VarietyJune 17, 1996
Time and Again
By Julio Martinez
SAN DIEGO -- An Old Globe Theater/Simon Edison Center for the Performing Arts presentation of a musical in two acts with book by Jack Viertel, music and lyrics by Walter Edgar Kennedy, based on the novel by Jack Finney. Directed by Jack O'Brien; choreography, Kathleen Marshall; musical director, Tom Helm; orchestrations, Chris Walker. Sets, John Conklin; lighting, Peter Kaczorowski; costumes, Catherine Zuber; sound, Jeff Ladman; projections, Wendall K. Harrington; special effects, Chic Silber. Opened May 9, 1996, at the Old Globe Theatre. Reviewed June 2; 571 seats; $ 38 top. Running time: 2 HOURS, 40 MIN.
Cast: Howard McGillin (Si Morley), Rebecca Luker (Julia Charbonneau), John Carpenter (Dr. Danziger), Jessica Molaskey (Kate/Mrs. Carmody), William Parry (Ruben Prine/Pickering), Danny Burstein (Frank), KT Sullivan (Joyce), George Dvorsky (Mr. Carmody); Anne Allgood, Terry Burrell, Susan Cella, Sean Grant, Marc Heller, Nancy Hess, Joann M. Hunter, Joseph Kolinski, John MacInnis, Elizabeth Mills, Roxann Parker, Luis Perez, Jacquelyn Piro, Andy Umberger, John Leslie Wolfe.
This time-transgressing love story of modern Gotham ad exec Si Morley (Howard McGillin) and Victorian-era New York housemaid Julia Charbonneau ( Rebecca Luker) has a lot going for it ... if only its creaky, overloaded plot wouldn't keep getting in the way. There is much to trim in this adventurous musical adaptation of the Jack Finney novel before it makes its fall-planned debut on Broadway. That trimming, however, would be worth the effort.
For all its abundant length, "Time and Again" is beautifully played under Jack O'Brien's creatively organized staging, aided immeasurably by the expressionistic designs of John Conklin (sets), Peter Kaczorowski (lighting), Wendall K. Harrington (projections) and Chic Silber (special effects). Though outweighed considerably by the book, the music and lyrics of Walter Edgar Kennedy are thoroughly original and engrossing, due in no small part to Chris Walker's inventive, atonal orchestrations.
Writer Jack Viertel has certainly given O'Brien and crew a lot of plotmachinations to deal with: the ponderous doings of the secret government agency that wants to send Si back to 1882 New York City; the intrigues of Si's nefarious grandfather (George Dvorsky) and blackmailer Pickering (William Parry); Si's less-than-steady romance with career woman Kate Mancuso (Jessica Molaskey); Si's ad company's efforts to complete a campaign to promote New York; and the historically significant first meeting of the parents-to-be of super scientist Dr. Danziger (John Carpenter).
What's lacking is a feeling of continuity in the growing love between Si and Julia. McGillin and Luker are radiant as the lovers, and their duet of "Time and Time Again" is the highlight of the second act. But because so much attention is paid to tangents, it's difficult to sustain attention to this work's main attraction: the great love affair intended to overpower the restrictions of time, the writing of history and the needs of the U.S. government.
The plot also fails to establish Si as the enigmatic creature everyone describes. Julia and Kate voice their mutual frustration in the duet "Who Are You Anyway?," but there is nothing in McGillin's boyish, matter-of-fact perf that evokes any mystery at all. It is also too bad that Kate, as played by the superlatively smart, sexy and witty Molaskey, has to lose out; Si might well have lost more than he gained.
The rest of the cast is uniformly excellent. Carpenter is a perfect scientific curmudgeon, quite moving when he explodes with grief and rage as his life's work is turned into an Orwellian monster by the government. Parry is doubly villainous as the government's icy career officer, Ruben Prine, and the abusive civil servant turned blackmailer Pickering.
Offering welcome musical-comedy relief to much of the dour doings are Danny Burstein and KT Sullivan as Si's ad company cohorts.