
Bear Grease is a rough around the edges but very fun show that wears it’s Fringe Festival roots on it’s Pink Aunties jacket sleeve. Most Fringe shows, at least from my experience with the MN Fringe Festival run about 50 to 55 minutes, This show runs about 75. It opens with some comedic making of skit videos and then 4 classic songs from 50’s and 60’s performed in their original style, two by the Pink Ladies and two by the Tug Boats as if in concert. Which then brings us to the show proper which runs about 50 to 55 minutes. Does that opening detract from the show and feel like the padding it probably is? No, I loved it all, but then that’s my kind of music. If they had wanted to call the show Bear Grease and then just come out and done covers of early rock-n-roll songs for 75 minutes, I’d have been just fine with that. The lead singer of each group do great renditions of the songs and the rest of the cast have the background singer sounds and moves down perfectly. The team behind the creation of Bear Grease, Crystle Lightning and MC RedCloud would love for it to make it to Broadway. It’s a long way from being ready for that, but they have the bones of something that could be built up. As I said this began as a show for the Edmonton Fringe Festival and it has the budget and production design that matches that level, which is absolutely fine for presentation.
The story follows the basic, though extremely abbreviated, plot of the movie Grease, which is subtly different from the original Broadway musical version. The twist is that aside from having a cast that is made up entirely of indigenous performers, it has also been rewritten with that community in mind. As a white man I’m sure I didn’t get all of the jokes, but I think I got most of it if not from prior knowledge but from context. The show will obviously have a much higher understanding by those from the native cultures from which it draws it’s humor, but is very accessible to all. They also replace a lot of the 50’s and 60’s style music with Hip Hop, thankfully for many of the songs they have the words projected behind them on a screen, I personally don’t have the best hearing and fast paced Rapping can leave me unsure of all the lyrics. I enjoyed all of the music whether is was new lyrics to a classic Grease song, or the often humorous hip hop take on moments from the original. One of my favorite moments was when Tammy Rae as Rezzo sang Stand By Me, most of it in I think the language of the Cree. The cast is great, there is some really fun dancing and the vocals are very good. Particularly the vocal work of Melody McArthur as Sandy and Bryce Morin as Danny, they could sing me the top hits of early days of rock n roll all day.
The theater world is getting better about giving voice to communities other than white which has dominated for so long, but it still has a long way to go. We can all help with that, by attending shows like this and others put on by companies like New Native Theatre. We need to show that there is an audience, a curiosity, and a market for these stories. Diversity and different perspectives enrich life and help us connect to each other, and it doesn’t always revolve around deep and political ideas or message plays. Sometimes, and maybe more often it should be about what’s funny and joyful about the communities from which these stories come, like with Bear Grease. the show runs one more weekend through March 9th at the Gremlin Theatre in St. Paul for more information and to purchase tickets go to https://newnativetheatre.org/bear-grease-comes-to-minnesota/
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