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Love, Noël: The Songs and Letters of Noël Coward

In NY at The Irish Repertory Theatre

By: - Aug 17, 2019

Like a symphony of popping champagne corks, with shooting confetti filling the air, Noël Coward’s witty, romantic, and cleverly penned songs and letters are being celebrated at the Irish Repertory Theatre. They are presented by the explosively gifted and multi-talented New York City legends Steve Ross and KT Sullivan. Playing in repertory with Irish playwright Elaine Murphy’s award winning Little Gem, Barry Day’s Love, Noël, closes on Sunday, August 25.

This intimate cabaret show is beautifully gift wrapped in James Morgan’s sleek black, silver and blue Deco set. It is deliciously bathed in Michael Gottlieb’s theatrical lighting. The eighty-year-old tuxedo-clad Ross plays himself, early and late Coward (1899-1973), all the male roles and tickles the ivories.

The beautiful KT Sullivan, Ross’ co-star – dressed to the nines in a loosely flowing sparkling red dress and looking younger than springtime – gets to play her continuously smiling and lovable self. And a few of Coward’s famous friends like Marlene Dietrich.

More than once both performers, thanks to Coward’s deeply knowing lyrics bring down the house. Though laughs come aplenty, his nostalgically infused lyrics continually remind us of lost loves and inevitable fading of youth,

Alone and in duo, Ross and KT perform some two dozen Coward songs. They read a number of letters and first night theater opening telegrams (remember those days). They are written by and received from his fans, famous friends, and letters both to and from his mother.

Some are truly funny, some sad, and a healthy handful, cleverly masquerading as innuendos, are deliciously risqué. And more to the point all showcase Coward’s personal style on stage and off Time Magazine aptly described as “a combination of cheek and chic, pose and poise".

Barry Day the creator of Love, Noël floods the script with a bucketful of prominent personages. Quite a few Coward both wrote plays for and acted on stage with. Yesteryear luminaries such as Yvonne Printemps, Gertrude Lawrence, Mary Martin, Marlene Dietrich, Elaine Stritch, Lynn Fontanne, Virginia Woolf, Edna Ferber, Bea Lillie, Winston Churchill, and the Queen Mother, are vividly brought to life.

A number of Coward’s songs like Mad About The Boy (Sung by both Ross and KT) , If Love Was All (sung by KT), and I’ll Be Seeing You Again (sung by both), are considered Great American Songbook classics.  Many  of the show’s songs, rarely heard nowadays, as poignant and as beautifully worded as they are, are rarities. Ross and KT are giving them new life.

One of Coward’s most loved signature songs is Don’t Put Your Daughter On The Stage, Mrs. Worthington. As sung by Ross it a drop dead show stopper. A rather long story-telling song, it starts out deceptively as gentle advice being-given to the mother of a young would be actress. It ends up with Ross, verging on hysteria, imploring the mother not put her daughter on the stage.

Turning a mite vicious, Ross sings, “One look at her bandy legs should prove she hasn’t got a chance. In addition to which the son-of-a-bitch can neither sing nor dance. She’s a vile girl and uglier than mortal sin. One look at her has put me in a tearing bloody rage that sufficed Mrs. Worthington, Christ Mrs. Worthington, Don’t put your daughter on the stage.”

KT is a show-stopper incarnate. Obviously with her extensive theater, TV, and cabaret background she knows exactly how to both capture and hold an audience. Though the script is light and airy, peppered with some dry spots, a couple of scenes allow KT’s acting and singing chops to shine. In two mini scenes, too short to be more than a teaser, KT laughingly channels Dietrich, in another Garbo. Both bring laughs.

Two knock out numbers allowed KT to trumpet her formidable singing and acting chops. Her rendition of Why Do The Wrong People Travel had the audience rolling in the aisles, as did her 10 minute monologue in which she plays a pushy Coward fan.

This scene starts out innocently enough with KT saying to Ross’ Coward, “You had a lot of highlights in your career. What were the low lights?”  One was when a fan  approached him for an autograph,  refusing to leave, tells him the story of her life.

KT’s brilliant comedic fan channeling – recognized by every one of us who ever asked for an autograph or offered a compliment to an actor – triggered a three minute rounds of applause. The monologue is a hoot. And knowing what the audience was craving KT happily milked this scene to a fare thee well.

The play ends, as it begins on a wistful note, with Ross and KT singing another Coward classic, I’ll See You Again. It is a promise that I am hoping is fulfilled sooner rather than later.

Cast: Steve Ross, KT Sullivan
Technical:  Set Design: James Morgan, Lighting: Michael Gottlieb, Properties: Brook Von Hensbergen

Love, Noël: The Songs and Letters of Noël Coward opened Off Broadway on August 1, at The Irish Repertory Theatre at 132 West 22nd Street.  It closes August 25, 2019 Devised and written by Barry Day it has a running time of 1 hour and 30 minutes without an intermission. For more information, or to buy tickets check out: www.irishrep.org or call 212-727- 2737.