Showing posts with label Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson. Show all posts

Friday, January 7, 2011

CD REVIEW: Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson

Thanks to a wonderful gift card from my family at Christmas, I am finally catching up on my cast recordings, DVDs and books.  The downside is that my thoughts on these things, which I will share, are still going to be dated.  Take today's review... Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson has come and gone already, and I am just now getting to the CD.  Oh, well... better late than never, right?

The Original Cast Recording of Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson is rather odd for several reasons.  A good reason is that the music is fresh and new and atypical of a show recording.  An interesting reason is that the packaging is kinda cheesy and cheap, but if it were too fancy, it wouldn't really fit the show.  (I suppose a paper CD slip would be too low brow?)  And a not so great reason it is rather odd is that it is one of those CDs I'm sure I'll play a lot for awhile, but I don't like it nearly as much as I like the show itself.

I have several CDs of shows that I adore, but don't really care too much for the show: Ragtime and Big River are but two.  And I have many CDs that made me love the show even more because the CD was so great: Passion, Grind and Once on this Island are but three.  But I have to admit...I'm trying to think through my CD collection... a case where I like the show more than the CD is a rare, if ever before experience for me.  What makes it even more strange is that I don't think I'd like it much if I hadn't seen the show!  Ah, well...

The "Broadway Logo" Slip Cover

The Off-Broadway Logo and
CD case cover

Title: Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
Artist: Original Cast (Off-Broadway)
Label: Ghostlight
Number: B003Y01JO4
Format: Single CD
Case: Cardboard bi fold, with cardboard overlay cover
Booklet: Full color booklet, with an essay, complete lyrics, credits and full color production photos of the off-Broadway production at the Public Theater.

Of the Show, I Wrote: "Finally, there is a show that no one can say "they didn't carry it out as far as they could," or "they sold out and went commercial," or "it's it too bad they compromised." No, BBAJ is evidence that you can still be all out with your creativity, that you can be smart and still be fun, and that there is an audience for unlikely subjects as long as you stick to your point of view and you remember that musicals are first and foremost a form of entertainment. As such, this show is the almost perfect blend of what I love about musicals. It ignites all of my senses, it makes me think, it makes me feel and it sticks with me long after exiting the theatre."

The Cast of Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
(Benjamin Walker, center)

Of the Score, as it Played Out in the Theatre: "It makes sense that the self-proclaimed "emo rock musical" fires on all cylinders - an edgy rock sound, overly emotional with repetitive and bizarre lyrics, the trademark over enunciation of words - my favorite being the words "in particular" repeated ad nauseum as "ian perticulyur" - and of course, the profanity laden lyrics that express both sexuality and anger in the same chorus. (I will not debate the authenticity of the score to the genre, but it certainly sends up what I do know about emo rock and its practitioners.) Highlights of the score include the Schoolhouse Rock-on-Ritalin-liquor-and-pot influenced "Populism, Yea, Yea!", the ready for radio "Rock Star", the indie station-esque "The Saddest Song", and the most scathing and catchy number in the show, "Ten Little Indians." The latter song sums up perfectly what my senses were like during the entire 90 minute show: it was clever for my ears and interesting for my brain, the sentiment made my blood boil, and the clever delivery (by outstanding ensemble member Emily Young) made the theatre lover in me tingle. The score alone - played, mind you, by but three musicians, Justin Levine, Charlie Rosen and Kevin Garcia and supplemented on occasion by cast members - gave me more than my money's worth."


On This Recording I Am Going to Say: Even as I re-read my initial thoughts, I can't help but think about the fact that having seen the show helps one to understand the songs as presented on the CD.  But I also can't help but think yes, but it really needs the visual to make the experience totally worthwhile.  That is not to say that I don't enjoy the CD.  I do. Very much.  All 28 minutes of it.  The same songs that I loved in the theatre are the ones I love here: "Ten Little Indians," "Rock Star," and "The Saddest Song."  The number "Illness as Metaphor" is the one number best served by having seen the production.  All four of those songs would make it into my iPod, if I had one.

"Illness as Metaphor"

The quality of the recording is top notch - crystal clear sound and excellent mixes that make 100% of the lyrics understandable.  The performances (here the complete off-Broadway Cast, most of whom transferred to Broadway) are uniformly good, with fine vocal quality and attention to character.  Benjamin Walker earns/retains his "I'm a New Broadway Star!" title with this recording.  I guess what is missing, and what makes some of it flat when listening to it is that many of the jokes, while chuckle-worthy here, were gut busters of hilarity when you saw how the jokes played out in the theatre.

One last question:  when did they stop putting Parental Advisory labels on CDs with profanity?  Yikes!  I am so glad I had my headphones on at work when I put this CD in the player!

The score is bold, new and fresh.  And for those reasons alone, it is a valid and valuable addition to any cast recording collection.  But I can't promise you what kind of time you'll have with it.  Seeing the show helps, but it might not matter, either.

GRADE: B

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.129

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Goodbye Old Friends, Part I

Let the "Great Broadway Shut Down of 2011" begin.  Just as shows close after the Tonys each spring, a bunch of shows usually close after the holidays as Broadway hunkers down for the cold, lonely winter.  It is an annual cycle, one which allows theatres to become available for that next big hit.

Still, this year seems very brutal, with 14 shows scheduled to close before February starts.  A lot of them are limited engagements, a problem in and of itself.  A few are long timers who just ran out of steam.  And a few, most problematically to my mind, are brand new shows that never caught on with audiences.

Today, we mourn the loss of 8 Broadway shows.  EIGHT!   As the lights dim and each becomes a memory of Broadway history, here are my thoughts:


Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
Opened: October 13, 2010
Previews: 26     Performances: 94
My Review Grade: A
My Thoughts:  While I can understand the thinking behind saying things like "this show is too off-Broadway for Broadway," I think it is wrong to perpetuate the notion that Broadway audiences can't handle something a-typical and boundary pushing.  Heck, isn't that what most theatre fans beg for?  Well, they gave it to us with this show, and no one showed up.  Like it or not, it was different and fresh and deserved more attention.  Shame on us.  Still, we got a set of hot new writers and director in Michael Friedman and Alex Timbers, and a brand new Broadway Male Star in Benjamin Walker.  And can you beat the tag line, "History just got all sexy pants!"?  An open run sadly cut short.


Brief Encounter
Opened: September 28, 2010
Previews: 21     Performances: 119
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: Director/writer Emma Rice spun gold out of two middling Noel Coward pieces, combing them into a glib, romantic and thrillingly theatrical evening.  Noel would be thrilled.  The visuals were stunning and memorable, but instead of overwhelming the story, it only enhanced it.  The show was part of the Roundabout season, and so was only ever to be a limited engagement, and it was extended at that.


Elf: The Musical
Opened: November 14, 2010
Previews: 15     Performances: 58
My Review Grade: A
My Thoughts: Finally, a holiday show that I would like to see again, and any time of the year.  My love affair with writers Chad Begeulin and Matthew Sklar, as well as Amy Spanger.  And Sebastian Arcelus is at the top of my favorites list.  A limited engagement always, the show made a ton at the box office - I hope it recoups - and I really wouldn't mind it if it showed up this time next year.


Fela!
Opened: November 23, 2009
Previews: 34     Performances: 462
My Review Grade: I didn't see this one.
My Thoughts:  You could have knocked me over with a feather back in the fall when it was announced that the show would close so soon.  I can only judge by people's reactions, many of whom put the show on their best of the year lists in 09 and 10.  Still, a unique entertainment that lasted this long is to be commended.  When it opened off-Broadway, did they really think Broadway, London and National Tour?


The Pee-Wee Herman Show
Opened: November 11, 2010
Previews: 18     Performances: 62
My Review Grade: I didn't see this one.
My Thoughts:  A hit show is a hit show, right?  Lots of people just a bit younger than I am went, loved it, and would never have dreamed of seeing a Broadway show before this.  Maybe Pee-Wee has birthed a few life long theatre goers.  A limited engagement that was extended and recouped is a great thing these days.


Promises, Promises
Opened: April 25, 2010
Previews: 30     Performances: 291
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: I loved this show and will miss it terribly.  I won't dwell on the controversies that plagued the show.  But it did provide me with two unforgettable experiences that I will cherish always: Kristin Chenoweth Tweeting about my review, and later, meeting her at the stage door to thank her.  She actually stopped for more than a minute to shake hands and speak to me.  People looked at me like I was a star.  And I was smitten all over again!  Too short a run for a great old-fashioned, beautifully staged musical.


West Side Story
Opened: March 19, 2009
Previews: 27     Performances: 748
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: This classic is one of my all time favorites, and a staging that recreated the original was both nostalgic and profound.  The dancing was as breathtaking as I always imagined.  I didn't even mind the Spanish.  And how many shows get better when replacements come in?  This is one show I wish I had gotten to one more time.


Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Opened: November 4, 2010
Previews: 30     Performances: 69
My Review Grade: I didn't formally review the 2nd preview - I had hoped to get back to it on the 16th.  But even as it was, I'd have given it a B- at the 2nd preview.
My Thoughts:  Congratulations, Internet rats!  You finally killed one before it got off the ground.  OK, it probably still lacked some how (Sherie Rene Scott was miscast, and really not good.  It wasn't the material.) as it was busy, but never frenzied.  Ultimately, it was a mix of circumstances, including unrealistic expectations that killed this one.  Still, it was a lot of fun and a thrill to see such talent all a one time.
Prediction: Laura Benanti will be Tony nominated and could even win.

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene or Tweet me!@yahoo.com
Jeff
2.124

Friday, December 24, 2010

Broadway News Makers #6 and #5: New Broadway Writers Welcomed and Legends Protested

The news makers at numbers 5 and 6 run the gamut from true Broadway legends to complete Broadway newbies.  The legends in question are John Kander and Fred Ebb, whose storied career has never ventured into the easy or non-controversial - celebrating murderers (Chicago), glamorizing Nazi Germany (Cabaret), homosexuality and the South American prison system (Kiss of the Spider Woman).  Their final (to date) new Broadway offering might even seem a bit tame in comparison: the true story of The Scottsboro Boys, who were wrongly accused and imprisoned in the Jim Crow South for allegedly raping two white women.  Straight forward history, right?


Well, sorta.  Using their tried and true "frame the story with out of reality, though timely, 'entertainment' pieces" is what got these legends in a bit of hot water.  Timeliness, in this case, meant framing the story as a minstrel show, which is pretty controversial.  Controversial enough that the Freedom Party formed a protest group outside the Lyceum Theatre, handing out literature that encouraged audiences to stay away due to the shows overt racism and use of black face.  After reading the "literature," it was pretty clear that most if not all of those protesters never even saw the show.  How fitting that a show about an actual historical event caused protests, just as the event itself did, decades ago!

Read more about that protest HERE.

The news makers at number 6 on the list all probably hope that they have as storied and controversial  a career as Kander and Ebb.  I'm talking about the influx of fresh writing talent on Broadway this year.  Fresh, with exciting idioms within which they operate, boundary-pushing formats and ideas - something Broadway fans always swear they want to see more of.  Unfortunately, so far this season, these new ideas, while critically acclaimed, aren't setting the box office on fire and some are meeting untimely and speedy deaths.

Playwright Geoffrey Nauffts (left) rehearses his
play, Next Fall, with its director, Sheryl Kaller

Two plays come to mind: Next Fall and Brief Encounter.  The former, critically acclaimed across the board, was the first effort by playwright Geoffrey Nauffts; the latter also critically acclaimed, the first Broadway effort by writer/director Emma Rice, who shaped two Noel Coward works into a wonderous production that sets new standards for creativity and flair.  Next Fall closed pretty quickly, especially after going Tony-less.  But Brief Encounter has had its limited run extended and has recouped its investment, though it is hardly the sell out crowd pleaser it really should be.

A scene from Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson

From off-Broadway to Broadway came the daring, boundary-pushing "emo rock musical" Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, and unlikely show about the corrupt life of our 7th President.  Timely and timeless this fast-paced comedy with frentetic direction, an edgy book (both by Alex Timbers), and edgier score (by Michael Friedman).  The critics loved it, a new Broadway star was minted in the name of Benjamin Walker, amd still, the crowds have stayed away.  The show will close January 2.  Let's hope we hear more from Timbers and Friedman.

Of course, there are a few exceptions, too.

Chad Beguelin and Matthew Sklar at the
opening of Elf: The Musical

One such pair has a second show on Broadway that will probably be back eventually, and is closing despite boffo box office due to its holiday theme and limited engagement status.  I am speaking, of course, of Chad Beguelin and Matthew Sklar's Elf: The Musical that is drawing people to the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in droves.  Like their previous outing, The Wedding Singer, the new show is based on a popular film.  And also like their previous outing, they are demonstrating an uncanny knack of writing in the style of a certain time period/genre, while still making both scores seem fresh - the 80's style of The Wedding Singer and the family-friendly/Broadway razzle dazzle style of Elf both work very well.

Composer David Bryan (far right) with Memphis
co-stars Chad Kimball and Montego Glover

And there is the Broadway debut of both Joe DiPietro (lyrics) and David Bryan (music), whose show, Memphis nabbed Tonys for Best Score and Best Musical.  True neither are complete musical novices - DiPietro has had a few off-Broadway hits, and Bryan is in a little rock band called Bon Jovi.  But both brought a new musical - a hit one, at that - based on an original idea to Broadway.  And that is news worthy.

Green Day: Billie Joe Armstrong is
top, left

Somewhere in the middle would be Green Day, who collaborated with Michael Mayer and Tom Kitt to bring their hugely successful album (plus a few sings from others) American Idiot to the stage.  The overall reviews were mixed, but nearly everyone agreed that this was a fresh voice and a new frontier for Broadway.  Largely ignored during awards season, the show has struggled with perpetually low box office numbers and grosses.  It sems the show only hits its numbers when lead singer of the group, Billie Joe Armstrong appears in the show as St. Jimmy.  He will be returning this January, in hopes, one assumes, that profits will once again be on the rise.

Click on the REVIEWS tab above to see what I had to say about The Scottsboro Boys, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, Next Fall, Brief Encounter, Elf: The Musical, Memphis and American Idiot.

Comments?  Leave on here, Tweet me or email me.
Jeff
2.112

Thursday, October 28, 2010

At This Performance the President Will Be Played By...

NOTE: Thanks to my good blog-buddy, Steve, I have made a correction to this entry! (I have highlighted the corrected sentences in RED.)

Cherry Jones once played the role on TV, and now Benjamin Walker is doing the same 8 times a week on Broadway.  Yes, both critically-acclaimed actors have played the President of the United States.  Of course, neither was the first, and I am sure neither will be the last on TV or Broadway.

As Mr. Walker continues to be all sexypants in Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson I got to thinking about other shows devoted to the man in the oval office.  What I found was pretty interesting, actually.  Seems that nearly all of our 44 presidents have appeared as characters in Broadway plays and musicals.

It might be easier to tell you which men have NOT been portrayed in a Broadway show - there are only 7 - and even two of them have potential special circumstances.  The 8 are: Benjamin Harrison, Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter, George Bush, and Bill Clinton.  Hoover doesn't appear, but his "handiwork" does in Annie, where they sing, "We'd Like to Thank You, Herbert Hoover."  Of course, F.D.R. makes an appearance in that show.  The other exception might be that while Benjamin Harrison himself is not a character, his wife was, and she was played by none other than The First Lady of the American Theatre, Helen Hayes.


Which brings me to one of the most interesting Broadway-related presidential facts.  Ms. Hayes appeared in a play called The White House, a 23 performance play about the inhabitants of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.  Among the cast (all of whom played 5 or more characters was: James Daly, Helen Hayes, Fritz Weaver, and Gene Wilder.  The Henry Miller's Theatre has never been so powerful!  23 performances, featuring 23 presidents!

The most recent president to receive Broadway treatment was George W. Bush, played by Will Ferrell in You're Welcome, America.  A Final Night with George W. Bush, which played a brief run in 2009.

Another play, Wilson in the Promise Land, played the ANTA Theatre for 7 performances, and featured 6 of our leaders.


In all, there are 14 plays or musicals that feature the White House as a setting listed in the Internet Broadway Data Base, including 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Mr. President, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson and Teddy and Alice.  While it is too early to tell about BBAJ, the others I listed, along with the few above were fast flops.  But there have been successes, too.  Frost/Nixon and Sunrise at Campobello did well enough.


Two of the more famous shows to deal with the Leader of the Free World are: 1776 and Assassins.  In the latter, only two presidents actually appear (live, not in photos): James Garfield and Gerald Ford.

Ronald Reagan, an actual actor, never appeared on Broadway, though his son was a photographer for a production in the 80's.  Mr. Reagan's likeness appeared in The Wedding Singer and a musical that never actually opened, Senator Joe.  But his voice was used in the musical Doonesbury.  Speaking of Senator Joe, Richard Nixon also appeared in that show, as well as Frost/Nixon, An Evening with Richard Nixon and..., and Jackie, which also featured JFK's only appearance on Broadway.


By far, the most "regular" Broadway President of the United States is Theodore Roosevelt (not including the character who thinks he is Teddy in Arsenic and Old Lace).  He has been a character in 6 different shows, including two specifically about him: Bully! and Teddy and Alice.

And while Andrew Jackson appears in Bloody Bloody, it isn't his debut.  He also appeared in The White House, Wilson in the Promise Land, and his actual debut came in a play called The Awful Mrs. Eaton.  Benjamin Walker is the fifth actor to portray the populist president (not including his two understudies or the understudies of the four others.


OK, I bet you are wondering how our newest president, Barack Obama, made it into a Broadway show already.  Well, technically, he hasn't, yet.  But there is serious talk of the Kenyan (as in African nation) production of Obama: The Musical making the big leap across the ocean in the coming years.  I guess we'll have to see!


Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.58

Monday, October 25, 2010

REVIEW: Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson

Review of the October 23 matinee performance. At the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre on Broadway, New York City. Approximately 90 minutes, no intermission. Starring Benjamin Walker. Book by Alex Timbers, music and lyrics by Michael Friedman. Choreography by Danny Medford, Directed by Alex Timbers. NOTE: This production contains adult language, situations and violent images.

Move over, American Idiot, there is a new bad boy rock 'n' roll show on Broadway, and his guns are ablaze and his wit is dagger sharp.  And his emotional outbursts may be as self-centered as yours, but his have deadly consequences on a national scale.  His name is Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, and he has taken the rock, self-reverential and blistering satirical musical to a whole new level.  If you were wondering how the groundwork laid by such shows as Urinetown: The Musical and the aforementioned American Idiot would progress into the next generation of American musicals, you need only get yourself to the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre and find out what all the fuss is about.

Finally, there is a show that no one can say "they didn't carry it out as far as they could," or "they sold out and went commercial," or "it's it too bad they compromised."  No, BBAJ is evidence that you can still be all out with your creativity, that you can be smart and still be fun, and that there is an audience for unlikely subjects as long as you stick to your point of view and you remember that musicals are first and foremost a form of entertainment.  As such, this show is the almost perfect blend of what I love about musicals.  It ignites all of my senses, it makes me think, it makes me feel and it sticks with me long after exiting the theatre. 


Of course, when you do go all out, you are sure to alienate some people (have you read the message boards?), and are sure to make fanatics out of others.  You are bound to insult some and cause others to roll their eyes in disgust.  Long before Andrew Jackson was even an idea (the writers might not have even been alive yet or were very small boys if they were) there was another show that engendered such extreme reactions from its audiences and the theatre world in general.  That little show was Sweeney Todd, and while I am not even remotely suggesting that Andrew is the masterpiece that Sweeney is, there is no denying that they are remarkably similar, right down to the blood stained costumes and sensory overload provided by their perspective productions. 

What perhaps gives Andrew Jackson the edge on edgy is that it is about a real person.  Sweeney is about a legendary figure of the penny dreadful tradition in England, and possibly a mass murderer or two that took their cue from the legend of the killer barber.  On the other hand, Andrew Jackson, even considering how skewed and purposely fictionalized his history is depicted here, is about a real leader, and a real man who was responsible for a mass genocide within our borders.  The ramifications of his actions remain with us to this day.  And while he certainly doesn't remain in our thoughts these days like Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln are, Jackson represents a dark, if forgotten, period in American history.


Scarier still is the fact that a lot of his ways and political views have remained in the public political consciousness.  Book writer/director Alex Timbers and composer/lyricist Michael Friedman have gone to great lengths and hit us repeatedly over the head with the parallels between the early 19th Century politics of Jackson and every president and the rest of our government in the late 20th Century and into the 21st.  There are plenty of digs about a leadership who throws a temper tantrum when he doesn't get his way.  There are plenty of moments about a president elected by a groundswell of support rallied during a campaign, only to see it all but forgotten when tough decisions, an unsupportive cabinet and an equally immature, self-centered Congress make great campaign promises impossible to keep.  I could go on about actions/policies, etc. that fly in the face of our Constitution, and how ego and a need for admiration over leadership has throughout history has nearly brought this country to its knees.  Let's just summarize by saying that Andrew Jackson as portrayed here was the first of a long line of American presidents to make more of a mess than even he ever dreamed possible.


Which brings me to the show itself.  A lot of what makes this show work is that its subject is a dynamic, charismatic and dramatic central figure.  The show certainly plays up to the fact that Jackson would perfectly fit into today's society.  He was popular, loved to be in a scandal, and he was a completely a self-made celebrity (take that Paris Hilton!).  Were he alive today, he'd be a media mega-star; a staple on shows like The View, the Fox News Channel and fodder for every other news outlet from The New York Times to CNN.  He would keep Perez and TMZ in business.  Everyone involved in the stage production is blissfully on the same page and understands this very well.  The show is full of sound bites (literally and figuratively), and portrays Jackson as a rock star, a bad boy and a scandal ridden media whore.  And the show hits everyone of these buttons with glee and gusto, including mock documentary narration, a news brief commentator, and an entourage of cheerleaders, backstabbing associates and an ass-kissing assistant.  Fittingly, that "assistant," Martin Van Buren, ends up being the next president.


And since everyone is on that same page, it makes sense that the self-proclaimed "emo rock musical" fires on all cylinders - an edgy rock sound, overly emotional with repetitive and bizarre lyrics, the trademark over enunciation of words - my favorite being the words "in particular" repeated ad nauseum as "ian perticulyur" - and of course, the profanity laden lyrics that express both sexuality and anger in the same chorus. (I will not debate the authenticity of the score to the genre, but it certainly sends up what I do know about emo rock and its practitioners.)  Highlights of the score include the Schoolhouse Rock-on-Ritalin-liquor-and-pot influenced "Populism, Yea, Yea!", the ready for radio "Rock Star", the indie station-esque "The Saddest Song", and the most scathing and catchy number in the show, "Ten Little Indians."  The latter song sums up perfectly what my senses were like during the entire 90 minute show: it was clever for my ears and interesting for my brain, the sentiment made my blood boil, and the clever delivery (by outstanding ensemble member Emily Young) made the theatre lover in me tingle.  The score alone - played, mind you, by but three musicians, Justin Levine, Charlie Rosen and Kevin Garcia and supplemented on occasion by cast members - gave me more than my money's worth.



The majority of the ensemble plays multiple roles, and every single one of them is very clearly defined and remarkably different, a testament to the depth of talent that they posses.  Add to that that they all have perfect comic timing and can play satire as well as anyone in the heyday of Saturday Night Live, as well as cutting modern commentary and surprisingly deep, honest moments of clarity.  They are asked to do an awful lot in 90 short minutes, and are easily the best ensemble on the Broadway stage today.  Particularly outstanding are the gentlemen who play other real life political figures: Darren Goldstein (who plays the arrogant, self-absorbed Calhoun with suave devilishness), Jeff Hiller (a humorously whiny, self-absorbed John Quincy Adams), Ben Steinfeld (a wonderfully confused Monroe), Bryce Pinkham (a laugh out loud riot of drool, facial contortions and an equally bug-eyed weasel), and Lucas Near-Verbrugghe (a fabulously effete Van Buren with a...Twinkie fettish...).  Also quite good, both in a funny, satiric way, but balanced with some surprisingly real moments of serious depth is Maria Elena Ramirez as Jackson's wife, Rachel.  Ms. Ramirez gets to be part of most of the show's more somber moments and she plays them very well.  In fact, her scenes with Andrew Jackson that are more serious and sincere are what balances out the show and makes the funny funnier instead of tedious.  She deserves a lot of credit for that. 

Esthetically, the designers have collaborated brilliantly with the concept created by Mr. Timbers and Mr. Friedman. Now I did not see the show off-Broadway, but if the set on the Broadway stage is any indication of how it was at the Public, designer Donyale Werle did his best to recreate the tight closeness of what had to be a smaller playing space previously.  I am pretty sure that the set only takes up the front half of the stage, if that, and every inch of the playing space is crammed with items that give the place the feel of a hunting lodge, a museum attic and boy's clubhouse all at once.  Where the design probably got bigger was in extending every element of the stage out into the entire house area.  Not since Cats has a Broadway show felt so completely environmental.  Every inch of the walls and most of the ceiling space is covered with portraits of dead leaders, political bunting and other Americana, along with letters that spell out the show's initials, funky upside down chandeliers and the infamous stuffed horse that hangs upside down over the orchestra seats.  When you enter the theatre, it is completely bathed in red Christmas lights, and most of the hundreds of stage lights are gelled red as well.  In short, lighting designer Justin Townsend has made the audience complicit in Jackson's actions as we enter and leave the theatre blood red in color.  And, as early in the season as it is, I think I can safely predict that both he and Werle are well on their way to Tony nominations, if not wins, for their endlessly creative sets and lighting, alternately theatrical and rock concert-ish in feel and scope.  Sound designer Bart Fasbender similarly contributes to this free-for-all/heavily calculated entertainment as well, with perfectly timed gun shots, arrow shootings and a wide variety of sound effects, while costume designer Emily Rebholz manages to make the costumes as witty and modern/of the period as the rest of the show.  Particularly interesting is the costume design for various cast members during the scenes when Jackson is in the oval office, which are predominantly black and definitely of today.  Smartly, only Van Buren remains in period costume, and as we know he will be the next president, it serves as a subversive reminder that everything old will be new again.


As I said earlier, this is an almost perfectly executed, all out musical, but even when you go all out, you must be sure not to go too far.  While 99.9% of Timbers' direction and choreographer Danny Medford's staging is right on target in its frantic pace and deliberately sophomoric moments, there is one character that kind of feels shoe-horned in, and is the only one that comes close to being overkill or eye-roll inducing, and that is the pretentiously named Storyteller.  One gets the impression that the device was perhaps used more thoroughly in previous drafts, and exposition being what it has to be with such a foreign topic, maybe the authors felt there was no option but to keep it.  Maybe I'm wrong.  Maybe she (a perfectly fine actress, Kristine Nielson, plays her) is meant to be just one more element of the send up.  But it is really the one thing in this bizarre circus that doesn't fit right.  And don't think for a moment that it is because she is portrayed as a handicapped person in an electric scooter.  Hell, that is the least offensive thing in a show that is equally offensive to Indians, slaves, Spaniards, gays, the rich, the poor and even cobblers.  It just isn't that funny or necessary, especially when other moments are later narrated by ensemble members seamlessly.


So what about the star of the show, Andrew Jackson himself?  Well, Hollywood's loss is definitely Broadway's gain, as Benjamin Walker tears up the stage as our seventh president.  He is cheeky, bombastic and literally sweats up a storm as he ages from a small boy to a petulant teen to an even more petulant adult.  Walker carefully lays out this progression so that it seems like a progression not a repetition.  There is a fine line between a one-note brat and a multi-faceted self-indulgent jackass of a man who acts like the child he once was.  Ben Walker doesn't just walk that fine line, he stomps right across it.  He embodies the entire notion of the show - that charisma, charm, bullying and not caring what the rules are can make you a star.  Andrew Jackson, at least according to this show, wrote the book on celebrity masquerading as substance - one that a myriad of today's stable of so-called stars follow (Paris, Snookie, and "The Situation" come right to mind).  What is so wonderful about Walker's genuinely star-making performance is that he is doing it the old-fashioned way: with blood, sweat and some remarkably well filled out jeans as the ad promises.  Sexypants indeed!  But best of all, he does so with the most important quality: genuine talent. 

It is sheer talent that got Timbers, Friedman, Walker and company to the big leagues.  And Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson is a homegrown hit that should give Broadway fans something to cheer about for some time to come.

GRADE: A

(Photos of the original Broadway cast by Joan Marcus.)

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.55

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Let's Hear It for the Boys: Elvis, Idiots, Andrew, Scottboro and Lombardi

Let's take a look at some TV commercials that put Broadway shows in view of their target audience: men!  Producers have long struggled with getting more men to the theatre, instead of just having them arrive as arm candy for their theatre-loving wives.  I think we can all agree that the gay male segment of the male population has been served well-enough both in advertising and content of Broadway shows for years.  It is the straight, married, along-for-the-ride guys that more and more shows are targeting with advertising.  Is it working?

Well, some shows seem to be man magnets with or without advertising aimed at the guys.  Jersey Boys  is a prime example.  I can name at least 7 men in my office (out of 29 souls) that have seen that show, and of them 3 have seen it multiple times.  I guess you can't get more guy-friendly than 4 males from Jersey singing "songs like they just don't make anymore."  (Yes, my boss actually said that about the show.)  And get this, he and another guy in my office are thinking of checking out another 4 guys aka the Million Dollar Quartet

Million Dollar Quartet
That show, as evidenced by a huge poster in Shubert Alley and an aggressive audio and video campaign is unabashedly going after the man who escorts his lady love to Times Square:



"Wife-tested, husband-approved," huh?  Let's see a woman's voice gets both of them to look up at the TV.  The first qualifier, "Passion," gets her interested because well, it is romantic, right?  And he's noticing the lip action with a hot babe (even I can recognize that Elizabeth Stanley is smoking hot).  Then you have that nasty "Betrayal" with one guy in the face of another (has Hunter Foster ever looked that charged up?).  And you end it with the dazzle of "concert footage" aka safe visuals for the anti-musical man.  We give them a reason to sing and it's cool (not to mention the absence of OMG! DANCING!).  Top it off with 4 manly men for the ages - Elvis, Jerry Lee, Carl and Johnny, plus a hard rocking (and nostalgic) underscoring of "Blue Suede Shoes" and "Hound Dog."  Testosterone pretty much beams out of the TV set and there is, gasp, finally a show both members of a couple can agree on.  Considering its goal, I think the ad is spot on.  I wonder how it is working, though.  the show's attendance numbers haven't really spiked...

Grade: A

American Idiot/Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson

For the younger guys, is there a more exciting pair of musicals than American Idiot and Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson?

For an earlier advertisement for American Idiot, please read my comments HERE.

I stand by what I said then, especially now that I have seen it more than once.

Grade: A

Limited by the fact that I don't live in NY and the stations I get don't come from there, I can't verify whether or not Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson has a longer TV commercial yet or not, but here is a very short one.



Well, it certainly does a lot fast: for the girls, pin-up quality glimpses of Mr. Hot Broadway, Benjamin Walker, plus a killer tag line - "Broadway Just Got All Sexy Pants"; for the theatre goer needing validation, a New York Times quote, and for they guys: a rocking song, that combined with the frantic visuals never really registers as "Populism, Yeah Yeah!" but just more gritty rock live on stage.  "Hey, if my girl can drag me to that Green Day show, and I liked it, maybe this won't be too bad, either," he's thinking.  Funny how they gloss over the Andrew Jackson part, and don't use the real tag line, "History Just Got All Sexy Pants."  Shows about dead presidents won't bring them in in droves.  What this does in 16 seconds is all great, but a longer commercial will probably sell more tickets...

Grade: A-

The Scottsboro Boys

I think this brilliant ad speaks to everyone:  the music and joyous jumping/dancing, along with the references to past shows by Kander and Ebb should really appeal to theatre goers; the cast should get more men to at least give it a second look, after all, how "prissy Broadway musical" can a show with all these guys be?; and the striking use of violent headlines projected like whipping scars on the backs of black men should ignite a spark in any American who has ever felt that injustice wins out far too much.  These days, that universally American feeling might just sell this complex and controversial show.  Not having seen it yet, I can't speak to how well it reflects the show it is advertising, but as a commercial it does its job for this viewer: I am intrigued and excited about seeing this new show.  Easily the best TV spot for a Broadway show this year.

Grade: A+



Lombardi

With the NFL as a producing partner, there is no other show on Broadway that needs to or is more likely to court potential male patrons than Lombardi.  And the producers are smart.  The initial spot is simple, to the point and features a star many guys know, Dan Lauria from TV's The Wonder Years, who looks and talks amazingly like football legend/icon Vince Lombardi.  Just so they know they wouldn't be seeing a film, the commercial looks theatrical - live people in slow motion staring at the camera, lights ablaze...ah, but those light look like stadium lights, so it is still cool.  Add three rough and tumble Green Bay Packers, and wow, this could be a show a manly man could love.  Still, a guy couldn't be caught dead going to a Broadway show ALONE!  So they sneak in another beloved TV (and soap queen) star, Judith Light, silent and a drink in hand.  "OK, so my wife/girlfriend won't be bored with all the football stuff," he thinks.  And just who is that other guy with the pad... leave it to the press to muck it up!  I can see a lot of sales in Lombardi's future if enough guys actually see this commercial.  And how many other Broadway show air ads on ESPN?

Grade: A+



Smart producers they are!  They have also created two other brief ads to appeal to more sectors of the ticket buying public.  And both are also A+ efforts!

For the ladies who might think there is nothing in it for them, this goes a long way toward showing them that even on Broadway, they won't be football widows.



And for theatre folks, tie it all up with a whiff of controversy and drama... and give us a chance to show that football can be more interesting to us besides the Super Bowl ads and halftime show!  (I'm joking... I'm sure there are many Broadway/NFL fans out there...)




Let's hope these shows are as good as their advertising, right?


Comments? Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.50

Friday, October 1, 2010

Broadway Boys: Mr. October 2010: Benjamin Walker

With the new theatre season comes a whole new crop of potential Broadway Boys and Ladies, and so I thought I'd start with a guy who has been on the scene for awhile, but has really come into his own playing the title character in a new musical.

Whether you saw him in his debut in the 2007 revival of Inherit the Wind or the 2008 revival of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, or in his current show off-Broadway last season, you were no doubt struck by his charm, presence, charisma and his good looks. 

What appeals to me even more than all of that is his work ethic, choosing to remain with his current project and seeing it through its final stages rather than take the bigger step to fame and money by turning down a starring role in the next X-Men film.

And so, without further delay, here is Mr. Broadway for October 2010... Mr. Sexypants himself, Benjamin Walker!

Benjamin Walker


His Broadway Debut:
Inherit the Wind with Christopher Plummer

His first Broadway Opening Night!





Production shots from his movie The War Boys


An Off-Broadway Production of
Romeo and Juliet - Mercutio in a dress...


An earlier incarnation of

Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
He's a ROCK STAR!


Les Liaisons Dangereuses with Laura Linney,
where Ben met his future fiance, Mamie Gummer!




Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson moves
from Off-Broadway to Broadway


Engaged since this past May to the daughter
of Meryl Streep, Mamie Gummer.


BBAJ hits the recording studio!


My favorite pictures of the new Broadway star!



Comments?  Leave one here.  Suggestions for future Broadway Boys or Ladies?  Email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com.
Jeff
2.31