
The current RENT tour, which stars original cast members Adam Pascal, Anthony Rapp and Gwen Stewart, comes to a close today in Sacramento, CA after 373 performances in 39 cities.

The current RENT tour, which stars original cast members Adam Pascal, Anthony Rapp and Gwen Stewart, comes to a close today in Sacramento, CA after 373 performances in 39 cities.
Here’s a roundup of reviews for the current Encores! production of Fanny.
Andy Propst at Theatremania: From the moment it begins, there’s a palpable sense of gentleness and delicacy…. [I]t’s essentially impossible to not be entranced by this delectable and neglected musical theater gem…. Both [Fred Applegate and George Hearn] deliver their songs with not only strength, but genuine warmth, and together they share a genial comic chemistry that radiates throughout the theater. As the young lovers, (Elena) Shaddow and (James) Snyder deliver powerhouse vocal performances. She rips into some of Rome’s most soaring numbers with a remarkably clear soprano; while Snyder’s vocals… resound with intensity.
Michael Sommors at New Jersey News Room: Crafted in the Golden Age of Broadway’s classic manner… Fanny rarely gets a hearing these days…. [I]t’s a pleasure to see the dear old thing again…. Under Marc Bruni’s smooth direction, first-class artists generate a good deal of magic. Genuine warmth can be seen in the growing bond between [Elena] Shaddow’s sweet, unassertive Fanny and [Fred] Applegate’s good-hearted Panisse. [James] Snyder makes an ardent Marius and George Hearn portrays his crusty dad with a twinkle. Taking a break from In the Heights, longtime Montclair resident Priscilla Lopez tartly depicts Fanny’s semi-fishwife of a mother.
Charles Isherwood at The New York Times: [T]hose susceptible to Broadway musicals in which doomed romance is set to soaring melody may find themselves getting a little choked up…. [T]he enduring charms of Fanny are affectionately showcased in this beautifully sung staging, directed by Marc Bruni…. Both [Elena] Shaddow and [James] Snyder make the most of their somewhat sketchy roles…. Shaddow could easily pass for French and has a soprano of lovely warmth and agility…. Mr. Snyder [is] also possessed of a gorgeous voice…. [George] Hearn is a welcome presence… in solid if not stentorian voice…. [T]he Encores! orchestra plays with its customary vigor and warmth.
Steven Suskin at Variety: Fans of lush, romantic, big-voiced musical comedy of the mid-20th century should plan a quick trip to the Encores! staging of Fanny…. [Harold] Rome – thus far known for snappily satirical songs of social significance – came up with a surprisingly romantic, if overly bounteous, score. Where Fanny faltered was in the absence of Hammerstein’s bookwriting and plot-crafting talents. [Fred] Applegate takes acting honors with his charming performance as the not-duped husband…. [Elena] Shaddow comes across fine, as does [James] Snyder.
Joe Dziemianowicz at the Daily News: If there was a compelling reason to drag Fanny out of musical mothballs, it never materializes at City Center…. what’s so striking about Mark Bruni’s stodgy staging is its failure to establish a sense of place. Marseilles? In France? Right? There’s no sense of that here. Pourquoi? Bruni doesn’t create a cohesive mood either. But even a more experienced director would struggle with that due to the show’s hodgepodge construction…. Elena Shaddow nails all her notes without hammering much emotion…. Fred Applegate… tilts too often toward easy laughs. It’s not that kind of show. As Cesar, the father of the boy Fanny loves, George Hearn… is ho-hum bland.
Erik Haagensen at Backstage: As a work of art, Fanny aspires more than it succeeds…. The wan Encores! concert version manages neither…. Encores! has inexplicably cast the fine supporting character actor Fred Applegate as Panisse. Though he seems to understand more than anyone else on stage just who his character is and gives the most honest performance, the uninventive Applegate lacks the star power necessary to elevate the character to the required level…. George Hearn’s perfunctory Cesar is charm-deficient…. The rest of the principals are undone by director Marc Bruni’s callow, tone-deaf direction.
So it seems you’ll either love it or hate it – nothing about this production falls somewhere in between for this group of critics.
Purchases from Amazon.com
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. Fanny 1954 Original Broadway Cast Recording CD.

There will be a tour of Broadway’s current incarnation of West Side Story starting in October this year. This production, which features the classic score by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, was directed by its librettist, Arthur Laurents. Much of the original Jerome Robbins choreography was restaged by Joey McKneely.
The tour will open at The Fisher Theatre in Detroit and further stops will be announced by the producers at a later date.
Purchases from Amazon.com
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. West Side Story 2009 Broadway Revival Cast Recording CD.
2. West Side Story Complete Script (side by side with Romeo and Juliet).
3. West Side Story Complete Vocal Score.
The previously announced fundraising gala, during which Angela Lansbury will receive the inaugural Signature Theatre Sondheim Award, will include tribute performances by Jason Danieley, Sherri L. Edelen, Victor Garber and Marin Mazzie.
Of their involvement in the event, the Signature Theatre’s Artistic Director, Eric Schaeffer, said:
It’s really wonderful to have these four amazingly talented artists come to the Sondheim Gala to perform in honor of Angela Lansbury, the first lady of Sondheim musicals. Victor, Marin, Jason and Sherri will give her a salute like none other!
Tickets for the event, which takes place on 12 April, can be reserved by visiting the Signature Theatre website and following the instructions found there.
The City Center Encores! production of S. N. Behrman, Joshua Logan and Harold Rome’s Fanny, directed by Mark Bruni with choreography by Lorin Latarro opened tonight for a run through 7 February. The cast includes Elena Shaddow (Fanny), Fred Applegate (Panisse), George Hearn (Cesar), David Patrick Kelly (The Admiral), Priscilla Lopez (Honorine), Michael McCormick (Escartifique), James Snyder (Marius) and Ted Sutherland (Cesario).
Playbill has presented a photo gallery of pictures from the show. You can see them all by following the link, but here’s my favourite of the bunch.

Purchases from Amazon.com
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. Fanny 1954 Original Broadway Cast Recording CD.
So here it is, the titular tune from the sequel to Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera, Love Never Dies:
Hang on a second you say – that sounds familiar! Well, of course it does. The song was first announced as a song for the The Phantom of the Opera sequel in 1998, but with the title “The Heart is Slow to Learn”. For the sake of comparison:
Of course, when the project didn’t take off back then, the song was incorporated into The Beautiful Game, as “Our Kind of Love”. Here’s a version of the song – in Hungarian, unfortunately, but you get the idea:
One of the highlights of that show, it seemed strange when it was excised from the score when the show was revised to become The Boys in the Photograph. Now I guess we all know why it happened…
In an interview with the Las Vegas Review Journal, Jerry Lewis said that he was hoping that the stage musical adaptation of The Nutty Professor, with book and lyrics by Rupert Holmes and music by Marvin Hamlisch, is aiming for a Broadway opening in October or November this year. Lewis, who will direct the show, also had the following to say:
I’m bringing a helluva goddamn show to Broadway. It’s going to be a blast. It’s unbelievable…. I’d love to get the Marquis Theater on Broadway. It’s where I did Damn Yankees in the mid-1990s. I’m directing the show in a manner in which you need space.
Lewis, of course, has an intimate history with the The Nutty Professor, having co-written the original film with Bill Richmond and starring in the titular role. The original is a classic and was remade as a vehicle for Eddie Murphy. One presumes – with more than a modicum of thanks – that the musical takes its inspiration solely from the earlier film. The Murphy vehicle, whilst popular and spawning a sequel of its own, was a crass and over-the-top take on the material. Film remakes like that snap into focus America’s sometimes almost obsessive nostalgia for the past and the art that was created in days gone by.
Purchases from Amazon.com
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. The Nutty Professor 1963 Film on DVD.
2. The Nutty Professor 2008 Animated Sequel on DVD.
The Grammy Awards were presented last night and West Side Story, the classic Broadway musical by Arthur Laurents, Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, took home the awards for “Best Musical Show Album”, winning over Ain’t Misbehavin’, Hair, 9 to 5 and Shrek. The album, which includes the songs translated into Spanish for the revival (most notably “Me Siento Hermosa” and “Un Hombre Asi”), is really only second to the original 1957 Broadway cast album when it comes to recordings of the show, which have been discussed previously here at Musical Cyberspace.
Congratulations West Side Story!
Purchases from Amazon.com
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
1. West Side Story 1957 Original Broadway Cast Recording CD.
2. West Side Story 2009 Broadway Revival Cast Recording.
Disney returns to its roots with this release of The Princess and the Frog, the first of its kind since Home on the Range in 2004. For too long, the studio proper has languished in the domain of CGI features that simply don’t measure up to those produced in collaboration with Pixar, even less impressive DisneyToon features and – at the bottom of the barrel – the seemingly endless stream of direct-to-video prequels and sequels. As such, The Princess and the Frog has been set up as something of a renaissance movie, akin to Cinderella in 1950 (which saw the studio’s post-war return to feature animation) and The Little Mermaid in 1989 (which saw the start of a new “Golden Age” for Disney animation).
The film tells the story of Tiana, a young black woman who dreams of opening her own restaurant. A great deal stands in her way, but she is tenacious to the point of denying herself even the smallest of pleasures in life. Things are complicated even further when a foreign prince (Prince Naveen of Maldonia), a voodoo magician (Doctor Facilier) and a curse are thrown into the mix. Offering a twist on the fairy tale of “The Frog Prince” (courtesy of The Frog Princess E. D. Baker), when Tiana kisses the amphibian version of Prince Naveen, she turns into a frog herself and a quest is started so that the pair can become human again. Along the way, the rack up a number of allies – Louis, a trumpet-playing alligator and Ray, a lovesick Cajun firefly – and visit Mama Odie, a blind voodoo priestess who serves as a kind of “Wizard-ess of Oz” as they travel down not a yellow brick road, but a murky river in the swamps near New Orleans.
The “Oz” reference might seem a little obscure, but it points to the main weakness in the storytelling. While invested with charm and a whole lot of energy, there’s something textbook about the proceedings and parts of the film – particularly in the middle – are weighed down by a lack of spontaneity, feeling as though they are recycled from other stories we’ve heard before. Twists in the narrative – and there are a few – lock heads with this sensibility and it’s ultimately more than a little frustrating. Of course, there’s nothing new under the sun, but Disney’s greatest storytelling triumphs have been making the stories appear as if they are being told to us for the first time. Marketing aside, that’s the reason why so many times “the Disney version” becomes the definitive version.
That quibble aside, there is a lot on offer in The Princess and the Frog: the main characters are largely memorable and the voice work is appealing. Tiana is motivated and, in an age where princess entitlement seems to be the largest transferable quality when it comes to the little girls of today, it’s great to see her working hard for her dreams and to see that, even with a little help, that forms the basis of her success by the end of the story. Disney princes have almost all come under fire for being wooden, but this cannot be said of Prince Naveen whose modus operandi is to behave in as unprincely a fashion as possible.
As respective representatives of the two sides of the voodoo coin, Doctor Facilier and Mama Odie do the job. Although Facilier is perhaps more serviceable than truly threatening, his presence creates a springboard for a host of really scary supporting characters – the spirits that hover under his precarious command of them – and an surreal and stylised animation sequence that recalls the Disney of the 1940s. Mama Odie is altogether more satisfying on the whole, quirky like Cinderella’s Fairy Godmother but who tells you not what you want to hear, but what you need to hear. Now that’s a refreshing take on stock character of the fairy tale genre.
As for the sidekicks, Louis is a great deal of fun and his antics enhance much of the film’s considerable comedic elements. And it is a testament to the storyteller’s efforts that Ray, surely a contender for one of the most annoying Disney sidekicks in the studio’s history, is still able to elicit some sympathy for his plight – and his fate.
The animation seemed a bit hit-and-miss to me. Some of the visuals are breathtakingly beautiful, others seem to be little better than the best moments in the Disneytoon or direct-to-video releases. Perhaps its not in the animation itself, then, but in the draftsmanship and there was something in particular about the way the colours were shaded, I think, in some sequences that made me pause for thought. At a push, I’d say it lacked subtely or that perhaps it looked too digital. I’m not certain what it is, but something didn’t quite gel for me.
The element I’ve left for last in this review is Randy Newman’s song score. Let’s get the Alan Menken comparison out of the way first. No, it’s not The Little Mermaid or Beauty and the Beast. Newman just doesn’t seem be as dexterous or as melodic as Menken. The songs in The Princess and the Frog are driven primarily by rhythm rather than melody. That doesn’t mean they’re bad, nor does it mean they are not memorable. “Almost There” and “Dig a Little Deeper” are probably the pick of the bunch; “When We’re Human” and “Gonna Take you There” are a good bit of fun; and while it’s no “Poor Unfortunate Souls”, “Friends on the Other Side” certainly provides the foundation for some super visuals.
What didn’t work for me was “Down in New Orleans”. The song provides a great opening and finale to the film when segments are performed by Tiana, but the full version early on in the film lost something for me because of it’s performance by a disembodied voice. Perhaps if it had all been presented by an impartial narrator, the consistency of the convention would have held it together. Even better, Newman should have found a way to make the characters sing New Orleans to life. That would have been something to see and hear.
So is The Princess and the Frog the renaissance movie Disney fans hope it will be? Well, I hope it sets a precedent for further traditionally animated films – for better ones too. It’s not a film that ranks amongst the best of Disney’s best, but it is solidly crafted and largely entertaining despite a few shortcomings – and as Disney has basically had to reinvent their 2-D animation department to bring this film to fruition, perhaps we can extend a little generosity in the hope that this rebuilding process continues long after the sun has set down in the bayou.
Oscar Nominations…
This past year, the musical was represented on screen by the adaptation of Nine and Disney’s first traditionally animated film musical in a long time, The Princess and the Frog. Both have picked up a couple of nominations for the Academy Awards, which will be presented next month at the Kodak Theatre at the Hollywood and Highland Center.
The over-hyped and, it seems, almost universally underwhelming Nine picked up four nominations: Best Supporting Actress (Penélope Cruz), Best Art Direction (John Myhre); Best Costume Design (Colleen Atwood); and Best Original Song (Maury Yeston’s “Take It All”). The design nominations are no surprise really, perhaps the others aren’t either. But where is Marion Cotillaird’s nomination? If anyone in the cast of Nine deserved to walk away with a nomination for Nine, it’s her. What a disappointment – and just another mark against the credibility of the Oscars.
The Princess and the Frog scored nominations for Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song (Randy Newman’s “Almost There” and “Down in New Orleans”). While Disney is not quite in top form with this film, it’s represented a welcome return to a genre of animation that has been sorely missed during the past decade or so.