Waitress Review | The difficult recipe for happiness

The recipe for a successful musical has never been found before. Gold Waitress, by New York singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, has enough good ingredients to pass the ramp. Alas, the work is sprinkled with too many good feelings to compare with the canons of the genre, such as The producers, West Side Story and others Hamilton.


“Sugar, butter, flour!” » This leitmotif recurs throughout the show created on Broadway in 2016, revived in London, among others, before being adapted for the cinema last year. Waitress tells the story of Jenna (Marie-Eve Janvier), a woman in search of happiness who works in a dinner from a small town in the southern United States.

The waitress has a talent for cooking succulent pies which she distributes to everyone. A passion inherited from his mother. Unfortunately, she did not give him the recipe for happiness. Between her backbreaking work and her toxic relationship with a violent and manipulative man, Jenna seeks emancipation. When she learns that her husband is pregnant, Jenna decides to keep the baby… even if she wants to leave home. Her two colleagues at the restaurant, Becky and Dawn, as well as her gynecologist for whom she has a crush, will help her free herself from her fate.

Universal Quest

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Waitress is probably the first successful feminist musical.

Entirely created by women (libretto, lyrics, music, direction and choreography), something rare on Broadway, Waitress is probably the first successful feminist musical. So much the better ! Because the sisterhood around Jenna to help her in her quest has universal resonances. And happiness has no gender.

Waitress is produced for the first time in French (texts and songs), under the skillful direction of Joël Legendre. With a large cast of 17 performers, in addition to 6 musicians on stage. Joël Legendre skillfully directed his actors. The pace of the production is a bit floating at times; the numbers, repetitive. Gold Waitress is a country folk musical, not a large-scale musical comedy. The choreographies are minimalist; the costumes and decor neat, but not flamboyant.

The production also does not feature great vocals like in other musicals. However, the interpreters are very accurate overall. Marie-Eve Janvier, very touching in the role of Jenna, lights up when she performs Hidden deep inside methe French version of She Used to Be Mine, the most beautiful song of the show; pure moment of grace and introspection of this character created by Jessie Mueller and taken over by Bareilles.

Renaud Paradis, Jonathan Gagnon, François Léveillée and Julie Ringuette are also very good. A special mention to Jonathan Caron who received a slap from the public on his first appearance in the role of the courtier nerdOgie, at the end of his song I will never ever leave. Unfortunately, this number, the most memorable of the evening, arrives at the end of the first act and is defended… by a secondary character.

PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, THE PRESS

Marie-Eve Janvier and François Léveillée

This explains that. In our opinion, the weakness of Waitress is based on its libretto, itself adapted from the screenplay of the film by Adrienne Shelly. This story does not have a strong dramatic arc, and its characters are poorly developed, even caricatures. We don’t understand why Jenna, “the queen of kindness and goodness”, insists on staying with her tormentor husband. Even more, what is the trigger for her sudden emancipation, after giving birth? The most improbable turnaround we’ve ever seen in the theater!

In short, despite the undeniable qualities of the production, the talent of its artists and designers, this light musical comedy on a serious theme did not really touch us.

Waitress is presented at Espace St-Denis, in Montreal, until July 28, then at the Salle Albert-Rousseau, in Quebec, from August 10 to 31.

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Waitress

Waitress

Musical comedy
Associate director, Joël Legendre,
based on the original direction by Diane Paulus
Featuring Marie-Eve Janvier, Julie Ringuette and Sharon James

Espace St-Denis, until July 28At the Albert-Rousseau Hall, in Quebec, from August 10 to 31.

6.5/10


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