A few years ago, Jeffrey Lo crafted a potential vision for the first musical he saw live as a high school student.

TheatreWorks Silicon Valley, a place where Lo serves multiple roles as a staff member, is readying itself to display that vision through the musical “Little Shop of Horrors,” often set in the grimy and grizzled world of New York City’s Skid Row.

That original setting was burned into Lo’s mind when he saw it at Children’s Musical Theater San Jose in 2002. But when Lo’s pitch to set the show in a completely different locale was accepted by TheatreWorks, he and fellow Campbell resident, scenic designer Christopher Fitzer, leaned in hard toward reinvention. For them, it meant dropping the musical into San Francisco’s Chinatown, a place Fitzer feels is a great microcosm for one of the story’s big themes.

“Ultimately the show is a metaphor about capitalism and what happens when capitalist greed takes over the plant,” said Fitzer. “That’s kind of what you see happening with San Francisco that feels really honest and authentic.”

The musical follows dopey floral assistant Seymour Krelborn (Phil Wong), who comes into the ownership of a strange and interesting plant, which he names “Audrey II” after his secret crush Audrey (Sumi Yu). Audrey II doesn’t get its nutrients from plant food but something more sinister: human blood. As the plant gets bigger and hungrier, making Seymour more famous with each new human disappearance, he must decide how far he will go to maintain his newfound fame.

“Little Shop,” loosely based on Roger Corman’s 1960 cult classic horror comedy film, premiered off-off Broadway in 1982. The musical is an early work of Howard Ashman and Alan Menken, the team that went on to compose both “The Little Mermaid” and “Beauty and the Beast” a few years later. Both are considered landmark films that ushered in a new era of Disney feature animation, but “Little Shop” has become iconic in the annals of the American musical, often topping lists of most-produced shows at every level of theater.

With its bouncy, cheery score that reveals something darker about societal greed, both Lo and Fitzer saw a golden opportunity to maintain all that is beloved about the allegorical tale of the dangers of capitalism while sprucing it up with regional fare.

Director Lo believes that reframing the narrative in a place like Chinatown is an incredible opportunity for the production to illuminate societal issues.

“San Francisco is the poster child of what happens to a vibrant community when it gets gentrified,” said Lo. “When I look at Chinatown, a beautiful portion of San Francisco is fighting tooth and nail from being gentrified because of money. The people there don’t want to lose what makes Chinatown so iconic.”

In 2022, rethinking what is possible in the American theater is happening everywhere. Broadway theaters are reinventing classics, expanding casting choices to support the new wave of equity and inclusivity that is moving through the nation as a whole. Yet despite the changes, the doo-wop hit parade that accompanies the darkly comic story, numbers such as “Grow For Me,” “Suddenly Seymour” and “Dentist!” are as glorious as ever.

“What excites me about what we’ve done is that when people come in, it’s still going to absolutely feel like ‘Little Shop,’” said Fitzer. “I don’t think we’ve lost that. We’ve just colored it differently because it still takes place in a floral shop and has the same ins and outs of what you technically need.”

The unity both Lo and Fitzer are striving for extends to the cast. The grouping that makes the production come alive is a highly diverse, veteran corps of performers, telling the story in a setting that showcases the oldest Chinatown in the United States, part of Bay Area lore since 1848.

“What better place is there to set this musical than San Francisco’s Chinatown, digging in with a group of actors who have not traditionally had the the opportunity to dig in with these characters?” said Lo. “We’re fortunate that we happen to live so close, and now we’re setting a show we all know and love essentially in our backyard.”

“Little Shop of Horrors” runs Nov. 30-Dec. 24 at Lucie Stern Theater, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Tickets are $30-$95 at theatreworks.org.

Source: www.mercurynews.com