Review: Fort Worth’s Amphibian Stage presents ‘Marie and Rosetta’
George Brant’s musical play about singers Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Marie Knight is enjoying a spine-tingling production.
Originally published on Dallas Morning News
Students of American popular music know Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the gospel singer and guitar player who influenced rock stars like Elvis Presley and Jimi Hendrix. Marie Knight, with whom Tharpe toured as a duo starting in 1946, is less familiar. Marie and Rosetta closes that gap.
George Brant’s musical play about their first rehearsal is enjoying a spine-tingling production at Amphibian Stage in Fort Worth. Longtime Dallas actor and singer Denise Lee portrays Tharpe, with four-time American Idol contestant Denise Jackson as Knight. Together they create a palpable chemistry even when they’re not laying into Tharpe’s impressive oeuvre.
And when they do, look out. Over the course of the play, they perform more than half a dozen Tharpe standards, including “This Train,” “Rock Me,” “Can’t Sit Down,” “Didn’t It Rain,” “I Want a Tall Skinny Papa” and “Up Above My Head,” which the audience sees them write together.
Backing themselves, they take turns jubilantly thumping the piano, with Lee also wielding a guitar, though its sound actually comes from musician Darrin Kobetich behind a curtain. Both Lee and Jackson have powerful voices, with Jackson displaying incredible range.
At first, Knight comes off as shy and nervous. But as the looser, joking Tharpe draws her out, the audience learns Knight is not as young and innocent as she wants the world to believe. This tension between their personalities and the evolution of their relationship is the major theme of Marie and Rosetta, along with the statement it makes about the characters’ talent that Lee and Jackson bring to life.