Joy and Less Joy In the Theater Scene

    It’s a joy, this musical about kids and other people striving for attention, respect and a place in the world. “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Beeâ€� at TriArts’ Sharon Playhouse doesn’t occupy your thoughts for days after, or leave you humming  William Finn’s mostly tinkly tunes (with one notable exception) but it’s funny, inspired now and then, and, well, piercing.

   Six kids, played by adults, air their quirks. First there’s William Barfée (Phillip Smith) with his draining sinuses, multiple allergies and his magic foot that spells out words on the gym floor.

   Then Marcy Park (Yukiko Yamamoto),  perfect and pushy. At one point she knocks conductor Dan Koch aside and takes over the keyboard herself.

   And Logainne Schwartzandgrubenierre (Sarah Murdoch) who is saddled with two demanding fathers and both their names.

    Leaf Coneybear (Charles Franklin) makes his own clothes, and believes he can’t spell. Chip Tolentino (Cailan Robinson) falls  victim to his raging hormones and, finally,  the character that gives this play its soul — Olive (Chloe Golden) who saves places in the audience for her parents in case they show up.

   All of these contenders know that everyone loves a winner. That means no one loves a loser. And all any of them wants is to be loved. For what they are.

   The show is slick, fast, clever and Olive singing “The I Love You Songâ€� in an imagined sequence with her parents just before spelling “chimericalâ€� is heartbreaking.

   In the end, of course, there is just one winner. But there are no losers, either.

   And the volunteer spellers from the audience  win a little time in the spotlight, too, something everyone wants now and then.

   “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,â€�written by William Finn and Rachel Sheinkin and directed by Andrew Volkoff, runs at the Sharon Playhouse through July 25. For tickets, call 860-364-7469.

Less of a joy is “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodieâ€� at The Sherman Playhouse. This odd tale from a story by Muriel Spark has been very successful as a play, and as a movie, too.  And the idea is appealing.

   A forceful, creative independent woman brings life and art to a dreary Scottish school. She creates a merry band of Brodies who worship and emulate her.

   That is because Miss Brodie is fond of  challenging authority, moral codes and the stuffy, boring business of education. She takes her charges to tea in a meadow where they read Tennyson’s  “The Lady of Shalottâ€� with a male music instructor in attendance. Much more interesting than grinding out multiplication tables in the classroom.

   Things get murkier as she tries to maneuver one of her girls into the art instructor’s bed.

   They get murkier still as Brody takes a shine to fascism and encourages one of her girls to go fight in Spain where the hapless young lady gets killed when her train is bombed.

   And then there is director Jane Farnol’s decision to introduce brogue-speak.

   A mistake. A struggle all the way for both audience and actors.

   Noel Desiato, an otherwise skillful performer, seems more reckless here as Miss Brodie than liberated, more desperate than inspired.

   The single star in all this is Katherine Almquist as Miss Mackay, the headmistress. She is a lovely actress who knows how to hold her fire. Until the right moment.

   “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodieâ€� runs at The Sherman Playhouse through July 31. For tickets, call 860-354-3622

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