Not Exactly Current, But Witty, Sweet

It took maybe two minutes to see why “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change” ran for 5,003 performances Off-Broadway. It’s witty and sweet, the music is fine, the singing and acting are spot-on and even though this 1990s musical deals with dated, mostly urban, East Coast romances, it works because its sit-com tales and chirpy attitudes insist that love is the great leveler. Not death, not pain. Not those other bad things. The performers in this Goshen Players production are adorable. Of course, there are no gay or online or tragic or sly alliances here. From the opening “Cantata for a First Date” to the “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change” finale 20 numbers later, we get one familiar setup after another, opening with the nervy preparations for that first date. It is followed by “Not Tonight, I’m Busy,” in which the couple, played by Michael C. Accuosti and Sybil Haggard Chamberlin, decide at first meeting to bypass those first-date jitters and go directly to the second date. But then, why not skip the blind, desperate hope there and go straight to the third date where they would decide to have sex? Bypassing that, Michael and Sybil head immediately to their first fight precipitated by his slow response to her question, “Does this dress make me look fat?” Then there is “Tear Jerk” in which Accuosti, playing a leather-jacketed tough weeps without retraint during a sentimental movie his date, Kristine Donahue, picked. Jean Connor’s lush violin playing set it up admirably. We encounter the women who suffer boring men for a good dinner, and the new parents who torture an old friend with baby photos. When he walks out, the father, Chuck Stango, cries “Wait! I’ve got a sonogram.” We get jokes about married people actually having sex, about the husband liberated by his automobile (with the whole family scooting about the stage on wheeled chairs) and about a woman waiting for a date to call her. In a tremendously touching number Sybil sings “I will be loved Tonight,” in spite of her triumph beating Chuck at tennis. Of course divorce happens, and it hurts. Sybil likens that to “open heartsurgery without anesthesia.” But in the main, couples age and love together and it’s never too late to date as widow Lea Dmytryck learns when Charlie Gill picks her up at a funeral. Adroitly directed by Colleen Renzullo, “I Love You, . . .” is entertaining and very often touching. “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change” runs at the Goshen Old Town Hall through April 12. For tickets, Call 860-491-9988, or go to Goshenplayers.org.

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