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          The 
          Concord Player's much anticipated production of Evita packed a powerful 
          sense of realism and acting skill into its sold-out Friday night performance. 
           
         Evita, 
          a physically demanding and politically loaded musical drama, is one 
          of the most challenging pieces to be undertaken by a theater company. 
          It is the story of Eva Peron, born into a peasant family who rose from 
          poverty to become not only the wife of Argentine president Juan Peron, 
          but one of the most powerful - and controversial - woman that Latin 
          America has ever seen.  
         Director 
          Kirsten Gould is to be commended for her concept of combining documentary 
          slides and photographs into the musical which conveyed to the audience 
          a sense of "realness" and understanding of Argentina in the 1940s. In 
          fact, in the lobby of 51 Walden Argentine music played and the walls 
          donned photos and quotes that invited theater goers into the life of 
          Eva Peron before the show began.  
         This 
          is an emotion-packed musical which begins and ends with Evita's death. 
          Act I opens to a group of Argentineans at the cinema whose movie is 
          interrupted by the announcement of Eva Peron's death. This is followed 
          by an intriguing transition of these carefree theatergoers into mourners, 
          who are then joined by more Argentine people in a Requiem for Evita. 
          It was a very moving opening carried off by a confident and melodic 
          company.  
         The 
          first of the five main players, Che, played by Scott Fisher, then made 
          his appearance. Che, an Argentine military leader, plays the Devil's 
          advocate to the peasants seemingly blind admiration of Evita, and also 
          acts as narrator of Evita's life. 
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            Don't Cry For Me, Argentina 
            His 
            appearance in over half the scenes makes for a particularly demanding 
            role, and one in which Fisher performed with such confidence that 
            even when not singing, his presence on the sidelines, eyeing the Perons, 
            was powerfully felt. However, it is his strong and clear voice that 
            most conveyed the powerful defiance of this man.  
           Marc 
            Clermont plays Magaldi, a lounge singer who brings Eva from her humble 
            origins to the excitement of Buenos Aires, and is the first of her 
            apparently many lovers. Clermont, a newcomer to The Players, brings 
            humor to his role of a struggling singer and conveys it with a touch 
            of sadness as he sees himself so readily replaced in the big city. 
             
           We 
            first see Eva as a young peasant girl being swept away by Magaldi, 
            and watch as she then transforms herself into a rather wild actress 
            and then political leader. Shana Dirik appropriately steals the show 
            in the title role with a beautiful voice and full understanding of 
            her character's complicated persona. Evita's short life was a continuos 
            internal conflict between yearning to help the very poor she came 
            from and her own personal greed. Ms. Dirik, an actress since the age 
            of 10, has the ability to subtly register the emotions of her character 
            in facial and bodily movements, and quite dramatically, in a remarkable 
            voice. In fact, her performance appeared to be transformed along with 
            her character's development; continually improving throughout the 
            performance, and perhaps reaching a dazzling peak with the renowned 
            "Don't Cry For Me, Argentina" scene of Act II. 
       
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