The Denver Post

“Emma” update will delight fans of Austen’s novel, romantic comedies

Contempora­ry music and characters addressing the audience offer a youthful spin on the Regency classic.

- By Lisa Kennedy lkennedywr­iter@gmail.com

The rhythms of Jane Austen’s novels are so persuasive, their challenges and resolution­s so familiar, that playwright Kate Hamill can merrily tease our knowledge again and again in her winking adaptation of “Emma,” now at the Denver Center, through May 5.

Those beats are after all, the stuff of many a movie rom-com. Still, who would have guessed the seeming influence of one Yorgos Lanthimos? The Greek filmmaker’s “Poor Things” featured his own Emma (Stone) doing an unexpected­ly zany, quasi-“soul Train” dance; Rachel Weisz devolved into something similarly wild in his film “The Favourite”.

Those familiar with the moviemaker’s work should not be surprised (sorry for the spoiler) but delighted nonetheles­s by director Meredith Mcdonough’s employ of contempora­ry songs and dance moves during the genteel parties in “Emma,” starting with the wedding celebratio­n of Mrs. and Mr. Weston and ending with… well if you don’t know Austen’s fourth book, I’ll keep mum.

Even before the house lights dim, the preshow sound of Dua Lipa’s “Dance the Night Away” hinted at the spirit of play the show would be going for, as did the pink gel lights casting their rosy hue on the arch that frames the action. Highbury Barbie, anyone?

Amelia Pedlow brings conspirato­rial joy to her role as the play’s titular meddler and matchmaker. Emma’s use of direct address is coy but never cloying. The audience is drawn into her ploys by her charm but also remains more knowing than our hero because Austen and romantic comedies have schooled us to be.

A student of Miss Bates (Mar

lene Montes), the well-educated but too idle Emma takes credit for the nuptials of her former governess, the newly wed Mrs. Weston, and begins planning more romantic intrigues. Joey Parsons delights as the governess and wisest soul on stage.

Emma’s childhood friend and neighbor, Mr. George Knightley (Carman Lacivita) sees the errors in her machinatio­ns and calls her on them, which only spurs her on.

But long before her gentle comeuppanc­e, Emma sets her sights on marrying off Harriet Smith (Samantha Steinmetz). Steinmetz brings a fangirl adulation to her interactio­ns with Emma. She is the acolyte and Emma the visionary. That this will change and the student challenge the teacher is part of the hilarity of Hamill’s script and Mcdonough’s direction.

Forget that Harriet seemed quite content with

Joey Parsons is wise beyond measure as Mrs. Weston, Emma’s onetime governess.

the attentions of Knightley’s groundskee­per, one Robert Martin. Marco Alberto Robinson plays the humble groundsman; the actor also struts his stuff without a fret as the gumchompin­g Frank Churchill. Mr. Weston’s nephew is quite eligible, and well-situated. Might he be the perfect match for Emma?

As for Mr. Martin, he says very little in the show because this is not really about his station but Emma’s and Harriet’s, whose place in society Emma wants to elevate mostly to prove she can.

“Onward. Upward. Onward. Upward” Emma coaches Harriet, who starts to embrace the chant.

First, she becomes enamored of Mr. Elton, the rector. Then Harriet moves on to another target, which will complicate matters for Emma.

Brent Hinkley brings relish to his role as the florid clergyman Mr. Elton, who aims his Cupid’s arrow at an aghast Emma. (Cast in the role of Emma’s dad, Hinkley is forever arriving on stage a great bowl in hand expressing his gruel intentions.)

Did we mention Miss Bates’s beloved niece Jane (Annie Barbour)? For no obvious reason — besides being lovely and smart although a bit chilly — she is Emma’s nemesis. Jane and Mr. Churchill have a prior if mysterious acquaintan­ceship. But Jane’s mere return to Highbury throws Emma off her game.

Atop distant, rolling, emerald-green hills, stand

the illuminate­d cutouts of a rectory, three manors and what appears to be a groundskee­per’s modest abode. (Mr. Martin’s?) The show’s witty scenic design and clever costumes reflect the crafty work of designer Lex Liang. Both underline the sweet silliness of the outing but never scuttle its lessons. In one scene, Harriet returns to the stage in a lemony gown that has a billowing flower at each breast. Va-va-bloom. But the entire production — sound by Palmer Heffernan;

lights by Jackie Fox and Paul Toben — runs with a fluid and sly confidence.

Emma mentions Shakespear­e’s tragedies as proof of enduring romantic couples, which rightly gives Harriet pause. Of course, with its roundelay of romantic presumptiv­e romantic partners, “Emma” shares kinship with Shakespear­e’s comedies. Hamill clearly knows her way around the Bard’s and Austen’s tart language. And director Mcdonough proves deft with goofball slapstick and fleet dialog, having helmed last’s season’s Denver Center revival of the larky noir “The 39 Steps” as well as the world premiere of “Emma” at Minneapoli­s’s Guthrie Theatre.

If, as reported, youth is wasted on the young, this zesty romp with its nods to Lizzo and Emma’s fourthwall breaking nudges intends to make certain theater isn’t wasted on, well, the older folk. Present company included. Rock on, Austen. Dance the night away, Emma and Co.

 ?? JAMIE KRAUS PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Clever is as Emma does: Amelia Pedlow plays the beautiful meddler in Kate Hamill’s take on Jane Austen’s novel.
JAMIE KRAUS PHOTOGRAPH­Y Clever is as Emma does: Amelia Pedlow plays the beautiful meddler in Kate Hamill’s take on Jane Austen’s novel.
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF JAMIE KRAUS PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? A makeover to remember: Harriet Smith (Samantha Steinmetz, center) in “Emma.”
PHOTOS COURTESY OF JAMIE KRAUS PHOTOGRAPH­Y A makeover to remember: Harriet Smith (Samantha Steinmetz, center) in “Emma.”
 ?? ?? Harriet (Samantha Steinmetz, left) and Emma (Amelia Pedlow) in the Denver Center’s production of Kate Hamill’s “Emma.”
Harriet (Samantha Steinmetz, left) and Emma (Amelia Pedlow) in the Denver Center’s production of Kate Hamill’s “Emma.”
 ?? ?? A beloved Jane Austen novel gets its groove on: the cast of “Emma.”
A beloved Jane Austen novel gets its groove on: the cast of “Emma.”
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