Divorce, free love, cohabitation and fierce individualism put marriage in the cross hairs in 1970, when composer Stephen Sondheim and writer George Furth cobbled together the musical comedy "Company." The show revolved around Bobby, a laconic gent celebrating his 35th birthday in the company of married friends and his three girlfriends.
Sondheim freighted the enigmatic Bobby with an entire society's insecurities about marriage: Could it survive in its traditional form; was its traditional form even the tradition; was it threatened by changing mores and attitudes; did it require reinvention?
"A person is not complete until he is married," says one of Bobby's friends -- repeating a bromide that typified mainstream views of how one succeeded in society up until even the late 1960s.
Marriage has become one of the topics du jour in this election season, so artistic director Peter Rothstein thought it might make sense to revisit "Company" for Theater Latté Da. The production, starring Dieter Bierbrauer as Bobby, opens Saturday at the Ordway Center's McKnight Theatre. The cast also includes Jody Briskey, who will sing the Elaine Stritch classic "The Ladies Who Lunch," David Darrow from last season's "Spring Awakening" and Andrea San Miguel, who just played the title role in Walking Shadow's "Eurydice."
"Company" started as a series of 11 disparate one-acts, stitched together by Bobby's story thread. It is not linear or plot-driven. Instead, each scene comments on the state of wedded bliss/hell and Bobby's bachelorhood. It was nominated for 14 Tonys and won six back in 1970.
That success has rarely translated into box-office catnip -- a point not lost on Rothstein -- but the inquiry into Bobby's psyche, along with Sondheim's music, made it worth the trouble for the director.
"They [Sondheim and Furth] were asking, 'How do people maintain intimate relationships in a society that is becoming depersonalized?'" Rothstein said.
To bring this idea into 2012, he has his cast on cellphones, surfing the Internet, hooking up on match.com and otherwise finding new ways to connect through technology.