Sunday, April 16, 2023

Bob Fosse’s Dancin’

 Bob Fosse’s Dancin’
The Music Box
April 15, 2023 

Photo courtesy of Bob Fosse's Dancin'

Bob Fosse’s Dancin’ celebrates the work of the legendary director/choreographer.  Some of the content is restaged from the original Dancin’, which ran on Broadway from 1978-1982.  Director Wayne Cilento, who appeared in the original production, staged a few montage sections, highlighting well-known pieces of Fosse’s work.  Fosse’s style was strictly adhered to in the creation of these sections.  A few of the classic pieces were reinterpreted to connect to a present day audience.

“Crunchy Granola Suite,” “Three in One,” “Dancin’ Man,” and “Benny’s Number” (“Sing, Sing, Sing”) are presented in full.  They remain effective and stylistically fresh.  “Mr. Bojangles” is recreated with a few variations from the original, yet lands with a strong emotional impact.  Although the choreography from “America” is fully remounted, it is reinterpreted.  The boisterous red, white, and blue design from the original is replaced with stark black and white, generating an entirely different feeling.  It is less humorous and celebratory, and reflects the nation’s current deep rooted conflicts.  “The Female Star Spot” (“Here You Come Again”) features four women and one man.  It leads with new dialogue, and explores a very different point of view. 

Photo courtesy of Bob Fosse's Dancin'
The dancers are truly phenomenal.  They are technically strong, and have perfected the Fosse style.  Peter John Chursin stands out stylistically.  He is a consummate actor and magnetic performer.  Kolton Krouse nails the Ann Reinking solo in “Sing, Sing, Sing.”  He is a powerful dancer and solid performer. 

Bob Fosse’s Dancin’ is pure entertainment.  It is a truly invigorating event. 

Domenick Danza

Monday, April 10, 2023

Life of Pi

 Life of Pi
Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre
April 9, 2023 

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

The Broadway production of Life of Pi is a truly mesmerizing theatrical experience.  If you’ve read the book or seen the movie, you know the story. This production takes it all to another level.  Lolita Chakrabarti’s adaptation is concise and engaging.  The illusions are spectacular.  The puppetry design by Nick Barnes and Finn Caldwell is inventive and precise.  The video design and animation by Andrzej Goulding combine with Tim Lutkin’s lighting and Carolyn Downing’s sound design to give the story dimension and life.  The cast and puppeteers are phenomenal, fully in sync and consistently unified. Director Max Webster pulls it all together to tell this tale of survival, faith, and persistence in the most remarkable way possible. 

Pi (played by Hiran Abeysekera) is the single survivor of a cargo ship that sunk on its way from India to Canada.  After over two hundred days in a life boat, he washes up on a beach in Mexico.  While recovering in a hospital, he is interviewed by Mr. Okamoto (played by Daisuke Tsuji), a representative from the shipping line, and Lulu Chen (played by Kristin Louie), the Canadian Ambassador to Mexico.  They need to document the facts surrounding the ship’s sinking.  Pi begins his story in India, where his family owned a zoo.  Due to diminishing attendance, Pi’s father (played by Rajesh Bose) purchases a Bengal Tiger to hopefully bring in the crowds.  To demonstrate how dangerous the tiger is, Pi’s Father feeds him a goat.  Pi witnesses the tiger kill and devour the goat.  The lesson is learned.  Pi fully understands.  

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

When Pi’s family decides to emigrate to Canada to escape the political unrest in India, they take the animals with them on a cargo ship.  When the ship sinks during a storm, Pi finds himself on a life boat in the middle of the ocean with an orangutan, a hyena, a zebra with a broken leg, and the Bengal Tiger.

Hiram Abeysekera portrays Pi as an impressive and ambitious seventeen year old.  His life in India is, as he says, “idyllic.”  He is educated, logical, and passionate.  He is eager and open to experiencing all the world has to offer.  Mr. Abeysekera enacts every detail of Pi’s story with agility, clarity, and precision.  He questions and explores.  He skillfully pulls back to draw the audience in, then freely opens up to relieve the tension.  He delivers a truly inspired performance.  The audience follows him, cares for him, and feels with him.     

Photo courtesy of Life of Pi

Every moment of spectacle in this production serves the telling of the story.  The audience is transported to a dangerous and mystical world.  

Don’t miss Life of Pi.  Get your ticket today!

Domenick Danza

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Shucked

 Shucked
Nederlander Theatre
April 7, 2023 


Photo courtesy of Shucked
Shucked
, the new Broadway musical with book by Robert Horn and music and lyrics by Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally, is wonderfully full of surprises.  It is a musical with an original story, not based on previous source material.  This is something we rarely see on Broadway.  The story builds and develops in ways that you won’t expect.  It is about the healing powers of love wrapped in knee slapping corn husks.  It is crony and heartwarming, boisterous and tender, raunchy and virtuous.  It is truly unique, and just what we need right now.  

The townspeople of Corn County are preparing for a wedding.  Maizy (played by Caroline Innerbichler) is about to wed her life-long love and best friend, Beau (played by Andrew Durand), when a tragic occurrence stops them.  The corn crop, which surrounds and protects the town, begins to wither and die.  The town relies on the corn for survival.  Maizy steps up and decides to leave and get help.  Her cousin Lulu (played by Alex Newell) tries to talk her out of it.  No one has ever left Corn County before.  Beau orders her to stay.  Maizy defies him and ends up in Tampa, where she meets Gordy (played by John Behlmann), a shyster Podiatrist who calls himself “The Corn Doctor.”  Gordy finds out that the stones in the bracelet Maizy is wearing are valuable gems.  Maizy’s Grandpa (played by Dwayne Clark) made it for her from the stones under their house.  Gordy sees this as an opportunity to pay off his loan shark, so he manipulates Maizy to take him back to Corn County.  Gordy promises to solve the corn problem in order to steal the stones.  Luckily, not all the townsfolk are as trusting as Maizy. 

Caroline Innerbichler (center) & the Cast of Shucked
Photo courtesy of Shucked
Caroline Innerbichler captures your heart as Maizy.  She is gullible and determined.  Andrew Durand is stubborn and vulnerable as Beau.  Together these two skilled actors create a genuine relationship that twists and turns in every scene.  They croon and swoon, then croon some more… and their crooning is out of this world. 

Alex Newell as Lulu
Photo curtesy of Shucked

Alex Newell rocks the house as Lulu.  She delivers every joke with a punch and a wink.  In Act I she brings the audience to their feet with her solo “Independently Owned.”  “Friends,” her duet with Ms. Innerbichler in Act II, is powerful and touching.  Her chemistry with John Behlmann (Gordy) is sizzling.  Lulu meets her match in this fast talking conman.  Their timing is spot on.   

Kevin Cahoon plays Beau’s brother, Peanut.  He delivers one corny pun after another.  They usually come in threes, and are followed by a dry take to the audience that extends the laughter even further.  His character defines the town and its inhabitants through his timing, rhythm, and simplicity. 

Photo courtesy of Shucked

Director Jack O’Brien finds the right, subtle tone and easy timing that allows Mr. Horn’s raucous writing to land as it needs.  You wait for the next joke, knowing it will be better than the one you just heard… and it always is.  Sarah O’Gleby’s choreography is sharp, energetic, and lively.  It sets the pace, encapsulates the setting, and keeps the show moving.

There are two kinds of stories to tell.  The first is when a stranger comes to town, and the second is when a character leaves home.  Shucked combines both.  A character leaves home and brings a stranger back to town, who upsets the norm in order to find what everyone was needing all along.  Go see this show! 

Domenick Danza

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Fat Ham

 Fat Ham
American Airline Theatre
April 1, 2023 

Photo courtesy of Fat Ham

Playwright James Ijames adapted Shakespeare’s Hamlet to tell the story of finding happiness through self-acceptance.  The stunning outcome is his Pulitzer Prize winning play, Fat Ham It is set at a family wedding celebration / bar-b-cue in the "American south…a kind of limited space between the past and the present."  Director Saheem Ali skillfully sculpts the moments in this piece so they deliver hardy laughs, while distinctly highlighting the plot points of a bold and poignant story.  The action rises as the family holds back their secrets.  The tension builds to the point of no return.  

Tio (played by Chris Herbie Holland) is helping his cousin, Juicy (played by Marcel Spears), set up the back yard for a bar-b-cue / wedding celebration.  Juicy’s mother, Tedra (played by Nikki Crawford), married his uncle, Rev (played by Billy Eugene Jones), only two weeks after the death of his father, Pap.  Juicy is unsure of his feelings for the events, until he is visited by Pap’s ghost (also played by Billy Eugene Jones), who tell him that Rev had him killed.  Pap wants Juicy to avenge his murder.  Juicy knows what he needs to do, and also  knows he can’t.  He’s too “soft.”  Rabby (played by Benja Kay Thomas), her son, Larry (played by Calvin Leon Smith), and her daughter, Opal (played by Adrianna Mitchell), arrive for the wedding celebration.  They all eat Rev’s bar-b-cue, sing karaoke, and play charades.  During charades, Juicy and his team act out a book title that mirrors Rev’s guilt.  This propels events to unravel faster that anyone can handle.  Juicy pushes Larry to come out to his mother, which motivates Opal and Rabby to uncover their private sides.  Tio speaks of his marijuana-induced vision for finding happiness, and everyone faces the music. 

Photo courtesy of Fat Ham
Mr. Ijames’ play is brilliantly structured.  His characters are complex and complete.  They open up about themselves at precisely the right moments to emotionally pull you into the events as they evolve.  His incorporation of Shakespeare’s soliloquies is genius.  These moments are personal.  They heighten the action, while deepening the psychological layers of the characters.  They are skillfully directed and masterfully performed. 

Marcel Spears as Juicy
Photo courtesy of Fat Ham

Marcel Spears is excellent as Juicy.  He has an ease about him that lures you into his predicament.  The audience understands his indecision, and is fully on his side.  Nikki Crawford and Billy Eugene Jones are fierce as Tedra and Rev.  Their timing and chemistry are consistently in sync.  Chris Herbie Holland delivers sharp humor in the role of Tio.  His monologue in the later part of the show is wicked, wild, and touching.  Calvin Leon Smith portrays Larry as a strict conformist.  When he opens up, it is pure poetry.  Adrianna Mitchell catches your attention the minute she enters as Opal, and never lets you down.  Her character is determined and rebellious.  Benja Kay Thomas is funny as Rabby.  She imposes rules and expectations, then lets them all go for the good of her family.

Fat Ham is playing at the American Airline Theatre.  It is a MUST SEE!  

Domenick Danza