Woody Guthrie.  He gave rise to so many great singers who were champions of the common man.  It is indeed a time to celebrate and come together at PBD Don & Ann Brown Theatre in West Palm Beach, July 13 – August 5.  For ticket information contact the box office at (561) 514-4042 or visit www.palmbeachdramaworks.org