Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
Written with an embracing expansiveness by
Ms. Vogel (a Pulitzer Prize winner for “How I Learned to Drive”), and
featuring handsomely sung hymns and carols of the period, this unusual
holiday pageant represents an illuminating alternative to the often
garish or sentimental holiday fare foisted on theater audiences. Instead
of a stocking full of sugar-shock-inducing candy, the show offers some
real sustenance, even as it gently accentuates the spirit of hope and
good will that even professional Scrooges try to embrace as the year
winds down.
It’s a particularly chilly Christmas Eve in
Washington, and the chill does not derive only from the quickly
descending temperature. President Abraham Lincoln (Bob Stillman) has
recently won re-election, and preparations are under way for his second
inauguration. But the country is still riven by war, and troops on both
sides are hunkered down for a frigid night with little hope of lasting
peace ahead.
The spare wooden set, by James Schuette,
emphasizes the hardship faced by most of the characters, who include
Robert E. Lee (Sean Allan Krill) and his dog-tired, increasingly
disarrayed Confederate troops, and Ulysses S. Grant (Chris Henry) and
his only marginally better supplied Union combatants. One strand of the
plot follows attempts to secure a Christmas tree, a new fashion imported
from Germany. But there are no trees to be found; they have all been
cut down for fires to warm the troops.
Ms. Vogel has taken particular care to
salvage from the margins of history the experience of African-Americans.
The production’s ample cast of characters includes Decatur Bronson (K.
Todd Freeman), a composite figure inspired by two black soldiers who
were awarded the Medal of Honor for their service in the war.
Bronson has given up his charge of a
regiment of black soldiers to work as a blacksmith at a Union Army
supply depot. He is still tormented by the kidnapping of his wife by
Confederate soldiers fleeing the Gettysburg field of battle. Bronson has
determined that should he ever again find Confederate prisoners in his
power, he will seek vengeance by taking their lives.
Elizabeth Keckley
(Karen Kandel) was an actual figure: a slave who purchased her freedom,
using her gifts as a seamstress, and went on to dress the cream of
Washington society, including the first lady, Mary Todd Lincoln, played
by the musical theater veteran Alice Ripley.
(Their friendship also figures significantly in the current movie
“Lincoln.”) Like the first lady, who still wears mourning for the death
of one of her young sons, Elizabeth is haunted by loss: her beloved son
abandoned his college studies to join the Union Army, and was killed.
Visited by his ghost — “A Civil War
Christmas” is peopled by almost as many ghosts as “A Christmas Carol” —
she finds herself touched to the point of anguish when she learns that a
young African-American girl, Jessa (Sumaya Bouhbal), is wandering the
streets of the city on this frigid night. Jessa lost touch with her
mother, Hannah (Amber Iman), as they fled across the Potomac to find
freedom in Washington.
With a deftness that is surprising, given
the breadth of experience she has chosen to include in her panoramic
view of American society, Ms. Vogel links these stories together cleanly
and efficiently. There is a sense of poetry, too, in her suggestion
that the lives of Americans on both sides of the Civil War were so
deeply intertwined that, despite their differences and sometimes fierce
enmity, the country and its people share a united destiny: unseen
filaments tie together all the lives of the characters. Eventually the
angry Confederate boy who dreams of joining up with a band of marauding
raiders finds himself staring down Decatur Bronson’s gun barrel, praying
for his life.
The president’s journey through the story
is, like that of many of the characters, solitary. Finding he has left
his wife’s Christmas gifts at their summer home, he decides to escape
his minders — who have been apprised that assassins are lurking nearby —
on Christmas Eve and venture forth on horseback to retrieve them.
Free from the burden of his fractious
cabinet, and his emotionally unstable wife, he rides through the night
with a sense of happy freedom on his shoulders. Mr. Stillman’s austere,
dignified performance is enlivened by appealing touches of dry humor,
while Ms. Ripley’s Mary is depicted as both a nervous shopaholic and a
troubled but humane woman who visits wounded soldiers incognito.
Directed in brisk story-theater style by
Tina Landau, with minimal props and simple costumes used to move the
story quickly from one location to another, “A Civil War Christmas” is
rich in precise historical detail, but it never feels like a series of
talking dioramas in a history museum. Even the most quickly sketched
characters exude the warmth of real human beings, thanks to vivid
performances from the cast. (Children may particularly enjoy the brief
romance between a horse and a mule, amusingly conducted to the strains
of a seductive duet from “Don Giovanni.”)
And when the actors’ voices rise together in
song — in well-chosen spirituals, along with war songs, hymns and
carols like “Silent Night” and “O Christmas Tree” — there arises from
the dark history being told an ineffable sense of wonder at the survival
of faith and humanity even in hearts ravaged by loss.
“The hope of peace is sweeter than peace
itself,” one character remarks, an observation that speaks to the show’s
clear-eyed but compassionate view of history. A lasting peace may be
forever just over the horizon, but there is solace in our ability to
keep believing that it may one day come ambling along.
A Civil War Christmas
By Paula Vogel; directed by Tina Landau;
musical supervision, arrangements and incidental music by Daryl Waters;
musical direction by Andrew Resnick; sets by James Schuette; costumes by
Toni-Leslie James; lighting by Scott Zielinski; sound by Jill B C Du
Boff; dialect coach, Deborah Hecht; production stage manager, Lori
Lundquist. Presented by New York Theater Workshop, James C. Nicola,
artistic director; William Russo, managing director. At New York Theater
Workshop, 79 East Fourth Street, East Village; (212) 279-4200,
ticketcentral.com. Through Dec. 30. Running time: 2 hours 30 minutes.
WITH: Sumaya Bouhbal (Jessa/Little
Joe/Others), K. Todd Freeman (Decatur Bronson/James Wormley/Others),
Chris Henry (Chester Saunders/Ulysses S. Grant/John Surratt/Others),
Rachel Spencer Hewitt (Raz/Mary Surratt/Others), Antwayn Hopper (Walker
Lewis/Jim Wormley/Others), Amber Iman (Hannah/Rose/Mrs. Thomas/Others),
Jonathan-David (Ely Parker/Silver/Frederick Wormley/Moses Levy/Others),
Karen Kandel (Elizabeth Keckley/Willy Mack/Others), Sean Allan Krill
(Robert E. Lee/William Tecumseh Sherman/John Wilkes Booth/Others), Alice
Ripley (Mary Todd Lincoln/Lewis Payne/Others) and Bob Stillman (Abraham
Lincoln/Raider/Others).
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