Review submitted May 29, 2010 by Rick:
I got a chance to see Woody Guthrie’s America Song last night and I’ve been thinking about the real achievement that it is ever since. I’ve run my mouth non-stop to friends and families and have now come here to run it some more.
See…
I’m what you might call a Woody Guthrie fan first and foremost. Before I get too worked up to see a show in a place that calls itself a “theatre” I’m more inclined to put on an old record (78 rpm if you please, on any of the Victrolas that litter my house) and stay home to listen to an old fashioned, scratchy, off-key stomp. Call me crazy, but that’s where you might most find the spark that all this high-minded art tries so hard to illuminate. So, I figured going to a fancy musical about Woody would be more something I could rant about later than something I’d leave telling friends to go see. I more figured I’d tell people to stay away from it and come over to listen to records with me.
But…
What I saw last night is EXACTLY what I’ve never managed to do in my whole life as a Woody fan. This show manages to get folks to hold still long enough to hear, feel, and see what makes it so easy for us fans to say that Woody was a real genuine article. I can’t count as high as the number of times I’ve said Woody is great only to hear people use words like “twangy” or “caterwauling” or even just “boring” in reply to my best efforts to show them what I mean. The voice isn’t technically great, but Woody wasn’t singing for the notes. He sang for the meanings of what he had to say, and his voice only underscores the sincerity and accuracy of his insight. But, tell that to the rabble…
Peter Glazer and company have managed to put together a magical combination of “nice” singing and “pleasing” sounding presentation that takes that immediate edge out of the equation. Then, he sits the people down and puts Woody on the stage for all to see. He gets well out of the way when it is time for Woody to take charge but knows how to gently tell him and his legacy that he might need a minute to sing more like people nowadays wanna hear songs sung. I’m glad Woody obliged on this one…so to speak.
What didn’t happen is a catastrophe I feared most. These songs are NOT over-produced or over-updated (see: Across the Universe) and they are not made so comfortable and pleasing that the meaning is lost. In fact, this performance does just what Woody did. It manages to make it easy for would-be adversaries to sing the same songs and to see the same things without pulling any punches when it comes to calling out what is wrong with the way things are.
Woody’s music, if nothing else, shows us that nothing has really changed. In a way, these songs are just songs to us now. But, we all can feel how it was to know what was right and what was wrong. What Woody did so well, and this performance manages perfectly, is to show that there is a great deal of stuff in the world that a great deal of us all accept and promote that is just plain wrong. The world is not much different, but we forget that sometimes. To have it so gently shown to us is truly something to cherish and promote. To have us remember what we have in common without compromising on where we disagree is the shared experience of Woody Guthrie as presented in this show.
I realized watching that I was in the middle of a room full of people who were doing pretty well. Some of them were “liberal elite” as they say, and some were just plain “old school conservative” types. They were all singing and clapping. They were all sharing the moments that put our shared humanity in front of us all. They all knew the words. In that context, Woody sang to us through these talented performers about our very present-day topics like economic opportunity, systemic hardship, compassion fatigue, survival, and even xenophobia and prejudice. Woody got it right then, and this company got it right now.
So…maybe what Woody said is true. He should be known as the guy who told us what we already knew. He saw it, or heard it, from someone who told him what he already knew to be true. So it goes. What has happened in this performance is a lot of talented people managed to get out of the way of the message and power of these things in a way so skillful that we almost thought they were the ones making the art. And, of course, they are.