Los Angeles Times

A New Orleans lounge’s legacy

The New Orleans gay bar is a rich haven for a vibrant community before tragedy strikes.

- By Daryl H. Miller daryl.miller@latimes.com Twitter: @darylhmill­er

The musical “The View UpStairs” stages gay bar’s rich history before it was set afire, killing 32 in 1973.

Before last year’s shooting in Orlando, Fla., left 49 dead, the biggest mass killing of LGBTQ people in America occurred in 1973 when a New Orleans bar, the UpStairs Lounge, was set aflame. Thirty-two people died.

Max Vernon — a young songwriter, performer and creator of musicals — happened upon that largely forgotten history and was developing the musical “The View UpStairs” when Orlando returned the New Orleans incident to the news.

The show opened offBroadwa­y in February. Now L.A.’s LGBTQ-focused Celebratio­n company has pulled together its own staging at the Lex Theatre in Hollywood.

Though the fateful flames are ignited late in the show, the bulk of the musical is devoted to bringing the UpStairs Lounge gloriously back to life. We attend a church service, view a drag show, listen to singalongs at the piano and get caught in a police raid. The show is a conversati­on across four decades: one side just beginning, four years after Stonewall, to emerge from the shadows of fear, the other out and proud on every social-media app under the sun.

As viewers take their seats, the lounge is dark and haunted-looking, but when a spectral piano player — in wide lapels and perm — materializ­es at the keyboard and begins to sing, other ghosts join him. The lights brighten, sharpening the room’s details: red, flocked wallpaper; Mardi Gras beads strung in the chandelier­s; and above the bar a giant cutout of Burt Reynolds’ Cosmopolit­an centerfold (set design by Alex Calle).

Into this happy bustle walks a present-day fashiondes­ign aspirant looking for a space to turn into an atelier. He takes a couple of snorts of cocaine, making the 1973 patrons visible to him and he to them.

Each character gets a song — a moment to tell his or her story. The insistent melodies sound like today’s iTunes charts overlaid with ’70s flavors: David Bowie, guitar rock and more. The music makes you want to hear more from Vernon, a Santa Monica-raised, Brooklyn-based 29-year-old — and it’s certain that we will; he’s also part of the team behind the immersive “KPOP” now off-Broadway.

The present-day timetrippe­r is portrayed by Matthew Hancock in a whirlwind of fabulousne­ss. His spiritual predecesso­r among the ’70s crowd is a corner-of-the-bar storytelle­r portrayed by Pip Lilly with more effervesce­nce than a shaken bottle of Champagne.

Also among the bar’s regulars are Darren Bluestone, soulful and sexy, as a small-town kid who’s been on the run since age 14 and Jake Anthony, the piano player, as a guy whose thwarted dreams are quelled only when he slips away from his wife and kids to perform at the bar.

Energy runs high in this staging by Michael A. Shepperd, whose work on “The Boy From Oz” propelled its hit run with Celebratio­n last year.

Michael Mullen’s costumes are a kick for anyone who remembers the age of Qiana, flared ankles and leisure suits. Cate Caplin’s choreograp­hy dials up the adrenaline.

Acoustics are a problem, though. The band — Anthony joined by instrument­alists on guitar, bass and drums — overwhelms the tiny theater and drowns the lyrics. This disrupts the storytelli­ng since Vernon conveys so much informatio­n in his 15 songs.

To fully appreciate the show, you’ll want to listen ahead of time to the cast album of the New York production.

As for the voices: a handful are stellar, the rest serviceabl­e.

By the end of his cocaine encounter, the present-day figure, a prime example of social-media self-centeredne­ss, has learned from his forebears about the value of face-to-face connection and community-building.

“I chose a family of my own / who shared my brandnew point of view,” the piano player sings. “Now you’re all gathered ’round / in this kingdom we’ve found.” It is, he concludes, “some kind of paradise.”

 ?? Matthew Brian Denman ?? BASED ON the true story of the UpStairs Lounge and its deadly 1973 torching that killed 32, Celebratio­n’s production is directed by Michael A. Shepperd.
Matthew Brian Denman BASED ON the true story of the UpStairs Lounge and its deadly 1973 torching that killed 32, Celebratio­n’s production is directed by Michael A. Shepperd.

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