By Lynn Venhaus

A refreshing breeze is blowing through the cozy confines of the Tower Grove Abbey in Stray Dog Theatre’s ambitious youth opera, “The Second Hurricane,” and it’s a breath of fresh air.

An earnest, well-rehearsed ensemble – 12 youth choir members and 11 adult choir members accompanied by a 12-piece orchestra, are unified in song and spirit in this rarely performed piece by Aaron Copland, flawless in their harmonies and heartfelt interpretation.

The remarkable young performers are as poised and polished as the adults are, and the entire effort is impressive. Director Gary F. Bell and Music Director John Gerdes strived for the highest level of excellence of all involved, and their dedication shows.

Copland is known as the Dean of American Music for his distinct musical identity that evokes the American landscape and spirit. One of the most influential composers of the 20th century, he wrote this opera, his first, in 1937, specifically for schoolchildren.

During a career that spanned 60 years, Copland incorporated jazz, folk and classical music in his traditional themes, shaping an American voice, and connecting deeply with audiences.

The dynamic dozen – the mighty musicians of “The Second Hurricane.” Photo by Stray Dog Theatre.

Perhaps you’ve heard “Fanfare for the Common Man,” a 1942 orchestral piece commissioned as a tribute to World War II soldiers; “Rodeo,” a 1942 ballet choreographed by Agnes de Mille honoring the American West that includes the very recognizable “Hoe-Down” (Remember the “Beef. It’s What’s for Dinner” ad campaign?); and his symbolic 1944 ballet “Appalachian Spring” that features the iconic “Simple Gifts” melody. He won an Oscar for the film score to “The Heiress,” among other accolades.

Bell, a longtime fan, was part of the opera’s revival in 1985 for the composer’s 85th birthday celebration. Then a 21-year-old artist living in New York City, Bell was honored to be cast in the production at the Henry Street Settlement, its original site, and met Copland, who died five years later.

His impact on Bell was significant, and the SDT artistic director said this opera is very personal to him.

Inspiring this ensemble to achieve their full potential was important, and Gerdes, a respected local musician and educator, also attained new artistic heights with the choirs and conducting the superb orchestra. They both carried this off with precision and perseverance.

The entire creative cast and crew executed Stray Dog’s first opera splendidly with an appreciation of the material, and emotional storytelling that resonates. An unmistakable feeling of community and its American essence is apparent.

The libretto by poet Edwin Denby was written specifically for young people and set during the Great Depression. It’s succinct and matter of fact, without frills or flourishes.

The accomplished adult choir. Photo by Stray Dog Theatre.

The program notes describe the time and place as: “A small Middle West town following a devastating hurricane in the 1930s. We start in a local high school and move to a rise in ground in a waste country near a great river.”

Inspired by a true story, a group of enthusiastic high school students volunteered to help with delivering supplies to victims of a recent hurricane. Little do they realize the dangers involved, for they are in harm’s way as the weather forecast predicts the possibility of a second hurricane.

With their different personalities and social hierarchy, the students tussle with each other, not agreeing much on duties and strategies. But faced with another natural disaster, frightened and with little resources as they’re stranded on a remote island, they learn to work together, cooperating and demonstrating courage and tolerance.

It’s a terrific lesson on teamwork. The six students on the rescue mission include Nadja Kapetanovich as top of the class Queenie, Bryn Sentnor as determined Gwen, Jabari Boykin as brainy Lowrie, Soren Carroll as new kid Butch, Wesley Balsamo as bully Fat, and Ben Hammock as Gyp, Fat’s younger brother. Cece Mohr plays Jeff, a country boy they discover living in a rural area.

Nadja Kapetanovich performs “Queenie’s Song.” Photo by Stray Dog Theatre.

They are bolstered by new friendships and a sense of belonging, and there’s tangible relief and gratitude from the parents.

The other expressive, self-assured students that shine in the chorus include Eliana Bryson, Margot Carroll, Abby Donald, Sydney Fendler, Sierra Hale and Ava Hettenhausen.

Demonstrating substantial technical skill, the adult choir includes Madeline Black, Leah Bryson, Jacob Cowley, Gansner, Rebecca Hatlelid, Lizzie Klemm, Brittany Kohl, Jess McCawley, Chris Moore, Jan Niehoff and Terrell Thompson. Kohl acts as the school principal and Niehoff as an aviator, Miss Maclenahan (she’s nearly unrecognizable, swallowed up in a cumbersome coat and hat).

From a first-row perch, Gerdes guides the 12 accomplished musicians to create a stirring sound and passionately interpret Copland’s music.

Jabari Boykin, Soren Carroll, Bryn Sentnor, Wesley Balsamo, and Ben Hammock. Photo by Stray Dog Theatre.

The cohesive musicians, behind the singers on stage, are– Helen Bednara, bassoon; Mo Carr, violin 2; Andrea Clark, flute; Jill Hamill, viola; Bill Howells, trombone; Michaela Kuba, double bass; Emily Mehigh, clarinet; Paul Rueschhoff, cello; G Schmiedeke, violin 1; Brandon Lee Thompson, oboe; Deborah Thuet, percussion; and Chris Dressler and Larry Levin each play trumpet at select performances.

Costume designer Colleen Michelson collected numerous print dresses for the period looks, and some of the boys wear overalls to reflect their rural life. Sarah Gene Dowling designed wigs for several singers. Tyler Duenow designed the lighting and Justin Been again created impeccable sound, simulating weather and making the music fill the theater.

Ava Hettenhausen, Sierra Hale, and Sydney Fendler

The two-act musical is only an hour, and the numbers are mostly presented as choral pieces, but four youngsters deliver moving and memorable solos.

Displaying clear, crisp and confident tones, Wesley Balsamo, Ben Hammock, Nadja Kapetanovich and Cece Mohr are affecting in their songs, simply titled with their characters’ names. Their stage presence is notable, too.

“The Second Hurricane” appears to be a rewarding collaborative experience, where everyone seemed to bring out the best in each other.

Stray Dog Theatre presents the Aaron Copland opera “The Second Hurricane” Aug. 7 – 30, Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. on Aug. 10, Aug. 17 and Aug. 24 at the Tower Grove Abbey, 2336 Tennessee Avenue. For more information or for tickets, visit the website, www.straydogtheatre.org.

Box Office/Will Call opens 1 hour prior to performance. Tower Grove Abbey is a “general seating” theatre. The opera is 1 hour long, with an intermission.

Rebecca Hatlelid, Lizzie Klemm, and Jess McCawley

By Lynn Venhaus

Infused with humor and a breezy charm, Stray Dog Theatre’s enchanting interpretation of Stephen Sondheim’s “A Little Night Music” brings out starlit summer imagery, the glory and glimmer of love, and the best in a resplendent cast.

On opening night, nature supplied a full moon on a crisp autumn evening outside the Tower Grove Abbey, a serendipitous touch. Imagine the golden glow of a warm, fragrant moonlit midsummer night – and you’ll easily slip into the mood for this sophisticated romp.

Set in Sweden at the turn of the 20th century, “A Little Night Music” concerns several pairs in various stages of romance or uncoupling – and what entanglements transpire during a summer sojourn in the country.

Liz Mischel is amusingly sarcastic as the unfiltered Madame Leonora Armfeldt, a wealthy matriarch who had colorful liaisons as a courtesan. She is schooling her innocent granddaughter Fredrika (a sweet and assured Adeline Perry) on the ways of the world – and men. She tells her the summer night ‘smiles’ three times: first on the young, second on fools, and third on the old.

The Armfeldts and servants picnicking. Photo by John Lamb

Madame’s daughter, the alluring, touring stage actress Desiree Armfeldt (Paula Stoff Dean) is a force of nature known for not playing by the rules. Her old lover, attorney Fredrik Egerman (Jon Hey), married a naïve young woman Anne (Eileen Engel) about 30 years his junior 11 months ago, and their union has not been consummated (her issues).

The coquettish but inexperienced wife teases her serious husband’s awkward son, Henrik (Bryce A. Miller), by his late first wife, who is studying for the ministry but has feelings for her, his stepmother. Although clumsy, he is not impervious to desire and has a dalliance with her maid, an older and wiser Petra (a brassy Sarah Gene Dowling making her character’s worldliness obvious).

Miller has to demonstrate the widest emotional range as the confused and ready-to-explode Henrik, and he effectively finesses the fine line between the melodramatic and the comedic to distinguish himself in a cast of veterans.

Desiree is currently the mistress of self-absorbed Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm (Scott Degitz-Fries), a buffoon whose jealous wife, Countess Charlotte (Madeline Black), is in on the charade. Degitz-Fries plays the military royal as an obnoxious, arrogant chauvinist who is not used to ‘no.’ Black channels her rage into a scheme – you know the adage about women scorned – but keeps her character’s refinement intact.

They all circle around and back to each other. Fredrik has taken Anne to see Desiree’s latest play, which eventually leads to an invitation for a country excursion. The complications culminate in the anticipation, flirting, fighting, and fleeing that takes place in the second act. Does love win in the end?

Hey, Dean. Photo by John Lamb.

One look at the waltzing quintet in their summer whites that starts this elegant show, and you’re transported back to a different era. Splendidly delivering “Night Waltz,” Cory Anthony, Shannon Lampkin Campbell, Jess McCawley, Kevin O’ Brien and Dawn Schmid glide across the stage as the Liebeslieder Singers, astutely controlling the tempo.

They act like a Greek chorus, and their lush harmonies soar in “The Glamorous Life,” “Remember?” and “The Sun Won’t Set.”

The entire cast’s strong vocal prowess is noteworthy throughout, but a masterfully arranged “Weekend in the Country” is a triumph.

Dean has decided to belt the signature song, “Send in the Clowns,” instead of reciting nearly all of it, as others have done, and it’s a fine rendition. Another highpoint is Dowling’s “The Miller’s Son,” emphatically sung as a mix of longing and reflection.

Whether they are singing solo or in duets, or at the same time with different songs (“Now” by Fredrik, “Later” by Henrik and “Soon” by Anne), you’ll marvel at how seamless the numbers are performed.

Black and Engel lament together on infidelity, smoothly combining in “Every Day a Little Death,” and Degitz-Fries has his moment with “In Praise of Women.”

Photo by John Lamb

Employing the beautiful orchestrations of Jonathan Tunick, Music Director Leah Schultz uses three string players that elevate the sumptuous sound. The orchestra is prominently placed on stage, and their work is exquisite.

Schultz, also playing piano, expertly conducts the seven-piece orchestra that includes a cello (Michaela Kuba), a violin (Steve Frisbee) and a bass (M. Joshua Ryan), along with Ian Hayden and David Metzger on reeds and Joe Winters on percussion.

The way director Justin Been has shaken off the stodginess and stuffiness of a high society period piece is impressive. He’s embraced the farcical aspect of revolving romantic hook-ups, sleekly moving the characters through a country estate, the grounds, and an adjacent forest

Looking at the book by Hugh Wheeler with a fresh set of eyes gave it needed oomph, and the ensemble, nimble in comedy, conveys a playfulness that endears. Been has brilliantly adapted the very theatrical and somewhat operetta-ish work for the small stage.

The original 1973 Broadway production won six Tony Awards, including Best Musical, book, and score, and has had revivals in London’s West End and Broadway, adapted into a 1977 film starring Elizabeth Taylor, and has been performed by opera companies around the world – including this summer’s traditional format at Union Avenue Opera in St. Louis.

Anne and Henrik. Photo by John Lamb

With a minimum of set pieces, Been has depicted the states of different affairs well. He designed modern Scandinavian impressionistic slats that hang above the orchestra, perhaps as a nod to magic realism. Jacob Baxley’s sound design and Tyler Duenow’s lighting design add to the imagery.

The creators claim the musical was suggested by Ingmar Bergman’s romantic comedy, “Smiles of a Summer Night,” which premiered in 1955, and is a staple at film retrospectives.

You might not think of Bergman as a merry sort of guy, particularly if you’ve seen his critically acclaimed classics “The Seventh Seal,” “Persona,” “Cries and Whispers,” and “Through a Glass Darkly.” But he mixed sugar and spice to come up with a confection that’s been ‘borrowed’ more than a few times. (Woody Allen’s 1982 “A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy,” to name one, which also references Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”).

But this Bergman-inspired fantasia is much lighter, and Been has brought out the laughter, easy on the melancholy – yet has middle-agers expressing regrets.

Dean, Hey. Photo by John Lamb

Hey, as Fredrik, and Dean, as Desiree, portray a rueful pair, looking back wistfully and rediscovering their spark. The accomplished actors display a natural rhythm with each other, especially in “You Must Meet My Wife.”

Like the music, the dance numbers are polished, choreographed by Michael Hodges with an emphasis on regal posture — although, at first, notice how awkward the pairings are – it’s on purpose, ahem).

Engel, who is delightful as the conflicted Anne, designed the costumes – and they are a mix of ethereal and chic, conveying the social status of each character. The hair and wig design by Dowling suitably complimented the looks.

Hey and Engel were part of Stray Dog’s “Sweeney Todd” in spring 2017, he in the title role and she as daughter Johanna, and know the challenges Sondheim presents, and their experience serves them well.

Sondheim’s work is getting a lot of posthumous attention – but that’s a good thing, never enough Sondheim done well. Like the recently revived “Into the Woods,” some of his musicals take on richer, more contemplative meaning as one ages and revisits them again.

Stray Dog’s superb “A Little Night Music” is worth the immersion, featuring a triple-threat cast in fine form and an inspired creative team.

The Liebeslieder Singers. Photo by John Lamb.

Stray Dog Theatre presents the Stephen Sondheim’s “A Little Night Music” at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays through Oct. 22, with additional performances at 2 pm Sunday, Oct. 16 and 8 pm Wednesday Oct.19. Performances take place at Tower Grove Abbey, 2336 Tennessee in Tower Grove East. Tickets are only offered in physically distanced groups of two or four. For more information: www.straydogtheatre.org

Hey and Degitz “It Would Have Been Wonderful.” Photo by John Lamb