|
Ashley Williams, making her Broadway debut as Brigance's smarty-pants
aide, shows confidence and great potential for comedy, but the role is
tissue-thin. John Douglas Thompson as the jailed father balances uneasily
between being wily and a simpleton. Holmes has his choice of material from both book and film and so some choices are odd. Scenes between Thompson and his wife (a great Tonya Pinkins) seem true and honest, but having the newly freed man rush back to court to celebrate with Brigance is a little corny. Holmes includes a movie scene that features a KKK member with a suitcase bomb, but in this version the KKK don't kill Brigance's dog or attack Brigance's aide. A huge burning cross with real flames is as unsubtle as, well, a huge burning cross. There is no jury in this version -- it's us. Act 2 is the trial itself and the spinning set goes into high gear. The lawyers and witnesses address us in the audience seats, but unlike Holmes' "The Mystery of Edwin Drood," the final outcome is then taken out of our hands. Nonetheless, here's the verdict: If you have time to kill, pick up the novel or catch the movie. ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.