Harris
Doran, Christeena Riggs & Herndon Lackey |
A good musical grabs us
at first listen. Ed Dixon's "Richard Cory," in
its premiere at the New York Musical Theater Festival, comes
off instead as the sort of subtly shaded chamber piece that
might attract a specialized audience with repeated hearings,
like a Bruckner symphony or a Britten opera.
It is admirably clear, even
transparent, both in its storytelling architecture and in
its inarguably fine execution by an exceptional cast of nine
under the director James Brennan. Mr. Dixon's through-composed
score seems to have absorbed the distant, dead-end perfectionism
of its title character all too well.
Based on the 1976 A.
R. Gurney play, itself an imaginative extrapolation of
Edwin Arlington Robinson's short poem from 1897, " Richard Cory" traces
the midlife disintegration of an impeccable gentleman lawyer
(Herndon Lackey) who feels stifled by high expectations,
and whose half-hearted stabs at change only baffle his
family and associates. He's a signature Gurney character,
in other words.
At its best, Mr. Dixon's piece
tenderly captures the nameless dissatisfaction of a man who
has everything but an acceptable outlet, or an understanding
ear, for his soul-shaking doubts. In a musical-theater world
besotted with the cheap irony of countless would-be "Urinetowns," Mr.
Dixon's earnest effort, with its stately chorales and well-drawn
trios, stands out.
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