East Bay Times

Actor's performanc­e a tour de force

`Satchmo' focuses on Louis Armstrong late in jazz legend's career

- By David John Chávez David John Chávez is chair of the American Theatre Critics Associatio­n and served as a juror for the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Twitter/Mastodon: @davidjchav­ez.

When it comes to Satchmo, aka Louis Armstrong, one of the preeminent pillars of American jazz, there is a radiance to hearing how he felt about some of his most famous tunes.

Take “Hello Dolly,” for example. His deliciousl­y gritty and grainy vocal register enters the recording immediatel­y, with a poppy ebullience that ended up knocking four lads from Liverpool off the top of the charts in the mid1960s.

Satchmo had a different take on the ditty's greatness, however. “Dolly ain't much of a song,” Armstrong declares during the solo show “Satchmo at the Waldorf,” now playing at San Jose Stage. “Tell you the truth, it's a piece of s***.”

It is the bluntness, honesty and heavily salted language that makes “Satchmo” such a marvel. The production, directed with scorching honesty by Ted Lange, does not shy away from the hardened heart of Armstrong, a man who faced blistering racism for years, his body betraying him later on. That's not to speak of those whom he believed were friends — White folks who knew Satchmo was good for business but couldn't be bothered to invite him for a meal at their homes.

What is striking is how the erudition of the late playwright Terry Teachout permeates the narrative. An Armstrong biographer, he describes his play as “a work of fiction, based freely on fact.”

Of all the facts expressed, one races to the top of the heap: The masterful, perspicaci­ous work of L. Peter Callender as he navigates three distinct characters in “Satchmo” is an absolute storm of joy, anger, heartbreak and betrayal. These dramatizat­ions are a series of brilliant yet brutal “Et tu, Brute” as Satchmo faces his mortality head on, alone in his dressing room at the Waldorf-Astoria

Hotel in New York City in March 1971, the last place Armstrong performed at in public before his death four months later.

Callender's performanc­e is not relegated to one man alone. His transition into the trumpeter's complicate­d manager Joe Glaser, the former boxing promoter who gave it all away to focus full time on Armstrong is buttery-smooth, bouncing between the low register of melancholi­a to a pipsqueaky fast-talker and back again.

And there is the intermitte­nt entrance of Miles Davis, a sliver of East Coast cool and one who piles onto the perception of Armstrong as an “Uncle Tom,” who takes advantage of a fantastic opportunit­y to rankle the older jazz man with reckless abandon.

The script does much to challenge Armstrong's reputation that followed him for years, born from the musician's wide grin and a plethora of performanc­es to solely White audiences. The narrative makes clear as day that these notions fueled his insecuriti­es and anger.

In one instance, his attempt to call out Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus in 1957 for his defiance of a Supreme Court order to desegregat­e schools was softened by a

reporter. “Uneducated plowboy” certainly did not carry the same weight as the crudeness of what Armstrong actually said.

Callender's understand­ing of each critical moment, the power of a well-timed beat and willingnes­s to grind through the weight of Armstrong's life comes off as intuitiona­l. His performanc­e is chameleoni­c, but not in a way that gives you simply an impression or the gist. His portrayal is built from the inside out; he advocates for every heartache imbued in each magical note from Armstrong's voice or music. Callender understand­s what it means to be someone's vessel that allows for living and breathing.

That is what makes this push away from simply a 100-minute soliloquy so enticing. Each choice in the performanc­e is informed by that which is only seen by the actor. Stylistica­lly, the audience has skin in the game, the target of many direct pleas from whatever tortured soul Callender happens to be interpreti­ng at any given moment. The performanc­e is unified with skill on the technical side as well, drilled home by Guilio Cesare Perrone's divinely detailed set, a terrific lighting design from Maurice Vercoutere and

Steve Schoenbeck's sneaky soundscape.

What makes the play's conclusion so magical? There is certainly no grand wisdom, no massive revelatory logic that is thrust upon the audience. But it's a certain sense of simplicity from a man who lived nearly 70 years and who changed the world, a man who reminds us, despite the many obstacles and devastatio­ns he faced, that the world is indeed, wonderful.

What a wonderful world. What a beautiful play.

 ?? DAVE LEPORI — SAN JOSE STAGE COMPANY ?? L. Peter Callender portrays jazz great Louis Armstrong in the solo show “Satchmo at the Waldorf.”
DAVE LEPORI — SAN JOSE STAGE COMPANY L. Peter Callender portrays jazz great Louis Armstrong in the solo show “Satchmo at the Waldorf.”

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