Restlessness and Reclamation in “Caroline or Change”

(Pier Lamia Porter, Davron Monroe, and Yewande Odetoyinbo in Monnbox’ ‘Caroline or Change’)

By Michele Markarian

“Caroline or Change”. Book and lyrics by Tony Kushner; Score by Jeanine Tesori; Directed by Allison Olivia Choat; Presented by Moonbox Productions at Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA, 527 Tremont Street, Boston through May 11.

“39 and still a maid,” sings Caroline (Yewande Odetoyinbo), who, in 1963’s Lake Charles, Louisiana, is a single mother of four children, one of whom is serving in Vietnam. She works for a Jewish family, the Gellmans, who have just suffered a crisis of their own – Betty, the mother, has died of cancer. Widow Stuart (Robert Orzalli) has decided to marry his deceased wife’s best friend, Rose (Sarah Kornfeld). His eight-year old son, Noah (Ben Choi-Harris) does not like his stepmother, much to her sad consternation. He is attached to Caroline, who lets him light her cigarettes. She also delivers some pithy advice: “When cancer eat people Noah, it God eating them. God sometimes eat people like a hungry wolf. He make this whole world as a test. Cancer was your momma’s test, and her death is your test.” Sounds harsh, but ultimately more comforting than what the emotionally detached Stuart has to offer his son with “There Is No God, Noah”.

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