The Light in the Piazza is a musical with a book by Craig Lucas and music and lyrics by Adam Guettel. Based on a novella by Elizabeth Spencer, the story is set in the 1950s and revolves around Margaret Johnson, a wealthy Southern
woman and her developmentally stalled daughter, Clara, who spend a
summer together in Italy. When Clara falls in love with a young Italian
man, Margaret is forced to reconsider not only Clara's future, but her
own deep seated hopes and regrets as well.
The score breaks from the 21st century tradition of pop music on Broadway by moving into the territory of Neoromantic classical music and opera,
with unexpected harmonic shifts and extended melodic structures, and is
more heavily orchestrated than most Broadway scores. Many of the lyrics
are in Italian or broken English, as many of the characters are fluent
only in Italian.
The Light in the Piazza was developed as a musical at the Intiman Playhouse in Seattle in June 2003 and then at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago in early 2004. After 36 previews, the Broadway production opened on April 18, 2005 at the Vivian Beaumont Theater in Lincoln Center, where it ran for 504 performances and closed on July 2, 2006.
On June 15, 2006, shortly before its closing night, the show was broadcast on the PBS television series Live from Lincoln Center,
and drew more than two million viewers. The cast consisted of Victoria
Clark (Margaret Johnson), Katie Rose Clarke (Clara Johnson), Aaron Lazar
(Fabrizio), Chris Sarandon (Signor Naccarelli), Patti Cohenour (Signora Naccarelli), Michael Berresse (Giuseppe Naccarelli), Sarah Uriarte Berry (Franca), and Beau Gravitte (Roy Johnson).
Synopsis:
ACT 1
In the early morning of their first day in Florence, Margaret reads
from her guidebook to Clara as the piazza around them is waking up and
coming to life ("Statues and Stories"). A breeze carries Clara’s hat off
her head and across the square where a young Italian man, Fabrizio,
miraculously catches it, mid-air, and returns it to her. The two are
instantly smitten. But Margaret steers her daughter away from the
encounter, bringing her next to the Uffizi Gallery
where the reaching figures in the paintings speak to Clara of her own
yearnings ("The Beauty Is"). Fabrizio appears, hoping to arrange a time
to meet with Clara, but once again Margaret intervenes.
Alone, Fabrizio sings in Italian his declaration of love at first
sight for Clara, along with a heartfelt cry of fear that she could never
love anyone as lost and without position as he ("Il Mondo Era Vuoto").
Fabrizio begs his father and his brother Giuseppe to help him dress more
presentably for Clara. Giuseppe attempts to teach Fabrizio some dance
steps as well ("American Dancing").
At the Duomo, Fabrizio once again catches up with Margaret and Clara,
and this time Fabrizio’s father, Signor Naccarelli, is able to help
penetrate Margaret’s resistance to any further involvement. They all
agree to meet at sunset to take a walk and admire the view of the city
from above at the Piazzale Michelangelo ("Passeggiata").
Margaret and Clara are invited to have tea at the Naccarelli home.
Giuseppe’s wife, Franca, takes Clara on a tour of the apartment, and
alone in a separate room, she warns Clara about how quickly love can
stale in marriage ("The Joy You Feel"). Though the Naccarellis are
universally impressed with Clara, Margaret tries without success to
share her deep reservations. When she looks in Fabrizio’s eyes and sees
the love there, she can’t bring herself to disappoint him, as much as
she feels she must; for there is something about Clara that none of
these people know. Clara secretly makes plans to meet Fabrizio at
midnight near the hotel.
Margaret calls her husband Roy, who is back in the states. She tries
to tell him what is happening with Clara and Fabrizio, but he is brusque
and not very understanding, cutting short the conversation. Margaret,
alone in her hotel room, reflects on the loneliness in her marriage
("Dividing Day"). She checks in Clara’s room, and finds that she is
missing.
On her way to meet Fabrizio, Clara becomes lost in the maze-like
streets of Florence. She loses all poise and control, becoming
hysterical and screaming like a child ("Hysteria"). Her mother takes her
back to the hotel and, as Clara sleeps, reveals the source of her
disquiet. When Clara was a young girl, she was kicked in the head by a
Shetland pony, and the accident has caused her mental and emotional
abilities to develop abnormally. Margaret feels that she must take Clara
away from Florence at once, and she steps down into the lobby to have a
drink. While she is away, Fabrizio comes to the room, distraught; he
cannot find the right words to express his feelings, and Clara urges him
to use any other means; Clara accepts Fabrizio’s proposal of marriage,
and the two are embracing, half undressed, as Margaret walks in on them
("Say It Somehow").
ACT 2
Margaret takes Clara to Rome to distract her and put an end to the
affair. Back in Florence, the Naccarelli household is in complete chaos.
As the family despairs, Signora Naccarelli translates in an aside;
Fabrizio believes he has ruined everything with Clara, his father
attempts to comfort him, and Giuseppe and Franca desire finer details
("Aiutami").
No matter what Margaret tries, her daughter refuses to give her an
inch, culminating into a painful confrontation wherein Margaret slaps
Clara across the face. Clara erupts with a torrent of feeling, centered
on Fabrizio and the nature of love ("The Light in the Piazza"). This
causes Margaret to relent, to set aside her doubts and considerations,
and to no longer stand in the way of the wedding. The two return to
Florence.
Clara is instructed in the Latin catechism in preparation for
converting to Catholicism while around her everyone in the extended
family sings of their feelings, stirred up by the immediate presence of
such intense, young love ("Octet Part 1"). Franca, in an attempt to
arouse her husband’s jealousy, kisses Fabrizio right on the mouth, and
Clara witnesses it, breaking into a furious rant that ends with her
throwing a drink on Franca. As Clara breaks down, Franca commends her
for her bravery and declares her own desire to fight for Giuseppe. She
toasts the upcoming union and is joined by the rest of the family
("Octet Part 2").
At the wedding rehearsal, Clara and Fabrizio are filling out the
necessary forms when Signor Naccarelli sees something on Clara’s form
that causes him to call off the wedding and take his family away at
once. Clara wants to know what is wrong with her, but her mother says
there is nothing at all wrong. With Clara sobbing and broken, alone in
one of the pews of the church, Margaret reveals her worst fears and her
shame at having been the source of her daughter’s lifelong suffering.
She resolves to do whatever it takes to give Clara a chance for
happiness ("The Beauty Is [Reprise]").
Margaret tries to reason with Signor Naccarelli, who saw Clara's
childlike handwriting as she completed her marriage form. Seemingly
unconcerned with her immaturity or her handwriting, Signor Naccarelli
admits that he saw Clara write her age on the forms – 26 – and that this
makes her an unsuitable bride for his son who is only 20. Relieved that
he has not discovered their secret, Margaret begs him to change his
mind, but he will not. She invites him to take a walk with her, and the
two wander from one end of Florence to the other as the sun slowly sets
and the night comes on ("Let’s Walk"). By giving him time to mull things
over and by not pressuring him, Margaret succeeds in putting the
wedding back on track; Signor Naccarelli says he will meet them at the
church the following morning.
From the hotel room, Margaret calls Roy to tell him about the
wedding. As might be predicted, he insists that Clara cannot handle the
responsibilities of marriage. Clara, in her wedding dress, stands in the
shadows, overhearing her mother’s side of the conversation. Margaret
says, “Just because she isn’t normal, Roy, doesn't mean she's consigned
to a life of loneliness. She mustn't be made to accept less from life
just because she isn't like you or me.” Shattered, Clara slips out of
the hotel room and runs once more through Florence ("Interlude"),
meeting Fabrizio at the church in order to tell him that she cannot
marry him; she won’t allow herself to cause him any pain. Fabrizio
assuages all of her fears ("Love to Me").
Moments before the wedding, Clara tells Margaret she can’t leave her;
Margaret assures her she can. Left alone, Margaret breaks open all the
repressed doubts and yearnings that she has carried for years on end
about love, realizing at last that the chance of love somehow outweighs
the terrible risks. She joins the wedding ceremony ("Fable").
Link to the Variety review here