WACKY ‘ WAGNER!’
Lyric, Second City stage ideal satire
Collaboration is the name of the game for all of The Second City’s improv exploits, but in recent seasons the company has expanded the meaning of that term, teaming up with both the Lyric Opera of Chicago and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago.
Now, in its second collaboration with the Lyric— “Longer! Louder! Wagner!” — it has truly tapped into a richly comic vein of pure Rhine gold. Subtitled “The Second CityWagner Companion,” this original, 90- minute musical comedy, inspired by the German composer’s monumental, four- part “Ring Cycle,” also happens to be a deliciously naughty bit of sanctioned heresy with an aptly zany script and a couple of sensational “legit” operatic voices all part of the mix.
To begin with, the Lyric, which has just embarked on its all new production of the complete Cycle that will unfold over four years ( it began with “Das Rheingold” in early October), is gleefully satirizing its own work. On top of that, it has welcomed The Second City ( and several fabulously “legit” opera singers) into its very own house to perform this mischief. Well, not quite “the house,” but the spacious, 300- seat William Mason Rehearsal Hall, which has been outfitted with gray velvet banquets and cabaret- style seating.
Written by Timothy Sniffen ( who co- wrote “The Second City Guide to the Opera” in 2013, as well as “Death of a Streetcar Named VirginiaWoolf: A Parody,” the spot- on satire of American theater classics that enjoyed a successful run atWriters Theatre last season) and directed by Anneliese Toft, the show features Jesse Case as composer, sound designer and music director. But best of all, he also plays the role of the wildly narcissistic, obsessive, decidedly kinky Richard Wagner, whose music was much- admired by one Adolf Hitler. Case, who nails the portrayal on every count, is part of an ensemble of eight that blithely confesses it has taken “a beautiful art form and turned it into something absolutely ridiculous.”
Of course as any opera- goer ( whether a passionate fan or a skeptic) might tell you, there is something innately “ridiculous” about opera, with its overblown emotions and voices that border on the superhuman. There also is something remarkable about it all. And the work ofWagner (“a nut job and a genius” as Sniffen tells us) embodied both aspects of the art form— one he pushed into a whole new realm.
“Longer! Louder! Wagner!” is set in motion with a program on classical-musical radio station WFMT, where a scholarly host ( Sayjal Joshi) is teamed with a lowbrow commercial radio deejay ( Randall Harr). And there is news: Wagner’s greatgrandson, Fred ( Tim Ryder), is alive and well and living a happily unexceptional life in the suburb of Schaumburg, where he stages light opera works, including the current production of “Cupcakes.” He lives with his girlfriend, Karen ( Alice Stanley Jr.), who is planning to earn her doctorate in Library Science, and he collaborates with a local set designer ( Travis Turner) who hasmastered the art of small budgets.
When aWagner scholar tries to goad Fred out of his mediocrity, he resists. But then the director of the Ring Cycle (“Der Ring des Nibelungen”) for the annual Bayreuth Festival— the annual musical festival in Germany conceived byWagner and devoted to performances of his operas— suffers a nervous breakdown. Fred is tapped to take over and gradually begins to get into the spirit of things. He even finds his ideal Brunnhilde, who works at a Jiffy Lube in Chicago. Her name is Valerie ( Tracy Cantin, a recent alumna of Lyric Opera’s Ryan Opera Center, who not only possesses a spectacular voice but has the exuberant comic chops for this work and sets it on fire), and she and Fred grow excited about each other.
Fast forward to Bayreuth, whereMorgan ( Jonah D. Winston, a marvelous bass with great comic flair, who made his Lyric debut in “The MerryWidow” last season) is to sing the role ofWotan, even though he would far prefer to be in a Disney musical, and where Fred increasingly communes with the spirit of his grandfather, whose passion for silk and young girls is revealed, as is his grandfather’s homosexual liaison- ofconvenience with his patron, King Ludwig II of Bavaria.
Along the way there is a deliciously revealing encounter in a cafe that brings together the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, the piano virtuoso Franz Liszt andWagner. There is a funny riff on the guilt involved in preferring Verdi to Wagner. And there is a scene that hints of both “Xanadu” and “The Producers.”
AsWagner aficionados will tell you, everything must end in a great conflagration, and indeed it does. But this is a case where the paroxysms of laughter might just extinguish the flames. And a happy “Gotterdammerung” to you all.