Egan’s powerful performance mixes new and old
Tim Titus
Susan Egan’s love for the Broadway musical is obvious. In the
intimate setting of the Orange County Performing Arts Center’s
Founders Hall, Egan’s powerful voice and charming personality
beautifully combine Broadway classics with insightful new music by
some wonderful up-and-coming composers.
While her voice is impressive, it turns out to be only a
supporting character. There are frustrated singers all over the
country with fantastic voices. The more important ingredient, the
ingredient that makes an evening with her such a joy, is Egan’s
down-to-earth persona and genuine empathy for the messages embedded
in her music. It is like an all-night conversation with your best
friend.
This performance is not about the Susan Egan. This performance is
a seamless weaving of the classic and the modern, an homage to the
music of the past and the present and the universal human emotions
experienced in each. Egan sets this tone early, disarming her
audience with the comically self-critical “Obligatory Opening
Number,” by Paul Loesel and Scott Burkell. Aside from making the
audience laugh, this number has the effect of humanizing Egan, making
her just another one of us, and we are ready to enjoy a night of
conversation with our new friend.
From here, Egan launches into a playful rendition of Cole Porter’s
“I Get a Kick.” To solidify the concert’s grounding in Broadway
classics, Egan also peppers in Rodgers and Hart and Gershwin. Classic
numbers such as “Where or When,” and “Someone to Watch Over Me” slide
beautifully into an appreciative audience.
These older pieces, however, are merely a skeleton onto which Egan
attaches brand new flesh. It is the music from modern composers that
steal this show.
These pieces cover a wide range. Christine Lavin’s “You Look
Pretty Good ... “ is a fun number that allows Egan flash her friendly
style by playing with her male audience members. Georgia Stitt’s
“Ordinary Thursday” is a strong, picturesque ballad that deftly
captures the curiously anonymous, yet public experience of living and
falling in love in the big city.
Another ballad, “Stars and Moon” by Jason Robert Brown, is simply
breathtaking. Egan nails this one. Her empathetic style clearly
delivers its heartening message.
There are some wonderful songs in this show, but the music of Zina
Goldrich and Marcy Heisler is truly the highlight. These songs
skillfully craft age-old human emotions and desires (sometimes to the
point of neurosis) into a modern framework. “Fifteen Pounds Away from
Your Love” (sung by guest performer Lisa Richard) appeals to everyone
who enjoyed going to their 20th high school reunion to find that
everyone who used to pick on them is now fat, lazy, unsuccessful, and
boring. “Taylor” is a showstopper and an anthem for every Starbucks
barista. You may never look at your latte the same way again. “The
Last Song,” a song that seems to avoid its own ending, completes the
show with a laugh, leaving the audience the way they started: wanting
more.
Susan Egan and Lisa Richard have wonderful voices, but it is the
innovation of the music they perform that sets this show apart.
Tributes to Sondheim, Porter, Rodgers and Hart/Hammerstein, Gershwin
and Lloyd-Webber have dotted the stage for decades, and while Egan
certainly pays tribute to many of these classic artists, she also
seems elated to expose her audience to the new.
It might be disappointing to look at the program and recognize
very little, but the payoff is worth it and reveals exciting new
possibilities for musical theater.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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