Dartmouth Glee Club to Perform Leonard Bernstein鈥檚 鈥楥andide鈥�

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Ridiculous and sublime.

That鈥檚 how title character Evan Ross 鈥�13, describes the performance of Leonard Bernstein鈥檚 Candide.

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鈥淐andide鈥� will be performed in the Spaulding Auditorium at the Hopkins Center for the Arts on February 15 and 16.

Directed by Broadway veteran David Beach 鈥�86, with the Glee Club鈥檚 Louis Burkot conducting, will be staged in Spaulding Auditorium at the Hopkins Center for the Arts at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, February 15 and 16. The show is part of the Hop鈥檚 50th anniversary celebration.

The operetta in two acts, based on Voltaire鈥檚 1759 satire Candide, ou l鈥橭ptimisme, is a work in motion, tilting between theater of the absurd and transcendent opera and racing across the globe, fueled by Bernstein鈥檚 orchestration.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so funny, I can鈥檛 imagine someone sitting through this show and not laughing hysterically,鈥� Ross says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not really high culture because it鈥檚 really brash with the occasional moments of low-browness, but Bernstein鈥檚 music is so sublime. I think it could give someone who isn鈥檛 otherwise inclined a real appreciation for the mastery he composes with.鈥�

Beach returns to Dartmouth to direct 28 years after he performed in The Boys From Syracuse under Burkot鈥檚 direction. The Glee Club director says he thought of Beach immediately when he conceived of the show.

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Louis Burkot, director of the Dartmouth Glee Club, leads a 鈥淐andide鈥� rehearsal this week. (Photo by Gavin Huang 鈥�14)

Beach, whose recent Broadway performances include the role of Harry Bright in Mamma Mia! and as an original cast member of Urinetown, says he didn鈥檛 hesitate for a moment when Burkot reached out.

鈥淚 wrote back like it was a text message. I had an instant reply,鈥� Beach says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been amazing to have that connection to the past, with Louis asking me up and him still being here and things going so well.鈥�

The work has an illustrious history, evolving from the moment it was conceived. The libretto was written by Lillian Hellman in collaboration with Bernstein, but each staging rearranged and reordered the work, altered by the likes of John Latouche, Dorothy Parker, Stephen Sondheim, John Mauceri, and John Wells. All this and Bernstein鈥檚 orchestrations make Candide an exceptionally challenging piece, Burkot says.

鈥淏ernstein makes the audience feel at some points during the piece that he鈥檚 moved so completely away from the key where you started that you鈥檒l never find your way back鈥攂ut you do. The harmonies are very beautiful, but very difficult.鈥�

鈥淪ince I had a group of rising seniors this year that have been one of the strongest classes that I鈥檝e had, I thought they would be up to the task.鈥�

Burkot and Beach point out that this Candide offers a showcase of remarkable performances.

Amber Dewey 鈥�12, who stayed on a term after her graduation to work on the show, is exceptional as Cundegonde, Candide鈥檚 love interest, Burkot says. She performs some of the most difficult and lovely of Bernstein鈥檚 compositions beautifully, he says.

鈥淚 knew this was happening and I thought it would be a great opportunity for her to be here without the classroom burden, to be able to just focus on singing this, because it鈥檚 extremely challenging.鈥�

Another recent graduate, Tyler Putnam 鈥�09, 鈥渨ho is doing well in New York in opera and Broadway,鈥� returns to play Pangloss, the irrepressibly optimistic philosopher who shepherds the romp, Burkot says. 鈥淭he role that really needs some age, gravitas, is Pangloss. He鈥檚 only 26, but compared to 18- to 19-year-olds, that鈥檚 gravitas.鈥�

Zana Thaqi 鈥�13, who plays an old woman who is something of a mother to Cundegonde, says taking on a piece like Candide and working with Beach has been a remarkable experience.

鈥淒avid Beach is so hilarious and he makes everybody feel great and he鈥檚 also a person who gets things done. If something鈥檚 not happening, he鈥檒l be very comfortable with saying, 鈥極K, guys let鈥檚 do this,鈥� 鈥� Thaqi says.

Burkot says all the performances of the Glee Club members, not just the headliners, rise to the challenge of this show.

Hannah Perry 鈥�15, a member of the chorus, says working on Candide has forced her to challenge herself musically.

鈥淚 would compare my past experience to the clich茅 of easing myself into the water and learning how to swim when it comes to singing classical music. But then this term, starting with Candide, it was just diving right in.鈥�

For Beach, Candide is the best of all possible worlds.

鈥淚 think it is going to be so much fun to see,鈥� he says. 鈥淚 was in a lot of productions when I was an undergraduate where it was really interesting to work on, but it wasn鈥檛 very interesting to see.鈥�

鈥淚 wanted this to be both, and I think it is clear that it will be.鈥�

The performance is made possible in part by the William D. 1905 and Besse M. Blatner Fund No. 1, Bruce F. Bundy 1916 Memorial Fund, Isaacs Family Fund, Leo J. Malavasic 1942 Memorial Fund, David P. Smith 1935 Fund, Paul R. Zeller Glee Club Fund, and Friends of the Glee Club.

Bill Platt