So is Zoetic Stage’s new production of the rock-pop musical, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 2010, the year Zoetic was launched. Since it began performing in its Carnival Studio Theater home at Miami’s Arsht Center, Zoetic has staged 37 shows — world premieres, plays, musicals, solo shows, and revues — in that time, winning critical acclaim, a loyal following, and dozens of Carbonell Awards.
But this 38th show? Next to Normal is simply superb, with every element combining to deliver a powerhouse artistic and emotional experience that manages to be both heartbreaking and exhilarating.
Kitt and Yorkey’s six-actor musical about a wife and mother’s long, deepening struggle with bipolar disorder has had several fine major productions in South Florida — by Actors’ Playhouse in 2012, Slow Burn Theatre in 2013, and Measure for Measure/Infinite Abyss in 2018. Whether you have or haven’t experienced the show before, Zoetic’s Next to Normal is must-see theater for many reasons.
Artistic director Stuart Meltzer, whose program notes refer to his late mother’s battle with bipolar disorder, brings a depth of understanding to staging the piece. Because of his personal history, he deliberately hadn’t seen a production nor listened to the original cast recording before working on it for Zoetic.
Meltzer’s version is immersively intimate. Theatergoers seated in the first row are enveloped in the family’s conflicts and in those rarer moments when memories or feelings conveyed in song become the catalysts for joy, wistfulness, and hope. The up-close staging choice gives the audience the feeling of living each moment in tandem with the actors.
Accompanied expressively by music director Caryl Fantel and five other musicians, the six performers are stunning in every configuration — solos, duets, small groups, and the entire cast. Indeed, when they’re all singing together, it’s mind-boggling that just a half-dozen actors are creating such a glorious sound.
Five-time Carbonell winner Jeni Hacker plays Diana Goodman, the woman whose bipolar disorder surfaced after a sudden, terrible loss nearly 18 years earlier. Though a twist partway through the first act reveals Diana’s major delusion, audiences deserve to experience that surprise firsthand, so we won’t spoil it here.
As Diana, Hacker’s face is often etched with anguish or confusion, though her mood changes are quicksilver and always appropriate to the moment. She is unequivocally among the most expressive singer-actors in the region, a truth highlighted as she sings “I Miss the Mountains,” “I Dreamed a Dance,” “Didn’t I See This Movie?” and more. Her Diana is another triumph in a career that has included such challenging roles as Fosca in Passion, Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd, and Helen in Fun Home.
Ben Sandomir plays Diana’s patient, loyal and supportive husband, Dan, a man as long-suffering as his wife. Alternating between frustration (“He’s Not Here”) and hope (“A Light in the Dark”), Sandomir finds the tamped-down exasperation and longing in his character.
Two teens full of angst, insecurity, and rage also inhabit the Goodmans’ home.
Gabe (Nate Promkul), just turning 18, chafes at his mother’s overprotective parenting and repays her, most often with surliness. Promkul, who was so memorable as Anthony Hope in Zoetic’s Sweeney Todd, has a powerful voice perfectly suited to this show’s score. In Next to Normal, his defiant “I’m Alive” and disturbingly persuasive “There’s a World” illustrate the great range of his talent.
Gabe’s 16-year-old sister Natalie (Gabi Gonzalez) is an academic perfectionist and pianist. Her punishing work ethic is designed to get her forever-distracted mother to notice her. She rages as she sings of the sibling status quo in “Superboy and the Invisible Girl,” then segues into a kind of partying-and-pills rebellion after she acquires a supportive boyfriend named Henry (Joseph Morell). Both actors have beautiful voices, and their scenes together have the friction of conflict and the sweetness of budding romance.
Robert Koutras plays a pair of therapists, adding his strong voice to the mix. Dr. Fine (about whom Diana sings the lilting “My Psychopharmacologist and I”) juggles different medications and doses until, finally, Diana tells him, “I don’t feel like myself. I mean, I don’t feel anything.” He replies chillingly, “Hm. Patient stable.”
After an impulsive decision to flush her meds down the toilet, Diana regresses, then goes to see a new therapist Dr. Madden (Koutras). He has been described as a “rock star” shrink, and the delusional Diana has flashes of seeing him that way as he awkwardly rips open his staid white coat to reveal leather and chains. It’s funny for a minute, but soon, frustrated by Diana’s lack of progress, Dr. Madden recommends electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), erasing a great chunk of her memory.
Operating on the same high creative wavelength as Meltzer and the cast, the Next to Normal design team has outdone itself, artfully enhancing the show’s intimacy.
As you take your seat, you see a high-backed gray armchair resting on a black floor with jagged white lines, like the cracks from an earthquake. Black velvet drapes conceal part of the playing area, but they’re quickly pulled open to reveal the Goodman family’s house — which is upside down. David Goldstein’s first set design for Zoetic is genius, a visual metaphor for the state of a family in torment.
Preston Bircher’s sensitive lighting design reflects the characters’ roller-coaster emotions, and when he bathes the house in a colorfully dappled, almost psychedelic design, it reflects Diana’s delusional mental state.
Matt Corey’s sound design is perfection in this production. The words, the music, and the effects are crystal clear, and you may find yourself marveling at the intricacies of Yorkey’s book and lyrics.
Costume designer Marina Pareja dresses the petite Hacker mostly in blouses or long sweaters and tank tops with jeans, the suburban mom’s uniform. Sandomir’s Dan is an architect whose look is comfortable but professional. The kids’ high school attire is convincingly age-appropriate. Koutras’ sleek Docs make him look like a man full of confidence — or himself.
In the world of musical theater, there are all kinds of shows. Some, as creative and visually dazzling as they may be, offer nothing more profound than entertainment and escape, exactly what their audiences want. Next to Normal takes you on a far deeper journey that is observant, sometimes painfully truthful, ultimately moving in a way that leaves you thinking and feeling long after you’ve gone home.
And in the case of Zoetic’s production, you can add “thrilling” as a description. This is South Florida theater at its best.
– Christine Dolen, ArtburstMiami.com
Next to Normal. Through April 9, at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, 1300 Biscayne Blvd., Miami; 305-949-6722; arshtcenter.org. Tickets cost $60 to $65. Performances take place 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday (no evening show Wednesday, April 5, additional matinee Saturday, April 8).
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by PostX News and is published from a syndicated feed.)