Buffalo Rising

MISS SAIGON at Shea’s presents non-stop, really non-stop, high-intensity emotion

THE BASICS:  MISS SAIGON, Cameron Mackintosh’s North American Tour of the Broadway musical presented by Shea’s and Albert Nocciolino opened on February 26 and runs through March 3, Wednesday and Thursday at 7:30, Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8, and Sunday at 2 & 7 at Shea’s Performing Arts Center, 646 Main Street (1-800-745-3000). www.sheas.org Runtime: 2-1/2 hours with one intermission (full service bar, snacks, souvenirs, the usual)

THUMBNAIL SKETCH:  Chris, an American G.I., falls in love with Kim, an innocent young Vietnamese woman who has wandered from her devastated rural home into Saigon. Chris encounters Kim on her first day employed at a dance hall/sex club run by The Engineer. Against advice on both sides (from Chris’s friend John, and from Kim’s arranged betrothed Thuy) they marry anyway in a wedding ceremony put together by Kim’s fellow dancer/sex workers. During the fall of Saigon, the two lovers are separated. Chris goes home to Atlanta, and after a year of disorientation, gets his life back on track with Ellen, his new American bride. Meanwhile, Kim delivers her and Chris’s son, whom she names Tam, and The Engineer helps her emigrate to Bangkok, where he hopes that the child, the son of an American, a child he whom he now calls his nephew, will be his “ticket” to the American Dream. John, now working on orphan relief efforts, discovers Kim and Tam, and arranges a meeting in Bangkok with Chris and Ellen. Things do not go well.

Emily Bautista as ‘Kim’ and Anthony Festa as ‘Chris’ fall in love singing “Sun and Moon” – Photo by Matthew Murphy
Emily Bautista as ‘Kim’ and Anthony Festa as ‘Chris’ continue to fall in love singing “Last Night of the World” | Photo by Matthew Murphy

THE PLAYERS, THE PLAY, AND THE PRODUCTION: Just as the musical RENT is based loosely on the opera LA BOHEME by Giacomo Puccini, MISS SAIGON comes from Puccini’s opera of an American Navy officer and a Japanese Geisha, MADAMA BUTTERFLY. The principle differences here are that in the opera the American Lt. Pinkerton actively seeks out a short-term companion and it’s obvious that he’s a “love ‘em and leave ‘em” guy from the start. In MISS SAIGON, Chris the Marine is reluctant at first, only succumbing to the thunderbolt that is love and, later, despite great efforts to leave for America with his bride Kim, is prevented from doing so by the chaos of the “fall” of Saigon. So Chris is a much more sympathetic character than Pinkerton.

The other big difference is the expansion of the role of the opera’s “Goro,” who is a somewhat matter of fact arranger of sham “marriages” between Japanese women and American military men. In MISS SAIGON, this role is greatly expanded into a low level but incredibly high energy hustler who “engineers” things (for a price) named The Engineer. In this production, that role is played with great gusto by Red Concepción, heard here in conversation and seen here with the entire cast in a theatrical trailer.

The classic A-B-A form of a love story is A: girl and boy meet, B: complications ensue, A: girl and boy reunite and live happily ever after. The darker “modernist” version is A-B-C in which the lovers meet, complications ensue, and they do NOT get back together, but the survivors learn something about themselves and we, the audience, learn something, too. A problem here is that maybe we don’t want to learn those lessons, especially watching Kim, mother of Tam, feeling forced into a really bad decision.

(L-R) Red Concepción as ‘The Engineer,’ Jace Chen as ‘Tam’ and Emily Bautista as ‘Kim’ walk westward to a new life | Photo by Matthew Murphy

But one character who learned who he was and formed a solid view of how life works at a very tender age pimping for his mother is The Engineer. He is the most consistent character, almost the “whack-a-mole” of entrepreneurs. Knock him down and he pops right back up somewhere else in his dogged pursuit of “The American Dream” replete with blondes in furs and Cadillac convertibles. Some may find his singularity of purpose, getting to America, and his lack of subtlety off-putting, but he is one engaging character, no doubt about it.

The musical is by Boublil and Schönberg, the team that created LES MISÉRABLES, with co-lyricist Richard Maltby, Jr. in a production that opened in London in 1989, was brought to Broadway, then revived in London in 2014, brought back to Broadway, and is now on tour in America.

The seven best things about this current production at Shea’s:

The helicopter lands on the roof of the American Embassy in “The Nightmare” in MISS SAIGON | Photo by Matthew Murphy

The four worst things about this current production at Shea’s:

Red Concepción (center as ‘The Engineer’) and the Company perform the show-stopper “American Dream” | Photo by Matthew Murphy

The two best things you can do before you attend this current production at Shea’s:

Lead image: Red Concepción as ‘The Engineer’ can get you anything you want | Photo by Matthew Murphy

UP NEXT: The play by Tony Kushner ANGELS IN AMERICA: MILLENNIUM APPROACHES at Shea’s Smith Theater, March 8 – 24 also MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET at Shea’s 710 Theater, March 14 – 31, and then RENT March 26 – 31.

*HERD OF BUFFALO (Notes on the Rating System)

ONE BUFFALO: This means trouble. A dreadful play, a highly flawed production, or both. Unless there is some really compelling reason for you to attend (i.e. you are the parent of someone who is in it), give this show a wide berth.

TWO BUFFALOS: Passable, but no great shakes. Either the production is pretty far off base, or the play itself is problematic. Unless you are the sort of person who’s happy just going to the theater, you might look around for something else.

THREE BUFFALOS: I still have my issues, but this is a pretty darn good night at the theater. If you don’t go in with huge expectations, you will probably be pleased.

FOUR BUFFALOS: Both the production and the play are of high caliber. If the genre/content are up your alley, I would make a real effort to attend.

FIVE BUFFALOS: Truly superb–a rare rating. Comedies that leave you weak with laughter, dramas that really touch the heart. Provided that this is the kind of show you like, you’d be a fool to miss it!

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