Last weekend at Webster University, the production shone as brightly as the title event in Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812. The staging by the Sargent Conservatory of Theatre Arts was extraordinary.
The musical by Dave Malloy is based on the section of Tolstoy’s War and Peace in which the title characters’ lives first intersect. Natasha Rostova is an aristocratic young woman who is newly engaged to Andrey Bolkonsky. While he is off fighting in the war against Napoleon, she is spending the winter in Moscow with her godmother.
Pierre is an awkward, wealthy aristocrat who is searching for the meaning of his life. He is married to Hélène Bezukhova, who actively seeks romance outside her marriage. Her brother, Anatole Kuragin, is a libertine who turns Natasha’s head and leads her to ruin. Pierre gives hope to the traumatized Natasha in the wake of a scandal. In the process, he finds what he is looking for.
Malloy’s music and the blunt, snappy words are contemporary. The present-day idiom gives great immediacy to the emotions expressed in the songs. The Webster staging was rooted in the past, however, by the characters’ manners and bearing and by the splendid work of the design team. The production’s ability to harmonize its historical and modern elements was one of its great strengths.
Anabel Weiland’s costumes were socially aware and lavish when appropriate. Rebecca Mack’s wig and makeup designs included a wig with big white curls that cleverly turned a young actor into a comical old man. Pierre’s duel with pistols was excitingly choreographed by Jack Kalan.
At the center rear of Lily Tomasic’s scenic design was an imposing doorway at the rear of an elegant, flexible performance space. Spencer Roe-Weaver’s lighting and Katelyn Gillette’s sound added substantially to the ambience.
The show’s premiere was in an Off-Broadway theater that had been altered to look like a Russian supper club. Actors played some of the instruments, and the audience was immersed in the action. The Webster production retained some of the Off-Broadway staging’s immediacy by employing roving musicians who sometimes ventured into the aisles and the front row of seats. The score was irresistible under music director Tali Allen.
The sung-through show’s music and movement were at one in Michael Baxter’s masterly direction. Ellen Isom’s choreography fused astonishing energy with unwavering discipline. The big numbers were dazzling.
The cast was a superb company of singing actors. Every portrayal was finely characterized and totally committed. The performers were:
Daisy Held | Natasha Rostova |
Will Hancock | Pierre Bezukhov |
TJ Staten | Anatole Kuragin |
Elise Cogan | Marya Dmitriyevna |
Vera Brown | Sonya Rostova |
Remi Mark | Hélène Bezukhova |
Collin Milfort | Fedya Dolokhov |
Isaiah Henry | Andrey Bolkonsky / Old Prince Bolkonsky |
Parnassus Funk | Princess Mary Bolkonskaya / Maidservant / Natasha cover |
Drew Bates | Balaga / Various Servants / Pierre cover |
Crayton Haney | Reveler / Roving Accordion |
Otto Klemp | Reveler / Roving Clarinet |
Elijah Paruzynski | Reveler / Roving Guitar / Andrey and Bolkonsky cover |
Marilyn Wilson | Reveler / Roving Guitar |
Daniela Rodriguez | Reveler / Roving Violin / Sonya and Mary cover |
Aliyah Jacobs | Reveler / Roving Ukelele |
Mia Rose Perritt | Reveler / Marya Cover |
Lillian Cooper | Reveler |
Wylie Godleski | Reveler / Dolokhov Cover |
Reilly Jane Grace | Reveler |
Bryson Sands | Reveler |
Alex Daspit | Reveler / Anatole and Balaga cover |
At present Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 is available for licensing only by educational institutions and professional theatres. This restriction is understandable. The show is a huge undertaking. The brilliance of the Webster production is an enormous tribute to the students and the training at the Sargent Conservatory.
—Gerry Kowarsky
Photo by Phillip Hamer Photography
From the left, Will Hancock as Pierre and Daisy Held as Natasha.