
CARRIE: REVIEWS
Carrie makes powerful musical
By: Ernest Albrecht, Home News theater critic
The Home News
5/16/88
"Carrie" is the sort of musical you will either love or hate. Wildly. I happen to have loved it, probably
for all the same reasons others will find to hate it.
The source for the show is Stephen King's novella by the same name about a late-blooming
teen-age girl (Carrie) who is isolated from the rest of the kids her age by her mother's religious
fanaticism. DesperateIy unhappy and feeling abandoned she discovers she has been given the
strange and supernatural gift of telekinesis. Through this medium she wrecks a horrible vengence
on those who have tormented and humiliated her .
This is strong and strange stuff fills the theater with a tension that is quite unlike anything I have
ever felt there. And there is no escaping it. Even the relationship between Carrie and her mother is
twisted. Despite that it achieves a kind of ethereal beauty through the music of Michael Gore.
Betty Buckley as the mother and Linzi Hateley as Carrie have some hauntingly beautiful moments
together and individually that are heartbreakingly tender and yet perverse. This relationship is just
as dangerous for Came as any she has with her peers. That tension underlies every embrace,
endearment. The moment when the mother forces Carrie into the cellar through a trapdoor is
shocking and terrifying.
In contrast all of the other peopIe Carrie's age are portrayed as another sort of monster: libidinous
beauties who spend more time cultivating their bodies than their minds. They are totally intolerant
of anybody who is different and determined to remove any obstacles to the realization of their sex
lives.
This aspect of the show is beautifully realized in the brilliantly suggestive dances of Debbie Allen
who keeps the kids perpetually twitching with unrealized sexual energy.
In between this world and the severe severity of the mother's Carrie is almost totally alone. She is
befriended by a sympathetic teacher and a schoolmate who seems to possess the only
conscience in town. Darlene Love is the teacher and she has an enchanting song "Unsuspecting
Hearts," that seems destined to become a pop single.
Similarly enchanting is a scene in which Carrie employs her supernatural powers to charming
effect. The accoutrements of her dressing table suddenly dance about her as she readies herself for
the prom with a date arranged by the conscience stricken friend.
But this is one Cinderella who will not live happily ever after. Carrie's nemesis is Chris. a particularly
vicious adolescent played with malicious glee by Charlotte D'Ambroise.
While the tensions and emotions continually bring the show to the brink of absurdity, it seems to
me the intensity of alI the performances and the integrity of the music and lyrics prevent its falling
into the pit. If one is shocked or embarrassed it is because we are so seldom asked to deal with
this sort of material in the theater.
In addition to the emotional intensity, of the material, the show is a stunning visual production that
shocks and startIes us even further. It is not just the technology involved but the very design itself
that consistently reinforces the emotional content of the show with its strikingly vivid images.
In, other words "Carrie" brings together all the forces that make live theater so exciting: brilliant
performances and an exciting and story, reinforced by the physical production and fashions them
into a truly unforgettable event.
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