Star Struck
Christopher Pinnella and Kristin Dausch in Lyric Stage's production of Funny GirlPhoto by James Jamison
Yowzers! Lyric Stage’s Funny Girl is one tour de force of chutzpah. From Bryan Wofford’s scenic design to Tracy Jordan’s choreography to Cheryl Denson’s direction and musical staging, the production sparkles. At the heart of it, gleaming brighter than everything around it, stands Kristin Dausch. Her turn at Fanny Brice is everything from sweet, charming, and lovable, to clumsy, careless, and headstrong. She lives the role. And when she sings, she lets out a sound that shivers your timbers, bringing down the house.
Funny Girl is the story of Fanny Brice, a young vaudeville actress in NY on the cusp of the 1920s. By sheer will and a pipe organ for lungs, she makes her way up the Ziegfeld Follies ladder until she is the star of the show. But Fanny doesn’t get there through conventional means: beauty, nice legs, and a simpering air. Instead, she’s all about the nuts and bolts– she wants a career, she’s got the talent—maybe some day she’ll learn the grace. She’s so guileless and unaffected by her talent that regardless of the foul ups she makes, she scoots by unscathed.
Until she falls for Nick Arnstein, that is. Christopher Pinnella plays Arnstein, and his suave, dashing, romantic airs sculpt Arnstein into the kind of debonair, considerate, and cosmopolitan fellow few eligible women would have the fortitude to scorn. Not surprisingly, Fanny’s a goner. But Arnstein’s got a gambling habit, and while he inevitably falls for Fanny, he can’t reconcile her success to his increasingly empty pockets. Feeling more like Fanny’s boy-toy than a proper husband, Arnstein soon gets mixed up in crime, which leads to incarceration—not so funny.
Despite the fact that Funny Girl has a downward trajectory, you don’t often quite feel as high and transported as when Kristin Dausch reprises “Don’t Rain on My Parade” at the production’s end. While she’s grabbed us by “I’m the Greatest Star” at the beginning, and her comic timing and hilarious antics seal the deal with “You Are Woman, I Am Man,” the closing number is her apotheosis. Nick Arnstein seems like the biggest schmuck ever.
With strong performances from the ensemble, especially from Jerry Dumont as Eddie Ryan, his Fred Astaire-style dancing, affable manner, and loyalty to Fanny making him quite precious, and also from Lois Sonnier Hart as Mrs. Brice, who has a kind of no nonsense warmness and matter of fact grace that make the moments she’s on stage too few, the overall production feels effervescent.
What Lyric Stage’s production does so well is to succeed both at the glitz and glamour that makes up the over the top staginess of the Ziegfeld shows and at the everyday toils and travails that eventually cripple Brice and Arnstein’s love. From start to finish, this production, like Dausch’s Brice, enraptures.
Funny Girl runs through September 20 at Lyric Stage. For more information click here.



I saw the final performance yesterday and LOVED LOVED LOVED IT!!!!!! The orchestra is to die for!!!!! I wish I had seen it the first week and I would have definitely gone back for a second time! Kristin Dausch had me on the edge of my seat and crying at the end — I can’t wait to see what her future holds!!! And long-legged dancer one liner Addison Reed was a standout dazzlingly beautiful FOLLIE BRIDE as one of Nick’s girls, her name was Cathy which the program did not list, and should have had more lines!!!!! BRAVO to the whole cast!!!!!!! And to Lyric Stage!!!!
21 September 2009 at 5:08 pm