Showing posts with label Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2011

More Shows for Boys?

I guess it isn't too surprising to hear from Newsies star Jeremy Jordan that the Disney film upon which the show is based is part of what made him want to be a musical theatre actor.  Or that Lysistrata Jones star Josh Segarra decided the stage was for him after seeing a performance of Take Me Out.  It is moments like that - life changing moments - that most actors can site without even thinking about.  For Jordan, it was seeing guys sing and dance; for Segarra it was about the connection to sports and making that connection onstage.  Either way, we are all better off because these two amazingly talented rising stars have made acting their career.

Boy Gets the Girl: Jeremy Jordan in Newsies
and Josh Segarra in Lysistrata Jones

The review for Disney's Newsies in the New York Times, talks about the future of the property, with Broadway looking more likely than ever, but questions its potential has a mega-hit "Disney" musical.  "The bigger question is Broadway, where the absence of magical elements (talking animals, flying nannies) or a brand-name title may be a handicap, particularly in such a boycentric show."  OK, maybe a lack of flashy spectacle may discourage parents from bringing the littlest theatregoers.  But what about the grossly under served middle and high school boy?  It stands to reason that "boycentric" shows will be of interest to boys.  Boys seeing characters that they can relate to will make a show interesting and even "cool."

There are shows on Broadway right now that should be speaking to these young men, each with a unique role model and hero for boys to look up to.


Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark:  The spectacle, the danger, the awesome aerials, a very cool villain, and even the pretty girl should draw every young comic book fan to the Foxwoods Theatre.  But ultimately, what should stick is the best "boy" character on Broadway, Peter Parker.  There isn't a guy in the world who hasn't felt like a goober - awkward, geeky, zero romantic skills, unheard.  And he's an underdog who rises above all of the bullying.


Disney's The Lion King:  Is there a better way to teach an important lesson about what it means to take responsibility for one's actions, and for the larger picture of being made to answer to the generations before and to provide for generations in the future?  And that it is a young man/cub who takes this journey should make it interesting and poignant to boys of all ages.


Billy Elliot: The most literal lesson on the importance of the arts in a boy's life could also be the coolest and without special effects to boot.  Add the fun of the boy outdoing all those girls certainly has its appeal to a young guy's ego.  It also makes "expressing yourself" no matter how you choose to do so very appealing as well.


War Horse: Life-sized horses, thrilling war scenes, and a young man who sets his fear aside for his best friend sounds like the perfect "boy story" to me.  And what a great chance to show a kid that live theatre can be as action-packed and exciting as a movie!  The ride home could also provide parents a great chance to talk about important "boy" issues - familial responsibility, loyalty, the perils and downside to war, and, yes, the strength of women through it all.

High school guys have Lysistrata Jones to look forward to - college basketball, sexy cheerleaders AND music that you would NOT be embarrassed to have on your iPod!  And if Newsies makes it to Broadway, there's a show for any guy in the family!



Why is that important?  Now is the time for the theatre gods to find the next Jeremy Jordan, Seth Numrich, Reeve Carney and Josh Segarra.  Do you know a young man whose life might be ready to change?  Take him to a Broadway show!


Rate this blog below and leave your comments here, or by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.035

Sunday, September 25, 2011

TheatreScene: September 19 - 25 in Pictures

Here is the TheatreScene for September 19 - 25, 2011!

BROADWAY BOX OFFICE (September 12 - 18):




Top Gross: Wicked: $1.479M
Photo by Joan Marcus




Top Attendance: The Book of Mormon: 102.4%
Top Average Ticket Price: The Book of Mormon: $147.58
Photo by Joan Marcus




Biggest Drop (Over previous week):
Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark -3.3%
Photo by Jacob Cohl
Now in previews:
Man and Boy: Previews: September 9; Opens October 9
Relatively Speaking: Previews: September 20; Opens October 20
The Mountaintop: Previews: September 13; Opens October 13

BROADWAY SHOW NEWS:





Kathleen Turner and Evan Jonigkeit in High
Photo by Joan Marcus




8 included actors Matt Bomer and Cheyenne Jackson
Photo by Joseph Marzullo
September 19:
  • High didn't last but a week on Broadway last season, but Kathleen Turner and Evan Jonigkeit will be taking their troubled souls on the road for a national tour starting in Boston.

  • 8, by Academy Award-winning writer Dustin Lance Black, had a star-filled benefit reading at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre directed by Tony Award-winning director Joe Mantello.






Reeve Carney and Diane Pagan (center) along with all
the Spider-Men at the announcement of the first Everyday Hero.
Photo by Krissie Fullerton
September 21:
  • Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark's Reeve Carney announced that show's first honoree in their "Everyday Heroes" program.  Her name is Diane Pagan, honored for her work making house calls to home bound patients in an effort for them to avoid hospitalization.  She's been doing this important work for six years!





Follies at the Marquis Theatre through January 22, 2012
Photo by Joan Marcus
September 22:
  • Follies has been extended for an additional 3 weeks at the Marquis Theatre.  The critically-acclaimed revival will now close January 22.


September 25:
  • Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS held its 25th annual Broadway Flea Market and Grand Auction today.


BROADWAY CASTING NEWS:




The Addams Family: A Portrait
Photo by Jeremy Daniel
  • Roger Rees will continue in the role of Gomez Addams opposite the Morticia of Brooke Shields through the closing night of The Addams Family, December 31.





Anything Goes: Reno Sweeney (Sutton Foster, center) and her Angels
Photo by Joan Marcus
  • Tony-winner Sutton Foster also extended her contract this week with Anything Goes.  This tap dancing phenom will now play Reno Sweeney through April 29, 2012.  Of course, this also means that the show will go on at least that long as well!





Bobby Steggert (left) in a scene from a previous production of Yank!
  • Yank! will be getting a New York reading before heading off to the Old Globe Theatre, and, one hopes, then returning to Broadway.  The reading will star Bobby Steggert, Santino Fontana and Nellie McKay.


BROADWAY PICTURE/VIDEO OF THE WEEK:

PICTURES:



A Little Night Music's Hunter Ryan Herdlicka
in Dallas Theater Center's The Tempest
Photo by Karen Almond

The Submission as rendered by (left) Ken Fallin and (right) "Squigs"
Last week, Spider-Man, this week,  Assassins
and Cabaret  star Neil Patrick Harris
makes the cover of a magazine.  
VIDEO:

The making of the latest Roxie Hart, Kara DioGuardi:




Rate this blog below and leave your comments here, by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.027

Monday, September 19, 2011

CD REVIEW: Music from: Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark

Like the show, which I have long championed, the recording released in conjunction with the Broadway musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark is an enigma to me.  Like the show, the album is alternately dumbfounding and excellent, alternately rock music and Broadway showtune.  Just like the show, it is alternately over-produced and superbly realized. And just like the final product onstage at the Foxwoods Theatre, the album is alternately ego unchecked and artistic boundary-breaking triumph.

As the world knows, the entire world scrutinized, criticized and watched an epic fail turn into a popular commercial success, if not a critical one.  In the process, director Julie Taymor was let go, her vision too long in being realized fully, the best parts retained for the final version.  Score writers Bono and The Edge, however, went largely unchecked, adding just one full number and tweaking a few others.  Unfortunately, it is the score that remains the weakest link of the show.  And I have to call it as I see it: their egos are just as much (probably more) to blame for the show's shortcomings as anything or anyone else.  They clearly don't know how to score a show - they have admitted as much.  Of course, it is too late to fix things again.


Title: Music from Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark
Artist: Bono, The Edge and members of the Original Broadway Cast
Label: Interscope Records/Marvel
Number: BOO15782-02
Format: Single CD
Case: Single Jewel Case
Booklet: Full color production photos; complete lyrics

Which brings me to the CD released in conjunction with the show, a microcosm of all that ills and elevates the project.  Apparently, in an effort to get something recorded (I am thankful for that), they rushed into the studio to record Music From Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.  The entire Broadway cast is on the recording, but I wouldn't call this an Original Cast Recording.  And even though other such recordings will occasionally have the writers crooning a song or two as bonus tracks, the egos of the show have again prevailed, and Bono and The Edge (I giggle every time I type these ridiculous noms de plume) have insinuated their way onto several tracks.  Their liner note message mentions how they have included "some of their own demos for the fun of it."  So, is this a show album or a U2 album?

Since a large chunk of the score is not included, which, again according to that liner note, were selected purposely from some 18 songs and 20 pieces of orchestration.  And it does include an attempt at a radio single, "Rise Above I."  I certainly applaud any attempt to bring Broadway to the masses.  But the Broadway show fan in me is ticked.  Couldn't they have at least put the songs they DID include in order?  Couldn't those numbers be all done as performed in the show?
Cover Art for the single, "Rise Above I"

The biggest difference is that here, you can, without fail, hear every single word.  And I thought that maybe hearing the lyrics and really paying attention to them in repeated listening would make it clearer and somehow deeper.  I was wrong.  I know the words now, but crap is crap and poetry is poetry.  And I will go out on a limb here and say that had the entire song list been preserved here, the balance between crap and poetry would be more in favor of poetry.  (Someone involved loves - I mean LOVES - "Pull the Trigger" and no matter how it has been retooled for the stage, it remains the very pinnacle of what is wrong with the show.  Ego unchecked; crap over poetry.)Well, enough carping. As this is a theatre blog, I will highlight all those numbers on the CD that are good AND include the Broadway cast. Again, these songs align pretty closely to the same songs that work the best in the show. And again, the cast shines through in spite of the material they are working with.

  • Track 1: "NY Debut": This instrumental is a welcome inclusion, considering how many times your hear part of it.  But it is also nice because it incorporates bits of the other background music.  It is not a traditional "overture" as it is not made up of melodies from songs in the score, but it certainly makes you feel the pulse and excitement of the shows biggest asset: the flying and action sequences.
  • Track 2: "Boy Falls from the Sky": I loved it the minute I heard Reeve Carney croon this tune on Good Morning America over a year ago.  It is moody, dark and poetic.  If only all of the songs were this character driven and interesting.  This should be the song vying for radio time, this and track 10.
  • Track 4: "Picture This": This is one number that tells me what could have been.  This is the perfect blend of U2 and Broadway.  It works well as a song and particularly well on stage as the worlds of Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson and Dr. Osborne are about to collide.
  • Track 5: "I Just Can't Walk Away (Say It Now)": A nice ballad that really showcases the talents and chemistry of Reeve Carney and Jennifer Damiano, with a subtle, well-sung contribution from T.V. Carpio.
  • Track 8: "No More": Another duet for Carney and Damiano, and is another example of what could have been in terms of show music.  It reveals character and advances the plot (this is the song that has Peter and Mary Jane arriving home to two different and troubled homes).
  • Track 9: "DIY World": Catchy and a showcase for the company, the song is eerie, interesting and completely part of the theme and conflict of the show, science vs humanity.  Patrick Page and Laura Beth Wells shine here.
"If the World Should End" as performed by
Reeve Carney and Jennifer Damiano at the
2011 Tony Awards
  • Track 10: "If the World Should End": Easily my favorite song, and nicely preserved here by a superb Jennifer Damiano.  Even if, in the show, it is now a duet, the song remains the highlight of the score and this recording.
  • Track 12: "A Freak Like Me (Needs Company)": The song most ready for the radio works surprisingly well as a production number and represents the one major improvement to the score, plot and version 2.0 of the show.  It is pop song catchy and well sung by the cast, with some very Green Goblin-esque song stylings by Patrick Page.  Add this song to my "guilty pleasures" list.
  • Track 13: "Rise Above 2": It is, for me, simply "Rise Above," as it is the version that plays in the theatre, and really did not need to be changed for any potential radio play.  Reeve Carney and T.V. Carpio are superb here; haunting, well-sung and one reason to see the show live.

Hmmm... I have highlighted 9 of the 14 tracks on this album.  More than half, so how bad can it be, right?  Well, except for maybe the final, title number, which I didn't include, the rest of the tracks are THAT awful.  "Bouncing Off the Walls," which I loved in the show, doesn't make much sense out of context and really needs the visual to make the aural really work.  "Turn Off the Dark," well-sung by Carpio, works better having seen the show and having just experienced everything up to that point, but in isolation, it is just weird.  It tries too hard.

The booklet contains full lyrics, some good pictures, and that very telling note from Bono and The Edge.  And the quality of the recording is first rate.  The vocal arrangements and orchestrations on the regular tracks are also first rate.


Maybe fans of U2 will embrace this attempt to get them to buy some of the albums.  Fans of the show will probably want it, too.  But if you are a serious Broadway Cast Recording fan, you'll probably do as I did - wait for a good sale and buy it to have it.  Then program your iPod for the three or four songs you really like, or better yet, just buy the songs you like from iTunes and be done with it.

Grade: C+


Rate this blog below and leave your comments here, by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.021

Sunday, September 18, 2011

TheatreScene in Pictures: September 12 - 18

The weekly round-up continues to evolve!  You wanted more pictures, so here you go!  Each week, I'll look at the box office, show news and casting news.  And at the bottom, sometimes something fun to look at - pictures and/or video.  Let me know what you think of this format below.

This is the Theatre Scene for the week of September 12 - 18!

BROADWAY BOX OFFICE (September 5 - 11)

Top Gross: The Lion King $1.299M
Photo by Disney Theatricals


Top Attendance: The Book of Mormon 102.4%
Top Average Ticket: The Book of Mormon $147.80
Photo by Joan Marcus

Biggest Drop in Attendance (over previous week):
How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying -18.1%
Photo from HowtoSucceedBroadway.com
BROADWAY SHOW NEWS



September 13:
  • The National Tour of Fela! began in Washington, D.C. at the National Theatre.
  • Hugh Jackman: Back on Broadway was announced today.  It will be a limited run from October 25 - January 1 at the Broadhurst Theatre.  Take that, Mandy!

Aspects of Love at the Walnut Street Theatre with
Charles Hagerty and Jennifer Hope Wills
Photo by Mark Garvin
September 14:
  • The Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia began performances of Aspects of Love today.  The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical stars Jennifer Hope Wills (The Phantom of the Opera, Wicked), Charles Hagerty and Paul Schoeffler (Rock of Ages).  It runs through October 23.



September 15:
  • The National Tour of The Addams Family began today in New Orleans.  The tour stars Sara Gettlefinger and Douglas Sills.
  • Disney's Newsies began its world premiere run at the Paper Mill Playhouse.  The show stars Bonnie and Clyde's Jeremy Jordan and is directed by Bonnie and Clyde's Jeff Calhoun.

Ten Cents a Dance at the McCarter Theatre
Photo by T. Charles Erickson

September 16:
  • The star-filled (and rumored to be Broadway-bound) Ten Cents a Dance began performances today at the McCarter Theatre.  The show stars Donna McKechnie (A Chorus Line, State Fair) and Malcolm Gets (The Story of My Life, Amour) and is directed by Tony winner John Doyle (Sweeney Todd, Company).

BROADWAY CASTING NEWS

  • Bobby Canavale (The Motherfucker with the Hat, TV's Will and Grace) has been cast as Nicky Arnstein in the upcoming revival of Funny Girl.  He joins the previously announced Lauren Ambrose (Awake and Sing!, Exit the King).  This will be the musical debut for both actors.

  • Kristin Chenoweth (Wicked, Promises, Promises) announced on The View that she will be returning to Broadway in a revival of On the Twentieth Century.  Personally, I hope this happens - I love me some Kristin.  But I also hope her TV series works out.  No production has been officially announced.

  • Andy Karl (Altar Boyz, Legally Blonde) and Quinn Van Antwerp (National Tour of Jersey Boys) will be joining the Broadway company of Jersey Boys next month.

Reeve will keep donning the suit through May 2012
  • Though he will be taking a few weeks off to make a film, Reeve Carney has extended his contract with Spider-Man:Turn Off the Dark through May 2012.  While he is away, his role will be played by Matthew James Thomas (SEE HIM!!!) and Matt Caplan.  Jennifer Damiano has not, so far, renewed her contract.  Stay tuned...

  • James Lapine will be directing Encores! production of Merrily We Roll Along.  This frequent Sondheim collaborator might just be able to make it work.

BROADWAY PICTURE OF THE WEEK

  • Any time Broadway makes the cover of a magazine it is blogworthy.  Muscle-bound superhero Broadway Boys just make it all the sweeter!

Rate this blog below, leave your comments here, or by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.020

Friday, September 16, 2011

More Broadway Milestones

It has been quite a week for Broadway shows, with several shows marking milestones.  Here's a quick look at the ones that happened this week (September 12 - 16, 2011)!

OPENING:

September 12: The starry revival of Follies opened to mostly enthusiastic reviews at the Marquis Theatre.  StageGrade.com took all of the major reviews into consideration and gave it an average score of A-.  (Talkin' Broadway was the major nay-sayer giving it an "F".)


Ron Raines, Bernadette Peters, Lora Lee Gayer, Nick Verina
Photo by Joan Marcus

The Follies Ensemble
Photo by Joan Marcus

PERFORMANCE MILESTONE:

September 14:  Mamma Mia! became the 10th longest-running Broadway show in history with its 4,098th performance at the Winter Garden Theatre, surpassing the run of Miss Saigon.  The show will celebrate its 10th year on Broadway on October 18th.

The Dancing Queens: Donna and the Dynamos on September 14.
Photo by Joseph Marzullo

Nothing says long-run record like cupcakes!
Stacia Hernandez, Lisa Brescia and Jennifer Perry
Photo by Joseph Marzullo


ATTENDANCE MILESTONE:

September 14: Spider-Man:Turn Off the Dark welcomed its 500,00th audience member, Jordan Muir an 11 year old from Australia.

Patrick Page addresses the audience as the cast looks on.
Photo by Krissie Fullerton

The Green Goblin introduces Spider-Man's
500,00th audience member Justin Muir (and family).
Photo by Krissie Fullerton

The Muir Family at the Foxwoods Theatre, with a special edition
of The Daily Bugle, one of Justin's special commemorative gifts.
Photo by Krissie Fullerton

Rate this blog below, and leave your comments here, by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.018