Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
April 26, 2022
Ended: 
May 29, 2022
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Center Theater Group
Theater Type: 
Regional; Touring
Theater: 
Ahmanson Theater
Theater Address: 
135 North Grand Avenue
Phone: 
213-972-4400
Website: 
centertheatregroup.org
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 30 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book/Score: Anais Mitchell
Director: 
Rachel Chavkin
Review: 

Hadestown is a musical that lives up to its hype. After sold-out runs—and numerous awards—in London and New York, Hadestown comes to L.A. (and Costa Mesa later) in a snazzy, brash production that casts a hypnotic spell.

The creative genius behind the show, Anais Mitchell, has written a wall-to-wall musical score in which all dialogue is sung, not spoken. Her jazzy songs are delivered by an 18-person cast that also dances spiritedly and pulsatingly (as choreographed by David Neuman) in non-stop fashion.

Hadestown is based, roughly, on the Greek myth of Orpheus, a musician whose wife Eurydice dies of a poisonous snake bite. He follows her down to the Underworld, where he charms the fearsome three-headed dog guarding the entrance. Even Hades and Persephone, king and queen of the dead, are seduced by his music. They agree to let him take Eurydice back to the upper world as long as he doesn’t look back at her until they reach the light of day. When just a few steps from sunlight, Orpheus can resist no longer. He looks back, and loses her forever.

In 1607 Monteverdi turned the myth into an opera. Gluck followed a century later with his version, which reformed the Baroque opera tradition. Now Anais Mitchell has taken her shot at the story, which I have always found irritating in the extreme.

Mitchell, though, overcomes my irritation with her modern take on the myth, which she sets, roughly, in a New Orleans speakeasy and features a youthful, multi-ethnic cast. Heading it in the role of Hermes (a master of ceremonies) is Levi Kreis, a dynamic performer. He takes neophyte songwriter Orpheus (Nicholas Barasch) under his wing and introduces him to Eurydice (Morgan Siobhan Green), a hippie chick. They fall in love and, of course, immediately burst into passionate song.

Lord of the underworld is Hades (Kevyn Morrow), a mean, deep-voiced gangster. He treats his moll Persephone (Kimberly Marable) as badly as he does everyone who works for him---a bunch of resentful proletarians. The class war that’s dramatized in Hadestown gives the show an unexpected and welcome dimension as it transforms myth into reality.

The show’s rousing, high-flying songs and dances—and its gritty, social truths—make for a riveting, satisfying experience. As for the ending of the story, with Eurydice dying because of Orpheus’s fatal flaw, it’s interesting to note that neither Mitchell, Gluck nor Monteverdi considered finishing their works the way the Greek myth did. In the original version, Orpheus, overcome with grief, wanders the mountains where he meets some women maddened by the God Dionysus. The women tear him apart and throw his head into a river. Still singing, it is washed down to the sea. Serves the jerk right.

Cast: 
Nicholas Barasch, Morgan Siobhan Green, Levi Kreis, Kimberly Marable, Kevyn Morrow, Belen Moyano, Bex Odorisio, Shea Renne, Tyla Collier, Ian Coulter-Buford, Lindsey Hailes, Chibueze Ihuoma, Alex Lugo, Will Mann, Sydney Parra, Eddie Noel Rodriguez, J. Antonio Rodriguez, Jamari Johnson Williams.
Technical: 
Set: Rachel Hauck; Costumes: Michael Krass; Lighting: Bradley King; Sound: Nevin Steinberg & Jessica Paz; Arrangements & Orchestrations: Michael Chorney & Todd Sickafoose; Music Director, Nathan Koci; Music Coordinator, David Lai; Hair: Jennifer Mullins
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
April 2022