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- REVIEWS, Page 66THEATERA Big Epic Writ Small
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- By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
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- TITLE: ANNA KARENINA
- AUTHOR: Music by Daniel Levine; Book and Lyrics by Peter
- Kellogg
- WHERE: Broadway
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- THE BOTTOM LINE: Tolstoy's masterpiece becomes a stage
- equivalent to TV's Masterpiece Theater.
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- Anna Karenina makes the case for the smaller-scale
- musical. It is a modestly produced chamber piece, with a minimal
- set and an orchestra of seven. What is right with the show all
- involves just one or two people, notably the first fine rapture
- of the title character's illicit infatuation with Count Vronsky
- and the pathetic disillusionment that sends her to her grim
- fate. What is wrong could not be fixed by any amount of dressing
- up. Anna is an earnest, intermittently moving but never quite
- thrilling stage equivalent to PBSs Masterpiece Theater -- lovely
- gowns, precise elocution and ballroom dancing, with a stately
- pace, wayward comic intrusions and scant urgency.
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- Composer Daniel Levine, who has never written a musical
- before, has yet to develop a distinctive sound: there are
- stylistic echoes of everything from Blossom Time to Sondheim,
- although the wistfulness is genuine enough in the title
- character's Act I showstopper, I'm Lost. Levine's writing
- partner, Peter Kellogg, also a beginner, deftly focuses the
- story on Anna's forced choice between romantic love for Vronsky
- and maternal love for her child by her husband Karenin. But
- Kellogg nearly wrecks the enterprise with lyrics so blandly
- generic that they convey hardly any specifics of character --
- especially frustrating when the source, Tolstoy's novel,
- provides some of the most vivid characters in world literature.
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- Director Theodore Mann and choreographer Patricia Birch,
- who staged the musical sequences, make remarkably rich use of
- a nearly bare stage. Ann Crumb, who starred in Aspects of Love
- in London and on Broadway, makes modest Anna's eruption into
- passion completely believable and is deeply affecting in her
- final derangement. Surrounding her are exceptional men: Gregg
- Edelman as the hapless gentleman farmer Levin, Scott Wentworth
- as a reckless but wholly admirable version of Vronsky and, most
- striking, John Cunningham, who overcomes caricatured writing of
- Anna's estranged husband to reveal a man poignantly wrongheaded
- and, in his way, as doomed as his desperate spouse.
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