Main story: South Valley Civic Theatre’s ‘Cabaret’ brings 1930s Berlin to life on stage
Show uses fun songs, dances, jokes to reveal dark side of human nature
By Marty Cheek
Life is a cabaret! And it’s especially so in the South Valley Civic Theatre’s musical that takes a dark look at how a society can fall to fascism.
“Cabaret” opens March 11 for a three-weekend run at the Morgan Hill Community Playhouse. Blending singing and dancing with comedy and drama, the show takes audiences to a seedy nightclub in 1930 Berlin. The story explores the last days of Germany’s Weimar Republic where characters fall in love but find their romance threatened by the rise of Nazism.
The show is co-produced by Robin Bezanson and Judy Grant and directed by Carol Harris. SVCT originally planned to perform it in spring 2020 but, after a few rehearsals, the COVID-19 pandemic forced it to be delayed.
After being gone for two years and the stress of what happened during the past two years, there was a question of whether or not SVCT should do such a serious show, Bezanson said.
“I think people have come to a place where they want ‘real’ — and this is real, this is what really happened. This is what we have to deal with,” she said. “And it’s time for us to learn from those times and move forward with love and acceptance and helping your neighbor. The things that happens to some of the characters are very relevant.”
The heavy themes of the show — which include racism, the rise of autocracy, and the darker side of human nature — is lightened by the slapstick jokes and comic music interlaced into the story’s plot, Harris said.
“It’s a very dark show but it does have a lot of humor. Act One and Act Two are totally different,” she said. “Act One has some happy spots and romantic relationships. But Act Two is a downer. Nothing goes right from the beginning to the end. The show is an omen to us that if we don’t pay attention to our history, it may repeat itself.”
The main performers are Billy Tindall as the eccentric master of ceremonies of the Kit Kat Klub, Sarah Duarte as the nightclub’s star performer Sally Bowles, and Vaughn Mayer as struggling novelist Clifford Bradshaw who comes to Berlin seeking inspiration. Other performers include Joy Reynolds, Mary Beth Anderson, Peter Mandel, Michael Grimm, Marty Cheek, Marilyn Pifer, Joyce Bedard, Helen Huang, Reggie Reynolds, Megan Griffin, Patty Reinhart, Christine Carrillo, Jillian Grotz, Brooklyn Butler, Mason Bell, Eric Bruckner and Christopher Cruz.
Tindall said he hopes audiences will see the parallels with Germany’s history of fascism and the world’s current events.
“Here are these people living their lives and then all of a sudden everything is pulled out from under them. It’s just like Ukraine now,” he said. “I feel like it’s an important message that’s out there all the time but people forget.”
What is the show’s message? “Be aware of what’s happening around you. Be knowledgeable about what your government is doing and what other people are thinking,” he said. “The message is current as it can possibly be right now.”
Emcee is “the conscience of the show,” he said in his approach to playing the part.
“He lures the audience into really seeing what’s going on,” he said. “He gives them a sense of complacency at the beginning — and then he wants to give them the message. He’s not the storyteller but he’s the one who leads them down the path to the story.”
Duarte studied opera in college and has performed in various bands, empowering her to belt out the songs at the cabaret with a powerful voice. She performs the role of Sally Bowles as a superficial party girl using drugs, alcohol and sex to fill a tragic void in her soul.
“She’s very sad. I think she’s relatable because she’s self-destructive and, unfortunately, I think that’s something all of us are subject to at one point in time or another,” Duarte said. But you have hope during the show that at some point she’s going to be able to turn it around. And then she doesn’t. And that’s really the tragedy.”
Vaughn auditioned for a role as a Kit Kat Klub “boy” in the cabaret, and soon after received a call from the producers offering him a starring role as Cliff.
“It was a pleasant surprise. I love the story of ‘Cabaret’ and I love how all the characters are all broken in certain ways,” he said. “What I love about Cliff is that he’s got that writer’s observation. Like most writers, he’s taking in his surroundings . . . He has the right ideas and his heart’s in the right place. But where he really falls short is that he expects people to change when he’s not really acknowledging who they are, particularly Sally.”
Although the show is inappropriate for young children because of its darker tone and open sexuality reflecting Jazz Age Berlin society, Tindall encourages high school students and adults who like to be challenged to attend as a “civics lesson” about how fragile democracy can be if citizens take it for granted.
“Cabaret” is about stepping back to a moment in history,” he said. “The setting and the time and what’s happening to the country of Germany is very real and pertinent to today.”
And the show’s lessons from the past are served with plenty of song and dance numbers and comedy for audiences to enjoy, he said.
“They’ll be entertained,” he said. “The music is wonderful. The dancing is wonderful. It’s an opportunity to enjoy all that but also get a very pertinent message about what’s going on these days.”