Theatre Latte Da's "Spring Awakening" by Sater & Sheik

APRIL 12 - MAY 6, 2012 | Rarig Center’s Still Thrust Theater - Minneapolis, MN

Directed by Peter Rothstein | Choreographed by Carl Flink

*2012 Minnesota Ivery Award for Outstanding Production*


Spring Awakening is a co-production between Theater Latté Da and the University of Minnesota Department of Theatre Arts and Dance.  The talented and energetic U students have the privilege of working with a first rate director (the marvelous Peter Rothstein) and a hyper-gifted music director (Denise Prosek), on a sexy and deservedly popular theatrical tour-de-force.  Latté Da, for its part, gets to work in a pretty-good playing space (Rarig’s Stoll Thrust) with excellent tech support.  In addition, the theater can cast students in supernumerary roles, thus freeing the theater from the curse of small-cast “chamber-theater.”  This show has theater-filling presence and satisfying size.  Win-win.

Spring Awakening is a musical adaptation of the bleak and nasty play of the same title, written in 1891 by Franz Wedekind.  Wedekind’s play still packs a punch.  Adolescents, faced with shrill and unmovable social rigidity and clueless and remote adults, act out horrifically.  They masturbate, rape, slash at each other with switches (desperate to feel something, anything), commit suicide.  Desperate alliances form: Wendla and Melchior, Hanschen and Ernst.

Playwright/lyricist Steven Sater softens this story somewhat.  A rape becomes, in Sater’s musical, lovemaking.  Sater’s ending (which, needless to say, I’m not going to reveal) is more hopeful.  Still, to his great credit, Sater honors Wedekind original and this gives the play edge and makes it compulsively watchable.

There is another crucial difference: these young people sing.  This transforms the story.  Musically empowered, these characters fight back.  They transcend meek victimhood.  They have energy, spirit – and this is why this piece has become so popular among young audiences.  That composer Duncan Sheik has created a luscious contemporary rock score helps enormously: “The Bitch Of Living,” “Totally Fucked,” “The Word Of Your Body,” et al, all brilliant.  The 21st century music marries perfectly with the arch 19th century script.

April 12 – May 6, 2012 Rarig Center, Stoll Thrust Theatre U of M West Bank www.LatteDa.org Theater Latté Da presents in partnership with the University of Minnesota Department of Theatre Arts and Dance Book & Lyrics by Steven Sater Music by Duncan Sheik Based on the play by Frank Wedekind Directed by Peter Rothstein Music Direction by Denise Prosek Choreographed by Carl Flink Spring Awakening is a dynamic rock adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s expressionist play about a group of teenagers coming of age in an uncomprehending world. Banned when the play first premiered in 1891, the contemporary musical is still provocative in its uncompromising gaze at the trials, tears, and exhilaration of the teen years. Winner of eight Tony Awards and hailed as Best Musical of the Year by the New York Times, New York Post, Star Ledger, Journal News, New York Observer and USA Today, Spring Awakening is a celebration of the rebellious imperatives of youth. Contains nudity, strong language and adult situations


Peter Rothstein is one of the premiere directors of musical theater in the country and I live in terror that an evil Broadway producer will swoop down and snatch him away from us.  His work on Spring Awakening is perfect: angular and over-the-top when it needs to be (his staging of “Totally Fucked” is gorgeous); sweet and simple when the play requires it.  He uses the Stoll Thrust with gymnastic abandon.  He has also had the good sense to hire the always wonderful musician Denise Prosek and the excellent choreographer Carl Flink.

As to the cast, wow.  I lack the space here to wax enthusiastic about everyone, but I have to mention Cat Brindisi who effectively combines the ineffably unformed sweetness of youth with solid technical choppage.  She gives a terrific performance, and so does the wiry and passionate David Darrow as Melchior.  I greatly enjoyed the edgy work of Grant Sorenson and Larissa Gritti.  The two adults, Michelle Barber and James Detmar, perform their multiple roles with cartoonish perfection.  I have to stop.  Everyone is wonderful.

Theater Latte Da presents in partnership with the University of Minnesota Theatre Arts and Dance SPRING AWAKENING April 12 – May 6, 2012 University of Minnesota, Rarig Center www.LatteDa.org Spring Awakening is a dynamic rock adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s expressionist play about a group of teenagers coming of age in an uncomprehending world. Banned when the play first premiered in 1891, the contemporary musical is still provocative in its uncompromising gaze at the trials, tears, and exhilaration of the teen years. Winner of eight Tony Awards and hailed as Best Musical of the Year by the New York Times, New York Post, Star Ledger, Journal News, New York Observer and USA Today, Spring Awakening is a celebration of the rebellious imperatives of youth. Book & Lyrics by Steven Sater Music by Duncan Sheik Based on the play by Frank Wedekind Directed by Peter Rothstein Music Direction by Denise Prosek Choreographed by Carl Flink Contains nudity, strong language and adult situations