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 | A CurtainUp Review Hairspray 
 
                  
                     |  Hairspray arrives in London  
 
 
                     
                          My parents begged me to run away to a circus. — Wilbur Turnblad
                
                  
                     |   
Mel Smith, Leanne Jones and Michael Ball as the Turnblad Family
 (Photo: Catherine Ashmore)
                                               |   
Set in an age before people became concerned by the damage to the ozone layer of aerosols, the Broadway feelgood hit musical Hairspray  arrives in London.   It comes with a British cast but everything else is per  the Broadway original.   The most amusing purported story about the London production of Hairspray  is about a number of Michael Ball fans who have approached the Box Office asking for a refund.  It seems that they have watched the show but report that   Ball, the star of many West End musicals,  did not make an appearance.  Of course, if they have neither read the programme nor have seen the advance publicity, they indeed might not have recognised Michael Ball in a fat suit, wig and dame make up playing Tracy's mother Edna Turnblad.  
Hairspray  is sure of a brilliant run in London.  Its story has the kind of Cinderella warmth of a nice girl with an unconventional  body shape getting her handsome prince and of a more hopeful society for Baltimore's black community.  This simple message of tolerance for otherness is one I cannot fault.  No way would Tracy Turnblad's feet fit into the delicate glass slippers but Leanne Jones, in her first West End role, could probably dance Cinderella off the dance floor.  So Hairspray  scores for reminding those of us, daily exposed to Size Zero models and celebrities in the media, that fat girls can be gorgeous too and for alerting casting agents that girls like Leanne deserve a shot at the best parts. You will also be impressed by the sheer professionalism of the production: beautifully choreographed, energetic dance scenes and bright, lively, designed sets and costumes.  The music too, although I felt it may be a tad derivative, in style if not in actual notes, is an homage to the popular songs of the 1950s with a brilliant beat and sing along melodies. 
 I was blown away by Leanne Jones.  Her sparkling personality is so endearing, I defy anyone with a heart not to love her from her very first scene.  What is amazing is at no point do we feel this sweet, smiley girl is anything except totally sincere.  There is no edge of schmaltzy or saccharine.  Michael Ball twinkles away as Edna, Tracy's mother although comedian Mel Smith is rather more contained as Wilbur,  but their big  duet, "Timeless to Me," gets a huge hand.  Elinor Collet as Penny Pingleton makes the transition from geeky girl to beauty after hooking up with Seaweed J Stubbs, played by the very talented Adrian Hansel whose solo "Run and Tell That" impresses.  I liked too Johnnie Fiori's performance as Momma Motormouth  Maybelle and Ben James-Ellis is cute as the teen idol and male lead Link Larkin.  The Mowtown type group, the Dynamites are superlative as their number welcomes the advent of the 1960s.  
 The sets are gloriously over the top and the heights of big hair seem to defy gravity in the competition scene.  When Tracy smarting at the unfairness of the voting in the Miss Hairspray contest regrets the manipulation of a judicial system just to win a contest, the joke is not lost on the British audience.  The Shaftesbury Theatre tends not to get passing trade, stuck as it is in a theatrical no-man's land at the far end of Shaftesbury Avenue, but with the word about Hairspray  being a great show, this Cinderella theatre should be getting good crowds for some time. 
  A full review of the original New York production, with song list,   follows the current production notes.
 
HAIRSPRAY 
 Book by Mark O'Donnell and Thomas Meehan
 Music by Marc Shaiman
 Lyrics by Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman
 Based on the New Line Cinema film written and directed by John Waters
 Directed by Jack O'Brien
 
 Starring: Michael Ball, Mel Smith and introducing Leanne Jones and Ben James-Ellis
 With: Tracie Bennett, Natalie Best, Dermot Canavan, Elinor Collett, Johnnie Fiori, Adrian Hansel, Paul Manuel, Wendy Somerville, Rachael Wooding, Gavin Alex, Fem Belling, Philip Catchpole, Lewis Davies, Helen Dixon, Emma Dodd, Tim Frater, Kate Gillespie, Ewan Gillies, Nicky Griffiths, Jenii Hicks, Holly James, Sandra Marvin, Terel Nugent, Michael Peters, Adam Price, Charlotte Riby, Dominic Shaw, Neil Toon, Michael Vinsen, Zara Warren, Yaa, Jacqui Zvimba
 Set Design: David Rockwell
 Choreographer: Jerry Mitchell
 Lighting: Kenneth Posner
 Costume Design: William Ivey Long
 Wigs and Hair by Paul Huntley
 Sound: Steve C Kennedy
 Music Director: Nicholas Skilbeck
 Orchestrations: Harold Wheeler
 Running time: Two hours 35 minutes with one interval
 Box Office: 020 7379 5399
 Booking to 25th October 2008 
 Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge based on 31st October 2007 at the Shaftesbury Theatre, 210 Shaftesbury Avenue, London WC2 (Tube: Holborn)
				
					 
 |  
 
 
 
                  
                     
                        | The future's got a million roads for you to choose But you'll walk a little taller in some high-heel shoes
 ---  from   "Welcome to the '60s",   the   show-stopper by  the  aptly  named   Dynamites  Trio   ( Kamilah Martin, Judine Richard and Shayna Steele).
 
 |  
                  If   I  had    to  sum  up   this   latest  musical adaptation  of a    movie golden oldie in  one sentence,   I  would  do  it with the title  of  the  final  number,   "You Can't Stop the Beat."   That  beat,   as  dished  up   by   composer-lyricist  Marc Shaiman   and  his co-lyricist  Scott Wittman,      is   a  foot  tapping   trip    to   the  rock'n'roll   era   of   the    60s   and  the   heyday  of  the   teen-age   dance  show   American Bandstand.
                     |   Marissa Jaret Winokur as Tracy Turnblad and   Harvey Fierstein  as  Edna Turnblad.   (Photo:  Paul Kolnik)
                   
                         |  
 The  story   is   pure  Cinderella.   Make  that  Cinderellas,  for  Hairspray    centers  around    two   moths  turning  into   butterflies --   one  more   unlikely    and     adorable   than  the other.      Sixteen-year-old   Tracy   (Marissa Jaret Winokur who  seems  to  have been  born to be  Tracy)   is   a   self-propelled   fairy  tale  heroine.    She's  short  and   squat   but     her  dancing   and    Beehive  hairdo    can   compete  with   the  best  of   the more  conventional  looking  teens  on  the   Corny Collins  TV  show.  
  In  the  course  of making her   dream  come true,  Tracy  also   unfolds   the   wings   of    her   plus-sized,  frumpy,   ironing board   tethered   mom   (Harvey  Fierestein  who,  his   decidedly  non-lyrical    foghorn  voice  and  mountains  of  silicone  fat  notwithstanding,    exudes   enough    maternal   warmth    and    witty  physicality    to    add  a  new   best  actor-and-actress  in a musical  category to  the Tonys).    Not  only  does   Tracy    manage  to   get   on  the  show,  but  she   wins   the  heart    of    Prince Charming-cum-Elvis-wannabe   (Matthew Morrison)  and   integrates  the  show,  thus  helping    her  hometown  of   Baltimore  to take  a  giant  step  forward  in  racial tolerance.
 
 All  this  puts   enough  key  elements  in  place  to   satisfy  those    for    whom   a  good  musical   is    like   a  good  hairspray,  light  but  with   enough   hold  to  keep  it  from  collapsing   from  its  fluffiness.   The    nineteen songs  (no  Webber-like leaning  on   reprises)   fit   the   book  so   well  that  you  wonder   why  this  wasn't  a  musical  to  begin with,   with  many  that   will  keep  bouncing  around   in  your  head.
 
 Fans  of   the  film  will   be  pleased  with  the   fidelity   to  the  original  by   book  writers    Mark  O'Donnell  and Thomas Meehan  (Meehan  also  contributed  mightily  to the success of  another  musical mega hit,  The Producers -- our review).     They'll  also  find    Harvey  Fierest in  and   Marissa Jaret Winokur  better  than   satisfactory   replacements   for  the  original Tracy  (Ricky Lake)  and  Edna  (the cross-dresser  Divine).        As   a   familiarity  with  or  liking of    the   Waters  film   isn't  a  prerequisite  for  enjoying  the  show  neither  is being   old  enough    catch all  the   little homages  to  the  '60s      or  young  enough  for  all  its  shenanigans   to   jog  memories   of  your own   teens.   In  fact,  while  I  would  tag  the  youngest  age  to warrant  the   expenditure  for  a ticket   at   10  to 12,    the 5-year old  boy  next  to  me,   as well  as  a      7-year-old  girl  in front of  him,  were  happily  and quietly    attentive   throughout.
 
 As   if    those  endearing   Cinderellas  and  the  bouncy   score   weren't  enough,   director  Jack  O'Brien  has    turned   the   large  supporting  cast   into   a   tight-knit    unit   that    gives   new  meaning   to   the  expression  all-star.      Laura Bell Bundy    as    Amber Von Tussle  and   Linda  Hart  as her   mom,  the  bigoted   producer and  former  Miss Baltimore Crabs,    give  winning   performances   as    the  blonde  "villains."     Matthew Morrison's Link Larkin    is    sweet  and   attractive    as   befits   the   prince   of   Tracy's   dreams.    Kerry  Butler,     as  Tracy's   best  friend  Penny   proves  that    the   good  impression  she  made  as   a   teen  ager  in  the musical  Bat Boy   wasn't   a   passing one (our review).
 
 Leading  the  actors   who  keep  the   integration  subplot   from     succumbing  to  its   tendency  to  preach   are   Mary  Bond   Davis  as   Motormouth Maybelle,    the  big-voiced    proprietor  of   a    record  store;   Corey Reynolds  as    her    nimble-footed  son  Seaweed who   becomes  Penny's   dreamboat;   and  Danielle Eugenia Wilson   as   her  scrappy   daughter  Little Inez.        Dick Latessa  is  just  right     as     Edna's   somewhat  nutty  but   devoted  husband  Wilbur.     Director   O'Brien   scores   extra  points   for   allowing   an    encore  right in  the  middle  of  the show for  Wilbur and  Edna's      "Timeless  To Me"  duet.
 
 Due    credit  for   the   show's    deliciously  tacky  pleasures    can  be  credited      to   the  behind  the  scenes  stars:   Jerry  Mitchell  for  his  spirited choreography;  David  Rockwell    clever   panels   and  roll-on   scenery,    ingeniously  lit  by   Kenneth   Posner.  (The  ensemble  silhoutted  against   bright orange  backed ovals   in  the  opening   scene   establishes   the   overall  visual  mood  of  an    animated   cartoon);    William   Ivey  Long's     fabulously  kitschy     costumes  and     Paul Huntley's    buoyant, bouffant  hairdos --  one  in  particular  outdoing  a  wedding cake  in  its  towering,  frothy   glory.
 
 Because  of   the   big  ripple   of   positive  publicity  preceding    and   immediately  following  last  week's  official   Broadway  opening,   Hairspray   is  sure   to   be   compared  with   the  big    movie-into-super-hit-musical,  The  Producers  (our review).    While  it  may well  have  a   more original   score,   The Producers  has  sturdier   legs   to  carry  it  to  the pantheon  of  classic   musical  comedies. But  then   why  look  for   split  ends  in  a show that's  been  sprayed  and  laquered   for  big   laughs  and  fun   rather than  musical  history  making.
 
 
 
                  
                     | Hair Spray Book by Mark O'Donnell & Thomas Meehan, adapted  from  the John Waters film of the same 
      name.
 Music: byMarc Shaiman
 Music and Lyrics by Marc Shaiman & Scott Wittmanl
						 Directed by Jack O'Brien
 Musical director: Lon Hoyt
 Choreographer Jerry Mitchell.
 Cast: Marissa Jaret Winokur (Tracy Turnblad), Harvey Fierstein (Edna Turnblad), Clarke Thorell (Corny Collins), Laura Bell Bundy (Amber Von Tussle), Matthew Morrison (Link Larkin), Jackie Hoffman (Prudy Pingleton, Gym Teacher and Matron), Kerry Butler (Penny Pingleton), Linda Hart (Velma Von Tussle), Joel Vig (Harriman F. Spritzer, Principal, Mr. Pinky and Guard), Dick Latessa (Wilbur Turnblad), Corey Reynolds (Seaweed J. Stubbs), Danelle Eugenia Wilson (Little Inez), and Mary Bond Davis (Motormouth Maybelle).
 Also: Eric Anthony, Shoshana Bean, Joshua Bergassse, Eric Dysart, Adam Fleming, Jennifer Gambatesse, Greg Graham, Danielle Lee Greaves, David Greenspan,  John Hill, Jackie Hoffman, Hollie Howard, Katharine Leonard, Kamilah Martin, Rashad Naylor, Judine Richard, Peter Matthew Smith, Todd Michel Smith, Shayna Steele, Brooke Tansley, Joel Vig.
 Set Design:  David Rockwell
.
 Costume Design:  William Ivey Long
 Lighting Design:  Kenneth      Posner
 Sound Design: Steve C. Kennedy
 Wigs and hair design: Paul Huntley
 Orchestrations: Harold Wheeler
 Orchestra conductor:  Lon Hoyt
 Running time:  2 hours and 40 minutes,  including one 15-minute intermission
 Neil Simon, 250 W. 52nd St., 
      (Broadway/6th Av), 307-4100
 website
 From  7/18/02 Tue -       Sat at 8pm; Wed & Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm -- $60-$95.
 Reviewed by  Elyse Sommer  based on  8/20  performance.
 Closing 1/04/09
 |  
| Musical Numbers |  
| Act One 
 
Prologue:  Good Morning Baltimore/Tracy & Company
   The Nicest Kids in Town/Corny Collins & Council Members
   Mama, I''m a Big Girl Now/Edna & Tracy, Velma & Amber, Penny & Prudy
I Can Hear the Bells/Tracy
   (The Legend of) Miss Baltimore Crabs/Velma & Council Members
   The Madison/Corny & Company
The Nicest Kids in Town (Reprise)/Corny & Council Members
   It Takes Two/Link & Tracy
Welcome to the '60s/Tracy, Edna, The Dynamites & Company
   Run and Tell That/Seaweed
Run and Tell That/Seaweed, Little Inez & Company
Big, Blonde & Beautiful/Motormouth, Little Inez, Tracy, Edna, Wilbur
 | Act Two 
 
The Big Dollhouse/.Women
Good Morning Baltimore (Reprise)/Tracy
Timeless to Me/Wilbur & Edna
Without Love/Link, Tracy, Seaweed, Penny
I Know Where I've Been/Motormouth & Company
Hairspray/.Corny & Council Members
Cooties/Amber & Council Members
You Can't Stop the Beat/Tracy, Link, Penny, Seaweed,  Edna, Wilbur, Motormouth & Company |  | 
 
 
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