
Bright Starย
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NCSUโs Titmus Theatre, Raleigh
Steve Martin has long been a beloved comedian, actor, essayist, and bluegrass enthusiast, but his career on stage has been far more checkered. Thatโs part of the reason why this TheatreFest production of Bright Star, Martinโs 2015 Broadway musical with songwriter Edie Brickell, is actually stronger in places than its material.ย
When Martinโs script seeks to associate itself with his bettersโas gruff literary editor Alice Murphy (a fine Tina Morris-Anderson) and her staff namedrop famous wordsmiths, including Carl Sandburg, Eudora Welty, and Carson McCullersโthe inevitable comparisons hardly favor Martin.
In this tale about the rise of a young Appalachian writer named Billy Cane (an earnest Benaiah Barnes), a social occasion crucial to the plot is graced with the vivid title โCouples Dayโ before Billy announces his inevitable discovery of love in deathless prose: โI think Iโm seeing you in a new way.โย
Brickellโs plainspoken lyrics too often stay too on the nose. โIโm ready for my life to begin / Iโm ready for it all to start,โ Billy asserts in the title song. โThere goes our chance for happiness / And all our hopes and dreams,โ Young Jimmy Ray (Chris Inhulsen) forthrightly despairs in โHeartbreaker.โย
Only the wistful first-act tune โAsheville,โ imaginatively staged by director Rachel Klem and lighting designer Joshua Reaves, fully benefits from such economy of expression.
Still, Diane Pettewayโs solid musical direction makes for show-stopping moments. She and choreographer Morgan Piner take Texas swing to a boozy barroom in the raucous โAnother Round,โ before Daryl Ray Carliles gives a Lyle Lovett take on โI Had a Vision.โย
Though Morris-Andersonโs climactic song, โAt Last,โ reunites two couples and a mother and child after too long a separation, it canโt erase the cardboard scripting of an earlier reconciliation between an estranged dad and daughter. In a play about writing, the writingโs the problem in Bright Star.ย
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