"The Threepenny Opera" has been described a lot of ways. Subtle is not one of them.
Composer Kurt Weill and playwright Bertolt Brecht wanted to both attract and repel theatergoers with this work of social protest that is set in the London underbelly during Victorian times and orbits a colorful cast of gangsters, prostitutes and shady officials.
The hybrid musical/opera, in this way, mimics the push-pull of the tango that is a key part of the show.
"That's the brilliance of the Brecht/Weill collaboration," said Bradley Greenwald, who plays gangster Macheath, the lead in "Threepenny," in a Frank Theatre staging that opens Friday in Minneapolis. It's "the maddening elixir of noble, exquisite melody and insolent and sometimes crass lyrics."
Frank's Wendy Knox has long admired Brecht. On her own and with the company she founded, Knox has staged half a dozen works by the German master, including "Mother Courage and Her Children," "The Good Person of Szechwan" and "The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui."
In fact, Knox produced "Threepenny" before — in 1999, for her company's 10th anniversary. This production, for the company's 25th anniversary, will be "15 years better," she said this week.
Created in 1928, "Threepenny" is based on John Gay's satirical 18th-century work, "The Beggar's Opera." Both shows orbit Macheath, who has secretly married Polly Peachum, to the consternation of her powerful father.
"When we first did it, I didn't know as much as I do now," said Knox. "I'm bullheaded about the text, but I'm kind of a bonehead about music. But I have an incredible cast."