PIPPIN
(REVIVAL)
From Wikopedia
The play begins with a Leading
Player of a troupe and
the accompanying actors in various costume pieces of several
different time periods, establishing the play's intentionally anachronistic, defamiliarized, unconventional feel.
Channeling the style of Bertolt Brecht, Hirson breaks thefourth wall, and the Leading Player and his
troupe speak directly to the audience.
They invite members of the crowd to join them in a story about a boy prince
searching for fulfillment ("Magic to Do"). They reveal that the boy
who is to play the title character is a new actor. Pippin tells the scholars of his dreams to find where he belongs
("Corner of the Sky"), and they happily applaud Pippin on his
ambitious quest for an extraordinary life. Pippin then returns home to the
castle and estate of Charlemagne (King
Charles), his father. Charles and Pippin don't get a chance to communicate
often, as they are interrupted by nobles, soldiers,
and courtiers vying for Charles' attention
("Welcome Home"), and Charles is clearly uncomfortable speaking with
his educated son or expressing any loving emotions. Pippin also meets up with
his stepmotherFastrada, and her dim-witted son Lewis. Charles and Lewis are planning on going
into battle against the Visigoths soon, and Pippin begs Charles to take
him along so as to prove himself. Charles reluctantly agrees and proceeds to
explain a battle plan to his men ("War is a Science").
Once in
battle, the Leading Player re-enters to lead the troupe in a mock battle using top hats, canes, and fancy jazz as to glorify warfare andviolence ("Glory"). Fosse's famous
"Manson Trio" is performed by the Leading Player and his two lead
dancers in the middle of this number. This charade of
war does not appeal to Pippin, and the boy flees into the countryside. The
Leading Player tells the audience of Pippin's travel through the country, until
he stops at his exiled grandmother's estate ("Simple
Joys"). There, Berthe (his grandmother, and Charles's mother, exiled by
Fastrada) tells Pippin not to be so serious and to live a little ("No Time
At All"). She sings, "Oh, it's time to start livin'. Time to take a
little from this world we're given. Time to take time, cause spring will turn
to fall in just no time at all." Pippin takes this advice and decides to
search for something a bit more lighthearted ("With You"). While he
initially enjoys these meaningless sexual encounters, he soon discovers that
relationships without love leave you "empty and unfulfilled."
The
Leading Player then tells Pippin that perhaps he should fight tyranny,
and uses Charles as a perfect example of an unenlightened tyrant to fight.
Pippin plans a revolution, and Fastrada is delighted to hear
that perhaps Charles and Pippin will both perish so that her beloved Lewis can
become king. Fastrada arranges the murder of Charles, and Pippin falls victim
to her plot ("Spread a Little Sunshine"). While Charles is prayingat
Arles, Pippin murders him, and becomes the new king ("Morning Glow").
However, after petitions from the masses, Pippin realizes that
neither he nor his father could change society and had to act as tyrants. He
begs the Leading Player to bring his slain father back to life, and the Leading
Player does so. At this point in the currently licensed production, the Leading
Player then introduces Pippin to The Finale.
Pippin is
left without direction until the Leading Player inspires him ("On the
Right Track"). After experimenting with art and religion, he falls into
monumental despair and collapses on the floor. Catherine finds him on the
street, and is attracted by the arch of his foot ("And There He Was")
and when Pippin comes to, she introduces herself to Pippin ("Kind of
Woman"), a widow, with a small boy, Theo. From the start, it is clear that
the Leading Player is concerned with Catherine's actual attraction to
Pippin—after all, she is but a player playing a part in his yet-to-be-unfolded
plan. At first, Pippin thinks himself above such boring manorial duties as
sweeping, repairs, and milking cows ("Extraordinary"), but eventually
he comforts Theo on the sickness and eventual death of his pet ("Prayer
for a Duck") and warms up to the lovely Catherine ("Love Song").
However, as time goes by, Pippin feels that he must leave the estate to
continue searching for his purpose. Catherine is heartbroken, and reflects on
him (much to the Leading Player's anger and surprise) ("I Guess I'll Miss
the Man").
All alone
on a stage, Pippin is surrounded by the Leading Player and the various troupe
members. They all suggest that Pippin complete the most perfect act ever: the
Finale. They tell Pippin to jump into a box of fire, light himself up, and
"become one with the flame." Pippin is reluctant at first, but slowly
loses resistance ("Finale"). He is stopped by his natural misgivings
and also by one actress from the troupe—the woman playing Catherine. Catherine
and her son Theo stand by Pippin and defy the script, the Leading Player, and
Fastrada. Pippin comes to the realization that the widow's home was the only
place where he was truly happy ("Magic Shows and Miracles")
"...I never came close my love". Having experimented with every
possible path to fulfillment, he feels humbled, and realizes that maybe the
most fulfilling road of all is a modest, ordinary life. He comes to the
conclusion that, while "settling down" may at times be mundane and
boring, "if [he's] never tied to anything, [he'll] never be free."
After removing the sets, lighting, makeup, and costumes from the stage (to no
success at dissuading Pippin), The Leading Player becomes furious and calls off
the show, telling the rest of the troupe and the orchestra to pack up and leave
Pippin, Catherine, and her son alone on an empty, dark and silent stage:
"You try singing without music, sweetheart!" Pippin realizes that he
has given up his extraordinary purpose for the simplest and most ordinary life
of all, and he is finally a happy man. Well, perhaps. When Catherine asks him
if he feels like a compromiser or a coward, he says no. But he does feel
"trapped," and that, so he says, "isn't too bad for the end of a
musical comedy."
Alternate
ending[edit]
Alternate
ending[edit]
Some
newer productions of Pippin have featured a slightly different
ending. After the troupe shuns Pippin for not performing the grand finale, and
he avers his contentment with a simple life with Catherine, Theo remains on
stage, and sings a verse of "Corner of the Sky", after which the
Leading Player and the troupe return onto the stage. The light on Theo becomes
brighter, and presumably, the cycle continues. Blackout. Current productions
vary between the two possible endings, though Schwartz himself has expressed
his preference for the newer ending.[4]Furthermore, the 2013 Broadway
revival uses the alternate ending.
No comments:
Post a Comment