UPDATED: 6:15 pm, April 11.
Due to a reporting error, an earlier version of this story misquoted a quote from Jim. The article has been changed to reflect the correction. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
There’s an awful lot of singing going on down the Mississippi.
And with the lively, dedicated cast of PlayMakers Repertory Company’s new production of “Big River,” that singing is strong and mostly successful.
“Big River” — the company’s first musical in more than a decade — sets Mark Twain’s classic novel “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” to music.
While it sometimes seems like there are a few too many songs — characters often sing without any real dramatic purpose — the joyful production ultimately charms.
It starts slow. The main plot arc of the musical, like the book, follows the infamous Huck Finn and his escaped slave, Jim, down the Mississippi River, but the pair doesn’t reach the waterway until halfway through the first act.
Side plots and humorous episodes that helped elevate Twain’s novel come to serve as somewhat useless distractions on stage.
But just like Huck wins over the hearts of most everyone he meets, the likeable, talented ensemble cast wins over the audience.