"Camelot," the 1960 musical by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, is still anchored in the legend of King Arthur and his knights of the roundtable, with a love triangle at the heart of this story of medieval battles and conflict.
But in length, look and feel, the revival that opens Tuesday at the Ordway Center has been given a makeover. The structure has been tweaked, songs have been reorchestrated and what used to be a three-hour-plus show has been pared to two hours and 20 minutes. Additionally, pastel scenery gives way to bolder, more realistic colors, and characters have more familiar names.
It's all part of an effort by the creative team to make us see "Camelot" less as an abstracted fairy tale and more as a contemporary story that commands our attention at a time of increasing social anxiety. Think of this "Camelot" as a mashup of "The Bachelorette" and "Game of Thrones."
"We tried to find the things in it that resonate today," said director Michael McFadden. "And that thing is storytelling. These are fascinating people who lead interesting lives that we want to know more about."
The show's leading characters are King Arthur; his beautiful young wife, Guenevere, also called Jenny, and Lancelot, the bad-boy knight she fancies. Lancelot is younger than her husband and promises to add pizazz, spontaneity and zest to her life.
"These are larger-than-life people who represent abstractions of love and revenge and hate," McFadden said. "Several years ago, we were talking about shows to revisit, and people are taking these epic stories, these fairy tales, and looking at them with a more modern sensibility. 'Camelot' is a natural piece to update."
A more percussive score
The changes include making the score more percussive, instead of having big, lush harmonic sound, and changing the placement and context of songs.
McFadden has cast actors who are close in age so the gap between the men does not influence audiences to favor, say, Lancelot over Arthur. But the decision Guenevere has to make — be faithful to her husband or follow her heart — will affect the entire realm.