Just a little bit of pixie dust
The real kids? Peter Pan's flight at the Alley is a three-hour, mega-event foradults
J.M. Barrie's story of Peter Pan has been chewed up and spit out into different interpretations since its first performance in 1904. The Alley brings us a rare revival, created in 1982 by John Caird and Trevor Nunn, of the Royal Shakespeare Company.
The performance I went to featured a sea of adult faces in the audience, which surprised me at first, but then I remembered children are usually tucked in by 8.
I had to practically pry my 6-year-old brother, Rodrigo, from my step-mother's arms for the show.
In act two, the narrator (John Tyson), mentions a "fairy orgy" passing over Peter's sleeping chest, which released a wealth of chuckles from the crowd. Rodrigo has yet to add "orgy" to his budding vocabulary, so instead of laughing with the crowd, he sat there in an innocent silence.
Tyson added a zesty, although sometimes distracting, flavor to the story.
Mechanically, Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up is impressive — although I don't think that fascination will keep the average audience member in his or her seat for the entirety of the production. At the end of act two, audience members released grumbles about getting to work the next day. Although the adaptors leave out the Indians and mermaids in this version, the play begins to feel too long after the second act and totals to about three hours.
Two preview performances of the show were cancelled due to worries about the "extreme technical nature" of the flying scenes. There were no problems opening week, but one should appreciate the dexterity of the technical aspects in the production (kudos to scenic designer Hugh Landwehr and ZFX Flying Effects).
Let me explain. As the children are about to jet off to Neverland, the nursery walls begin to shift — opening up the rest of the stage into a faux sky — all while the actors are suspended in the air .
Of the cast, Peter (Jay Sullivan) and Mrs. Darling/Slightly (Katrina Lenk) are the strongest. Sullivan makes it hard not to fall in love with the handsome, never-aging youth and Lenk manages to switch between gorgeous and cunning, as Mrs. Darling and Slightly, one of the Lost Boys. The rest of the cast does well in capturing the story, but these two lead the way.
After all, isn't Neverland two stars to the right and straight on 'til morning?