NEW YORK, NY.- To be a fan of the work of Stephen Sondheim, as Frank Rich wrote in The New York Times, is to have ones heart broken at regular intervals. He meant not only that Sondheims songs are so often crushingly poignant but that the experience of loving them can feel unrequited. The shows they are in he was reviewing the original production of Merrily We Roll Along dont always love you back.
That was in 1981, when Merrily, with a problematic book by George Furth, suffered an ignominious Broadway debut of just 16 performances after 44 previews. No matter that Sondheim, responding to the story of a songwriter, had written his most conspicuously tuneful score to date, prompting pop recordings by Frank Sinatra (Good Thing Going) and Barbra Streisand (Not a Day Goes By). It was universally deemed a debacle.
The debacle ended the working relationship between Sondheim and director Harold Prince, whose five shows together in the 1970s Company, Follies, A Little Night Music, Pacific Overtures and Sweeney Todd had redefined the American musical. With Merrily, they thought they were taking the form even further, with a complicated backward chronology and a cast of mostly inexperienced actors who played 40-ish adults at the start and grew into themselves at the end.
After the shows death by a thousand pans, Sondheim, saying hed rather make video games, threatened to leave the theater entirely. Luckily, that didnt happen and Merrily, too, refused to give up, instead undergoing a seemingly endless series of unsatisfactory improvements that only seemed to confirm the hopelessness of making it matter.
But with the opening of its first Broadway revival, after 42 years in the wilderness and the death of Sondheim in 2021, Merrily is no longer lost. Maria Friedmans unsparing direction and a thrillingly fierce central performance by Jonathan Groff have given the show the hard shell it lacked. Now heartbreaking in the poignant sense only, Merrily has been found in the dark.
When we meet him after the uplift of the gleaming overture, Groff, as composer Franklin Shepard, is alone in an empty and unappealing liminal space. (The deliberately ugly sets, perhaps uglier than necessary, are by Soutra Gilmour.) He is wearing, and will throughout the show, a solemn undertakers outfit black pants, black tie, white shirt. Even as everyone else changes with the times, in vivid costumes (also by Gilmour) that mark each notch on the timeline from 1976 to 1957, Frank always remains what he was: a one-man show. Merrily is the funeral he throws for his own ideals.
The contrast between the pleasures that music can provide and the damage obvious in Franks demeanor immediately frames what follows as a solo psychodrama. Yes, Charley Kringas, who writes the words, and their friend Mary Flynn, a novelist turned theater critic, are there throughout, trying to encourage his better angels and corral his worse ones. But despite high-wattage, laser-focused performances by Daniel Radcliffe and Lindsay Mendez, they have no effect on him; they are clearly Franks pawns, willing or otherwise.
How he destroys Mary, and nearly Charley as well, not without their assistance, is revealed as the musicals formerly absent spine. In the first scene, a 1976 party for Darkness Before Dawn, a hack hit movie Frank has produced now that he no longer writes music, Mary is dispatched with barely a blink, or drunkenly dispatches herself.
In the next scene, as Charley enumerates Franks misplaced priorities in a 1973 television interview Radcliffe handles the song Franklin Shepard, Inc. superbly Groffs coldblooded rage is terrifying. Collateral damage along the way includes Franks first wife, Beth (Katie Rose Clarke); his second, Gussie (Krystal Joy Brown); his probable third, Meg (Talia Simone Robinson); his producer, Joe (Reg Rogers); and even his adorable young son. Who but a monster would betray such a punim?
Merrily is thus no longer, as it seemed in 1981, the story of the gradual, almost inevitable dimming of youths sweet illusions but rather the story of their falsity in the first place. Frank is only devoted to Mary and Charley when he doesnt have access to anyone more useful. To think he turned into that monster is a mistake: He always was one, as Sondheim clearly understood. Thats what everyone does, Mary sings once the three-way friendship has collapsed. Blames the way it is/on the way it was/On the way it never ever was.
Friedman has thrown in her lot with the coruscating insight of the songs, making a tactical decision successful but not without consequences to deprioritize everything else, including the scores brassy élan. Merrily Kremlinologists will want to know that the version onstage at the Hudson Theater, though slightly bigger than the off-Broadway version that opened at New York Theater Workshop in December 2022, is still somewhat underscaled for Broadway. It has a cast of 19 instead of 17 and an orchestra of 13 instead of nine.
It takes more than even those larger numbers to deliver the Golden Age thrill that is, after all, the shows milieu. (The original orchestra had 20 players.) Other than the costumes, the minimal design is more practical than inspiring; the sound of the band (playing new orchestrations by Sondheims longtime collaborator Jonathan Tunick) is especially unbalanced. The choreography by Tim Jackson too often seems charades-like. Some of the solo singing could be more effective, technically and thus emotionally.
And then there is, as always, the book. Friedman has apparently made her peace with Furths final Frankensteined version; though its pieces are coarsely sutured and dont quite line up, at least the thing walks. If in seeking to sweeten the main story it still leans too heavily on thin satire for laughs morning news shows, Hollywood sycophancy the trajectories for the secondary characters, especially Beth and Gussie, who are now more than cannon fodder, at last make some sense.
In this production, though, it wouldnt matter much if they didnt. Radcliffes wit and modesty, combined with Mendezs zing and luster, provide perfect settings for what is now (as it has never been previously) the inarguably central performance. Groff, always a compelling actor, here steps up to an unmissable one. With his immense charisma turned in on itself, he seems to sweat emotion: ambition, disappointment and, most frighteningly, a terrible frozen disgust.
I dont know whether thats what Furth intended, but Sondheim is brutally clear about the insidiousness of great talent. In Frank, it eats everything it can find, eventually including itself. Who says Lonely at the top? he sings amid the end-stage cynicism of his loveless Bel Air party. I say, Let it never stop.
What a strange and daring thing for the great and greatly missed Sondheim to dramatize, and for Friedman to forefront. Id call it heartbreaking if the result werent finally such a palpable hit.
Merrily We Roll AlongThrough March 24 at the Hudson Theater, Manhattan; merrilyonbroadway.com. Running time: 2 hours, 30 minutes.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.