Steam and Heat at TriArts

Capitol and labor. That’s what Hines, an efficiency expert at Sleep Tite Pajamas, tells us this grand little musical is all about.

    Capitol and labor.

    OK.

    And men and women.

    And, oh yes, sex. But only the happiest, most wholesome, family-friendly, Midwestern kind. Just right for TriArts. The kind of sex that makes venerable ladies with blue hair laugh out loud and leaves 8-year-olds (and there are always 8-year-olds at TriArts matinees) alert but clueless.   

   Ten years ago or so TriArts produced “The Pajama Game†at the awesome open spaces of a warehouse in Pine Plains, NY.

   It was grand then.

   It is grand now.

   Well. Mostly grand. This production needs heavy pruning, and “The Pajama Game†is a show that works best when everyone knows how to dance. Still, it has great players (Michael Britt, Glenda Lauten, Matthew Naclerio, Johanne Kesten among them), terrific songs, some wonderful characters and, naturally, a happy ending in which everyone walks away from the bargaining table with a little something. The audience included.

   The curtain opens on the factory floor where women sew and men give orders.It’s 1954. Eisenhower is president. Communism is scary. And circle skirts with crinolines are the fashion. Even in Cedar Rapids.

   Enter Sid Sorokin, the new factory superintendent: ambitious, lonely, adorable, played with abundant steam heat by Scott Laska. Sid runs into Babe Williams, the grievance officer: ambitious, lonely, adorable, played like a pretty tough tomboy by Colleen Raney. And, Houston, we have ignition.

    Of course we have trouble, too. The workers want a 7 1/2-cent-an-hour raise. And greedy, mean Sleep Tite Pajamas owner Mr. Hasler (Wayne Riemer) refuses (although he has already built the raise into the cost of production). This conflict between capitol and labor messes up romance, naturally, but produces some wonderful songs like “Hey There,†in which Sid croons a memo into a dictaphone (what’s that? half the audience must have wondered, but e-mail just would not have worked) and then sings a duet with the machine. This is just plain grand.

   We have some good dance numbers like Steam Heat in which Gladys (exuberantly performed by Yvonne Campbell) makes us crazy about Bob Fosse all over again.

   And we have one of the jolliest declarations of love ever made in “There Once Was a Man,†performed  with grinding hips and high spirits by Babe and Sid.

   Just pare a few numbers from Act I, find some more good dancers and “The Pajama Game†at TriArts is the perfect summer musical.

   “The Pajama Game†runs at TriArts in Sharon, CT, through Aug. 19. For tickets, call 860-364-7469, or go to www.triarts.net. 

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