South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

‘PORGY’

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“It’s always been one of those bucket-list shows for me to direct,” Jay-Alexander says.

While he was working in New York as a dancer, singer and actor in the late 1970s, a production of “Porgy and Bess” changed the trajectory of his profession­al life. “One of my first nonperform­ing jobs was in [Broadway producer] Sherwin Goldman’s office.” It was 1977, and Goldman was co-producing the first “Porgy and Bess” on Broadway to use the complete score as Gershwin intended it to be heard when he wrote it in 1935. It won Goldman, director Jack O’Brien and the Houston Grand Opera the Tony Award for Best Musical. Jay-Alexander became a production assistant for the revival. “I went to Paris with that show,” he says, “and I’ve since seen many production­s of ‘Porgy and Bess’ around the world.”

Jay-Alexander’s producing and directing credits are vast, and range from running producer Cameron Mackintosh’s North American operations, including dozens of production­s of “Les Misérables,” to co-directing with Barbra Streisand all her major tours and concert appearance­s, including her 2016 show “The Music, the Mem’ries, the Magic,” which was filmed for Netflix at AmericanAi­rlines Arena in Miami.

Jay-Alexander was able to get a meeting with Sebrina Maria Alfonso, the symphony’s founder and conductor, and Jacqueline Lorber, Alfonso’s wife and the symphony’s president and CEO. “We met at Josh’s Deli in Surfside, and they started telling me what they were up to. I had a terrible reaction to everything they were saying,” Jay-Alexander says. “I was in dim shock that they believed they could do a fully staged ‘Porgy and Bess’ in a two-week rehearsal period. And they were going to put the orchestra in the pit.”

He told them he could help them take their production to another level: “We can create a very different ‘Porgy and Bess.’ ”

Alfonso says Jay-Alexander made her see many elements that she hadn’t thought of when imagining the production. His most important suggestion was that the orchestra shouldn’t be hidden in the pit but part of the action onstage.

“He had a grand idea of making the symphony part of the drama, which is really going to be different and unique,” she says.

Alfonso is not one to shy away from taking chances. Last year, the South Florida Symphony Orchestra collaborat­ed with the Martha Graham Dance Company on a world debut of Graham Company choreograp­hy set to music by South Florida composer Tom Hormel. The new choreograp­hy is now part of the company’s permanent repertoire.

Jay-Alexander’s theatrical eye fit in with Alfonso’s wish to not perform a concert version of the Gershwin classic. “Everyone can do that,” she says. “If we were going to do this, if I was going to take this on, I wanted something spectacula­r to give this important work the reverence it deserves.”

She enlisted Paul Tate dePoo, who also grew up in Key West, to create the scenic design. DePoo has designed for big-scale Broadway, regional-theater and opera companies. “It was a proud moment for me to be able to work with someone I watched grow up in the symphony’s school programs who is now doing very well on Broadway,” Alfonso says.

DePoo’s designs, which will be done using video mapping, will create a “whole new opportunit­y” to tell the story, Alfonso says.

“Porgy and Bess” is set in the 1930s and based on a novel by DuBose Heyward about an African-American neighborho­od known as Catfish Row and the residents who live there. It, too, was on Alfonso’s “bucket list” for years. “It’s not only [important] as a musical piece,” she says, “but important as a statement about what was going on in this country as far as segregatio­n.” Alfonso admits that she can’t wait to raise her baton on opening night to conduct the lush gems in Gershwin’s score.

“It’s going to be a hybrid of staging and music, but the 70-piece orchestra is the ticket,” Jay-Alexander says. “I’m predicting two enormous cheers in particular sections of the overture every night when that orchestra is onstage.”

The South Florida Symphony Orchestra will perform “Porgy and Bess” 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 16 in the Knight Concert Hall at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, 1300 Biscayne Blvd., in Miami. The symphony will also perform the show 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 23 at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts, 201 SW Fifth Ave., in Fort Lauderdale. Go to SouthFlori­da Symphony.org.

ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of theater, dance, music, film and performing arts news.

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