PicksInSix Review: 42 Balloons - Chicago Shakespeare Theater
What Goes Up, Must Come Down.
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy
It’s a simple premise, really. On July 2, 1982, a man named Larry Walters piloted a lawn chair attached to weather balloons to an astounding elevation of 16,000 feet over Los Angeles. Once Larry was airborne, all sorts of things began to happen. And there’s even more to the story when he returns, all playing out in Jack Godfrey’s Broadway-bound musical “42 Balloons” directed by Ellie Coote that opened in The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Tuesday night.
There is a mighty producing team behind Godfrey’s whimsical take on the delightfully odd and fascinating true story. It’s a curiosity all by itself to be sure: a sung-through collection of multiple, often brilliant, music styles including 80s pop and soaring ballads, clever lyrics, artful projections, and, a slam-bang ensemble supporting the superb performances of its two principal stars—Charlie McCallagh and Evelyn Hoskins—who plan and finance Walter’s adventurous dream and fall in love along the way.
As “42 Balloons” begins, Walter (McCallagh) enlists in the Air Force during the Vietnam era only to find his dream of being a pilot quashed by his poor eyesight. Walter will not be deterred, even though he lives civilian life as a truck driver. After meeting Carol Van Deusen (Hoskins), he starts making mathematic calculations for his dream flight. Carol is totally against the idea at first but eventually comes around and agrees to take out a $15,000 bank loan to finance the flight. That loan, and how it is repaid, becomes a pivotal turning point in the storyline, their relationship, and Walter’s peace of mind which begins to evaporate in Act II. All the while, the two are in hilarious cahoots with Carol’s mom Margaret (Lisa Howard) and Walter’s pal Ron (Akron Watson) to see things through.
It's a lively, fast-paced, funny story with some quizzical suspense early on as to how this is all going to play out. Despite the fact that I found myself thinking “in a lawn chair” well into the lofty middle of show, I was leaning in all the time. There are facts that cannot be disputed about the flight—which is cleverly done and the visual highlight among many in the show—and others that will not be revealed here. McCallagh creates a character yearning for something beyond what he has, reaching for the stars and falling short thanks to the atmospheric pressure that accomplished what his advance planning, and some missteps, could not.
Driven by his single-minded desire to take flight, Walter is ultimately guilty of looking past all the good that is right in front of him. The dilemma that the charming Hoskins wrestles with throughout “42 Balloons” is that she is trapped in someone else’s story: a woman who will do anything for the man she loves and who receives little in return. It’s a marvelous performance, despite the clouded revelation that her own dreams and aspirations will never be fully realized.
Walter’s lawn chair is now on display in the National Air and Space Museum for all to see. It was a gift from Jerry Fleck—the neighborhood kid played here in a terrific, featured performance by Minju Michelle Lee—years after Walter gave it to him when he landed. Recognizing the historical significance of Walter’s daring encounter in the wild blue yonder is perhaps what the producers of “42 Balloons” are hoping for when the show transfers to New York, and Walter’s star will twinkle even brighter.
PHOTO|Kyle Flubacker
North American Premiere
Chicago Shakespeare Theater
42 Balloons
The Yard
Navy Pier
through June 29, 2025
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PROGRAM
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