As of this writing, I’ve seen three productions of the Broadway musical Follies. Four, If I count the 1985 Lincoln Center concert version. Isn’t that enough for one lifetime? (I think I’ve only seen Hamlet more times.) Those were my thoughts as I took my seat at the Marquis Theatre on Sept. 8. I had seen the original 1971 production and been less than whelmed. I know, call me both a dinosaur and a philistine. The 2001 Broadway revival is best forgotten, as I have done. The concert had its charms, notably Barbara Cook and Lee Remick. And I like the recording. But I remember in each incarnation a certain ennui setting in around, say, “Too Many Mornings.” Too many songs perhaps? Too much of a good thing perhaps? And then there is the unavoidable truth that for two and a half hours this audience member at least felt locked in with characters he didn’t much like and whose world view differed from his own. I’m no Little Mary Sunshine, but the quartet at the heart of Follies are deeply, depressingly, unremittingly unhappy at the beginning of the show, in the middle of the show and at final curtain. Worse, the original production was played without an intermission, which I remember left me benumbed halfway through. There just was no escape from the misery, not even a midshow bathroom break. Rumor had it the current production was flirting with going intermissionless. Fortunately, the powers that be reconsidered. But I wasn’t convincingly cheered as I settled in for what I thought would be a very long and drear night. Was I ever wrong. If there is going to be a near-perfect Follies in my lifetime, this is it. And if there is another revival before I flee this mortal coil, I think I’ll say, “No thanks.” I’d rather go out on a high. Chalk up my reconsideration of Follies to the actors: Bernadette Peters, Ron Raines, Jan Maxwell and Danny Burstein. Has a musical ever been better acted? I couldn’t take my eyes off Peters, who had me in tears from her entrance until her final look around the stage. Her Sally is mad, bad and heartbreaking. I wanted to take her by the shoulders and shake some sense into her, but at least this time around I understood—and felt—why Sally was such a slobbering mess. That’s acting.
