DC Theater Arts Review: SEUSSICAL

Keegan Theatre Hatches an Egg-sellent SEUSSICAL

There’s no way you can take your eyes off Keegan Theatre’s production of Seussical: The Musical. Josh Sticklin’s colorful, multilevel playground of a set and a wild variety of costumes by Alison Samantha Johnson and Janine Sunday are sure-fire attention grabbers. Not even the youngest members of the audience could fail to remain engaged by the unstinting energy of the ensemble, performing one aerobically challenging dance number after another.

Taking their material principally from three Dr. Seuss stories, Horton Hatches an Egg (1940), Horton Hears a Who (1954), and Gertrude McFuzz (1958), Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens created a plotline involving Horton (Keegan regular Michael Innocenti), an empathetic elephant, Gertrude (Sarah Chapin), an insecure but loving bird who becomes his romantic interest, and the inhabitants of Whoville, a microscopic planet that Horton discovers floating on a speck of dust. The Who are not on (stage) first, however; that distinction belongs to an initially unnamed child (Kailyn Fetterman) who calls forth a favorite Seuss creation, The Cat in the Hat, played by Quincy Vicks as a charismatic, loose-limbed narrator/dancer/vaudevillian.

Horton, ever compassionate and steadfast, … takes on two difficult tasks. Having found Whoville, he must protect its people. “A person is a person, no matter how small,” he says and sings repeatedly, expressing the story’s central theme. This is a tough sell to other denizens of the Jungle of Nool, particularly the Wickersham brothers (Stephen Russell Murray, Christian Montgomery, and Jimmy Bartlebaugh), monkeys who abduct the clover on which Horton has deposited Whoville, sending Horton on a lengthy quest to retrieve his minuscule friends.

In co-directors/choreographers Kurt Boehm and Ashleigh King’s concept of the characters, the Wickershams are more than bad boys up to hijinks; they appear intentionally cruel. Like everyone in the cast, their vocals and movement are first-rate. Among the other skeptics is the Sour Kangaroo (Tori Gomez), who in a dynamic belt role makes clear her disdain for what seems to her to be Horton’s well-meaning nonsense.

Horton’s second task is to sit on a large egg, laid by Mayzie, a party girl bird who has no interest in parenthood. In another striking belt role, Caroline Graham, in “Amayzing Mazie,” assisted by Bird Girls Carianmax Benitez, Sally Imbriano, and Link, shows that this is one bird who knows how to shake her tail feathers. Mayzie’s bright pink outfit and the rainbow colors of her backup trio are another win for the show’s costume design.

The character given the most varied vocal palate is Gertrude, who has moments of belt, lyricism, and even patter. She also has the most interesting character arc in the show, transitioning from a bird who — for having only a single tail feather — feels unattractive, then gains an excess of tail feathers that prove unmanageable, and finally settles into a more secure sense of herself as she and Horton come together by show’s end. Sarah Chapin handles all aspects of the role delightfully.

The original Broadway version of Seussical, a full-length two-act musical, famously failed both artistically and financially. As a tightly constructed one-act, this version gets across the themes that animate Dr. Seuss’s work in a format that not only avoids excess but is of a length that does not too strenuously test the attention spans of children in the audience. As Horton might say, a play is a play, no matter how small.

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