2012 Emmy Awards

Musical theater programming garnered a handful of statues at this year’s Emmy Awards given out by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, both at the 65th annual Primetime ceremony hosted by Jimmy Kimmel on Sep. 23 that was broadcast live on ABC and at the 64th annual Creative Arts ceremony on Sep. 15 that was broadcast Sep. 22 on Reelz Channel, both from the Nokia Theatre in downtown Los Angeles.

The 65th Annual Tony Awards (CBS) won as Outstanding Special Class Program, the third consecutive year for the annual broadcast, bringing statues to executive producers Ricky Kirshner and Glenn Weiss and producer-host Neil Patrick Harris (his second Emmy win). The program brought additional trophies to Glenn Weiss for Outstanding Direction for a Variety Special (his sixth win, all for helming the annual show), composer Adam Schlesinger (his first) and lyricist David Javerbaum (his first for music but eighth overall) for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics, and production designer Steve Bass (his third) and art director Seth Easter (his first) for Outstanding Art Direction for Variety or Nonfiction Programming.

Another multiple-winning program was The 34th Annual Kennedy Center Honors (CBS), named as Outstanding Variety Special, bringing statues to producers George Stevens Jr. and Michael M. Stevens. The program also brought recognition to music directors Rob Berman and Rob Mathes for Outstanding Music Direction, the first win for each man after several previous nominations.

Other honorees included choreographer Joshua Bergasse, who won his first Emmy in Outstanding Choreography for the routines to “National Pastime,” “Let’s Be Bad” and “Never Met a Wolf” during the premiere season of Smash (NBC), and the Great Performances (PBS) production of the Tony Award-winning musical Memphis, which won for Outstanding Technical Direction for a Miniseries/Movie or Special, led by technical director Steven Cimino, a seven-time winner for his work on Saturday Night Live.

Posted in Awards, TV | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Forbidden Broadway: Review Roundup

The cast of Forbidden Broadway: Alice & Kicking in "Once (Is Enough)"

The long-running Off-Broadway satirical revue Forbidden Broadway, offering its latest incarnation after a three-year hiatus, has opened to strongly positive reviews. The creative team includes Gerard Alessandrini (book, lyrics, direction), Phillip George (addl. dialogue, direction), Philip Heckman (costumes), Megan K. Halpern (sets), Mark T. Simpson (lights), Bobbie Cliffton Zlotnik (wigs), and David Caldwell (music direction). Musical numbers include “Brigadoon Prologue,” “Alive and Kicking,” “Evita 2012,” “Nice Work,” “Granny/Annie,” “Once (Is Enough),” “Mary Poppins,” “Forbidden Follies,” “Agony/Into the Woods,” “Rock of Ages,” “Anything Goes,” “Send in the Hounds,” “Ghost,” “Newsies,” “The Circle of Mice,” “Spider-Man,” “Jersey Boys,” “Porgy and Mess,” “Smash,” “Mandy & Patti,” “Wicked,” “Judy As Judy,” “We Believe,” and “Ta-ta.” The cast includes Natalie Charlé Ellis, Scott Richard Foster, Jenny Lee Stern, and Marcus Stevens with David Caldwell on piano.

Ben Brantley (N.Y. Times): This little satire gives you everything you need to be witty, withering and informed about long, expensive musicals that would cost you thousands of dollars to see. … Just one session of the current Forbidden Broadway and you’ll be holding your own amid even the most passionate first-nighters. In an age that prizes bargains and shortcuts, Gerard Alessandrini’s rejuvenated Forbidden Broadway, which arrives packing polished brass knuckles, is a godsend. … The constant theatergoer will of course bring a connoisseur’s relish to all this. But honestly you don’t have to know the, uh, score to enjoy Forbidden Broadway. Good satire generates its own self-contained logic and infectious energy.

David Finkle (Theater Mania): Sometimes you don’t know how much you miss something until it returns, and that’s indisputably true of Forbidden Broadway, which its creator Gerard Alessandrini has just brought triumphantly back. … It has been directed for endless hoots by Alessandrini and Phillip George, and hilariously acted by cast members Natalie Charle Ellis, Jenny Lee Stern, Scott Richard Foster, and Marcus Stevens, with David Caldwell, back at the piano, demonstrating stamina equal to a 24-piece Broadway orchestra. … There’s no missing Alessandrini’s sharpest underlying satirical point – expressed by Ellis’ Mary Poppins in “Feed the ‘Burbs,” chastising audiences and producers alike for choosing “tepid vapid titles they know.” Luckily, there’s nothing tepid or vapid about this kick of a show!

Joe Dziemianowicz (N.Y. Daily News): Marksmanship matters in satire. The new edition of the popular lampoon Forbidden Broadway hits one bull’s-eye after another. … It’s punchy, packed with laughs and boasts a super quartet of singing comic chameleons. … The bulk of the show is fresh, with some skits familiar from previous versions, including whacks at the long-running Mary Poppins, Wicked and Jersey Boys. One of the most delicious debuts skewers the reigning Best Musical Tony winner Once. The bittersweet story of a boy, a girl and a vacuum gets taken to the cleaners in a hilarious zing. … For theater lovers, it’s like Halloween and Christmas both came early.

Erik Haagensen (Back Stage): The show is for the most part sharper and funnier than ever, with delightfully wicked new material outnumbering a few oldies but goodies. The revue lands a haymaker right out of the gate with “Evita 2012,” announcing that “dinner theater’s back.” … The combination of Alessandrini’s racing wit and nimble lyrics, the inventively on-the-cheap physical production, and the shockingly talented cast (joined occasionally by estimable musical director David Caldwell) makes Forbidden Broadway: Alive and Kicking! essential viewing for all theater lovers.

Steve Suskin (Variety): In a four-person cast of almost equals, Stevens and Stern stand out. He’s a versatile and always funny mimic slipping with ease into Patinkin, Fierstein and a very funny Sondheim. Stern is a wonderful clown; the more intense the funnier, and she doesn’t mind milking the laughter by crossing her eyes. … Alessandrini and long-time co-director Phillip George are once again abetted by pianist David Caldwell, who does a marvelous job of kidding the music. Numerous laughs are contributed by costume designer Philip Heckman and wig designer Bobbie Cliffton Zlotnik. Not everything comes up roses. … But the highest hilarity comes in the Once sketch, which lovingly exploits the intense stars, the guitar songs, the Irish stepping, and even the red-bearded guy in the chorus.

Linda Winer (Newsday): Not all the sketches are prime Alessandrini, but enough are treasures that make it hard to resist ruining the jokes by repeating them for you. Suffice it to say that the new cast … is another gifted quartet of ridiculous chameleons. I’m blaming an occasional lack of focus on the sheer number of follies and felonies that have been piling up and begging for comment in the last three years. The show has more than 20 sketches, which means we get more quick hits than the kind of delirious in-depth scenes Alessandrini did for Les Miz. The most ambitious and sharply observed is the Once. … If we clap our hands and believe in Forbidden Broadway, maybe it won’t go away again.

Posted in Off-Broadway, Shows | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Broadway or Bust

Broadway or Bust, a new three-part miniseries documenting high school musical hopefuls, premiered on PBS this past Sunday with the episode “The Casting Call.” (If you missed it, you can watch the full episode online.) The program, produced by WGBH Boston’s Laurie Donnelly and Lance K. Shultz, follows 60 students as they prepare to compete in the National High School Musical Theater Awards in New York City. Tony nominee Constantine Maroulis (Rock of Ages) and Grammy nominee Deborah Cox – now co-starring in the Broadway-bound national tour of Jekyll & Hyde ­– co-hosted this year’s fourth annual ceremony on June 25 at Broadway’s Minskoff Theatre, home of the long-running musical The Lion King.

These “Jimmy” Awards, named for producer James M. Nederlander, invite students from across the country who have earned recognition in their local high schools, providing one Best Actress and one Best Actor with college scholarships. In the week leading up to the prize announcement, the teenagers participate in a boot camp of rehearsals, coaching, and auditions. The remaining pair of hourlong installments in the reality series – “Behind Closed Doors” and “And the Winner Is…” – will air the next two Sundays, Sept. 16 and 23, at 8 p.m. ET. In addition to Maroulis and Cox, the series includes appearances from Tony nominees Liz Callaway (Baby) and Montego Glover (Memphis), as well as Smash star Leslie Odom Jr., among other Broadway musical professionals.

Posted in Shows, TV | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Chaplin: Review Roundup

Rob McClure

After thwarted attempts in 1981 (by Ernest Kinoy, Lee Goldsmith, and Roger Anderson) and 1983 (by Anthony Newley and Stanley Ralph Ross) to bring Chaplin’s life to Broadway, a Little Tramp musical has finally arrived on the Great White Way … but to unappreciative notices – except for a universally acclaimed star turn by leading actor Rob McClure. This version of the screen star’s life was presented at the 2006 NYMF (as Behind the Limelight) and had its world premiere in 2010 at La Jolla (as Limelight). Now titled Chaplin, its creative team includes Christopher Curtis (book, lyrics, music), Thomas Meehan (book), Warren Carlyle (direction, choreography), Beowulf Boritt (sets), Amy Clark and Martin Pakledinaz (costumes), Ken Billington (lights), Scott Lehrer and Drew Levy (sound), Jon Driscoll (video & projections), Paul Huntley (wigs & hair), Angelina Avallone (makeup), Bryan Perri (music direction), and Larry Hochman (orchestrations).

The cast includes Rob McClure (Charlie Chaplin), Jim Borstelmann (Alf Reeves), Jenn Colella (Hedda Hopper), Erin Mackey (Oona O’Neill), Michael McCormick (Mack Sennett, etc.), Christiane Noll (Hannah Chaplin), Zachary Unger (Young Charlie, etc.), and Wayne Alan Wilcox (Sydney Chaplin)

Ben Brantley (N.Y. Times): With all this metamovie stuff – and the arty gray color scheme, which extends to the makeup – it’s not always possible to know where you are in relation to time or reality. Yet a stolidly conventional heart beats beneath these airy trappings: a by-the-book rags-to-riches-to-loneliness saga, underscored by vaporous music … and vaguely period dances. … [McClure] does a lovely impersonation of the Little Tramp that captures the heartbreaking grace in that character’s embattled dignity. Delivering the anguished lines of the self-destructive egotist that Chaplin became, he perversely tends to fade into the gray. This may be a mercy, given the lines he has to say. It’s hard not to sympathize with the character who tells him, “I miss the days when you didn’t speak.”

Joe Dziemianowicz (N.Y. Daily News): 3 out of 5 stars. In the musical Chaplin, sets and costumes come in black and white. Unfortunately, so does the storytelling in this cut-and-dried bio about the complicated silent-film legend Charlie Chaplin. The book … could have used more imagination and a stronger point of view. Curtis’ songs, much-reprised, don’t give the show much lift either. … Despite modest material, Rob McClure gives a nimble star turn as guided by director-choreographer Warren Carlyle. … The way Chaplin stands now, it’s modestly entertaining. But in a story in which Chaplin often talks about the magic of the flickers, one yearns for more flickers of magic.

Erik Haagensen (Back Stage): It’s hard to know where to begin with Chaplin, the dismally dull musical. … The most the writing aspires to is mediocrity, which it rarely if ever achieves, something Warren Carlyle’s busy direction and choreography can’t disguise. The one performance of note comes from the extremely gifted Rob McClure in the title role, but the show’s relentless shopworn sentimentality erodes even his fine work. … Chaplin merely dashes from notable event to notable event with nary a thought to why the story is being told. The show squanders huge hunks of stage time on nonessential numbers. … Curtis’ largely pastiche music is a pale imitation of better and more original composers, while his lyrics never met a cliché or a false rhyme they didn’t like (my favorite was “Chaplin”/“happen”).

Steve Suskin (Variety): The most treacherous part of producing a biomusical about an iconic performer is finding an actor who can convincingly handle the role. The producers of Chaplin … have passed that difficult test, with relative newcomer Rob McClure proving a small wonder as the Little Tramp. But they have come up all thumbs, alas, in the writing and staging departments. … The act-one transformation scene, in which the panto comic devises his film persona, is especially effective. Elsewhere, though, the show’s creatives have transformed Charlie’s tale into just another Hollywood story of stardom today, oblivion tomorrow.

Elisabeth Vincentelli (N.Y. Post): 2-1/2 stars out of 4. The show about the silent-film icon is packed with so many biographical details that it seems like a PowerPoint presentation with songs. But hey, at least it looks good! … At least things move along zippily under the direction of Warren Carlyle, who also choreographed … but there’s a dearth of showstopping numbers. The agile McClure captures Chaplin’s physical trademarks – particularly the Little Tramp’s duck gait – and he’s very likable, but things move too fast for him to flesh out his character.

Posted in Broadway, Shows | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Spotlight on Broadway

Mayor Bloomberg unveiled Spotlight on Broadway yesterday during the free Broadway on Broadway concert in Times Square. A project of the New York mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment, the program will celebrate the history of Broadway by highlighting the theaters and people who contribute to its cultural legacy. As part of a growing archive of multimedia storytelling, 40 short documentary portraits are available now on its website. Designs are also in the works for a permanent installation in Times Square. The program has been supported by the Broadway League and labor union partners, the Museum of the City of New York, New York Public Library, Shubert Archive and Sony Broadway Masterworks. The full project is planned to be in place by fall 2013.

Inaugural Spotlight Award winners Tommy Tune, Chita Rivera and Charles Strouse

To coincide with the program’s launch, the inaugural Spotlight Awards were presented to recognize and honor individuals in the Broadway community who have made a significant contribution over a ten-year period in one of the following four categories: Industry Support, Actors, Behind-the-Scenes Talent, and Producers. During Broadway on Broadway yesterday, the first class of Spotlight Award winners honored included musical actress Chita Rivera; composer Charles Strouse; actress Arlene Dahl; musical actor-stager Tommy Tune; Equity president Nick Wyman; IATSE president Matthew D. Loeb; producer James M. Nederlander; and general manager Nina Lannan.

Posted in Awards, Stage | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Call Me Madam: Album Reviews

Just in time for the 2012 election season, Sony’s Masterworks Broadway is offering the first digital release of the 1950 political satire Call Me Madam, which has been out of print since 1956, except for a brief LP pressing in 1977.  Remastered from the original tapes, the album features Dinah Shore as Sally Adams, the “Hostess with the Mostess,” with original cast members Russell Nype, Paul Lukas, Galina Talva, and Pat Harrington. Irving Berlin won his first and only competitive Tony for his score, and Ethel Merman won her first and only competitive Tony for her performance. However, RCA asked Dinah Shore to step in for this official original cast recording since Merman was under contract to rival label Decca, for whom Merman recorded a compilation album with Dick Haymes and Eileen Wilson that included songs from the show. For the record, the creative team includes Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse (book), Irving Berlin (lyrics, music), Don Walker (orchestration), and Jack Blackton (music direction).

Steven Bergman (Edge): In this crucial period of partisan politics leading up to the national election, Masterworks Broadway has smartly released one of the classic spoofs of the political world, Call Me Madam, on CD and digital formats for the first time, and the synchronicity between the two events alone makes the score worth a listen. … It seemed appropriate that the show, a Broadway box office success, would have political drama associated with it when it was time to go to the studio and record Berlin’s score. … RCA brought in Dinah Shore, its current superstar, to take Merman’s place as Mrs. Sally Adams on vinyl. Shore’s take on the role is vastly different from Merman’s, but her down-home sound and sincere interpretation are equally enjoyable, and she’s supported by the original cast of the show. … This release gives us a wonderful opportunity to enjoy Shore singing those Berlin melodies before she found her mark on television. A rare recording that is worth the listen.

William Ruhlmann (All Music): Call Me Madam … was Irving Berlin’s final hit Broadway musical. It was also his second collaboration with Ethel Merman, who had starred in his most successful show, Annie Get Your Gun. … Unfortunately, there was a glitch. The show had been financed by RCA Victor Records, who claimed the cast album. But Merman was an exclusive recording artist for Decca, one of RCA’s major rivals. The result was two albums: RCA replaced Merman with Dinah Shore, while Decca made its own recording with Merman and a few hired hands, including Dick Haymes. … Shore is an odd fit with the stage cast on the RCA material. Paul Lukas (“Welcome to Lichtenburg”) and the rest of the actors perform in character, but Shore sounds like the pleasant, noncommittal pop singer she is, never bothering to create any believable characterization, even when she’s speaking dialogue.

Posted in Albums, Books & Media, Original Stage Cast | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Broadway on Broadway 2012

Broadway on Broadway, the annual free outdoor concert presented in Times Square by the Broadway League and the Times Square Alliance, will kick off the 2012/13 Broadway season this Sunday, Sep. 9, beginning at 11:30 a.m. Kathie Lee Gifford (who wrote the book and lyrics for the upcoming Scandalous) will host. Alex Lacamoire (music arranger for Bring It On and the upcoming Annie revival) will conduct a 30-piece orchestra accompanying performers from Bring It On (“It’s All Happening”), Chicago (“My Own Best Friend”), Elf (“Never Fall in Love with an Elf”), Mamma Mia! (medley), Newsies (“King of New York”), Once (“Falling Slowly”), Spider-Man (“Boy Falls From the Sky”), and the upcoming Annie (special appearance), Motown (“Get Ready”), and Scandalous (“For Such a Time as This”) as well as Off-Broadway’s Bare (“Are You There?”) and Stomp (“Brooms”). The free concert will also feature a celebration of the Nederlander centennial and a sneak peek from the second season of NBC’s Smash.

Posted in Concert, Shows | Tagged , | Leave a comment

20at20 Fall 2012

The Off Broadway Alliance is once again offering its 20at20 program of discount tickets to Off-Broadway shows. Now in its sixth year, the biannual program offers $20 tickets for sale 20 minutes before curtain time. Note that only cash is accepted for any 20at20 ticket sales. This fall’s engagement begins today and runs to Sep 23. Participating musicals include Angelina Ballerina, Avenue Q, Berenstain Bears, Closer Than Ever, Cougar, Fantasticks, Forbidden Broadway, Hollow, Naked Boys Singing!, New Girl in Town, Newsical, Pinkalicious, Silence!, Sistas, and StinkyKids. If you see seven participating shows you can mail your original ticket stubs (before Sep. 24) to receive a free voucher for dinner for two. For more information about the program and dinner offer, visit the 20at20 website.

Posted in Business, Producing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Broadway Week Fall 2012

Broadway Week Fall 2012, produced by NYC & Co. with the Broadway League, begins today and runs until Sep. 16. During these next two weeks, you can buy two-for-one tickets to 19 Broadway shows. The program, now in its fourth year, is offering an additional incentive this time: a free dessert with your ticket stub at some two dozen participating restaurants in the Theater District. Participating musicals this year include the recent Bring It On and Chaplin as well as Chicago, Evita, Jersey Boys, Lion King, Mamma Mia!, Mary Poppins, Newsies, Nice Work If You Can Get It, Once, Phantom of the Opera, Porgy and Bess, Rock of Ages, Spider-Man, and Wicked. However, tickets are limited and going fast; Once and Wicked have already sold out of their allotments. You can learn more about Broadway Week and purchase half-price tickets at their website.

Posted in Business, Producing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

FringeNYC 2012 Update

The FringeNYC Encore Series has grown to 19 shows (including five musicals) to be presented in three venues over the next month (Sep. 7-30). Independents (book by Marina Keegan, lyrics by Mark Sonnenblick, music by Stephen Feigenbaum) and Super Sidekick (book by Gregory Crafts, lyrics and music by Michael Gordon Shapiro) will play at the Soho Playhouse Mainstage (15 Vandam St.), Hill-Bent (by Danny Visconti and Adam Wachter) at the Soho Playhouse Huron Club, and Nightfall on Miranga Island (book and lyrics by Justin Moran and Jonathan Roufaeal, music by Adam and Matt Podd) and Standby (book and lyrics by Alfred Solis and Mark-Eugene Garcia, music by Keith Robinson and Amy Baer) at the Players Theater (115 MacDougal St.).

The winners of the Overall Excellence Awards, selected by an independent panel of 40 theater professionals, have also been announced. Among the four Overall Production winners is the musical Independents, and among the four Design Award winners is Hanafuda Denki by Tokyo’s Ryuzanji Company. The Music Composition Award went to PartyFolk for Panoramania.

Posted in Festivals, Shows | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment