My Fair Lady (musical) at Kauffman Center, Kansas City MO Feb 7-12, 2023 (review)

MY FAIR LADY Tour Dates

AMES, IA Feb 13 STEPHENS AUDITORIUM
MIDLAND/ODESSA, TX Feb 15 WAGNER NOEL PERF. ARTS
PALM DESERT, CA Feb 17 – Feb 19 MCCALLUM THEATRE
SAN JOSE, CA Feb 21 – Feb 26 SAN JOSE CPA
PORTLAND, OR Feb 28 – Mar 5 KELLER AUDITORIUM
DAVENPORT, IA Mar 8 ADLER THEATRE (RIVERCENTER)
SIOUX FALLS, SD Mar 10 – Mar 11 WASHINGTON PAVILLION
LIMA, OH Mar 13 VETERAN’S MEMORIAL CIVIC CENTER
AKRON, OH Mar 14 – Mar 15 EJ THOMAS HALL
LEXINGTON, KY Mar 17 – Mar 19 LEXINGTON OPERA HOUSE
SAINT PAUL, MN Mar 21 – Mar 25 ORDWAY CENTER
MIAMI, FL Mar 28 – Apr 2 ADRIENNE ARSCHT CENTER 
GAINESVILLE, FL Apr 3 PHILLIPS CENTER FOR THE PA
WASHINGTON, DC Apr 6 – Apr 9 THE NATIONAL THEATER
GRAND RAPIDS, MI Apr 11 – Apr 16 DEVOS HALL
BOSTON, MA Apr 18 – Apr 30 CITIZENS BANK OPERA HOUSE
UTICA, NY May 1 – May 2 STANLEY THEATER PAC
READING, PA May 3 SANTANDER PAC
ROANOKE, VA May 4 ROANOKE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER
WILMINGTON, NC May 6 – May 7 WILSON CENTER
ORLANDO, FL May 9 – May 14 DR. PHILIPS CENTER
SPRINGFIELD, MO May 16 – May 18 HAMMONS HALL (MSU)
LITTLE ROCK, AK May 19 – May 21 ROBINSON CENTER HALL
COLORADO SPRINGS, CO May 23 – May 25 PIKES PEAK CENTER

It’s all in the language

The importance of communication in general, and phonics in particular, is maybe no more highlighted than in the classic musical, My Fair Lady.

After a quarter-century away, the Lerner & Loewe version of this well-known story of “Cockney to Cultured” is enjoying a current revival, via the Lincoln Center Theater’s production (they also brought back The King & I and South Pacific) and director Bartlett Sher’s vision.

We were fortunate enough to catch opening night of their six-night run at the beautiful Kauffman Center for the Arts in downtown Kansas City.

My Fair Lady is a musical based on George Bernard Shaw‘s 1913 play Pygmalion, with a book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe. The story revolves around young Eliza Doolittle (played famously in previous incarnations by the likes of Julie Andrews and Audrey Hepburn) as a Cockney flower girl who takes speech lessons from Professor Henry Higgins (perhaps actor Rex Harrison’s best-known role) a respected phonetician, so that she may pass as a cultured and proper lady.  Despite his cynical disposition and difficulty relating to the opposite sex, Higgins finds himself attracted to her.

The musical’s initial 1956 Broadway production won six Tony Awards, including Best Musical and set a record for the longest run of any musical on Broadway (2,717 performances!) up to that time. Many revivals followed, and the 1964 film won the Academy Award for Best Picture.

The themes of the source material haven’t exactly aged well, in our current post-”Me Too movement” culture, with characters maybe once charming and endearing, now thought of differently; but it should all be taken in historical context (like a period-piece novel, film, or painting), as a reflection of the particular times it was initially composed.

And besides, the true strength of this musical are the songs themselves, familiar to almost everyone – “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “The Rain in Spain,” “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” and “On the Street Where You Live” (and as evidenced by the humming and whistling of them we heard in the halls at intermission- at the restroom, water fountain, and cocktail bar lines).

The touring company for My Fair Lady has been on the road for some time, and is very schooled by this point, in presenting a flowing and professional staging. Sets were shifted in a lively manner, cues and prompts were hit, and the orchestra (mostly hidden in the front pit) was well-rehearsed and nicely mixed. A word of warning that the Cockney accents are strong and sometimes indecipherable (especially at the beginning), but as ears acclimate and the story continues, it becomes less of an issue.

Related, this version is a straight-ahead and traditional telling of the tale- no modernization, no American accents, or changes in setting, which preserves its source origins, but can also lack any potential surprises.

Lead Madeline Powell (as the scrappy young Doolittle) is on her first national tour and has found an ideal showcase for her vocal versatility, which stretches from a raspy Cockney drawl to operatic-height solo songs. Jonathan Grunert as Prof Higgins portrays an accurate blend of ego, steadfastness, reserve, and self-absorption and cohort John Adkison as wingman Col. Pickering displays similar, but with more lightheartedness and whimsy.

If you haven’t returned to the theater since our collective isolation years, perhaps the path back to again witnessing the unique language that can only happen on a live stage, is with a classic and traditional musical- familiar in its themes and songs, warm like a comfortable bowl of English stew. My Fair Lady is that musical.

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(My Fair Lady is playing at the Kauffman Center through Sunday, February 12)

(all photos courtesy of the official touring company website, click on any image to enlarge and see in full)

MY FAIR LADY

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