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  • Alison (Erin Kommor) calls home from college in “Fun Home,”...

    Alison (Erin Kommor) calls home from college in “Fun Home,” presented by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley October 1-28 at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. (Photo credit: Kevin Berne)

  • Life is busy at the Bechdel house (shown l to...

    Life is busy at the Bechdel house (shown l to r: Jack Barrett, Lila Gold, Billy Hutton, Crissy Guerrero, James Lloyd Reynolds, Moira Stone) in “Fun Home,” presented by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley October 1-28 at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. (Photo credit: Kevin Berne)

  • Young Alison (Lila Gold) receives advice on how to improve...

    Young Alison (Lila Gold) receives advice on how to improve her school project from father Bruce (James Lloyd Reynolds) in “Fun Home,” presented by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley October 1-28 at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. (Photo credit: Kevin Berne)

  • Production designer Andrea Bechert’s sets for TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s current...

    Production designer Andrea Bechert’s sets for TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s current production of ‘Fun Home’ had to accommodate the fantasies of Small Alison (Lila Gold), who here dreams about her favorite TV show coming to life in her living room, complete with singers and dancers (from left, Ayelet Firstenberg, Michael Doppe, Erin Kommor). ‘Fun Home’ runs through Oct. 28 at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. (Photo by Kevin Berne)

  • The Bechdel children (clockwise from left, Lila Gold, Jack Barrett...

    The Bechdel children (clockwise from left, Lila Gold, Jack Barrett and Billy Hutton) play in the family-owned funeral home despite their father Bruce’s (James Lloyd Reynolds) wishes in ‘Fun Home,’ presented by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley through Oct. 28 at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. San Jose State professor Andrea Bechert designed the sets for the show. (Photo by Kevin Berne)

  • With a tough coming-out story of her own, San Jose...

    With a tough coming-out story of her own, San Jose State University professor and production designer Andrea Bechert found more than just work as she designed the sets for Fun Home,’ being staged by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley through Oct. 28. (Photo by Kevin Berne)

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“Fun Home” is an emotional roller coaster of a show. Now playing at Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, this superb TheatreWorks Silicon Valley production is helmed by artistic director Robert Kelley. It’s a joyous and heartwarming coming-of-age story about a young lesbian woman discovering her sexuality, and at the same time, it’s a heartbreaking exploration of her loving, but troubled relationship with her deeply closeted father.

Based on the 2006 graphic memoir by cartoonist Alison Bechdel (also known for the Bechdel Test introduced in her comic strip “Dykes to Watch Out For”), the 2013 Tony Award-winning musical’s book and lyrics are by Lisa Kron (“Well,” “In the Wake”) with marvelous music by Jeanine Tesori (“Caroline, or Change,” “Soft Power”). After its hit 2015 Broadway production, the show first played the Bay Area on tour last year at the Curran in San Francisco.

There are three Alisons in the play. Moira Stone feelingly portrays the adult Bechdel at her drafting table, grappling with how to tell this story and also observing it, cringing at some of the embarrassing moments of her youth with rueful humor.

Seventh grader Lila Gold is a joyful and enthusiastic dynamo as the child Alison (played by Ruth Keith at some performances), and every time her father says something hurtful to dampen her dreams, it’s like a punch in the gut. Her chipper ’70s-style song-and-dance number doing a made-up commercial jingle for the family funeral home with her two brothers (Jack Barrett alternating with Dylan Kento Curtis, and Billy Hutton trading off with Oliver Copaken Yellin) is one of many highlights of the show, with boisterous choreography by Dottie Lester-White. The brothers drop out of the story entirely after childhood, because that’s not the story Bechdel is telling.

Erin Kommor is full of nervous giddiness as teenage Alison, freshly arrived at college and discovering herself as a lesbian, aided by Ayelet Firstenberg’s confidently flirtatious and easygoing Joan. Alison’s uncontainable exuberance after her first sexual experience is one of the most endearingly joyful scenes you’re likely to see. It leadsinto a wonderfully funny number where she sings that she’s “changing my major to Joan.”

The songs are powerful and catchy, terrifically rendered by the cast and the orchestra conducted by musical director William Liberatore.

James Lloyd Reynolds veers erratically from near-manic joviality to distance to defensive lashing-out as Alison’s father, Bruce. It’s a powerful performance, the more so because you can see how much damage his repressed inner conflict does to his loved ones.

Michael Doppe breezily plays several young dudes in whom Bruce takes an interest. Crissy Guerrero exudes stoic resignation as long-suffering mother Helen, whose own relationship with Alison is explored in Bechdel’s 2012 follow-up graphic memoir, “Are You My Mother?”

Andrea Bechert’s scenery smartly conveys multiple locations with just a few details. At first, the blackened stage appears bare except for a small drafting table, but when we get to their lovingly restored gothic-revival home, fancy windows drop in and a few key furnishings give us a strong sense of the ornate decor on which Alison’s father so lovingly dotes. Director Kelley also makes haunting use of a single projected image from Bechdel’s graphic novel, of somber Bruce playing with young Alison.

Like the book, the musical spills most of its biggest spoilers early on, as the emphasis is not on plot twists so much as processing and coming to terms with what happened. Knowing what’s coming makes some of the later scenes of blossoming daughter and spiraling father gut-wrenching. As Alison reflects in one of the show’s most tear-inducing lines, “I had no idea my beginning would be your end.” By turns delightful and devastating, it’s an unforgettable and powerfully performed masterpiece.

Contact Sam Hurwitt at shurwitt@gmail.com, and follow him at Twitter.com/shurwitt.


‘FUN HOME’

By Lisa Kron and Jeanine Tesori, based on the graphic novel by Alison Bechdel, presented by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley

Through: Oct. 28

Where: Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, 500 Castro St., Mountain View

Running time: One hour and 40 minutes, no intermission

Tickets: $40-$100; 650-463-1960, www.theatreworks.org