Showing posts with label Catch Me If You Can. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catch Me If You Can. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Broadway Jigsaw Puzzles III: Goodbye!

Here are three more theatre-related jigsaw puzzles, this time with the common theme that they are from shows that close today.  Click on the links to start each puzzle.  Enjoy!

Jigsaw Puzzle #7 (70 pieces)

The Off-Broadway cast of Death Takes a Holiday.  The Roundabout Theatre Company production was preserved on an original cast recording, due to be released later this fall.



Jigsaw Puzzle #8 (100 pieces)

Baby It's You told the story of Florence Greenberg and The Shirelles.  Oldies but goodies flowed in this jukebox musical, which closed at the Broadhurst Theatre today.



Jigsaw Puzzle #9 (117 pieces)

Catch Me If You Can, which closes today, featured a slick and sleek logo on its Playbill cover.



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Jeff
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Saturday, September 3, 2011

CD REVIEW: Catch Me If You Can

My favorite musical of the 2010 - 2011 season, Catch Me If You Can will close this Sunday after a mere 32 previews and 166 performances.  I found it to be elegant, smart and sexy.  I love shows that offer a challenge along with the obvious entertainment.  Everyone involved offered up just that, theatricalizing a book, film and actual life story.  I found the show's framework - a 60's style variety show - to be a fitting and theatrical way of telling an epic cat and mouse game in a way that made it all work in just over two hours.  The direction was sleek, fast-paced, and, despite knowing how it all turns out before the show even starts, managed to keep you on the edge of your seat.   The score, matching the show's time and framework, is equally challenging and high quality, and that is the subject of my review today.

Grade: A+



Title: Catch Me If You Can
Artist: Original Broadway Cast Recording
Label: Ghostlight Records
Number: 8-4449
Format: Single CD
Case: Single Jewel Case
Booklet: Full color production photos; complete lyrics; essays by Frank Abagnale, Jr.
Bonus: Extra track of a song cut from the show, "Fifty Checks," sung by Tom Wopat.

Aaron Tveit and Norbert Leo Butz


Of the Show and Its Stars, I Wrote: "If history is any guide, I’m pretty sure critics will be divided on this show, but don’t wait for a revival 10 years from now at Encores! to decide that this show works brilliantly on every level. See it now, and soak it all in. With The Book of Mormon, we have a celebrated meta-musical comedy; with Catch Me If You Can, we have a superb concept musical.  And who better to take us there than almost the entire creative team of the blockbuster musical Hairspray, which itself took the traditional form to new comedic and socially important heights? Yes, composers Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman have re-joined forces with director and choreography dream team Jack O’Brien and Jerry Mitchell, who have in turn re-joined with designers David Rockwell (sets), William Ivey Long (costumes), and Kenneth Posner (lighting) to create a completely different world than they took us to before. (Beyond the people themselves, there really is no other valid comparison to Hairspray – to come in expecting that would be like expecting King Lear to be anything like The Odd Couple. Both shows are great on their own.) This world that is as debonair and sleek as a 60’s new Boeing 727, full of innocent double entendres, sexy chorus girls and boys seemingly unaware of, yet basking in, their own steaming hotness, and a juicy story about getting away with everything but murder and coming out on top. All played to a soundtrack (not literally: the magnificent orchestra is in full view nearly all the time) of suave Sinatra-esque songs, and a cheeky modern jazz score that titillates as much as it pleases the ear.

"Live in Living Color"

"It isn’t often that you come across a love triangle involving three men, but that is the real meat of this story. And how amazing it is that all three are being given such grand treatment in three Tony-worthy performances. Tom Wopat gets the lion’s share of the heavy emotional content in this show. We see a man who really only wants to make life better for his wife and son, but can’t see that living by such credos as “The Pinstripes Are All They See” as a way to get around authority, and such platitudes as “Don’t Be a Stranger” and “Little Boy, Be a Man,” aren’t really the stuff of good parenting.  Then there is the honorable life led by FBI Agent Carl Hanratty, warmly played – through a veneer of g-man stiffness – by Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz.  We see the workings of the FBI as frustrating as they are through “Don’t Break the Rules,” and a little inside the man as he tries to out think his con man adversary in “The Man Inside the Clues.”   Aaron Tveit has found the first role, of many one hopes, that proves he can carry a show on his considerably young and talented shoulders. He has turned in a thoroughly engaging, exciting performance as Frank, Jr. It is a role that has huge demands in the singing (his big closer “Good-Bye” is a huge power belt number in the greatest Broadway tradition), dancing (he matches the entire ensemble step for step) and acting areas. We must believe he is smart way beyond his years, mature enough to make smart people believe he could be a pilot or doctor, charming and sexy enough to bed Playboy bunnies, and charismatic enough to woo an innocent girl, her family and a grizzled FBI agent. Tveit has the charming, sexy and high quality singing voice down pat. But this role shows that he is a true triple threat. With Catch Me If You Can he is a full-fledged Broadway star."



"Doctor's Orders" and "Jet Set"

Of the Score, I Wrote: "This world that is as debonair and sleek as a 60’s new Boeing 727, full of innocent double entendres, sexy chorus girls and boys seemingly unaware of, yet basking in, their own steaming hotness, and a juicy story about getting away with everything but murder and coming out on top. All played to a soundtrack (not literally: the magnificent orchestra is in full view nearly all the time) of suave Sinatra-esque songs, and a cheeky modern jazz score that titillates as much as it pleases the ear.   The homey sweetness of the production numbers from weekly variety shows of the Perry Como/Lawrence Welk ilk, as well as the sexy, dazzling, send-the-kids-to-bed-before-it-starts variety shows that were star vehicles for one performer – like Mitzi Gaynor, and later, Liza Minnelli. You know just the kind of numbers I mean – a common setting, a risqué arrangement of a familiar tune, and costumed dancers in the tightest possible versions of setting appropriate costumes, with the star bedazzled in sequins from head to toe. Each number is carefully constructed to please everyone – the song lover, the singer lover, and the blush inducing dancer lovers. The show has an abundance of such numbers – the airline-themed “The Jet Set,” and the hospital-themed “Doctor’s Orders” – to name but two."

Of this Recording, I say: First and foremost, I think all of us who love musical theatre need to thank Ghostlight Records for recording so many shows that not too long ago would have gone by the wayside.  Catch Me If You Can, with its short run, would probably have gone without a cast recording.  As usual, Ghostlight has delivered a top notch product, from the full color booklet to a terrific sound.
Marc Shaiman and Larry Blank's vibrant orchestrations, under the direction of John McDaniel sound simply gorgeous, played by a full jazz orchestra.  They were great live onstage, and certainly do not disappoint here.  And, absent of the visual, the score is even more vivid and exciting when one can concentrate on the music and lyrics (by Shaiman and Scott Wittman).  What was terrific in passing while the show was going on, is even more fun just listening to it.  In the theatre, I knew I liked the score.  After listening to the CD, I really appreciate the wit and intelligence of the songs. 

The score itself is a mix of theatre music, torch songs and period/genre specific numbers.  And yet, and much of a mix as there is, the score is a cohesive whole.  There are times when you expect Frank Sinatra or Dean Martin, cigarette and scotch glass in hand, to start crooning the smooth jazzy numbers - "The Pinstripes Are All They See," "The Man Inside the Clues."  Or maybe Perry Como comes to mind when hearing the clever story-song "Butter Outta Cream" or "Seven Wonders." 

"Seven Wonders"
(Aaron Tveit and Kerry Butler)

"Little Boy, Be a Man"
(Norbert Leo Butz and Tom Wopat)


And of course the big dance numbers performed by all those innocently sexy boys and girls of the ensembles of all the best variety shows come across pretty well here, too.  In the show, they are "The Frank Abagnale, Jr. Players" and here, as there, they come across well, excellent singers, all, in such numbers as "The Jet Set" and "Doctor's Orders."  Of course, it is sad that one can't see what goes with these numbers - the dancing and staging really make the big numbers - "Live in Living Color" especially, and the smaller, stagier numbers like "Don't Be a Stranger."

Stand-out Numbers:  The whole recording is terrific, but there are several songs I find myself playing over and over.  Surprisingly, the awesome-as-you-watch-it-number "Don't Break the Rules" isn't one of them - you really need to see that number to fully appreciate it.  But I love the following: "The Pinstripes Are All That They See," with Tom Wopat's suave song-stylings and the back up of the girls.  "Doctor's Orders" is a sexy double-entendre number, featuring great vocals from Candace Marie Woods.  I love the emotion behind two of Norbet Leo Butz's numbers, "The Man Inside the Clues" and his poignant duet with Aaron Tveit, "Christmas Is My Favorite Time of Year."  But it is the upbeat numbers that set my feet a-tappin' (I literally have trouble sitting still when I drive): "Live In Living Color," "Jet Set."  But my two absolute favorite songs are the infectious "(Our) Family Tree," a (literally) sing Along with Mitch production number, and the powerful "Goodbye," which is gloriously sung by Mr. Tveit.  For me those two numbers alone reveal a really terrific show sadly under appreciated.

Here's hoping national audiences embrace the National Tour.

(Photos by Joan Marcus)


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Jeff
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Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Why CATCH ME Caught Me

Timing, they say, is everything.  And I can't help but wonder how different the fate of my favorite musical of last season, Catch Me If You Can, would be.  Had the show opened during the 2009 - 2010 season, I suspect that the Shaiman-Wittman-McNally musical would not have posted a closing notice after just 170 performances as it did today.  Even with the mixed reviews it got, I bet it would have swept the Tonys, and Memphis might not still be around.  At the very least, it would have offered considerable competition to a season that included Memphis, The Addams Family, Come Fly Away and Million Dollar Quartet.  Mind you, I genuinely enjoyed three of the four (it makes me sick to think MDQ has run longer that CMIYC).
Ah, well.  There is no point in getting bitter. It is what it is.  One imagines that despite an attendance rate that continues to hover around the 80% mark, an average ticket price under $70 must make turning a profit difficult.  After all, the show boasts a large cast and a large orchestra.  It can't be cheap.

Perhaps the most difficult thing to reconcile in my mind and heart, though, is that the things a lot of people didn't like about the show are the very things that drew me to it.  Here are 5 reasons why Catch Me caught me:
  • I did not go into it expecting the twisted, hilarious world of the composers-director-choreographer's previous outing, Hairspray.  I knew going in that it would probably as different from its predecessor as Sondheim/Lapine's Passion is from Sondheim/Lapine's Into the Woods.  The stories couldn't be more different, and their sources are polar opposites - John Waters' skewed but loving view of his childhood Baltimore couldn't possibly be like the psychologically off kilter world of a real-life teenager turned con artist all for the love of his parents.  To expect a silly romp out of Catch Me If You Can is, well, silly. 


  • I like an anti-hero.  The cold detachment and almost machine-like determination that is a heavy cloak over the troubled emotions of Frank Abagnale, Jr. is interesting to me.  It isn't just matinee idol Aaron Tveit, either.  You see, I can root for a guy who has drive, inner-fears, and a deep rooted need to please his parents.  And who can't feel for a kid who will literally do anything to get his folks back together?  For me, an instant bond and irrepressible warm fuzzies doesn't mean I'll love the show he is in.  It's the same reason why I am always drawn to the Javerts and not the Valjeans.


  • I like an adversary that I can warm up to, too.  Again, chalk it up to the Javert/Valjean thing, only in Catch Me you get BOTH!  Who can't find the fun in the rumpled workaholic with a heart of gold hidden beneath a heavy cloak of self-righteousness, political correctness and drive?  It helps that Hanratty is played with a sweet earnestness by Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz.


  • I love slick staging and pristine precision dance numbers that are sexy and daring, not fodder for the Lawrence Welk Show.  Jack O'Brien's amazing use of trap doors and sliding panels created a fast-paced world for Catch Me.  It moved as seamlessly and surprisingly as the actual cat and mouse game we were watching.  Oh, sure people bemoan the lack of tension,  There was plenty of tension in the audience both times I saw it, especially in the closing scene and even more so in the scene in the hotel where Hanratty and Abagnale come face to face for the first time, until the audience gave an audible sigh of relief and laugh when Aaron leaves Norbert there with a big bottle of ink and "sucker" written all over his face.  But I digress.  Equally eye-popping were the era evocative, high energy and high precision dance numbers created by Jerry Mitchell.  "Live in Living Color" was a great opening number, while "The Jet Set" set in stone iconic images from the film and book versions.  And of course, Hanratty's old fashioned Broadway showstopper, "Don't Break the Rules," is one of the season's biggest highlights.


  • And most of all, I love a high-concept, challenging show that is a slick as the characters in the show.  You see, I liked the concept of a 60's variety show to tell this story.  It is period perfect, and it makes the reasons for breaking into song and dance legitimate.  Perhaps best of all, it allows a certain sterile distancing between the real-life story and theatricalizing of the more commercially interesting highlights of a life on the run.  It makes one enjoy the razzle dazzle of the sharp dance numbers as we see young Abagnale become a pilot, a doctor, and almost a family man without becoming too enamored of it.  After all, he is a criminal.  That allows the more thoughtful and feeling moments - the ones not choreographed and staged with urgency, to draw us in with the emotional content.  Of course, that is the very thing that most people wanted and didn't get easily.  They wanted the razzle dazzle to be so much fun you could love the criminal Frank Jr. who is inherently more interesting than lost at sea teenager Frank Jr.  People wanted to love the bad guy like they love Roxie and Velma.  Ironic isn't it that this is exactly the point of both shows?  America loves a bad guy who gets away with stuff we can't in everyday life.  It is harder to find the entertainment value in a kid who is simply starved for approval and is too smart to be left to his own devices.


 


 
I love a challenge.  And I love when it is presented by people who know what they are doing.  And that is why I love Catch Me If You Can.

 

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Jeff
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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Is Norbert Leo Butz Broadway's Tom Hanks?


Norbert Leo Butz and Tom Hanks:
Broadway and Hollywood favorites and award-winning actors

Two of Tom Hanks's films have been made into musicals - three if you count You've Got Mail which is based on the same source as the musical She Loves Me.  The two direct film to Broadway creations are, of course, Big and Catch Me If You Can.  Recently, I had the pleasure of returning to the latter show and taking in Norbert Leo Butz's fabulous Tony-winning performance, and it got me to thinking about Mr. Hanks.  

Catch Me If You Can's Carl Hanratty(s)

So the parallels between the two range from literal to the more emotional.  Literally, they share the same Catch Me role, Carl Hanratty, but because Butz seems to exude that same charm and charisma, no matter the role, that Hanks does on screen.

"Ladies Men": Bosom Buddies and Is He Dead?

Men will be boys: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Big

Both shared a certain flare for dressing and passing as the fairer sex: Tom Hanks in his TV series, Bosom Buddies, Norbert Leo Butz in Is He Dead?  The affable boyish abandon Hanks showed in Big is much like the impish glee Butz exhibited in his other Tony-winning role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.

Both men do comedy and serious roles; their everyman qualities make both completely relatable to audiences.  Their intensity makes them believable as the good guy fighting for right and as the crooked schemer.  Just look at Hanks' Philadelphia or even The Bonfire of the Vanities and Butz' Enron, Speed-the-Plow or his Tony-nominated turn in Thou Shalt Not (and again as the scheming con man in  Dirty Rotten Scoundrels).


Enron and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

Both guys have that heady mix of "aw shucks" friendliness, killer smiles and maddening confidence that make them entirely believable as the guy the gals fall in love with so easily - Tom with Meg Ryan or Julia Roberts; Norbert with Idina Menzel in Wicked or the babes in, you guessed it, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. (Not to mention their Broadway babe wives, Rita Wilson and Michelle Federer!)



Norbert gets the girl: Wicked and The Last 5 Years
and his wife, Michelle



Tom gets the girl, too: Julia Roberts (Charlie Wilson's War, Larry Crowne)
 and Meg Ryan (You've Got Mail, Sleepless in Seattle)

And let's face it, no one else on Broadway today could pull off Cast Away: The Musical like Norbert Leo Butz!





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Jeff
2.304

Monday, May 23, 2011

YouTube on Broadway: 2011 Tony Nominees, Part I

Today begins my annual look at the commercials deployed by the producers of this year's Tony Award nominated shows.  It strikes me as a sign of the times that for the first time, I've actually seen these commercials, even though I don't live in New York.  Why?  Because they are now featured in all media - pop-up ads at theatre related sites, show websites themselves, and even YouTube "Channels" dedicated to the shows.  Yes, the world continues to get smaller, and in this case much more inclusive.  Long gone are the days when you had to be in New York City to see an ad for a show.

Here is a look at two of the four Best Musical nominees.

The Book of Mormon

You know, I have found the entire PR machine around this gigantic hit show to be so fascinating.  The producers are savvy enough to know that a sold out hit doesn't require advertising frequently, but enough to keep it in the public consciousness.  And yet, the whole thing feels (in an entirely terrific way) like a new kid has come to town, and not knowing the rules, is making up new ones.  It is not unlike the show and its creators themselves.  They are breaking all of the rules... free listening to the cast recording on NPR... a free performance for those hundreds of loyal kids who assemble every night for a lotto that has cheap seats to accommodate 20-25 people... sure, they can afford, right now, to give away the farm, but the long-term good will this engenders should be vast.  And it should be game-changing.  Like the advent of seat lotteries and student rush tickets ushered in by the last blockbuster new kid, RENT, the show has, hopefully, started some new trends toward bringing Broadway entertainment to the masses.

And their ads - which fit TV, websites, etc. - are as simple and to the point as Mormons themselves.  Instead of big splashy production values and one long commercial, the group has created a series of 5 ads that give us rapid fire narration of significant quotes from critics, while trumpeting 14 Tony Nominations, including Best Musical.  Why these 16 second bits work is threefold.  One, they are short enough to keep the "I hate pop up ads/I hate commercials" crowd interested and tuned in.  Two, because they are narrated word for word from the words on the screen, they work whether or not you have in your ear buds or the sound is up on your iPad or other device.  And three, they are organized into types, so where they are placed can have the most impact. 

There are 5 of them, but I'll focus on three:

1.  This ad is for the traditional Broadway attendee, who lives, breathes and worships at the altar of The New York Times.  It hits the old-fashioned button while still being hip, brings in mom and dad, who always talk about how great Broadway used to be, and of course is almost reverent about the source it comes from.  Very smart - reach beyond the initial South Park loving crowd.  There are way more of them.



2.  Speaking of that target audience, this second clip is directed toward them, for sure.  Who is quoted?  The kings of subversive late night, Jon Stewart, Jimmy Fallon and David Letterman.  Not a Leno in sight.  These are the shows the target audience watch, and if these guys (all men, mind you) can crack wise about a MUSICAL and still love it, maybe its time to get with it and see what this Broadway business is all about.



3.  This one, I think is for the more traditional theatre goer who is looking for something new.  He or she has probably heard of the show, knows its bad boy reputation, and has probably dismissed it.  But since it got all of those Tony nominations, maybe it is worth a second look.  So why not give these folks a series of quotes from a wide spectrum of reputable publications to mull over.  After all, Rolling Stone, Vogue AND The London Daily Mail can't ALL be wrong, can they?



It may not be glitzy, glamorous, or even all that "Broadway," but it works so well!  Grade: A

Catch Me If You Can

This show is really cashing in on the sexy glamour of the 60's, focusing on the gorgeous, leggy gals of the ensemble and the youthful sex appeal of star Aaron Tveit.  Played like a cross between a Fosse musical and an old airline commercial, this spot has its cake and eats it, too.  It shows us a good glimpse of one of the main segments of the show, it shows us dancing, pretty girls and a hot leading man.  If you know the film, you understand the nod to Leonardo DeCaprio walking down the jetway with a pair of stewardesses in tow.  If you don't know the film, it is still  everything Broadway should be to the average viewer: song and dance, and romantic characters doing exciting things.  Hot stuff, indeed!  Grade: A-

Here is the "Making of" video:



And here is the finished product.  Makes me want to see it again!




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Jeff
2.266

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Broadway on TV : The Pilot Season

If you follow TV at all - and I freely admit that I watch way too much of it - you know that now is the time that the networks announce cancellations and new series, which may picked up after their pilot episodes have been filmed, critiqued, polled, focus grouped, etc.  (Kinda like Spider-Man 2.0!).  "Out with the old and in with the new," they always say.

Kristin Chenoweth: From Glee to Good Christian Belles

This year, a lot of Broadway favorites have joined the TV ranks, which is bittersweet.  I mean, sure, if the ratings are good, we'll get to see the likes of Cherry Jones and Kristin Chenoweth every week.  On the other hand, that also means we probably won't be seeing them on Broadway any time soon, either.  Naturally, I wish them all every success, but hope that they don't forget us theatre fans and come back to the stage soon.

Janney and MacFarlane: Gone from the TV screen, back to Broadway?

I was, first of all, saddened by the announcement of the cancellation of a few ABC series which have Broadway ties: Off the Map, sort of Grey's Anatomy meets Tarzan got cancelled.  It featured one of my favorite young actresses, Mamie Gummer.  Then there is the comedy Mr. Sunshine, whose co-star, Alison Janney (9 to 5: The Musical) was the biggest reason to watch that show.  But I am heartbroken about Brothers and Sisters.  With that show gone, however, maybe Calista Flockhart (The Glass Menagerie), Sally Field (The Goat, or Who is Sylvia?) and Luke MacFarlane (The Normal Heart) will return/stay on Broadway.

Still, there are a lot of Broadway babies to be excited for (and I'm sure I'll miss a few):

  • Laura Benanti: The Playboy Club (NBC)
  • Kristin Chenoweth, Annie Potts: Good Christian Belles (ABC)
  • Katie Finneran: I Hate My Teenage Daughter (FOX)
  • Cherry Jones: Awake (NBC)
  • Megan Hilty, Christian Borle, Brian d'Arcy James: Smash (NBC)

Megan Hilty on the set of
the pilot for Smash

Of course, most Broadway eyes will be on Smash for several reasons.  One, it is about the birth of a new Broadway musical.  Two, if it is made into a series - more likely now that the pilot has been chosen - it will likely be filmed in New York, which means day jobs for Broadway actors.  These are at a premium with soaps dying off or moving, Law and Order winding down and no more Sex and the City.  And three, not only will it star some of Broadway's brightest, but its pedigree and production staff is all Broadway: Steven Spielberg (Catch Me If You Can) produces, Michael Mayer (American Idiot) directed the pilot, and March Shaiman and Scott Wittman (Hairspray, Catch Me If You Can) are penning the original musical score for the show.

I guess TV this year will be a win-win for everyone!  I hope all of these shows make it and run for years.  Just don't forget the stage, OK stars?


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Jeff
2.257

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Ask Jeff: Random Questions, Random Thoughts

Occasionally, I like to share emails from readers with everyone.  Today, I have a few that are very topical that I'd like to share.  If you have anything you'd like to ask or simply state for the record, please email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com!

How to Succeed...:
the first show I was comped for and asked to review

Dear Jeff:
I've noticed that some of your reviews lately have stated that you have gotten a free copy of a book to review, or received free tickets to a show you are reviewing. I know you say that you aren't obligated to give a good review, but be honest.  Doesn't that influence your opinion a little?
MM, Brooklyn, NY

MM,

Thank you for writing - and for reading "the fine print."  I have been fortunate that people directly involved with Broadway productions have found their way to my blog and that they think highly enough of it to ask me to review their product or show.  I'd like to think that at least part of what makes them ask me in the first place is that my reviews come across as honest opinions supported by facts and details.  And I'll assume that before they even ask me, they've read more than one review.  So, I feel obligated - more to you than to them, really - to continue to share my honest opinions.  If they are good, great, if not, that's fine, too.  While I can't speak for these people directly, I can tell you that nothing in our conversations leading up to complimentary tickets or books, even implies that I will automatically like what I see.  And should a negative review result in my no longer being asked to review something, so be it.  I'll buy the book or the ticket if I want read/see the book/show enough, anyway!
JK



Aaron and Andrew: Catch Me If You Can vs The Book of Mormon

Jeff:
I just got done reading your reviews of Catch Me If You Can and The Book of Mormon.  I have to say that yours are the most thorough reviews I've read of either show.  You also seem to have the most opposite opinions on both shows that I've read.  Do you always root for the shows that are not the hottest tickets and go harsher on the big hits?  Last year, you loved Come Fly Away and The Addams Family...
Tarana J., Washington, DC

Tarana,

Thanks for writing, and for being such a long time reader!  I get variations on this question a lot, though usually it has to do with my seeming to like EVERYTHING!  I guess the bottom line is that I try to go into every show with the attitude that this is going to be a great show, and the truth is, it is rare that I outright hate any show I see.  Please note that I say, "I try."  I am human, and I am influenced by past experiences, and, try as I might to avoid it, public opinion.  For example, I generally do not like the kind of humor associated with the creators of South Park, who both wrote The Book of Mormon.  I purposely made myself watch an entire episode of that show just so I wouldn't be operating under any pre-conceived notions about their brand of humor.  Further, I absolutely HATED (and I know I contradicted what I just said) both The Producers and Spamalot, which I kept reading about being comparable to The Book of Mormon.  So, I have to admit I went in with a certain dread that I couldn't be fair to the show because of all this baggage.  And yet, I really liked it a lot.  Enough that I'd like to see it again, and I can't wait for the Cast Recording!  That said, I stand by my chief objection to the show, which has mostly to do with the pacing and structure of the scenes.  As far as Catch Me If You Can goes, I guess it is a matter of taste.  I love sophisticated, complicated shows that ask you to mentally participate every step of the way.  And I am a sucker for big dance numbers.  Which is why I loved Come Fly Away.  As for The Addams Family, it just hit me right.  Big, splashy sets, costumes and dance numbers, plus a very funny book, coupled with an understanding that they weren't replicating the films or the TV series, but rather the comics, allowed me to love it for what it was, not what it wasn't.
JK



I think the words speak for themselves.


Jeff:
Now that it is on hiatus, what do you really think of Spider-Man?
HowToFan

HowToFan:
I was wondering how long it would take to have someone ask me that!  You win!

I will honor the work of the original team by not offering a formal review, as the show never officially opened.  However, I will say this: it is so far away from being the worst musical of all time - even at the 5th preview I attended - that it makes the reviews that did come out laughable.  But it was still in massive need of overhaul in several areas.  And I will also mourn the loss of some things that Julie Taymor created for the show if they don't make it to version 2.0.  There were some truly stunning moments that I hope I'll never forget.  Still, I want the show to be a success, and to be the payoff that the cast deserves.  And this is history in the making.  What an absolute thrill to have this opportunity to watch and learn!

On a similar note, I noticed today when I was at another theatre site, that the banner ads for Spider-Man have a significant change to them.  They now say "Previews Begin May 12!"  "Begin"?  Interesting... are we supposed to forget the other 150 or so?  This is a clear signal that they are distancing themselves from the original.  I am surprised that no one has cried "foul" yet about this, given the shows history of being attacked for every little thing.  A quick look at the show's website also offers some hints as to where things stand at the Foxwoods Theatre:  The title page offers the same "Previews Begin May 12!", but also still lists Julie Taymor as co-writer and director.  Deeper in, she remains as the director of record, and none of the new creative team members are listed, but the four members of The Geek Chorus are no longer a part of the cast list.  (Everyone else remains so far...).  I guess that means legal negotiations are ongoing, but things are moving in getting the show overhauled.

Jeff

THE NORMAL HEART CONTEST QUESTION OF THE DAY!



It is not too late to join the contest to win TWO FREE TICKETS to Broadway's The Normal Heart! Click HERE for complete rules and Trivia Question #1.  Trivia Question #2 can be found HERE.


TRIVIA QUESTION #3:
Lee Pace will be making his Broadway debut in The Normal Heart. He played the lead in which TV series that also featured a lot of Broadway stars?

A. Glee
B. Pushing Daisies
C. The Good Wife
D. Law and Order


Look for question #4 at the bottom of Wednesday's blog! And remember, you need to give the letter AND the answer on your entry!


(Photo of The Normal Heart star Lee Pace)



Jeff
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Friday, April 15, 2011

Broadway Ladies: Ms. April 2011: The CATCH ME IF YOU CAN Girls

Ms. Broadway April 2011
The Catch Me If You Can Girls

WHY THEY ARE MS. BROADWAY:  In the March 2011 issue of Playbill, lyricist Scott Wittman says, "We have, I must say, ten of the most beautiful girls on Broadway!"  If you have seen Catch Me If You Can yet (and if you haven't, you really should), you know just how important those 20 impossibly long legs are to the show and more specifically, "The Frank Abagnale, Jr. Players," who inhabit the lead character's (Aaron Tveit) fantasy re-telling of his life.  Sure, there are the guys, too, but these ladies have already made headlines as they shimmy, dance and cavort as Pan Am stewardesses, hospital nurses, and a variety of other ladies that have turned the con man/kid's head.  In addition to their beauty, these gals are all triple threats in a show where the ensemble is so integrated into things, many of them have more stage time than the named characters.  Some are making their Broadway debuts (welcome!), others have resumes full of experience (welcome back!), and all of them make a seamless chorus of dancers, high kickers, and endless feminine energy.  They are 60's chic and 2011 smart.  They are the Catch Me If You Can Girls, and they are Ms. Broadway April 2011!

Composers Marc Shaiman and
Scott Wittman and the girls!

  • Currently appearing in: "Live in Living Color," "The Pinstripes Are All That They See," "Someone Else's Skin, " "The Jet Set," "Don't Break the Rules," and "Doctor's Orders," among other things at the Neil Simon Theatre.
  • Other credits: They have, collectively, appeared in such shows as Legally Blonde, Hairspray, The Producers, Chicago, Rock of Ages, Fosse, Finian's Rainbow, Curtains, Spamalot, Tarzan, Dirty Rtten Scoundrels, Crazy for You, Sunset Boulevard, The Will Rogers Follies and Cats, to name a few.  And that doesn't even count national tours or regional theatre...
  • Website: http://catchmethemusical.com/home
IN PHOTOS



Top: "The Jet Set"
Bottom: "Live in Living Color"



  • Alex Ellis: Broadway Debut!


(center) in Thoroughly Modern Millie



  • Jennifer Frankel: Broadway and Rockette Veteran



(center) in Minsky's



  • Lisa Gajda: Broadway and Twyla Tharp Veteran



in Spamalot



  • Kearran Giovanni: Broadway and One Life to Live veteran



(center) in Lippa's The Wild Party



  • Rachelle Rak: Broadway and Fosse veteran



(next to John Lithgow) in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels



  • Angie Schworer: Broadway and Susan Stroman veteran



with Aaron Tveit in early Catch Me If You Can promo pictures



  • Sabrina Sloan: Broadway and American Idol veteran



as Vanessa in the 1st National Tour
of In the Heights



  • Sarrah Strimel: Broadway and National Tour veteran



(far left) backstage at Rock of Ages and a
meet and greet with Tori Amos



  • Katie Webber: Broadway and XFL Cheerleading veteran



(far right) recording the cast album of Memphis



  • Candice Marie Woods: Women on the Verge Survivor and Broadway veteran


(center) featured dance in "Doctor's Orders"


Top: "The Jet Set"
Bottom: "Live in Living Color"

IN VIDEO




"B Roll" of Catch Me If You Can

(NOTE: I do not own this video, and absolutely no copyright infringement is intended.  I git it from YouTube.com.  The video is included here to promote and celebrate the Broadway production of Catch Me If You Can.  The property, images, music, lyrics and staging are under the copyright owned by the producers and respective artists involved with the production.)

Suggestions for furture Mr. and/or Ms. Broadway's?  Leave them here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
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