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Music Man takes a high-spirited step back in time with familiar songs and characters


SRT 6449Barbershop quartets, Fourth of July celebrations, ice cream socials and marching bands find a home at Columbia State Park’s Fallon House Theatre when Sierra Repertory Theatre presents The Music Man, June 26 – August 16.

“There’s nostalgia to it, there’s charm,” said Scott Viets, Sierra Rep’s artistic director, who directs the show. “That’s why this musical endures. It simply makes you feel good.”

Described “as American as apple pie and a Fourth of July oration” by the New York Times, The Music Man is a family-friendly classic, set in 1912. It’s the charm of that period, Viets said, that helps take audiences back to a simpler and more innocent time and place.

The story revolves around Harold Hill, a charismatic musical-instrument salesman who cons the good folks of River City, Iowa, into believing that he can teach their children to play in a marching band. Harold plans to skip town, though, fall apart when he falls in love with Marian, the town’s prim librarian and part-time piano teacher. Other characters include a stodgy mayor and his snooty wife, a daffy teenager with a crush on the town’s bad boy, a widowed Irish mother who can’t help but give her daughter well-meaning advice about finding a man, and many more.

Inspired by his boyhood in Mason City, Iowa, Meredith Willson wrote both the music and lyrics for The Music Man. His first musical was a surprise smash hit in 1957, winning five Tony Awards, including Best Musical.

Playing Hill in Sierra Rep’s production of The Music Man is Ralph Krumins, also the theater’s education director. Krumins was Buddy Holly in Sierra Rep’s popular Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story in 2013. He’s excited to play the charming con man.

“It’s one of the most challenging musical parts I can think of,” he said. “You have to be likeable, but he’s still kind of a shady character. It’s a lot of fun.”

That’s what Krumins thought when he first saw the musical as a child, on VHS tape.

“There’s energy, there’s silliness, there are great costumes,” he said. “It’s Americana. It’s a good time.”

SRT 6608Those great costumes are by Ryan Moller, who designed costumes for Cinderella in the fall of 2012, Les Misérables in 2014 and Honky Tonk Angels this year.

Moller’s vision: Drab clothes – browns, tans and greens – at least until Professor Hill arrives in his bright-colored suit. Gradually, as the town buys into Hill’s ideas, the clothes change along with the atmosphere.

“This is a show about a town that has been deprived of joy,” Moller said. “Then, Harold arrives and it’s as if someone has breathed life back into them. The colors get brighter, things get happier.”

Happy is one way to describe the music, which includes rousing production numbers like “76 Trombones,” “Trouble” and “The Wells Fargo Wagon.” There are also well-known ballads: “Goodnight My Someone,” “My White Knight” and “Till There Was You.”

Deb Malcom, who designed sets for Sierra Rep’s All My Sons and It’s a Wonderful Life, designs the sets for The Music Man. Audiences can expect a town square straight out of the early 1900s. The production will play at the Fallon House Theatre in Columbia State Historic Park, an ideal setting, according to Viets.

“It just lends itself to the production,” he said. “Hopefully the feeling will be that you are stepping back in time.”

Photo Credit: Rich Miller


Sierra Repertory Theatre Presents: The Music Man

When: June 16 – August 16
 
Times: Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. – Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. – Thursday 7 p.m. shows on July 2 and 9, with 2 p.m. matinees in place of evening shows on July 16, 23, 30, Aug 6, 13
 
Where: Fallon House Theatre, 11175 Washington St, Columbia, Ca 95310
 
Prices: $28 to $35, with child, group, senior & student discounts available
 
Box Office: (209) 532-3120
 
Book, Music & Lyrics by Meredith Willson
Based on a story by Meredith Willson and Franklin Lacey

As American as apple pie and a Fourth of July oration ... a marvelous show, rooted in wholesome and comic tradition. - The New York Times

Funny, warm, romantic and touching, this award-winning musical comedy has been entertaining audiences for six decades and is a family-friendly story to be shared with every generation. The Music Man follows fast-talking traveling salesman Harold Hill as he cons the people of River City, Iowa into buying instruments and uniforms for a boys' band he vows to organize - despite the fact that he doesn't know a trombone from a treble clef. His plans to skip town with the cash are foiled when he falls for Marian the librarian, who transforms him into a respectable citizen by curtain's fall.

About Sierra Repertory Theatre

SRT is a professional non-profit theater producing a year-round season of classic and contemporary plays at two locations — the SRT theater in East Sonora and the historic Fallon House Theatre in Columbia. The talented resident company and visiting guest artists include members of Actors' Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers. High quality performances, production values and management have established Sierra Rep as a model for regional theater. Sierra Rep's 200-seat theater in East Sonora is intimate, attractive and comfortable; with excellent sight lines and acoustics, and no seat more than 10 rows from the stage. The Fallon House is a restored Gold Rush-era theater and inn located in Columbia State Historic Park. It seats 274. Both theaters are centrally heated and cooled and wheelchair accessible. The East Sonora Theater has an assistive listening system for hearing-impaired patrons.