The Jerusalem Post

A bow to Bernstein

Felder’s one-man show a tribute to famed Broadway composer

- • By TOM TUGEND

LOS ANGELES (JTA) – There is a remarkable moment in Maestro, Hershey Felder’s one-man show about Leonard Bernstein, when the late famed conductor-composer is shown in an old film clip on a giant screen and the two perform a seamless piano duet from Richard Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde.

The tour de force characteri­zes the fusion between Bernstein, who died in 1990 at 72, and Felder, very much alive and lively at 48.

Maestro opens off-Broadway on September 1 for a six-week run and will tour cities throughout the United States and abroad in the future.

The multitalen­ted Felder, who sings, acts and plays the piano in a combinatio­n of biographic­al narrative and concert, seems confident he will remember his lines. After all, he tells an interviewe­r, “I’ve impersonat­ed Lenny Bernstein on stage some 600 times.”

However, even those who have seen Felder tributes to Bernstein will find different nuances and characteri­zations in the upcoming New York presentati­on.

“The tone of each performanc­e depends on the reaction of the audience, so my job never gets easier, only harder,” Felder said, but he hopes the result is “a more realized piece.”

There are some actual parallels in the lives of the two men. Both grew up in Yiddish-speaking homes, the sons of Eastern European immigrants and in tightly knit Jewish communitie­s – Bernstein in the Boston area, Felder in his native Montreal.

A recurrent shtick in the show is Bernstein’s Ukraine-born father agonizing about how his son is ever going to make a living as a musician.

The show follows Bernstein from his admission to Harvard (squeezing in under the 10 percent Jewish quota) to his first steady job as assistant conductor of the New York Philharmon­ic to his triumphs as a composer both of classical music and classic Broadway musicals.

There is the historical date of November 14, 1943, when in a pure Hollywood fantasy, a hung-over Bernstein is awakened by a phone call telling him that the evening’s scheduled conductor, Bruno Walter, has suddenly fallen ill and that he, the 25-year-old Lenny, must wield the baton at 3 p.m. that very day.

Bernstein, of course, triumphed and the rest is history.

Maestro introduces the great conductors who influenced Bernstein, each infused by Felder with a distinct personalit­y and different European accent.

We meet the likes of Walter Damrosch, Dimitri Mitropoulo­s, Fritz Reiner (“with the permanent expression of a man who had sex once and didn’t like it,” says Felder), Walter and, above all, the beloved music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitz­ky.

On another level, there is Bernstein the composer, whose works, such as “Jeremiah,” “Dybbuk Suites” and “Kaddish,” reflected his deep Jewish roots.

From a world-renowned classical conductor, Bernstein turned to the musical stage with works ranging from On the Town to Candide and the triumphant West Side Story, a modern-day version of Romeo and Juliet (Bernstein originally cast the warring clans as Jews vs. Catholics, but cooler heads prevailed, “so we threw out the Jews and brought in the Puerto Ricans,” Bernstein is quoted as saying.)

On a third level is Bernstein the complex and conflicted human being. He was happily married to the Chilean-born Felicia Montealegr­e, the mother of his three children, but made little effort to hide his liaisons with men.

Maestro opens with Bernstein on his deathbed. Felder believes that for all the worldly acclaim, the celebrated musician pronounced a harsh judgment on himself. Perhaps his greatest sorrow was that he never composed the one classical masterpiec­e that would immortaliz­e his name, Felder said.

In his later years, “Bernstein also suffered from strong feelings of guilt,” Felder believes. “He shoved [his affairs with men] down Felicia’s throat and he didn’t care how devastated she was.”

Maestro runs nearly two hours, without an intermissi­on, and the sheer physical stamina required for the one-man play is astonishin­g. Even more so as Felder throws himself into the role with unreserved physical and emotional passion that stops just short of going over the top.

In addition, Felder transmits a real feeling for the creative processes underlying the arts of conducting and compositio­n.

Over a span of 19 years and some 4,500 stage performanc­es, Felder has also interprete­d the lives and works of Beethoven, Chopin and Liszt, as well as Irving Berlin and George Gershwin (Felder introduces the latter by his birth name, Yankele [Jacob] Gershowitz.) In addition, Felder presents his own works, including the concerto Aliyah, the opera Noah’s Ark and Love Songs of the Yiddish Theater.

Next on Felder’s intense schedule is his musical and biographic­al homage to Our Great Tchaikovsk­y, which will premiere next year.

When not touring, Felder lives in Paris and New York with his wife, Kim Campbell, the former Canadian prime minister, whom he met while she was serving as her country’s consul general in Los Angeles.

Maestro, directed by Joel Zwick, will run through October 16, with Felder’s signature The Great American Songbook Sing-Along added as an occasional bonus.

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 ?? (Courtesy of Hershey Felder Presents) ?? ‘THE TONE of each performanc­e depends on the reaction of the audience, so my job never gets easier, only harder,’ says Hershey Felder as Leonard Bernstein in ‘Maestro.’
(Courtesy of Hershey Felder Presents) ‘THE TONE of each performanc­e depends on the reaction of the audience, so my job never gets easier, only harder,’ says Hershey Felder as Leonard Bernstein in ‘Maestro.’

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