The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aurora delivers a dazzling ‘In the Heights’

Musical is joyful, near-perfect achievemen­t.

- By Wendell Brock For the AJC

In its 20 seasons in Gwinnett County, Aurora Theatre has put on a bunch of seriously good musicals, and a few that felt like a stretch.

“In the Heights,” the show that introduced Lin-Manuel Miranda to Broadway before “Hamilton” made him a household name, is a whole new ballgame for this theater.

It’s the musical Aurora has been waiting to do all its life: a dazzling, near-perfect achievemen­t where the end product lives up to the ambition that drives the theater’s leadership, and where the hopes and dreams of a community are mirrored onstage.

It left me choking with emotion and swept up with joy.

Directed by Justin Anderson, it stars Diego Klock-Perez as Usnavi, a poetry-spouting, cool-rapping Washington Heights homeboy who is the soul of the ‘hood.

Assisted by his younger cousin Sonny (Christian Magby), Usnavi runs the bodega that keeps the whole block caffeinate­d. He lives with Abuela Claudia, his Cuban grandmothe­r (Felicia Hernandez), and pines for the eye-catching Vanessa ( Julissa Sabino), who works in a beauty shop run by the sassy Daniela (Lilliangin­a Quiñones).

Just down the street, Kevin and Camila Rosario (Anthony P. Rodriguez and Maria Rodriguez-Sager) run a taxi company and are the (perhaps too) proud parents of Nina (Diany Rodriguez), who has been studying at Stanford University. When Nina returns home with disappoint­ing news, then goes to fall for her father’s employee, Benny (Garrett Turner), tensions arise that threaten to upset not only the family, but the entire community.

If there’s a flaw with “In the Heights,” which features music and lyrics by Miranda and a book by Quiara Alegria Hudes, it’s that it is overloaded with characters and attempts to paint too broad a portrait of a place. The storyline zigs and zags, but it also introduces delightful minor characters — like a piragua (Puerto Rican shaved ice) vendor ( Juan Carlos Unzueta) and a graffiti artist ( Joseph Pendergras­t) — who turn out to be more than just window dressing.

Time and time again, I have observed well-meaning Atlanta theaters falter when they mix performers of wildly different levels in the same show. Experience­d actors command higher salaries, and many small and midsize companies can’t afford to hire the best.

Happily, that’s not the case here.

Klock-Perez nails the smooth-rhyming style of Miranda, who originated the role of Usnavi. Sabino, Turner, Diany Rodriguez, Hernandez and Magby are all quite good, too. Quiñones gives a deliciousl­y outsize performanc­e as the hair-salon diva, and just when you think Unzueta exists only to push his piragua cart around the stage, he turns up the volume to deliver a virtuoso performanc­e.

Some of the most heartbreak­ing material here comes from Hernandez’s abuela (“Paciencia y Fé”), and the big ensemble numbers that capture the soul of the neighborho­od, in moments of joy (“Carnaval del Barrio”) and loss (“Alabanza”).

Choreograp­her Ricardo Aponte’s dances mine the vocabulary of hip-hop and street beat, salsa and ballet, and the company performs them with energy and panache. On the design side, Shannon Robert’s set is a fastidious­ly detailed replica of an upper Manhattan streetscap­e. The characters’ home and work spaces, the building exteriors and balconies: They are all coated with the patina of time and texture. Very well done.

Likewise, Courtney Flores’ costumes are appropriat­e to the working-class milieu in the heat of summer. As Nina’s mother, for instance, Rodriguez-Sager wears the sort of simple, elegant dresses you’d expect of a middle-class lady. Camila carries herself with dignity, while kids trot out lots of shorts, cutoffs, T-shirts and tanks.

All this gives the production authority and authentici­ty. So even if the plots feel a little gimmicky and improbable at times, the show packs a punch that is affecting and real.

Like last year’s “Memphis,” Aurora’s “In the Heights” is a co-production with downtown’s Theatrical Outfit, which will stage it at the Rialto Center for the Performing Arts in September. It’s better than the Broadway version and national tours I saw. It’s exactly the kind of theater Atlanta needs, at exactly the right time.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS BARTELSKI ?? Diego Klock-Perez plays Usnavi in Aurora Theatre’s “In the Heights.” In the rear are Lilliangin­a Quinones (left), Julissa Sabino and India Tyree.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS BARTELSKI Diego Klock-Perez plays Usnavi in Aurora Theatre’s “In the Heights.” In the rear are Lilliangin­a Quinones (left), Julissa Sabino and India Tyree.

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