The Sliding Doors-esque plot follows Elizabeth, who has just left Pheonix and an unhappy marriage to start over in New York City. She's a pragmatical cat (a woman after my own heart) who believes in facts and data and analyzing all possibilities. But that strategy doesn't work as well in life as it does in urban planning, and based on one small choice, Elizabeth diverges into Liz, who meets a handsome army doc, gets married, has children, and teaches urban planning, and Beth, who has a successful and fulfilling career as a city planner and unsuccessful dalliances with her ex and her boss. While you can't easily change hairstyles on stage like you can in a movie, you can don a pair of glasses and subtly change wardrobe pieces to quickly and easily identify which Elizabeth we're watching. The two realities are cleverly and seamlessly woven together, making it easy to follow the storylines and see the parallels in the two lives. At the most powerful moments Liz and Beth merge into one beautifully flawed, strong, very real woman, as she grapples with the choices she's made and the life she's found herself in.
Anthony Rapp as Lucas and Jackie Burns as Elizabeth (photo by Joan Marcus) |
As Elizabeth's ex and best friend Lucas, Anthony Rapp is the only original cast member in the show, returning to the role that was written for him. He's so natural and charming in the role, playing two different versions of one character, reluctantly finding himself in a happy relationship with a man in one reality, hopelessly pining after a woman he once loved in the other. But to this RENThead, he will always be Mark. The sound of his voice, every gesture of his hands, brings me right back to the musical that has meant so much to me over the last 20 years. Every chance I get to see Anthony on stage is a joy.
the cast of If/Then (photo by Joan Marcus) |
As much as anything else, If/Then is a love letter to NYC, with all its diversity, beauty, challenges, and interconnectedness. The city is well represented in the set design (which seems somewhat simplified from the complicated apparatus on Broadway) and video projections. The urban landscape can be seen in the sharp lines of the metal structures, including a walkway that lowers from ceiling to floor, and the rotating open boxes that make up Liz/Beth's apartment. Video projections of maps and skylines continue the modern urban feel, as does the simple, chic, versatile wardrobe, and choreography that's more like organic movement emphasizing the story rather than traditional dance numbers (set design by Mark Wendland, projection design by Peter Nigrini and Dan Scully, costume design by Emily Rebholz, and choreography by Larry Keigwin). It's a very tech-heavy show, which works for the most part, but I'm looking forward to when it's available for regional productions and one (or more) of our fantastic local companies can tell what essentially is an intimate story in a more stripped down way.
If/Then continues at Minneapolis' Orpheum Theatre through this weekend only, so make your choice now to see this new, original, exciting musical, or you might find yourself wondering "What If?"