She Loves Me

โ˜…โ˜…

Through Sunday, Dec. 9

PlayMakers Repertory Company, Chapel Hill

Thereโ€™s more than a touch of old-world charmโ€”but a few too many pounds of old-world patriarchyโ€”in She Loves Me, a 1963 musical-comedy rework of Hungarian playwright Miklรณs Lรกszlรณโ€™s 1937 comedy Illatszertรกr (Parfumerie).

Songwriter Jerry Bock and lyricist Sheldon Harnickโ€™s witty, nimble tunes knowingly puncture the love/hate relationships of the harried clerks and upscale customers of Maraczekโ€™s, a tony Budapest perfume shop. Anyone whoโ€™s ever worked in retail will recognize the unctuous kowtowing in โ€œThank You, Madamโ€ and relish the digs in โ€œSounds While Selling,โ€ whose laughable lyrics make surreal non sequiturs out of overlapping countertop conversations.

But then the veil of consumer-based bonhomie and goodwill is completely rent by the showโ€™s eleven oโ€™clock number, an increasingly frantic โ€œTwelve Days to Christmas,โ€ propelled by Kirsten Sandersonโ€™s direction, Tracy Bersleyโ€™s gratifying choreography, and Mark Hartmanโ€™s peerless six-piece orchestra. They also drolly collaborate in โ€œA Romantic Atmosphere,โ€ during which a wet-behind-the-ears cafรฉ busboy (David Fine) finds himself the hapless center of an impromptu, comical tango orgy, as the patrons of a tasteful trysting spot briefly let their illicit passions get the better of themโ€”and everyone else.

But Joe Masteroffโ€™s book keeps the tables sharply tilted in favor of Georg (a dashing Michael Maliakel), the snippy head clerk at the perfume shop, who lords it over Jenny Latimerโ€™s earnest Amalia from the moment she comes in seeking a job. Understandably, she resents and resists this treatment using verbal sales-floor combat.

But unbeknown to either of them, Amalia has anonymously responded to the lonely-hearts ad Georg anonymously placed in the cityโ€™s paper, and in their correspondenceโ€”last centuryโ€™s analog version of online datingโ€”each has taken liberties with the truth while building up the other in their imaginations as an idealized lover. Somethingโ€™s got to give, of course, when workplace enemies realize theyโ€™ve been wooing each other.

Georgโ€™s cowardice about meeting his mystery date ironically gives him the upper hand when heโ€™s the first to realize Amaliaโ€™s been writing him. Again, he exploits the situation to his advantage, keeping her in the dark during an inexplicably creepier-than-necessary โ€œTango Tragique.โ€ Power and its imbalance are more important than equity or amity, here and in the title song, where an eavesdropping Georg learns Amaliaโ€™s true feelings and exults in the most important findingโ€”that he is loved, not that he loves.

Throughout this putative romance, the fears and needs of a man who keeps his cards well hidden come before those of the woman who acts more forthrightly. We donโ€™t even need to know that Laszloโ€™s comedy has been made into three films and a musical to realize that weโ€™ve heard this one before.ย ย 

Bio: Byron Woods is the INDY's theater and dance critic.Email: [email protected]: http://twitter.com/byronwoods