

While this production focuses squarely on a positive view of the world, it is, perhaps, also a reminder that this country has survived difficult times. Gray used his comic strip to express his views on a variety of issues, even removing Daddy Warbucks from its frames while Roosevelt was in office. Are there political overtones? Should I be paying attention to gender inequities? Does the storyline pass muster in today’s climate?Īnnie points time and again at the political overtones of poverty, the Depression, a looming war with Germany, and opposition to the president’s policies.

However, watching anything these days, for me, is a juggling act between enjoying the moment and looking for larger implications. With familiar songs like “It’s a Hard-Knock Life” and the relentlessly optimistic “Tomorrow” ringing in our ears, we cannot help but leave the theater feeling hopeful.

The set (designed by Robert Andrew Kovach) and costumes (by Mary Folino) transport us back to 1930s New York, contrasting the sparseness of the orphanage with the hustle of a city street and the elegance of Daddy Warbucks’s Fifth Avenue mansion. This crew includes favorite local performers such as Ben Dibble, Melissa Joy Hart, and Fran Prisco. The ensemble plays homeless residents of Hooverville in one scene, elegant servants in the next, then national politicians. Each supports and challenges our plucky heroine. Paul Schoeffler, plays Annie’s billionaire savior Daddy Warbucks Rebecca Robbins plays his assistant Grace Farrell real-life married couple Christopher Sutton and Lyn Philistine play Miss Hannigan’s co-conspirators, Rooster Hannigan and Lily and, of course, there’s Sunny as Sandy the dog. In one scene, she produces a scream that seems to last forever and can probably be heard as far away as New Jersey. She cares for the other orphans and even stands up to the wicked (and often inebriated) matron, Miss Hannigan, played by the indomitable Mary Martello, who provides some of the evening’s standout moments.

Left on the doorstep of the New York City Orphanage by her parents with a note and half a locket when she was an infant, Annie has grown into a cheerful and caring child dreaming of a reunion with her parents.Īnnie was played on opening night by Tahlia Ellie (who alternates the role with Jenna Seascholtz) with a bold and brassy voice and charm to spare.
