There have been many dysfunctional families on
Broadway throughout the years, but none as charming and eccentric as the
Sycamore clan in the delightful revival of the 1936 comedy, You Can’t Take It With You. One of the great successes of the
playwrights George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, the show feels fresh and sprightly,
primarily because of the seasoned cast of comedic actors and the lively, buoyant
direction by Scott Ellis.
The idiosyncratic members of the Sycamore household
are a sight to behold. Martin
Vanderhof (James Earl Jones), grandfather and family patriarch, hasn’t worked
in 35 years or paid income tax, and has a fondness for attending college
commencement ceremonies. Penelope,
the mother (Kristine Nielsen). is a dreadful, unpublished playwright that began
her avocation eight years earlier after the accidental arrival of a typewriter
to the home. Paul, the father (Mark Linn-Baker)
builds fireworks in the basement along with Mr. DePinna, a former iceman who
made a delivery years earlier and never left. Daughter Essie (Annaleigh Ashford), is an appallingly
bad dancer who bounds around the living room all day long when not in the
kitchen making candy. Her husband
Ed (Will Brill) plays the xylophone when not indulging in his hobby of churning
out inflammatory leaflets on his printing press. Then there is the live-in maid, her boyfriend, the Russian
ballet instructor, an overly intoxicated actress, a Grand Duchess of Russia, and
daughter Alice (Rose Bryne), the only normal one of the clan. She and the boss’ son are in love, but
Alice is panicking about her beau Tony Kirby (Fran Kranz) meeting her offbeat
family. For us baby boomers think of
Marilyn Munster’s dilemma when she brought dates home to 1313 Mockingbird Lane. Add to the plot the disastrous meeting
of rich, staid Mr. and Mrs. Kirby and the Sycamore family as well as over eager
T-men and you have the essentials of You
Can’t Take It With You.
Playwrights Kaufman and Hart have written a
lightweight, but humorous, at times hilarious, comedy. The plot is almost secondary to the
nutty, screwball characters the writers have created. The authors also manage to sneak in some pot shots at the
rich, Wall Street, and United States governmental policies.
Director Scott Ellis has molded the large cast into a
smooth running production that is crisp and bustling with energy. The actors and actresses move about the
stage of the Longacre Theatre in perfect harmony, which is quite an
accomplishment with so many performers in motion at one time.
The entire cast is such a pleasure to watch. Their comic timing is pure theatrical
magic. While everyone deserves a
mention, let me put the spotlight on just a few. James Earl Jones is contemplative and sagely as the affable
and good-natured grandfather. Kristine
Nielsen is daffy, determined, and simply marvelous as Mrs. Sycamore. Annaleigh Ashford as the ungraceful
Essie delivers another comic gem of a performance. Her rendition of “The History of Wrong Men” from Kinky Boots was one of the best comedic
songs from a Broadway show in recent memory. Her dancing is so bad it’s good and her mannerisms, even the
most minute, are priceless. Rose
Byrne, better known for her film comedies, makes a sparkling Broadway debut as
the hapless Alice Sycamore. Julie Halston, who was so outrageously
funny in last season’s Off-Broadway, The
Tribute Artist, has a very small role as the inebriated actress Gay
Wellington. Yet, her moments on
stage are hysterical with no one telling the “Man From Nantucket” joke better.
David Rockwell’s scenic design of the interior of the
Sycamore home is as eccentric and outlandish as the family itself. The walls are chocked full of knick-knacks,
relics, and assorted tchotchkes.
It truly adds to the whimsical, quirky nature of the show.
You Can’t Take It With You, an entertaining diversion,
playing through January 4, 2015.
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