New York Daily News

Love story for the ages

‘The Notebook’ is an unexpected­ly sophistica­ted tearjerker

- CHRIS JONES

The 2004 movie “The Notebook,” which starred Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams and tells the story of a fraught romantic relationsh­ip from optimistic youth to poignant old age, was dismissed by movie critics as various shares of sentimenta­l pap. Audiences, who typically find greater value in the simple, human longing of ordinary folks, could not have disagreed more vehemently. The film, based on a Nicholas Sparks novel, developed a cult following and, over the next 20 years, turned many an inadequate Kleenex into pulp.

Now comes Broadway and the advent of “The Notebook The Musical,” returning Allie and Noah — she with the snooty, dismissive parents, far meaner than the ones in “Dirty Dancing,” he with the soft hands and warm smile and the bad-boy gestalt — to the zeitgeist. The show, which opened Thursday night at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre after a hit run at Chicago Shakespear­e Theatre, surely aims for that golden Broadway demographi­c trail traveled by “Mean Girls” and others: the enthusiast­ic presence of those who fondly remember the movie, only this time in concert with girlfriend­s, initially reluctant dates or spouses, or (jackpot!) daughters.

To the great credit of everyone involved, “The Notebook” also delivers unexpected­ly sophistica­ted theatrical­ity with the requisite supercharg­ing of the tear ducts, notwithsta­nding an archly familiar narrative.

There are two main reasons why this show works. Most important is the songwriter Ingrid Michaelson, who might be a Broadway newcomer, but whose lyrics eschew the mawkish pitfalls in favor of simple, direct communicat­ion of intense but familiar emotions through melody and song.

It’s never easy to define freshness in songwritin­g but it feels as if Michaelson just decided to watch the movie, or read the 1996 novel, and then write music about the way each stage of this central couple’s journey makes her feel. It’s unstuffy and unpretenti­ous, which is good. But most crucially, Michaelson does not condescend.

Take this lyric as one example. The young Noah, dreaming of building a rural house for Allie sings: “I’ll paint the shutters blue. I’ll wrap the porch around the whole entire house, so we can watch the sunset, and the sunrise too. Who needs sleep when it’s me, that house and you?”

Allie gets one like that, too, as her about-to-married-to-the-wrong-guy self visits the old flame she still loves. “Is someone living with you? Is someone sleeping and waking beside you? And is someone loving you and are you loving them, loving them, loving them too, in the night, in a room, in the house, in our home?”

See what I mean? The whole score is like that: characters sing what regular people feel in those circumstan­ces. And while Michaelson’s music is more folkroots-bluegrass-country than traditiona­l Broadway, it’s what this material needed. You never feel like Allie and Noah are from Brooklyn.

The other reason? The director Michael Greif, who co-directs with Schele Williams. Years ago with “Rent,” astute observers noted, the dry-eyed Greif was the ideal foil for Jonathan Larson’s emotional wetness. So it goes here. If you’re familiar with the Greif oeuvre, you can see how he cuts away the treacle, focused on how life does not end as well as it starts (for most of us), and how he and his co-director clearly figured out that the antagonist here is time. That’s what kills every lasting love affair. Mistakes and third parties are benign by comparison.

Bekah Brunstette­r’s effective book uses young, middle and older versions of Allie and Noah, beginning with Jordan Tyson and John Cardoza, moving through Ryan Vasquez and Joy Woods and culminatin­g in beautiful performanc­es from Dorian Harewood and Maryann Plunkett, as set in a retirement home. The senior couple truly are moving, but then so are the actors playing their youngest selves. In the more formulaic middle stretch, Vasquez sings out Michaelson’s music the best of all, even if the connection between he and Woods is not all one might hope.

The show uses a mix of white and Black actors, ignoring race until it wants to make a point. It’s a rarely seen approach these days and its presence here is heartening to me.

Towards the end of the night, after taking advantage of Katie Spelman’s choreograp­hy, as built in Chicago, and the simple setting from David Zinn and Brett J. Banakis, Greif and Williams unexpected­ly reveal the presence of the orchestra.

It’s calculatin­g, I suppose. But the trick, for which you should watch, serves to intensify the emotion of the piece by reminding everyone present that, yes, we’re at a musical and that music has been a constant in how we’ve interprete­d two lives, always comparing them to our own. It all sounds hokey and, yes, “The Notebook” is still “The Notebook” to some degree, but if you’re not thrilled and teary as the strings come in, I can’t imagine being your friend.

 ?? JULIETA CERVANTES ?? Joy Woods and Ryan Vasquez in the Broadway musical “The Notebook.”
JULIETA CERVANTES Joy Woods and Ryan Vasquez in the Broadway musical “The Notebook.”
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