Friday, April 24, 2009
Beauty and the Beast is More Beautiful on Broadway
Although I have dissed other Disney movies that have become plays. This one is different. I am a little biased because this was the first play I had ever seen, and then obviously the first Disney movie to play that I had seen. I felt that back when this play came out in 1991 the producers were a little more careful not to have the movie and the play exactly the same. I also felt that they took more time to look into developing characters, which is something that is very important for plays.In adapting the film to the stage, Linda Woolverton (also one of the film's
writers) instituted a number of key changes: Just about every character was
given more depth (the Beast is more threatening and sympathetic; Belle, the
beauty of the title who strays into his clutches, is more determined and
headstrong), and, perhaps most importantly, the story's panoply of talking
knick-knacks were no longer servants who had been enchanted into teapots,
armoires, clocks, and so on as the result of an enchantress's spell - now, they
were gradually becoming these things.
Bush On Broadway
And now the stupidness (haha) of W. Bush have reached Broadway. George W. Bush was not good enough to play himself for the production, so instead Will Ferrell will take the lead. "You're Welcome America. A Final Night with George W Bush" is a "show picks up after the 43rd President has lifted off from the White House lawn. Director Adam McKay ("Step Brothers") and Ferrell fashion that into a brilliant entrance for Dubya, who recalls his life at Yale, Crawford, Tex., and in the Oval Office." I would love to see this play and laugh along as Ferrell and the rest of the cast totally humiliate Bush.
"The stage is mostly bare, with just a few props and video screens where images of places, faces and ruder body parts help set the scene. If some sequences run out of steam, another laugh is looming just around the bend." Yes at some point in the play you will get the opportunity to see Bush's penis (of course it's not truly his) which has caused some not so happy theatergoers to leave before the play is over.
I have loved Will Ferrell in pretty much every film he has been in, from "Elf" to "Old School".
"Ferrell has Dubya down pat - the stance, butt head chuckle, constant squint and tumbleweed twang, which sparks one of the shows best jokes."
I really want to see this play. Anything making fun of "Dubya" has to be great.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Offensive Is Funny
An interesting thing about the presentation of the show is that you can see the
puppeteers at all times. You could easily watch this show twice once
watching the puppets, and once watching the puppeteers who are easily as
animated as the "actors" they control.
It's very interesting because even though they are puppets, as a audience member you watch them and connect with them as if they were real.
One reason I think everyone really enjoys this play is because they connect with it. Everyone finds that certain "actor"/puppet to feel for and everyone understands and connects with the different topics and songs. Many of the things discussed in "Avenue Q" are topics that people agree with 100% but it's "not right" to talk about it in public.
The funny thing is, is that the theatergoer can see that this play is based on "Sesame Street", but instead of centering it around children it's for adults that can handle topics involving racism, sex, porn, etc.
Subtly but essentially, Moore has transformed a "Sesame Street" episode
self-consciously seen through a glass darkly, into more of the genuine article.
Rather than receive a watering-down, the show is stronger for his labors. Both
humans and puppets are so ingenuous, so wide-eyed and naive in an authentically
Children's Television Workshop way, that all the R-rated material becomes
paralyzingly funny, and the dicier the topic the funnier it gets: the sex
between needy Princeton and woeful Kate Monster (Kelli Sawyer) is pushed to the
limit, but the human actors' who-me? openness renders it utterly
unobjectionable.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Chicago Will Blow Your Mind
"the original production had the misfortune to appear in the wake of
Watergate and Vietnam when dark and cynical were out of vogue. “Chicago” also
appeared the same year as “A Chorus Line,” a more upbeat and optimistic dance
show that ultimately had far more appeal for critics and audiences""What spawned the revival of “Chicago” in the mid-1990s was former football star O.J. Simpson going on trial for the murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ronald Goldman. After assembling a “Dream Team” of celebrity lawyers, Simpson was ultimately acquitted of murder charges and parallels between Simpson’s circus-like criminal trial and the characters in “Chicago” were immediately drawn by entertainment pundits and became the catalyst for the “Encore!” revival. Even today and despite the fact that “Chicago” is based on actual events from the 1920s, the memory of the O.J. trial—and other celebrity trials since, including Phil Spector and R. Kelly—keeps “Chicago” plausible and entertaining."
Way To Be "Mary" During This Trying Time
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Miserable Play
Dolly Parton Is Working 9 to 5 But Should Retire Instead
OPt Out OPera
Racial Stereotypes Don't Make For Good Play Topics
A Lot Of Spam Is A Tasty Treat For Play Lovers
Seems More Like A Concert To Me
This Hairspray Won't Keep You In One Place
Monday, April 20, 2009
Mamma Mia Here I Go Again.. And Again.. And Again..And Again
If you want to see a play with energy to spare, go see "Mamma Mia!" If you want
to see a play full of comedy and romance, go see "Mamma Mia!" If you want to
hear delightful songs sung by super talented performers, go see "Mamma Mia!". If
you want to have a night at the theater that will send you home with a smile on
your face and a song in your heart, go see "Mamma Mia!"
Wow that made me so happy I could just scream, Mamma Mia!!!
It's Hard Being Ugly On Broaway, Except For Shrek
Peanuts Play?
It's 10 years later, and - prepare yourself - Snoopy has been put to sleep after
killing Woodstock. Linus has become Van (Keith Nobbs), a stoner who smoked the
burned remains of his security blanket. Pigpen has cleaned up into a violent
jock (Ian Somerhalder, from "Lost"). Lucy, known only as Van's sister (Eliza
Dushku, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"), is a lithium-addled pyromaniac who has
slept with, believe it or not, Charlie Brown, or CB (Eddie Kaye Thomas), as he's
called, a popular kid with a mean streak.
So pretty much it's nothing like the comic strip at all. It makes me think of how I loved the show Rugrats on Nickelodeon, but then they decided to make the Rugrats All Grown up show and it was horrible. Sometimes you just got to stick with the original. When you try and milk something for all it's worth, normally the second thing is not as good as the original. The fact that it deals with so much "normal teenage life experiences" makes me feel like it is pushing it. Homosexuality, drugs, sex, violence, suicide, and teenage rebellion are all themes that can be found in this play. Seems a little over the top to me. I mean when you place all of these themes in a 2 hour play it seems like it definitely trying to get the "awe factor" which can be very annoying. I'll leave you with a quote that Charlie Brown (CB) says in the play which seems to show the stupidity of the show.
"Do you ever feel like you're not a real person?" CB asks his sister. "That
you're the product of someone's imagination and you can't think for yourself
because you're really just like some creation and that somewhere there's people
laughing every time you fall?"
Friday, April 17, 2009
The Little Mermaid a Flop
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
FAME Or Shame
Bang Bang Choo Choo Car? Come On Chitty Do Your Thing
Monday, April 13, 2009
Musicals Are Music To My Ears
Harry Potter Has Moved On To Bigger And Better Things
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Sometimes You Just Got To Give Your Top Ten
42nd Street
Lion King
Beauty and the Beast
Legally Blonde: The Musical
Hairspray
Wicked
Spamalot
Avenue Q
Chicago
Fame
At some point in the near future, I will get around to blogging about each musical individually but for now I just thought I would give you something to look forward to.
True "American Idiots"
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Girls Just Want To Have Fun: So Screw You Boys
Guys and Dolls - Good or Dud?
Friday, April 10, 2009
It Will Tap It's Way Into Your Heart
If you have never seen it, it is definitely worth seeing someday. Here's one of the numbers called "We're in the Money". I bet after watching it you'll not only be dying to see the play, but also take up tap dancing.