Theater Review
For those who wonder just what the creators of the world’s greatest
musical could do for an encore, the answer is impressively on view at the
Orange County Performing Arts Center.
When Frenchmen Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg turned Victor
Hugo’s “Les Miserables” into an awesome dramatic musical spectacle, they
built their show around historical fact, a lower-class uprising in Paris
in the 19th century. Another history lesson, America’s involvement in the
Vietnam War, led to the creation of “Miss Saigon.”
The word “spectacle” hardly qualifies as a description of “Miss
Saigon,” a maelstrom of pulsating emotions set in 1975, the year South
Vietnam’s capital fell, and three years later in its painful aftermath.
The show brilliantly captures both the overall pandemonium and the
internal conflagration of personal heartache.
“Miss Saigon” has often been compared to Puccini’s “Madame Butterfly”
for its depiction of love and loss involving an American military man and
his foreign lover. This is accurate enough, but there’s also a few
strains of “West Side Story” present, not to mention memories of “Les
Miz.”
The latter moments are stirred by the presence of the Engineer, an
avatar of avarice who’s at least a second cousin to Thernardier. Joseph
Anthony Foronda tackles this role with a seething devotion to personal
enhancement that manifests itself in his glorious production number “The
American Dream” late in the show. Foronda revels in his consummate greed
as the ultimate street hustler, a sterling performance.
The heart-rending core of the production, however, is Mika Nishida’s
achingly realistic portrayal of Kim, the teen-age Vietnamese girl thrust
(like “Les Miz’s” Fantine) by personal poverty into a life of degradation
as one of the Engineer’s “business girls.” Nishida thrusts herself and
her superior singing voice deeply into this tragic character.
Greg Stone is staunchly believable as the American Marine whose life
is forever altered by Kim, and who endeavors, three years later, to do
the right thing by her. Stone brings a sense of power and integrity to
his role, rendering his moralistic dilemma convincingly in the solo “Why
God, Why?”
Another upstanding GI who can’t forget the plight of the children left
behind is given a splendid rendering by Eugene Barry-Hill. The role of
Chris’ American wife is powerfully interpreted and beautifully sung by
Jacquelyn Piro, whose tortured solo, “Now That I’ve Seen Her,” expresses
volumes of painful concern.
Johnny Fernandez, in a character recalling Chino from “West Side
Story,” excels as the Vietnamese soldier promised to Kim from childhood,
riveting in their fateful confrontation and haunting in his later
reappearance. Little Brittney Bui, all of 4 years old, is delightful as
the son Chris left behind.
Then there is that helicopter. Like the chandelier in “Phantom of the
Opera,” it’s the centerpiece of “Miss Saigon,” a spectacular effect that
punctuates the frenzied exodus from the capital as the North Vietnamese
close in. It’s actually the first sound you hear in the show, but you
must wait until midway into the second act to see it up close and
personal in a stunning flashback sequence.
“Miss Saigon,” superbly staged by Nicholas Hytner with equally
impressive musical staging by Bob Avian, exudes a power and passion
rarely experienced in the musical theater. It stands toe to toe with “Les
Miserables,” which is the ultimate compliment.
Unlike the normal center weeklong run, “Miss Saigon” will be around
through Sept. 25, which should give local theatergoers ample opportunity
to experience its emotional power and technical magnitude.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
CUTLINE: Mika Nishida clutches her son as Johnny Fernandez threatens
his life in a tense scene from “Miss Saigon” at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
WHAT: “Miss Saigon”
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa
WHEN: Now through Sept. 25; show times are Tuesdays through Fridays at 8
p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 and 7 p.m. (dark Monday
only)
HOW MUCH: $41-$66
PHONE: (714) 740-7878
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