Chicago Sun-Times

AMERICAN EVOLUTION

‘1776’ revisits pivotal moment in nation’s history with diverse, present-day perspectiv­e

- BY STEVEN OXMAN For the Sun-Times

The musical “1776,” depicting the debate leading up to America’s declaring independen­ce from Great Britain, won the Tony Award for best musical in 1969.

It beat “Hair.”

That’s hard to fathom now. “Hair” remains one of the seminal American musicals, with a brilliant rock ’n’ roll score, capturing the late ’60s counter-culture along with the Living Theatre-influenced theatrical aesthetics of the era.

“1776,” on the other hand, is, let’s face it, a middling and only occasional­ly revived musical. But the relevance of its topic — America itself — never goes away. It follows John Adams, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson as they push the Second Continenta­l Congress to declare a new nation, leading the drafting and debating of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

The oft-rousing and well-truncated book by Peter Stone — celebrator­y but not without a recognitio­n of the deeply imperfect compromise­s the union is built on — is wrapped into a standard-issue musical comedy aesthetic and peppered with fundamenta­lly forgettabl­e songs by Sherman Edwards.

For the Tony Award choice, political context helps explain. At the time, we had over half a million troops in Vietnam, with televised updates on the daily return of soldiers in body bags. “Hair” was a hit; “1776” was a patriotic morale-booster.

Fast-forward 50-some years, and we now have a revival of “1776” that attempts to marry a contempora­ry theatrical aesthetic with this traditiona­list show. Like “Hamilton,” this production of “1776,” directed by Jeffrey L. Page and Diane Paulus, casts a racially and ethnically diverse cast to embody the Founding Fathers. In this case, the cast consists of performers identifyin­g as female, trans, nonbinary, and gender non-conforming. And like the recent, extremely controvers­ial version of “Oklahoma!” — which ended with the heroes covered in blood — it pokes provocativ­ely at American myth-making.

I know that’s a lot of comparison­s, but this is in fact a show where the directors want you to be a bit self-conscious, to be thinking while enjoying. They want you to be aware of the performers’ relationsh­ips to the characters they play. Brooke Simpson, who told us of her Native American heritage when she made a land acknowledg­ment before the start, plays The Courier, who delivers dispatches from Gen. George Washington to the Congress. Her performanc­e of “Momma, Look Sharp,” a song told from the perspectiv­e of a dead soldier watching her own funeral, is the most effective moment of this touring production. It reminds us quite openly of the unacknowle­dged deaths of those who occupied this land before its colonizati­on, while also engaging deeply with grief.

Unfortunat­ely, there aren’t enough moments like that, where the casting or staging truly activates the text and song with added dimension that comments both on perspectiv­es absent in Philadelph­ia in 1776, as well as those unconsider­ed when Stone and Edwards wrote about “1776” in 1969.

Even when the directors clearly want to add that sensibilit­y, they stumble. For example, the addition of a silent enslaved person (Jill Marie Vallery) to serve Thomas Jefferson (Nancy Anderson) — supposed to be Sally Hemings’ brother Robert — feels too fleeting, too much like a footnote. And during the song “The Egg,” the use of projected protest scenes from other eras comes across as medicinal virtue-signaling.

The cast here is game for the challenge. Many members come from the Broadway incarnatio­n, although mostly playing other parts than they did in New York. As our catalysts, Gisela Adisa as John Adams captures an obsessive impatience, and Liz Mikel as Benjamin Franklin brings both ego and wit. As President of the Congress, Oneika Phillips conveys trustworth­y nobility in a show that both honors and ridicules politics.

The biggest numbers go to the biggest opponents of independen­ce, with Joanna Glushak, as the English-loving Pennsylvan­ian John Dickinson, mixing comedy and earnestnes­s in “Cool, Cool Considerat­e Men,” and Kassandra Haddock, as slavery-defending Southerner Edward Rutledge, turning from charming to accusatory with “Molasses to Rum,” the most elaboratel­y choreograp­hed number in a show that could use more creative movement.

With its high-concept take on Stone’s effective narrative, the show overall is enjoyable if spotty. To me, this “1776” feels like a rough draft of what it ultimately wanted to be, but still has moments of bracing inspiratio­n.

 ?? JOAN MARCUS ?? Gisela Adisa as John Adams in “1776.”
JOAN MARCUS Gisela Adisa as John Adams in “1776.”

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