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The Broadway Pulse

The Broadway Pulse, maintained by BroadwayWorld.com's Editor-in-Chief, Robert Diamond, highlights the most interesting goings on in the world of theater - online and off... To submit materials to The Broadway Pulse, click here. Anonymity's guaranteed. Subscribe to RSS Feed

WHITE CHRISTMAS Review Roundup

Press notes describe Irving Berlin's White Christmas as "the story of Second World War veterans Bob Wallace and Phil Davis who become partners in a song-and-dance act after the war. Looking for love, the two follow a duo of beautiful singing sisters who have a Christmas gig at a Vermont lodge, which just happens to be owned by their former army commander, General Waverley. Full of dancing, laughter and some of the greatest songs ever written, Irving Berlin's White Christmas promises to be a merry and bright theatrical experience for the entire family."

Michael Kuchwara, Associated Press, "Who diluted the holiday cheer? The festivities are muted and mild in "Irving Berlin's White Christmas," a lavish, yet surprisingly bland stage adaptation of the popular 1954 movie. This version, which opened Sunday at Broadway's Marquis Theatre, raids Berlin's considerable catalog of songs to augment the film score, which was centered around "White Christmas," the most iconic of the composer's melodies."

David Rooney, Variety: "There hasn't been this much tap-dancing on a Broadway stage since "42nd Street." Yet despite its relentless effervescence, "Irving Berlin's White Christmas" is most alive in its gentler, more melancholy moments -- few as there are. Arriving in New York after multiple regional stops in the past four seasons, and aiming to establish itself as an annual holiday engagement, this somewhat mechanical show feels like a road production staffed with mostly second-tier talent. More seasonal confection than full-bodied musical theater, it coasts along on the strength of its melodious numbers and sparkling visuals, which should suffice to keep the tourist trade happy."

Elysa Gardner, USA Today: "Irving Berlin's White Christmas (* * 1/2 out of four) is as conscientiously G-rated a musical as you'll find on Broadway. Still, it ought to have an audience advisory — for diabetics. In fact, anyone susceptible to sugar shock should think twice before digging into this bowl of holiday treacle, which opened a limited engagement (through Jan. 4) Sunday at the Marquis Theatre."

Charles Isherwood, New York Times: "This efficient but bland theatrical version of the Bing Crosby-Danny Kaye movie from 1954, directed by Walter Bobbie and choreographed by Randy Skinner, has been spreading cheer to kitsch-friendly audiences in various cities since its premiere in San Francisco in 2004. It comes trimmed in extra numbers from the Irving Berlin songbook, as has been the custom for newfangled old-fashioned musicals for years, at least since “My One and Only” remixed the Gershwin songbook back in 1983. "

Joe Dziemianowicz, NY Daily News: "After playing in other U.S. cities for the past four years, "Irving Berlin's White Christmas" has finally made its way to New York. As Broadway musicals go, it's a little creaky. But as a holiday entertainment, it's light and bright and boasts some great production numbers. "

Linda Winer, Newsday: "The good cast handles the old-fashioned snappy talk without overselling it. Carrie Robbins' handsome costumes appear to have been made with a budget intended for a long run - or, more accurately, a return engagement as an annual alternative to the Rockettes and "The Nutcracker." In other words, "White Christmas" is a reasonable facsimile of what it's meant to be - a manipulation of the sentimental holiday marketplace that does not disturb the seasonal equilibrium with a bubble of original thought."

Frank Scheck, NY Post: "So it's more than a little disappointing that the Broadway production of "Irving Berlin's White Christmas" is so lacking in genuine Yuletide spirit. Looking to this would-be seasonal perennial for holiday cheer is like trying to get warm while watching the "Yule Log" on TV."

Posted on: Monday, November 24, 2008 @ 08:56 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Dividing the Estate Review Roundup

Dividing the Estate opened last night at Broadway's Booth Theater. The show's a human comedy about a family that must confront its past as it prepares for its future. Did the critics find it funny?

For USA Today, Elyse Gardner writes that "But the 92-year-old who gave us the The Trip to Bountiful and The Young Man From Atlanta, not to mention the Oscar-winning screenplays for To Kill a Mockingbird and Tender Mercies, is too gentle a soul to summon anything resembling real venom. The folks we meet in Estate, which opened Thursday at the Booth Theatre, can be immensely irritating, but they're not, well, bad people — or, truth be told, terribly interesting ones."

For the NY Daily News, Joe Dziemianowicz gives the show 3.5 stars out of 5 and writes that "With a lone exception, the cast of the Lincoln Center presentation at the Booth Theatre is the same as the one that made the play's Off-Broadway run at Primary Stages 14 months ago so tasty.".

David Rooney writes in Variety that ""Evidence that history repeats itself is everywhere in "Dividing the Estate." Once-valuable farmland has made way for strip malls, local businesses are being supplanted by foreign-owned factories, the real estate market has sunk, financial institutions are hurting and more and more folks are facing bankruptcy and home foreclosures. This sweetly satirical comedy about a Texas family squaring off over their inheritance could almost be unfolding in 2008, but Horton Foote wrote the play 20 years ago and set it against the economic turmoil of the late '80s."

Michael Kuchwara writes for the Associated Press that "In one respect, "Dividing the Estate" is even more timely today than it was in October 2007. The play, under Michael Wilson's leisurely, low-key direction, is set in recession-plagued 1987. Prices are falling. Real estate is a mess. Jobs are being lost. And the members of a once well-off clan must confront their dwindling financial future. You can't get more up-to-date."

Ben Brantley writes in the New York Times that "This production — which arrives with most of its original cast, directed with hair-trigger timing by Michael Wilson — has ripened into an ideally balanced ensemble piece, with acting that matches and magnifies Mr. Foote’s slyly and acutely observant writing. A year ago “Dividing the Estate” was good, but a tad shaky in tone. This latest incarnation reveals it to be one of the masterworks of the 92-year-old Mr. Foote, the author of “The Trip to Bountiful,” “The Young Man From Atlanta” and the Oscar-winning screenplays for “Tender Mercies” and “To Kill a Mockingbird.”"

Frank Scheck of the NY Post gives the show 3.5 out of 4 stars, and he says that "Opening last night after an earlier run at Primary Stages, this deeply humanistic and funny play is old-fashioned in the best sense. Director Michael Wilson's assured production features a wonderful ensemble cast whose seamless work feels even more lived-in than it did earlier. It's easy to believe that this loving but endlessly bickering clan would drive themselves crazy if they failed to live up to the task of the play's title."

Posted on: Friday, November 21, 2008 @ 08:46 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


American Buffalo Review Roundup

John Leguizamo and Cedric the Entertainer star in the Broadway revival of David Mamet's American Buffalo, which opened on Broadway last night. Here's the critics takes!

Ben Brantley writes in the NY Times that "Ssssssssst. That whooshing noise coming from the Belasco Theater is the sound of the air being let out of David Mamet’s dialogue. Robert Falls’s deflated revival of Mr. Mamet’s “American Buffalo” — which opened on Monday night with the mixed-nut ensemble of John Leguizamo, Cedric the Entertainer and Haley Joel Osment — evokes the woeful image of a souped-up sports car’s flat tire, built for speed but going nowhere."

Joe Dziemianowicz for the NY Daily News gives the show 2 stars out of 5, and writes that "Despite a starry cast of John Leguizamo, Haley Joel Osment and Cedric the Entertainer, who's miscast, the tepid two-hour two-act, directed by Robert Falls, makes the story seem very slight, with all the danger and combustibility of a book of soggy matches."

Elysa Gardner in USA Today gives the show 3 stars out of 4 and writes that ". Approaching Mamet's celebrated account of three losers bound by complementary failings, Falls and his cast ease the pace and intensity of the distinctly jazzy dialogue rhythms and emphasize the underlying pathos that truly — more than the four-letter words or the sudden bursts of violence — makes this play disturbing. This isn't the most titillating American Buffalo you'll ever see, but I doubt that many productions have made the thwarted humanity of these men more accessible or moving."

In Newsday, Linda Winer writes that "So there is less hot news here. On the other hand, this one has an exhilarating performance by John Leguizamo, who careens off Mamet's essence with a joy I missed in the oddly constricted "Plow.""

David Rooney writes for Variety that "When "American Buffalo" is done right, the profane poetry of David Mamet's dialogue can be bracing and the sad desperation of its three minor-league crooks -- playing at being players -- has a poignant sting. But in the three decades since the play was first seen, the influence of its speech patterns has become increasingly pervasive in films, cable TV and imitative theater, while humanized hoodlums have turned up everywhere. Maybe that's why this starry revival sits so flatly on its impressive set. Or maybe it's the lack of a connective thread among its performers. Either way, something isn't working."

Lastly for this roundup, Michael Kuchwara writes for the AP that "The four-letter words are intact but just about everything else is amiss in the slack, unsatisfying Broadway revival of David Mamet's "American Buffalo.""

Posted on: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 @ 08:51 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


BILLY ELLIOT Review Roundup

Based on the film about a working-class British boy with dreams that run contrary to family expectations, the London smash-hit musical arrived on Broadway last night. So, what did the critics think?

David Rooney in Variety writes that "Three-and-a-half years may seem a long time for an instantaneous London smash like "Billy Elliot: The Musical" to cross the Atlantic, but the delay looks to have played serendipitously into the producers' hands. With unemployment figures soaring and the economy in the dumps, the zeitgeist could hardly be more attuned to the stirring story of a Northern England miner's son liberated from bleak reality by his passion for ballet. But even without that happy accident of timing, American audiences would have no trouble connecting with the universal sentiment of this bittersweet dual celebration of community and individuality."

Michael Kuchwara writes for the Associated Press and says "It's not often that a musical comes along that is as ambitious as it is emotional — and then succeeds on both counts. But "Billy Elliot," which opened Thursday at Broadway's Imperial Theatre, is an exceptional work that exemplifies what the best musicals are all about: collaboration. Everything comes together in this impressive, warmhearted adaptation of the 2000 British film about a North Country coal miner's young son who yearns to dance and join the Royal Ballet School in London."

Ben Brantley RAVES in the New York Times that "Your inner dancer is calling. Its voice, sweet but tough and insistent, pulses in every molecule of the new Broadway musical “Billy Elliot,” demanding that you wake up sleeping fantasies of slipping on tap or ballet shoes and soaring across a stage. Few people may have the gift of this show’s title character, a coal miner’s son in northern England who discovers he was born to pirouette. But the seductive, smashingly realized premise of “Billy Elliot,” which opened Thursday night at the Imperial Theater, is that everybody has the urge. "

Barbara Hoffman in the NY Post gives the show 4 out of 4 stars and writes that "AFTER some rocky previews, marred by a sluggish hydraulic set and overly thick accents, "Billy Elliot" opened last night, proving itself the best gift from Britain since Harry Potter. This tale of a motherless coal miner's son who was born to dance (ballet, no less) was written, directed and choreographed by the same team behind the 2000 film. But unlike so many shows that plod from screen to stage, "Billy Elliot: The Musical" makes the leap from reheated adaptation to reimagined creation."

Elyse Gardner gives the show 3 out of 4 stars in USA Today and she says that "But the show arrives on Broadway at a time when Americans are just as primed for its feel-good populism. In a period of economic turmoil, after a presidential campaign marked on both sides by a defiant hopefulness, Billy Elliot feels very much in sync with the mood in the nation today."

Posted on: Friday, November 14, 2008 @ 08:54 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Wicked Author Retuns to Oz

On my 129038th check of CNN already this morning, I came across a nice interview with WICKED book author Gregory Maguire. He's returning to the land of Oz (and why shouldn't he, WICKED sold more than 2.5 million copies) with a new book "A Lion Among Men."

This latest tale covers the story of the Cowardly Lion.

Off to vote!

Posted on: Tuesday, November 04, 2008 @ 08:35 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Speed-the-Plow Review Roundup

For USA Today, Elysa Gardner gives the show 3.5 out of 4 stars and writes that "Twenty years after Plow's Broadway debut, the wickedly fine revival (* * *?out of four) that opened Thursday at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre seems less like a satire than a darkly comic documentary. Strip away the trenchant wit of Mamet's dialogue and it's not hard to imagine his narcissistic, desperate characters inhabiting a reality TV show."

In Variety, David Rooney writes that "The play may be 20 years old but David Mamet's astringent observations on the supremacy of commerce over art in Hollywood are still as fresh as last night's rushes. With the dismantling of studio specialty divisions and the increasing struggle of non-mainstream fare to find a foothold in the marketplace, "Speed-the-Plow" remains on-target in its sardonic skewering of an industry run by self-confessed whores and driven by the public's appetite for mindless escapism. Despite a weak midsection, Neil Pepe's taut Broadway revival keeps the verbal sniper fire swift and scathing, while the three accomplished actors make the air between them crackle with tension."

For Reuters/Hollywood Reporter, Frank Sheck writes that "Although the play never quite convinces in terms of its situations and characterizations, Mamet's razor-sharp comic dialogue makes its 90 minutes breeze by."

Michael Kuchwara writes for the Associated Press that "The bilious business of moviemaking remains as hilariously nasty as ever in David Mamet's "Speed-The-Plow," now two decades old but still packing heat in a sizzling revival which opened Thursday at Broadway's Ethel Barrymore Theatre. If anything, the play seems more pertinent than ever as the stakes have risen financially — not to mention psychologically — in the battle of art vs. commerce. And in Mamet's deliciously jaded world view, there is no doubt what will win out."

Ben Brantley in the New York Times writes that "The Barrymore Theater should provide seat belts for as long as Neil Pepe’s revival of David Mamet’s “Speed-the-Plow” is in residence. The production that opened Thursday night — starring the ace team of Jeremy Piven, Raúl Esparza and Elisabeth Moss — pursues its corkscrew course at such velocity that your instinct is to check yourself for whiplash. When the curtain falls on this short and unsparing study of sharks in the shallows of the movie industry, it’s as if you had stepped off a world-class roller coaster. The ride was over before you knew it, but you’re too dizzy and exhilarated to think you didn’t get your money’s worth."

Linda Winer in Newsday writes that "It would be delightful to say that the much-anticipated revival, which opened last night starring Jeremy Piven, Raul Esparza and Elisabeth Moss, lived up to the scabrous exuberance of the original. Despite a cast that looks wonderful on paper, director Neil Pepe's production is small, tight and more angry than fabulously, shamelessly, joyously rude. Piven, perhaps trying not to duplicate his sleaze-triumphant agent, Ari Gold, from "Entourage," plays Bobby Gould - new production head of a studio - with a soft underbelly that works against the surprise of his potential conversion to art movies."

And lastly for this roundup, Clive Barnes gives the show 4 (out of 4) stars in the NY Post and says that "WHEN Hollywood meets Broadway, sparks fly and Tinseltown's incinerated - especially if the flamethrower is David Mamet. So it is with "Speed-the-Plow." Now, 20 years after its premiere - in which Madonna took much of the initial limelight - the beautifully played revival that opened last night establishes the play as a modern classic."

Posted on: Friday, October 24, 2008 @ 10:03 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


ALL MY SONS Review Roundup

All My Sons opened last night and we've got All The Reviews.

For Variety, writes that "Pairing Arthur Miller's probing social realism with Brit director Simon McBurney's multidisciplinary experimental approach was a gamble, but the payoff in "All My Sons" is considerable. The first Broadway revival of the playwright's work since his death in 2005, the production balances theatrical artifice with heightened emotion, seeding anxiety deep in the collective pit of the audience's stomach and then amplifying it steadily until the shattering final scene. Liberally mixing Brechtian presentation with cinematic flourishes, this is a commanding illustration of the power of theater and a searing drama of morality and conscience that has as much to say to America now as it did in 1947."

Michael Kuchwara for the Associated Press writes that "Miller's play, despite its potent message, is weighed down with enough symbols, not to mention its own awkward melodramatics. McBurney and company have, unfortunately, added even more of their own."

For USA Today, Elysa Gardner gives the show 2.5 stars out of 4, and says "The accomplished actors with whom Holmes shares top billing are better at tempering dramatic gestures with nuance, and McBurney nurtures their sensitive rapport. John Lithgow is painfully convincing as Joe Keller, a businessman haunted by the disappearance of his son in World War II and a possibly related professional transgression. The marvelous Dianne Wiest offers a witty, heartbreaking portrait of Joe's tortured wife, Kate, who has her own talent for denial. Patrick Wilson movingly traces the disillusionment of their surviving son, Chris, who shares his missing brother's affection for the daughter of Joe's former colleague.

Clive Barnes for the NY Post writes that "THERE'S an awful lot of shouting these days at the Schoenfeld Theatre, where Arthur Miller's early melodrama "All My Sons" opened last night in a powerfully acted revival. A starry cast has been assembled to yell their lungs out, including the distinguished John Lithgow and, in her Broadway debut, Katie Holmes, known in her (less than) private life as Mrs. Tom Cruise."

In the New York Times, Ben Brantley says that "I have seen such portraiture in revivals of “All My Sons” from the Roundabout Theater Company (in 1997) and in particular at the National Theater in London (in 2000), productions that had much of the audience in tears. The preview performance I saw of this one left me stone cold, despite some electric moments from a very fine Mr. Lithgow and Mr. Wilson. The very different leading actresses — the stage veteran Ms. Wiest and the neophyte Ms. Holmes, in her Broadway debut — are sad casualties of Mr. McBurney’s high-concept approach. (My companion at the theater, finding herself dry-eyed at the final curtain, asked, “Is there something wrong with my emotional acuity?”)"

And lastly for this roundup, Lynda Winer writes for Newsday that "John Lithgow and Dianne Wiest are shattering as Joe and Kate Keller, the prosperous small-town couple whose elder son disappeared in his bomber during the war and whose remaining son (played with all-American likability by Patrick Wilson) wants to marry his brother's sweetheart. Katie Holmes -- whose Broadway debut is the supposed news of the production -- is earnest and pretty, like a talented girl in a school play. But she doesn't seriously hurt anything as that girl who used to live next door. And the star does bring in the business, which Miller, of all social realists, just might understand."

Posted on: Friday, October 17, 2008 @ 09:36 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


'A Man for All Seasons' Review Roundup

Tonight, October 7th, 2008 A Man for All Seasons opened at Roundabout Theater Company. In addition to star Frank Langella (Sir Thomas More), the cast includes Hannah Cabell (Margaret More), Michael Esper (William Roper), Zach Grenier (Thomas Cromwell), Dakin Matthews (Cardinal Wolsey), George Morfogen (Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop), Patrick Page (King Henry VIII), Maryann Plunkett (Alice More), Michel Gill (Duke of Norfolk), Jeremy Strong (Richard Rich), Charles Borland (Jailor), Peter Bradbury (Steward), Patricia Hodges (Woman), Triney Sandoval (Thomas Chapuys) and Emily Dorsch.

For Newsday, Linda Winer writes that "If America had a national repertory theater, Frank Langella would be luxuriating now in the official ranks of theater royalty. Three decades after he oozed seductive grandiosity as the irresistible but trivial Dracula, the actor has grown beyond the implied vanity in his plumy voice and grand gesture. He is a precious anachronism, a throwback to a theatrical presence of more majestic times. With Broadway's first revival of "A Man for All Seasons" since its 1961 premiere, the Roundabout Theatre Company has tossed the hungry acting giant a big chunk of juicy sustenance. And Langella's gratitude becomes our own."

For Variety, David Rooney writes that "Langella's performance, however, is sufficiently commanding to overcome the role's limited dimension. The actor's effortless authority is softened by a playful sense of irony that makes it seem only natural he would toss off a cutting remark even while being sentenced to die. Humility is not a major asset in Langella's arsenal, but a shot of arrogance adds color to his More, and the penetrating assessments he makes of both friends and foe come through loud and clear, often without words."

Elysa Gardner, for USA Today, gives the show 3 out of 4 stars and writes that "In the end, only the leading man can ensure that Seasons sustains its subtle spark, and Langella is, happily, more than up to the task."

Ben Branley in the NY Times writes that "Is it heresy to whisper that the sainted Thomas More is a bit of a bore? Even Frank Langella, an actor who can be counted on to put the pepper in mashed-potato parts, doesn't find much variety in the monolithic goodness of the title character of "A Man for All Seasons," Robert Bolt's 1960 biodrama about More's road to martyrdom during the reign of Henry VIII."

Frank Scheck gives the show 3 out of 4 stars in the NY Post, and writes that "In the end, though, it's less the production and more its star that best deserves the title of "A Man for All Seasons.""

And, for the NY Daily News, Joe Dziemianowicz writes that "Whether it's 1530 or 2008, men who'll literally stick out their necks for their beliefs are rare, which gives "A Man for All Seasons" a timelessness. As an ethics lesson, it clicks, but far less so as a rousing, full-blooded drama."

Posted on: Wednesday, October 08, 2008 @ 10:09 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


13, the Musical Review Roundup

13, the Musical opened at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theater last night and the reviews are in.

David Rooney of Variety writes "In case anyone missed the lesson learned from "High School Musical" and its endlessly multiplying spawn, kids these days are quite comfortable watching their fictional counterparts burst into song to express their feelings. So the target audience for "13" should have no trouble identifying with the characters onstage as they tunefully reflect on friendship, crushes, popularity, acceptance and tongue action. There's not much in this sweet all-adolescent tuner to engage anyone past puberty, but the other lesson of the Disney franchise is that a narrowly defined demographic is no barrier to success."

Michael Kuchwara for the Associated Press writes that "Like its young hero, "13," suffers from uncertainty and more than a bit of awkwardness as it tries to a tell a tween tale about making mistakes, growing up and taking responsibility."

USA Today gives the show 2 1/2 stars out of 4 and writes that "Thanks largely to these performances, 13 is, if hardly awesome (not even in the lesser sense of the word), an innocuous and sometimes touching diversion."

Ben Brantley in the NY Times writes that "But mostly the characters never emerge as genuine individuals. Maybe that’s deliberate on the part of the show’s creators, to allow young audience members to project themselves onto archetypal personas. But if I’m going to revisit the worst years of my life, I need some fresh insights — or at least a sustained, authentic rush of the painful glory that is youth — to make it worth my while."

Michael Sommers in the NJ Star Ledger wrote that "A lively musical about growing up, "13" is the flip side of "Spring Awakening." While the latter hit explores teen angst in dark, woeful terms, the attraction that premiered yesterday at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre is humorous and optimistic as its adolescents bounce along to a happy beat. "

Joe Dziemianowicz in the NY Daily News gives the show 2 out of 5 stars and writes that "Director Jeremy Sams creates some clever moments, including an amusing scene in a movie theater where the kids watch a horror flick. The pubescent crowd may find this new musical fascinating — but Mom and Dad will be left thinking about 13 better ways they could have spent their ticket dollars. "

Barbara Hoffman (Clive Barnes is off) gives the show 3 stars out of 4 in the NY Daily News and she says that "With a raw, rousing score by Jason Robert Brown sung by a cast of 13- to 17-year-olds, it's Sondheim for MySpacers - the perfect show for those too old for Disney, too young for "Spring Awakening," and too impatient to wait for a new block of "Wicked" tickets."

Posted on: Monday, October 06, 2008 @ 09:03 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Sarah Palin "Sings" 'POPULAR'

Can't resist passing along...

Click here... Also, a reminder that NY's voter registration deadline is Monday, October 10, 2008.

Posted on: Saturday, October 04, 2008 @ 02:28 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Could Producers Be Sniffing 'SMELL' for Broadway?

David Pittu is in a league of his own. Over the past few theatre seasons, he has become a critics darling and has snagged two Tony Award nominations (LOVEMUSIK and IS HE DEAD?).

This talented actor has been a staple in the community, with a recent a rush to the front of character actors, exhibiting a wide range of abilities, including a unique voice as a writer. 

We happened to catch WHAT'S THAT SMELL: THE MUSIC OF JACOB STERLING at the Atlantic Theater Company and it would seem obvious that if producers are sniffing around, that with XANADU vacating the Helen Hayes Theater, this could be an obvious tenant, with a very low weekly nut. It could also land Pittu multiple Tony nominations.

The format of this unique show is billed as a "play with vocal selections." Expecting camp, I was surprised by the depth and seriousness of much of the writing, done as earnest comedy. Also impressive, was Pittu's uncanny musical talent and delivery of the songs penned by his character, Jacob Sterling, and in reality penned by Randy Redd and Pittu himself.

If you haven't seen it, it's been selling out at the Atlantic Theatre Company and is scheduled to close on October 5th.

If I was to bet...I would suspect that this wouldn't be the end for this sweet "smell" of success.



WHAT'S THAT SMELL: THE MUSIC OF JACOB STERLING began previews September 2nd, and opened September 10th Off-Broadway at Atlantic Stage 2 (330 West 16th Street). Due to high ticket demand following strong reviews, the limited engagement originally scheduled through September 28th, was extended through Sunday, October 5th, 2008.
 
The world premiere comedy is an absurd musical satire that charts the career of eternally up-and-coming (and fictitious) musical theater composer Jacob Sterling (Pittu). A rare, up close and personal visit with an artist of questionable gifts who performs from his songbook and shares his human struggle to keep musical theater alive and well in the 21st century. The show also stars the incomparable and equally gifted Peter Bartlett. 
 
The new comedy also features Atlantic Acting School alumni Brandon Goodman and Matt Schock, and Jen Temen.
 
The design team for WHAT'S THAT SMELL: THE MUSIC OF JACOB STERLING features scenic design by Takeshi Kata, costume design by Martin Pakledinaz, lighting design by Matthew Richards, sound design by Jill DuBoff, projection design by Dustin O'Neill, and production stage management by Alison DeSantis.
 
The Off-Broadway staging of WHAT'S THAT SMELL: THE MUSIC OF JACOB STERLING is a testament to Atlantic Stage 2's mission to develop new works. It began as a short piece as part of the one-act festival 10 X 20, the inaugural production of the second stage theatre in 2006. This past June, an expanded developmental reading with David Pittu and Peter Bartlett was featured in the 11th annual Perry-Mansfield New Works Festival in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.
 
WHAT'S THAT SMELL: THE MUSIC OF JACOB STERLING plays Tuesday through Saturday at 8:00pm, with Saturday matinees at 2:00pm and Sunday performances at 3:00pm and 7:00pm/. All tickets are $50.00 Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday, $55.00 Friday and Saturday, and are available by calling Ticket Central at 212-279-4200 (www.ticketcentral.com).

Posted on: Friday, September 26, 2008 @ 02:49 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Ugly Betty Goes "New York, New York"

In advance of the September 25th season premiere (and to celebrate the show's move to New York City), the entire cast of UGLY BETTY is featured singing "New York, New York" on the show's ABC web site.

Click here to tune in to the clever promo.

Posted on: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 @ 09:46 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Les Misbarack

Wonder how they're blowing off steam at Barack Obama's National Headquarters?

The answer is, with a bit of Les Miserables aka Les Misbarack.

Click here to watch the hilarious and well put together video.

Let's hope that immediately after, they got back to work. :-)

Posted on: Saturday, September 13, 2008 @ 12:05 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Dolly Parton SINGING @ 9 to 5

From Defamer.com -- click here.

'nuff said.

Posted on: Friday, September 12, 2008 @ 12:05 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


MUST WATCH: Every Little Step...A Chorus Line Documentary - Trailer & Donna McKechnie!

Debuting this weekend at the prestigious Toronto Film Festival was a new documentary called Every Little Step, a film tracing the history of Michael Bennett's A Chorus Line.  The "buzz" on the film is FANTASTIC. 

The forces behind it are John Breglio and Bob Avian, who shepherded the latest Broadway revival, which was a total success and paid back its investment. The documentary chronicles the process of casting the 2006 revival, along with the show's history and dating back to the original workshops with Bennett and the original cast. It could be easily stated that this show, in addition to all its other historic accomplishments, could actually be the first "reality show."

Tony-award winning actress, Donna McKechnie, who walked off with a Tony, as the original Cassie, just got back to New York from Toronto and was in the audience for the premiere. I reached her at home, and this is what she had to say about the film and her experience watching it: 

"I can't wait until everyone sees this film. They did a great job putting it together and the audience reaction was stupendous. I was so nervous about seeing it for the first time at the Toronto premiere, but from the opening moments, I was in love.

The film is very exciting, funny and extremely moving. It's a great tribute to Michael, to dancers, and to all of us who have a dream and want to work hard for what we love.  Every Little Step has the true heart of A Chorus Line... 

It brings the experience that audiences have watching the show in the theatre -- to film.

It's a tribute to us ALL!"

Click here to see the exciting trailer...you'll see a lot of familiar faces - past and present.

A Chorus Line is currently on a national tour and certainly is one of the most exciting shows that you'll ever see LIVE on stage. Click here for tour cities and schedule.

Broadway has produced many legendary productions, but A Chorus Line and the story behind it remain special. Every Little Step captures the magic of the show by following the process of casting the 2006 stage revival. The concept is self-referential, given that the very plot of A Chorus Line is about casting a musical, but the filmmakers add another layer by examining how the original show was born when Michael Bennett recorded a group of dancers speaking in confessional mode. Fans of the show may get goosebumps hearing those audio tapes, while newcomers will discover what made Bennett (in the words of the finale song) "one singular sensation/every little step he takes."

This is the third documentary directors James D. Stern and Adam Del Deo have premiered at the Festival. Stern has built a prolific career producing film and Broadway shows, including The Producers and Hairspray. His participation afforded the crew extraordinary access behind the scenes and, for anyone who loves theater, Every Little Step is cause for hip-swaying, high-kicking celebration.

In auditions, we see performers giving everything they've got for songs like "I Can Do That" and "At the Ballet." We meet the original performers Donna McKechnie (who performed "The Music and the Mirror") and Baayork Lee (whose personality and short stature inspired the character Connie) along with the aspiring dancers who hope to revive those roles. Encountering so many talented hopefuls, it is mesmerizing to watch their different interpretations of each character. As part of the dialogue between past and present, composer Marvin Hamlisch reveals how the song known as "Tits and Ass" was almost cut in 1975, while thirty years later new singers out-vamp each other to make it their own.

But who will get the parts? The directors deftly follow the process to the end - the heartbreak of being cut, the exhilaration of being chosen. The result is one thrilling combination, every move this film makes.

For tons of BroadwayWorld.com coverage of A Chorus Line, click here.

For more on the Toronto Film Festival, click here to read about it in today's New York Times or click here to read about it in Variety.

Posted on: Sunday, September 07, 2008 @ 03:32 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


HURRICANE GUSTAV EMERGENCY RESOURCES

Just some ways that everyone can pitch in to help...

Catholic Charities USA's Disaster Response Team has been deployed to the Gulf Coast ahead of Hurricane Gustav, ramping up efforts to respond to the potentially devastating storm. Once on the ground, the team will be working with the local Catholic Charities agencies in the region to preposition community resources sites. After the storm, these sites will provide water, basic food essentials, clean up supplies, personal care kits, and other items to meet the communities' recovery needs. To contribute to Catholic Charities USA's response efforts: Call (800) 919-9338

Direct Relief International, which provides humanitarian medical relief, is sending additional relief materials to complement its pre-positioned hurricane preparedness materials distributed in high-risk areas. In the three years since Katrina and Rita, Direct Relief has supported safety-net clinics and community health centers along the Gulf Coast with $47 million in medical material aid and $4.6 million in cash assistance. Direct Relief is communicating frequently with healthcare partners treating people affected by Gustav to deliver the most effective aid possible, both in the U.S. and in the Caribbean. 

Hands on New Orleans is working with local and state agencies to prepare and ensure for a coordinated immediate response. Donations of funds to operate a volunteer reception center and to deploy an early responder team to meet immediate needs are necessary at this time; click here. To donate goods or products click here.

The Louisiana Disaster Recovery Foundation (LDRF), is expediting funding to local agencies along the Gulf Coast to help with the mandatory evacuation ahead of Hurricane Gustav. Already, LDRF has helped the Lafayette Restoration Center move seniors and people with special needs out of New Orleans and to safety, and there are many more local organizations LDRF is providing emergency assistance to. You can help. Visit the LDRF website to find out how: to donate, click here.

Operation USA, an international disaster relief agency, is partnering with established networks of community health clinics which are working around the clock to anticipate needs resulting from a major storm with 15-30 foot storm surges necessitating the possible evacuation of millions of people. Operation USA is appealing to individuals, foundations and companies for money and appropriate relief supplies to enable it to respond effectively when Hurricane Gustav makes landfall.

Southern Baptist Disaster Relief (SBDR) requests for feeding capacity has now doubled from 310,000 meals per day to more than 600,000 as the Gulf Coast braces for the possibility of a Category 4 Gustav. Some 113 of 115 Southern Baptist Disaster Relief feeding units have been put on alert to mobilize along the Gulf Coast states a day or two in the wake of hurricane landfall. Several larger shelters are at ready in Texas where four Texas Baptist Men Disaster Relief feeding units have deployed. Other sites will be determined as landfall nears. 

World Vision, an international Christian relief and development agency, has readied emergency supplies in Picayune, Mississippi, with several truckloads of additional goods on standby in Dallas, Los Angeles and other U.S. locations. The organization's domestic disaster response teams are also on full alert today, with expert staff prepared to deploy from around the country early next week should Hurricane Gustav prove destructive.

 

Posted on: Sunday, August 31, 2008 @ 03:55 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


BWW Twitter

BroadwayWorld.com's offered a stripped down version of the site for wireless browsers and devices since year one. (It helped that I had a day job at the time AND one of the original Blackberry devices!). We're now proud to offer one of the latest wireless services, adding a BroadwayWorld.com Twitter feed! Subscribing will get the latest top stories (only the major news folks!) sent straight to the device of your choosing. 

Twitter, is a "micro-blogging service" for which you can sign up to receive updates via their web site, instant messaging, SMS, RSS, email, facebook, etc... 

For more information on Twitter itself, click here

For BroadwayWorld.com's brand new feed, click here!


Posted on: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 @ 09:02 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Sondheim Writes in to the NY Times

Composer / lyricist extraordinaire Stephen Sondheim wrote in to the Sunday NY Times in respose to Off the Stage, What's Behind the Music, written by Susan Elliott on August 13, 2008. The original article discusses some of the "unseen heroes" of the musical theatre world, the orchestrators. Mentioning orchestrators from Russell Bennett (South Pacific) to Sim Ramin (Gypsy) to Doug Besterman (Young Frankenstein) to Bill Sherman and Alex Lacamoire (In the Heights). 

In his letter to the editor, available here, Sondheim takes umbrage at instances where orchestrators get TOO much credit, including the occasional insinuations that some of their work can cross the line into composition. He also takes on the downsizing of orchestras, noting that he "deplores" them, but does "understand the economics."

About credit given to Jason Carr, who won the Drama Desk Award for the orchestrations of the most recent Sunday in the Park with George, he writes

"As for Jason Carr, who won the Drama Desk Award for his deft reduction of Michael Starobin's thrilling 11-player orchestration to an ensemble of five, I'm happy for him, but the atmosphere and most of the extra instrumental lines and decorations were still Michael's. Six-elevenths of the award, at the very least, belong to him"

Well worth reading.

Posted on: Saturday, August 23, 2008 @ 05:28 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


The Buzz on SHREK

So far the buzz on SHREK, which just began its out of town tryout (on August 14th) at the 5th Avenue Theater in Seattle is quite good. The show plays out there through September 21st, before heading to Broadway to begin previews on November 8, opening on December 14th. 

Early reports on the show, some of which you can read right here on BroadwayWorld.com's Message Boards are as positive as they get these days (naturally, keeping in mind, that the show *IS* in tryout mode where anything can change on a daily basis - the whole point of an out of town tryout). 

Even Michael Riedel has a hard time trying to find ways to knock the show in today's NY Post - and if that doesn't tell you a lot, I don't know what does! I do agree with him though that Neil Diamond's "I'm A Believer" will be missed - how could it not be?

Also check out a video from Seatle's Evening Magazine, welcoming the cast to Seattle. That lovable ogre is looking good (and reminding me of how I look in the morning pre-coffee).

Posted on: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 @ 08:50 AM Posted by: Robert Diamond


Bryan Batt Interviewed About MAD MEN and More

Here's today's second entry about a talented Broadway thesp currently enjoying well-deserved success on the small screen. BroadwayWorld.com fave, and Broadway vet (La Cage aux Folles, Seussical, Saturday Night Fever, The Scarlett Pimpernel, Sunset Boulevard, Beauty and the Beast, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Starlight Express and Cats) Bryan Batt was interviewed this morning by the CW11 news about his character on the show.



On the show, Bryan plays Salvatore Romano, the Art Director of the show's agency. Mad Men airs on AMC Sunday nights at 10pm. Click here to visit the show's official web site.

For more on the uber-talented Batt, visit his official web site here.

Posted on: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 @ 06:10 PM Posted by: Robert Diamond


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