By John Orr 1997
When the San José Repertory Theatre decided to
open its brand new building with a blues musical,
"Thunder Knocking on the Door'' by Keith
Glover, director Timothy Near did a really smart
thing:
She hired the great Chris Cain to
lead the band, and to write new music for the
musical.
Imagine that: Capturing a real, live blues guy
and bringing him back alive to put him on stage
in a musical.
I am a big fan of Cain, respect his musicianship
greatly, and have seen him live many, many times,
in blues clubs and on festival stages.
But how would he do in the constraints of a big
musical, where he's in the band, but it's not his
show? Where he has to do the same things, night
after night?
Well, I wondered, so coughed up the bucks to buy
a couple of tickets, and made a phone call or two
to arrange taking a picture of him on stage,
after the show, and chat with him a bit.
To cut to the coda, Cain was great. He
fronted a band that included Joe Hodge on drums,
Mel Nelson on keyboards and Ron Johnson on bass.
Those four guys together would make for a great
blues set anywhere, anytime.
And, the five principals of the cast were all
good singers. They all had at least a few great
moments each, and a couple of them -- Natalie
Venetia Belcon as Glory Dupree, and Yvette Cason
as Good Sister Dupree -- were good as gold
vocally all through the show.
Cason,
left, and Belcon. San José Rep photograph. Click on
it to see larger version.
Lots of great singing, a couple of clunkers among
the tunes, but mostly excellent musicianship
going on at every level.
It was fun for me to listen to Cain and the band
playing the incidental music, the background
stuff, and recognize melodies from Cain's albums.
The weirdness of it, and the weakness of the
show, is that blues music is alive and dynamic --
ever been to a good show at a club or a festival
and get caught up in the music? It moves you with
power!
But this show didn't capitalize on the strength
and the power of the blues; it would get a little
something going, then wimp out in some way or
another.
Part of the problem is the affectionate but
lightweight script by Glover; part of it was
insipid direction by Near. All those fine
musicians up there, with too much silly stuff
between the great music.
It is possible to make a musical with
blues music and other black-influenced music of
the South and keep it alive and exciting -- look
how well Gershwin did with "Porgy and
Bess," for instance, and consider
"Gospel at Colonnus" (I can't remember
who put that together off hand) which managed to
blend gospel, blues and Greek tragedy and make
for a great show.
But, "Thunder" does not live up to that
promise.
And, one thing that grated for me was that
apparently no dialogue coach was hired. The play
is about superstitious black people in Alabama in
the early 1960s; all these actors -- Belcon,
Cason, and fellas Robert Barry Fleming, Nathan
Hinton and Harry Waters Jr. -- are black, but
they are all sophisticated, trained theater
actors, and that's what they sound like --
sophisticated actors. They don't sound anything
like the sort of people who'd go to great lengths
to deal with "shape-shifters" and
"devils" and "imps" and
people who "ain't human."
It was like listening to William F. Buckley
saying "I been knowing." Bad grammar
with perfect enunciation. Ha. That one error made
it impossible to feel anything consistent about
this show. Is it a comedy musical? Is it a
serious musical? Is it a revue? Is it just
lightweight puffery?
And, twice -- notably when Hinton, as Marvell
Thunder, was singing Willie Dixon's
"Hootchie-Cootchie Man," the music was
so softened and badly arranged that we kept
waiting for Pat Boone or Debbie Reynolds to step
out on stage and finish for him. My hope and
guess was that those two instances were the work
of Michael Butler and Near, not Cain. But, I
don't know.
But ... there were some other nice touches.
Fabulous choreography on a love dance between the
blind Glory Dupree and the sneaky Thunder ... and
... a sort of nice twist on the story of the
shape-shifter.
The plot is that Dregster Dupree (Waters) has
lost one of two special guitars to Thunder in a
cutting contest. The other guitar belongs to his
sister Glory. Thunder, who made some kind of deal
with some kind of poorly defined power, has to
win that guitar from Glory in a cutting contest,
or he will turn to stone.
This, of course, is another variation on the
"crossroads" myth that grew up around
Robert Johnson's song of that title.
(It's interesting to me that so much slick
nonsense has been made of that myth, powered no
doubt by the success of the Cream version of that
song. That goofy movie starring Ralph Macchio,
for instance [which at least made a paycheck for
Ry Cooder, who did the actual playing], and now
this goofy musical.
The other day I got to visit with John Lee Hooker
[to take him some cookies for Christmas], who
grew up in deepest Mississippi, and I asked him
if he ever heard any of that crossroads stuff
when he was a kid growing into a blues man, and
he said no, he'd never heard any of that stuff
until he came out to California. He said it
rather dismissively, I thought.)
The variation on that over-played myth that I
liked is that Thunder the shape-shifter gives
Glory back her eyesight before their cutting
contest. The deal is, if he beats her, he gets
the guitar and doesn't turn to stone, but she
goes blind again; if she wins, she keeps the
guitar and her eyesight, but he turns into the
Rock of Bluesalter (my joke).
But they fall in love.
That I liked. Does he turn to stone, or does she
go blind? Decisions, decisions!!
Hinton.
San José Rep photograph. Click on image to see
larger version, with Belcon in the background.
Another thing I liked is that Near and the Rep
didn't pretend anybody but Chris Cain was REALLY
playing guitar on that stage. The
"guitars" the actors carried are big,
convoluted things that look sort of like
elongated giant soft pretzels. They dance around
while Cain is in clear view, cutting the real
licks.
And his playing was magnificent -- which no
longer surprises me ... but, I wonder if people
who go to see this who are not blues buffs really
understand how GREAT his playing really is.
Cain got his share of ovations, which were well
deserved.
My main interest was Cain -- although it was a
pleasant surprise to hear the great singing from
the cast -- and my original intention was to
photograph him after the play, then return soon
to talk with him about the experience.
That didn't happen ... the holidays and lots of
other life stuff intruded for him and for me.
But I'm glad I saw the show. It's always a treat
to hear Chris Cain, and I certainly hope I get to
hear Belcon and Cason sing again sometime.
Maybe someday Cain and I will have a chance to
discuss his role in staging this musical. If so,
I will update this page.
Update: The
show closed in San Jose, and Chris Cain has been
playing blues dates around the nation and in the
Far East. For his itinerary, keep an eye on his web site.
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