A Fast, Fierce Friendship Plays a New Kind of Gospel Sound
By Lauren Yarger
Gospel legend Sister Rosetta Tharpe (Kecia Lewis), who was a big influence on the music of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles and Jerry Lee Lewis, commands the stage once again in Marie and Rosetta, George Brant’s delightful play with music presented Off-Broadway by Atlantic Theatre Company.
By Lauren Yarger
Gospel legend Sister Rosetta Tharpe (Kecia Lewis), who was a big influence on the music of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles and Jerry Lee Lewis, commands the stage once again in Marie and Rosetta, George Brant’s delightful play with music presented Off-Broadway by Atlantic Theatre Company.
We join Rosetta
and her protégée, Marie Knight (Rebecca Naomi Jones), as they reflect on how they met and teamed up to become one
of the greatest duets in musical history. Tharpe, the queen of “race
records” in the 1930s and ’40s, performed mornings at churches and evenings at
the Cotton Club. Her less-conservative-seeming faith and coarse language are at
first a challenge for Knight, who wonders whether Sister is “right with God.”
The two form a
fast and fierce friendship, however, and realize that only divine blessing
could make them sound as good as they do (the women sing and effectively appear
to play the guitar and piano under the direction of Neil
Pepe and the musical
direction of Jason
Michael Webb).
For Knight,
plucked by the star from a backup group where she never had a chance to try out
her voice, this is the start of a whole new career, even if it means leaving
her children behind to hit the road. For Tharpe, the young singer’s high voice
counters her own and the sound they make together could be her ticket back into
the hearts of the gospel music crowd with whom she fell out by trying to
interject rock and roll with the spiritual.
“You sing it for me,” Tharpe encourages as
Knight is too timid to lend her voice to the jazzed up hymns, “and I’ll church
it up for you,’ promising to curb her tendency to bend a
lyric or two. When she uses a bad word, she’s quick to apologize to her
companion -- and to God in a humorous ritual.
The women bond
over having been married unsuccessfully to preachers and by a need to follow
their music. That journey takes them to a number of places where singers of
color might be accepted on stage, but often are not in restaurants or lodging
houses. The meeting here takes place in a funeral home (with the action framed
in coffins by Scenic Designer Riccardo Hernández) where they have
been offered a place to lay their heads down to sleep, creepy as that thought
might be.
Brandt is a gifted storyteller and the 90
minutes without intermission are mesmerizing. I had never heard of this duo by
name, though I do know some of Tharpe’s music – “Down By the Riverside,” for
example. We immediately feel like we want to know these women better. Brandt
includes a satisfying twist in telling the story of how a woman who once was a
big enough celebrity to fill
a baseball stadium for her third wedding ended up forgotten and buried in an
unmarked grave. I felt grateful that Brandt has brought her back to life for us.
That thanks
includes powerhouse performances by Lewis (Mother
Courage) Jones (Hedwig and the
Angry Inch), even though Jones’ voice was sounding a bit strained. The
music is heavenly. I felt as though I had attended a worship service.
The limited engagement at the Linda Gross
Theater, 336 West 20th St., NYC, has been extended through Oct. 16, so see it while you
can. Performances are Tuesdays
at 7 pm; Wednesday through Saturday at 8 pm; Saturdays and Sundays at 2 pm. Tickets
are $76.50: atlantictheater.org.
Additional
credits:
Costume
Design by Dede Ayite, Lighting Design by Christopher Akerlind, Sound Design by Steve Canyon Kennedy
FAMILY-FRIENDLY
FACTORS:
-- a few minor language issues
-- a few minor language issues
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