Los Angeles Times

Order up for this ‘Waitress’

The national tour delivers a satisfying entree — life — at the Hollywood Pantages.

- By Daryl H. Miller daryl.miller@latimes.com Twitter: @darylhmill­er

The national touring company delivers a sweet production at Pantages. Review,

Like the pie fillings dreamed up by its central character, the 2007 independen­t movie “Waitress” is made of ingredient­s that wouldn’t seem to belong together yet combine into something delicious.

The recipe was tweaked — just a bit but needlessly and ham-fistedly — for a stage musical adaptation that is still playing on Broadway after nearly 21⁄2 years and that has reached Southern California on tour. Yet much of its strange magic remains. As performed by a thrilling talented company of actors and musicians, the show has audiences at the Hollywood Pantages Theatre alternatel­y whooping with excitement and dabbing at tears. Further engagement­s are scheduled for November in Costa Mesa and San Diego.

Adrienne Shelly wrote, directed and costarred in the film, a bundling of talents that she’d been honing in a string of offbeat independen­t projects. “Waitress” made an acclaimed debut at Sundance that likely would have thrust her to a new plane, but before she could enjoy it, she was dead in an at-home homicide.

Her spirit of empowermen­t is manifested in the musical, for which women fill the key creative positions. A particular­ly inspired choice for the team is Sara Bareilles, the singersong­writer of such anthems of self-determinat­ion as “Love Song” and “Gravity,” working here as a firsttime composer-lyricist for the stage.

The story’s central character is Jenna, a small-town pie-baker and waitress in her 30s. Her husband is controllin­g and angry. They never have enough money. So she’s already feeling plenty bound to other people’s needs when she learns she’s pregnant.

Life is never going to knock Jenna down, however, so long as she’s devising her improbable pies (they come in rushes of inspiratio­n marked by sudden shifts of light and the ethereal incantatio­ns of offstage voices) and she has the friendship and support of her fellow waitresses.

Jenna passes through each day with few smiles for the world, but the songs give Desi Oakley other ways to convey warmth and resolve, her power-soprano building from introspect­ive hush to sustained fortissimo. Her connection to the other waitresses is symbolized in tight, close-harmony singing with Lenne Klingaman as nerdy, easily flustered Dawn (the part played by Shelly in the movie) and Charity Angél Dawson as stylish, outspoken Becky.

Jenna deserves a nice guy like her new OB-GYN. Sure, he can seem awkward and odd (Bryan Fenkart infuses the role with wonderfull­y geeky physical comedy, as when a prescripti­on slip gets away from him and flits like a butterfly while he grabs at it), but there’s something solid and even sexy about him. Too bad that he, like she, is married.

Jessie Nelson’s script, like the movie’s, veers from drama to comedy and back again. This keeps us off-balance, as does the locale’s exaggerate­d charm. Against a landscape of unrelentin­g flatness and lonely telephone poles, set designer Scott Pask drops us into a cheery diner where the production’s lively six-player band often rolls into view and customers slap their tables in time to the music. Are we seeing life as Jenna might try to gloss it? Or is something supernatur­al in the air?

It’s an odd whirl of elements, but director Diane Paulus keeps everything tightly counterbal­anced so it doesn’t fly out of control.

Bareilles’ songs are smooth, propulsive and emotionall­y compelling, some given an overlay of country, others percolatin­g with … doo-wop? Where did that come from? Like everything else about “Waitress,” the music keeps us guessing yet fits snugly into its puzzle of styles.

It’s frustratin­g, though, that the creative team didn’t trust the quietness of the original material and instead dialed the comedy to such extremes that many key characters are flattened to stereotype­s and situations are pumped to the point that the audience laughs merely because it’s expected to.

The lives that Shelly devised are messy and raw. But people claim ownership of their destinies and help others who are struggling to do the same. From imperfect ingredient­s, they bake new possibilit­ies.

 ?? Photograph­s by Joan Marcus ?? JENNA (Desi Oakley) has a sweet moment with the doctor (Bryan Fenkart) in the national production of “Waitress” at the Pantages.
Photograph­s by Joan Marcus JENNA (Desi Oakley) has a sweet moment with the doctor (Bryan Fenkart) in the national production of “Waitress” at the Pantages.
 ??  ?? UNITED in song are Charity Angel Dawson, left, Oakley and Lenne Klingaman.
UNITED in song are Charity Angel Dawson, left, Oakley and Lenne Klingaman.

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