It’s like a chef’s reduction that still keeps a flavor.
In real life, the late Minnesota club singer Doris Hines was a dazzling four-octave contralto admired by jazz greats such as Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington who called her their satin doll.
Onstage in a new bio play at the History Theatre, she’s a small-to-medium figure played by soulful mezzo soprano Comfort Dolo. And her stage story includes melodramatic moments in which she screams at mice, an overdone detail to denote domestic travails.
Hines’ layered and complicated life has been distilled into choppy entertainment in “Don’t miss Doris Hines,” playwright TyLie Shider’s and director Vanessa Brooke Agnes’ new work that’s up in a world premiere in St. Paul. The show is capably performed even if it leaves us wanting more.
Remarkably, “Doris Hines” is the 148th new play to make its debut at History Theatre, a company that specializes in celebrating unique and notable Minnesota stories.
Hines’ life was marked by struggle, both to survive and to realize her artistic gifts. Born in 1923 in New York, Hines shuttled between orphanages and foster homes as a child before marrying early and bearing six kids. She died in 2015 at 91.
In the play, she’s torn between pursuing her singing career and taking care of her brood even as husband, Big Ed (Darius Dotch), wants her to focus entirely on home.
Following a singing engagement at a Minneapolis hotel, Hines eventually moves solo with her children to Minnesota, where one of her offspring, Gary Hines, would later redeem her entertainment dreams as maestro of the Grammy-winning Sounds of Blackness.