It always struck me as curious that the tag line for the stage version of The Color Purple is "the musical about love". I'm not quite sure what marketing genius came up with this, as it is definitely not a musical about love, and moreover, what a musical is about should be left for the audience member to decide. That being said, director L. Walter Stearns has poured much love (and money) into his very clear and focused vision of the musical version of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize winning novel which opened Monday night at the gloriously rehabbed Mercury Theatre.
Of course The Color Purple is best known through Stephen Speilberg's 1985 non-Academy Award winning film (11 nominations, no wins), which shot Whoopi Goldberg as Celie to stardom and earned Oprah Winfrey raves as Sofia. Over two decades later, Ms. Winfrey became a lead producer on the musical version which was directed to great acclaim by our own Gary Griffin and featured Chicago actress Felicia Field's in the Winfrey role.
Mr. Stearns has brought together a cast that can vocally handle every nook and cranny of the sometimes-difficult pop/gospel score (by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray) and this is far and away musical director Eugene Dizon's best work since Pacific Overtures some years ago. Trisha Jeffrey's take on Celie is honest and moving with the perfect amount of naivety that beckons the audience member to feel her internal pain. By the time her aria "I'm Here" comes around, she has us hook, line and sinker. Keithon Gipson also does fine work with his thankless role as Mister. Somehow, even through all the misogynistic temper tantrums you know the heart of his Mister is good.