Saturday, July 9, 2011

HOT TICKETS, ALLEGEDLY

The most fascinating thing about Catch Me if You Can is why all those gifted people would want to make it into a musical. The movie on which it is based was an episodic caper about a charming young con man, played by Leonardo di Caprio, and was redeemed by the idiosyncratic Christopher Walken as his father and the always weighty imprimatur of Steven Spielberg. But a musical needs to unfold, not be explained.

The gargantuan comedic talents of Norbert Leo Butz as the pursuer of the young culprit, are here squished into an uncomfortable wrinkled suit and a scowling demeanor. The bad boy himself, Aaron Tveit, is cute but nothing to build a show around. His 'takes' as he gets yet another darkly bright idea make one long for the original production of How to Succeed and the inimitable Bobby Morse. Mark Shaiman is a gifted composer and arranger, but nothing here shines except for his autobiographical program notes, which are wittier than anything in the show.

A few blocks away is The Book of Mormon. I was successful in getting a ticket last week, a cause for congratulations from all I knew, since it is unquestionably the biggest hit in eons. But except for one song that moved me, the show seemed what I would have to characterize as 'Ka Ka' humor.

The biggest surprise on the Great (and expensive) White Way is Sister Act. The musical adaptation of the Whoopi Goldberg movie, I went expecting nothing. To my astonishment it is riddled with wonderful songs by Alan Menken and Glenn Slater, a dynamite and dazzling leading lady in Patina Miller, who rocks and discos with the best of them -- maybe even better than the best, and the pure and touching soprano of Victoria Clark as the Mother Superior. For those who missed the movie, Patina plays a singer who saw a murder and is hiding out in a convent. The device and its movie past aside, this is flat-out entertainment at its sequined best. Exhausted at having been so disappointed with what people were saying was good, I, like the woman at the center of the show, was redeemed.


HOT TICKETS, ALLEGEDLY

The most fascinating thing about Catch Me if You Can is why all those gifted people would want to make it into a musical. The movie on which it is based was an episodic caper about a charming young con man, played by Leonardo di Caprio, and was redeemed by the idiosyncratic Christopher Walken as his father and the always weighty imprimatur of Steven Spielberg. But a musical needs to unfold, not be explained.

The gargantuan comedic talents of Norbert Leo Butz as the pursuer of the young culprit, are here squished into an uncomfortable wrinkled suit and a scowling demeanor. The bad boy himself, Aaron Tveit, is cute but nothing to build a show around. His 'takes' as he gets yet another darkly bright idea make one long for the original production of How to Succeed and the inimitable Bobby Morse. Mark Shaiman is a gifted composer and arranger, but nothing here shines except for his autobiographical program notes, which are wittier than anything in the show.

A few blocks away is The Book of Mormon. I was successful in getting a ticket last week, a cause for congratulations from all I knew, since it is unquestionably the biggest hit in eons. But except for one song that moved me, the show seemed what I would have to characterize as 'Ka Ka' humor.

The biggest surprise on the Great (and expensive) White Way is Sister Act. The musical adaptation of the Whoopi Goldberg movie, I went expecting nothing. To my astonishment it is riddled with wonderful songs by Alan Menken and Glenn Slater, a dynamite and dazzling leading lady in Patina Miller, who rocks and discos with the best of them -- maybe even better than the best, and the pure and touching soprano of Victoria Clark as the Mother Superior. For those who missed the movie, Patina plays a singer who saw a murder and is hiding out in a convent. The device and its movie past aside, this is flat-out entertainment at its sequined best. Exhausted at having been so disappointed with what people were saying was good, I, like the woman at the center of the show, was redeemed.


Tuesday, February 8, 2011

SPIDERFREUDE

As one whose childhood was brightened by what seemed the great original American art form, my heart lifted by the brilliant lyrics of Frank Loesser, Yip Harburg and Cole Porter, my soul tintinabulated by a sense of personal destiny because I had the same birthday as Irving Berlin, I have watched and listened with great dismay to the devolution of the musical comedy. When Lincoln Center had its brilliant revival of South Pacific, I wept all through the overture: hearing real songs, feeling true sentiments, not just squishy things, but a modicum of wit that made you smile, and occasioned bursts of true joy. So it was with some alarm that I experienced Phantom, and the mawkish music of Andrew Lloyd Webber, and grieved for what was doubtless going to be downhill from Lerner & Loewe.
But I had NO idea. Only as a vague sense of terror descended on me with the mounting cost of musicals, and the success of mirthless unfrolics like Spring Awakening, as my ears strained for real music, did I begin to feel what I loved was lost forever. So when the announcements started coming about Spiderman- Turn Off the Dark, that a theater was to be renovated to make room for the areial acrobatic, and a show was to cost $65 million i threw in my spiritual musical towel.
Having lived many years in Hollywood, the capital of Schaadenfreude, where one is mostly sustained by the failure of others, it is with a heart full of song that
I read today Ben Brantley's wittily negatived and admittedly early(although in terms of original scheduling, late) review of Spiderman, Turn Off the Dark. Any bad advance feelings I had towards the show had been exacerbated by the positive enthusiasm lately exhibited by the hysteric Glenn Beck, who endorsed it as if it were the musicalized philosophy of Sarah Palin. So to have a genuine theater critic from The New York Times see it at last, and express his tasteful disdain gave
a lilt to the day. The Gershwins hummed in my ears. Jerome Kern flooded my veins. I think the song he played was "Look for the Silver Lining."
Is it possible in this horribly confusing world where daily the values we once clung to are swept away, that virtue can still triumph? That Good-- that is to say not the comic book victory of masked hero over masked villain, but something of actual value, like a melody you can actually hum and words you can understand-- can prevail? Oh, God, I hope so. Are You there? Are You watching this? Or are you just trying to get out of the way before some more scenery falls?

Thursday, January 13, 2011

A STONE FOR OSCAR WILDE

Before Harold Robbins decided to become a very rich hack, he wrote what was a pretty good novel, called A Stone for Danny Fisher. I don't know why I remembered that during last night's fairly wonderful production of The

Importance of Being Earnest, Brian Bedford's hailed directorial stint, not to mention his performance as LAdy Bracknell, but I did. I suppose it was because

I really love Oscar Wilde, and feel a great sense of personal connection, so the laughs, though real and stemming from a truly clever and original brainpan, felt a little forced and painful, because I imagine I know how deep he went, how much

more he had to say and see and later did, and how exhausting it must have been

to be so witty.

My closest connection with that estimable Irishman was at the great marble memorial to him in Paris at La Cimitiere Pere LaChaise, that was paid for

by an admirer, as he could not himself manage a simple burial fee. "I could not afford my life," he wrote, "and now I cannot afford my death." The words inscribed on the coffre were, in part, 'Outcasts Always Mourn,' and they

became a line of the poem I wrote for Happy's Eulogy, after that little Yorkie and I had spent the brilliant summer day having lunch with Oscar, on what was to be Happy's last afternoon. A terrible sadness crept out of the marble I sat on the edge of with my sandwich, and invaded me even before anything went wrong. It was as though I could physically feel the agonies Wilde had been through in his life, not the least of which were having to be so witty, effortless though

it seemed. Comedy writing is so very Pagliacci.

So it was that as much as I enjoyed the production and performances last night, the shrill of the young women's lines cut through me as he well defined their empty attractiveness, the best of the wit being saved for Lady Bracknell,

deftly portrayed in drag, which is how, I guess, most old ladies must have seemed. In memory I searched for Dame Edith Evans who looked not unlike Bedford at this point in his life and make-up. Anyway, it was all veddy veddy clever

and well-designed and I was glad I went, though sorry he and Happy were dead, though I suspect Happy had an easier life.

After that Parisian afternoon where my Yorkie and I spent a glorious day among the glorious literary, musical and artistic dead, the only interesting place you could go to that day because every museum was closed, it being one of

their arbitrary holidays that if you tried to take it away from them they would go on strike, which is the French's favorite thing to do, we went to dinner back near my hotel at a restaurant called Bouchon, where we sat at a table on the

sidewalk and a little boy ran through the street chasing after his fireman father, and after a while chased after Happy. A pretty, dark-haired woman came and gave me a glass of champagne, and said "That is for being so kind to my son,

Dorian." DOrian? "After Dorian Gray," she said. Pas posible. Lunch with Oscar WIlde and dinner with Dorian? So of course we became friends and I invited them to come visit me the next day at the Plaza Athenee, where once

again Dorian and Happy resumed their chase, this time around the room.

After they left, I took Happy for a walk, and he collapsed. That final exertion, showing he could stand up to a younger dog had done him in. I called the vet who said, from the symptoms, it had been a heart attack, and we would

have to put Happy to sleep the next day. I held him in my lap at a cafe so I could quiet his quivering, and Happy had one strand of pate Alain Delon. Then I carried him back to the hotel, asked him to help me, and stroked him in the

darkness. And at four in the morning, I turned on the light and he was dead.

There was a black velvet bag I hid him in to attend forbidden occasions, the Literary Guild dinner when there was still a Literary Guild, and it was in

that bag that he was cremated. Then I took his ashes and sprinkled him among the greats at Pere LaChaise.

I have no idea why I am telling this sad but somehow strangely uplifting story except that I am trying to re-define for myself the obligation of an artist, what it is they (we?) are supposed to do to satisfy our own needs as

well as the world's. But I felt so much pain for Oscar Wilde even as I watched his comedy, that I knew something more was going on than simply seeing a play.

Tell of the storm-tossed man, o muse.

But what of the storm-tossed woman?

Anyway, I'm attaching the eulogy, as generously recorded for me by one of the great voices of my lifetime. And certainly Happy's. Maybe you can help to

tell me what it all means.

With love from slush-tossed New York.



A STONE FOR OSCAR WILDE

A STONE FOR OSCAR WILDE

Before Harold Robbins decided to become a very rich hack, he wrote what was a
pretty good novel, called A Stone for Danny Fisher. I don't know why I
remembered that during last night's fairly wonderful production of The
Importance of Being Earnest, Brian Bedford's hailed directorial stint, not to
mention his performance as LAdy Bracknell, but I did. I suppose it was because
I really love Oscar Wilde, and feel a great sense of personal connection, so the
laughs, though real and stemming from a truly clever and original brainpan, felt
a little forced and painful, because I imagine I know how deep he went, how much
more he had to say and see and later did, and how exhausting it must have been
to be so witty.
My closest connection with that estimable Irishman was at the great
marble memorial to him in Paris at La Cimitiere Pere LaChaise, that was paid for
by an admirer, as he could not himself manage a simple burial fee. "I could not
afford my life," he wrote, "and now I cannot afford my death." The words
inscribed on the coffre were, in part, 'Outcasts Always Mourn,' and they
became a line of the poem I wrote for Happy's Eulogy, after that little Yorkie
and I had spent the brilliant summer day having lunch with Oscar, on what was to
be Happy's last afternoon. A terrible sadness crept out of the marble I sat on
the edge of with my sandwich, and invaded me even before anything went wrong.
It was as though I could physically feel the agonies Wilde had been through in
his life, not the least of which were having to be so witty, effortless though
it seemed. Comedy writing is so very Pagliacci.
So it was that as much as I enjoyed the production and performances last
night, the shrill of the young women's lines cut through me as he well defined
their empty attractiveness, the best of the wit being saved for Lady Bracknell,
deftly portrayed in drag, which is how, I guess, most old ladies must have
seemed. In memory I searched for Dame Edith Evans who looked not unlike Bedford
at this point in his life and make-up. Anyway, it was all veddy veddy clever
and well-designed and I was glad I went, though sorry he and Happy were dead,
though I suspect Happy had an easier life.
After that Parisian afternoon where my Yorkie and I spent a glorious day
among the glorious literary, musical and artistic dead, the only interesting
place you could go to that day because every museum was closed, it being one of
their arbitrary holidays that if you tried to take it away from them they would
go on strike, which is the French's favorite thing to do, we went to dinner back
near my hotel at a restaurant called Bouchon, where we sat at a table on the
sidewalk and a little boy ran through the street chasing after his fireman
father, and after a while chased after Happy. A pretty, dark-haired woman came
and gave me a glass of champagne, and said "That is for being so kind to my son,
Dorian." DOrian? "After Dorian Gray," she said. Pas posible. Lunch with
Oscar WIlde and dinner with Dorian? So of course we became friends and I
invited them to come visit me the next day at the Plaza Athenee, where once
again Dorian and Happy resumed their chase, this time around the room.
After they left, I took Happy for a walk, and he collapsed. That final
exertion, showing he could stand up to a younger dog had done him in. I called
the vet who said, from the symptoms, it had been a heart attack, and we would
have to put Happy to sleep the next day. I held him in my lap at a cafe so I
could quiet his quivering, and Happy had one strand of pate Alain Delon. Then I
carried him back to the hotel, asked him to help me, and stroked him in the
darkness. And at four in the morning, I turned on the light and he was dead.
There was a black velvet bag I hid him in to attend forbidden occasions,
the Literary Guild dinner when there was still a Literary Guild, and it was in
that bag that he was cremated. Then I took his ashes and sprinkled him among
the greats at Pere LaChaise.
I have no idea why I am telling this sad but somehow strangely uplifting
story except that I am trying to re-define for myself the obligation of an
artist, what it is they (we?) are supposed to do to satisfy our own needs as
well as the world's. But I felt so much pain for Oscar Wilde even as I watched
his comedy, that I knew something more was going on than simply seeing a play.
Tell of the storm-tossed man, o muse.
But what of the storm-tossed woman?
Anyway, I'm attaching the eulogy, as generously recorded for me by one of
the great voices of my lifetime. And certainly Happy's. Maybe you can help to
tell me what it all means.
With love from slush-tossed New York.