AMERICAN IDIOT Review Roundup

Time for a review roundup of the San Francisco run of American Idiot:

Positive

Jay Barmann at SFist: The music is urgent, driving, and loud. Whatever you feel about Green Day, there’s a theatricality and consistent narrative element to their music that lends itself well to staging, and it’s accomplished in this show with a lot of art and only a little of the cheesiness that many associate with musicals. The story, apart from what we’ve just summarized, is just a sketch. As in a real opera, the audience has to interpret what’s going on through the action most of the time, because it isn’t explicitly spelled out in the lyrics or in dialogue.

(I can’t believe that’s being waved around as a triumph of the show!)

Robert Hurwett at San Francisco Chronicle: The cast and creative crew match the pulsating wall of sound for sheer energy and pump it up with Broadway-quality pipes, stage-rattling, thrashing choreography, flying bodies and walls crammed with pulsating video and projected images…. American Idiot… doesn’t deliver much in the way of character or story. But the rock opera… packs plenty of excitement and entertainment…. It isn’t much of a story, more like concepts imposed upon songs proclaiming nihilistic disillusion. But the songs are vivid, dynamic and in some cases pleasantly melodic. And the packaging is so wildly entertaining it’s almost a complete show by itself.

Mixed

Marcus Crowder at Sacramento Bee: The world premiere… brought rock ‘n’ roll energy and excitement to already innovative theater…. [T]he mostly sung-through play should appeal to an audience that might not have considered musical theater before. As fresh and contemporary as American Idiot feels, it’s not as though new ground has been broken. It’s still a musical with singing, choreographed dancing and an inventive, multitier set…. There’s not much to (the) characters to begin with, and while they do eventually grow, the production’s weakness lies in their lack of compelling development. Little of substance happens, though Mayer creates a continually watchable spectacle in his visual interpretations of the songs.

Christine Borden at SF Appeal: As a so-called “rock opera,” Berkeley Rep’s American Idiot looks good. It sounds good. But what does it all mean? … It is just like watching TV, specifically MTV before it got rid of all its music videos. Songs crash into one another, some without even a dialogue segue. Music video after music video, the show sucks you in. It’s entertaining. It’s jukebox theater…. Unfortunately, all this angst seems a little outdated (and ungrounded, especially considering that you don’t know what the hell is going on or why even).

Leslie Katz at San Francisco Examiner: Will the world-premiere rock opera based on the East Bay band’s monster 2004 album be the savior of live theater for generations to come? Not necessarily. The show has lots going for it: Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt and Tre Cool’s quintessentially 21st century score of melodic rock songs, for one major thing…. Yet the story… remains thin. Surface characters, an undeveloped plot, MTV-inspired choreography and costumes that look too much like costumes… at times lend a lack of authenticity and keep viewers at a distance. American Idiot does have its moving moments, particularly with its biggest hits and the most hummable songs…

Negative

Jim Harrington at Silicon Valley Mercury News: There will hopefully come a day when the stage adaptation of American Idiot is seen as just a curious misstep in Green Day’s otherwise highly enjoyable career. Regrettably, the American Idiot musical comes across as a well-intentioned idea… forced into reality…. There are many problems with the actual staging of the play — it’s hard to believe, for example, that Armstrong and Mayer couldn’t come up with a more engaging script — but the main \issue is the music isn’t moving. The grandiose arrangements… are so weighted down with illusions of self-significance that they fail to strike any emotional involvement…. The music sounds processed and stale, handled with kid gloves by way too many players and sung by more than a dozen actors that have rehearsed the original fire right out of the songs.

Some interesting things said. So the story is too thin and the character development poor, but it has energy and (some say) great music. I wonder how it will play on Broadway.

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BYE BYE BIRDIE on MAD MEN

A sequence based on the film version of Bye Bye Birdie has appeared in Episode 3/02 of Mad Men. Check it out here:

In the sequence, the title song from the film is reproduced with new lyrics as the basis for an advertisement for Pepsi Patio. The episode originally aired on August 23.

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Interpolations for the BYE BYE BIRDIE Revival

The wealth of material created for the film and television adaptations of the 1960 Broadway musical Bye Bye Birdie won’t be heard in the new Broadway revival, with one exception: the title tune written for the film, which will be used as the finale for this revival.

The song list for the show will thus consist of:

  • “We Love You Conrad”
  • “An English Teacher”
  • “The Telephone Hour”
  • “How Lovely to Be a Woman”
  • “Put on a Happy Face”
  • “A Healthy, Normal American Boy”
  • “One Boy”
  • “Honestly Sincere”
  • “Hymn for a Sunday Evening”
  • “One Last Kiss”
  • “What Did I Ever See in Him?”
  • “Kids”
  • “A Lot of Livin’ to Do”
  • “Baby, Talk to Me”
  • “Spanish Rose”
  • “Rosie”
  • “Bye Bye Birdie”

The show is currently in previews and will open officially next month.

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LOVE NEVER DIES teaser/trailer

A trailer – of sorts – for Love Never Dies, the sequel to The Phantom of the Opera, has been put up at the official site. It consists mostly of archival shots of NYC and Coney Island over some creepy music, which is named “The Coney Island Waltz”. It’s also up on YouTube:

By the way, if you think this was the worst teaser you’ve ever seen for a musical, then you clearly didn’t see the one for The Addams Family. That was horrible!

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NEWSFLASH: Mel C Adds Spice to BLOOD BROTHERS

BLOOD BROTHERS

To purchase the 1998 Cast Recording of BLOOD BROTHERS, click on the image above.

Hot on the heels of our May Madness poll about “The Spice Girls in Musicals”, BroadwayWorld is reporting that Mel C will be in Willy Russell’s Blood Brothers:

Melanie Chisholm, the Spice Girl formerly known as Sporty, is set to make her West End debut as Mrs Johnstone in Blood Brothers at the Phoenix Theatre. She starts her run on October 26….

Chisholm’s former colleague Mel B is the one Spice Girl to have already trodden the musical theatre boards, as Mimi in Rent, and she too has been linked to an autumn West End role – as Paulette in Legally Blonde.

Any thoughts about this? I think the news about Mel C is smashing, although I wonder if anything will come about the rumours of Mel B playing Paulette in the West End transfer of the Nell Benjamin-Laurence O’Keefe-Heather Hach penned musical based on the hit Reese Witherspoon film of the same name.

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EMPIRE: the Empire State Building Musical

EMPIRE

The Empire State Building: The Making of a Landmark

Nick Wyman, Nancy Anderson and Kevyn Morrow will appear in a reading of a musical based on the creation of the Empire State Building. The original musical, for which Caroline Sherman and Robert Hull share the credit for book, music and lyrics, has already been seen in full productions in Los Angeles in 2003 and Connecticut in 2004 as well as in workshops in 2008, which featured names like Karen Ziemba, Matt Cavenaugh and Michael McCormick.

The original intention was to bring the show to Broadway in the 2009-10 season, but it seems that the show will be launched in London in 2010 instead with a Broadway transfer to follow. The producers are in negotiation with Brooke Shields as a potential star to lead the show.

Set in the Depression and mixing fact with fiction, Empire is being promoted as a celebration of the American spirit embodied by those who built what was then the tallest structure in the world, the Empire State Building. With big dance numbers, pop-driven melodies and captivating spectacle, the producers promise that Empire will put a contemporary spin on the classic musicals of the 1940s and 1950s.

Joining Wyman, Anderson and Morrow in the latest reading will be Ryan Silverman, Nancy Anderson, Jessica Phillips, Eric Michael Gillett, Nick Wyman, Ryan Bauer-Walsh, Christina DeCicco, Kevyn Morrow, Becca Ayers, Katherine Tokarz, Stacie Bono, Dawn Timm, Aaron Simon Gross, Bill Evans Jeremy Davis, Robert Rokicki, David F M Vaughn, Brian O’Brien and Jeff Williams.

More information can be found at the show’s official website and also at the creators’ website.

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Broadway Revival of PROMISES, PROMISES

Variety has reported that following the LA production of Parade, Rob Ashford will begin prepping the Broadway revival of Promises, Promises that has been rumoured ever since Ashford staged a reading of the Burt Bacharach musical in March 2008:

(Rob Ashford is) on board to helm a potential revival of Promises, Promises that could materialize on the Rialto in the spring…. (The show) has Craig Zadan, Neil Meron and the Weinsteins on the list of attached producers.

Only whispers, perhaps – but exciting ones. I think it’s about time Promises, Promises had a revival on Broadway. I wonder if Sean Hayes or Anne Hathaway, who participated in the aforementioned reading, are still attached to the project in any way.

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BYE BYE BIRDIE: Changes in the Revival

BYE BYE BIRDIE

BYE BYE BIRDIE

Playbill has a new article about the revival and how the director-choreographer Robert Longbottom will honour the original show while giving it a new spin. This is a bit quotation heavy, I know, but it’s interesting stuff:

Kenneth Jones wrote:
Longbottom says that when Roundabout Theatre Company unveils Bye Bye Birdie… audiences will hear the show’s signature song just as it was presented in 1960 — sort of.

Robert Longbottom wrote:
It’s the exact same dance music… It’s one of the more beloved things from the show. I’m working with the best dance arranger in the business, David Chase, and we could have easily scrapped it and done something new, but it’s brilliant. It’s a great piece of music. I’ve chosen to do it with six very unhappy fan girls.

…. For this first Broadway revival, some revisions and refinements have been made to the show…

Robert Longbottom wrote:
The choice to cast the kids as genuine teenagers made a huge difference — just the believability factor…. I’m sure in 1960 Susan Watson and company were adorable, but Allie Trimm is 15 years old, and it comes with lots and lots of dividends. She’s absolutely adorable. [Ann-Margret, who was in her 20s when she played the curvy Kim in the movie version of the musical] was great and powerful. We’ve taken the number that opens that movie and we use it as our finale curtain call. It’s a dandy little number — Strouse and Adams wrote it. It’s kind of nice to have a title song at the end.

For fans of the show, there are some unresolved song-assignment issues that stick out in the post-Hammerstein, post-Sondheim age of well-made, musically-integrated shows. For example, poor Hugo Peabody, Kim’s boyfriend, never had a song.

Robert Longbottom wrote:
We gave him one….He sings a good deal of “One Boy” [traditionally Kim’s song] because Matt Doyle… has such a voice that we thought: ‘Let that song be a dialogue.’ So he sings a good deal of it. She introduces it and once he’s convinced that she’s genuine, he sings along. It’s great to hear his voice.

Longbottom says Strouse and Adams were “very generous” about being flexible as the new creative team explored the material… Longbottom explains:

Robert Longbottom wrote:
The score is beloved and that record is something that so many people grew up with. I think it would be foolish to play with lyrics, even though there’s a temptation [to change] some things that will be [obscure] to 14-year-olds today — including ‘Ed Sullivan.’ I didn’t want to mess with them. If the context is correct, you’re going to understand who ‘Abby Lane’ was. If you know it, all the better.”

Still, he admits:

Robert Longbottom wrote:
I’ve changed one lyric because I put Mrs. Peterson into “Spanish Rose” — I never could really get ahold of… where that number was taking place, other than an 11 o’clock number on stage…. By putting the mother there as the point of receiving all of that, it made a whole lot more sense for [Rose] to drag out all these kooky stereotypes, and have fun at Mae’s expense…. As opposed to singing, ‘I’m just a Spanish tamale according to Mae,’ she sings ‘you love to say’ — and she sings it directly at Jayne Houdyshell. It pays off and it gives the actress playing Rosie something to really play — and aim it at somebody.

[Gina] Gershon… was quoted recently saying that original director-choreographer Gower Champion’s “Shriners’ Ballet”… was cut from the revival because it was too “gang rape-y.” Longbottom says:

Robert Longbottom wrote:[The specialty piece] was not cut to be politically correct, nor do I look at what they did as any kind of ‘gang rape’…. I felt [the “Shriners’ Ballet”] held up the flow of the story. …As brilliant a number as it was, and it certainly was a terrific showcase for Chita Rivera, there’s something misogynistic about it — there’s something about Rose’s choice going under a table [of men], head first, with her legs spread for four counts of eight, that I didn’t really want to contend with. The bigger reason, ultimately, is that it’s Gower Champion’s number. It’s his concept, it has virtually nothing to do with the movement of the plot. It’s like the ballet they had in the first act [“How to Kill a Man,” according Internet Broadway Database] which is something I didn’t think anybody ever does.

In the full article, there are notes about a few more minor changes and about where the big dance numbers will be. But it seems that there’s been quite a bit of retooling for the revival – quite a new spin indeed. Still, this is a show that’s known for being presented in different forms with different material. I wonder how this version will play and if if will become definitive.

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The Big Move II

So the next section of the site content has been moved over to WordPress. That bittersweet feeling of seeing the old pass away and the new come into being applies. So what’s here now?

ALW Banner

All the material that was on the old “Any Dream Will Do” section of the site is here and can be accessed using the page links in the bar above.
Yes, I know there are still a few of the ALW Musicals missing, but these were housed in the general long-running shows section. So they will be here shortly.

Lloyd Webber has created some of the most commercially successful musicals of the past four decades: some have catered perfectly for the tastes of the contemporary musical ear; others have been less popular but nonetheless given audience several of the most visually spectacular productions ever seen. So whether you’re a fan who listens to “the music of the night” all day long or someone who’s just experienced Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat for the first time ever – come along with us and explore the worlds that Andrew Lloyd Webber and his many collaborators have created. Show listings are all alphabetical.

Step two of the big move is over. When that’s all done, I’ll continue blogging as I did before Geocities announced their date of closure and things began to feel a bit more urgent.

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AMERICAN IDIOT Extends

American Idiot, which starts previews tomorrow with opening night set for September 16th has exceeded expectations for advance bookings and has announced an three week extension. The show would originally have to closed on October 11, but will now run until November 1.

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