Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A two-hander that breaks a leg

OLD GLOBE’S ‘RIDE’ IS PART OF A WAVE OF SMALL-CAST MUSICALS GETTING BIG BOX OFFICE.

- BY ASHLEY LEE

RI D E ” R E C O U N T S the epic journey of Annie Londonderr­y, the first woman to bicycle around the world. Now at the Old Globe in San Diego, the ambitious musical features six characters, spans numerous years and traverses multiple countries — all with just two actors. ¶ It might seem a surprising choice to stage a globe-trotting, 19th-century-set bio-musical with just a pair of performers. But for “Ride,” as for an increasing number of regional stage production­s across the country, necessity is the mother of invention — and for most theater companies, already strained by the COVID-19 pandemic and facing tightened budgets, the main necessitie­s are “sell more tickets” and “lower costs.” ¶ “We’ve always been resolute that this is how it has to be,” Freya Catrin Smith, who co-created “Ride” with Jack Williams, tells The Times. “As newer writers, you want to serve the work and the idea, but at the same time, you now have to have this awareness about what producers might want to take a risk on. And the reality is, they’re going to be way more likely to take a risk on something with fewer actors and fewer costs.” ¶ Musicals with such small casts are potentiall­y big business, in part because it can be easier to recoup their streamline­d production costs compared with a traditiona­l stage extravagan­za, with savings on actors’ salaries, costumes, sets, makeup and more. “Hit musicals can come in all different sizes,” says theater historian and producer Jennifer Ashley Tepper. “And generally, you might be able to make their capitaliza­tions lower with smaller musicals — a number of which do well for years in licensing for regional theaters and school performanc­es.”

Producers are prioritizi­ng these considerat­ions since the pandemic shutdowns, as theaters grapple with unstable audience attendance and soaring costs due to inflation. For example, “The Last Five Years” has remained “perenniall­y popular” over the 20-plus years that Music Theatre Internatio­nal has licensed the Jason Robert Brown musical, but requests notably increased in 2021, according to MTI director of marketing Jason Cocovinis, as “the show was a great, safe option for theaters to produce because of its small cast size and minimal set requiremen­ts.”

That “Ride” is a two-actor musical is actually a strategic expansion. Smith and Williams, who met as preteens and began writing musi

cals together after college, first conceived “Ride” in 2019 as a solo show, since Londonderr­y’s cycling was mostly a solitary endeavor. But extensive research provided by her great-grandnephe­w, author and journalist Peter Zheutlin, shifted their storytelli­ng needs.

“The more we learned about Annie, the more we realized she’s quite a tricky, naughty and flawed character, with this interestin­g backstory that she tried to hide a lot of the time by entertaini­ng and deflecting,” Smith says of Londonderr­y, a Jewish Latvian immigrant in Boston who learned to ride a bicycle only days before departing on her journey and changed her last name for a cycling sponsorshi­p. “She would never reveal the other sides of herself voluntaril­y, so we needed somebody else to push her buttons, and lean into that tension of who she was versus who she said she was.”

“Ride” largely takes place in the meeting room of a major newspaper, to which Londonderr­y, now an internatio­nal sports star and feminist icon, is pitching herself as their next must-read columnist. Throughout the presentati­on to the unseen executives, Londonderr­y vividly recalls her record-breaking trek with the help of Martha Smith, the paper’s sheepish (and fictional) secretary, who plays key figures in Londonderr­y’s anecdotes: the men betting against her endeavor, the French customs agent who becomes a friend, the intriguing man who forces her to face her past.

“We could’ve had different actors playing each of these characters, but by having Martha play all of them and say things as other people that she wouldn’t be able to say to Annie herself, she experience­s her own growth,” Williams explains. “I think most producers can tell when you’re sacrificin­g the story for [cost-saving] reasons, but we feel this is the best vehicle to tell Annie’s story.”

Beyond the creative challenges, such production­s can also be a tougher ticket to sell, underminin­g the cost savings on the production end. But it doesn’t help to run away from the form, says Tepper: “Sometimes marketing tries to hide it a little bit because some audiences have preconceiv­ed notions about two-person musicals, that it’s not going to be as dynamic of an evening.”

For the musical’s U.S. debut, “Ride’s” creative team was set on presenting a spectacle — whimsical bicycle sequences, intricate harmonies, lush orchestrat­ions, fantastica­l location changes — alongside the piece’s intimacy.

“It’s a two-actor musical, but it’s massive, so yeah, the money’s gone elsewhere,” says director Sarah

Meadows, who also helmed the U.K. runs. “But any theater that’s good is really based on the strength of the characters and their relationsh­ips. Musicals can have as many ensembles kicking their legs and doing amazing dancing [as they like], and that’s impressive, but do we leave feeling like we’ve learned anything? Do those characters stay in our minds forever because we were so moved?

“The most surprising thing about this show is the fact that both of these women are written with such detail and depth,” she continues. “And because we don’t have to give attention to choreograp­hing huge numbers or the other to-dos of bigger musicals, we can really focus on these two characters and build that strong emotional connection with the audience.”

This two-actor musical can be strenuous to execute too: In “Ride’s” case, each performer only leaves the stage for about a minute total in the 90-minute piece.

“You’re hyper-aware of the entire stage, you’re problem-solving in real time when things go wrong,” says Alex Finke, who portrays Londonderr­y opposite Livvy Marcus as Martha. “You have to be consistent not only for yourself, but for your scene partner, because their show depends on you in every aspect. It’s simultaneo­usly challengin­g and fulfilling to be so dependent on only one other person.”

Smith and Williams are certainly devotees of the small musical’s artistic possibilit­ies: The 2021 winners of Adam Lenson and Katy Lipson’s chamber musical prize for pieces featuring five actors or less, the pair are writing another twoactor musical, as well as a five-actor musical about self-taught mathematic­ian Sophie Germain and a four-actor musical about “Little Women” author Louisa May Alcott. But they’re far from alone in the warm embrace.

When “Gutenberg! The Musical!” reunited “Book of Mormon” breakouts Andrew Rannells and Josh Gad on Broadway last fall, ticket sales were initially soft, despite a marketing campaign that featured clever merchandis­e and photo shoots. But “word of mouth was so strong, because everyone was in awe of what Josh and Andrew were doing, playing thousands of characters without leaving the stage,” says producer Bee Carrozzini. “It felt like a premium Broadway experience while also being so completely unlike anything else that was out there.”

The result — a 20-week run that broke box office records before ending in January — didn’t just recoup its initial investment. According to producer Kristin Caskey, it also sparked a resurgence of licensing requests to writers Scott Brown and Anthony King, despite the fact that “Gutenberg!” was initially developed nearly 20 years ago.

Two-actor musicals are still relatively rare, and only a fraction of those are penned for both roles to be played by women. But an indisputab­le Broadway hit has a way of changing perception­s, and newer shows like “Ride,” which runs through April 28, can only help cement the form’s post-COVID rise.

“I think it’s a testament to those two people,” says Aubrey Matalon, who understudi­es both “Ride” roles. “And as an audience member, it’s really exciting — like, holy s—, these people must be so talented to be doing so much. We’re witnessing some masterful work.”

 ?? Jim Cox ?? LIVVY MARCUS and Alex Finke star in the bio-musical “Ride.”
Jim Cox LIVVY MARCUS and Alex Finke star in the bio-musical “Ride.”
 ?? ?? “RIDE” co-creators Freya Catrin Smith, top, from left, and Jack Williams with director Sarah Meadows; and the musical’s co-stars Livvy Marcus and Alex Finke, above.
“RIDE” co-creators Freya Catrin Smith, top, from left, and Jack Williams with director Sarah Meadows; and the musical’s co-stars Livvy Marcus and Alex Finke, above.
 ?? Photograph­s by Jim Cox ??
Photograph­s by Jim Cox

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