Lost in the Stars: A Timeless Work that Speaks to All

United StatesUnited States Kurt Weill, Maxwell Anderson, Lost in the Stars: Artists and Soloists of Siti Company, Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers, Los Robles Master Chorale, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra/Jeffrey Kahane (conductor), Royce Hall, Los Angeles, 29.1.2017. (JRo) 

Justin Hopkins & Lauren Michelle in Lost in the Stars;  Photo credit: Reed Hutchinson.
Justin Hopkins & Lauren Michelle in Lost in the Stars;
Photo credit: Reed Hutchinson.

Principal Singers:
Linda – Meloney Collins
Stephen Kumalo – Justin Hopkins
Irina – Lauren Michelle
Chorus Leader – Issachah Savage
Alex – Joel Baptiste Muepo

Actors:
Zuri Adele, Will Bond, Larry Powell, Samuel Sticklen, Stephen Duff Webber

Production:
Director – Anne Bogart
Costume Design – Nephelie Andonyadis
Lighting and Scenic Design – Brian H Scott
Choreography – David Roussève

When a politically powerful work of art performed by world-class artists takes the stage before an audience hungering for substance and truth, the results are electric. Without doubt, UCLA’s Royce Hall was an important place to be on Sunday evening. Those in attendance were treated to an emotional rollercoaster of profound implications. Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson’s Lost in the Stars, based on Alan Patton’s great anti-apartheid novel, Cry, the Beloved Country, speaks to issues of racism in South Africa but travels across time and space, landing, like a gift, to audiences in LA now. One can only hope it travels further, perhaps as far as Trump Tower.

Produced for the Broadway stage in 1949, the show can be accurately described as a singspiel, combining non-singing actors and operatic singers. It ran for over 300 performances but never traveled the country: the tour was cancelled in protest when it was learned that the black cast would be banned from staying at the same hotels as the white cast. Weill was a man who lived by his principals, and we are the beneficiaries of his vision.

That vision is evident in all his works, as are his prodigious musical gifts. The cast and orchestra did justice to Weill, from the exquisite rendering of his score by LACO under the baton of Jeffrey Kahane, whose dream it was to present this piece; to the principal singers whose devotion to and interpretation of the material was of the highest quality.  Add to that the marvelous chorus and the consummate actors whose gravitas and stage presence grounded the piece, and you have a gripping evening of drama and song.

Lost in the Stars incorporates gospel, African American spirituals, blues and Broadway show tunes to tell the tale of a black minister, Stephen Kumalo, who leaves his South African village for Johannesburg in search of his son, Absalom. He discovers his boy in prison, accused of killing a white man – an act foolishly executed out of social and financial distress. Absalom refuses to plead not guilty to the charge, acknowledging that the accidental murder happened as a result of a botched robbery attempt. While his accomplices go free by lying, Absalom insists on telling the truth. We see all too clearly the desperation of the black man in a country where white rule is harshly imposed and opportunities are nonexistent.

The play was performed on an empty stage with chairs and curtains as the only props; the principals and chorus were awash in pale clothing. It was more than enough to convey the setting. Choreography was cleverly handled, from the sensual gyrations of Linda in the saloon to the mass movement of the chorus at the train station.

Lauren Michelle, who played Irina, starred in a 2016 Washington National Opera production of Lost in the Stars and reprised the role in Los Angeles. As the heartbroken and pregnant lover of the condemned Absalom, she poignantly portrayed the all-too-common victim of an indifferent society, making us feel the depth of her sorrow in the songs ‘Trouble Man’ and the gorgeous ‘Stay Well’.

Stephen Kumalo, performed by bass-baritone Justin Hopkins, is the dramatic anchor of the tragedy, and it is mainly through his eyes that we view the unjust world of apartheid. In a compelling performance, Hopkins sang majestically, capturing the pain and pathos of a loving father, concerned husband and religious leader of his community. He sang the evocative number ‘Lost in the Stars’ with tenderness, then delivered an anguished climax in ‘O Tixo, Tixo, Help Me!’

Issachah Savage as the Chorus Leader was beautifully cast. His voice resonated with clarity and power, leading, among many songs, the chorus in ‘Last Train to Johannesburg’ with the chilling refrain, ‘White man goes to Johannesburg, he comes back; black man goes to Johannesburg, never comes back’.

The chorus was exhilarating from first to last, and the principal actors were moving and spirited in their portrayals, particularly Will Bond as James Jarvis and Samuel Stricklen as Absalom.

Weill, Anderson and the original director, Rouben Mamoulian, understood the mechanics of drama and didn’t neglect to insert some lighter notes in the tragedy. Delivering the cleverly sexy ‘Who’ll Buy?’, Meloney Collins as Linda lit up the audience with her full-voiced, sensual number. And nine-year-old Joel Baptiste Muepo, having the time of his life, conquered the stage with ‘Big Mole’, a respite from the heartbreak.

If you can find a production of Lost in the Stars, run to see it. If you can’t, buy the CD, and if you have the interest, beg Jeffrey Kahane and Anne Bogart to take it on the road: the time is ripe.

Jane Rosenberg

1 thought on “<i>Lost in the Stars</i>: A Timeless Work that Speaks to All”

Leave a Comment