I have never thought of
Los Angeles as a theatre town. Most
performances I have attended featured actors hoping that their stars would rise
and actors who had some success and were doing a play between projects. This is called stretching the acting chops,
this theatre work; it is definitely not a money-making endeavor for Hollywood
actors. Whatever the circumstances, when
attending a theatre performance in Los Angeles, I am always aware that the
people on stage in front of me are acting. And that often makes the experience
unsatisfactory.
So I did not prepare
myself to be enthralled by the touring production of Miss Saigon my wife and I recently attended at the Pantages Theatre
to celebrate our 32nd wedding anniversary. I was transported, mesmerized, mind-blown. I did not expect the opening number with the
scantily-clad prostitutes nor did I anticipate the language—I am not a prude,
but the last major musical I saw at the Pantages was The Lion King; enough said.
The lighting, the sets, the special effects, all exquisite and only
added to the performances.
Emily Bautista’s Kim is
a revelation. She is in almost all the
scenes in the first half of the show and much of the second half as well, and
since the entire play is more of an opera with everything—plot points,
dialogue, etc.—sung, I marveled at her ability to belt out the difficult score
from nearly every position, including prone on her back and crouched cradling a
child. Red Concepcion as the Engineer is
also impressive as a sort of ring master to the circus that was the final days
of Saigon and the Vietnam War.
Of course, the piece de resistance is the landing of
the helicopter on stage for the evacuation of the U.S. embassy, an image from
history that most people of a certain age remember clearly. The aircraft starts as a hologram from the
back of the theatre, floats down over the audience’s heads with a thundering
shudder and hiss of rotors to disappear at the back of the stage only to turn
around and float back into view over the actors and chaotic scene. At that point, it appeared to be a very real
aircraft with spinning rotor and pilots in the cockpit. It was nothing less than astounding.
The ending was a
little predictable but moving. The story
of Amerasian children born of American G.I. fathers and Vietnamese mothers has
always been part of the discussion of the Vietnam War. Yet, the subject has not gotten the treatment
that the war and all of its consequences has.
Certainly this aspect makes for a unique story for musical theatre. Miss
Saigon stands alone for this reason, and a revival was a welcomed return
for a great show.
We exited the theatre
to a wonderful balmy night in Hollywood.
The sidewalks overflowed with tourists, theatre-goers, and residents who
occupy the surrounding mixed use buildings.
Hot dog and sausage vendors lined the streets and the smell of onions
and grilling filled the air.
Theatre in Los Angeles
does not really have its Times Square, mainly because the city has such a sprawl
but the Pantages is the heart of the theatre scene in L.A., as I have written
before. In a town that puts everything
into its film industry, good theatre does take place if one is willing to
venture out and look for it. That night,
32 years after our special day, we had an unforgettable experience on a
beautiful night in Hollywood.
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