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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Catey Sullivan - For the Sun-Times

‘Big Fish’ yields little wonder in small-scale production at Marriott Theatre

Michael Kurowski as Will (left) and Alexander Gemignani as his father Edward in “Big Fish” at the Marriott Lincolnshire Theatre. (Liz Lauren)

Marriott Lincolnshire Theatre spins a not-quite-splashy-enough yarn with “Big Fish,” a musical that takes an already tall tale and further stretches it like Silly Putty under an Alabama sun.

A sentimental family drama that features giants, witches, werewolves, some stunning aerial work and a heart-broken cheerleader, “Big Fish” swims through generations and decades, the occasional shard of provocative wisdom occasionally flickering to the surface. 

Directed by Henry Godinez, “Big Fish” has moments that gleam, primarily due to the cast’s uniformly engaging vocals. Andrew Lippa’s score is bland and innocuous, but this ensemble sings the heck out of it. That said, the sense of the over-the-top fantastical that should define the show’s core aesthetic is more shrugging than spectacular. The witches and giants and werewolves, et al, are more mundane than magical.

‘Big Fish’

The musical from Andrew Lippa (score and lyrics) and John August (book) hews fairly close to the original source, Daniel Wallace’s 1998 novel (which was also the inspiration for Tim Burton’s 2003 movie adaptation).

On the page and stage, “Big Fish” is centered on the strained relationship between Edward Bloom (Alexander Gemignani) and his adult son, Will (Michael Kurowski). The elder Bloom is a life-long fabulist. While child Will (Archer Geye at the performance I saw; he shares the role with William Daly) was always enchanted by his father’s tales of preposterously heroic exploits, adult Will has just about run out of patience with his dad’s self-aggrandizing mythology.

The cast of “Big Fish” featuring Alexander Gemignani as Edward Bloom (center) with Archer Gaye as Young Will. (Liz Lauren)

That iota of patience dries up as Will and his wife Josephine (Lydia Burke) prepare to welcome their first child into the world. Thankfully, Edward’s ever-supportive wife Sandra (Heidi Kettenring) is always available to smooth over the rough patches between father and son.

The plot toggles between decades and generations. Following a trail back to his father’s tiny hometown in Alabama, adult Will embarks on a coming-of-age journey of sorts, eventually discovering his father’s impact on regular neighborhood folk was as spectacular as any of his wild stories about saving mermaids and the like. 

We see a youthful Edward skipping stones in a deceptively drowsy set-up for the eruptive “Be the Hero,” a percussive romp choreographed with gleeful energy by Tommy Rapley. Still, this is a song that ends with a torrent of fish literally flying through the air and the Marriott gives us only a noncommittal shower. Not even Rapley’s joyful choreography can fix that. 

A haze of mortality hovers throughout ‘Big Fish.” In flashback, Edward encounters the Witch (Lucy Godinez, a flare of charisma in a character defined by a cackle and an eye-patch) who tells him precisely how he’ll die.

Will, meanwhile, talks about how frightened he is for Josephine’s pregnancy — a concern that surfaces repeatedly as he tries to understand his father’s seemingly endless flights of fancy. 

Still, the thematic elements joining the two timelines don’t feel smoothly integrated at the Marriott. Part of the problem is that the ensemble is stretched too thin. Except for Edward, Will and Sandra Bloom, every person in the cast is either double- or triple-cast. Scenes that could pop with a robust, Fellini-esque absurdity instead look underpopulated and sad.

Gemignani’s Edward delivers killer vocals, but the character is an amalgam of arrogance papered over with a pretense of aw-shucks folksiness. As Edward’s son Will, Kurowski is alternately cherubic and churlish. He hits the mark on emotive barnburners like “Stranger,” but like his father, Will’s character is without foundation, as fleeting as a wave. Not even a circus scene featuring the extraordinary aerial work of ensemble member Ayana Strutz can make up for the lack of substance. 

Despite the occasional flash of ridiculous brilliance (rhyming “laughing gas” with “pain in the a--,” for example) and the odd philosophical provocation thought (is life really just a series of “minor triumphs and major disappointments”?), “Big FIsh” is no big deal. 

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