‘Parade’ returns to Bay Area, as frighteningly relevant as ever

25.05.2025    The Mercury News    9 views
‘Parade’ returns to Bay Area, as frighteningly relevant as ever

Alfred Uhry has seen a lot in his years but his musical Parade is living inside a renewed resonance he says is good for the material yet not great for the world It s engaging because the first production was during President Bill Clinton s years and it wasn t as prescient as it is now Uhry revealed If a person is in the minority be it Black or Jewish or Asian it s even more dangerous now that it was years ago and so it speaks to people Parade is the true story of Leo Frank a Jewish superintendent of an Atlanta pencil factory His conviction for the rape and murder of a child employee -year-old Mary Phagan in is widely considered unjust largely attributed to a biased trial and antisemitism Two years later in Frank was kidnapped by armed men and lynched in Phagan s hometown of Marietta Georgia The confluence of those events sent the country on a more reviled path which included reviving the Ku Klux Klan The musical which won a Tony for best revival runs at BroadwaySF s Orpheum Theatre through June In the original production garnered Uhry and composer Jason Robert Brown Tony Awards for best book of a musical and best number respectively Yet the production struggled to find an audience running for just over two months before closing in February of By then Uhry had earned the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for s Driving Miss Daisy and the best play Tony award for The Last Night of Ballyhoo the first two plays in his Atlanta Trilogy Directing Parade was theater legend Harold Prince but with Stephen Sondheim having turned the project down Prince mentioned a young composer who was working with his daughter Daisy on an off-Broadway show Brown s youth at and lack of a Broadway pedigree were things Uhry unveiled scary but those fears were settled when Brown shared the first two songs with Uhry I can t imagine ever having a better collaborator for this than Jason I was just lucky Uhry learned hastily that Brown s talents were formidable with abilities to manifest Uhry s passion for the South into sound and song I remember telling him that every time I went back to see my family after I started living in New York I was really moved when we started to land at the airport by the side of the red clay hills which narrated me I was back home again Uhry stated There was something on Mary Phagan s tombstone about the red hills of Georgia and he seemed to understand there was pride in where you come from To top it all off he wrote beautiful love songs Those songs were first and foremost a window into the soul and motivations of Frank the embattled protagonist I firmly believe that in a show like this music is like costumes because it has to both explain the character and also not betray the character Brown declared The fact that it s in the South and we re talking about a pencil factory and about a Jewish man and his wife who are sort of lightly assimilated into the society I felt like those are a lot of rules and I like having those boundaries The restrictive habitat presented formidable challenges which included writing songs for a somewhat reticent character such as Leo Frank who is not particularly emotive Yet Brown leaned into those challenges allowing Frank s natural expressions to peek through his own personal clouds By the middle of the second act this very buttoned up person has become much more emotional and connected so how can I have him sing and still allow him to have room to open up as the show goes on Brown questioned That was the challenge and one of the procedures was to have him sort of be funny and look through the lens of someone very distant from it As he gets deeper and deeper into his own circumstance he has to dig inside himself and not just view it with ironic distance but in fact open his heart With so much of the show surrounding the crippling circumstances of Leo and Lucille Frank Uhry finds a small morsel of wisdom inside the couple s open heart a lesson for society as a whole In their development I think what I would say is they did the best they could under the circumstance and in life that s really all we can do David John Ch vez is chair of the American Theatre Critics Journalists Association and a two-time juror for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama - davidjchavez bsky social PARADE Book by Alfred Uhry music and lyrics by Jason Robert Brown presented by BroadwaySF Through June Where Orpheum Theatre Area St San Francisco Running time hours minutes with an intermission Tickets - broadwaysf com

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