STORMING THE BARRICADES; POWERFUL 'LES MIZ' RETURNS TO L.A.Byline: Reed Johnson Reed Cameron Johnson (born December 8, 1976 in Riverside, California) is an outfielder for the Toronto Blue Jays of the American League East division of Major League Baseball. He weighs 180 lb (82 kg) and is 5'10" tall. Theater Critic ``Les Miserables'' may be the perfect holiday show for a secular age, a one-size-fits-all musical that translates easily and transcends religious hair-splitting. Sort of like ``A Christmas Carol,'' only with its own trademark logo. Like other great spiritual epics, ``Les Miz'' has saints, sinners, martyrdom, sacrifice and redemption, plus comic relief comic relief n. A humorous or farcical interlude in a serious literary work or drama, especially a tragedy, intended to relieve the dramatic tension or heighten the emotional impact by means of contrast. , a love interest or two, and a fistful fist·ful n. pl. fist·fuls The amount that a fist can hold. Noun 1. fistful - the quantity that can be held in the hand handful containerful - the quantity that a container will hold of lovely melodies that seem to grow richer with repeated listenings. It even has poor, misguided Inspector Javert, hurling himself off a Paris bridge like a cross between Milton's Satan and Jimmy Stewart's George Bailey in ``It's a Wonderful Life.'' That's ``Les Miz'' for you: high-minded ideals commingling Combining things into one body. The term commingling is most often applied to funds or assets. When a fiduciary, a person entrusted with the management of funds other than his or her own in trust, mixes trust money with that of others, the fiduciary is commingling with old-fashioned melodrama, populist entertainment without pandering. The thinking-person's tear-jerker. All those qualities are again present in the stirring and sturdy, if not quite first-rate touring production of the show that stormed into the Ahmanson Theatre The Ahmanson Theatre is one of the four main venues that comprise the Los Angeles Music Center. Through the generosity of philanthropist Robert H. Ahmanson, construction began on March 9, 1962. Sunday night, where it will remain through mid-February. Although the leads - Ivan Rutherford as crusading Christian humanist Jean Valjean and Stephen Bishop as fanatical lawman Javert - are worthy successors to Colm Wilkinson and Terrence Mann, the company overall at times lacks a certain crispness of execution, a sense of discovery that may be difficult to replicate after more than a dozen years on Broadway and in London. Musical tempos have been slowed down a shade, so that lyrics are clearer, but some transitions among numbers now show their seams more conspicuously than before. And despite the producers' assurances that this is the first full-scale, hydraulically souped-up version of ``Les Miz'' to hit Los Angeles in several years, those monumental John Caird sets always look pretty much the same to me, rising out of the gloomy Paris slums like a giant assemblage sculpture. As Spiro Agnew might've observed, seen one barricade, you've seen 'em all. None of this really detracts, however, from the primal storytelling power of this panoramic adaptation of Victor Hugo's elephantine Elephantine (ĕl'əfăntī`nē), island, SE Egypt, in the Nile below the First Cataract, near Aswan. In ancient times it was a military post guarding the southern frontier of Egypt. novel, nor from the literateness and melodic catchiness of the Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg score. At three-plus hours long, ``Les Miserables'' remains one of the most satisfyingly complete mass entertainments ever devised. Director Trevor Nunn's turntable staging still sweeps the action along, pulling us through the stodgy stodg·y adj. stodg·i·er, stodg·i·est 1. a. Dull, unimaginative, and commonplace. b. Prim or pompous; stuffy: early exposition and reaching its stirring culmination with the backlit An LCD screen that has its own light source from the back of the screen, making the background brighter and characters appear sharper. , slow-mo deaths of the revolutionaries atop the barricades. If you don't get the shivers at this stuff, you may want to check your pulse. It would be hard to invent a purer portrayal of Gallic saintliness saint·ly adj. saint·li·er, saint·li·est Of, relating to, resembling, or befitting a saint. saint li·ness n. than Rutherford's Valjean, the ex-convict turned people's hero, or to imagine a sweeter tenor than his on numbers like ``Bring Him Home.'' His counterpoint Bishop conveys Javert's transition from self-righteousness to self-doubt with a pro's confident economy. Of the secondary characters, Tim Howar (Marius) and Sutton Foster (Eponine) make the most of their big numbers, the melancholy ``Empty Chairs at Empty Tables'' and the pop-torch belter belter Noun Slang an outstanding person or event: a belter of a match ``On My Own,'' respectively. As the predatory Thenardiers, J.P. Dougherty and Aymee Garcia are rouged Daumier caricatures sprung to life. And while Joan Almedilla's Fantine is perhaps too much the passive victim, Kevin Earley makes for a noble Enjolras, the student leader, Regan Thiel brings a warm vibrato vi·bra·to n. pl. vi·bra·tos A tremulous or pulsating effect produced in an instrumental or vocal tone by minute and rapid variations in pitch. to the bland Cosette role, and local lad Cameron Teitelman is the most refreshingly uncloying Gavroche in memory. Despite all the years under its belt, ``Les Miz'' somehow always arrives at the same place: an auditorium full of people clearing their throats and wiping their eyes. By that final celestial chorus of ``Do You Hear the People Sing?'' I lost my own Brechtian battle to hold my mucous membranes Mucous membranes The inner tissue that covers or lines body cavities or canals open to the outside, such as nose and mouth. These membranes secrete mucus and absorb water and salts. Mentioned in: Leprosy, Pulmonary Fibrosis, Topical Anesthesia at bay. Funny - that always seems to happen whenever ``Les Miz'' comes to town. The facts What: ``Les Miserables.'' Where: Ahmanson Theatre, Music Center of Los Angeles County, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown. When: Through Feb. 12. Performances at 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 7:30 p.m. Sundays. Additional performances at 2 p.m. Dec. 23, 30 and Feb. 10; 8 p.m. Dec. 20, 27 and Feb. 7. Tickets: $15 to $70. Call (213) 972-7231. Our rating: Three stars. CAPTION(S): Photo Photo: Sutton Foster plays Eponine and Tim Howar is Marius in ``Les Miserables,'' at the Ahmanson Theatre. |
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