Evening Primrose TV Soundtrack
Evening Primrose TV Soundtrack
Evening Primrose TV Soundtrack
is invigorating, bringing out the impeccable arrangements by legendary television music director Norman Paris (with assistance from David Shire). The disc's primary revelation is Perkins' vocal performance. Biographer Charles Wineeott wrote of Perkins' Broadway singing in Greempillow (1960), "He wasn't big enough in his delivery; it simply wasn't in his nature." However, Perkins' thin voice translated much better in the more intimate medium of television and record, and his nervousness serves him extremely well in the role of Charles Sncll, a poet who seeks refuge in a department store after hours, the first and by no means the last Sondheim hero to consciously try to cut himself off from humanity. Perkins' voice breaking in the final verse of "Take Me to the World" is one of the album's emotional high points. Garr, who played Liesl in the film version of The Sound of Music (which was still in movie theatres when Evening Primrose was broadcast). co-stars as Ella, the lifelong hermit with whom Charles falls in love. If she is not quite the vocal equal of others who have sung the part, such as Bcrnadette Peters or Theresa McCarthy, she still brings the precise amount of innocence to "I Remember" and "When."
For the first time, Evening Primrose's incidental music has been released. Mueh of it is simply a recapitulation of the existing songs (i.e., "Take Me to the World" is played over the closing credits), and the climactic chase music sounds somewhat formulaic. But the brief dance music (played during the scene in which i and Ella plan to escape), scored for clarinets. is a cousin to Sondheim's incidental music to the 1960 Broadway play /ncirorion to a ^farch (available on the recording I'nsung Sondheim}. and the piano underscoring for ~\bu"re One of Us" anticipates the music to Stavisky. There's also a charming brief song, previously unreleased. in which Charles memorizes the closing schedule of each department in the store to the refrain of "If You Can Find Me, I'm Here."
If an official video release of a crystal-clear Evening Primrose remains a pipe dream for now. Kritzerland's presentation of the original soundtrack is a fulfilling substitute and an obligatory purchase for Sondheim fans. |TSR|
ANDREW MILNER reviews books and CDs for the Philadelphia City Paper.