I'm not a huge fan of most musicals, although to be fair plenty of really excellent ones are out there. The form at its best works not unlike Shakespeare--a heightened form and language making the story more vivid on many levels.
Violet does precisely that, which made attending the show not a slog through cloying sweetness but rather a very touching human story told in sharp relief.
Based on The Ugliest Pilgrim by Doris Betts, this show (directed by Richard Israel) takes place in September 1964 in the Deep South. Violet (Claire Adams) is a twenty something girl from a tiny town taking the bus across several states to see a preacher, a man whom she has seen heal people on t.v. She herself lives every day with a terrible scar across her face, one that makes anyone who doesn't know her do a very obvious take. We don't see this scar, but are left to imagine it because at no time does the musical let us forget it is there.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Returning to the main story, Violet with Monty and Flick form something of a love triangle, which sounds cliche as all get out. Cliches, however, depend upon laziness, upon assuming the audience will fill in the many, many gaps. Not so here. We end up deeply understanding all three characters more and more.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Not the stuff of nations or huge grandeur is Violet. Yet still, epic--in the sense of the soul who, like us, tries to find purpose and happiness and acceptance. Flick, who by the musical's end has fallen hard for this girl with a horribly scarred face, knows precisely why he has. He even says it--she looks at him and sees him. Not his skin color nor uniform nor rank. Him. Just as he looks at her and sees nothing but Violet herself. Such a frightening thing to happen, and the stuff of our deepest desires.
Credit: Matthew Gilmore |
Violet plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 2:30pm through June 17, 2018 (with an extra Saturday matinee at 2:30pm May 26) at the Actor's Co-op in the Crossley Theater on the east side of the campus of First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, 1760 N. Gower Street, Hollywood CA 90028.
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