
Aimee Doherty (front) as Dolly Gallagher Levi with the cast of “Hello, Dolly!” 
Jackson Jirard (left) and Mark Linehan in a scene from the Lyric Stage production of “Hello, Dolly!”
Heart and humor abound in the sensational production of the American musical theater classic “Hello, Dolly!” at Lyric Stage in Boston’s Back Bay through Sunday, June 22.
The Lyric Stage production, running two and a half hours with a 15-minute intermission, is directed by Maurice Emmanuel Parent, co-founder and producing artistic director of the Front Porch Arts Collective, a Black-led theater company committed to advancing racial equity.
Adapting American playwright Thornton Wilder’s 1954 play “The Matchmaker” into a musical, Jerry Herman composed the music and lyrics, and Michael Stewart wrote the book for “Hello, Dolly!” Its first Broadway run lasted from 1964 to 1970 and won 10
Tony Awards. Among the stars who played Dolly was Pearl Bailey, who won
a 1968 Tony for her performance in an all-Black production that earned
critical raves and drew audiences that included then-president Lyndon B.
Johnson and his wife Lady Bird.
Unfolding
in 1890s Yonkers, then still a rural town, as well as in neighboring
Manhattan, Wilder’s play and its musical reincarnation present a web of
interconnected people who vary in status, income and personalities. His
wily core character, Mrs. Dolly Gallagher Levi, brings a realist’s eye
as well as zest to her matchmaking trade as she assesses her prospects’
talents, tastes, flaws, desires and potential as mates.
Horace
Vandergelder, a wealthy but stingy merchant, is played by an
often-glowering Joshua Wolf Coleman. His store’s clerks are Barnaby, an
upbeat Max Connor and Cornelius, whose evolution from underdog to hero
is touchingly rendered by Michael Jennings Mahoney. Kristian Espiritu is
magnetic as Manhattan hat shop owner Irene Molloy, and Tamma Beaudreau
sparkles as her assistant, Minnie Fay. Horace’s niece Ermengarde,
(Sophie Shaw) bleats “Waaaahhh!” in moments of distress as young artist
Ambrose (Stephen Caliskan), seeks her uncle’s approval of their
marriage.
Aimee
Doherty, recipient of two Elliot Norton Awards, is a captivating Dolly.
She’s bold but not brassy, and tender and warm as well as exuberant as
she goes about her business of making matches that fulfill her clients’
desires for more from life.
Ever
enterprising, Dolly readily pulls from an array of calling cards for
various services, at one point telling a prospect, “Now, I might also
mention I’m available for financial consultation, instruction in the
guitar and mandolin, short distance hauling … and varicose veins
reduced!”
As the
play’s characters transform through her expert tutelage, Dolly also
pursues a new life for herself after years of mourning her late husband,
Ephraim. She occasionally quotes him and requests a sign from him that
her intended — Horace — is a worthy match.
Collaborating
with Parent are scenic designer Janie E. Howland, choreographer Ilyse
Robbins, lighting designer Karen Perlow, sound designer Alex Berg, and
music director Dan Rodriguez, also keyboardist in the production’s
eight-member orchestra.
Dolly
enters by descending down an aisle, promising several audience members a
match. Later, after losing his wallet in a hat shop melee, Horace walks
down an aisle asking in a whisper if anyone has seen it. Audience
seating surrounds the stage on three sides and on its floor is a
period map of New York City and a trap door, a suitable entry for
underling clerk Cornelius. The small stage hosts waltz lessons, a
marching band, a frantic hide-and-seek, an all-out melee, and a
courtroom. A balcony becomes the setting for a posh dinner hosted by
Dolly.
Preparing for a
consummate night on the town triggers a sequence of spellbinding
numbers, and for the ladies, splendid attire by costume designer Kelly
Baker and ornate wigs by Kat Shanahan. Milliner Irene delivers an aria
to the joys of a hat with long ribbons.
With
a celebratory return, Dolly ends her long absence from the Harmonia
Gardens Restaurant, which she and Ephraim had frequented years ago. She
greets its staff with the musical’s title song. They then erupt into a
rhapsodic welcome. While tossing plates like frisbees waiters form
kaleidoscopic, geometric formations and chorus lines that evoke the
Depression-era stage spectacles of Busby Berkeley.
Breakdancers
spin and the cast’s tallest performer, Mark Linehan, who plays Rudolph,
the Prussian headwater, performs a spectacular tap solo.
As
Dolly and her clients enlarge their lives, she observes, “As my late
husband, Ephraim Levi, use to say, money — pardon the expression — is
like manure. It’s not worth a thing unless it’s spread around
encouraging young things to grow!”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at lyricstage.com/show-item/hello-dolly/