Friday, February 29, 2008

Did Critics Provide Passing Grades To Passing Strange?

Did Critics Provide Passing Grades To Passing Strange?

Last evening, Broadway's most offbeat musical Passing Strange opened at the Belasco Theatre to some bona fide critical raves (including mine), although there were some dissents.

The show is based on the early adult years of musician Stew (née Mark Stewart) with music he co-wrote with Heidi Rodewald. Directed by Annie Dorsen and choreographed by Karole Armitage, the tuner stars Daniel Breaker (pictured) as Stew's younger self, along with De'Adre Aziza, Eisa Davis, Colman Domingo, Chad Goodridge and Rebecca Naomi Jones.

Calling "it wonderful, and a welcome anomaly on Broadway," Charles Isherwood in The New York Times sounds the clarion call: "Although it is far richer in wit, feeling and sheer personality than most of what is classified as musical theater in the neighborhood around Times Square these days, its big heart throbs to the sound of electric guitars, searing synthesizer chords, driving drums and lyrics delivered not in a clean croon but a throaty yelp....Stew brings an invigorating new perspective to the classic coming-of-age narrative. He brings a gently satiric touch too..... This jumpy character -- in the text he is simply called Youth -- is portrayed by the sensational Daniel Breaker, whose performance has grown tremendously since the Off Broadway run."

Asserting that "It's boldly atypical Broadway fare that pulses with a new kind of vitality," Variety's David Rooney heaps on the laurels: "Stew and director/co-creator Annie Dorsen have fine-tuned the material, adding definition and removing most of the lulls from the previously rambling second act in particular....Dorsen's achievement here in giving the episodic musical a satisfying shape cannot be overstated. Working with choreographer Karole Armitage, she creates something propulsive and viscerally exciting out of minimalist staging....The appealing Breaker's light touch never falters, deftly offsetting the posturing pretensions of countercultural hipsterism with his character's youthful ingenuousness.... Whether this personal yet joyously inclusive show is a first step into the form or a one-time excursion, Passing Strange breaks the mold with electrifying inventiveness."

Offering that "Strange is truly unlike anything you've seen on Broadway," USA Today's Elysa Gardner hails the show in her three-and-a-half star review: "Stew actually sends up cultural sacred cows, from performance art to punk rock. Racial stereotypes, too, are cleverly evoked and debunked, and there are lighthearted jabs at musical theater itself. But Strange is no snark fest. Stew and Rodewald reject the sentimentality and bombast that some rock-influenced writers bring to Broadway, and their work has more of the emotional intuition and melodic invention that distinguish great musicals than anything Andrew Lloyd Webber or his acolytes have come up with. Strange's humor and heart are enhanced by the cast. Daniel Breaker makes Youth lovable despite his narcissism, and manages a funny, touching rapport with Stew, the narrator."

Praising it as "all smart and all enjoyable and all very good for the theater," Newsday's Linda Winer clearly enjoyed the show: "What's inside is what gives this surface its remarkable traction. Annie Dorsen, a downtown director in her mainstream debut, keeps the seriously comic action -- to use Stew's favorite word -- real. With little more than a few chairs and a back wall (by David Korins) of jukebox neon lights, the show manages to create at least three different communities of unpredictable individuals with complex internal lives and worldviews. Karole Armitage, a veteran modern-dance choreographer, gives raucous energy to purposefully haphazard running, sliding and spinning for joy. No Broadway unisons here....When Youth tries to impress his German friends with his ghetto-warrior 'Identity Song,' the thing turns out to be a vaudeville....Nobody gets naked here, but everyone is exposed."

Proclaiming it "a hell of a good time," The New York Sun's Eric Grode is mostly positive: "It's a witty, boisterous, often heretical dissection of racial identity in all its modern-day fluidity....Director Annie Dorsen has recalibrated the performances of her excellent original cast for the larger space....Mr. Breaker has that exceedingly rare ability to make post-adolescent self-involvement and sanctimoniousness endearing, and he and Stew have developed an easy rapport that wasn't evident last year. When Youth grabs Stew's microphone during a climactic realization, taking brief ownership of his future, the effect is both offhanded and riveting."

Citing this as "one of the more audacious attempts to bring rock 'n' roll to Broadway," Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter is largely upbeat: "[W]hat it lacks in cohesion and theatrical imagination, it makes up for with musical passion and energy....[T]here's no denying the quality of the hard-driving, stylistically eclectic rock score, with the evening's best number, the hard-driving 'Amsterdam,' proving a true show-stopper. The fluid staging by Annie Dorsen and the minimal but energetic choreography by Karole Armitage add greatly to the show's impact. And the six-person ensemble, led by the highly engaging creator/narrator, deliver terrific performances."

Labeling Passing Strange an "exuberant if flawed show," Joe Dziemianowicz of New York's Daily News offers a mixed assessment: "[T]he story feels familiar and smacks of warmed-over 'Wizard of Oz.' The stocky, bald Stew wears hipster shades and a dark suit as he narrates, sings and strums guitar. But he might as well be dressed in Dorothy Gale gingham and ruby slippers.
What makes the show fresh is the music, which Stew wrote with Heidi Rodewald. Its rhythms and sounds go from hard-thumping rock and groovy blues to funk, punk and gospel....Daniel Breaker is magnetic as the Youth. Eisa Davis adds hilarity and heartache as his caring, churchgoing mother."

Concluding that "although Broadway may not be (Stew's) alley, his offbeat beatness would be a delight to encounter in cabaret," New York Post's Clive Barnes nevertheless musters up two and a half stars: "It's also beautifully performed by a beguiling cast -- fun people to be with, even if one has to be with them rather longer than one might have planned....This is a conceit less strange than the show's authors try to suggest: Self-invention is often a prelude to self-identification. Yet, for all its conventionality, Stew's book and particularly his lyrics are witty and pointed. He has a dry sense of humor that's perfectly on-target, and stands back from these presumably autobiographical vignettes with a wry but calculated modesty."

Overall, given the praise that has been showered on Passing Strange, the question now is whether audiences will finally discover it and make it their own. Certainly, it does not help that the Belasco is on the other side of Broadway, away from the glare of most theatres. But it certainly deserves four times more than the 23.5% capacity crowd it drew last week.

So, if you're smart, I'd advise you to get thee right away to get tickets while excellent seats are still available. I'm sure they won't last long.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Passing Strange (The SOB Review) (February 29, 2008)
Broadway's Strange Opening Night (February 28, 2008)
Strange Stagefellows (February 20, 2008)
Passing Strange Jersey Boys And Rock 'N' Roll: Downbeat Box Office (February 19, 2008)
Stranger Things Have Happened! (October 19, 2007)
Passing Strange To Broadway? (October 16, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Passing Strange (The SOB Review)

Passing Strange (The SOB Review) - Belasco Theatre, New York, NY

**** (out of ****)

Shout "Hallelujah!" high to the heavens, for the absolute best, most cosmic musical of the year has arrived!

Strangely enough, it comes in one of the most unusual, unexpected shows I think I've ever seen. Perhaps it's fitting that Passing Strange, which opened last evening at Broadway's out-of-the-way Belasco Theatre, is off the beaten path, for it succeeds in taking the Great White Way in an entirely new, infinitely intelligent direction.

And it's not just that Passing Strange has a laid-back California meets pulsating Amsterdam by way of a Berlin vibe -- and trust me, I've been to all three places to know firsthand.

It's that its trajectory brilliantly takes a bohemian base and infuses gospel, rock, punk and soul music into a delicious, simmering hot, heterogeneous -- and anything but bourgeois -- bouillabaisse, compliments of a musician named Stew. This exacting artist (his real name is Mark Stewart) takes us on a wild trip quasi-strolling through an astral plain, expertly telling the story of his own formative adult years with such humor, passion and grace that I found myself tearing up many times over as chills shot down my spine.

While others might dub this "Early Summer Awakening," the fantastical journey (sorry Stew) offered by Passing Strange's stellar cast and heavenly score makes this a celestial voyage worth taking. Making it all the more worthwhile is the realization that this is largely a true personal account from Stew of his early adulthood laced with enough wry wit and beautiful, clever score to leave you on a real high long after it's over.

I'll be honest with you. Before I broke the news about Passing Strange's own ride to Broadway last year, I had never heard of Stew or Heidi Rodewald (who collaborated on the score) or their band, the Negro Problem. So when the show began, I had no idea what to expect.

Initial appearances proved deceiving as Stew and his band took to the stage in full concert mode. But it soon gave way to Stew's folksy storytelling of his alter ego, Youth -- a younger version of himself played with awkward charm by Daniel Breaker. (Allow me to pause here to tell you that a sensational new stage star has emerged in an astonishing breakthrough role. Breaker conveys volumes with a simple roll of his eyes and displays a natural presence found far too infrequently. There is a Tony nod in his future.)

Set against a distinct backdrop of black and white, the younger Stew feels trapped, pigeon-holed into an existence where the color of one's skin is the defining factor -- oh, and by the way, he happens to be African American. Yet he finds his passage to his future through an unlikely source. Stew's loving mother (a lovely Eisa Davis) compels him to become more involved with his church. However, she gets more than she bargained for when the minister's son (Colman Domingo, who exceptionally takes on various roles within the show) turns him on quite literally to all the world's possibilities, one toke at a time, freeing him to begin his quest to find life's deeper meaning.

Just as Moses showed the way to the Promised Land without ever reaching it himself, the minister's son inspires the young Stew to take off for Amsterdam. For the first time in my theatregoing experience, I actually felt my seat vibrate as if I were with him on the flight's take-off. To say the least, Tom Morse's sound design literally rocks.

Once he lands in Amsterdam, David Korins' stark black-and-white set design gives way to vivid colors where ironically, skin color no longer seems to matter. (The tune "Amsterdam" underscores how exceptionally Stew and Rodewell excel at moving the story forward with inventive, smart lyrics buttressed by hook after musical hook.)

And after expanding his mind with a coffeeshop cluster of colorful individuals, our Youth advances to the punk side of Berlin. And lives to tell about it.

Often veering toward the existential, this ethereal odyssey ultimately dares to proclaim that you actually can go home again. But it's delivered with the caveat that you'll be all the richer for having not only dared to dream big, but especially choosing to live even larger.

For that and its glorious score, I couldn't help but fall head over heels in love with this smoke-hazed tale. Far from strange, I look forward to passing this way again.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Broadway's Strange Opening Night (February 28, 2008)
Strange Stagefellows (February 20, 2008)
Passing Strange Jersey Boys And Rock 'N' Roll: Downbeat Box Office (February 19, 2008)
Stranger Things Have Happened! (October 19, 2007)
Passing Strange To Broadway? (October 16, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Broadway's Strange Opening Night

Broadway's Strange Opening Night

Arguably the quirkiest musical to tread the Broadway boards this season -- or in years for that matter -- Passing Strange opens this evening at the Belasco Theatre.

To say it's been a long and winding road on the path to the Great White Way would be an major understatement.

The creation of Stew (née Mark Stewart), Passing Strange is based on the bohemian musician's formative adult years, beginning in LA, with stops in Amsterdam and Berlin and back. It's brought to life through his book, along with the score he co-wrote with Heidi Rodewald, one of his bandmembers from the Negro Problem.

But the decidedly downtown show's path to Broadway began with a collaboration between The Public Theater and the Berkeley Rep, first playing New York last summer during an extended gig before transferring to California's Bay Area.

Now, the tuner is back in the Big Apple, and it's on Broadway.

The show's MySpace page describes the show as:
...the story of a young black bohemian, who abandons his bourgeois roots to journey to Europe searching for "the real." Discovering a world of sex, drugs, rock and roll and art revolutionaries, our rebel-hero explores love, identity and the meaning of home.
Passing Strange is directed by Annie Dorsen and choreographed by Karole Armitage. The musical not only features Stew and his band as an integral part of the staging, but stars Daniel Breaker as Stew's younger self, along with De'Adre Aziza, Eisa Davis, Colman Domingo, Chad Goodridge and Rebecca Naomi Jones.

Might this just become this season's little tuner that could? Find out tomorrow as I not only provide my critics' capsule, but I'll offer my very own SOB Review.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Strange Stagefellows (February 20, 2008)
Passing Strange Jersey Boys And Rock 'N' Roll: Downbeat Box Office (February 19, 2008)
Stranger Things Have Happened! (October 19, 2007)
Passing Strange To Broadway? (October 16, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Technorati blog directory Blog Directory & Search engine
Visitor Map

Powered by FeedBurner