Hardly a story of corn as high as an elephant’s eye or real-good clambakes, Suffs marks an extraordinary moment in the evolution of musical theatre, mostly thanks to Taub’s highly relevant and accessible book and haunting, arresting musical score. Under the direction of Leigh Silverman and featuring choreography by Mayte Natalio, jaw-dropping costuming by Paul Tazewell, and lighting design by Lap Chi Chu among its uniformly dynamic design elements, although I’m sorry I never got to see Jenn leading the original New York cast, the team touring with it on the road could not be more impressive.
Maya Keleher here takes over from Taub as Alice Paul and Marya Grandy as Carrie Chapman Catt, with Danyel Fulton as African American activist Ida B. Wells, Livvy Marcus as Doris Stevens, and Jenny Ashman as President Woodrow Wilson, all topnotch musical theatre artists leading what is surely to be the most awarded ensemble of the season in Los Angeles.
The magnificent vocal power of all the members of this ensemble is nothing short of stunning and what sound designer Jason Crystal has accomplished in the usually acoustically challenged Pantages is something to be commended.
There are many standout performances in the large cast, with particular kudos to the eleventh-hour turn by Gwynne Wood as the grieving mother of a lost soldier whose actual letter to a Tennessee congressman changed the final vote in favor of adopting the history-changing amendment and to understudy Amanda K. Lopez, who stepped in at the last moment on opening night to literally steal the show as socialite turned fervent suffragist Inez Milholland.
Suffs goes to the top of my list as one of the most ambitious and memorable musicals of all time, providing a moving, inspiring, entirely credible, and still enjoyable experience paying long overdue homage to a defining moment in our country’s history while still managing to be a charming character-driven entertainment.
For me, I felt a special connection to Taub’s show-stopping “I Was Here,” sung by Ida and some of the other hardest working suffragists after the passing of the amendment:
“I want your mother to know I was here
I want your children to know I was here
I want your great-granddaughter to know I was here
I need her to know I was here.”
I began my own lifelong commitment to fight for equality and justice as a very young teen, traveling during show breaks and between school semesters to sit in the backs of buses, working tirelessly as a member of SNCC, marching shoulder-to-shoulder in freedom marches with Diane Nash, and onceceven being arrested while storming the pedestrian bridge in Century City. I worked with the Committee to Ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in the late 70s and early 80s, wrote articles and later took to the streets again to stir the pot for marriage equality, not to mention the legalization of cannabis.
Now, at 79, I have often felt myself lumped into the mix as nothing but an ineffectual old white dude who some of the younger activists think should just lie down and let the primordial tar cover me from the toes up.
What has been accomplished in the name of rights and justice by others who came before the current stand of cotton should be honored, studied, and appreciated, not passed off as old news. Suffs, in all its glory, does just that.
Personally, the most emotional moment during the opening night performance of Suffs came unexpectedly. It was thrilling to see busloads of schoolkids in front of the theatre, obviously filled with anticipation to be included in what will surely be a pivotal experience in their young and impressionable lives.
Near the end of the play, after the passage of the amendment, Doris Stevens and her love Dudley Malone contemplate marriage on one side of the stage—the fact that her future husband is played by African American actress Brandi Porter not lost in the message—while on the other side of the stage, Grandy as Carrie Catt wonders with her secret love Mollie Hay (Tami Dahbura) if they, too, will ever be allowed to marry.
When Catt and Hay share a modest kiss, pockets of approving and clearly youthful hoots and cheers rose up throughout the house and especially from the mezzanine, the area where most of those eager and open-minded bussed-in teenagers were seated.
It was an unforgettable moment, giving me a sudden wave of hope for the future of our poor maligned country—a feeling I’ve found nearly impossible to muster in the light of our current national nightmare as a self-serving madman and his cowardly enablers drag us steadily backward into the dark ages.