Copyright © 2012 by Mark Gabrish Conlan for Zenger’s
Newsmagazine • All rights reserved
Say what you
will about Diversionary Theatre, you never quite know what to expect from them.
Their latest production, Harmony, Kansas,
is an original musical — that’s something of a surprise right there — set in
the Kansas flatlands and the town of Shiloh, described on the ePodunk.com Web
site as “a township in Neosho County … [whose] population, at the time of the
2000 census, was 297.” For those Queers whose association with Kansas is as the
place Dorothy Gale was magically whisked out of by a cyclone that took her to
Oz, Harmony, Kansas will be a
jolting confirmation that we are, indeed, everywhere — even in the middle of
the Kansas wheat country where virtually everyone is a farmer and there are
virtually no opportunities to meet each other.
Written (book
and lyrics) by Bill Nelson with music by Anna K. Jacobs, Harmony, Kansas centers around Heath (Jacob Caltrider), a Wisconsin
native whose sex-fueled wanderlust cost his family their farm and who’s trying
to make it right by building a spread in Kansas equal in size to the one he
lost in Wisconsin. Either one or two and one-half years earlier — Nelson’s book
is a bit unclear on the timeline — Heath met a man named Julian (Tom Zohar) in
Kansas City (there are actually two Kansas Cities, but Julian is presumably
from the larger and much more cosmopolitan one in Missouri rather than the one
across the state line in Kansas), started a relationship with him and
ultimately got him to move back with him to his farm.
There’s just one
problem: Julian remains a city boy at heart, painfully yearning for the company
of other people in general and other Gay men in particular. He’s found at least
some of what he’s looking for in an informal singing group that meets every
Monday night in Shiloh. The organizer is Wylie (John Whitley) and the other
members include middle-aged bear type Fuzz (Bill Nolte); rather prissy homebody
Darrell (Tony Houck) — whose partner Pete (whom we never see as an on-stage
character) is out of town selling horses — Ken (Anthony Methvin), with whom
Darrell has drifted into an affair; and 16-year-old D. J. (Dylan Hoffinger),
who’s taking out his dual frustrations over being Queer and under the age of
consent out on animals he puts in freezers or blows up with homemade bombs.
The plot of Harmony,
Kansas deals with Julian’s desperate
attempts to get Heath to join him in the singing group — whose members have
informally nicknamed it “The Poker Night” because that’s what they tell anybody
else who asks what they’re doing on those Monday nights — and the struggles of
the various members to maintain their integrity as people against the
relentless pressure on them to remain closeted. The first half is generally
campy and a bit silly — though at least Nelson resists the temptation to turn
the relationship of Heath and Julian into Green Acres, the Gay version.
Indeed, their
cultural conflicts and the peculiar combination of love and guilt in the
relationship between Darrell and Ken are presented dramatically and with
genuine pathos, even though sometimes it seems as if Nelson has inverted the
formula of “comic relief” by creating those moments as “serious relief” from
the campy humor. At one point Darrell even gets miffed that Julian has brought
snacks for the group and sings a song called “I Bring the Snacks.”
The second half
gets a good deal more serious as the conflicts between Heath and Julian get
more pointed, the triangle between Darrell, Ken and the unseen Pete becomes
harder to maintain, and Wylie gradually wants to raise the profile of the
singing group and have it perform in public. Though all the onstage characters are Gay men, Nelson does a
superb job of dramatizing the closet and its corrosive effects on these men’s
self-esteem, as well as their abject fear of “outing” themselves by appearing
on a local stage with all their neighbors watching. “Don’t ask, don’t tell” may
be history as far as the U.S. military is concerned, but at least as depicted
here it’s still very much a part of life on the Kansas plains.
When Julian
protests that their fellow farmers will have noticed that they are two men
living together and therefore have intuited that they’re a Gay couple, Heath
protests that he needs to maintain their respect (especially since he’s
depending on them for the bank loan he needs to expand his farm) and therefore
they can’t do anything that might be read as “flaunting.” Darrell is in an even
worse pickle because the farm he lives on is owned by Pete’s family, and they
have the power to throw him out and render him homeless any time they choose.
Harmony,
Kansas gets darker and more emotionally
intense as it goes on, and though it reaches an affirmative climax it gets
there through a deus ex machina
device of such bone-crushing obviousness one gets the impression that Nelson
missed the class session of Playwriting 101 that would have taught him not to
do that. Despite that miscalculation, though, it remains emotionally intense
(this viewer cried!) and is superlatively staged by director James Vasquez and
Diversionary’s technical crew, and impeccably acted by the cast.
Though Jacob
Caltrider stands out — he’s the hottest man in the cast (when one of the other
characters makes a joke about how well he fills out his Wranglers, virtually
every Gay man in the audience — and most of the straight women as well — will
no doubt agree!), he’s the most charismatic actor and he’s also got the
strongest singing voice — Harmony, Kansas
is really an ensemble piece. Tom Zohar gets a bit whiny sometimes as Julian,
and John Whitley and Tony Houck don’t always maintain the right balance between
their characters’ queeny exteriors and their emotion-ridden interiors, but
Anthony Methvin is a powerful stage presence as the tortured Ken and Dylan Hoffinger
is dynamic as the frustrated D.J.
The best part of
Harmony, Kansas is the formidable vocal
blend its actors have achieved. Adam Wachter, who conducts the show, plays the
piano accompaniment (supported by Peggy Johnston on bass) and is responsible for
the arrangements, deserves credit for rehearsing the actors and training them
to become a first-rate singing group. The few times they’re less than perfect —
like on the pathetic (in the negative sense) “Welcome Song” Wylie writes to
welcome Heath to the group — are clearly intentional. Indeed, it might be nice
to see these actors stay together and keep singing after the run of Harmony,
Kansas ends on July 22; they’re good enough
to sing the great standard songs their 1950’s harmonies were made for. (There’s
one point during the musical in which Nelson’s dialogue seems to be setting up
a song cue for “Over the Rainbow” — and it seems likely the only reason he and
Jacobs didn’t go there was the nightmarish trouble and expense of securing the
rights.)
Harmony,
Kansas is produced with Diversionary’s
usual technical aplomb. Sean Fanning’s unit set is reasonably credible as both
farm country and living room, and only when we’re asked to believe that a crude
stack of three chairs is a mechanical bull does it tax credibility. Shirley
Pierson’s costumes are appropriate enough — especially D. J.’s overalls and
Fuzz’s belt buckle, which tell us more than we need to know about them — and
Michelle Carron’s lighting design is a bit on the autumnal side but still lets
us see what’s going on. Overall, it’s a nice, uplifting evening at the theatre,
a piece that fulfills the musical conventions (and is helped by being about people who sing!) despite some glitches in the
dramatic construction which Nelson may well fix for subsequent productions.
Harmony,
Kansas runs through Sunday, July 22 at Diversionary Theatre, 4545 Park Boulevard in
University Heights. Previews run through June 22 and the official opening is on
Saturday, June 23. Performances are 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat. and 2 p.m. Sun. Special
performances occur Wed., June 20 and Mon., July 9. For tickets and other
information, call (619) 220-0097 or visit www.diversionary.org