Showing posts with label Baby It's You. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baby It's You. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2011

REVIEW: Baby It's You!


Review of the April 20 matinee preview performance. At the Broadhurst Theatre on Broadway, New York City. 2 hours, 20 minutes, including an intermission. Starring Beth Leavel, Allan Louis, Geno Henderson, Erica Ash, Kelli Barret, Kyra Da Costa, Christina Sajous, Crystal Starr, Barry Pearl and Brandon Uranowitz. Book by Floyd Mutrux and Colin Escott. Choreography by Birgitte Mutrux . Direction by Floyd Mutrux and Sheldon Epps.

Grade: C-

Where do I start?  How do I even explain what I saw last week at a preview of the new musical Baby It's You!?  Bear with me, please, for this might not come out right.  Every season, there is one show that seems to bear the brunt of ridicule - not the kind where there is a potentially great cast who isn't up to expectations (like Women on the Verge) or because its problems are huge, but still interesting (like Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark), but rather so shameful it is too easy a target.  Baby It's You! is mostly that last type of "bad" show.  Is it as bad as you've heard in the chat rooms and message boards?  No, but not by much.  Is it the worst musical of the season?  Well, I have yet, as of this writing, to see Wonderland or The People in the Picture, but I'm going to go out on a limb and say that at the very least it is one of the worst of the season, by a large margin. (And it isn't as bad as last season's worst, Everyday Rapture.)

That is not to say that there aren't things to applaud about the production; there are a few.  And I'll start with those.  The show curtain, a replica of the fabulous (I really mean it) show logo, is pretty cool, as the logo is on the screen, and roving spotlights shine on it in such a way that the picture looks 3D.  And the pre-show "turn off you electronic devices/unwrap your candy" announcement happens as a film resembling those old drive-in commercials for the snack bar (God, I am dating myself...) which is pretty cool.  The costumes (designed by Lizz Wolf) and the lighting (designed by Howell Binkley) are top-notch, and, along with the pretty nifty projections (designed by Jason H. Thompson) which set the scenes, are evocative of a time gone by while still being 21st century cool.

Florence Greenberg (center) and The Shirelles

A few performances stand out in a good way.  All four of the girls who play the Shirelles are spunky, decent dancers with better voices than their true-life counterparts.  Of the four, Christina Sajous sticks out as the best, as she can SING!  But this could also be because she makes the most of having the best material to work with in the book scenes.  And there is Kelli Barrett, who plays both Lesley Gore (doing a fun "It's My Party") and Greenberg's all but forgotten daughter, Mary Jane.  It is Miss Barrett that ultimately offers the show's single dramatically tense moment - a confrontation between mother and daughter, who finally has the guts to say, "Mom, you treat them more like daughters than you do me."  If that doesn't sound like much, take it for what it is worth that it really is the high point of dramatic tension.

And there is Beth Leavel as Florence Greenberg, the actual subject of the show, despite what the "The Shirelles Musical" moniker might imply.  As you might expect, Ms. Leavel is giving a wonderful performance, emoting her ass off and treating each scene like a command performance of Macbeth before Queen Elizabeth.  She is also in excellent voice, though I can't imagine what singing she actually does is particularly taxing as it is all well within her belty range.  In retrospect, there isn't as much of her singing as I thought there was.  And she works hard to make the unbelievably sophomoric book scenes have a little heft and dramatic tension.  Let's just say she's still in search of her next Drowsy Chaperone that will catapult her into true Broadway divadom.

The rest of my comments are largely uncomplimentary, though I can say, in summary, that the whole cast is very committed to giving a high energy performance.

Now for the hard part: trying to explain what Baby It's You! is as a musical.  I guess I'll go with "hybrid."  It wants desperately to be Jersey Boys, and had the story been told better, it could have been close; old Flo was one feisty gal way ahead of her time.  But doesn't it say something that a late 50's/early 60's love affair between a Jewish business woman (a taboo in and of itself) and a black songwriter/producer comes off like a minor plot point?  The show also resembles one of those Time-Life "Songs of the 60's" Collection info-mercials, complete with cheesy narration like, "It was 1960-whatever and Liz got Oscared, Birdie got Tony-ed and the the kids were dancing to the sounds of blah blah," followed by a longish snippet, but not complete version of a tune by blah blah, reenacted by the narrator/disc jockey character.  Another part of the show owes its existence to one of those "This is Your Life" programs where the subject is "exposed," warts and all, but never really with any depth.  But perhaps worst of all is the dialogue between husband and wife that is so condescending that the audience booed with delight all around me, while I thought, "Who knew Leave It to Beaver was so progressive?"  That the cast gets through any of the book scenes is commendable, but shame on both (yes, it took two people to write this dreck) Floyd Mutrux and Colin Escott for thinking that shoving all 4 or 5 different takes on the same subject together would actually work.  And I hope that any significant women in their lives gave them both an earful for even thinking to write a line like, "Most women would be grateful to have a house and a husband to take care of."  Even if this were the 50's/60's that would be unacceptable.  And I won't even discuss the deprecating platitudes hurled about regarding people of color or non-Christian religions. (I give Barry Pearl, the poor shlub who plays Flo's husband and who actually says most of those lines, a lot of credit for getting it out without choking or laughing.)

The Shirelles are finally a hit!

Even more shocking is that it took two people to direct this mess: Floyd Mutrux and Sheldon Epps.  Mr. Mutrux, the same guy who brought us the nearly as bad Million Dollar Quartet, needs to be banned from Broadway for inexcusable mediocrity.  I can describe the blocking in about 3 sentences: 1) Stage left and stage right are "locations" (a kitchen, a recording studio, Florence's office), while center stage is the "performance area." 2) All book scenes will take place on the sides, with literally dozens of entrances and exits completed by the cast who deliver one line and leave, then come back, talk more and then leave.  3)  Occasionally, for the sake of "mixing it up," allow the DJ/narrator or Florence walk all the way across the stage.  I am not exaggerating when I estimate that Ms. Leavel must walk two miles per show, just entering and exiting; should this run for any length of time I bet she will ask her stand-by to do the matinees.

While the singing is uniformly good, because most of the actors play multiple roles (including the gals who play the Shirelles), it is often difficult to recognize who we are seeing.  For example, they announce "Dionne Warwick" as one of the Shirelles (Erica Ash) comes out singing "Walk on By" (I think).  Only after the show, as I thumbed through my Playbill, did I realize she was playing Dionne Warwick, too!  And then it hit me... the Shirelles didn't necessarily have a lot of hits on their own, but also did back up singing and many covers of other people's hits.  Whether or not that is actually the case is not the relevant point here; that would be that the show so muddies the song aspect of the show that unless you really know their career, you don't actually know where the Shirelles stop and the show starts taking license.  I don't know what is worse: that I feel kind of duped or that I don't care enough to look it up on Wikipedia.

Beth Leavel and Allan Louis

We are supposed to, I think, feel the thrill of forbidden love and the pangs of anger when prejudice rears its ugly head concerning the affair between Ms. Greenberg and Luther Dixon.  But there are two huge problems with this.  First and foremost, we are always told ugly things happen - "people are talking Flo," "we should never have come to Atlanta," etc. - but we never experience them.  And second, despite his constant swagger and egotistical talk, Luther (Allan Louis in collaboration with the horrid book and esoteric direction) always gives in too easily to Florence, so that when he finally leaves (inevitably) in a huff and a puff it elicited some giggles!  It was as if the audience was saying, "OK, macho man, now you stand up to the old girl?"  PLEASE.  And when things go sour between Florence and the Shirelles, there is no big crushing argument scene, and in fact there is the most unexciting reunion at the end of the show; it was more like they has spent a weekend apart rather than career changing months and years.  YAWN.

Perhaps most emblematic of the woes of this production, though, is Geno Henderson, who plays Jocko, our DJ/narrator, and no less than three different musical stars.  I'm going to be blunt because there really is no way to sugar coat this: the man is creepy.  Chills-down-your-spine/cringe-and-look-away CREEPY.  He leers at the audience like he is undressing us with his eyes, swivels his hips and every other man part he has that looks like Elvis moves, but is really more like a pimp showing his girls the kind of moves a guy likes for his $20 bucks.  I also had no idea he was playing three different singers in addition to Jocko, either.  If you held a Shirelle to my head and threatened to beat me with her, I wouldn't be able to tell you a single difference between the three characters.  Further, he exemplifies just how hard the show works to get you into it.  He embarrasses us into clapping along, encourages us to sing along from the start (and the audience I was in did just that...during EVERY song, even the ones you clearly are meant to listen to only), and then leaves us hanging, as mid-show the narration stops and we are, without warning, supposed to really pay attention on our own.

Christina Sajous and Geno Henderson

With only about 10 people in the cast, and most of them taking on multiple roles, and a "score" full of hits from yesteryear, Baby It's You! should have an adoring audience for some time, as group sales, bus trips, and seniors emerging from their winter cocoons to venture into the city for 1 show each spring, latch on to this one for all of those wonderful memories.  And watch out Florida, Arizona and budget conscious dinner theatre owners!  You'll want to sign up for the rights to this one early.  Mindless entertainment on the cheap, while still being a crowd-pleaser to the monied senior set, is a hard combination to find.  If your audience is of a certain age, and they haven't already spent their Social Security checks on the Time-Life CD set, Baby It's You! should brighten your box office.  But musical theatre fans will recognize quickly, that, save for Ms. Leavel and some decent singers, Baby It's You! is even less than bad dinner theatre at Broadway prices.

(Photos by Ari Mintz)


Comments? Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.240

Saturday, March 26, 2011

LOGOS: Baby It's You!

Previews begin today for Broadway's latest rock'n'roll bio-musical, Baby It's You!  What potentially sets this one apart from say, Jersey Boys or Million Dollar Quartet are two things: it's about a girl group, not a boy band or male rock stars, and it's really as much about the woman behind the scenes as the girls behind the microphone.

Baby It's You! tells the story of Florence Greenberg (Beth Leavel), a New Jersey housewife who propels the Shirelles and other groups to super stardom by ignoring the male dominated recording establishment and striking out on her own.


The show takes place in the early 1960's, and pretty much everything about this logo/advertising has that vintage feel about it.  Except for perhaps a tad too clean a computerized line, the title block takes you right back to the era of doo-wop and fun fun fun.  The bright, pastel-ish colors that clash and go together at the same time - a turquoise-blue and purple - in a faux cursive that is double printed with white and the word "it's" in a decorative circle, combine to take us back to that familiar, homey feeling of late 50's early 60's advertising.

Then there is the double photo of the logo - a girl group in fashionable and tasteful sparkly cocktail dresses surround a single microphone in synchronized knee-bend faces away from us and toward the footlights; and an ultra-fashionable white woman dominates the photo and the logo both by placement and sheer size.  Her lips perfectly lipsticked, her cats eyes glasses, in a matching color, of course, are held off her nose to reveal piercing eyes that sparkle with a confidence and power.


Those photos at a glance tell us the story - Florence is in charge, a muse to the Shirelles.  And the tag line fills in any possible blanks in getting the simple point across: "The Shirelles made the headlines... She made the Shirelles."

With the gals posed away from us, a border of footlights shining in our eyes, we are also told that this show will be in the mold of Jersey Boys, only this time it will be the rise and fall of a girl group.  A coincidence of similarity?  I really doubt it.


But it is colorful, simple to tell what it is all about.  And if that era's music appeals to you, then the show, and its logo really work.

Grade: A

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.207

Sunday, March 6, 2011

TheatreScene: February 28 - March 6

DON'T FORGET TO VOTE IN THIS MONTH'S NEW POLL (TO YOUR RIGHT)!

 
LIKE WHAT YOU SEE?  BECOME A "FOLLOWER"!

 
HERE'S WHAT YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED THIS WEEK:

 
BROADWAY BIRTHDAYS THIS WEEK:

 
  • February 28: Tommy Tune, Actor/Director/Choreographer (Seesaw, My One and Only/Grand Hotel: The Musical, Will Rogers Follies)
  • March 1: Larry Keith, Late Actor (Titanic, Cabaret (1998), Caroline, or Change)
  • March 2: John Cullum, Actor (The Scottsboro Boys, Urinetown: The Musical, Shenandoah)
  • March 3: Christopher Body, Actor/Dancer (Movin' Out)
  • March 4: Adrian Zmed, Actor (Grease - original and 1994, Blood Brothers)

 
Jack Cassidy (far right) at opening of
It's a Bird!  It's a Plane!  It's Superman!
  • March 5: Jack Cassidy, Late Actor (Maggie Flynn, original She Loves Me)
  • March 6: Shuler Hensley, Actor (Les Miserables - original, Oklahoma! (2002), Tarzan)

 
ON BROADWAY - IN PREVIEWS AND OPENING THIS WEEK:

 

 
  • Arcadia: Previews - February 26; Opening - March 17
  • The Book of Mormon: Previews - February 24; Opening - March 24
  • Ghetto Klown: Previews - February 21; Opening - March 22
  • Good People: Previews - February 8; Opening - March 3
  • How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying: Previews - February 26; Opening - March 27
  • Priscilla Queen of the Desert: Previews - February 28; Opening - March 20
  • Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark: Previews - November 28, 2010; Opening - March 15
  • That Championship Season: Previews - February 9; Opening - March 6

 
TOPS AND BOTTOMS (February 21 - 27):
  • Top Gross: Wicked ($1.66M)
  • Top Attendance: TIE: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark (100.1%)
  • Bottom Gross: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying ($162K - 1 preview)
  • Bottom Attendance: Colin Quinn: Long Story Short (61.6%)
  • $1M Club: Jersey Boys, The Addams Family, The Lion King, American Idiot, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark and Wicked
  • SRO Club: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, Wicked

 
THIS WEEK IN BROADWAY HISTORY
  • The Oldest Opening of the Week: 1794: a double bill of "musical comedy spectacle": Tammany and The Agreeable Surprise.  Perhaps the biggest "surprises" were that the show ran a whopping 4 performances and that the cast included five married couples!
  • Funniest Title/Best reference in [title of show]: 1980's 11 preview, 5 performance flop, Censored Scenes from 'King Kong'.  It played the Princess Theatre, and starred Stephen Collins, Alma Cuervo, Chris Sarandan and Carrie Fisher!
  • The Longest Time Since the Last Broadway Opening: March 5.  26 years ago, in 1985, The Octette Bridge Club opened at the Music Box Theatre and ran 24 performances.

 
February 28:
  • 1979: On Golden Pond opened at the New Apollo Theatre, and given what a huge success the play has become and the film that was made of it, how surprising to find out that it only ran 126 performances!  Perhaps this sweet little show was too much for the 42nd Street crowd.
  • 2008: Passing Strange opened at the Belasco.  A critical hit, the show won the Tony for Stew's book, but closed after only 165 performances.

 
March 1:

 
  • 1979: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street opened at the Uris Theatre, winning 8 Tony Awards, including Best Musical, Best Actor (Len Cariou), and Best Actress (Angela Lansbury).  It closed after 557 performances, and Broadway hasn't been the same since.

 
March 2:
  • 1995: Smokey Joe's Cafe opened at the Virginia Theatre, where it played an impressive 2,036 performances.  Even more impressive: it was shut out of the Tonys that year (7 nominations/0 wins) by Sunset Boulevard, but managed to run more than twice as long.

 
March 3:
  • 2005: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels opened at the Imperial Theatre where it played 627 performances.  It was only 6 years ago, but feels so much longer ago...

 
March 4:

 
  • 1993: The Goodbye Girl, one of the most underrated shows of the 90's, opened at the Marquis Theatre, starring Bernadette Peters and Martin Short.  It ran 188 performances.
  • 1999:  Annie Get Your Gun, one of the most overrated shows of the 90's opened at the Marquis Theatre, starring Bernadette Peters.  It ran 1,045 performances.

 
March 5:
  • 1981:  Bring Back Birdie, proof that sequels don't work, opened at the Martin Beck Theatre, starring Chita Rivera and Donald O'Connor.  Even though it ran only 31 previews and 4 performances, it earned Rivera a Tony nomination, and it got a cast recording...  So come on, Elf and Cry-Baby!

 
BROADWAY NEWS THIS WEEK

 
February 28:
  • Another week starts, another New York Times article taking a swipe at Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.  Seems Bono finally got around to coming back to see the show, and this set off speculation (along with a book doctor and an alleged co-director) that the show would again postpone its official opening.  I think that, if indeed, this massive overhaul is happening, than a delay is necessary.  But why does the Times care?  It already has had its say.  Now, maybe they could just shut up?
  • Priscilla Queen of the Desert began previews today at the Palace Theatre.  What a drag!  LOL

 
Clockwise from left: Alan Menken, Douglas Carter Beane,
 Glenn Slater and Cheri Steinkellner
  • With an article that made the man sound like the second coming of Christ in The New York Times, Douglas Carter Beane, was officially announced as co-book writer of Sister Act: The Musical.  This has to be Broadway's worst kept secret.  Well over a year ago, Beane announced he was going to work on the Broadway version after having seen the London version a few times at the request of producers.  I guess for some shows, this is good news; for others a rallying cry to close it!  (For the record, I personally love Beane.  He wrote two of my favorite shows: Xanadu and The Little Dog Laughed.)

 
March 1:
  • Lord Vader Webber's impossibly megalomaniac take on The Wizard of Oz opened in London today, to um, less than rapturous reviews... my favorite was the one that said that Toto looked as bored as the audience.  And big surprise - not - they said the spectacle of a Webber show outweighed the content! Only ALW would think he had the stones to improve a classic.
  • First announced for off-Broadway, then postponed, then cancelled, Michael Mayer's new version of On a Clear Day You Can See Forever has announced that it will go right to Broadway instead.  Opening this fall, the show will star none other than Harry Connick, Jr.  This will be interesting, I have a feeling...

 
  • Broadway good guy Christopher Sieber will save the day over at La Cage aux Folles, replacing Jeffrey Tambor shortly.  He was supposed to return to Chicago  as Billy Flynn.  Another Broadway good guy, Jeff McCarthy will instead make a return visit to that show in Sieber's place.  I love it when Broadway rallies together.

 
March 2:
  • Rock of Ages, the film version, that is, is doing an online search for the role of Drew.  How much you wanna bet Constantine Maroulis will end up playing the part anyway?

 
March 3:
  • Good People by David Linday-Abaire opened tonight at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre.  Produced by the Manhattan Theatre Club, the show co-stars Frances McDormand, Tate Donovan and Estelle Parsons.

 
March 4:
  • Stephen Sondheim will be this year's recipient of the Olivier Special Award at the Olivier Awards honoring the best in London theatre this past season.
  • Dancing with the Stars champion Julianne Hough will be co-starring with Tom Cruise and Mary J. Blige in the film version of Rock of Ages.  Conflicting reports say she will (or won't) be Sherie.  Can't you get excited about the film on just the possibility that Cruise will try to ravage her in the men's room?  (Does that qualify as a spoiler?  If so, sorry.)

 
  • For a show that some people are still doubting will happen, this might just confirm that it is: Wonderland - A New Alice. A New Musical. will be recorded on March 6th for a cast recording release in May.  Apparently, the company is confident that the score won't be what changes during nearly a month of previews, which start March 21 at the Marquis Theatre.  P.S.: The Spider-Man title is no longer the one I hate the most.  Just typing this one makes my fingers hurt...
  • If you have tickets to the July 7,8 or 9 performances of How to Succeed... you better get them exchanged, and quick.  Seems they have to let Daniel Radcliffe go for a few days to promote the final installment of the Harry Potter series.  A wise move, really.  Would you want to feel the wrath of Harry Potter fans against your little one theatre show?  I did read one comment that asked why not just let the understudy go on?  Yes, they could do that, and I'm sure whoever he is is quite fine in the role, but let's face it.  Everything about this production is geared toward Radcliffe's presence.  John Larroqutte, the only other above-the-title name is probably not a huge draw (in comparison) as he's making his Broadway debut and hasn't been much in the public eye since Night Court left the air in 1992, making appeal to almost no one of the Harry Potter age.
  • Kathy Griffin may want a Tony - unlikely - but she will be getting a Broadway extension!  Two shows have already been added.
  • George C. Wolfe has signed on to co-direct (uncredited) The Normal Heart with director Joel Grey, so that the latter can more easily balance his Anything Goes obligations.  That is great news for me... maybe Grey will be in the performance I'm going to the weekend before his play opens... we shall see.
  • And what week would be complete without more bad news for Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark?  This time, it is reported that the show was "slapped" with 3 citations for unsafe work practices by OSHA (this takes the show to the Federal level, not just the city/state level).  Of course, little has been done to make it what it is:  these fines and citations are for the same four incidents that occurred during initial rehearsals and previews.  This has nothing to do with any continued problems with safety at the show, which has remained compliant ever since the initial incidents occurred and new safety procedures were implemented.  If history is any guide, this should propel ticket sales higher than Spider-Man flies.

 
March 5:
  • Colin Quinn: Long Story Short, which was twice extended, closes today after 135 performances at the Helen Hayes Theatre.  HBO will air the show in April.

 
March 6:
  • That Championship Season opens today at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre.
  • John Doyle will use his actors as musicians style on another Sondheim piece - Merrily We Roll Along.  I hope this makes the show work, and if anyone can, it is him.  I also hope that he, like he did with both Company and Sweeney Todd, finds a way to mix it up and not let it be the same old thing.  I am confident!

 
  • Most of the principal original cast of The Addams Family, including Nathan Lane, Kevin Chamberlin, Carolee Carmello, Terrence Mann, Krysta Rodriguez and Wesley Taylor, leaves the show today, with a whole new cast of crazies coming in on Monday.  Lane's replacement, Roger Rees, will play Gomez starting March 22.  I hope tickets sales remain decent.  This is a show that is really much better than the critics said it was.  You will have fun, if nothing else.  Is that so bad?  Snap-snap.

 
Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.187

Friday, March 4, 2011

CASTING: Baby It's You!

When Baby It's You! begins previews on the 26th of this month, nostalgic audiences will have the opportunity to see the Shirelles, the Beatles, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis all on Broadway, conceivably all in the same week.  Yes, producers, all hoping to jump of the cash cow bandwagon of Jersey Boys, are pumping out these bio-musical/tributes at an astonishing rate.  Frankly, I'm surprised that both RAIN and especially Million Dollar Quartet have lasted this long.  True, RAIN is a novelty act that has and will continue to tour the country long after it closes on Broadway.  And MDQ is in London as we speak.  But, even though I don't particularly care for Jersey Boys, it does have two things going for it: a long list of potential and surprisingly varied hits to draw from, and it has a compelling human drama driving it.  In short, it has what the other shows are missing: real musical theatre chops.

I am seriously hoping, though - with a pedigree and family tree close to the dismal Million Dollar Quartet - I am trying not to get my hopes too far up, either, that Baby It's You will be more Jersey and less Quartet.  Not having seen it, I can only conjecture that this one has the potential for being just that.  First, it centers around not just a singing group (though the Shirelles were full of their own drama, I hear) but their producer, courageous and way-before-her-time housewife turned music producer, Florence Greenberg.  And second, it has a huge, fun and catchy songlist to choose from.  (I had the same hopes for Million Dollar Quartet, too.)

For now, though, I can discuss the thing that drew me to the box office to purchase my ticket: the casting.

The ensemble includes: Kelli Barrett (The Royal Family), Alison Cimmet (A Tale of Two Cities), Erica Dorfler (Memphis), Berlando Drake (debut), Adam Heller (Victor/Victoria, A Class Act, Caroline, or Change), Geno Henderson (debut), Jahi A. Kearse (debut), Allan Louis (debut), Annette Moore (debut),  Barry Pearl (the film Grease, original Broadway casts of Bye Bye Birdie and Oliver!), Zachary Prince (debut), Ken Robinson (debut), Chelsea Morgan Stock (The Little Mermaid) and Brandon Uranowitz (debut).  Seems like you either have had a career or are just starting out in this ensemble.  That excites me - the energy should be quite high, and in years to come, who knows how many will become huge stars and Tony winners!?

"The Shirelles" and "Florence Greenberg" (center)

The Shirelles will be played by: Christina Sajous (American Idiot's Extraordinary Girl), Erica Ash (debut), Kyra DaCosta (AIDA, Sweet Charity) and Crystal Starr Knighton (debut).  Again, half experienced/half debutantes.

But for this theatregoer, the real draw is the always fabulous Beth Leavel (Tony-winner, The Drowsy Chaperone, Elf: The Musical, Mamma Mia!) who was "wooed" to play Florence Greenberg.  I have a feeling the show is in at least good hands here.

So, like always, I will try to go in with the most positive attitude, feel excited for all the new kids, and know that Ms. Leavel will bring 100% to the proceedings.  I, of course, will give you a full review after the show opens!

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.185

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Life After Idiot: From Green Day to Green Pastures

By March 1st, most of the principal original cast members of Green Day's American Idiot will have departed the show.  But no sooner can your get out your guitar and start singing "Good Riddance," than most of them will be back onstage in new and different and exciting roles.  The sheer variety of projects they are undertaking, I think, speaks volumes for the breadth of their individual talents.






Here's a look at those who have gone already and those preparing to move on shortly:

Michael Esper (Will)
Departs Idiot: February 27, 2011
Moving on to: Tony Kushner's The Intelligent Homosexual's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures, directed by Michael Greif at the Public Theater.  Stephen Spinella and Steven Pasquale co-star with Esper.
To be succeeded by: Justin Guarini

Esper (right) rehearses with Stephen Spinella

Mary Faber (Heather)
Departed Idiot: December 12, 2010
Moving on to: The 50th anniversary production of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, as Smitty, the been-there-done-that secretary with a penchant for matchmaking.  Directed by Rob Ashford and starring Daniel Radcliffe and John Larroquette.
Succeeded by: Jeanna de Waal

Mary Faber

John Gallagher, Jr. (Johnny)
Departs Idiot: February 27, 2011
Moving on to: Co-starring with Tony winner Mark Rylance in Jerusalem, the acclaimed London play which will transfer to Broadway this spring for a limited engagement.
To be succeeded by: Van Hughes

Promo art for Jerusalem, starring Mark Rylance

Joshua Henry (Favorite Son)
Departed Idiot: July 18, 2010
Moved on to: Henry led the cast of the short lived, but acclaimed musical The Scottsboro Boys.
Succeeded by: Wallace Smith and Miguel Cervantes

Joshua Henry (center) in The Scottsboro Boys

Christina Sajous (Extraordinary Girl)
Departs Idiot: February 27, 2011
Moving on to: Playing one of the Shirelles in Baby, It's You! just across the street at the Broadhurst.
To be succeeded by: Libby Winters

Christina Sajous (2nd from right) in Baby, It's You!

Tony Vincent (St. Jimmy)
Departed Idiot: December 30, 2010
Moved on to: Promoting his recording career.  This Thursday, February 24, 2011, his image will be on postage stamps for the United Kingdom.  The stamp on which he appears commemorates the production We Will Rock You as part of an 8 stamp series celebrating British musicals.  He starred in that show's West End premiere, as well as the Las Vegas production.
Succeeded by: Billie Joe Armstrong, Melissa Etheridge, Andrew C. Call, and now permanently by Davey Havok.

Tony Vincent from the front and the back!

Both Stark Sands (Tunny) and Rebecca Naomi Jones (Whatsername) will remain with the production.  Original cast members Van Hughes (Johnny) and Libby Winters (Extraordinary Girl) will have both moved up into larger roles, effective March 1, 2011.

Rebecca Naomi Jones with John Gallagher, Jr. and Tony Vincent

Soon, casting for the First National Tour will begin.

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.175

HERE IS THE 5TH AND FINAL QUESTION IN THE WIN TICKETS TO BROADWAY'S HOW TO SUCCEED CONTEST!  CLICK HERE FOR FULL CONTEST RULES AND HOW TO ENTER.

TRIVIA QUESTION #5:
Which two Pulitzer Prize-winning musicals have to do with American politics?

A.  South Pacific
B.  Fiorello!
C.  next to normal
D.  Sunday in the Park with George
E.  Of Thee I Sing 

There will be TWO answers to this question and you will need BOTH on your entry.


(Daniel Radcliffe as J. Pierrepont Finch in How to Succeed...)




Entries will be accepted from now until noon Eastern time on Wednesday, February 23rd.  No late entries will be accepted.  Be sure to follow the complete rules for submitting an entry.  Thanks for playing and good luck!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

2011 Chorus Boys and Girls, Part II

Late last month, I selected two cast members from each of the first five musicals to begin previews in this "second half" of the 2010 - 2011 season, the idea being that I'd try to focus some more of my viewing energy on the unsung heroes of the Broadway musical - the chorus or ensemble.  And specifically, I'd keep my eye on one guy and one gal in each show's ensemble.  My selections for Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, The Book of Mormon, How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying, Priscilla: Queen of the Desert and Catch Me If You Can are HERE.

And here are my selections for the final 5 musicals to begin previews this season:


Anything Goes
Previews: March 10     Opening Night: April 7



Chorus Boy: Adam Perry (Ensemble)
Credits: A Chorus Line, Promises, Promises, Wicked


Chorus Girl: Joyce Chittick (Angel/Ensemble)
Credits: Cabaret, The Pajama Game

Why Them: He: Still somewhat new, but with a wide variety of experience in dancing.  She: Ms. Chittick is the very definition of "Broadway gypsy" and deserves my undivided attention.

Perry (center) in Broadway Backwards 5
Chittick in Broadway Musicals of '64


 



Wonderland
Previews: March 21     Opening Night: April 17


Chorus Boy: Derek Ferguson (Ensemble)
Credits: Broadway debut; We Will Rock You, High School Musical National Tour


Chorus Girl: Sae La Chin (Ensemble)
Credits: White Christmas, Fosse, The King and I

Why Them: Aside from a variety of credits, he has toured/danced with Miley Cyrus, Ne-Yo and Paula Abdul, and she has danced as a Radio City Rockette.  Both have made a career out of shining in the background without pulling focus from the front!


(Top) The National Tour of Disney's High School Musical
(Bottom) Broadway's Irving Berlin's White Christmas





Sister Act
Previews: March 24     Opening Night: April 20


Chorus Boy: Blake Hammond (Ensemble)
Credits: Hairspray, Elf: The Musical, Kiss Me, Kate


Chorus Girl: Christina DeCicco (Ensemble)
Credits: Broadway debut, Wicked National Tour as Glinda

Why Them:  Can these two, who have played major leading roles in two giant musicals, do good work in the background?

He was Pumbaa in The Lion King;
she was Glinda in the National Tour of Wicked





Baby, It's You!
Previews: March 26     Opening Night: April 27


Chorus Boy: Brandon Uranowitz (Ensemble)
Credits: Broadway debut; regional/tour credits: Brighton Beach Memoirs, RENT


Chorus Girl: Alison Cimmet (Ensemble)
Credits: A Tale of Two Cities

Why Them:  Two Broadway newbies...


Brandon was in Broadway Bound regionally with Karen Ziemba.
Alison has apppeard in Don't Quit Your Night Job with Marc Kudisch.





The People in the Picture
Previews: April 1     Opening Night: April 28


Chorus Boy: Jeremy Schecter (Ensemble)
Credits: A Chorus Line, The Pajama Game, Beauty and the Beast


Chorus Girl: Megan Reinking (Ensemble)
Credits: Hair, Lestat, Dracula: The Musical

Why Them: Can they go from featured roles to ensemble members?  You bet they can!


Both center: he in A Chorus Line; she in Hair



Any chorus folks you think I missed?  Let me know!  Leave your thoughts her, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
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