
Theater Review: While Some Performances Shine, ‘Into the Woods’ Gets Lost in Some of Its Creative Choices
‘Into the Woods’ is a legendary musical. It’s quite accessible as it uses familiar characters from fairy tales and have them engage and interact with each other with comedic results, in the first act, and then heavier, more dramatic effect in the second act. Stephen Sondheim’s Tony Award-winning music and James Lapine’s Tony Award-winning book creates a deceptively fun but also deeply profound musical about the human condition of wishes, hopes, and dreams, and the innocence of longing and desire.

The story revolves around some pretty famous fairy tale characters: Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Jack (of Jack and the Beanstalk), and The Baker and the Baker’s Wife (adapted from a classic French tale). Each character must go to the woods but it is the Baker and his wife who enter the forest to gather ingredients needed to lift a curse put upon them so they can have a child. The witch who cursed them demands “a cow as white as milk, a cape as red as blood, hair as yellow as corn, and a slipper as pure as gold.” Their interactions force each character to learn, to grow, and to discover things about themselves and of life in general.

I grew up with this musical. My dad would play the original Broadway soundtrack at home on CD, and we watched the 1991 recording of the original Broadway cast performing it in front of a live audience on PBS American Playhouse. I knew every line and could sing every song. So, to be able to catch this show in the Philippines, with an incredible line-up of Filipino talents (Lea Salonga! Nyoy and Mikkie Volante! Teetin Villanueva! And more…) and Filipinos by roots (Arielle Jacobs, Josh Dela Cruz) and a multi-award-winning creative team led by Clint Ramos as producer and Chari Arespacochaga as director, felt like a no-brainer. Adding to the mix a full, live 19-piece orchestra, and this staging became everything I could ask for.
But despite all the talent, the show I saw at the opening gala night seemed to buckle under the pressure of all that expectation. It was opening night, so I can excuse some missed cues and some technical issues with the microphones. The first thing that really stood out was the stage design of Ohm David. Making full use of the Samsung Performing Arts Theater gigantic stage, he created a cavernous set framed by Capiz-shell lattice windows that created the image of an indoor locale. There are three elevated areas creating three large steps to create levels and there are four gray poles meant to stand for trees. Each of the three levels have entrances and exits on both sides of the stage. The size of which becomes problematic as ‘Into the Woods’ is a bit of a farce and the exits and entrances must be quick but because there’s so much space to cover, it kills the momentum as we shift from one scene to the other. Without more trees to hide in for a quiet exit out, the play has to wait for characters to step in and out and it kills the pacing of the show.

This design was the seat of the most of my problems. Much of the story involves going into the woods for the characters to get their wishes – Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Jack (of Jack and the Beanstalk), and the Baker and the Baker’s Wife (from a classic French tale) – and some of the songs repeatedly reference the woods. Yet, visually, the stage never truly evokes that image. The production boasts of approaching the material through a Filipino lens – Capiz-shell window frames, a salakot hat worn by one character, and the magical harp taken from the giant’s lair in Jack’s story designed to resemble a Sarimanok. These are all adornments meant to create a sense of the Filipino but it never really says anything about the culture or how the culture adds a texture or layer to the material. It feels added on rather than integrating itself organically into the show.
Are the four gray poles meant to symbolize that the Philippines has gone urban and so are woods are concrete? Later on, as Jack’s story with the bean stalk play out and the giant’s wife searches for her husband’s killer, she speaks with a Southern American accent, unmistakably? Is the giant meant to be America? But as a friend pointed out, the show’s enemy isn’t the giant, it’s their greed for wanting to get their wishes.

It’s some choices like this that created a resistance to really get into the show. The heavier, more profound parts of ‘Into the Woods’ wasn’t quite hitting its mark but all the fun and humour of it was in full display. Lea Salonga, as the Witch, gave her some of the best songs of the evening, and she can really imbue each one with the weight of emotions that’s required of it. I personally felt that she struggles on the opening night with the first-act costume, the mechanics of the witch’s garb got in the way of her clarity in her performance but the moment she shows her true form, Salonga cut through and delivered some powerful moments. Of the very talented cast, the standouts were really Mikkie Bradshaw-Volante and Arielle Jacobs. Bradshaw-Volante was able to project the difficulties of a wife being taken seriously by her husband, a shade of a typical Filipino household that I would have loved if it was amplified more. But she was able to balance the comedy and the heart of her story and really nailed her solo, which was a triumph of this production. Airelle Jacobs was just perfect as Cinderella. Her vocal range and her innocence; it really created a wonderful space for Jacobs to take Cinderella and show us the not so happy side of happily ever after. Her character’s growth – the realisation that not everything you wish for is what you really wanted – is so evident, especially in her final scene between herself and her prince (Josh Dela Cruz). The moment was so affecting that it left the entire theater in a hushed silence.

The cast who got to play and really felt so in synch with the play’s more joyful elements were Josh Dela Cruz and Mark Bautista as Cinderella and Rapunzel’s Princes, along with Kakki Teodoro and Sarah Facuri as the wicked stepsisters. Aside from Dela Cruz, these characters play counterpoints to the main cast and thus have the unenviable task of just having fun and they do. Teodoro and Facuri are campy and loud, create a nice contrast to Jacob’s Cinderella. Dela Cruz and Bautista, on the other hand, take their melodramatic princes into another level completely. They have so much fun, one-upping each other, and trying to find a way to make their princes the most scene-stealing prince of all. It never feels too much, for some reason, because it’s campy approach somehow works with the show’s design that doesn’t quite gel together: the lack of any real woods, the Capiz-shell frames that makes the show feel contained rather than wild and free.
There’s still plenty to enjoy in this production. The songs are gorgeous and gorgeously performed – especially with a 19-piece orchestra under Gerard Salonga’s baton – and some performances really stand out. There are just some choices that I feel restrains the show from reaching its full potential and while there are aspects of Filipino imagery by design or adornments, it never really makes any full connection to the Filipino lived experience to justify these tacked on Filipino markers.
My Rating:
Don’t miss your chance to experience this beloved Sondheim classic brought to life on the big stage. Into the Woods runs until August 31, 2025, at the Samsung Performing Arts Theater. Secure your tickets now a TicketWorld.