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Rogers & Hammerstein’s South Pacific has long been one of my favorite musicals, not just for its sweeping romance and unforgettable score, but for the way it tackles big ideas with such touching honesty. Set on a remote island during World War II, the show blends sunlit escapism with the very real tensions shaping its characters’ lives, creating a story that’s as heartfelt as it is enduring.

South Pacific follows two intertwined love stories set against the backdrop of World War II, each shaped and strained by the racial prejudices of the era. The musical centers on Nellie Forbush, an American nurse from Arkansas, who falls for Emile de Becque, a French plantation owner living on a South Pacific island. Their romance is warm, hopeful, and immediate, but Nellie falters when she learns that Emile has mixed-race children, forcing her to confront the biases she didn’t realize she carried. Meanwhile, a young Marine lieutenant, Joseph Cable, falls in love with Liat, a Tonkinese woman, only to recoil from the social consequences of marrying her. These parallel stories expose the poignant cost of prejudice, a theme the musical tackles directly and candidly.

The show’s creators - Richard Rodgers (music), Oscar Hammerstein II (lyrics and co-book), and Joshua Logan (co-book) - adapted the musical from James A. Michener’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Tales of the South Pacific. Their adaptation blends romance, wartime tension, and social critique, using songs like “Some Enchanted Evening,” “Younger Than Springtime,” and the pointed “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught” to deepen the narrative’s resonant and political stakes. The hit 1958 film version, starring Mitzi Gaynor and Rossano Brazzi, helped cement South Pacific as a cultural landmark and carried its most iconic songs to an even wider audience. South Pacific debuted on Broadway in 1949, where it became an immediate hit and went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and now the beloved musical has found a temporary home at Paramount Theatre’s massive stage in Aurora.

Paramount’s production is anchored by a cast that brings both freshness and passionate sharpness to this classic musical.

Strong pecs are de rigueur for a troop of World War II U.S. Navy seabees stationed on a tropical island in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific, playing now through June 14 at downtown Aurora’s Paramount Theatre. For tickets, visit ParamountAurora.com or call (630) 896-6666.

Allsun O’Malley brings a bright, grounded sincerity to Nellie Forbush, making her Paramount debut with a turn that feels fully lived-in rather than broadly sketched. Her Nellie is warm, funny, and emotionally accessible, and she brings each of her songs to life with bright, expressive vocals - especially “A Wonderful Guy,” which she delivers with pure joy, and a buoyant optimism that never obscures the character’s underlying complexity. O’Malley also reveals Nellie’s internal contradictions with clear, intentional choices, letting the audience see the exact moments when optimism collides with inherited prejudice. Opposite her, Devin Archer delivers a commanding and deeply felt Emile de Becque. Archer’s rich velvety voice has the kind of effortless power that makes “Some Enchanted Evening” land with full romantic weight. Also, the quiet, wounded dignity he brings to Emile’s past gives the role its human spine. Archer and O’Malley create a partnership that feels real, tender, and every couple’s dream come true! 

Cindy Chang’s Bloody Mary is a standout from her first entrance, played with sharp wit and a knowing edge that never slips into stereotype. Chang gives the character agency and intelligence, making her both a shrewd survivor and a mother navigating impossible circumstances. Anthony Maggio, as Lt. Joseph Cable, delivers a performance that balances youthful idealism with the crushing weight of societal expectation. His later scenes, where Cable confronts the limits of his own courage, give Maggio’s work real force and heartfelt depth.

Matthew Michael Janisse is absolutely wonderful as Luther Billis, perfectly cast and firing off some of the evening’s sharpest comedic timing. He brings a mischievous ease to every entrance, shaping the humor with character-driven precision rather than broad antics, and his presence reliably lifts the energy of each scene he touches. Louisa Darr’s Liat offers a gentle, luminous counterbalance, shaping the role with quiet grace. Esteban Ortiz‑Villacorta (Professor) and Chris Khoshaba (Stewpot) add texture and humor to the ensemble, while Joshua L. Green’s Captain George Brackett and David Rossetti’s Commander William Harbison provide crisp, authoritative counterpoints. Young performers Evelyn Dorough and Elle Laroco (Ngana) and Bennet Angsurat and Vin Laroco (Jerome) bring charm and authenticity to their scenes, rounding out a talented cast that feels cohesive, committed, and fully engaged in the world of the production.

The ensemble is exceptional across the board, moving with a unified energy that enriches every scene. Their vocal blend, character detail, and fantastic dancing give this interpretation its heartbeat, making the world of the island feel alive with youthful energy.

Nellie Forbush (Allsun O'Malley) admits to her fellow nurses she’s in love with a wonderful guy in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific, the 2025-26 Broadway Series finale at downtown Aurora’s Paramount Theatre. 

One of my favorite South Pacific moments comes when Cindy Chang steps into “Bali Ha’i,” singing with a hypnotic calm and quiet urgency that makes the number seem both inviting and faintly mysterious, as if she’s revealing a world only she can fully see. That spell is followed by the sailors’ showstopping “There Is Nothin’ Like a Dame,” a riot of comic bravado and tight choreography that electrifies the stage. And just when the energy peaks, the nurses answer with a gleeful, splashy rendition of “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair,” led by Allsun O’Malley and complete with real water cascading from onstage showers - a burst of theatrical fun the audience clearly loved.

Co-directors Devon Hayakawa and Trent Stork guide this Rodgers and Hammerstein masterpiece with a confident, contemporary touch, shaping a presentation that honors the show’s sweeping romance while sharpening its sincere and thematic edges. Their staging is purposeful and fluid, allowing humor, heart, and tension to coexist without competing. Choreographer Morgan DiFonzo adds another vital layer, crafting movement that feels organically rooted in character while giving the staging its rhythmic pulse. Together, the trio delivers a revival that respects the classic while infusing it with fresh perspective and simplicity.

The set and costumes are nothing short of breathtaking, with projections that expand the already majestic environment into a fully realized island in the South Pacific. Jeffrey D. Kmiec’s scenic design features towering, densely layered trees that rise beyond the height of the stage, using every inch of space with intention and beauty. Izumi Inaba’s costumes enrich the world with texture and authenticity, while Greg Hofmann’s magical lighting bathes the stage in shifting moods that deepen the sense of place. Adam Rosenthal’s sound design adds precision and atmosphere, and Mike Tutaj’s projections provide some of the production’s most magical touches - most memorably a stunning firefly-filled night scene that seems to shimmer in the air. As a unit, the design team created a world that feels immersive, transportive, and alive with the beauty of island nature. 

Under the baton of Music Director and Conductor Kory Danielson, the orchestra sounds vibrant, balanced, and enthusiastically attuned to the storytelling. Danielson shapes the score with clarity and warmth, giving the big ensemble numbers buoyant lift while letting the more intimate moments breathe. His leadership keeps the musical pulse steady and expressive, ensuring the show’s soulful arcs land with full impact.

This South Pacific is a richly imagined, beautifully performed revival that captures the sweep, humor, and emotional punch of the Rodgers and Hammerstein landmark musical while giving it a revitalized, contemporary pulse. From the stunning design work to the standout performances and thoughtfully shaped direction, every element comes together with definition and heart. It’s a staging that invites you in, holds you close, and stays with you long after the final notes fade. Rogers & Hammerstein’s South Pacific runs through June 14th, and it’s absolutely worth catching before it sails away.

I highly recommend this breathtaking and deeply romantic landmark musical. 

For tickets and/or more show information, click here.

Published in Theatre in Review

Aurora’s Paramount Theatre returns to one of the reasons it’s become the largest subscription theater in the U.S. – producing and presenting bold reinventions of classic American musicals – with Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific. Performances of Paramount’s 2025-26 Broadway Series finale are April 29-June 14, 2026.

Get ready for one enchanted evening when Paramount delivers this American classic musical in a classy new way. Set in a tropical paradise with warm sea breezes, breathless sunsets and B-29 Bombers, South Pacific is arguably the most romantic musical of all time, and also an uplifting tale that reminds us all of the importance of celebrating cultural differences.

The story follows World War II armed services personnel through spy missions, war-time drama and romance. While balancing duties to their country with island expectations, U.S. Navy nurse Nellie Forbush and lieutenant Joseph Cable each suddenly find themselves irresistibly falling in love on foreign soil. But will that love translate back in the States?

Think “spectacle” when you think Paramount’s South Pacific. This production promises a talented cast of 36 actors/singers/dancers – one of Paramount’s largest ever – performing Rodgers and Hammerstein’s lush score played by a 15-piece orchestra, which even includes a harp. Add costumes hand crafted by Paramount artisans, and a tropical scenic design anchored by 20-foot palm trees with elements hewn from a half a mile of bamboo, 18,000-square-feet of netting and 10,000-square-feet of hand-painted muslin.

Of course, South Pacific is a 10-time Tony Award-winner, including Best Book and Best Score, and it features some of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s most memorable showtunes like “Some Enchanted Evening,” “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair” and of course, “Bali Ha’i.” It’s also an iconic, complex and important piece of musical theater that reminds us to celebrate cultural differences and the value of people unlike ourselves.

South Pacific holds such beauty - in the setting, in the romance, and especially in the score. What’s special to me, however, is the way that this iconic musical also brings a complex story about love, war and race to the stage,” said co-director Devon Hayakawa. “As a daughter to an Asian American dad and a Caucasian mom, South Pacific means an awful lot to me. When I saw it growing up, it marked the first time I saw myself truly represented onstage - in the most accurate way, with Ngana and Jerome, but also in seeing Asian and Pacific Islander bodies on stage at all. What Trent and I are particularly excited about is to utilize the text, along with the excellent historical work of our dramaturgy team, to really deepen the characters of Bloody Mary and Liat.”

“I'm beyond excited to have South Pacific on Paramount’s stage. For one, it has some of the best music in all of musical theater history, the show's genre defining, and there's not a bad song in the entire show,” said co-director Trent Stork. “South Pacific also has a profound story full of complex characters. We’ve got Nellie Forbush, who joins the Navy to get away from her mother, see the world, and meet different kinds of people, even though she’s unprepared for what that will ask of her. We have Emile de Becque with his two children from a previous marriage, falling in love again. Bloody Mary is actually the smartest person on the island, using the war to make money, get ahead, and provide a life for her daughter."

Ticket information

South Pacific begins previews Wednesday, April 29.  Performances run through June 14: Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Thursday and Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Sunday at 1 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. (Exception: No matinee Wednesday, April 29.) Tickets are $31-$106*,  a fraction of the cost to see a show in downtown Chicago. Plus downtown Aurora boasts easy, affordable parking and new restaurants all around. *Prices listed when tickets are purchased in-person. Additional fees apply for phone and online orders.

Paramount Theatre is located at 23 E. Galena Blvd. in downtown Aurora. For tickets, visit ParamountAurora.com, call (630) 896-6666, or stop by the Paramount box office Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and until show time on show days. For group discounts, contact Melissa Striedl, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or (630) 723-2461.

Paramount: Making live theater accessible to all

Paramount will offer two Pay What You Can previews Thursday, April 30 at
7 p.m. and Saturday, May 2 at 2 p.m. See ParamountAurora.com/Pay-What-You-Can for details. 

Paramount will offer open captioning Wednesday, June 3 at 1:30 p.m. and American Sign Language interpretation Friday, June 12 at 7 p.m. 

Paramount offers free assistive listening devices at all performances. Check in at the coat room before the show to borrow a device. If you require wheelchair or special seating or other assistance, please contact the box office in advance at (630) 896-6666 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

South Pacific: Behind the scenes

Paramount’s cast for South Pacific features Allsun O'Malley as Nellie Forbush, Devin Archer as Emile De Becque, Anthony Maggio as Lt. Joseph Cable, Cindy Chang as Bloody Mary, Matthew Michael Janisse as Luther Billis, Louisa Darr as Liat, Esteban Ortiz-Villacorta as Professor, Joshua L. Green as Capt. George Brackett, David Rossetti as Cmdr. William Harbison and Chris Khoshaba as Stewpot. The ensemble includes Karmann Bajuyo, Matty Bettencourt, Michael Brown, Kristen Das, Loreto Delgado III, Nick Druzbanski, Dan Gold, Mai Hartwich, Emily Holland, Dario Amador Lage, Will Leonard, Carolyn Anne Miller, Ashton Norris, Mollie Peery, Callan Roberts, David Sajewich, Morgan Schoenecker, Allison Sill, Zachary Joel Smits, Tommy Thams, Shelbi Voss and Marek Zurowski. Youth performers Evelyn Dorough and Elle Laroco alternate in the role of Ngana, and Bennet Angsurat and Vin Laroco alternate as Jerome.

Paramount’s production team is led by co-directors Trent Stork and Devon Hayakawa, with Morgan DiFonzo, choreographer; Kory Danielson, music director, conductor and supervisor; Jeffrey D. Kmiec, scenic designer; Izumi Inaba, costume designer; Greg Hofmann, lighting designer; Adam Rosenthalsound designer; Mike Tutaj, projection designer; Katie Cordts, wig, hair and makeup designer; Aimee Plant, properties designer; Ethan Deppe, electronic music designer; Britta Lynn Schied, associate director; Celia Villacres, associate music director and associate conductor; Matty Bettencourt, associate choreographer; Matt Deitchman, orchestra reductionist; Emma Rund and James Hayakawa, dramaturgs; Kendra Thulin, Dialect Coach; Greg Geffrard, intimacy director; Bailey O’Neil, young performer supervisor; Sean McNeely, orchestra contractor; Jinni Pike, stage manager; and Emma Franklin and Lanita VanderSchaaf, assistant stage managers.

Trent Stork (co-director, they/them) is Paramount’s Artistic Producer and Casting Director. Stork directed Paramount’s Chicago regional premiere of Come From Away, its circus-inspired production of Cats, and Paramount’s Chicago regional premiere of Disney’s Frozen the Broadway Musical, along with Billy ElliotCharlie and the Chocolate Factory and School of Rock. They also won their first Jeff Award, Director-Musical-Large, for Paramount’s Kinky Boots in 2022. 

Devon Hayakawa (co-director, any pronouns) has collaborated with Stork on several productions including as associate director and dramaturg of Come From Away, associate director of Cats, and assistant director of Disney’s Frozen. They were also the dramaturg for Million Dollar Quartet and What the Constitution Means to Me. Hayakawa has also performed on the Paramount stage, including playing Veruca Salt in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Joan in Fun Home and in the Waitress ensemble. They’ve also worked on stage and off at Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Goodman, Drury Lane and Remy Bumppo.

South Pacific is based on Tales of the South Pacific, James Michener’s collection of short stories, and features music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II, and a book by Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan. It opened on Broadway at the Majestic Theatre on April 7, 1949, starring Mary Martin, Ezio Pinza and Juanita Hall. South Pacific received the 1950 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and for the first time the committee included a composer in the drama prize. It also received ten Tony Awards, a Grammy Award and countless other accolades. For years the second-longest running show in Broadway history, South Pacific has proven itself a classic in countless productions around the world. It was adapted onscreen in the 1958 film starring Rossano Brazzi and Mitzi Gaynor and in a 2001 made-for-television film starring Glenn Close and Harry Connick, Jr.

Paramount Theatre’s production of South Pacific is sponsored by Closets by Design and Sikich. Broadway Series sponsors are the Dunham Foundation, BMO, Illinois Arts Council and the City of Aurora.

Published in Now Playing

South Pacific, with music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein, is undoubtedly one of my all-time favorite musical theater pieces. This beautiful, lengthy show features some of the most enduring and heartwarming classic Broadway hits of romance ever written, including “Bali Ha’i,” “Some Enchanted Evening,” “I’m in Love With a Wonderful Guy,” “Happy Talk,” “Younger than Springtime,” and the heartbreakingly wistful “This Was Nearly Mine.”

Directed by Pat Henderson with musical direction by Jeremy Ramey, this MadKap production at Skokie Theatre managed to fit a large cast of talented players into a small space, telling a big story with many levels of relevance to today’s events. The musical explores themes of finding a second chance at true love later in life and the challenges of sexual and racial prejudice against women and Polynesians during wartime.

Most theater lovers have seen South Pacific at some point, but if not, the main plot revolves around Navy nurse Nellie Forbush, considered an old maid in the United States, who is sent to the South Pacific during World War II. There, she falls in love with a widower and expat from Paris named Emile De Becque.

Nellie Forbush is portrayed with great depth and emotional range by Willow Schneider. Schneider has a wonderful voice and is a talented actress. I truly appreciated her ability to capture both the responsible, respectable American professional nurse and the love-struck, happy young woman who has found true love later in life. Schneider really shines vocally, expressing the true excitement and joyousness of spirit in the songs “I’m in Love with a Wonderful Guy” and “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair.”

The character of Emile De Becque is wonderfully played by Tony Calzareta. Calzareta brings mature, compassionate energy to the character and his amazing singing voice to the classic songs “Some Enchanted Evening” and the heartbreaking “This Was Nearly Mine.” Calzareta truly conveyed the depth of love he found in this young woman—and nearly lost—during these songs and in the scene where Army officials try to get him to risk his life on a mission against the Japanese. He declares that nothing is more important to him than having her love now that he’s finally found her - not any war or request to endanger himself from any government.

Islander and trader Bloody Mary, played by Mariel Saavedra, was a delight with her rich, warm voice and motherly take on having to protect and, at the same time, try to marry off her young daughter to any soldier or islander who has enough money to take care of her. Mariel sang a great rendition of “Bali Ha’i,” the ultimate island siren song, and also “Happy Talk,” where she encourages her daughter and soldier boyfriend to chat about happy things they’d like to do together so that their dreams can come true.

Max Perkel as Lieutenant Joe Cable also displayed his vocal prowess in his segment of “Bali Ha’i” and his finely finessed performance of “You’ve Got To Be Carefully Taught”. 

Luther Billis, the fast-talking, somewhat sleazy purveyor of women and cigarettes who operates a secret laundering side-business, was artfully played by Andrew Buel. Buel managed to get some very funny takes in while also conveying the deep loneliness and hopelessness that a lower-level soldier must have faced while scraping by on an island in the Pacific without much respect for their lives. The entire supporting cast of nurses and soldiers had great voices too, and I thought they worked well together, bringing humor and energy to this wonderful musical classic.

I have to give special acknowledgment to the talents of the live musicians working as the orchestra for the play: Musical Director and keyboardist Jeremy Ramey and Andrew Millikan on the second keyboard. As soon as the overture for the play began, it was clear that the music for this production was going to be outstanding. Despite the small number of musicians on stage, I could’ve sworn there was a full orchestra hiding somewhere behind them at times. Ramey and Milliken are exceptionally talented musicians, and every note they played from the beginning to the end of the show soared with the deep romantic and dramatic emotions that a great production of South Pacific deserves. Their musical accompaniment was so captivating that I could have listened to them play the songbook all evening.

My only note regarding production value is that the stage setting could have been a bit more tropical and elegant, with a little more detail in the backdrops and set pieces. However, the creative team was resourceful in its staging considering the smaller stage area for such a large production, so that the aisles and stairs leading up to the stage were used effectively to expand the space.

All in all, the combined talents of this maturely cast production created a wonderful full night of entertainment with a classic, romantic, and enduring Rodgers and Hammerstein musical.

I highly recommend you and your family attend this enlivening production, suitable for audiences of all ages! There is ample free parking across from and next to the theater.

For tickets and more show information, click HERE.

Published in Theatre in Review

“South Pacific” is a timeless Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical full of wonderful romance and social commentary about racism that is important for young and old to experience today and I was thoroughly impressed with Drury Lane’s warm, happy, romantic interpretation of the classic show. It is the latest of shows to run at the theatre and perhaps the best I can remember in recent history.

Taking place on a South Pacific island during World War II, the plot revolves around Ensign Nellie Forbush, an American nurse, who falls in love with a French plantation owner, who is middle-aged and quite a bit older than her. It is when she discovers Emile de Becque’s children from his late, Asian wife, that she struggles with her own prejudices. As the island hosts American naval troops, nurses and its own natives, another love story develops between the handsome, young Lieutenant Joseph Cable and a beautiful Tonkinese woman, Liat. But he, too, fears the social costs.

Each and every voice in this production is outstanding. Robert Cuccioli as Emile de Becque really played the role nicely with a good sense of humor and his vocal numbers soared with great feeling and the experience of a seasoned pro bringing the entire audience under the spell of new and intoxicating island romance. Cuccioli has a wonderful, rich operatic voice and is very likable in the role, leaving us little doubt to his ability as a talented vocalist with his final, powerful note of “Emile’s Terrace” to close out Act I.

Samantha Hill as the down to earth “hick” “Ensign Nellie Forbush” is a pleasure to watch. Hill also has a gifted voice and her enthusiastic, good natured portrayal of Nellie falling in love with De Becque during “(I’m in Love with) A Wonderful Guy” was exactly the type of joyful, naïve, and honest portrayal of true love and excitement that the play needs to counter the heavy nature of the tragedy of war.

The musical, well-directed by Victor Malana Maog, also includes perhaps one of the strongest supporting casts in any production of “South Pacific” I have ever seen. Yvonne Strumecki is absolutely stunning as “Bloody Mary”.  Strumecki’s vocals are rich and impressive and she is able to both hit the high notes and get the laughs in this role, which can be heavy handed if not approached just the way she did, with more warmth than anger. Strumecki’s voice is simply beautiful during my favorite song from the show, “Bali Hai,” and both desperate and wry during “Happy Talk,” as she tries to talk the Lt. Joseph Cable into staying with her beautiful native daughter, Liat.

As Lieutenant Joseph Cable, Austin Colby stuns the audience with his rendition of “Younger then Springtime,” his voice angelic and finely finessed – literally a show stopping moment.

In this well-cast classic, the ensemble of nurses and soldiers and officers are excellent singers and dancers - really drawing laughs from the audience and getting them involved during the adorable numbers “There is Nothing Like a Dame” and “I'm In Love with a Wonderful Guy”. Matt Crowle as Luther Billis is exceptional, displaying flawless comic timing, perhaps harnessing a bit from the school Art Carney.

The set design is a delicious tropical island with low hanging palm trees that rotate around the stage per scene, soft pools of light breaking through the leaves, really placing the audience in the Southern Pacific. The set was a delight to behold and immediately places the entire audience right in the middle of the warm, steamy heat and action from the moment the play switched from the impressive interior of de Becque’s ritzy home.

Overall, the cast is superb and meshes incredibly well with each other while the orchestra provides us with a dreamy soundtrack that along with the imaginative set, puts us in a tropical paradise.
“South Pacific” is almost in a category by itself. Few other musicals actually open with the leads falling in love at first sight to magical, unmatched quintessential lyrics like:

Some enchanted evening
When you find your true love,
When you feel her call you
Across a crowded room,
Then fly to her side,
And make her your own
Or all through your life you
May dream all alone
                                            
I highly recommend seeing Drury Lane’s production of “South Pacific” for the many wonderful vocal performances of spectacular songs like “Some Enchanted Evening”, “Bali Hai” and “Younger than Springtime” and also for the wonderfully warm, inviting and joyful interpretation of this enduring classic about true love.

“South Pacific” is being performed at Drury Lane through June 17th. For more show information visit www.DruryLaneTheatre.com.

 

Published in Theatre in Review

 

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