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Theatre

Theatre review: Dear Evan Hansen

This musical tale of teenage angst and deception doesn't completely convince John Nathan

November 21, 2019 15:49
Sam Tutty as Evan Hansen

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

2 min read

The lyrics of the movie musical La La Land are alone enough to recommend a show. They were written by the composers of this show. And, like the film, the songs here have that wordy (in the best possible sense) quality but without being verbose. It is a virtue that is present throughout this multi-award winning musica populated by American high school students and their parents and composed by Benji Pasek and Justin Paul who are responsible for both the music and lyrics.

And yet the music — which won a Tony in New York — is both a strength and a weakness. The tone is set early on with the guitar-driven rhythms of Anybody Have A Map? in which the mother of this musical’s loner hero Evan Hansen, relates how she has no idea how to guide her son through his debilitating social awkwardness. His doctor’s advice is to write himself letter of self confidence-boosting encouragement. This turns into the cornerstone of Steven Levenson’s clever plot.

One of the letters relates how the only light in Evan’s life is fellow student Zoe. It accidentally ends up in the possession of her brother Connor, another teen racked with self doubt and anxiety who later commits suicide (off stage, thankfully) but whose parents assume was writing to Evan because the letter in his possession starts Dear Evan Hanson. Seeing the desperation in Connor’s mother to learn what her uncommunicative son might have been feeling, Evan pretends they were good friends, a white lie that snowballs into a massive deception.

With the help of his sarky friend Jared, Evan fakes e-mails to prove his friendship with Connor. And it is here that the show achieves a rare, perhaps unique, psychological complexity as Jared, Evan and their imagined version of the dead Conner collaborate on writing e-mails that conveys the feelings of the young and suicidal.