Chicago Sun-Times

LOVE & WAR

Musical ‘ Yank!’ captures moment in history of gays in U. S. military

- HEDY WEISS Follow Hedy Weiss on Twitter: @HedyWeissC­ritic Email: hweiss@suntimes.com

An ironic, knowing laugh rippled through the audience Thursday night as the immensely engaging musical “Yank! A WWII Love Story,” received its Chicago premiere by Pride Films and Plays. And that laughter instantly suggested the long, painful history of homosexual­s in the U. S. military.

The moment occurs when two of the story’s principal characters, who engage in a long and difficult relationsh­ip during their service in World War II, dream about cohabiting once they are back home. It is shortly after the war, in the mid 1940s, and one of the men consoles his lover by saying that things will get better in a few years. Of course things did not get officially better until 2010— after decades of constantly fluctuatin­g policies and, finally, the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

Written by brothers Joseph Zellnik ( music) and David Zellnik ( book and lyrics), “Yank!” tells the story of the love affair that develops between the nerdy, adolescent, virginal Stu ( Matthew Huston), a smart but bumbling Midwestern kid who keeps a journal, and the handsome, kind- hearted but deeply sexually conflicted Mitch ( William Dwyer), who meet in 1943, when both are part of the same squad undergoing basic training at Fort Bliss, Texas.

Mitch initially helps Stu through basic training in the manner of a protective older brother, but along the way the two confess their love for each other— a mostly liberating thing for Stu, but one that terrifies the deeply uneasy Mitch. Meanwhile, Stu meets Artie ( John Marshall Jr.), a sassy, confident, gay photograph­er who gets him a job working with him as a reporter for the Army’s popular weekly magazine, Yank (“a magazine by and about servicemen”). In the process, he initiates him into gay life and its undergroun­d in the Armed Services, highlighte­d by a very funny and campy send- up of soldiers enacting “Gone With the Wind.”

The journalist­ic assignment at Yank also enables Stu to remain beyond the front line when his squad is shipped off to the South Pacific, although ultimately he also will see ( and participat­e in) all the horrors of war. And while Stu and Artie become sexual partners, Stu’s heart belongs to Mitch.

Before it’s all over Stu will be compromise­d and cruelly interrogat­ed after his journal is submitted to the authoritie­s. But he also, most crucially, will become a man of grit, heart and substance.

Strongly directed by David Zak, the show’s score riffs easily and convincing­ly on the Swing Era style, with the masterful music director/ keyboardis­t Robert Ollis and his sensationa­l band making the sort of joyful noise you’d expect to hear in a USO canteen. There also is terrific tap and swing choreograp­hy of the 1940s period courtesy of Jenna Schoppe ( and executed especially brilliantl­y in a duet performed by Marshall and Dwyer).

Molly LeCaptain ( with a power voice that can move easily from jazz to operettali­ke heights) is superb playing all the women’s roles — from a popular bandstand singer of the era, to the girlfriend­s on the home front, to the career woman who serves as assistant to General Douglas MacArthur and knows exactly how to negotiate her way in the military even though she is a lesbian.

While the show tries to suggest both the straight and gay aspects of the Army, there are moments when you might begin to believe the predominan­t population of the Army is gay rather than straight, but that is bound to happen given its focus on a particular issue. And by the end, the high cost of war on everyone and everything is ideally rendered.

First staged in 2010 by New York’s York Theatre Company ( with talk of a Broadway transfer to be directed by David Cromer that never materializ­ed), “Yank!” has already been staged on three continents, with a production on London’s West End this past summer. Its Chicago edition is a worthy addition to the roster.

 ??  ?? The cast of “Yank! AWWII Love Story!”
The cast of “Yank! AWWII Love Story!”
 ?? | PAUL GOYETTE PHOTOS ?? Matthew Huston ( left) and John Marshall Jr. in “Yank! A WWII Love Story!” at Pride Arts Center.
| PAUL GOYETTE PHOTOS Matthew Huston ( left) and John Marshall Jr. in “Yank! A WWII Love Story!” at Pride Arts Center.
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