Presented by The MIT Gilbert and Sullivan Players
Music and Lyrics by Sherman Edwards
Book by Peter Stone
Directed by Emma Brown
Vocal Direction by Tom Ostrowski and Johnnie Han
Orchestra Directed by Julie Henion
August 12 – 14
MIT Kresge Little Theatre
48 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA
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Review by Danielle Rosvally
(Cambridge, MA) 1776 is one of those archaic mainstays of musical theatre that gets some seasonal adoration around the patriotic holidays of summer and spends the rest of the year hiding in its box waiting for people to remember how catchy the good songs are (and forget how atrociously lingering the bad ones get). It’s also got some technical and social difficulties: the cast is large; dare I say ungainly; and made almost exclusively of men. Costuming the show is serious business since it’s a period piece (rarely modernized). And the script… oh the script… the script has not aged well. Sherman Edwards wrote some poppy songs that still captivate, but Peter Stone’s book is definitely a product of its time. Once again; the good parts are great. The bad parts just linger a little too long. Last, but certainly not least, the show attempts to tackle some very dark eras of American History and doesn’t exactly do it in the best possible way. Continue reading