With music by Jeanine Tesori and books/lyrics by Lisa Kron, this true story is gripping from its opening – not a big brash Broadway extravaganza but a subdued chamber piece, full of peacefulness, angst, love and adolescent longings.
The creators have hit upon the idea of having the older Alison (Darrin Smith ) onstage mostly watching and commenting on the action , while her earlier self is portrayed as a college student, and a very young girl, respectively by Hannah Starr and Stella Rose Hoyt.
It works wonderfully as sometimes the three ages of Alison are able to complement each other in the growing irony of the storyline. Stella is stunning as the youngest, culminating in an endearing romantic song about her first awakening to her sexuality , when she encounters a butch delivery woman in “ Ring of Keys “.
Rob Lindley is an authoritarian father-figure, a teacher and funeral director, who can’t be contradicted yet he betrays his inner pain at being a gay man who can’t escape to happiness. As he tells his “out” daughter towards his tragic end, “ it’s harder when you’re older to begin “.
McKinley Carter plays the wronged wife – a talented actress and pianist, reduced by the despair of a totally hollow marriage to midday drinking.
It needs to come back to the West End after lockdown, before Jake Gyllenhall, who’s bought the film rights, makes his movie of it. Oh and the title? Well it’s the ironic family abbreviation for their funeral home business.
You have to pay roughly £16 to see the show – it’s worth it.