HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE SEARCH REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California New Jersey DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us |
A CurtainUp New Jersey Review
Pirates
Greenberg, who did such a smashing job with the Paper Mill's revival of the cult musical The Baker's Wife, has reconceived the action with a hip and hearty thrust of bravado. Benjamin, fresh and flush from the excitement of her and her husband Laurence O'Keefe's Tony nomination for their score for Legally Blonde, The Musical, has both generously replaced and audaciously augmented many of Sullivan's original lyrics, with no apologies necessary. Purists may take umbrage with the new-ish lyrics and libretto that resonate with Benjamin's own voice, some a little crude. But let it be known that all of her liberties stood the test of at least these responsive and receptive ears. McDaniel's musical arrangements and orchestrations invite the sounds of a steel drum and delightfully enhance the zany qualities of the score with the flavor of the Caribbean, the setting for this new version. The super but small orchestra, under the direction of Shawn Gough, is perched visibly within the confines of a low stone wall in the center of a two level stage mainly designated to be awash with comically virile swashbucklers and fair maidens. Greenberg has successfully fused this production's contemporary theatricality into the traditional spirit of G. & S. The rapid fire patter of the lyrics that fly trippingly off the tongue are as dexterously executed as Warren Carly'le's cleverly untraditional choreography. Its witty flourishes of island rhythms affords the lamentable brigade of town drunks and misfits a chance to do more than behave like inept Keystone Kops. Ed Dixon is more than splendid as the stuffy doting father/dithering Major General Stanley, whose esprit de corps defies anyone saying that he has been too long in the noon day sun. Dixon,, whose theatrical specialties range from playing General Wetjoen in The Iceman Cometh to Thenardier in Les Miserables on Broadway, brings an insinuating wrinkle to his show-stopping patter songs, "A Modern Major General," and "The Nightmare", the latter earning him even more applause. You can't ask for a more impressive entrance than that made by Farah Alvin, as Mabel, who lands on this non-specific Caribbean island in a hot air balloon. Dressed in safari suit and helmet with a bird cage serving as a back pack and wielding a pet tarantula and a butterfly net, Alvin charms us easily enough, as do her sisters who are especially good at "smiling vacantly." Although Andrew Varela is decidedly handsome and dashing and all those things that are prerequisitea for the Pirate King, it is his invigorating panache and playful countenance among a bevy of cuties that is most ingratiating. Also no slouch among the affable brigands is Barrett Foa, as Frederick, the young man fated to romance the winsome Mabel—much to the disappointment of his nurse maid Ruth, as played with a robust lustiness by Liz McCartney. Set designer Rob Bissinger has taken a cue from the Encore Series at City Center in which the concept of a concert is embellished with costumes, action and simple trappings to indicate locales at sea and on land. In this instance these embellishments include palm trees, barrels, hanging mobiles and a few props. David C. Woolard's circa Queen Anne costumes are as fantastical as the grungy scoundrels and gregarious sisters who don them. The plot twist, if you must have it spelled out, has to do with a voodoo curse that makes the pirates "landsick." No skull and crossbones about it, there are pirates of the Caribbean here that are doing just fine without Johnny Depp.
|
Try onlineseats.com for great seats to
Wicked Jersey Boys The Little Mermaid Lion King Shrek The Musical Easy-on-the budget super gift for yourself and your musical loving friends. Tons of gorgeous pictures. Leonard Maltin's 2007 Movie Guide At This Theater Leonard Maltin's 2005 Movie Guide > |