Palo Alto Players - Into the Woods - Stark Insider Review
Palo Alto Players – INTO THE WOODS – Timothy Sanders as Jack, Akemi Okamura as Milky White, Chris Janssen as Baker, Elizabeth Santana as Baker’s Wife
In Review

Into the Woods

2.5 out of 5 stars
2.5 out of 5 stars - 'Comme ci, comme ça'
Palo Alto Players
Music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Book by James Lapine
Review by Cy Ashley Webb

Into the Woods is a difficult show to perform, demanding split-second responses, with nary a rest. Fairytale characters busily weave their assorted tales, while simultaneously operating on a whole different level to subtly remind us that these archetypes live in our heads, inhabiting some deep part of ourselves. These stories live us as much as we live them. Good productions of this play operate on the same level as the opening of Dante’s Inferno, in which that narrator finds himself “within a forest dark, for the straightforward pathway had been lost.”

Opening night of Palo Alto Players’ production of this gem provided a few hints as to how good this play can be. The 13-piece orchestra, under music director Katie Coleman, did justice to Sondheim’s shimmering score, offering up something far better than one might expect from community theatre. The care taken with set design was obvious, and the decisions how to handle Jack’s beanstalk and the Giant were good ones.

Unfortunately, however, the cast seemed to be doing it by rote. While most opening night issues (and with multiple mic failures, this production had more than its share) aren’t worth mentioning, this lack of animation rendered the show unnecessarily sluggish and hid the show’s luminous beauty.

Despite this low-energy opening night, Chris Janssen’s standout performance as the Baker helped power the evening forward. The physicality of Marisol Sonia Urbano as Jack’s mother was interesting to watch. However, these weren’t enough to save the evening.

Part of the problem was the stage felt too small for the production. While the mammoth trees, anchored on a turntable, worked well to create the woods, the stage was so cramped that the video projections were barely visible, and choreography felt unnecessarily constrained. Tighter stage direction might help compensate, quickening the pace and giving loft to an otherwise draggy production.

Palo Alto Players - Into the Woods - Stark Insider Review
Chris Janssen as Baker, Taylor Sanders as Little Red
Ridinghood, Mohamed Ismail as Steward, Izetta Klein as Witch
Palo Alto Players - Into the Woods - Stark Insider Review
Sharon Lita as Florinda, Morgan Dayley as Cinderella’s

Friends who saw Sunday’s performance reported fewer of these bugs so it may be that the issues (as they often do in theatre!) worked themselves out. However, the show I saw was flawed enough to give pause.

Good productions of Into the Woods have consistently graced Bay Area stages, including Ray of Light’s production, which garnered a Critic’s Circle Award in 2013, and the killer 2014 production by SF Playhouse. Fans of this Sondheim gem may enjoy the Palo Alto Player’s production, but first timers may want to wait for another production that better reveals the true glory of this show.

Photo credit: Joyce Goldschmid

Cy spent the ‘80’s as a bench scientist, the tech boom doing intellectual property law, and the first decade of the millennium, aspiring to be the world’s oldest grad student at Stanford where she is interested in political martyrdom. Presently, she enjoys writing for Stark Insider and the SF Examiner, hanging out at Palo Alto Children's Theatre, and participating in various political activities. Democracy is not a spectator sport! Cy is a SFBATCC member.