This is not a review of the show I saw – that’s not my thing. I’m also not going to summarize the show in my post. That’s what Wikipedia is for. This is just my reaction to a theater experience I had recently.
Last weekend, I saw Sweeney Todd at the Signature Theater in Arlington, VA. The Signature won the regional theater Tony in 2009, and the theater scene in Washington, DC (my hometown!) is quite vibrant and reputable. I had high expectations for Sweeney Todd, and I was not disappointed.
I had actually never seen the show (or the movie) before, and I was mostly unfamiliar with the music. Especially for how dark it was, the music was catchy. I especially like how the words and melody of the opening number are woven throughout the show. I often find myself now singing “Did Sweeney… Did Sweeney Todd… the demon barber of Fleet… Street.” It’s haunting and memorable.
I was impressed by the magic Sondheim worked to write a song which is hilarious while also wildly disgusting and more than a little disturbing. I am, of course, referring to “A Little Priest.” I don’t know where people come up with ideas like “let’s write a musical about baking people into pies,” but that’s why those people have careers creating musical theater and I just blog about it. I think Sweeney Todd is genius, especially considering (and notably not in spite of) its strange plot.
I’m glad at least Anthony and Johanna get some semblance of a happy ending, but I also do appreciate the tragedy of the play. For the same reasons that I overwhelmingly prefer Thomas Hardy to, say, Jane Austen, I like when theater (particularly musical theater) is dark. Just because people are singing on stage doesn’t mean everything has to be glittery and bright and accompanied by tap dancers in top hats. I think a lot of musical theater has embraced the dark lately, but Sweeney Todd is for sure the darkest thing I’ve seen yet.
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