
Bonnie & Clyde
โ โ โ
Through Sunday, Mar. 31
North Raleigh Arts and Creative Theatre, Raleighย
I had a big pulp-fiction phase as a teen, devouring Maxwell Grantโs thrilling, formulaic novels about 1930s vigilante The Shadow. So I mean it as a simple description, not a put-down, that Bonnie & Clyde is a dime-store novel of a musical. As Frank Wildhornโs score meanders through ragtime and Americana, Ivan Menchellโs book punches up and simplifies the life-of-crime story of Bonnie Parker (Reanna Kicinski) and Clyde Barrow (Ty Myatt), paring down the criminal gang to Clyde’s brother, Buck (Daryl Ray Carliles). It also erases the seamier facts behind the stylish, sexy, and self-documenting young couple who were celebrated as folk heroes for robbing banks during the Great Depression, then reviled for the indiscriminate murders they committed.
With a predominantly young cast, including student actors, achieving varying levels of characterization and believability, the ensemble scenes donโt always coalesce under Jeri Lynn Schulkeโs direction. Overall, the women fare best, from Kicinskiโs show-stopping torch song โHow โBout a Danceโ to Lauren Tompkinsโs luminous โThatโs What You Call a Dreamโ as Buckโs wife, Blanche. Tompkins also helms a comic gospel rave-up in which she and three beauty-shop sibyls inform a slack-jawed Buck, โYouโre Going Back to Jail.โ Myatt began pretty cold on opening night, but his and Kicinskiโs conviction ultimately sold the poverty critique โWhat Was Good Enough for You.โ Double-cast, Ryan Madanick amused as a gangster groupie before turning into a Texas Ranger.ย
Thereโs poignancy in the small-town dreams of Clyde, who plans on โwearing Sunday clothes on a Tuesdayโ and driving a race car with a top speed of sixty-five. A starstruck Bonnie marvels that, in Hollywood, โBig stars make thirty dollars a week!โ But the Depression offered scant shelter, food, or money, let alone riches or fame, and we sense the tragedy coming when the only way two impatient twenty-somethings can find agency is with their guns.


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