Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

THIS ‘NOTEBOOK’ MAKES SPARKS FLY

Superb score, writing and cast transform sappy source material into stage musical you can truly love

- BY STEVEN OXMAN For the Sun-Times

First, I must express a bit of shock. I simply was not expecting to fall in love with “The Notebook,” the new musical version of Nicholas Sparks’ 1996 over-the-top romantic novel, turned into a solid film of romantical­ly saturated colors by director Nick Cassavetes, starring Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams. But I have.

I was expecting teary and hoping for sincere. But I also must admit that, with writer Bekah Brunstette­r — best known for her work on the shamelessl­y manipulati­ve TV soap opera “This Is Us” — and first-time theater composer Ingrid Michaelson — arguably best known for the slew of songs that featured on the TV soap opera “Grey’s Anatomy” — I thought this musical version might aggressive­ly aim for the tear ducts from start to finish.

For the unfamiliar, “The Notebook” tells the story of Allie and Noah, each played here by three performers — as the teenagers Younger Allie and Younger Noah (Jordan Tyson and John Cardoza); in their late 20s as Middle Allie and Middle Noah (Joy Woods and Ryan Vasquez); and as Older Allie and Older Noah, elderly inhabitant­s of a nursing home (Maryann Plunkett and, at opening night, Jerome Harmann-Hardeman understudy­ing for John Beasley).

The nursing home setting forms the frame, with Noah reading to Alzheimer’s patient Allie every day from the titular notebook that tells their own story, hoping for flashes that Allie remembers. The younger performers then play that history out, with the differentl­y aged versions of the characters often onstage simultaneo­usly.

Taking this time-spanning romance of a love that overcomes class difference­s, parental resistance, long-term separation, competing relationsh­ips, and even severe dementia, and setting it all to music on a big stage certainly runs the risk of going really sappy really fast.

But what we see at Chicago Shakespear­e is a pre-Broadway production that is not just safe for the skeptical. It’s a significan­t leap in artistic quality over its sources, which it respects, while also providing a clear, resonant and unique voice of its own.

Brunstette­r (who has also written well-respected plays like “The Cake”) and Michaelson (the very model of an indie singer-songwriter) adapt “The Notebook” into what feels like a deeply personal expression.

The book and score blend together so seamlessly that you can’t always tell them apart, and rather than amping this tale up to the larger-than-life, they go the opposite direction, making this more of a chamber musical about ordinary humans that also works, under the direction of Michael Greif and Schele Williams. They are assisted by an ace design team, at the Broadway scale, with mostly simple flourishes but also an impressive onstage rainstorm.

Michaelson’s songs are just beautiful, her lyrics poetic and specific and only seemingly simple, bringing us instantly, for example, into Allie’s feelings when she sees Noah on the front page of a newspaper after a decade apart: “What happens to a person who forgets how to breathe? / Who forgets who she is / Who forgets where she is …”

With every solo and duet, every cast member feels emotionall­y connected to the moment with every word and note. It helps too, of course, that they are stellar singers.

There are so many extraordin­arily smart choices here that I can’t even list them. But take, for example, the challenge of a character with Alzheimer’s, played with wondrous exactitude by Plunkett, in a romantic musical. How can she sing about her confusion when anything she’d sing would be too articulate to convey confusion? The brilliant choice: Have her younger

selves sing it for her. “Is it time for dinner / Is it time for forever / I didn’t know the last time I’d leave the house / Was the last time I’d leave the house.”

That song, “I Wanna Go Back,” is so poignant, and also so restrained, that it should be studied carefully for the way Michaelson differenti­ates sentiment and sentimenta­lity, a quality this entire show excels at.

And kudos to Greif and Williams for the cross-racial casting choices even with the same character at different ages. Once we’re settled comfortabl­y into the theatrical device, it becomes an underlying expression of the universali­ty of this specific work.

That choice, as well as the contempora­ry sound and a gentle updating of the time periods, makes “The Notebook” aesthetica­lly very current and fresh.

And likely, hopefully, very lasting.

 ?? LIZ LAUREN ?? John Cardoza (from left), Jordan Tyson, John Beasley, Maryann Plunkett, Ryan Vasquez and Joy Woods star in Chicago Shakespear­e Theater’s world premiere stage production of “The Notebook.”
LIZ LAUREN John Cardoza (from left), Jordan Tyson, John Beasley, Maryann Plunkett, Ryan Vasquez and Joy Woods star in Chicago Shakespear­e Theater’s world premiere stage production of “The Notebook.”

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