An ‘Oklahoma!’ You Have Never Seen Before

Bard has a history of quirky theater: a sickly queen tethered to a medicinal drip; rivers of blood flowing down a ramp in a day of Greek tragedy; the course of a train running through, and below, the audience.

   Now director Daniel Fish brings to Bard’s annual Summerscape an “Oklahoma!” that treats audience members to chili and corn bread and leaves them stunned by a shocker of a finish.

   Within a theater inside a theater in the Fisher Center, this “Oklahoma!” is set in a community hall with gun racks on the walls and crock pots on tables where the audience is seated surrounding the stage. 

   The action begins with a marvelously vigorous Aunt Eller (Mary Testa) mixing up a batch of corn bread from boxes of Jiffy mix and Curly (Damon Daunno) singing “Oh What a Beautiful Mornin.’ ” 

   

   The band, outfitted in jeans and checked shirts, joins in and “The sounds of the earth are like music,” Curly tells us. 

   He’s looking to take Laurey to the community picnic that evening. Laurey (Amber Gray), outfitted in cowboy boots and cornrows, twits him for asking so late and figures she will go, instead, with Jud Fry (Patrick Vaill), the scary hired man on the farm.

   This is no sunny, flirtatious Laurey. This is a conflicted woman, drawn to Jud because he frightens her and drawn to Curly because he beguiles her. These two get as close as humanly possible without touching in a very sexy moment. Her moves with Jud, though, are hasty, and chill.  

   There is, however, nothing conflicted or ambiguous about this delightful Ado Annie in her very short denim shorts (Allison Strong); she just can’t say no. And her suitor, Will Parker (James Patrick Davis), is having a tough time getting her to see things his way. Ado Annie dances on the dining tables, flirts with a wonderfully droll Ali Hakim (Benj Mirman) and dishes up the bright joyous side of this classic American musical.

   The music, of course, in this Rodgers and Hammerstein collaboration, their first, is beautiful. And the tempo is bright and speedy, a contrast to the scene in which Curly visits Jud to tell him how popular he would be as a dead man. The two meet in the center of a totally dark stage and their faces, visible up close on monitors at either end of the hall,  are grim. This is a wicked Curly and a yearning, frightened, heartsick Jud.

   And, though change is in the air  and statehood is coming, the scene is set right here for that other aspect of American life: a  final and violent piece of frontier justice.

 

   “Oklahoma” runs at Bard College’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts through July 19. For tickets, call 845-758-7900 or go to fishercenter.bard.edu.

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