A New Director for THE ADDAMS FAMILY

A few days ago, Michael Riedel mentioned in his column at The New York Post that the producers of The Addams Family would be bringing in a new director to help shape up the show for its Broadway opening.

Now it’s been confirmed and the man named for the job is Jerry Zaks, who will take over the reins from Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch. Well, not exactly. At this point in time, it appears that McDermott and Crouch will retain their title as co-directors of the show, with Zaks as a creative consultant, in his own words, to “take this original musical to the next level.”

Critics in Chicago gave the show a mixed reception, expressing a hope that things would will come together before the show opens on Broadway. In a statement to The New York Times, while apparently “at pains… to emphasize that the show was not in trouble”, producer Stuart Oken said that:

(The feedback from critics, colleagues and friends) is that perhaps we were taking a little too much for granted assuming that the audience walks in with the relationship with the Addams family fully intact, and we didn’t appropriately reconnect the audience to the family members.

This was, of course, not the only problem identified by critics in reviews of the show, but I guess we’ll see come April 2010 what Zaks has brought to the table and whether he pushes it in the direction of his previous hit productions of Guys and Dolls and Smokey Joe’s Café in the 1990s or his misfires since the dawn of Y2K, Little Shop of Horrors and La Cage Aux Folles.

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Lillias White in FELA!

Lillias White in FELA!

Lillias White in FELA!

According to just about all of the critics, seasoned musical theatre singer-sctress Lillias White is currently delivering a stunning performance in the role of Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s mother, Funmilayo, embracing both the Pan-African performance style and the conventions of a traditional Broadway performance that are combined in this eclectic show. Playbill recently ran a lovely interview with the actress who, along with the show itself, should offer some stiff competition to other actresses alongside whom she will surely be nominated come Tony time. Some of the highlights:

Question: Before getting the role and doing this production, did you know much about Fela?
White: I was familiar with his music, and I knew that he had been an activist back in the day, but I did not know about his mother at all.

Question: Did you do much research into the role?
White: There’s a book called For Women and the Nation, and it is about Funmilayo. It is about her life and how she grew up and the things that she did in her lifetime to help the women in Nigeria. I did as much research as I could online. There was not a tremendous amount on her online, but I researched her as much as I could. I read whatever I could get my hands on.

Question: Was there anything that stood out to you as particularly memorable as you were learning about her?
White: Mainly that she was pretty stern. She was a pretty stern, strict mother, which I try to be…. I don’t know how successful I’ve been with that, but anyways… She really loved Fela. She loved his spirit. Some people may even say that he was her favorite of all her children.

Question: In the first song you imitate the vocal sounds of the region. How did you go about getting that sound?
White: Honey, I live in Harlem. We have lots of Africans in Harlem from every part of Africa. Africa’s a very, very big place. Here in Harlem we have people from all over the African Diaspora. So I’m really good at accents, and I’ve been studying the Nigerian accent and different accents all my life, so I just kind of picked it up. I got some help from a Nigerian buddy who was friends with Fela.

Question: The second number is so great and powerful. What’s it like doing that song in the second act every night?
White: It’s pretty intense. There’s a lot of energy that’s created with those moments in that particular part of the show. There’s a lot of prayer going on, prayer to the African god…. There’s chanting going on, there’s a lot of movement going on, and it’s a very intense moment. The energy in the air, where I’m sitting up there, is very intense. It’s not fun and games up there. It’s very serious. I take it very seriously.

The full interview is an interesting read, looking at her audition process, the research she did for the role and her performance in the show, as well as anecdotes about other shows in which White has performed. Use the link above to get there – and enjoy it!

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The New AMERICAN IDIOT Single


American Idiot Single

The cast of American Idiot has recorded a single version of the song “21 Guns”, which was produced by Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong. It’s be available for download at many places, one of them being Amazon.com.

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Scott Thomas Out, Scacchi In

The upcoming production of A Little Night Music in Paris loses one Desiree and gains another as Kristin Scott Thomas bows out because of a foot injury and Greta Scacchi signs on to play the fading actress in Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler’s classic musical.

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NEWSFLASH: Seth Rudetsky Interviews Maury Yeston

Maury Yeston

Above: Maury Yeston

Seth Rudetsky has written about Nine in his latest “Onstage and Backstage” column at Playbill. If you scroll down past the Christmas Eve story, you’ll find an interview with Maury Yeston – not much new here if you’ve been following the press trail for the film – and a talk through of the premiere.

Yeston does make one interesting point about the film later on in the interview:

Maury had a great point about when people ask him how he can support changes in the script or the score. They’ll say “Are you OK with what they’ve done to your musical?” and he says “They haven’t done anything to my musical. The musical has stayed the same. This is the film.”

Well now that’s a backhanded compliment if ever I heard one…

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Musicals on Brantley’s 2009 Top 10 List

Ben Brantley, of whom I’m no fan in particular, named two musicals in a list of his Top 10 shows of 2009: Fela! and Next to Normal. I’d be more inclined to accept the nod to these shows, which I think both deserve a spot on lists such as these, as genuine kudos for the respective productions if Brantley didn’t write quite so many silly things in his reviews. Nevertheless, sincere congratulations to those involved in these two productions!

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New Minimalist Production of CAMELOT

The trend towards pared down productions that somehow supposedly enhance the audience’s insight into the show continues; this time with a new production of Camelot by the Pasadena Playhouse. From Playbill:

“David Lee…has a fresh and exciting take on the material that will give the show new vitality and a much stronger dramatic focus,” stated Pasadena Playhouse artistic director Sheldon Epps. “I am very pleased that we will be collaborating on this timeless musical, which could not be more timely than at this very moment in our country’s history.”

Lee explained in production notes, “In the previous incarnations of Camelot there has always been an emphasis on pageantry, big sets, stunning costumes with lots of armor and ladies in pointy hats, a large chorus of singers and dancers, funny mythical characters and even a dog; much of this to stunning effect. But even though the story has large philosophical resonance, it really is a rather small tale about the relationship among three human beings – Arthur, Guenevere and Lancelot. A couple of years ago, just for fun, I went through the script and eliminated everything that did not contribute directly to telling their story. What I was left with was the same beautifully written tale, but one that now seemed more direct, clearer and more emotionally accessible. Plus it was shortened enough that I could afford to add back music that is often cut.”

At least Camelot is a somewhat flawed musical to begin with, so the adaptation is perhaps more justifiable. I’d be interested to see what is cut and what is restored. I’d also very interested to see how it will be designed. It’s ironic: a minimalist production would seem to take the emphasis off of the design elements, but the more minimalist productions you see, the more you realise how much more difficult it is to make the production compelling visually; thus, the role of the designer takes on, perhaps, even more importance than it did before.

Let’s hope that David Lee has learned from the mistakes of some recent productions that have embraced this trend, to varying degrees: the current minimalist revival of A Little Night Music, which misses the fuller orchestrations of the original and features a set that perhaps doesn’t serve the show as well as it should; Signature’s recent Show Boat, which thought it was a big deal because it didn’t have a boat, but which ultimately looked ugly and actually didn’t reveal any depths of the show that had hitherto evaded the theatrically literate; and the currently running revival of Ragtime, which substitutes the original production’s opulence for an approach that supposedly made for a more emotionally honest experience despite its still considerable size, making use of a large, single set that doesn’t quite work all the way through and creates some awkward staging moments that Marcia Milgrom Dodge (whose repetitive, lacklustre choreography can’t hold a candle to the work done on the original production by Graciela Daniele) can’t seem to solve and a cast that doesn’t even come close to banishing the memory of the uniformly superior original Broadway company.

So, Mr Lee, I hope you’ve got those notes: get a good orchestra with great orchestrations, a clever designer and an excellent cast. Otherwise you might find your audiences yearning for “one brief shining moment” from some Camelot of the past instead of being transported to the kingdom you’ve envisioned for your new “revisal” of this classic show.

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THE ADDAMS FAMILY on Stage Tube

BroadwayWorld’s “Stage Tube” has posted a video clip of a report dealing with the opening night of The Addams Family, showing the shortest of clips from the visually vibrant show. The clip then offers us with an interesting perspective on how the arts can help surrounding businesses thrive in spite of the current economy. I’m glad somebody’s noticed – may the trend continue and the importance of the arts to our society never be forgotten!

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More PROMISES, PROMISES Revival Casting

Playbill has offered up some new casting information for the upcoming revival of Promises, Promises:

Brooks Ashmanskas – Mr. Dobitch
Katie Finneran – Marge MacDougall
Tony Goldwyn – J.D. Sheldrake

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101 DALMATIANS: Video Clips and Photos

Playbill has up a gallery of photos from the touring 101 Dalmatians musical. Two of the shots – you can check out the complete gallery by clicking the link above:

101 Dalmatians

101 Dalmatians

I’m sorry, but it looks just awful. The stilts don’t look as if they create a decent sense of perspective at all, unless there’s a lot of lighting to help it along, as there is in the second shot above – and even then it sort of looks like she’s flying! But it looks absolutely ridiculous in the first picture.

BroadwayWorld also has put up video footage of various bits and pieces from the show. Poor Rachel York. What did she do to get stuck doing some second rate tour of what looks like a third rate musical, albeit one based on a classic children’s novel and which is able to trade off of the reputation of a classic family film? All right, let’s be generous – it does look like first rate children’s theatre – but does anyone want to tell me why we’re hearing so many American accents for a story set in London and why a score that surely should use period pastiche sounds, in the sections involving the dogs at least, like those “pop single” versions of classic Disney songs that appear as extras on that studio’s special edition DVDs?

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