Daniel Radcliffe, the actor, should be at the top of the list that the character he is playing is creating in Every Brilliant Thing, Duncan MacMillian’s inter-active one-person play at the Hudson Theatre. Brilliant is the word that best describes his energetic and compassionate portrayal of the life of a man shaped by his mother’s first suicide attempt when he was 7. The title refers to the list of happy things he begins compiling for her, a list he continues through the next 20 years of his life, which will include his own depression as an adult.
MacMillian, with Jonny Donahoe, found a creative way to deal with such serious material. Rather than have Radcliffe alone on the stage telling his story, they broaden his world by having him improv with audience members throughout the show’s 70 minutes. Dressed in a lavender sweatshirt, black pants and white sneakers, with his boyish (Harry Potter) face fully bearded, he is perpetual motion as he cues pre-selected folks when it’s time for their contribution to the narrative. Most have been given numbered cards with printed answers but in some of the best scenes he interacts with people who have been assigned roles, such as his father, the school librarian and his wife. Radcliffe, under Jeremy Herrin and MacMillian’s direction, handles this potentially risky storytelling with precision and grace. In addition to acting out his script he must remember where every number is in the audience so when he calls one out he knows whether to be looking up at the balcony or to the right or left at the people seated in a U shape onstage He participates in the selection, along with production staff, by chatting with audience members throughout the theatre for a half hour before the show begins.
“The list began after her first attempt,” he says, addressing the audience from the stage that will remain devoid of any set, with the house lights remaining on. “A list of everything brilliant about the world. Everything worth living for.”
He then called out the number one and a woman from the balcony shouted out “ice cream.” This pattern continued with “water fights," "staying up past your bedtime and being allowed to watch TV” and more of what a 7-year-old boy thinks makes life worth living.
When he returns to school he is sent to the counsellor, “who was actually just Mrs. Patterson from the library. She was a wonderful woman, the sort of person you looked at and immediately trusted.”
When she asks how he is feeling he replies, “My mother’s done something stupid.”
They sit in silence until “she did a truly remarkable thing. A very unexpected, incredibly unusual thing. Even now, I can’t quite believe she did it.”
She took off a shoe and sock and put the sock on her hand and it magically became a friendly dog who had a conversation with him. (He’s never given a name in the show.). “It was hard to stay grumpy after that.”
The woman playing her clearly enjoyed it and received hearty applause, as did all the other brave souls who took parts.
The calling out of numbers continues throughout the show, growing into the hundreds of thousands as the years go by and he struggles with his own mental illness and the failure of his marriage. It’s not giving anything away to say he will be all right. Anyone who develops such a coping method as young as 7 has resilience.
And it has been touching people around the world. The show comes to Broadway following a successful run in London’s West End where four other actors, male and female, also performed the role. It has been performed in 62 countries and translated into 42 languages
When we entered the theatre Tuesday night I was immediately captivated by what sounded like a live jazz band. Jazz is my favorite form of music, beginning and ending each day for me, coming from my old jazz station, WAER, at Syracuse University, which I listen to now online. I didn’t see any musicians listed in the Playbill so it must have been recorded. Tom Gibbons is the sound designer.
The show ends as the character announces his millionth brilliant thing. (We don’t hear all the numbers in between. They make big skips.) “Listening to a record for the first time. Turning it over in your hands, placing it on the deck and putting the needle down, hearing the faint hiss and crackle” (we hear this, for those of us old enough to remember that exciting sound) “at the sharp metal point on the wax before the music begins, sitting and listening while reading the sleeve notes.”
He sits surrounded by boxes filled with pages of his list and pages and pages surrounding him on the stage floor. Then, in an absolutely perfect ending that belongs on his list of brilliant things, Nina Simone’s recording of “Ooh Child,” a song I have loved since 1970 when it was a hit for the Five Stairsteps, begins. It felt as if the words were descending from on high to embrace him.
Ooh child
Things are gonna get easier
Ooh child things’ll get brighter
Some day, yeah
We’ll put it all together and we’ll get it undone
Some day
When your head is much lighter
Some day, yeah,
We’ll walk in the rays of the beautiful sun
Some day
When the world is much brighter . . .
