 |

| Theater
News |
November 8, 1998
|
Of George Gershwin She Sings
Maureen McGovern has masterfully redefined herself as an
interpreter of the American icon's work.
By DON HECKMAN
George
Gershwin is not exactly the first thing that comes to mind as Maureen
McGovern slips into a booth at Gadsby's on La Brea for a quick lunch.
Looking tailored and elegant, her short red hair neatly coiffed, she could
easily pass as a successful Beverly Hills psychiatrist or a power-brokering
Hollywood agent.
Yet this is the same McGovern whose versatile,
song-filled stage appearances have been virtual Gershwin celebrations
for the past few years--and especially so in this centennial of the legendary
American composer's birth. On Thursday, she makes one of her most dramatic
Gershwin statements when she stars, with Gregory Harrison, in a 14-performance
run of George and Ira Gershwin's musical satire "Of Thee I Sing" in the
Reprise! series at UCLA's Freud Playhouse, directed by Arthur Allan Seidelman.
"You never get tired of hearing Gershwin,"
she says, pausing briefly to explain to the waiter that she's "vegetarian
all the way."
"That's what I think is astounding about
Gershwin's composing," she continues, "the body of work that he wrote,
especially in such a short time. And if it's played well, and treated
with respect, you just never tire of it."
Certainly McGovern hasn't. She already has
performed in a historic concertized rendering in 1987 of "Of Thee I Sing"
(with "Let 'Em Eat Cake") at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Kennedy
Center with Jack Gilford and the late Larry Kert--a performance that received
a Grammy nomination for its recorded version. And she has recorded a collection
of Gershwin classics ("Naughty Baby" on CBS Records) and starred in a
number of Gershwin television specials, including "Celebrating Gershwin"
and "Happy Birthday George Gershwin."
It's no wonder that Clive Barnes of the
New York Post, reviewing her Gershwin performances, wrote "McGovern can
sing Gershwin like Joan Sutherland can sing Donizetti."
But who would have thought, 25 years ago,
when McGovern was briefly the queen of disaster-flick songs--with such
hits as "The Morning After" from "The Poseidon Adventure" and "We May
Never Love Like This Again" from "The Towering Inferno"--that her career
would unfold the way it has? Certainly not McGovern.
"I had a huge hit with 'The Morning After,'
" she says, "but I wasn't the hit, the song was the hit. And what I've
made a conscious effort to do, ever since then, has been to find a way
to make myself blossom."
She may, however, be a bit too critical
of herself. A retrospective hearing of those early hits reveals, even
within the over-baked production of the time, that McGovern's voice was
something special, clearly capable of working with music better suited
to her expansive skills. Something like Gershwin.
And once she moved past the disaster ballads
to Gershwin and the Great American Songbook, she never looked back.
"Gershwin really is the universal language,"
she says. "No matter what country I've been in, everyone knows those songs.
They may not know who he was, but they know the music.
"And I keep discovering tunes that I haven't
done. One of the best Gershwin experiences I've ever had was doing the
'Happy Birthday George Gershwin' television show with the Dallas Symphony.
I actually got to sing a duet from 'Porgy and Bess' with Jubilant Sykes--and
how often do you think I get a chance to do something like that? It was
absolutely thrilling."
She is equally excited about the prospect
of performing in the upcoming semi-staged production of "Of Thee I Sing,"
a 1931 work by George and Ira Gershwin that was the first musical to win
a Pulitzer Prize.
The story, in essence, is about a presidential
campaign based on a platform of "love" expressed via the song "Love Is
Sweeping the Country." Candidate John P. Wintergreen, eager to win the
presidency, agrees to a campaign gimmick in which a beauty contest is
held to choose a first lady for him. But instead of accepting the contest's
winner, Diana Devereaux, Wintergreen falls for the campaign organizer,
Mary Turner, played by McGovern. Infuriated by the rejection, Devereaux
calls for an impeachment hearing to deal with Wintergreen's actions.
"You could definitely say that it has a
contemporary resonance," says McGovern with a smile. "But the thing that's
really interesting about it, to me, is that--along with 'Let 'Em Eat Cake'
[a sequel to "Of Thee I Sing" that ran for three months in 1933]--it shows
Gershwin's maturation as a composer, on the way to 'Porgy and Bess.' You
can hear all that, the contrapuntal lines, the harmonies. And just to
hear that score every night is such a thrill." (The song "Mine," from
"Let 'Em Eat Cake," was added to a revival of "Of Thee I Sing" in 1952,
and will also be included in this production.)
Now celebrating her 25th anniversary in
show business, McGovern, who turns 50 this year, has finally achieved
the diversified career that became her long-term goal after her early
Top 40 successes. She mixes her time between concert performances, musical
theater, cabaret, recordings and her most recent interest, children's
music.
"Each has its satisfactions," she notes.
"Obviously there's much more freedom when I sing in concert, or in a cabaret
setting. I do shows with everything from just a piano up to a full symphony
orchestra. The freest, obviously, is with a pianist, and when I'm just
working with Mike Renzi, my music director, we can do anything we want--change
rhythms, change tunes, take the music someplace else spontaneously."
But McGovern also finds freedom, if a different
kind of freedom, in interpreting a character in a musical.
"It's incredibly exciting," she says, "to
every night go through a birthing process with a character and tell her
story. Because it's what you feel as translated through someone else,
but that still contains your own individual expression.
"Also, in the theater, the songs are there
to carry a point, so the musical arrangements are very specific, and they
don't get in the way of making the dramatic action. Which is different
from a concert or a club performance, where--when everything is right--the
music and I become one."
But her greatest love at the moment, aside
from her two Yorkshire terriers, Nick "Bebop" and Rocky "Doowop," is her
growing involvement with children's music. Several upcoming recording
and television projects are in the works, and her book/cassette, "I Want
to Learn to Fly," co-written with Judy Barron, is currently in the Scholastic
Books catalog.
"I have no children of my own," says McGovern,
"so these are my gifts to all children. And I try to write things that
are parent-friendly, that don't drive parents crazy. When we were growing
up, we baby boomers, we could still hear sophisticated melodies being
played on the radio. I try to keep that in mind with the projects I do
for children--especially the fact that appreciating melody is not an inherited
thing; you learn how to do it."
As the lunch comes to a close, McGovern
has a final thought or two about what it's like to reach the midpoint
in a slowly unfolding musical career.
"I'm just set upon doing all the things
that interest me--acting, the theater, concerts, recording, children's
music," she says. "I want to leave a body of work that I can be proud
of. But I don't want to be a copy of somebody else. I just want to do
what I do best.
"The way I see it," McGovern says, "is not
all that different from what I hear in Gershwin's music. You continue
doing what you believe in, what challenges you or makes you grow. You
either chase the circle, or the circle comes to you."
* * *
"OF THEE I SING," UCLA Freud Playhouse,
Hilgard Avenue, Westwood (use Parking Lot 3). Date: Tuesdays to Saturdays,
8 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, 2 p.m. Also next Sunday, 7 p.m. Ends Nov.
22 Prices: $45-$50. Phone: (310) 825-2101.
- - -
Don Heckman Is a Regular Contributor to Calendar
Copyright
1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
MAUREEN MCGOVERN, SINGERS,
GEORGE GERSHWIN. You will not be charged to look for stories, only
to retrieve one.
|