Into the Woods: Review Roundup

Dennis O'Hare
and Amy Adams

The second New York revival of the 1987 musical Into the Woods has opened Off-Broadway, as the closing show in the Public Theater’s summer season at the Delacorte in Central Park, to decidedly mixed reviews. For the record, the creative team includes James Lapine (book), Stephen Sondheim (lyrics, music), Timothy Sheader (direction), Liam Steel (co-direction, movement), John Lee Beatty and Soutra Gilmour (sets), Emily Rebholz (costumes), Ben Stanton (lights), Acme Sound Partners (sound), Rachael Canning (puppets), Leah Loukas (wigs), Jonathan Tunick (orchestration), and Paul Gemignani (music direction).

The cast includes Amy Adams (Baker’s Wife), Jack Broderick and Noah Radcliffe (alternating as Narrator), Glenn Close (Giant), Victoria Cook (Gretel, Snow White), Gideon Glick (Jack), Cooper Grodin (Prince), Ellen Harvey (Stepmother), Ivan Hernandez (Prince, Wolf), Tina Johnson (Granny), Josh Lamon (Steward), Bethany Moore (Florinda), Jessie Mueller (Cinderella), Donna Murphy (Witch), Johnny Newcomb (Woodsman), Denis O’Hare (Baker), Jennifer Rias (Lucinda), Laura Shoop (Cinderella’s Mother), Tess Soltau (Rapunzel, Sleeping Beauty), Sarah Stiles (Little Red Ridinghood), Eric R. Williams (Hansel), Kristine Zbornik (Jack’s Mother), and Chip Zien (Cinderella’s Father, Mysterious Man).

Ben Brantley (N.Y. Times): It breaks my heart to chalk up this production as another example of thwarted hopes. … This high-concept repackaging of beloved archetypes feels like the work of an overeager Hollywood production team desperate to tap the tweener market. … Worse, these souped-up creatures exude little flesh-and-blood warmth. … But all flaws could be forgiven – or nearly forgiven – if this production had found its authentic voice in song. … In this version, though, the music is never allowed to hold its own or even to take center stage. Admittedly, much of the cast isn’t up to the demands of an intricate Sondheim score. But even those who are, like Ms. Murphy and Ms. Mueller, find their numbers undermined by the distractions of frantic and unfocused staging. When the songs in a Sondheim show get lost in the woods, you know it’s time for some serious deforestation.

Joe Dziemianowicz (N.Y. Daily News): Without Donna Murphy’s vivid star turn … it’d be an interesting but uneven night. … On the plus side, the scenery, a cobbled high-rise of trees, ladders, wooden walkways and soaring bird’s nest, is bewitching. Ditto the visuals. … On the downside, the production can be shrill and alienatingly eccentric, from characterizations to costumes. Some key performances fail to bring out the beauty of the music or to pop as colorfully as they might – or both. … Running three hours, Into the Woods is a bit of a haul. But endurance brings a sweet payoff: “Children Will Listen,” a beautiful song that makes you feel fully connected. It’s not a miraculous happily ever after. But in the moment, it’s pretty heavenly.

Michael Musto (Village Voice): Donna Murphy excels as the Witch, especially scoring in her fiery “Last Midnight” number in which she makes all sorts of demands then disappears into a hole. Sarah Stiles is wryly funny as an unkillable Little Red Ridinghood, complete with a crash helmet and an Instamatic camera. And while Denis O’Hare is the endlessly frustrated Baker, Chip Zien – who played the part in the original production – is now his dad, proving that we all become our parents. … Some of this production’s choices are head scratchers and a few scenes need better direction, but by taking bold steps, it fills these fractured fairy tales with enough yearning spirit to create a richly enjoyable musical meditation on parenting, responsibility, scapegoating, and compromise. I wish … you’d see it.

Lisa Schwarzbaum (Entertainment Weekly): Director Timothy Sheader’s buoyantly inventive, into-the-trees production makes room for every emotion, thanks to a generously talented cast led by Donna Murphy in a stop-the-show thrilling performance as the witch. (Another starry highlight: As the baker and his wife, Denis O’Hare and Amy Adams sweetly interpret the tender duet ‘‘It Takes Two.’’) … Sheader, who directed the show two years ago at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre in London, has an obvious feel for the show, one of Sondheim’s most enduring hits. Here, working with co-director Liam Steel, he’s produced once-upon-a-lifetime theater. A

Steven Suskin (Variety): Brit director Timothy Sheader builds his often willfully anachronistic production on intriguing if not always workable notions. It makes for an enjoyable evening of free theater, but the open question for the Public is whether the show has the legs to transfer. … Overall effect is strong but not transporting. … Sheader’s devices too frequently distract. … Characters are outfitted and performed in a cartoonish manner, providing laughs, but often at the expense of the script. Similarly, while the production has an array of interesting performances, the contempo touches sometimes limit their impact. … Even when it’s not supportive of the material, the staging by Sheader and Steel is novel and dynamic. This Into the Woods serves as a good, if overlong, midsummer’s eve diversion in Central Park, but not necessarily in a Broadway theater.

Terry Teachout (Wall St. Journal): Donna Murphy and Jessie Mueller, for instance, are terrific, and the Midsummer Night’s Dream-style set … makes imaginative use of the Delacorte Theater’s natural surroundings. If only the sparkle-free, visually unfocused staging looked half so good. It’s hard to imagine a production of Into the Woods going flat, but that’s what this one does. … Ms. Murphy plays the Witch with thrilling ferocity, while Ms. Mueller, the Cinderella of this revival, is the finest young musical-comedy singer to hit New York in the past decade. … The word is that the Public Theater’s “Into the Woods” is going to Broadway. That would be a mistake. … Yes, it would be fun to see Ms. Mueller and Ms. Murphy play Cinderella and the Witch on Broadway – but not like this.

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Spamalot: Review Roundup

Todd Carty, Marcus Brigstocke, and
Bonnie Langford

The London revival of the 2005 musical Spamalot opened last week at the Harold Pinter Theatre in the West End to lukewarm reviews. For the record, the creative team includes Eric Idle (book, lyrics, music), John DuPrez (music), Christopher Luscombe (direction), Jenny Arnold (choreography), Hugh Durrant (production design), Nick Richings (lights), Terry Jardine (sound), and Tony Castro (music direction). The cast includes Marcus Brigstocke (King Arthur), Bonnie Langford (Lady of the Lake), Robin Armstrong (Bedevere), Robert Delaney (Robin), Adam Ellis (Herbert), Kit Ortoni (Lancelot), and Jon Robyns (Galahad).

Kieran Corcoran (What’s On Stage): Although it left much of the audience unscathed, a ghostly suggestion seems to haunt Spamalot, which returns to the West End after a three-year absence: perhaps Eric Idle’s acclaimed and award-winning “lovingly ripped off” Python musical just isn’t that funny anymore. … A peek at what a properly irreverent and fun musical might look like appears in the latter half, in the form of “You Won’t Succeed in Showbiz.” … On the downside, it has almost nothing to do with the rest of the narrative, to which the show slumps back for an unmemorable finale. I was excited about the return of Spamalot; it could have sounded a clarion call for kooky Britishness … but last night was more of a fart in my general direction. 2 stars.

Simon Edge (Express): I remain bemused that this proudly low-brow show, reliant on naughty words, silly names and putting grown men in frocks, was seen as the height of sophistication on Broadway where it swept the board at the Tony awards. With its one-joke songs that point up the flimsiness of the writing … and its colourful sets, it looks like a nicely made, heartily danced panto arriving in the wrong season.

Quentin Letts (Daily Mail): 3 out of 5 stars. Perhaps the funniest thing about the Monty Python comedy Spamalot, which has just been relaunched in the West End, is that it is now showing at the Harold Pinter Theatre. Morose old Harold playing host to the “knights who say ni”! This Camelot spoof is good fun, provided you are a Python person.  Some people find this sort of humour unbearable but I enjoy the silliness of sketches. … The one dud performance comes from Marcus Brigstocke as King Arthur. He can’t sing, walks woodenly and looks wildly self-conscious. Lord knows why they cast him. He is sharing the role with Jon Culshaw, who can only be better.

Jamie Tabberer (Entertainment Focus): 3 out of 5 stars. Not a Monty Python fan? I don’t blame you. But having seen with a totally open mind this revival … I must confess I did quite enjoy parts of it. But perhaps that says it all. … Countless reality TV and London 2012 references, plus a smorgasbord of effortlessly hilarious jokes made at Boris Johnson’s expense, are plonked in every few minutes. The result is funny, but it’s not quite the annoying, impenetrable sort of funny that Monty Python’s known and adored for. … The stagecraft and costumery is cheap and cartoonish, the cast’s combined singing ability pedestrian at best. Of course there’s charm to speak of therefore, akin to a regional pantomime or a ropey secondary school production.

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London Road: Review Roundup

The revival cast
of London Road.

The 2011 musical London Road returned to London’s National Theatre last week to overwhelmingly positive reviews for a limited summer revival. The creative team includes Alecky Blythe (book, lyrics), Adam Cork (lyrics, music, orchestration), Rufus Norris (direction), Katrina Lindsay (production design), James Farncombe (lights), David Shurbsole (music direction), Javier De Frutos (movement), and Paul Arditti (sound). Original cast members Clare Burt, Kate Fleetwood, Hal Fowler, Nick Holder, Claire Moore, Michael Shaeffer, Nicola Sloane, Paul Thornley and Duncan Wisbey are joined for this revival by James Doherty and Linzi Hateley.

Michael Coveney (What’s On Stage): Breaking every rule in the musical theatre book, London Road makes everyday speech remarkable by putting mere words in relief, finding rich patterns in the verbal wallpaper. And this makes for a still-riveting evening of theatre. … People talk of the curative powers of music, and in London Road the cast literally sing their way to living with the past and facing the future. Traditionally, musical theatre is about aspiration, triumphalism, falling in love and changing the world. This extraordinary piece concentrates on the ground level business of patching and mending and surviving and re-defines the priorities in our everyday lives in the aftermath of one almighty blip, the bane and banality of evil. Above all, it proves that we’re all in this together.

Sarah Milton (Upcoming): Adam Cork and Alecky Blythe’s music and lyrics are penned using natural speech rhythm from recorded interviews, but are still melodic and captivating. The characterization, supported by this clever use of rhythm and dialogue, is suspending. … The musical is astonishingly unique and hauntingly real. … I wouldn’t miss it, but don’t expect a musical. Expect a well-told, characterful and true story, supported by instruments and intelligent use of rhythm and a scary insight into human pressures and experience. Four stars.

Jane Shilling (Telegraph): 4 out of 5 stars. It should be an impossible marriage – the formal structures of music and the haphazard meanderings of colloquial speech. In fact it is the opposite: comic, perceptive and deeply touching. … Set to Adam Cork’s plangently melodic score, performed by a six-part band, London Road is a production of many beautifully calibrated parts. Exceptional design and lighting, outstanding performances by an ensemble cast and precision direction by Rufus Norris combine in a production that speaks eloquently about the human condition in all its messy tragi-comedy, while never straining for effect.

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In Memoriam: Mark O’Donnell

Yesterday, musical theater lost another unique voice. On Monday, librettist Mark O’Donnell died after collapsing in the lobby of his New York apartment. With co-writer Tom Meehan, O’Donnell crafted the books for musical adaptations of two John Waters films. The first, Hairspray (2002 with a score by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman) earned the librettists a Tony Award; the second, Cry-Baby (2008 with a score by David Javerbaum and Adam Schlesinger) earned them another Tony nomination.

I was fortunate to attend the Seattle tryout of Hairspray and was awed by the audience reaction. Indeed, the show became one of a select few musicals in recent memory to capture popular imagination so vividly, leading a wave of teen musicals from High School Musical (2006) to Glee (2009), not to mention the careers of Zac Efron (the film Link Larkin) and Matthew Morrison (the Broadway Link Larkin).

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In Memoriam: Marvin Hamlisch

On Monday, composer Marvin Hamlisch died in Los Angeles, after a brief illness. A “singular sensation” himself, Hamlisch won three Oscars, four Emmys, four Grammys (including one as Best New Artist), one Tony, plus the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. (The only other person to ever win those five awards was Richard Rodgers.) After some success in 1960s pop music, Hamlisch saw breakout success in 1974, with his Oscar hat trick for The Way We Were and The Sting, which revived interest in Scott Joplin and led to that composer’s Pulitzer recognition.

Hamlisch’s first Broadway score was A Chorus Line (1975), which not only secured his fame but also the future of Joe Papp’s Public Theater, the Shubert Organization, and Broadway itself, which was beginning to lose ground in Times Square to blue movies and exploitation flicks. The composer’s other theater scores include They’re Playing Our Song (1979 with Neil Simon and Carol Bayer Sager), Jean Seberg (1983 in London with Julian Barry and Christopher Adler), Smile (1986 with Howard Ashman), The Goodbye Girl (1993 with Neil Simon and David Zippel), and Sweet Smell of Success (2002 with John Guare and Craig Carnelia), for which he received his second Tony nomination. His latest show, The Nutty Professor (2012 with Rupert Holmes), just opened its Broadway tryout last week in Nashville.

I was fortunate to cross paths with Hamlisch twice. The first was in 2002, when I moderated a panel at New Dramatists with the three writers of Sweet Smell of Success; the second was in 2006, when I performed in Juilliard’s world premiere centennial commission of his song “Let Me Go Where’er I Will.” Both times, I was struck by how creatively generous and self-effacing he was.

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New LIT Fund

In February, Edward Albee and other Off-Off-Broadway luminaries joined Judith Malina at her Living Theatre, when the League of Independent Theater announced plans for its LIT Fund, to financially assist groups and individuals creating independent theater in New York City. That collective fundraising effort launched last week, when its members began contributing 5 cents from every ticket sold toward the fund’s seed money. For a list of contributing groups, visit LIT Fund’s Member Companies and Venues.

The funding process will evolve as the needs for the indie theater change. For Year One, money collected for the fund will be divided as follows: 20% to create an endowment, 20% to establish an Emergency Fund, 50% toward unrestricted funding and an annual group resource, and 10% to cover operating costs.

Inspired by the inaugural Indie Theater Convocation sponsored by Martin Denton’s New York Theatre Experience in April 2006, John Clancy, Paul Bargetto, and John Pinkard met to discuss creating a league for Off-Off-Broadway. They were joined by Shay Gines, Abby Marcus, Leonard Jacobs, Martin Denton, Erez Ziv and Robert Honeywell to create the League of Independent Theater in June 2006.

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Nutty Professor: Review Roundup

Michael Andrew (center)

The Broadway-bound musical The Nutty Professor, based on the 1963 Jerry Lewis film, made its world premiere last week at Nashville’s Polk Theater to enthusiastic out-of-town reviews. For the record, the creative team includes Rupert Holmes (book, lyrics), Marvin Hamlisch (music), Jerry Lewis (direction), JoAnn M. Hunter (choreography), David Gallo (sets), Ann Hould-Ward (costumes), David Weiner (lights), John Shiver and David Patridge (sound), and Tom Watson (wigs). The cast includes Michael Andrew (Julius Kelp/Buddy Love), Marissa McGowan (Stella Purdy), Mark Jacoby (Dr. Warfield), Klea Blackhurst (Miss Lemon), Jamie Ross (Harrington Winslow), and Ronnie Nelson (Norm Brodkowski).

Evans Donnell (Arts Nash): The Nutty Professor entertains in grand American musical comedy style. Broadway should want it – they’d be truly nutty to pass on this funny, charming show. … As with other new theater works there are components that aren’t essential. To avoid misunderstanding, I don’t think anything in The Nutty Professor as now presented is bad; theirs is an embarrassment of riches. … The Nutty Professor is a show that fondly embraces a Golden-Age-of-American-Musicals ethos; the entertaining journey we take with Julius Kelp and Stella Purdy is the optimistic theatrical trip we once took with such characters as J. Pierrepont Finch and Rosemary Pilkington from How to Succeed.

Jeffrey Ellis (Broadway World): A vibrantly told and visually stunning production … offers plenty of laughs to be certain, but perhaps surprisingly, there’s a whole lot of heart to be found in Rupert Holmes’ book, set tunefully to a classic Marvin Hamlisch score. … But the most noteworthy aspect of The Nutty Professor is, without danger of exaggeration, the amazing choreography of JoAnn M. Hunter. … It’s an old-fashioned, nostalgic homage to the very best of American musical theater without seeming at all derivative or redundant. … Should you go see The Nutty Professor? Without a doubt. You’ll want to tell the story of being on-hand for the start of a Broadway fable.

Mike Parker (Examiner): The Nutty Professor was an absolute delight, from start to finish, top to bottom and everywhere in-between. What was good about it? Well, just about everything: music, performances, dance numbers, set design, costume, etc. … The actors in The Nutty Professor were stellar. Michael Andrew in the iconic dual roles of Julius Kelp and Buddy Love channeled Lewis’s original performance to a T, and Marissa McGowan was simply adorable as the spunky Stella Purdy. … I have to throw out special kudos to choreographer JoAnn M. Hunter. The dancing, which really took center stage during the second act, was fun, flirty, and even sexy. … Bottom line: I loved this show.

Amy Stumpfl (Tennesseean): This charming musical may just have found the formula for future success on Broadway. … What is most astonishing is Andrew’s ability to maneuver back and forth between such distinctive characters. This quick-change artistry is impressive. … Marissa McGowan also is terrific as Stella Purdy, offering a sweet, but decidedly self-assured interpretation of the role. … But it is Klea Blackhurst who nearly steals the show as Miss Lemon. … JoAnn M. Hunter’s wildly imaginative choreography is simply dazzling, offering a nice balance between retro dance moves and more artistic influences. … Don’t miss it!

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Skippyjon Jones: Review Roundup

Austen Nash Boone

Last week at Off-Broadway’s Lucille Lortel, Theatreworks/USA opened its free summer show, the world premiere one-act musical Skippyjon Jones, based on the popular picture book series by Judy Schachner, to near-unanimous positive reviews. For the record, the creative team includes Kevin Del Aguila (book, lyrics), Eli Bolin (music), Peter Flynn (direction), Devanand Janki (choreography), Rob Odorisio (sets), Tracy Christensen (costumes), Jeff Croiter (lights), Carl Casella (sound), and Frank Galgano and Matt Castle (orchestration). The cast includes Austen Nash Boone (Skippyjon Jones), Jose Restrepo, Veronica Reyes, Gabrielle Ruiz, and Graham Stevens.

Joe Dziemianowicz (N.Y. Daily News): 3 out of 4 stars. On the surface this one-hour show for kids 4 and up is simply a kicky tale of a big-eared Siamese cat who’d rather be a Chihuahua. But look closer and themes resonate about acceptance and being comfy in your own skin, er, fur. Either way, it’s light and bright and scampers along thanks to five game actors and a litter of lively songs … harmonizing pups declaring, all too accurately, “We are Chihuahuas! Yap! Yap! We’re macho and mean. In purses and handbags we ride.”

Laurel Graeber (N.Y. Times): Adults may fear that they’re about to be trapped in an hourlong Taco Bell commercial. But Skippyjon Jones offers far more rewards, even if it does involve Chihuahuas with exaggerated Spanish accents. … Del Aguila’s witty lyrics … are well matched by Eli Bolin’s multitextured score. … The young actors nimbly portray multiple roles – and species. And, refreshingly, this is one family entertainment where you don’t have to root for either cats or dogs. Only that greedy insect gets a bad rep.

Andy Propst (Theater Mania): Little ones learn some important lessons about the power of the imagination and accepting others for who they are in Skippyjon Jones. … With a breezy book and gag-filled lyrics by Kevin Del Aguila and a deliciously giddy Latin-infused score by Eli Bolin, the show also proves to be a great deal of fun … for theatergoers of all ages. … Under the direction of Peter Flynn, and featuring lively dances by choreographer Devanand Janki, the company rips into the material with gleeful abandon.

Frank Scheck (N.Y. Post): This summer’s free offering from Theatreworks/USA deserves a hearty olé! … The hourlong show features a tuneful, Latin-flavored score by Eli Bolin and genuinely witty lyrics by Kevin Del Aguila: “We are Chihuahas! Yap yap! We’re macho and mean. In purses and handbags we ride. Aie-Yie Mighty Chihuahuas! We’re hyper and lean and Mexico’s where we reside.” … The show will delight small kids without boring adult chaperones. Best of all, tickets are free.

Sam Thielman (Back Stage): Once upon a time there was a beautiful Kevin Del Aguila–Eli Bolin score that lived with some embarrassing direction. … Peter Flynn doesn’t have much use for the non-imaginary parts of the show, and it shows. The scenes in the “real” world have that painful cuteness that lards kids’ TV, but they give way to the confused Siamese mindscape quickly enough. … Skippyjon Jones goes a bean joke too far on more than one occasion. The kids will have a ball anyway.

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Last Smoker: Review Roundup

Farah Alvin

The new one-act musical The Last Smoker in America, which had its world premiere in 2010 at Contemporary American Theatre Company in Columbus, opened Off-Broadway last night to weak reviews. For the record, the creative team is Bill Russell (book, lyrics), Peter Melnick (music), Andy Sandberg (direction), AC Ciulla (choreography), Fred Lassen (music direction, orchestration), Charlie Corcoran (sets), Michael McDonald (costumes), Jeff Croiter and Grant Yeager (lights), and Bart Fasbender (sound). The cast includes John Bolton (Ernie), Farah Alvin (Pam), Jake Boyd (Jimmy), and Natalie Venetia Belcon (Phyllis).

Suzy Evans (Back Stage): Smoking is the least of the “evils” in Bill Russell and Peter Melnick’s The Last Smoker in America, a one-note satirical musical about what might happen if government regulation went to extremes. … At least the cast is inherently likable, and the actors give full-out, endearing performances, despite the one-dimensional characters they portray. … The Last Smoker in America is a cri de coeur against governmental regulation. The market, of course, self-regulates, and that’s exactly what word of mouth is likely to do for this shallow musical.

Melissa Maerz (Entertainment Weekly): All of this could have made for a very of-the-moment satire, especially at a time when health crusaders are rallying to outlaw everything from trans-fats to oversized soft drinks. But the jokes feel hopelessly outdated, with nods to Riverdance, emo music, goat cheese, political correctness, and other trends that haven’t felt relevant since the 1990s. Even the music belongs to another era. … Of course, maybe this is all part of the joke. If critics get insulted, then the musical has proven its point: America’s just way too uptight. C+

Andy Propst (Theater Mania): The show has a cute – and even timely – enough premise. … It’s the sort of idea with all the heightened details that could make for an amusing improv sketch, but Russell has stretched the premise to the breaking point, never building any real dramatic tension into the tale that supports 90 minutes of stage action. … When Russell’s book settles into a sort of genial sitcom mode, it actually can be charming, and Melnick has turned out a couple of lovely ballads … in this sadly underwhelming tuner.

Catherine Rampell (N.Y. Times): The Last Smoker in America has the spark of a smokin’-hot new musical, but a soggy book keeps it from ever fully igniting. … Peter Melnick’s pop-rock score is terrific, with multiple catchy melodies that will stick in your head like peanut butter. Bill Russell’s lyrics have their moments too. … The script … is the critically weak link. … Many of the book’s flaws have been papered over with what appears to be suitcases of cash … but bling, exploding robots, a colonial marching band and assorted prop gags can plug only so many plot holes.

Steven Suskin (Variety): The hysterically funny premise turns out, once onstage, to be resolutely not. The authors … are both men of talent; chalk it up as a bad idea gone worse. Buried in the mess are two songs with music worth salvaging, “Hangin’ Out in a Smoky Bar” and “You’re the Only Friend I’ve Got.” But that’s about it. The cast of four give it their all. … John Bolton, as the father, is the only one who comes out looking good. … Farah Alvin tries her darndest in an impossible role, while the other two Equity members have some embarrassing things to do and say.

Linda Winer (Newsday): Four talented actors mug and shriek through this belabored would-be satire about a time when smokers are jailed and their spouses fired for carrying the smell of tobacco on their clothes. … The show is only 90 minutes, but is loaded with stereotypes and padded with tangential scenes and songs that could well be plugged into many other musicals. … Andy Sandberg’s direction is as broad as the material, though AC Ciulla’s choreography does support some amusing production numbers.

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Bring It On: Review Roundup

Taylor Louderman (center)

After a yearlong tour that began at the Alliance Theater in Atlanta, the new musical Bring It On, inspired by the 2000 film written by Jessica Bendinger and its sequels, opened last night on Broadway to reviews that ranged from polite to positive. For the record, the creative team is Jeff Whitty (book), Lin-Manuel Miranda (lyrics, music), Amanda Green (lyrics), Tom Kitt (music, orchestration), Alex Lacamoire (orchestration), Andy Blankenbuehler (direction, choreography), David Korins (sets), Andrea Lauer (costumes) Jason Lyons (lights), Brian Ronan (sound), Jeff Sugg (video), Charles G. LaPointe (hair, wigs), and Dave Pepin (music direction).

The cast includes Taylor Louderman (Campbell), Adrienne Warren (Danielle), Jason Gotay (Randall), Elle McLemore (Eva), Ryann Redmond (Bridget), Ariana DeBose (Nautica), Gregory Haney (La Cienega), Neil Haskell (Steven), Dominique Johnson (Cameron), Janet Krupin (Kylar), Kate Rockwell (Skylar) and Nicolas Womack (Twig).

Dan Bacalzo (Theater Mania): This new tuner features some amazing routines by director/choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler that are likely to have the audience cheering the musical’s vibrant young cast. … Whitty plays around with several film and musical tropes, but recombines them in some surprisingly fresh ways. … The show’s [songs] go back and forth between musical pop sounds and hip-hop rhythms to immediately showcase the differences between Campbell’s two schools. Similarly, Blankenbuehler’s choreographic vocabulary is attuned to the different movement styles of these two student populations. … Ultimately, it’s those numbers – with girls flung high into the air, boys doing amazing flips, and everyone moving to the show’s pulsating and infectious beats – that audiences will most remember.

Joe Dziemianowicz (N.Y. Daily News): The show brings a lot to like: A crew of talented Broadway newbies, a blast of infectious feel-good and, most memorably, dazzling dancing and cheering-squad routines. Indeed, the show nails it whenever it’s in motion. Simply singing, it’s more standard fare. … The book is another story … which shows a keen ear for teen-speak, is topical, toothy and consistently giggle-inducing. … Bring It On doesn’t break new ground, but it kept me smiling. Sometimes pretty silly – and very acrobatic – is enough.

Elysa Gardner (USA Today): 3 of out 4 stars. Librettist Jeff Whitty, a Tony Award winner for Avenue Q, and his equally accomplished collaborators cared enough to craft an original story with new characters, rather than simply rehash the film while making snarky jokes at its expense. … The newly crafted heroine, Campbell, though played with a nice balance of sweetness and spine by Taylor Louderman, is pretty much a stock ingénue, belting out forgettable, pop-flavored songs. … Director/choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler, abetted by “cheer consultant” Jessica Colombo, has provided exuberantly acrobatic routines. … In cheerleading, as in all feel-good entertainment, enthusiasm counts for a lot.

Erik Haagensen (Back Stage): Whitty’s generic script is full of predictably sassy one-liners and types rather than characters. It regularly grinds to a halt so that director-choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler can whip out yet another cheerleading routine; these are impressively athletic at first but grow increasingly repetitive as the show progresses. Tony Award-winning composers Tom Kitt and Lin-Manuel Miranda have joined forces on the music, with Amanda Green and Miranda providing the lyrics. It’s a lot of firepower for such a lightweight result, but the songs are never less than pleasant if rather interchangeable. The bright young cast works hard for its money.

Charles Isherwood (N.Y. Times): While it has its moments of memorable wit and some appealing rhythmic Broadway-pop songs, Bring It On … has the feel of a daffy lark embarked upon as a summer-vacation goof. … While the musical is “inspired” by the film, it is by no means a stage facsimile of it. Aside from the title and the cheerleading, the musical is almost wholly original, if you can call original a show that relies so blithely on the familiar formulas (and clichés) of fictional depictions of adolescence. … It’s when the cast members drop the bonding and the mean-girl bitching to take part in Mr. Blankenbuehler’s exciting cheerleading routines, arranging themselves into dazzling human starbursts, that Bring It On really brings something fresh to the ever-expanding roster of shows aimed at the teenage demographic.

Michael Musto (Village Voice): Four Tony winners have collaborated on a show that’s so light it’s almost as if Picasso got to work on an Etch-a-Sketch. … The sets – lockers and beams, plus moving panels with images projected on them – busily try to conceal the lack of a big budget. Director/choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler’s staging throws s-p-i-r-i-t in your face, with lots of people lifting other people at regular intervals. And the plot – complete with an obligatory she-messed-up twist – has draggy stretches, but when the humor clicks, it brings on spoofy amusement. Teenage girls and their moms will probably enjoy this glorified trifle. But it took four Tony winners?

David Rooney (Hollywood Reporter): It should prove a crowdpleaser with the target demographic. Is the show destined for a place in the musical-theater pantheon? Unlikely. But it scores points by reinventing rather than replicating the source material, sampling from a tasty selection of pop-cultural favorites. And the sheer athleticism of the event numbers … provides enough genuine thrills to compensate for the stop-start storytelling. … Director-choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler … packages the material into an affectionate salute to the joys and pains of high school and amps up the electricity where it matters most – in the dance numbers.

Steven Suskin (Variety): The tuner remains airborne often enough to overcome several obstacles along the way, starting with overly familiar plotting and characters. Strong performances from a personable cast, athletically impressive staging and an engaging score combine to make Bring It On a pert and refreshing summer surprise. … The show displays a low pulse through much of the first act, despite several acrobatic displays of cheerleading flips and twirls. Once the heroine switches schools, though, the pace quickens, as does audience interest. Things finally spring to life after 45 minutes or so.

Elizabeth Vincentelli (N.Y. Post): 2-1/2 out of 4 stars. Inspired by the movie, Bring It On is filled with energetic feats of cheerleading, but falls short with a clichéd plot. … No need for a spoiler alert: There will be a reckoning between the two schools at Nationals. By the end, “Omigod, everyone’s gone through all this, like, personal growth.” … Life on the road has gelled the cast, which is likable and very tight. The actors even make most of the time-wasting ponderous songs – and there’s a lot of those in the slow second act – feel semi-bearable. Between them and those gymnastics, Bring It On pulls off a decent landing.

Linda Winer (Newsday): This is a harmless entertainment … but for all the positive messages and appealing contributions from these new-generation pedigrees, the hero of the show must surely be director-choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler, who turned theater-trained singers and dancers into confident acrobats and real-life competitive cheerleaders into believable characters. … The clichés come with twists, thanks to the cleverness of the hip creative team. And the twists tumble in on piles of human pyramids.

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