Dan Crosby as Lee Harvey Oswald and David Galido as John Wilkes Booth. / Photo by Jan Cartwright |
The Stephen
Sondheim musical Assassins opens
tonight (Valentine's Day) at the Farmington Players Barn Theater. I recently interviewed David
Galido, who plays the enigmatic John Wilkes Booth, and asked him what people
will enjoy about the show. His answers – in quotes – are interspersed with my
own thoughts about the top nine reasons to see this show.
1. The History:
You can’t make this stuff up; these guys
and gals were real “characters.” The
nine U.S. Presidential assassins (and their targets) were: John Wilkes Booth
(President Abraham Lincoln in 1865); Charles Guiteau (President James Garfield
in 1881); Leon Czolgosz (President William McKinley in 1901); Guiseppe Zangara
(President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt was thought to be his intended target
when he killed Chicago mayor Anton Cermak in 1933); Lee Harvey Oswald
(President John F. Kennedy in 1963); Sam Byck (hoped to kill President Richard
Nixon in 1974 by crashing a plane into the White House, but his aborted
hijacking attempt ended in suicide); Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme and Sara Jane
Moore (both attempted to assassinate President Gerald Ford in September 1975);
and John Hinckley, Jr. (attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan in
1981 in a misguided attempt to impress actress Jodie Foster).
2.
Artistic License: Okay, you can make up some
of this stuff. Like, what would happen
if all the assassins got together in one place at one time? David said, “What I like most about John
Wilkes Booth is the opportunity to play such a charismatic and manipulative
character. The other assassins look to him
as their leader and in some cases Booth even convinces them to do the deed or at
least sets them on the path to assassination.”
3.
The Process: It isn’t always easy to play a character
based on a real life historical person. David
described the process: “There is a historical record out there that can be used
as research. So you do as much reading
as you can, watch documentaries; all of it gives you some insight to the potential
thought process of the person who attempted to assassinate a president. But in the end you are still creating the
character; it has to come from you so that the audience sees this character on
stage and believes this person is capable of murder.”
4. You’ll Laugh: Despite the subject matter, David says this
show is flat out “funny. Granted it’s a
dark comedy, and these are some troubled individuals, but it’s very funny. At
least in places.”
5. You’ll Cry: “At other times it is heart wrenching,
watching someone who has lost all hope and truly believes the best action they
have left to take, the only thing that might make their life worth something,
is to take the life of another human being.”
6. You’ll Feel: “I personally don’t always go to see a show
or a movie just to ‘feel good’ – sometimes I listen to a song on the radio that
makes me cry and I leave it on because that is part of the human experience and
I want to feel all of these things – a story that causes bewilderment or
outrage is just as meaningful as watching a heartwarming tale of redemption or
a laugh out loud slapstick comedy. Art
and theatre can do so many things beyond entertaining. It can educate and enlighten and this show
does those things as well.”
7. The Music: It’s complex, challenging music, even by
Sondheim standards. It can be bold (“Everybody’s
Got the Right”) and even beautiful (“Unworthy of Your Love”). David acknowledges that “Jason Wilhoite has a
fantastic voice and great stage presence as the Balladeer; audiences won’t want
to miss it. He and Music Director
Rachael Rose have been a great help and given me so much confidence in my
singing.”
8. The Dream: This show has been called an “interrogation”
of the American Dream. (Miskoff, Ashley, "The Interrogation of the
American Dream in Stephen Sondheim's Assassins"
(2011). Honors Theses.Paper 29. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/uhm/29) David explains, “One of the ways this show
will resonate with today’s audience is that each one of these assassins is
living in a country that they no longer feel belongs to them. They were taught to believe in America as the
greatest country in the world, where everyone could grow up to realize their
dreams and if they worked hard and did the right things they would become rich
and happy. And when these characters
figure out that isn’t going to happen for them, they get desperate. We are living in a country where a vanishing
middle class and ever increasing income inequality could create an environment
for more and more disenfranchised people.
And as Assassins shows, it
only takes one frustrated person, one gun, and one bullet to ‘change the world’.”
9. The Details: Opening night will certainly make for a
memorable Valentine’s Day date, but if you’ve got other plans tonight, the show
runs through March 1st. There’s
even a special President’s Day performance on Monday February 17, with
half-price ($9) tickets for students. The
Farmington Players' production of Assassins
is proudly sponsored by the Center for Financial Planning, Inc. Tickets can be purchased online at
www.farmingtonplayers.org or by calling the box office at 248-553-2955.
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