Chicago Sun-Times

THEY REIGN SUPREME

‘Six’ makes triumphant return to Chicago

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN For the Sun-Times

From Shakespear­e’s plays to history’s texts, the wives of King Henry VIII have long been eclipsed by the corpulent shadow of their royal husband. The brutally reductive rhyme delivered with thunderous portent at the top of the Tony Award-winning musical “Six” labels them accordingl­y: Divorced, beheaded, died; divorced, beheaded, survived.

But that bit of doggerel is only the tip of the iceberg in the musical by Lucy Moss and Toby Marlow. In a breathless 80-minutes, “Six” reframes the lives of Catherine of Aragon (divorced), Anne Boleyn (beheaded), Jane Seymour (died), Anna of Cleves (divorced), Katherine Howard (beheaded) and Catherine Parr (survived), giving them the agency that evaded them in life.

In presenting the queens as contempora­ry pop stars and giving each one a killer solo, “Six” has the women sashaying into their own. Running through July 14 at the James M. Nederlande­r theater, “Six” is a fascinatin­g history lesson presented with the vibe of a high-octane pop concert infused with the dazzle of a Vegas-themed coronation and filtered through retrospect of the #MeToo movement.

Polished to a high gloss by directors Moss and Jamie Armitage, “Six” remains an electrifyi­ng triumph some five years after its U.S. premiere at Chicago Shakespear­e Theater in 2019.

With whip-smart, pop-culture infused lyrics, the show references everything from Lutheranis­m to the Spice Girls. Still, the show has more on its mind than salacious Tudor-era celebrity gossip.

The musical is structured as a singing competitio­n to determine which queen King Henry tortured and traumatize­d the most.

We hear from the six in chronologi­cal order of their marriages, starting with a massive banger from Catherine of Aragon (Kristina Leopold). “No Way” swerves from rage and defiance to wrenching pathos inside the space of a few choruses.

Cassie Silva’s Anne Boleyn has the giddy energy of a young teenager — which she was when Henry brought her from her home in France to his court. The fizzy, frivolous innocence she brings to “Don’t Lose Ur Head” turns the number into a wonderful ear worm. But like Katherine Howard (Taylor Sage Evans opening night, in for Alize Cruz) in “All You Wanna Do,” the number shows how innocence can be mercilessl­y preyed on and destroyed.

With the soaring ballad “Heart of Stone” Kelly Denice Taylor’s Jane Seymour unleashes a voice that could fill a cathedral.

Seymour — supposedly Henry’s one true love — died in childbirth roughly a year into their marriage.

Anna of Cleves (Danielle Mendoza) turns the heat up to scorching with “Get Down,” a stomping, strutting ode to savvy pre-nuptial agreements and financial independen­ce. (Cleves got a castle and a substantia­l income of her own after Henry cast her aside for Katherine Howard.) As Catherine Parr, Adriana Scalice brings the competitio­n to a close with “I Don’t Need Your Love,” a number that begins as a gentle, lilting lullaby that builds and crescendos into an anthem.

Carrie-Anne Ingrouille’s precise, bold choreograp­hy features a range of styles that you can easily imagine on a pop concert stage. Gabriella Slade’s gleaming, jewel-toned costumes — are the sartorial equivalent of fireworks.

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JOAN MARCUS

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