Review: Miss Saigon

by

Bob Compton photography, KC Starlight Miss Saigon

The show opens with the sound of a helicopter approaching. You are transported to wartime Vietnam. Soldiers, fighting "in a place full of mystery that they never once understood," are finding ways to dull the pain and agony of a gruesome war. They find themselves at Dreamland, a strip club and bar in Saigon. John, one of the soldiers and best friend to a depressed G.I., Chris, purchases a night with a girl for his friend, hoping that will help ease his pain. Kim is the newest girl at Dreamland, an innocent sweet girl who lost her family in tragedy and wound up at the club. Kim and Chris fall in love. Miss Saigon is the tale of their love in the midst of war.

Note: This production is recommended for a parents' night out. The show is not appropriate for children. See details in the Tips Section below.

The twelfth longest running musical in the history of Broadway, Miss Saigon is a tragic love story, inspired by Puccini's opera, Madame Butterfly, taking audiences back to wartime Vietnam on an emotional and unforgettable journey. This weekend, my husband and I attended Starlight Theatre's production of the show. The show last appeared on the Starlight stage thirteen years ago and still holds the record for highest ticket sales ever at Starlight. One of the most powerful productions I have ever witnessed at Starlight, Miss Saigon  is moving, compelling, and emotional. As we ponder the position our soldiers are in, fighing on foreign soil, and the relationships that are created during war and the implications of foreign love, Miss Saigon  raises so many challenges. War leaves so many victims, but the forgotten victims are the torn love stories, the children born of the pain of war, people forced to make hurtful decisions, and families torn apart.


I'm American, how could I fail to do good?all I made was a mess, just like everyone elsein a place full of mystery that I never once understood!I wanted back a world I knew

Miss Saigon

When Chris is forced to leave Saigon during an emergency evacuation, Kim is left behind. Neither know then that she has conceived Chris' child. As the story unfolds, John learns of the boy three years later after he and Chris are both living new lives in America. Chris has married an American girl, and Kim is living in Bangkok providing for their son while working at a club - a son who is rejected by both his mother's culture and his father's. John sings of these children in a powerful solo, "Bui Doi." An excerpt:


War isn't over when it endsSome pictures never leave you mindThey are the faces of the childrenThe ones we left behindThey're called Bui-DoiThe dust of lifeConcieved in hellAnd born in strifeThey are the living remindersOf all the good we failed to doWe can't forgetMust not forgetThat they are all

Our children too

Miss Saigon is an epic production. With elaborate sets, spectacular costumes, and special effects - most notably the arrival of a helicopter on stage (this scene did not disappoint), the power of the story is told in its fabric: powerful music and lyrics, and intense emotional dialogue. Each character's back story is revealed bit by bit and you find yourself drawn in and sympathizing, understanding how each arrived where they are world they do not understand. The story is intense and plays like an American Opera with tragedy, drama, and love.

The sets for the show were magnificent. Screens, flags, lighting, barbed wire fences, neon lights, and the helicopter... the helicopter. No matter how many times you see it or read about it, it still remains one of the most powerful scenes in musical theater.

The cast for this production was outstanding. Manna Nichols as Kim offered a beautiful vocal talent to the stage and captured the emotional growth of Kim as young girl, woman in love, and mother. Chris, played by Charlie Brady, does an outstanding job. But, my favorite performance of the evening was that of John, played by Nkrumah Gatling,  friend and fellow soldier, with his solo "Bui Doi."

Miss Saigon was outstanding, compelling, and tragic.... Starlight's grande finale to a wonderful season of shows!  

Tips for Starlight Theatre:

Starlight Theatre

4600 Starlight Rd., Kansas City, Missouri View Map

816.363.7827

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