Showing posts with label Jeff McCarthy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff McCarthy. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Music? Music? Music?

It seems to me that I have written this same review several times in the past. A new musical with a weird plot, unmusical writing, and incredibly loud singing.

Last night David and I saw the World Première of Broadway Bounty Hunter at Barrington Stage 2. Music and Lyrics are by Joe Iconis with a book by him, Lance Rubin and SweetTooth Williams.

I am much too old to appreciate this kind of theatre. Sitting in the front row of the theatre being bombarded by people basically hollering at me from six feet away while also being amplified, unable to understand many of the words that were being sung, and feeling I would rather be somewhere else. This work again came from the Musical Theatre Lab of William Finn and was directed by Julianne Boyd.

Image result for annie golden   Annie Golden

The unbelievable story concerns a middle aged actress trying to get a part in a play.Her husband drowned ten years ago and she still pines for him. She is kidnapped by a strange Asian man and several henchmen and begins her study in a Bounty Hunter School where everyone does their best to kill each other. She is sent to Venezuela to bring back a man who has been a crooked Broadway producer and has killed several people with a product he discovered that energizes them so they can perform fifteen shows a week rather than a mere eight. He turns out to be her supposedly dead husband.


Image result for alan h green Alan H. Green

Well, you get the idea.


Image result for jeff mccarthy Jeff McCarthy
  
The leading roles were played by Annie Golden, Alan H. Green, and Jeff McCarthy. They all sang as loud as possible. Ms. Golden is an excellent actress and the entire cast hollered and danced with great energy.

Julie suggested that the show may be Broadway bound. I doubt it.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

He 'da man

Tonight Peggy, Jim, David, and I saw Man of La Mancha at Barrington Stage. To put it mildly, I was underwhelmed. I'm not quite sure why. I saw the original production in New York at the ANTA Theatre in Washington Square in 1965. As I remember, this was a temporary theatre, possibly even a tent. I remember that a large bridge-like stairway was lowered from the top of the stage into the audience. Other than that, I have no vivid memories.

Richard Kiley was Don Quixote and Joan Diener was Aldonza. I guess that they were fine. The show ran for several thousand performances.

Image result for jeff mccarthy Jeff McCarthy

Tonight's performance was a 'puzzlement' to me. (Sorry to mix Broadway shows). I had a hard time getting involved in the production. Jeff McCarthy played Don Quixote and Felicia Boswell was Aldonza tonight. 

He is a stalwart of Barrington Stage and has appeared in many of their musical productions. I saw him in Sweeney Todd several years ago and felt he was just not a Sweeney Todd vocally. I had the same feeling tonight as regards his singing of the Don. I'm not sure whether he was trying to make his voice sound 'old', like the aging Cervantes, but it really didn't work very well. Gaspy phrases followed by very loud high notes.

Image result for felicia boswell Felicia Boswell

Ms. Boswell acted the part of Aldonza very well but has an even more problematic vocality than he. She pushes the 'chest' voice up to the point of pain and then flips into a tiny head voice for a few notes.

Several other of the male singers had really fine voices, especially Tom Alan Robbins as Sancho Panza.

Image result for tom alan robbins  Tom Alan Robbins

I just had a very difficult time staying involved with the often wandering plot. And the singing of the two leads really put me off.

Oh well, there speaks the voice teacher...

The show started life as a 1959 Television, non-musical presentation. Sometimes trying to expand a work pushes it out of context. This is what I felt tonight.

***********************

After finishing this blog last night, I went to You Tube to hear Richard Kiley's interpretation of the role. This is what was missing in last's night's production. He sang 'The Impossible Dream' with fervor, rich voice, and an effortless long musical line. No gasps. When he came to climactic high notes, they were the obvious emotional response to the text. Not a desperate attempt to gain applause.

The main character in any production has to hold the whole thing together. When lesser characters sing better than the star it weakens the whole thing.

Imagine Otello without a strong Otello.

I also just listened to Joan Diener as Aldonza. More of an operatic voice that still has the show-biz sound.