Having first been announced Disney and Cameron Mackintosh’s Mary Poppins as an intended part of their 2020 season, Nashville Repertory Theatre’s Mary Poppins, as directed by Micah-Shane Brewer, made its debut last week on April 28 to a near-sold out crowd at TPAC’s Polk Theatre, featuring some of the Nashville theatre community’s most-beloved actors, as well as a few newer faces. Unable to attend opening night, but it being one of my favorite shows, I was thrilled to catch the show during its second evening performance.
While the literary world was first introduced to self-professed practically perfect nanny Mary Poppins in author P. L. Travers‘ 1934 children’s book of the same name, as well as seven subsequent sequels through 1988, it’s likely Julie Andrews‘ iconic portrayal in Disney’s 1964 film that most think of when they hear the name. In 2004, the theatrical division of Disney, who had already enjoyed success by adapting both Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King for the Broadway stage, did the same for Mary Poppins. With Book by Julian Fellows (yes, that Julian Fellows, of Downton Abbey and The Gilded Age fame) and additional music and lyrics by George Stiles and Anthony Drewe, added to original music featured in the Disney film by Richard and Robert Sherman, the creative team breathed new life into the magical world of Poppins, her jack-of-all-trades friend Bert and The Banks family who reside at No. 17 Cherry Tree Lane.
Upon entering the Polk Theatre last weekend, my eye immediately fixed upon the the scrim concealing the set, as the canvas curtain features the exterior of the familiar row of houses on Cherry Tree Lane. What struck me so what the illustration-like nature of the scene for it looks as if it might have somehow been rendered in pen and ink, not unlike the drawings by Mary Shepard that accompanied the original books by Travers when the stories were first published. According to the program, Scenery for Nashville Rep’s production of Mary Poppins has been provided by Music Theatre of Wichita and designed by J. David Branson. When the scrim rises, the interior set pieces of 13 Cherry Tree Lane continue to pay homage to Shepard’s illustrations with corners and shadows created by hashmarks and layering of color.
For Nashville Rep’s Mary Poppins, has cast Nashville Rep newcomer, Christine McNeal in the title role. Among McNeal’s theatrical credits, a solo show at 54 Below and an international tour as Daphne in Scooby Doo Live. Near the top of the show, upon decided for herself that she’ll be hired by The Banks family to take charge of their young children Jane and Michael, McNeal’s Mary Poppins extols her qualifications in Practically Perfect, the first of many gloriously infectious tunes; some new, some carried over from the Disney film as mentioned above. Under the direction of director Brewer, McNeal is playing the role with a hint more prudent sternness than I’ve seen in the past. The children seem to have a genuine respect for her as their Nanny. That said, McNeal also finds interesting layers in the often single-dimensional character perhaps taking to heart the lyrics from A Spoonful of Sugar, “In ever job that must be done, there is an element of fun. Find the fun and snap! The job’s a game”. McNeal gets the job of portraying Mary Poppins done, but again, to borrow a lyrical phrase…”in the most delightful way”.
The aforementioned Banks family comes to life by way of Geoff Davin as Mr. George Banks, Natalie Rankin as Mrs. Banks and two sets of young actors alternating the roles of the Banks’ offspring and Mary Poppins’ charges, Michael and Jane Banks. At various performances, Jackson Benfield & Danny Davis play Michael, while Mia Blaise Campbell and Sarah Hedrick alternate duties as Jane. The night I saw the show, the children were played by Benfield and Campbell.
Davin as Mr. Banks, has the daunting task of being the family’s business-minded task master. A role he plays to the hilt, balancing a seemingly stern exterior with the deeper love and first priority of his family’s success and happiness. The softer side of Mr. Banks is revealed in Act 1’s lighthearted Cherry Tree Lane and the thoughtful A Man Has Dreams. The latter of which gets a reprise near the end of Act 2. Interestingly, Mr. Banks’ more self deprecating number, Good for Nothing which is in some stage versions that I’ve seen in the past, was absent from this production.
Rankin is fabulous as Banks’ loving wife with a mind of her own. She hold’s her on as wife, mother and lady of the house with an undeniable feistiness. Musically, Rankin’s high point as Winifred Banks comes in the sentimental but telling, Being Mrs. Banks.
As Jane and Michael, Benfield and Campbell light up every scene they’re in, as I’m sure their cohorts do during their alternate appearances. Their interaction with McNeal’s Mary Poppins and the rest of the cast is truly blissful. I particularly enjoyed Benfield and Campbell’s mischievousness regarding their behavior around Gavin’s Mr. Banks. They also seem to genuinely be having a blast as Michael and Jane during many of the show’s familiar moments with Mary and Bert.
Speaking of Bert, the man of many occupations who’s got the inside track on Mary Poppins. Also making his Nashville Rep debut, Jeremy Benton is happiness personified. Having first seen Benton in the National Tour of Broadway’s Anything Goes, then again in the tour of White Christmas, I’ve known for a while the Tennessee native is an accomplished singer/dancer/actor…a true triple threat. Benton is front and center in many of the evening’s breathtaking dance sequences, as well he should be. Having seen several iterations of the show, both on Broadway, on tour and regional, I was curious if Nashville Rep would present the full Step in Time experience where Bert magically walks up the wall of the proscenium, then proceeds to perform a tap-tastic upside down dance across the ceiling. Indeed they did and Benton is not only gravity-defying, he does this with excitement, energy and an obvious abundance of joy. Y’all! It’s truly one of the most spectacular theatrical moments I’ve ever been witness to in my life. I think because it happens in a theatrical company I have grown to love and being performed by a talent I’ve come to truly admire and consider one of my theatre crushes, just makes it all the more special.
Christine Zimmerman’s choreography crushes it with her faithful nod to original choreography featured in the Broadway show. An Associate Professor of Dance at Ball State, Mary Poppins also marks Zimmerman’s first Nashville Rep show. Yup. She’ll be back.
Special mention has to be made of Katie Bruno, Jonah M. Jackson and Dennis R. Elkins. Bruno and Jackson play The Banks Family’s house staff, Mrs. Brill and Robertson Ay, respectively. These two obviously feed off each other perfectly giving the audience some of the show’s best snark and silliest slapstick physical comedy moments. I always think of character actresses like Mary Wickes and Hermione Baddeley when I see Bruno in a supporting comedic role. Interestingly, both Wickes and Baddeley themselves have ties to Poppins. Wickes played the lead in a 1949 TV adaptation, while Baddeley played the maid in the Disney film. Jackson goes all in for laughs, pratfalls and all leading into and out of one of the show’s most popular numbers, A Spoonful of Sugar.
As for Elkins, who plays Admiral Boom, the Park Keeper and the Bank Chairman, where has this treasure of a character actor been? According to his bio, he’s got more than two decades of theatre experiences in Tennessee, Georgia and Colorado and is currently working with Encore Theatrical Company in Morristown, but I’ve a feeling now that Nashville Rep has featured him in this myriad of charming character roles, each of which he plays to the hilt, Nashville audiences will surely see more of him.
Then there’s the magical unicorn of a talent, Jennifer Whitcomb-Oliva. Whitcomb-Oliva pulls triple-duty in Mary Poppins appearing first near the end of Act 1 as Mrs. Corry, then briefly as the Statue of Queen Victoria, and finally as Miss Andrew, George Banks’ own Nanny, three characters created and expended when the musical was adapted for the stage. When Mary takes the children on a walk in the park, they encounter Mrs. Corry, who runs the Talking Shop, a place to buy conversations and gingerbread stars. What? What else pairs well with letters of the alphabet for sale? Come on, it’s Mary Poppins, just go with it. That leads to an all-in moment and another familiar tune, Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. With a brightly colored costume and wonderfully whacky wig for Whitcomb-Oliva it’s another moment in the show I dare anyone who sees it to try not to sing and clap along. On that note, as my friend, Bryce and I were walking into the lobby, I ran into Nashville Rep’s Executive Director, Drew Ogle. As we chatted, he mentioned that opening night he, and the cast were surprised when the audience randomly, unanimously erupted into syncopated applause during a couple of the numbers. I guess they’re used to it by now, because the same spontaneous magic happened the night I attended.
While Whitcomb-Oliva’s Mrs. Corry is a hand-clapping delight, it’s her more playfully sinister turn as the strict Miss Andrew that’s simply marvelous. As the darkly-dressed villainous Miss Andrew, complete with a Jane Russell-esque swirl of gray among her severely styled raven-colored wig, Whitcomb-Oliva revels in the role during the lyrically frightful Brimstone and Treacle near the top of Act 2 and again during a good vs. evil mashup of Brimstone and Spoonful with McNeal’s Mary Poppins towards the end of the show.
Speaking of that moment, the larger than life birdcage that (Spoiler Alert!) soon houses Miss Andrew, features a giant version of Mary Poppins’ parrot umbrella topper, complete with winking eye. Gorgeous!
I can’t review Nashville Rep’s Mary Poppins without special mention of Denise Hicks. Hicks, a legend among the Nashville theatre community, plays not only Miss Lark, the puppy-carrying neighbor to the Banks family, but she’s also featured as the Bird Woman, the elderly lady who sells bird seed for “tuppence a bag”. Knowing Hicks was cast in the role, as Bryce and I settled into our seats, I leaned over and told him to avert his glance away from me during the heart-wrenching moment when Hicks’ Bird Woman sings Feed the Birds, and as certain as Mary Poppins comes in on the east wind, when Feed the Birds happened, I was once again thankful that masks are still being required in the theatre because my eyes began to sweat as I sobbed uncontrollably.
As for the technical aspects of the show, musical director and conductor,Randy Craft and the in-house orchestra, Nate Stasser, Ming Aldrich-Gan, Michael Meadows, Brad Williamson, Melodie Chase, Harry Ditzel, Michelle McClary, Robbie Shankle, Matthew Davich, Garen Webb and Casey Brefka do a tremendous job bringing music—familiar and new—to life.
Sound designer Tanner Roman and Lighting designer Mike Wood and every single person involved in this production deserves high praise for the stunningly beautiful job they’ve done. In particular, Nashville Rep’s resident costume goddess, Lori Gann-Smith and her incredible team, who according to a recent behind-the-scenes post on The Rep’s socials, reveals they constructed a mind-boggling 80 pieces for the show. From Mary Poppins’ signature blue topcoat, flower-festooned black straw hat and ever-present parrot umbrella to her iconic white with red accented Jolly Holiday dress and from Bert’s chimney sweep tattered clothing to his white and red striped jacket and bright white pants park attire and everything in between it’s all there and looking lovelier than ever.
There’s a line in Anything Thing Can Happen, the show’s final number that says, “If you reach for the heavens you get the stars thrown in”. Nashville Rep’s Mary Poppins has certainly done both, reached for and attained heavenly musical theatre status and the show’ is certainly chocked full of stars!
Mary Poppins continues through May 8 at TPAC‘s Polk Theatre. CLICK HERE to purchase tickets or for more information. In case you missed it, CLICK HERE to check out my recent Rapid Fire 20Q when I got the chance last week to chat with Mary Poppins’ stars Christine McNeal, Jeremy Benton, Geoff Davin and Natalie Rankin.
While Mary Poppins marks the end of Nashville Rep’s current season, they’ll be back with their 22-23 Season in the fall starting with RENT September 16-25, The Cake October 21-30, Elf: The Musical December 21-January 1, August Wilson’s Fences March 3-5, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time March 24-April 2 and Violet May 12-21. Season Tickets just went on sale earlier this week. CLICK HERE to purchase Season Tickets or for more info. Check out Nashville Rep online HERE and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram.
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