Showing posts with label Joe Mantello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Mantello. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2009

9 to 5

GRADE: B-/C+

Book by Patricia Resnick, music and lyrics by Dolly Parton. Directed by Joe Mantello, choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler. Marquis Theatre. (CLOSED)

Reviews for this brassy new musical based on the 1980 feminist revenge comedy are genuinely mixed: Even those who love its silly, busy, anything-for-a-laugh aesthetic report misgivings about the direction or the book, while most of those who deplore its crude humor or generic excess note some highlights among Dolly Parton's score or the cast. If there is any rough consensus, it is that the non-singing, non-dancing Allison Janney is nevertheless brilliant as put-upon office manager Violet; critics diverge on her co-stars Megan Hilty and Stephanie Block, though a number find Marc Kudisch's lecherous boss a lot of fun. Most critics expect it to be a hit, though they're divided on whether Joe Mantello's direction and Andy Blankenbuehler's choreography are fizzy and fun or heavy-handed and lead-footed, and they're similarly split on the merits of Parton's score.


The Guardian A
(Ed Pilkington) If the theme still rings true, so does the taut dialogue, with several of the best one-liners preserved from 1980...The acting is consistently sharp and to the point...But there is no doubt as to who the real star of the show is, however: Dolly Parton. She is not on stage, but her presence fills it. She has composed a set of songs, accompanied with her own lyrics, that complement the original song. The greatest triumph of the night was that the film has been reinvented as a musical so successfully. It seemed improbable, given the cult status of the movie, but the stage show has met it and raised it, rather than being its pale imitation.

Bloomberg News A-
(John Simon) As slap-happily silly as can be, “9 to 5” has abundant, often demotically tasteless gags; a goodly array of standard-issue songs; and far-flung, hard-working choreography. Also three droll women (admittedly only one sexpot) in the leads, along with one smoothly villainous leading man and an unspoken guarantee of not taxing the brain. Instead, it plunges one into a mindlessly passive euphoria...It is very much a feminist daydream, every secretary’s harbored revenge on a swinish employer...However personable as a country and western icon, Parton is not a Broadway composer-lyricist. Only for Doralee, whom she portrayed in the movie, was she able to write not generically but in character. Still, people who find Sondheim too much are apt to revel in pleasure here...Joe Mantello, doubtless aware of the material’s thinness, has directed with palliative frenzy, abetted by Scott Pask’s scenery that sprouts and sinks, as agitated as the feverishly racing humans.

New York Post B+
(Elisabeth Vincentelli) Goofily entertaining...Each of the female leads delivers, but Janney emerges as the most unlikely musical-theater star since...well, is it too early to say Bea Arthur?...Making a welcome return to the stage after years in TV and movies, Janney throws herself into the show with a contagious abandon...It shouldn't surprise anybody [Parton has] taken so well to the stage: She's always been a storyteller first and foremost. Her countrified pop, enhanced by fiddle and pedal-steel guitar, fits perfectly on Broadway. Of all the mainstream artists who've tried their hand at show music in the past few years, she may be the most convincing. Paradoxically, Janney and Parton do better than theater pros like Mantello and choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler.

Backstage B+
(Erik Haagensen) George Abbott–style musical comedy is alive and still breathing at the Marquis Theatre. Blessed with a terrific company of comic actors and led by three absolutely stellar performances, 9 to 5 is unquestionably entertaining and likely to be pleasing Broadway audiences for some time. It also has a dexterous physical production that allows it to move like a musical comedy should. If only the creators had applied the legendary Mr. Abbott's rigorous standards, they might have had a show for the ages. Instead, we have to settle for the not inconsiderable pleasures available...9 to 5 aims low and hits its target squarely.

Entertainment Weekly B+
(Simon Vozick-Levinson) By refusing to sand down [its] edges for a Broadway audience, Resnick's book nails the same balancing act as its source material: 9 to 5 remains a laugh-out-loud treatment of very serious issues...Funniest of all might be Marc Kudisch (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang) as Franklin Hart Jr., the truly detestable pig of a boss whom the three Consolidated secretaries stumble into kidnapping...Parton's new tunes, meanwhile, are just fine. None of them will likely be entering her greatest-hits canon any time soon, but they advance the musical's plot well enough. And it's tough to complain about any performance that includes not one but two renditions of 9 to 5's title song, still one of Parton's catchiest, cleverest compositions. Seeing the cast sing it out on stage is enough to make any aspiring pop songwriter pour him- or herself a strong cup of ambition.

NY1 B
(Roma Torre) The workaholic of Broadway musicals, trying in every way to entertain its audience with decidedly mixed results...As a musical, "9 To 5" is pretty flimsy stuff but credit is due to a very talented company that works overtime to sell it...The songs are pretty darn good, if not exactly inspired, and in some cases derivative. The dated storyline is a problem...That said, Joe Mantello pulls out all the directorial stops on this sweetly silly musical and he achieves a nifty sleight of hand. He covers up the show's deficiencies with a kaleidoscope of fevered energy. Even the sets dance around and every song seems to get a big production number. The lead performers are wonderful.

Theatermania B
(Andy Propst) Sturdy if essentially unexceptional...Heralds the arrival of a marvelously charismatic leading lady for musical theater: Allison Janney...She simply galvanizes the show as Violet, the no-nonsense secretary who strikes a resounding blow for women's rights in the workplace. True, her singing voice may not be the strongest in the show -- that honor belongs to the iron-lunged Stephanie J. Block as Judy -- but she has both a great sense of tone and rhythm and a grand sense of comic timing that allow Violet's stinging barbs to land explosively and hilariously...Hilty, doing a fine impersonation of Parton, charms consistently...The show, directed with a characteristic edge by Joe Mantello, moves along with whiz-bang efficiency thanks to Scott Pask's automated rolling and rotating scenic design, which perfectly captures the ambiance of the antiseptic workplace...Unfortunately, Parton's score is not particularly memorable.

Newsday B
(Linda Winer) A female-empowerment theme-park musical...lavish and harmless...The squarely old-fashioned show fills a tourist-ready Hollywood slot left vacant by "Legally Blonde" and "Hairspray." The thing feels less created than assembled from recycled musical-comedy components, but Broadway doesn't have one of these right now, and summer approaches. There is a big cast of talented people, including Allison Janney from "The West Wing." She isn't much of a singer or a dancer, but she smartly nails a classic type - the capable-yet-vulnerable big-boned gal - with endearing echoes of Eve Arden and Rosalind Russell...The show is a little bit country and a little bit "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." Parton's songs are more than functional, with short, unpredictable phrase lengths and an apt mix of the plaintive and the shrewd.

Curtain Up B
(Elyse Sommer) I found the staging too razzly-dazzly, the dancing too hyper-kinetic, the singing over-miked and the overall more brassy than artful. That said, while it may not be as artistic or have the long running bring-the-whole-family appeal of The Lion King or the more recent movie-cum-musical, Billy Elliot, Nine to Five has enough going for it to fill the seats of the huge Marquis theater for a decent run...Parton's score, with its mix of country, rockabilly and Broadway-ish ballads, adds to the sense of visiting a beloved old friend...Hilty's Parton-essque Doralee twangs delightfully, and Stephanie J. Block showcases a lovely voice, especially when she lets her faithless, weaselly husband to "Get Our and Stay Out." But the big surprise and delight is Allison Janney.

Village Voice B-
(Michael Feingold) Songwriter Dolly Parton's honest, simple-hearted good sense comes through clearly, empowering the four terrific performers in the lead roles: Allison Janney, Stephanie J. Block, and Megan Hilty as the variously victimized office gals, and Marc Kudisch as the preening boss they all abominate. Unhappily, other aspects of the show—a lackluster book, busy-busy direction, and bland choreography—only hinder these hard-working folk, and the story's tricksy, urbanized comic tone makes a bad match for Parton's country-bred sincerity. Her talent needs, and deserves, a more heartfelt tale to tell.

Variety B-
(David Rooney) The popular 1980 fem-powerment farce about three renegade secretaries who turn the tables on their chauvinistic boss was driven by three iconic performances, and the women who step into those heels here do dandy work re-creating those characters with enough freshness to rise above mere imitation. If the material showcasing the trio is an uneven cut-and-paste job that struggles to recapture the movie's giddy estrogen rush, plenty of folks will nonetheless find this a nostalgic crowd-pleaser. The other big ace up the show's sleeve is Dolly Parton...As composer-lyricist of the country-flavored pop score, Parton is a significant presence as well, not just in the evergreen title tune but particularly in a handful of new songs...Other key creative elements are hit and miss. Patricia Resnick's book wisely conserves the movie's best jokes and sticks to the 1979 setting. But the antic plotting lacks flow...Director Joe Mantello and choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler bring their own set of problems.

Associated Press B-
(Michael Kuchwara) Durn. You kinda want "9 to 5: The Musical" to be better than it is. Not that you won't have fun...It's a certified crowd-pleaser...You won't mistake Parton's words and music for the works of Stephen Sondheim, yet she has a simple, direct way with lyrics and a beguiling sense of melody...But Parton hasn't been served well by her director Joe Mantello, who pushes the musical and book writer Patricia Resnick's overstuffed cartoon of a story at a furious pace. For much of the evening, everything is played in the key of frantic, as if the director were afraid to let the show slow down, catch its breath and let us really get to know the three women who kidnap their sexist pig of a boss. And when the women are played by a talented trio of ladies such as Allison Janney, Stephanie J. Block and Megan Hilty that's a shame...Best of all is Block, as the neophyte office worker (the Jane Fonda part in the movie), who...delivers the evening's big anthem: "Get Out and Stay Out"...And we haven't even gotten to Kudisch, the chauvinistic boss who finds himself at the mercy of the avenging females. His performance is riotously on target, both physically and vocally.

The Daily News C+
(Joe Dziemianowicz) What's fresh and original are Dolly Parton's bouncy, big-hearted songs, which accompany the familiar title tune...Not every tune is a home run, and some lyrics are too plain-spoken. But enough of them stand out...Unfortunately, Joe Mantello's direction...careens from full-of-life to DOA, including a poorly realized scene with a dead body in a hospital. The creative team, including writer Patricia Resnick, who co-authored the film, has struggled to open the show up for the stage...Choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler ("In the Heights") has pounced hard on the notion that the boss is a jerk, but the many herky-jerky dances get repetitive and distracting...If you're looking for a little diversion, it will do the trick from 8 to 10:15.

Chicago Tribune C+
(Chris Jones) Like many musicals spawned from movies, “9 to 5” doesn’t establish a cohesive theatrical pallet, nor does it unleash itself sufficiently from its cinematic source. It also doesn’t trust its own retro setting or embrace its own storytelling, and ultimately dissolves into a digitally enhanced and over-produced re-creation of famous scenes from the film. And with the honorable exception of the lovable ballad “Backwoods Barbie,” Parton’s charming, autobiographical, country ode to how neither a rural origin nor a Double D-Cup prevents a sharp mind, there is nothing in Parton’s score that comes anywhere close to the Academy Award-nominated title song...“9 to 5” has its enjoyments—many of which flow from the lips of the deliciously sardonic Janney, who is such a great comedic actress one forgives her lack of a singing voice...The show is wholly harmless and will have its fans, especially among its target demographic. But neither the lyrics nor Patricia Resnick’s choppy book really let us get to know these women. The show is at its best when the characters dance.

New York C
(Stephanie Zacharek) Has particular relevance now; unfortunately, 9 to 5 just milks it too hard. The songs are by Dolly Parton, an indisputable goddess of country music. Yet aside from the uncannily catchy title song, only one number (“Backwoods Barbie,” sung by Hilty, whose whole performance is an overextended Dolly impersonation) comes close to capturing the spirit of classic Dolly; the rest are of the generic talk-singing variety that clutter so many contemporary musicals. The dance numbers, too, substitute garishness for energy. They have an entropic quality, as if born of the fear that the audience will get bored. Janney, at least, offers relief from all this relentless entertainment...Mostly, though, watching 9 to 5 is drudgery. Having fun shouldn’t be so exhausting.

Time Out NY C
(Adam Feldman) 9 to 5 is a musical about working women, and it is nothing if not workmanlike...This expensively staged but cheaply conceived new show is the Broadway equivalent of a corporate drone. It’s professional, it’s efficient, and it gets the job done, more or less. But its Broadway twist on 1970s feminism—I am woman, hear me belt—seems less about liberation than marketing...Director Joe Mantello keeps everything moving—there are plenty of set changes, and smartly stressed-out choreography by Andy Blankenbuehler...But there’s no spark of joy in the somewhat dated sisterhood-is-powerful message. The movie’s feminist revenge-fantasy plot gave it a touch of satirical kick; the musical just punches the clock.

Wall Street Journal C
(Terry Teachout) "9 to 5" is a Big Mac musical, a surprise-free entertainment machine based on a hit movie. Buy a ticket and you don't have to guess what you'll be getting: You already know, right down to the number of pickles on the sesame-seed bun that is Joe Mantello's ultraefficient staging. From start to finish, it does what it's supposed to do -- and no more...Urban theatergoers may not know that Ms. Parton is one of the best country songwriters in the business. The new numbers that she's written for "9 to 5," sad to say, are slick and untheatrical. Every time the actors start singing, the action screeches to a halt. Andy Blankenbuehler's pointlessly busy choreography seems to have been designed to cover up the dramatic inertness of the score: The dancers never stop moving. (Neither do the sets.) The one good reason to see "9 to 5" is Allison Janney...I'd love to see her as Desirée in the upcoming Broadway revival of "A Little Night Music."

Talkin' Broadway C
(Matthew Murray) Of all the direct film-to-stage adaptations of late, 9 to 5 is perhaps the most accomplished and the least surprising...both the most reverent and the least enlivening in the genre, with most of the intelligence of the film but practically none of its sparkling individuality...Parton’s songs...[are] undistinguished...Only Judy’s 11-o’clock spot, “Get Out and Stay Out,” is legitimately exciting...Kudisch is, well, Kudisch, and overdoes his insensitive-guy shtick, but no one overdoes it better. Janney comes across best, just as Tomlin did...Neither Janney nor anyone else is always well served by either Mantello’s cheese-spreading direction or Blankenbuehler’s choreography.

The Hollywood Reporter C-
(Frank Scheck) Slavishly faithful to the film except for the addition of its new Parton-penned score, this overblown musical is bound to cause a division between critics looking for freshness and audience members all too eager for theatrical comfort food...The show signals the witless vulgarity of much of its humor in the opening song--depicting various anonymous figures tiredly preparing for their workday, with one man sporting a prominent morning woody...Parton's songs are, like most of the prolific tunesmith's efforts, eminently catchy and listenable. But few of them resonate strongly in theatrical terms...Also problematic is Andy Blankenbuehler's choreography, clearly inspired by "How to Succeed in Business" and featuring little more than variations of office workers jerking around in formation while going through their duties.

The New York Times D
(Ben Brantley) Gaudy, empty...Feels assembled by an emulous shopaholic who looked around at the tourist-drawing hits of the last decade and said: “I want some of that. And that. Ooh, and can I have that, too?”...This show isn’t about its stars. It’s about turning its feminist revenge story into an occasion for lewd slapstick...and a mail-order catalog of big production numbers, filtered through that joyless aesthetic that pervaded the 1970s. The show lumbers through its two and a half hours in a blur of heavy moving scenery (by Scott Pask), animated projections (by Peter Nigrini and Peggy Eisenhauer), sour-candy-color lighting (by Jules Fisher and Kenneth Posner) and costumes (by William Ivey Long) that reminds us that the Carter years were the nadir of 20th-century fashion...Ms. Parton’s score...includes some rockabilly raunch, rhythm-and-blues riffs, a likable song of self-explanation for Doralee (“Backwoods Barbie”) and a standard-issue anthem of empowerment called “Get Out and Stay Out.”

AM New York D
(Matt Windman) While faint hints of a crowd-pleaser occasionally occur, sitting through this faithful adaptation feels as tiresome as a long day at the office...Though Dolly Parton has penned 18 new songs, none can compare with the film’s catchy title song, which serves as an upbeat opening number. In fact, the songs tend to slow down the plot rather than advance it. The blame for the show’s overwhelming mediocrity probably lies Joe Mantello’s lazy and unimaginative direction. It would appear that he merely modeled the show after “Wicked,” which he directed five years ago, and hoped that it would somehow turn into the same kind of girl-power hit. Andy Blankenbuehler’s choreography is frenetically excessive and distracting.

Lighting & Sound America D
(David Barbour) Stops at nothing while pandering to its target audience. The creators have hitched any number of dated sex comedy gags to a full complement of female-empowerment ballads in what looks to me like a shameless attempt to come up with the next big girls-night-out hit, à la Mamma Mia! But where the latter show benefits from a certain style and a knowing, self-mocking sense of humor, 9 to 5 has only more shopworn goods to offer...As everyone knows, Dolly Parton, who wrote the score, is an enduring star, possessed of considerable skills as a composer and lyricist. But a knack for expressing your personality in pop tunes isn't the same thing as writing songs for the purposes of character or narrative. Here, she relies on a country-flavored pop style that only occasionally seems appropriate to the characters or setting...It's common wisdom to describe a show like 9 to 5 as theatrical comfort food; there's nothing wrong with that, but it's too bad that the menu consists almost entirely of leftovers.

The Guardian A 13; Bloomberg News A- 12; New York Post B+ 11; Backstage B+ 11; Entertainment Weekly B+ 11; NY1 B 10; Theatermania B 10; Newsday B 10; Curtain Up B 10; VV B- 9; Variety B- 9; Associated Press B- 9; The Daily News C+ 8; Chicago Tribune C+ 8; TONY C 7; WSJ C 7; NY mag C 7; Talkin' Broadway C 7; The Hollywood Reporter C- 6; The New York Times D 4; AM New York D 4; LS&A D 4; TOTAL: 187 / 22 = 8.5 (B-/C+)
Read On »

Friday, December 19, 2008

Pal Joey

GRADE: B-

Music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Lorenz Hart, book adapted by Richard Greenberg from John O'Hara. Directed by Joe Mantello. Choreographed by Graciela Daniele. Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54. (CLOSED)

That this famously troubled, much-anticipated revival of Rodgers & Hart's legendary 1940 musical has won as many champions and defenders as it has—with Variety, AP, and Bloomberg leading the charge—might be considered a triumph, given the negative advance buzz and a resounding slam from the NY Times' Ben Brantley. The elevation of understudy Matthew Risch into the lead role after Christian Hoff's injury ramped up speculation of a catastrophe. But while most critics do find Risch a less-than-ideal leading man—saving their praise for female costars Stockard Channing, Jenny Fellner, and above all Martha Plimpton—a fair number are seduced by director Joe Mantello's noir-ish conception and Richard Greenberg's snappy script revision. But what the show's champions see as a deliciously seamy vision, a chorus of detractors finds simply dingy and dull.


Variety A
(David Rooney) The Rodgers and Hart songs in “Pal Joey” are certainly easy on the ear, but what makes the Roundabout revival of their 1940 show so compelling is Richard Greenberg’s trenchant adaptation of the original book by John O’Hara. Erasing the sanitizing stamp of musical-theater coyness, Greenberg brings a fascinating melancholy grubbiness to this cynical story of sordid emotional transactions and opportunistic behavior in late-1930s Chicago. It’s a dark show for desperate times, with enough dramatic meat on its bones to work even as a nonmusical play. And like “Cabaret” a few years back, it seems right at home in the decadent former playpen of Studio 54...The good news is that while Risch is neither a top-drawer singer nor dancer, he’s doing creditable work as louche lounge lizard Joey Evans. ...The smoke-drenched, seamy world of this smart adult musical is intoxicating.

Bloomberg News A
(John Simon) Pumps much-needed fresh blood into a Broadway grown anemic...Richard Greenberg contributes a sleek new book to the top-notch Rodgers and Hart score...Unusual for revised books of classic musicals, the period (1940) and locale (Chicago) have been idiomatically retained and nothing has been mucked up...Risch has the properly improper gigolo looks and persona of Joey, singing, dancing and acting with precarious insouciance spelled by the called-for defensive arrogance...Too bad that Studio 54 couldn’t revert to its initial nightclub format for “Joey,” but let us not ask for egg in our beer. With splendid choreography from Graciela Daniele, combining period with modern; scrupulously detailed staging by Joe Mantello; and Paul Gemignani’s expert conducting of a spirited orchestra, it would take an aged-in-the-wood curmudgeon to ask for anything more.

Associated Press A
(Michael Kuchwara) Greenberg's rewrite is crisp and to the point. There is a hard-boiled briskness to his work, a film-noir sensibility in its punchy dialogue that ricochets lickety-split across the stage. That dialogue, under Joe Mantello's fast-paced direction, is handled with ease, particularly by its three leads, Stockard Channing, Martha Plimpton and, in the title role, Matthew Risch...The understudy acquits himself well, particularly during choreographer Graciela Daniele's club numbers. A fine dancer, Risch...has a boyish energy, a sexy confidence tinged with more than a little naughtiness.

Total Theater A
(Simon Saltzman) There is a lot to praise and be thankful for in this smartly refreshed and snappily staged production under the direction of Joe Mantello...Considering the age of the musical and the tendency in its time for musical numbers to stand noticeably apart from the book portion, Greenberg has done a terrific job in masking and integrating that structure. He has emphasized the most brittle and caustic aspects of the story while grounding the musical’s not-too-likeable characters in their own sociopathic reality...The decision to go with Risch was a wise one. Good-looking and a splendid dancer, he gives every indication that his already convincing performance will continue to grow...Supporting performances are all solid and complete this gritty if not pretty picture of O’Hara’s morally corrupt world.

CurtainUp A-
(Elyse Sommer) The amazing Plimpton sends sparks flying as she bumps, grinds and sings with the other girls of the latest incarnation of Pal Joey...Fortunately, there are plenty of other reasons to see and enjoy this latest musical incarnation of John O'Hara's epistolary stories about an ambitious hustler on the fringes of show business. For starters, Stockard Channing is deliciously bitchy but also "bewitched, bothered and bewildered" ...Without sanitizing Joey as the movie starring Frank Sinatra did, Greenberg has made it easier to see how the crude, cocky heel at the show's center is somehow both attractive and repellent, as innocent as he is exploitative...High on the list of reasons this Pal Joey is worth seeing is that it's a big, handsome musical that benefits from director Joe Mantello's ability to introduce a Sondheim flavor to to a musical from a by-gone era.

Theatermania A-
(David Finkle) If anyone is putting a song across better on Broadway right now than Stockard Channing as she explores the tarnished heart of the great Lorenz Hart-Richard Rodgers number "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered," in the Roundabout's Theatre Company's highly entertaining revival of Pal Joey at Studio 54, I don't know about it...This moment...turns out to be only one of the satisfying delights in a production that experienced some mighty touch-and-go moments getting this far...Itemizing the many other Pal Joey pluses makes for a joyful pastime. At the top of the list is the Rodgers and Hart score...Greenberg's other major, if seemingly unnecessary, re-working of the O'Hara script was to add a gay sub-plot regarding nightclub manager Mike (Robert Clohessy), which isn't very O'Hara but is very much Greenberg. Still, there's little harm done to this evergreen musical gem.

Backstage B+
(David A. Rosenberg) This is a revival of Pal Joey in the style of film noir: angry, dark, cynical, acerbic, and paranoid...Furnished with a tough new book by Richard Greenberg, directed by Joe Mantello as if it were Chicago, and tentatively choreographed by Graciela Daniele, Pal Joey is back in a production that, although it can't quite make up its mind what it wants to be and is too remote to be engaging, still manages to find the brash undertones of a fabled, always troubled creation. And, oh, that witty, melodic, still-fresh score!

American Theatre Web B+
(Andy Propst) Matthew Risch, who stepped in at the last moment to play Joey Evans, is certainly well on his way to owning this starring role, but as of press performances, he seems a little unsteady on his feet in this production, which features Richard Greenberg's generally satisfying revision to John O'Hara's original book and Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart's unbeatable score, and which emphasizes the unsavoriness of the world in which Joey works and lives...While theatergoers most likely would have expected Channing to dazzle as Vera, nothing could have prepared them for the two performances that are revelations in "Joey." Martha Plimpton, a mainstay of the New York stage in dramatic roles, makes her debut in a musical here and is simply captivating...Equally impressive is Jenny Fellner, who's been seen in smaller roles on Broadway, but here plays the sweet ingénue.

Hollywood Reporter B+
(Alexis Greene) Stockard Channing steals the new Broadway revival of "Pal Joey," Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart's 1940 musical noir about Chicago nightlife...Channing brings sleekness, wit and sexual suggestiveness...The production itself, imaginatively and forcefully directed by Joe Mantello...will draw both fervid supporters and adamant naysayers. John O'Hara's book (adapted from his own short stories for "The New Yorker") has been rewritten by Richard Greenberg...mostly for the better...To everyone's credit, this is a far sexier and more adult "Pal Joey" than its creators dared present back in 1940 or for the first major revival in 1952...But this is a bleak, harsh world that director Mantello has staged beneath Chicago's looming elevated train. If Risch would just loosen up and roll back the hard sell, this fresh revival of Rodgers and Hart's innovative musical could be a hit.

NY1 B+
(David Cote) The Roundabout Theatre Company gets a lot right with its handsome revival of the jazzy classic - just not the guy on the marquee...If “Pal Joey” has a weak center, the glitter at the fringes is plenty engaging. Richard Greenberg's rewrite of the John O'Hara book flashes with keen wit and shadows of melancholy, raises the emotional stakes for each character and avoids O'Hara's more formulaic plot devices. Choreographer Graciela Daniele keeps the cast bumping and high stepping with jazzy dances. Martha Plimpton makes a sizzling musical theater debut as the jaded singer Gladys Bumps, dryly unzipping Lorenz Hart's perfectly packaged rhymes...Although “Pal Joey” is not a Broadway masterpiece on the level of “West Side Story” or “Guys And Dolls,” but it is a sophisticated showcase of old-fashioned glamor and wit.

Philadelphia Inquirer B+
(Howard Shapiro) Greenberg's new book gives Joey, his society sugar mama (a dead-on Stockard Channing), and even the play's one decent character - the girl who wants to believe in his potential as a long-term catch - glib repartee that's more like a laugh-line thread than comic relief. Joe Mantello's direction...accentuates this characteristic of the revival - nasty talk with a chuckle...[Risch's] Joey displays an arrogance as threatening as it is magnetic, and his lizardlike smile reminds that some things in Pal Joey must never change.


USA Today B+
(Elysa Gardner) Greenberg also gives us fuller portraits of the women in Joey's life...All three are sturdily and sympathetically represented under Joe Mantello's witty direction...The real revelation, though, is Martha Plimpton's Gladys...As for Risch, who replaced original lead Christian Hoff (after Hoff sustained a foot injury in late November), he has no shortage of talent or charisma, but at 27 seems a little green for Joey. Rodgers and Hart's songs, of course, remain as glorious as ever...Gems such as "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" and "I Could Write a Book" still have a cool fire that fits Pal Joey, this incarnation in particular, like a glove.

New Yorker B+
(John Lahr) The scenic and narrative gains of this production bring with them some losses...The dance establishes the internal and external geography of the piece, but does it skew it? This leaching of charm out of the atmosphere, and, subsequently, out of the man, may be up to the minute, but it robs the character of some of his complexity...Greenberg’s new book, it seems to me, superbly sets up the drama of the songs and of Joey’s atrophied soul.

NY Press B+
(Leonard Jacobs) He may dance angelically and sing swell, he may hawk beady eyes and raise smirky smiles, but Risch’s Joey isn’t the snake charmer that Pal Joey demands...How nifty that Pal Joey also manages to be one of the most chic enterprises Roundabout has mounted in a long time. There’s an actual orchestra at Studio 54! And Paul Gemignani’s musical direction of the score, by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, illustrates what an incandescent, melodic knockout it remains. Risch also receives the kind of thespian support that underscores the generosity of the theater.

Back Stage (blog) B+
(David Sheward) I was pleasantly surprised to find Risch was everything Joey must be--a dynamite dancer, a charming romeo, and a first-class heel. The only area where he was lacking was in the vocal department, but Joey is more of a dancing role...Joe Mantello's production is pure film noir with Scott Pask's menacing set dominated by grim elevated train tracks. As Vera Simpson, Joey's alcoholic patroness, Stockard Channing is so cutting and martini-dry, she draws blood from the other characters and tears from the audience...Martha Plimpton is another performer we don't usually see in musicals. Yet she scores a bull's eye with the tough-talking showgirl Gladys.

New York B
(Jesse Oxfield) It's pleasingly consistent with the classic backstage story to report that a major singing-and-dancing talent has arrived—except that it’s not Risch. It's the heretofore serious actress Martha Plimpton...Everything else in this well-conceived, timely revival is dark, dangerous, and dry.

NJ Star-Ledger B
(Eric Grode) Broadway loves an "understudy makes good" story, but for every Shirley MacLaine or Sutton Foster...there are at least a dozen jobbers who hit their marks, take their bow and slide back into obscurity...Such is the case with Risch, a young dancer with a lovely smile, a serviceable voice and none of the nuance needed to make Joey's amorous conquests remotely plausible. Vera's sung summation of Joey as a "half-pint imitation" hits distressingly close to the mark here...The real surprise is Plimpton...who proves to be a sparkling musical theater performer.

New York Post B
(Frank Scheck) I'm pleased to report that a musical-comedy star is born in the newly revived "Pal Joey." Unfortunately for the Roundabout, it's Martha Plimpton and not Matthew Risch, the chorus boy recently bumped up to the title role...Working with a new book by Richard Greenberg (which differs only slightly from John O'Hara's original, while making one of the characters blatantly gay), director Joe Mantello has provided a smooth, reasonably entertaining staging that's enhanced by the slinky, sexy choreography of Graciela Daniele. Stockard Channing, looking impossibly young for her 64 years, is compelling as the sexually rapacious socialite Vera Simpson, even if her renditions of such classic songs as "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" are better acted than sung.

Hartford Courant B
(Malcolm Johnson) The songs are great, the book is much improved and the women deliver, especially the astonishing Martha Plimpton. But there is no Cinderfella story for Matthew Risch, the understudy who took over the title role in "Pal Joey"...The production by Joe Mantello, which the Roundabout Theatre Company opened Thursday at Studio 54, resonantly evokes Chicago in the late '30s when the partnership of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart was coming to an end. But this troubled musical, which originally starred Gene Kelly as the nightclub owner/gigolo Joey Evans, has not yet found the production so often dreamed of through the years.

The Record C+
(Robert Feldberg) Hard to warm up to...The production does have some nice things in it, starting with an atmospheric dance sequence performed during the overture. Director Joe Mantello blends one scene into the next, creating an uninterrupted flow of action; Graciela Daniele's choreography has a pleasing period flavor; and the orchestrations evoke the musical sound of the late '30s. The story, though, is a downer....While a capable dancer and singer, [Risch] doesn't make Joey at all appealing...The show's score, overall, is not distinguished.

Newsday C+
(Linda Winer) Despite a smart creative team and game performances from Stockard Channing and the ever-more-surprising Martha Plimpton, the Roundabout Theatre Company production that opened last night at Studio 54 seems more like grown-ups playing dress-up than gritty and cynically delicious pulp fiction. There is no nice way of saying this. Matthew Risch, the understudy who stepped into the starring role when Christian Hoff reportedly was injured, is a slick and stylish hoofer, and a competent singer. But he doesn't have the wattage to make us care about Joey Evans...Without a bad-boy Joey we can't help but adore, the women around him are less than fabulously interesting. Without more spark behind Joe Mantello's handsomely imagined Chicago lowlife of a production, the darkness starts to feel more dull than glittery.

EW C+
(Thom Geier) Though Risch works up an impressive flop sweat—literally mopping up the perspiration from his face with an ill-disguised cloth during one early scene—his efforts still have the whiff of flop about them...Risch is never less than professional, but his costars must struggle to compensate for his shortcomings in this tricky story: Jenny Fellner, as the bumpkin-in-the-big-city ingenue, fails to convince us why she'd hang around for a nogoodnik like Joey; Stockard Channing, as the cougar and sugar mama who falls for Joey and finances his nightclub, is thin of voice but touchingly acts her way through classic songs like "Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered;" and Martha Plimpton, as an aging showgirl punished for knowing too much about Joey's shady past, is a surprisingly strong singer who comfortably sells her second-act charmer, "Zip."

The Daily News C
(Joe Dziemianowicz) Casting a boyish near-beginner as a die-hard heel is but one issue in Joe Mantello's low-impact staging, which has a book by Richard Greenberg (seamier than John O'Hara's original) and efficient dances by Graciela Daniele. Under Mantello's inconsistent direction, the acting styles range from realism to broad musical comedy while tuneful Rodgers and Hart songs - from "I Could Write a Book" to "You Mustn't Kick It Around" - land with little impression...The delightful surprise is Martha Plimpton as the street-smart showgirl Gladys. The actress debuts a robust and smoky singing voice and makes the novelty number "Zip" (usually sung by another character) enormously entertaining...Revivals of Rodgers and Hart's dark-toned show don't come around that often. Unfortunately, this "Pal" doesn't inspire a friendlier welcome.

Theatre News Online C
(Roger B. Harris) The fizz is flat...Director Joe Mantello keeps the show moving along at a nice pace while choreographer Graciela Daniele's work is merely adequate. In this instance, jiggling, wriggling chorines, do not a pretty sight make. Richard Greenberg has streamlined and updated the book, which isn't necessarily a good thing. The air is too heavy with innuendo. Scott Pask's set, William Ivey Long's costumes and Paul Gallo's lighting do not get in the way, which I guess is a plus. What is a definite plus is the chance to hear that fabulous score once again on stage.

Talkin' Broadway D+
(Matthew Murray) [Greenberg's libretto] is less a full-blown rewrite than a mild reconsideration, in no way a curb-kicking of the original...The contributions of the rest of the creative team are lethargic at best. Designers Scott Pask (sets), William Ivey Long (costumes), Paul Gallo (lights), choreographer Graciela Daniele, and especially director Joe Mantello have aided neither Greenberg’s script nor Rodgers and Hart’s score in finding their own natural, down-and-dirty rhythm. Rather than exploring the dangers and complexities of Joey and Vera’s pairing against the musty glitter of Chicago nightlife, they’ve tried to change Pal Joey into a makeshift Cabaret by swathing it in darkness, squalor, and self-promoting grit...Daniele’s rancidly greasy choreography is similarly more an approximate afterthought than a necessary element.

The New York Times D+
(Ben Brantley) Featuring the gifted but misused Stockard Channing and a streamlined but innuendo-heavy book by Richard Greenberg (after the original by John O’Hara), this “Pal Joey” has no detectable pulse...Nobody, with the qualified exception of Martha Plimpton as a floozy with a grudge, emerges from this Roundabout Theater Company production covered in stardust. In shining a harsh light on the inner rot of selfish characters who first appeared in short stories by O’Hara for The New Yorker, this revival has succeeded only in turning them into zombies. When Ms. Channing, as the alcoholic society matron Vera Simpson, sings the show’s most famous song, “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered,” it might as well be titled “Benumbed, Bummed Out and Bored Silly”...Watching the cast go through its motions is like watching a “Marat/Sade” in which the asylum inmates have been pumped full of Thorazine.

AM New York D
(Matt Windman) This revival is bewitched, bothered, bewildered and bad!...27-year-old Mr. Risch lacks not only charm, but also credibility. He sweats profusely and looks too hard at work handling all the hoofing to successfully interact with the cast. He also appears too effeminate to play such a manipulative conman. His co-star Stockard Channing has a bigger problem: she has absolutely no vocal chops. She speaks through all of her songs, turning great ballads like “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered” into slow, painful marches. If not much else, Channing has the commanding stage presence that Risch desperately lacks. The fabulously talented Martha Plimpton steals the show as chorine Gladys Bumps...The blame for this revisal should lie with playwright Richard Greenberg, whose overhaul of John O’Hara’s original script with new character motives is uninvolving and awkward, and director Joe Mantello for making so many poor artistic choices. Graciela Daniele’s serviceable choreography works best when it parodies bad nightclub staging.

Wall Street Journal D
(Terry Teachout) The Roundabout, as best as I can figure, has decided to sell "Pal Joey" by selling it out. In this production, directed by Joe Mantello and choreographed by Graciela Daniele, the show is retrofitted as a glossy school-of-Fosse extravaganza. The fancy sets and showy steps, while pleasing enough in their own right, have little to do with the seedy, sordid world that O'Hara conjured out of thin air in his very first stage direction...Richard Greenberg, one of my least favorite contemporary playwrights, has rewritten O'Hara's book from curtain to curtain, replacing his sharp-eared dialogue with lame, campy punch lines and smoothing out the rough edges of the plot in a way that is alien to the flint-hearted spirit of the real "Pal Joey."

Village Voice D-
(Michael Feingold) The new book, by Richard Greenberg, does little harm, although nothing was wrong with John O'Hara's original book that a few minor emendations couldn't fix. Almost everything else, however, is just plain awful...Granted, Martha Plimpton's Gladys can put over a song; Stockard Channing's Vera doesn't exactly wreck hers; and Matthew Risch, the understudy who replaced Christian Hoff, dances pretty well and gives the role the understudy's traditional brave try...The evening's marginally more bearable than the Roundabout's scorched-earth rendering of the team's Boys From Syracuse a few years back, but that's the best compliment their holiday gift can extort from me.

Variety A 13; Bloomberg News A 13; Associated Press A 13; Total Theater A 13; CurtainUp A- 12; Theatermania A- 12; Backstage B+ 11; American Theatre Web B+ 11; THR B+ 11; TONY B+ 11; Philly Inquirer B+ 11; USA Today B+ 11; New Yorker B+ 11; NY Press B+ 11; Back Stage blog B+ 11; New York B 10; New York Post B 10; NJ Star-Ledger B 10; Hartford Courant B 10; The Record C+ 8; Newsday C+ 8; EW C+ 8; The Daily News C 7; Theatre News Online C 7; Talkin' Broadway D+ 5; The New York Times D+ 5; AM New York D 4; WSJ D 4; Village Voice D- 3; TOTAL: 274 / 29 = 9.45 (B-)
Read On »

Tuesday, December 2, 2003

Wicked

GRADE: C+



Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz; Book by Winnie Holzman; Directed by Joe Mantello

USA Today and TimeOut both go for Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman's adaptation of Geoffrey Maguire's novel, praising its political wherewithal, it's willingness to explore dark themes, and the quality of its score and the deftness of its book. The naysayers find the show interminable, preachy, tonally confused and too flashy. At the time that it opened, Wicked was the most expensive show in Broadway history, it has since been surpassed by Young Frankenstein which was also taken to task for its expense by the critics. Quick note: everyone has very nice things to say about the show's leads (in one case, they are given credit for the evening being enjoyable at all). Neither Idina Menzel nor Kristen Chenowith (who has for the second time in her career left The Rialto for the small screen) is still in the show.


.
USAToday A-
(Elysa Gardner) The most complete, and completely satisfying, new musical I've come across in a long time... juggles winning irreverence with thoughtfulness and heart.

TimeOut NY A-
(David Cote) This musical prequel to The Wizard of Oz addresses surprisingly complex themes, such as standards of beauty, morality and, believe it or not, opposing fascism. Thanks to Winnie Holzman’s witty book and Stephen Schwartz’s robust, pop-inflected score, Wicked soars.

Variety C+
(Charles Isherwood) A strenuous effort to be all things to all people tends to weigh down this lumbering, overstuffed $14 million production. Wicked is stridently earnest one minute, self-mocking the next; a fantastical allegory about the perils of fascism in one scene, a Nickelodeon special about the importance of inner beauty in another. There are flying monkeys, flying witches and flying scenery, but the musical itself truly soars only on rare occasions, usually when one of its two marvelously talented leading ladies, Kristin Chenoweth and Idina Menzel, unleashes the kind of vocal magic that needs no supernatural or even technical assistance.

NY1 C
(Roma Torre) Wicked, the flip side to the Wizard of Oz has a lot more in common with The Boy From Oz than you might think. Just as Hugh Jackman's awesome performance keeps his show afloat, the two mesmerizing stars of Wicked will keep theirs from melting into oblivion.

NYTimes D+
(Ben Brantley) It's hard to avoid the impression that whenever Ms. Chenoweth leaves the stage, "Wicked" loses its wit, while its swirling pop-eretta score sheds any glimmer of originality. There are visual and verbal jokes aplenty throughout this thorned re-creation of Baum's enchanted land, where Glinda and Elphaba get to know each other long before a little brat named Dorothy shows up. But more often than not, the humor brings to mind a slightly sweaty young college professor with a social conscience, hoping to win over his students by acting funky and cracking wise.

NY Daily News D
(Howard Kissell) An interminable show with no dramatic logic or emotional center.... If the theater enforced more stringent economic controls, the creators would have had to solve the problems emotionally. "Wicked" then might have had more impact

USA Today A- 12; TimeOut NY A- 12; Variety C+ 8; NY1 C 7; NYTimes D+ 5; NYDaily News D 4; TOTAL = 48/6 = 8 =C+
Read On »