Watch for the Banana Peels

A couple of unexpected revelations underlie the Up in One company’s buoyant, weirdly nostalgic resurrection of “Godspell” at the Rhinebeck Performing Arts Center. First: This clowny, high-comedy, slapstick troupe hearkens to 1971when artists didn’t take themselves so seriously. The second revelation? The same culture that embraced the Yippiness of the time was also wincingly Christian-centric. Based on parables from the Gospels of Matthew, the original “Godspell” managed to spend two solid hours celebrating the Bible’s version of things as if it really were..um…the one and only gospel. Were someone to stage an unironic musical about a my-way-or-the-highway Jesus Christ today, celebrating him as the son of god, preaching the only true religion, it wouldn’t get as far as a high school stage, let alone Broadway. The modern equivalent would patch the teachings of Mohammed, Hindu, Buddha, Christ, Joseph Smith and the Druids around a global-music score preaching that there is no one true religion, but that all of their gods had the right idea. In the hands of Up in One, happily, the sheer theatrical energy keeps the monotheistic implications at bay. George Conrad’s Jesus does a mean Groucho imitation, using exquisite comic timing to set an example for the ten disciples around him, whose mastery of physical comedy keeps things rolling. In particular, veteran Lisa Lynds brings a wink-wink, bump-and-grind sensibility to her every standout moment, along with a terrific voice. Bill Zimmer’s John-the-Baptist-as-circus-barker stands out, too. The main caveat: The second act, lacking the slapstick energy of the first (Jesus heading for the cross doesn’t beg for an Abbott & Costello interpretation),well, it lags. Director Laurie Sepe Marder would have done well to shorten things and get rid of the intermission which allows the air to seep out of the buoyant bubble of a first act. But no matter. Hearing songs like Day by Day, sung by a confident cast, beats the hell out of having to listen to a starched choir sing “A mighty fortress is our God.” Praise Up in One, and pass the banana peels. “Godspell” runs at Rhinebeck’s Center for the Performing Arts though Aug. 7.For tickets and information, call 845-876-3080,or go to www.centerforperformingarts.org

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