Next to Normal: the must-see Broadway musical is in Toronto this week only
Monday, July 25th, 2011Where: Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts (at Osgoode Subway)
When: Tuesday-Saturday (26-30) at 7:30PM
Tickets: $35 if you’re under 30 and join <30 DanCap; $40-65 regular admission.
More information: See the Next to Normal website
The best show in town this week, and possibly even this summer, is the 2009 Tony award-winning musical, Next to Normal, playing at the Four Seasons Centre, the last stop on its North American tour. Next to Normal tells the story of Diana Goodman (played by Alice Ripley in a Tony award-winning performance), a woman with bipolar disorder, and her family as they struggle to cope with the strains from her condition. Diana’s husband, Dan (Asa Somers), sticks with her, trying his best to help her cope with her condition, still clinging to the image of the woman he first met in his early twenties but that may no longer exist, deluding himself that everything is fine. Their daughter, Natalie (Emma Hunton), is a straight-A straight-edged student, who eventually hits breaking point, after starting up a sweet and optimistic romance with her supportive stoner classmate.
This is pretty heavy material. But it’s laced with a good deal of laugh-out-loud humour, never doing a disservice to the seriousness of the issues at hand. Take the hilarious number, “My psychopharmacologist and I”, for example. As the psychopharmacologist hilariously explains the complicated medication instructions “The round blue ones with food but not with the oblong white ones / The white ones with the round yellow ones but not the trapezoidal green ones…”, Diana sings about their relationship as an “odd romance / Intense and very intimate”: “He knows my deepest secrets / I know his… name!”.
But at its core, Next to Normal is about something more universal. There’s a saying that alcoholics are just like everyone else, only more so, and that turn of phrase would apply equally well to Diana and her family. They are, as the title suggests, next to normal, dealing with a heightened version of strikingly recognizable average family tribulations. There’s the twenty-year marriage on the rocks because the couple aren’t quite the same people they used to be, still coping with a tragedy from years past. And there’s the high school senior daughter, anxious to leave for college, who starts a romance with a doting classmate, yet is afraid to introduce him to her crazy family. These are strikingly recognizable problems, which resonate strongly, keeping the audience completely emotionally involved on this roller-coaster journey: I could hear sniffles and laughter all around me throughout (and I certainly wasn’t immune either).
The show is almost entirely sung — talking dialogue is sparse — by an incredibly vocally talented cast with fantastic acting chops, especially Ms Ripley. It has an original and Tony award-winning score, that’s a mix of modern rock, pop, and folk music, which gives it the very modern feel that this very modern material — a modern family in crisis — deserves. And the music is pretty good. The tunes aren’t catchy enough to have you humming them afterwards, but they are well crafted to suit the story and keep you tapping your foot through the show. It also doesn’t feel like an operetta with awkwardly sung dialogue. They sing songs, actual songs with verses and a chorus, which always serve to advance the plot, and highlight the emotion. There is a solid live orchestra or, more appropriately, band accompanying the actors, which includes keyboards, electric guitar, fiddle, acoustic bass, and drums.
The show is everything you would expect from a star Broadway musical — strong performances, good music, good direction, and a dazzling set — all working together to keep us totally engaged in the action. It’s a real treat to see a wonderful Broadway show without having to venture all the way out to Broadway to get it. And at $35 for anyone under 30, it’s a real steal.



















