Performing Arts

It’s a hard-knock life in rags-to-riches musical

Durango Arts Center’s Applause presents ‘Annie Jr.’

Imagine 50 orphans asleep on the Durango Arts Center stage. Amid pillows and blankets, the youngsters dream of better days. Then they awaken to the reality of the Municipal Girls Orphanage under the cruel dictatorship of Miss Hannigan.

So begins the musical version of Little Orphan Annie. “Annie Jr” opened last night and will run weekends through Dec. 16 with two matinees on Saturday and Dec. 16.

Directed and choreographed by Emily Simpson Grandt and assisted by Melissa Kirschstein, the 67-member cast comes entirely from the DAC’s performing arts program for kids known as Applause. The company started preparation in mid-September, so now it’s showtime.

“Once the lead orphans move,” Simpson Grandt said to her cast at rehearsal last Saturday, “Tuesday Class GO, Thursday Class GO, then everybody freeze.”

Simpson Grandt refers to her performers by their Applause groupings, including Spot On and Somethin’ Doin’. She also knows every youngster by name. The scene suggests the herding cats cliché, but Simpson Grandt clearly has control. She’s a kinder, more creative version of Miss Hannigan.

The comic-strip heroine first appeared on Aug. 5, 1924, in the Chicago Tribune. Created by cartoonist Harold Gray, the story of a courageous orphan struggling against the tide of the Great Depression endured until Gray’s death in 1968. “Annie” was reprinted then taken up by subsequent cartoonists until The Tribune Syndicate finally discontinued its daily version in June 2010.

The 1977 Broadway musical featuring Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan imprinted the story permanently as part of America’s self-image as resilient. Columbia Pictures came out with the first film version of the musical in 1982. Subsequently, the abbreviated version known as “Annie Jr” launched in 1998 and has appeared in public and private schools all over the country. Now, it’s the DAC’s holiday show.

Annie’s story is a quintessential rags-to-riches American dream. An orphan girl with grit lives a hard-luck life until she meets a billionaire who rescues her. Along the way, she encounters villains like Miss Hannigan, the hapless residents of a Hooverville, rogues who pose as her long-lost parents, and others before Oliver Warbucks saves the day.

It’s a treat to see youthful Durango portray Depression-era orphans and mean-spirited villains, not to mention Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who appears as a kind of deus ex machina at the end. Yes, these are our children, and the remarkable DAC program is worthy of attention and applause.

Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theater Critics Association.

Meet Emily Simpson Grandt

Emily Simpson Grandt arrived in Durango in 2014 from Kansas City, Missouri. She quickly started the San Juan Ballet School in the dance studio at the Durango Arts Center.

A native of Abilene, Kansas, Simpson Grandt studied ballet from childhood and made the transition from dancer to teacher to administrator at the Kansas City Ballet School. In 2012, she became director and supervised 50 faculty members, accompanists, administrative staff, not to mention a variety of programs.

“At 25, I hung up my ballet shoes and shifted to teaching,” she said during a break at a DAC rehearsal last Saturday.

Her classical ballet career included performing and choreographing modern dance using “the Martha Graham system,” she said.

Having appeared in shows like “Mattress,” “Cinderella” and “Mame,” she added, she’s entered a new phase of her creative life as director of the Applause program.

“We began classes in mid-September and have been preparing for ‘Annie’ since that time. The cast ranges in age from 5 to 18. Each class has a different name: Confetti is for first- and second-graders; Somethin’ Doin’ is for third- to fifth-graders; and Spot On is for sixth grade through high school.”

Simpson Grandt has been part of Applause for two years and assumed the directorship last September.

Once “Annie Jr.” closes, Applause will focus on the next musical, “Giants in the Sky,” scheduled to open in April 2018.

Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theater Critics Association.

If you go

What:

“Annie Jr.,”

a musical by Charles Strouse, Thomas Meehan and Martin Charmin, directed by Emily Simpson Grandt and the Applause Performing Arts Program of the Durango Arts Center.

When:

7 p.m. Dec. 7-9, 15-16, and 1p.m. Dec. 9 and 16

Where:

DAC, 802 East Second Avenue

Tickets:

$12 DAC members, ages 12 and under, $15 non-members.

More information:

www.durangoarts.org/theatre

or 259-2606.



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