Curvy Widow

Curvy Widow has taken an express train to off-Broadway, first performed in Asheville, North Carolina ten months ago then moved to New Jersey’s  George Street Playhouse before quickly getting booked here at the Westside Theater.  The autobiographical book is by Bobby Goldman, the widow of Broadway playwright and Academy award winning screenwriter James Goldman (The Lion in Winter and Follies).  By the end of the first song, the husband is dead and Bobby is no longer “Under Control.”

Curvy Widow is the match.com name used by Bobby when she finally decided to move on with her life and “The Rules for Whittling Down” was a very funny, well-staged song on how to take her 172 “matches” down to a more actionable quantity of suitors.  Think Rue McClanahan in Golden Girls but without the constraints of television language restrictions.  A little racy and funny.  Unfortunately, the entire show is stuck in bad sitcom land and many jokes and musical numbers are flat.

Broadway veteran Nancy Opel (Urinetown, Honeymoon in Vegas) plays Bobby and is accompanied by three men (Ken Land, Alan Muraoka and Christopher Shyer) who play assorted male characters such as her “shrink,” doctor and assortment of dates.  This part of the show works best and all of them are very good and fun to watch, even when the material is cliché or ridiculous.  Bobby’s three women friends also have various roles, primarily as her best friends, but have nothing significant to do or say, which is a missed opportunity.  There is definitely an audience here for this type of musical comedy.  Even the inane “Gynecologist Tango” number generated a few guffaws.  But the laughs are not frequent enough and the thoughtful ending, while effective, comes without the benefit of enough depth along the journey to get us to the same place as Bobby.  This production of Curvy Widow is probably as good as it can be.

www.curvywidow.com

 

 

A Bronx Tale

Beowulf Boritt’s scenery can be as large a character as anything in a show.  Take the phenomenal cityscape from Act One (the play from Moss Hart’s memoir) that rotated from tenement to luxury penthouse and back again.  It was an awesome framing device to an exceptional play.  We are treated to big moving brownstones in A Bronx Tale, but this time they get in the way.  Perhaps they were going for choreography but the structures’ spinning, then moving upstage and back throughout the proceedings is distracting, overwhelming this rather underwhelming musical.

Based on his one man show turned into a well-admired 1993 movie, Chazz Palminteri wrote the book with Alan Menken (every Disney musical and the great Little Shop of Horrors) providing the music.  We are in the Bronx alternating between the years 1960 and 1968 in an Italian neighborhood ruled by “goodfellas.”  Young Calogero is a child seduced by the easy money earned from the mob.  The older Calogero is our narrator and lead character in the story who is looking back on choices made, while trying to find the right path for his future (Bobby Conte Thornton, confident portrayal in his Broadway debut).

At far too many curtain calls these days, the audience leaps to its feet like puppies begging for Snausages.  Tellingly, that did not happen at the end of A Bronx Tale although the audience seemed more satisfied with the show than me.  There’s one outstanding song, “One of the Great Ones” sung by our mob-in-chief played by the always solid Nick Cordero (best thing in Bullets Over Broadway, great off-Broadway work in Nice Girl and Brooklynite).  All of the other songs are unmemorable.  Supporting players with little to do are given goombah names (Frankie Coffeecake, JoJo the Whale) but there is no character development whatsoever.  The direction is credited to Broadway veteran Jerry Zaks and Robert De Niro (who also directed the movie, his first).  If telling your cast to stand center stage in the spotlight and sing facing forward is direction, then WOW.  But the set moves a lot so I guess someone had to coordinate that.  The absolute worse thing in A Bronx Tale was the Sound Design.  The cast was amplified like it was playing an arena.  When the material is this subpar, loudness does not help.  I’ve certainly seen worse but this one’s not good.  Terrible may be too strong.  But maybe not.

www.abronxtalethemusical.com

Lucky (Dixon Place)

Dixon Place describes itself as an artistic incubator which supports artists by producing original works of theater, dance, music, puppetry, circus arts, literature and visual art at all stages of development.  I head downtown once or twice a year to see what’s on.  The last time I went, the infamous play Sex by Mae West was excerpted and performed by women who, for various reasons, had been actual sex workers.  After the performance, they took questions and had candid conversations about their lives, the historical significance of that play and women’s rights.  Not for everyone but definitely made for thoughtful conversation afterward.

Last night’s less serious offering was Lucky by the Atlas Circus Company, a troupe formed by former students at Muhlenberg College.  We follow Lucky as he travels to the big city and stumbles, trips and falls from one misadventure to the next, told through slapstick and circus skills.  Lucky is best described as a combination of mime, Three Stooges tomfoolery, athleticism and magic tricks.  As such, the four artists present an old style of eccentric clowning with no real words spoken (but sounds) and musical accompaniment (piano, recorded music).  Think stolen briefcase hijinks and you will get the picture.  Two performers had inspired bits throughout while the other two didn’t really have enough to do, despite some hilarious physicality.  In Lucky, Atlas Circus is combining circus with a theatrical narrative.  A nice diversion at downtown prices.

www.dixonplace.org

Really Rosie (Encores)

I have no recollection of this 1975 show despite the fact that Carole King wrote the music in a collaboration with Maurice Sendak, who supplied the music and lyrics.  Really Rosie is based on a number of his children’s books from the early 1960s.  Originally a television special, this musical was then expanded and given an off-Broadway run in 1980.  Avenue P in Brooklyn is the setting and young Rosie is a big dreamer who essentially spends the entire show corralling the neighborhood kids into pretending to make her fantasy movies, where she naturally is the star.  I know Sendak can be dark but maybe this is just not my cup of Ovaltine.  This giggly, sugary sweet musical references children’s deaths through kidnapping, choking on a chicken bone or getting chopped into pieces before being placed in a shoebox.

The best songs were “Avenue P” and “Chicken Soup with Rice” but unfortunately they came toward the end of the show.  After viewing, I googled the score and, interestingly, both of those songs were in the middle originally.  Hard to tell if the many kids in the audience were engaged completely in the cavernous City Center.  When I happily departed to the subway, I heard a mom gushing over the performance and reminiscing about listening to the soundtrack as a young girl.  Really Rosie might need that kind of connection to be admired.

www.nycitycenter.org

New York Musical Festival (NYMF Part 7)

Freedom Riders:  The Civil Rights Musical

I was born in 1961, the year civil rights activists called Freedom Riders rode interstate buses to the southern United States in order to challenge the non-enforcement of a Supreme Court ruling that segregated buses were unconstitutional.  The southern states ignored the ruling and the federal government did nothing to enforce them.  The Freedom Rides put a national spotlight on  this issue.  This was violent, risky stuff.  In Birmingham, Alabama, for example, police cooperated with the Ku Klux Klan and allowed mobs to attack the riders.  In Montgomery, ambulances refused to take the injured to hospitals.  Riders were jailed and, when some of them would not stop singing freedom songs while incarcerated, prison officials took away their mattresses, sheets and toothbrushes.  How big was this movement?  President Kennedy, his brother Robert, then Attorney General, and Martin Luther King, Jr. are all figures in this history.  Rich material for a struggle that is unfortunately not over.

So why did I not completely embrace this show?  Three reasons:  the book, the lyrics and the presentation style.  There are 26 scenes in a two hour musical.  In order to move this story along, there is a surface level component at work, with so many characters drawn in two dimensional sketches, at best.  Like another NYMF entry about oppression, A Wall Apart, lyrics are repeated over and over again, but even more so in Freedom Riders.  There are some fine songs throughout although not necessarily grounded in this particular history.  Relentless anthems continually sung directly at the audience gives the entire piece a civics lesson feel.  Furthermore, the cast (including the ensemble)performs far too often as if it were auditioning for The Voice.  One can admire the talent but I felt disconnected to the people and the deep, troubling story being brought to life.

Georama:  An American Panorama Told On Three Miles of Canvas

Opening with the song, “Nobody Knows,” Georama tells the now obscure story of John Banvard, a 19th century painter known for his giant panoramas of the Mississippi River.  He sketched the river while on a boat, eventually painting a canvas that grew to twelve feet high and one half mile long, although it was advertised as a “three mile canvas.”  In 1848, the magazine Scientific America published a piece under “New Inventions” describing and illustrating Banvard’s mechanism for displaying a moving panorama.  Georama uses its own screen projected panorama as the backdrop for this story, moving us from the river to larger towns and cities.

As luck would have it, Georama was my last musical from this festival and clearly one of my favorites.  What’s to love?  24 songs in 90 minutes which add layers to the strong book and help develop its characters, performed by two musicians who only play piano, cello, violin and guitar.  The music feels authentic to the period and yet contains a fine example where inserting a whimsical musical comedy number out of nowhere completely works.   The four person cast, led by P.J. Griffith and Jillian Louis, is simply excellent.  One of Georama’s big themes revolves around art and the truth, or whether the line between truth and lies has become increasingly blurred, reflected in “Art is a Lie.”  This musical is even timely.  What’s not to love?

Theater Reviews From My Seat  – BEST of FEST

At the closing celebration, awards will be presented to the best of the festival.  Now that I’ve started this blog, I am looking forward to how the reviews from my seat will stack up against the panel of judges.  Should be fun.  My full production favorites are listed below.  For the record, I did not see Errol and Fidel, My Dear Watson or The Time Machine.  Let’s hope they have a future life so I will have the opportunity to check them out.

My votes for Best of Fest, in alphabetical order:

Backbeard

Georama:  An American Panorama Told On Three Miles of Canvas

Matthew McConaughey vs the Devil

The Goree All Girl String Band

The breath of material in this year’s NYMF was outstanding.  1961 Berlin Wall.  1940s Las Vegas.  1961 the segregated southern U.S.  1800s Mississippi River.  1969 New Orleans.  897 Rome.  1940s Texas women’s prison.  16th century Puerto Rico.  1961 B-movie.  Contemporary offerings including mommies, kids and the answer to the question on everyone’s mind:  how did Matthew McConaughey win an Oscar?  And very hairy, very smelly pirates.  All at $27.50 per show.  Alright, alright, alright.

www.nymf.org

New York Musical Festival (NYMF Part 6)

Backbeard

Based upon his children’s picture book series, Matthew McElligott co-authored the book and lyrics to this musical about pirates of the most silly kind.  While Backbeard himself is very, very hairy and very, very smelly, the pirate danger can be summed up in the song lyric, “he’ll give you a pirate wedgie.”  After a raucous birthday party finds Backbeard’s clothes ruined, he turns to two tailors who give him a colorful, non-piratey makeover, complete with a pig rather than a bird perched on his shoulder.  Winning acceptance for standing up for who you are, told through song, dance, comedy and swordplay, is the big theme.  This is definitely kid’s stuff but I laughed out loud and the children in the audience seemed to be having a great time.  The songs fit the story and riffed somewhat on the typical pirate songs forever stuck in your head.  Lyrics were clever and not dumbed down for the young folks.

I imagine Backbeard must be a fun book to read with your child and that is exactly what was put onstage.  Kudos to the director, Michael Musial, who also wrote the score and co-wrote the lyrics.  Everyone in the cast seemed 100% committed to the show in terms of tone and style, which made the material truly come to life.  Jimmy Kieffer (Backbeard) was hilarious and the whole largely non-equity cast nailed the comedic storybook effect like seasoned pros.  Disney could take this piece and run with it.  Well executed and a nice surprise.

Motherfreakinghood!

From the author’s note:  Whether you are a tiger mom, helicopter mom or free-range mom, we’ve all said things like “Leave the cigarette butt on the ground” and “the Tooth Fairy must have been too busy to come last night.”  If that sentence made you nod in appreciation, this show may be for you.  Packed with 22 songs over 90 minutes, Motherfreakinghood! is the musical revue of three women from pregnancy test through high school graduation.  A kitchen sink of song titles such as:  “Ballad of the Post Partum,”  “Poo-Wop Playground,”  “Hormones on Parade” and, when I needed it, “Last Freaking Song.”  The musical style is sort of doo-wop, girl group but occasionally musical theater inspired, like  “Friends to the End,”  clearly indebted to “Friendship” from Anything Goes.

Does this show work?  As an off-Broadway revue, perhaps yes.  Target audience:  moms who need a girl’s night out, some Chardonnay, or two Cosmopolitans, or both.

Ben, Virginia and Me:  The Liberace Musical

From the 1950s to the 1970s, Liberace was one of the highest paid entertainers in the world, having conquered Las Vegas during its meteoric rise in the desert.  Liberace’s three brand symbols were the piano, a candelabra and flamboyant costumes.  Underneath the glitter was a closeted gay man who was so effeminate it is hard to imagine anyone was fooled.  Ben, Virginia and Me is a musical combining the stories of Liberace’s career and personal life trajectory with the gangster Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel and his girlfriend, Virginia, who built the Flamingo Hotel for the mob.  As musicals can do, this story is very loosely based on facts: all three of them were in Las Vegas, there was an encounter where Bugsy offered Liberace a job at his hotel and Liberace’s public humiliation in London by the Daily Mail resulting in a libel suit.

Does it matter than the core of the show, the relationship between the three titular characters, is best classified as historical fiction?  Not really.  The show opens with “The Fabulous Flamingo,” complete with showgirls and glitz.  Not only do we get a healthy dose of classic Las Vegas spectacle but also a little slice of history of two of its early famous icons:  the Flamingo Hotel and “Mr. Showmanship.”  As Liberace, Samuel Floyd delivers a fully rounded performance of a complicated individual, never slipping into caricature.  The best moment in the show came near the end with “Beautiful Man,” a elegantly staged memory song where Liberace reminisces about his early relationship with Rock Hudson.

Although Ben, Virginia and Me is always watchable, it is overstuffed to the point that Virginia’s death is just a throwaway line to wrap up a main character’s story arc.  The real fun here was the vast parade of costumes designed by Kurt Alger:  showgirls with headresses, 1940s mob suits, and increasingly ruffled, feathered frocks for our flashy, garish pianist.   The cast even had curtain call costumes where everyone donned their finest sparkle.  Within a NYMF budget, very impressive indeed.  There’s a big show concept inside Ben, Virginia and Me, perhaps leaning more towards Me.

www.nymf.org

Ghost Light (Third Rail Projects)

In 2012, I was introduced to Third Rail Projects, self-described “creators of site-specific, immersive and experiential performance.”  Then She Fell was an awesome combination of hospital ward, the writings of Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland and only fifteen audience members per show.  Two of us attended that show, were separated right at the start and did not see each other again until the end.  The show was magical, thought provoking and is still running in Brooklyn.  In 2016, I ventured into The Grand Paradise, set in a late 1970s resort purported to contain the fountain of youth.  The second show was a bit larger in scale but I would guess no more than forty people.  The connecting thread of these works is clever scenery, dance, storytelling and audience members who remain silent passengers and voyeurs throughout.

After those two experiences, I was definitely planning to see Ghost Light, a big time move up in exposure for this company to the Claire Tow theater in Lincoln Center.  An appropriate upgrade as this piece is all about theater and performance from a behind-the-scenes, almost dreamlike perspective.  We travel backstage, into hallways, look down from the balcony and take it all in.  Like their other shows, Ghost Light is a combination of great mood setting, overlapping scenes viewed from different perspectives and dance.  The sheer mechanics of moving an audience of more than one hundred in ever changing group sizes and formations was impressive.  As far as the content is concerned, some moments were great, some were odd yet fun, while others were a tad boring, especially the visually stunning but ultimately overlong ending.  I can’t wait to see what’s next for this troupe.

Interactive, immersive theater has been successfully settling in here in New York with shows like the long-running Sleep No More.  Try one.  And if you can be comfortable in a very small group while in the presence of the White Queen, definitely go see Then She Fell.  I may need to go back again this fall.

www.thirdrailprojects.com

New York Musical Festival (NYMF Part 5)

A Wall Apart

Graham Russell is the singer-songwriter of the Australian soft rock duo, Air Supply, a very successful band here in the 1980s with songs like All Out of Love and The One That You Love.  A Wall Apart transports us to Berlin in 1961 right before the wall is erected.  Families, careers and relationships are about to be turned upside down with the erection of the wall, eliminating all travel between East and West Berlin.

Esther, the American/German love interest, is a professed fan of West Side Story and unsurprisingly A Wall Apart mirrors the “opposite side of the tracks doomed love affair.”  The book nicely develops a family history of three brothers who are split on their east/west loyalties.  Unfortunately, we have to endure song after song of repetitive lyrics.  Lines are underlined so often that you cannot get them out of your head.  During intermission, the people in front of me starting singing “We’re Having A Baby,” the Act I closing number.  Actually, they only sang those four exact words, having just heard them repeated over and over.  Given the interesting premise here, I was underwhelmed by songs titled:  “Do You Mind If I Adore You,” and “I Want To Be In Love With You.”  To be fair, a sappy and romantic Air Supply fan I am not.

The principals in the cast were game and did everything in their power to put this material over, even the jarring transition midway through Act II to a dead narrator.  The set design and screen projections of Berlin were very effective, elucidating the harshness of the wall.  I’ll avoid discussing the odd choreography which was inserted far too often.  You can have a good story and talented performers, but a good musical must have good tunes.  Underneath the lyrics, however, there were some nice melodies.  The verdict:  a bit of a slog overall but a promising idea.

Peace, Love and Cupcakes:  The Musical

Is it possible to fairly review a show that sells cupcakes in the lobby for No Bullying charities?  Let’s try.  Based on a mother/daughter written book, Peace, Love and Cupcakes addresses eighth grade angst with songs like “Different,” “Kylie Carson Doesn’t Belong Here,” and “How Do You Deal With a Monster?”  Kylie is a new student trying to fit into a new school, dreading every “Monday Morning.”  To make matters worse, the popular (and very mean) young ladies, ingeniously named the BLAH girls, are in full torment mode.  Kylie forms a cupcake club and, as a result, there are lessons learned through songs sung on the way to peace and love.

In the performance I caught, Kylie was played by soon-to-be high school sophomore Carrie Beck, the co-author of the original book and also this musical.  Ms. Beck was simply excellent in the role and the rest of the large cast were fun to watch.  It was especially nice to see all the performers putting a spin on their different character’s personalities, enriching the viewing experience.  I would recommend tightening this to one act as the intermission drained the momentum somewhat and Act II is short with not enough new songs.  This is a kid’s show for sure but it is easy to imagine this musical performed in middle schools everywhere.  I think it was possible to fairly review a show that sells cupcakes in the lobby.  Whew.

Generation Me

Following the middle school scenario in Peace, Love and Cupcakes, Generation Me is a significantly darker offering.  Although this show also opens with a Monday number, “Monday Morning/Revelation,” by song’s end Milo Reynolds (Milo Manheim) hangs himself.  The rest of the show is told in a series of flashbacks, unraveling the mystery of why he decided to end his life.  In the program, the book and lyrics writer, Julie Soto, noted that she was trying to create age appropriate and challenging material for teen actors.  Clearly she accomplished that but at least my journey to that conclusion was decidedly mixed.

By structuring the show in flashbacks, we alternate sadness and despair with teen angst, clichés and a cornucopia of social issues.  An example: right after the suicide, Milo and his best friend have a number called “The Bra Song” about learning to unhook a bra before going on a date.  Not that the song wasn’t funny, it was such a dramatic swing in tone that seemed odd.  Then the first Act piled on the  gossiping and severe meanness but in a way that felt like a celebration of such behavior.  (The cutter in the class is known in social media as #SLICE.)  By intermission, frankly, I was completed put off.  The couple sitting to my left did not return after intermission and the young lady next to me probably said’ “Oh my God” a half  dozen times, often then burying her face in her hands.  Apparently I was not suffering alone.

Perseverance, however, can have its rewards.  Before the middle of Act II, the machinery that swung repeatedly from one extreme to the next calmed down and a slew of very nice, character driven ballads emerged which put emotion, grief and heft to the forefront.  To the credit of Ms. Soto, I was impressed toward the end of the show when I realized how many of these characters had meaningful parts, with performances and dialogue to match.  The flashback structure of the show may be what I struggled with here.  Letting out some of the teenage musical comedy hijinks (perhaps better termed as abuse) earlier before throwing the audience directly into the suicide might help.

www.nymf.org

The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin (Encores!)

First performed in 2000, The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin was written by Kirsten Childs, a former Broadway dancer and traces the life of Viveca (also known as Bubbly) from the early 1960s in Los Angeles to the mid-1990s in New York City.  Nikki M. James takes on the part originated by LaChanze and is excellent as usual.  The course is set for us to watch a girl grow up and deal with racial prejudices from playing with her white doll to a cop profiling her friend to Director Bob asking her to play a scene “less white.”  Yes, Director Bob is a caricature of Bob Fosse (amusingly embodied by Josh Davis).

By intermission, I found the show very cartoonish which I assume was on purpose.  Bubbly could possibly be a distant relative to You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown both in terms of tone and simplistic life teachings, with dashes of edginess added to make it seem less, well … bubbly.  Then in Act II, we audition for shows, have sex (Julius Thomas III, gorgeous R&B vocals), listen to Granny’s advice and conclude with a serious revelation.  A reasonably good version of so-so material.

www.nycitycenter.org

Groundhog Day

Once in a while you go to a Broadway show and leave so completely entertained that you can hardly believe your luck.  If you don’t already know, the basic plot premise is that Phil Connors (Andy Karl) is an irritable, obnoxious weatherman sent to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to cover Phil, the groundhog, and his shadow prediction for spring.  But something happens and he wakes up to face February 2nd again and again.  I vaguely remember liking the movie on which this show is based and I am a big fan of Andy Karl’s previous work (On the Twentieth Century, Rocky, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Legally Blonde).  His performance (acting, singing, clowning, being an asshole) is astonishingly great and he is onstage nearly the whole show.

I would rather not give too many details, just go.  Groundhog Day is a combination of inventive set design (Rob Howell), a very funny book (Danny Rubin), clever lyrics (Matilda‘s Tim Minchin, another winner) and direction (Matthew Warchus) that tightly packs in so much hilarity throughout.  Importantly, this entire cast was stellar and memorable no matter what the size of the role.  If you want to attend a big Broadway show, be wildly entertained and leave completely in awe of the talent that created and performs this finely tuned machine, then Groundhog Day is a must-see.

www.groundhogdaymusical.com