Art isn't easy. In fact art and the artist are most complex as explored in Stephen Sondheim's poignant 1984 musical Sunday In The Park with George. This difficult and awkwardly structured piece is getting one of its most vibrant and truthful stagings to date at Chicago Shakespeare Theater thanks to Gary Griffin and his remarkable cast. Sunday In The Park with George is one of those musicals that can create a great divide in the theater community between those who love it and those who hate it. However, a remarkable thing happened on opening night that I have rarely seen in my many years as a critic; that is Mr. Griffin's production was able to convert many of the established "haters" with his coherent and moving production.
For those that are not familiar, Sunday in the Park explores George Seurat's creation of the masterwork "A Sunday Afternoon On The Isle Of La Grande Jatte". The project, which took two years to complete (1882-1884) is done in the style of pointillism, wherein Seurat creates the painting's characters and objects through a series of dots that form a unified cohesive image in the viewer's eye. Act one shows the difficulty of the artist externalizing internal passion while Act Two turns the tables and shows how what happens when the external commercialization of art gets over-internalized.
As the musical opens, we see George in the park on a typical Sunday painting his lover Dot, who conveys her comfortableness in one of the best opening songs of any show. As the famed painting is digitally created (and uncreated) before our eyes, we are given a glimpse into the art of making art, the temperament of a great artist and the immense pain they can cause others by their inability to verbally communicate what is so natural for them to paint. We witness each of the characters of the painting come to life and get to see their backstories play out in interesting and at times laborious detail. By the time the first act ends, the complex painting is complete, but at the ultimate of costs. Dot leaves George for good and moves to the United States with her new lover and George's infant daughter while George's terminal cancer takes it's victim at the age of 31.