Author Archive for David Hurst – Page 5

The New York Pops – My Favorite Things: The Songs of Rodgers and Hammerstein ★★★★☆

Julian Ovenden & Sierra Boggess with Steven Reineke and The New York Pops (Photo: Richard Termine)

Carnegie Hall – Isaac Stern Auditorium
October 9, 2015

Steven Reineke, Music Director and Conductor
Essential Voices USA – Judith Clurman, Music Director and Conductor

The New York Pops opened their 33rd season October 9th with a classic program entitled My Favorite Things: The Songs of Rodgers and Hammerstein.  But if you think that meant another stuffy evening of American songbook fare you’d be oh-so-very wrong.  The skillful Pops orchestra, under the ever-more assured direction of Steven Reinek, dug into the R&H cannon with gusto and their trademark lush sound to give the audience a thrilling evening of rapturous standards – all performed with a freshness that was startling.

Moving thru the songwriting duo’s oeuvre in chronological order, instead of opening with the well-known “Overture” from the Broadway production of Oklahoma with its arrangement by Robert Russell Bennett, Reineke opted for the superb, 1955 film “Overture” which segues into the “Main Title” and “Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’,” with a gorgeous arrangement by Adolph Deutsch and orchestration by Alexander Courage.

Singing Curley’s famous opening song, and handling the Pop’s leading-man duties all evening, was handsome British heartthrob Julian Ovenden who filled in at the last minute for a previously announced Steven Pasquale.  Ovenden, who has a bright, lyric tenor (as opposed to Pasquale’s more full-bodied, dramatic baritone), may be best known for his television work on Downton AbbeyPerson of Interest and Foyle’s War, but he’s equally at home in musical theatre having starred to critical acclaim in many West End productions.  His voice throbs with passion and, though we missed getting to hear Pasquale sing the “Soliloquy” from Carousel (as he just to did to much acclaim this summer at the Lyric Opera of Chicago), Ovenden acquitted himself with polish and elegance, particularly on “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught” from South Pacific and “Edelweiss” from The Sound of Music.

Joining Ovenden in the evening’s leading-lady duties was the beautiful Sierra Boggess who radiated glamour and talent in equal measure.  With her soaring soprano, Boggess especially excelled in a series of duets with Ovenden, including “People Will Say We’re in Love” from Oklahoma, “I Have Dreamed” from The King and I and “No Other Love” from Me and Juliet.  In addition, Boggess took “The Gentleman Is a Dope” from Allegro and “I Enjoy Being a Girl” from Flower Drug Song  and made them her own, much to the audience’s delight.

Throughout the evening, The Pops sounded utterly wonderful, particularly playing the famous “Carousel Waltz” (orchestrated by Don Walker) and the “Cinderella Waltz” (orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett).  Throw in the luxurious support of Essential Voices USA providing excellent choral support throughout the program and you’ve got an evening of entertainment that proved positively rapturous.  Don’t miss The Pops’ upcoming concerts: “Sophisticated Ladies” – a tribute to Billie Holiday and other African-American icons starring Montego Glover, Capathia Jenkins and Sy Smith on November 13; and “It’s Christmas Time in the City” featuring Stephanie J. Block and Brian d’Arcy James on December 18-19.

www.newyorkpops.org

Seth Sikes Sings Judy Garland ★★★★☆

Seth Sikes in SETH SIKES SINGS JUDY GARLAND (Photo: Kevin Thomas Garcia)

54 Below
June 10, 2015

Conceived by Seth Sikes & Lisa Lambert
Directed by Eric Gilliland
Music Direction by Gary Adler
Orchestrations by Matt Aument
Piano: Gary Adler
Bass: MaryAnn McSweeney
Drums: Greg Joseph
Reeds: Kristy Porter
Guitar: Chris Biesterfeldt
Trumpet: Alex Bender
Trombone: Mike Fahn

In the pantheon of legendary female entertainers there is one woman who reigns supreme – the extraordinary Judy Garland.  Born the  youngest of three performing sisters in Minnesota in 1922, little Frances Gumm quickly morphed into MGM’s brightest star, dazzling the world in a string of shattering performances before being taken from us at the gasp-inducingly young age of 47 in London in 1969.  There’s a reason people worship Judy Garland; her talent was, quite simply, incomprehensible.  She was the ultimate tripe-threat: a natural actress incapable of a false performance; a brilliant dancer who could memorize choreography upon seeing it only once; and a singer of such emotional power and truth that Frank Sinatra reportedly said: “…someday we’ll all be forgotten, except for Judy!

Judy_GarlandIs it any wonder then the invitation to see a ‘chorus-boy-turned-director’ perform a cabaret show celebrating Garland on what would have been her 93rd birthday made my blood run cold?  Of course not.  Years of experience watching hundreds of cabaret shows where singers – both women and men, gay and straight – couldn’t resist the temptation to sing Judy’s repertoire have taught me to temper my expectations with large helpings of patience and indulgence.  But there are exceptions to ‘cabaret rules’ and I’m always happy to admit when my preconceived notions were wrong.  In the case of Seth Sikes I’m delighted to report not only was I wrong, but that Sikes may well be one of the saviors of the Great American Songbook as we continue into the 21st century.

Sikes’ biography reads almost like an MGM film script.  As boyish as he is enthusiastic, the fresh-scrubbed Sikes hails from Paris, Texas, where he grew up on a farm and was obsessed with Judy from a young age.  He tried his hand at acting but gave up a career as a performer (Fame on 42nd Street) for one as an assistant to directors such as David Cromer (Women or Nothing and Tribes) and Jack O’Brien (The Nance).  After years of thinking about it (and gentle prodding from a supportive grandmother back home), he tried out a full show of Garland’s material last October and was such a hit 54 Below added subsequent dates in November and again in April.  I caught him June 10th in his latest effort, Seth Sikes Sings Judy Garland, which doubled as a birthday party for Garland, complete with a cake and red suede shoes standing in for ruby slippers!  He is, in a word, amazing.

Seth Sikes at 54 Below (photo: Kevin Thomas Garcia)

Seth Sikes at 54 Below (photo: Kevin Thomas Garcia)

Opening with a medley of “I Feel A Song Coming On” and “From This Moment On,” it was the size and power of Sikes’ voice that first struck me.  He’s a lyric tenor, but it’s the incredibly high placement of his voice that astonishes.  It’s jaw-dropingly high!  And Sikes doesn’t appear to be pushing or straining to sing the way he does, which is full-out.  Of course, after a lifetime of ‘singing along with Judy,’ it shouldn’t be surprising Sikes’ vocal production emulates the greats.  Like Merman, Garland and Streisand, Sikes is a belter – an unashamed, un-repentent belter.  Clearly, no teacher or coach ever told him “you can’t do that,” so he now sings unaware that what he’s doing shouldn’t be possible.  I kept waiting for him to tire or to shift into his head voice, but it never happened.  By the time he’d finished a thrilling “Trolley Song” my mouth hung opened.  By the time he reached the end of the first line in the “Born in a Trunk” sequence, I was a puddle on the floor.  In short, Sikes gets it.  His delivery is unfussy, but the emotion is there and his passion for Garland’s songs is thrillingly palpable.  And if the keys he sings in aren’t exactly those of Garland’s, they’re damn close.  Employing a terrific seven-piece band, crisply led by Gary Adler, Sikes benefits from smartly condensed arrangements by Matt Aument which closely mirror Garland’s originals.  Everything is there: the punched accents, the bluesy harmonies, and – most crucially – the rising key changes that build to frenzied climaxes.

Mid-way through the show, Sikes invited singer Trevor McQueen, a fellow piano-bar devotee, to join him in a ‘Cities Medley’ which contained such showstoppers as “Chicago,” “San Francisco” and “I Happen to Like New York.”  McQueen has a big, belting tenor too, and he complemented Sikes nicely as they sparred and parried over the verses of the songs.  Their unconscious competitiveness got the better of them, however, and by the end of the medley they were both over-singing to a noticeable degree.  But that kind of zealotry can be chalked up to ‘the excitement of the moment’ and didn’t detract from their overall chemistry.  In fact, watching these two young men belting out standards from the golden age of songwriting made me hope for the future of cabaret in general.

My favorite moment in Sikes’ show came in a quietly moving reading of Kurt Weill & Maxwell Anderson’s “It Never Was You” from Knickerbocker Holiday.  It was the first time in the show Sikes sang any dynamic approaching a mezzo-piano and it was rewarding to hear him shift gears out of his full-belt mode.  This leads me to two criticisms of Sikes’ singing that need to be addressed.  First, as I just alluded, his performances need more dynamic diversity.  Nobody likes a belter more than I do, but these songs require more shading and finesse than Sikes is currently giving them.  Second, though he has terrific breath support on long-held notes at the end of songs, Sikes needs a good coach to help him improve his breath control on the legato elements of his singing and, in particular, shifting in and out of his head voice which he can and should employ more often.  To be clear, I’m not advocating that Sikes change his natural delivery.  On the contrary, to quote George Gershwin’s iconic advice to Ethel Merman on the opening night of Girl Crazy in 1930, “…don’t ever let anyone give you a singing lesson; it’ll ruin you!

Sikes concluded his Garland birthday soiree with a stirring “You Made Me Love You” into “Swanee” that had the audience on its feet before launching into two encores.  The first encore was the hilarious “Happy Harvest” from Summer Stock, which was a running gag throughout the show owing to Sikes’ farming roots in Texas.  The musical lead-in to “Happy Harvest” made the audience think he was going to sing “Over the Rainbow” but, wisely, Sikes eschewed that classic as too sacrosanct to touch.  (And he was absolutely right to avoid it when so many singers don’t!)  The final encore was Turner Layton & Henry Creamer’s “After You’ve Gone” which sent Sikes sailing into the stratosphere both musically and emotionally.  It capped an evening that was a vivid reminder of Garland’s greatness now embodied by a young acolyte who understands and appreciates her particular and compelling genius.  I can’t wait to see what Sikes does next.  I’ll certainly be there and so should you!

The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey ★★★★★

Dixon Place
February 7 thru March 28
Opened on February 22, 2015

Written & Performed by James Lecesne
Directed by Tony Speciale
Visuals by Matthew Sandager
Incidental Music by Duncan Sheik

A beautiful gem of a performance-piece, The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey pulls together author and performer James Lecesne’s gifts as storyteller, actor, advocate and activist to dazzling effect.  Neither showy nor flashy, it pulls off the enviable feat of being quietly understated while also delivering an emotional punch that leaves audiences thinking and talking about what they’ve just seen.  It’s what truly great theatre should be, but so rarely is.

Adapted from Lecesne’s Absolute Brightness, a 2008 young adult novel published by Harper Collins, and first seen at Provincetown’s Afterglow Festival in September, 2014, The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey is many things.  A who-done-it mystery combined with a shrewd character study of small-town life saturated with everyday fears and longings, Lecesne’s deft monologue examines the denizens of a small, New Jersey shore town as they deal with the disappearance of 14-year old Leonard Pelkey, a flamboyant presence unashamed to be himself and unafraid to be gay.  Our primary narrator thru Leonard’s story is Chuck DeSantis, a weathered, Jersey detective with an accent to match who doesn’t suffer fools gladly and is determined to get at the truth surrounding Leonard’s disappearance.  Along the way we meet, and Lecesne effortlessly morphs into: Chuck’s brash, loud-mouthed colleague Marty Branahan; Ellen Hertle, the owner of the local beauty salon and Leonard’s aunt; Ellen’s shy but introspective daughter Phoebe; Buddy Howard, a fey, British drama school owner who saw and encouraged Leonard’s talent; Gloria Salzano, a mob widow whose sharp eye discovers several important clues to assist the investigation; Marion Tochterman, a friend and customer of Ellen who goes with her to the morgue to identify Leonard’s body; Otto, an older German man who runs a clock repair shop who befriended Leonard; and Travis Lembeck, a local kid who bullied Leonard.

James Lescene in "The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey" (photo: Peter Yesley)

James Lescene in “The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey” (photo: Peter Yesley)

Of course the one person we never meet or see is Leonard himself, but that’s the magic of Lecesne’s artistry as a performer and shrewdness as a writer.  Slowly and methodically, through the course of meeting all the people who Leonard touched and transformed, we get to know and care for Leonard, which makes the revelations at the play’s end all the more heart-wrenching.  Lecesne’s previous work includes his 1995 solo show, Word of Mouth, which won Drama Desk and Outer Circle Critics Awards, as well as Trevor, his short film which won an Oscar the same year for Best Live Action Short and led to the founding of The Trevor Project in 1998, the only nationwide 24-hour suicide prevention line for LGBT and Questioning youth, of which Lecesne is a co-Founder.

James Lescene in "The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey" (photo: Peter Yesley)

James Lescene in “The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey” (photo: Peter Yesley)

But there’s no preaching in The Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelfrey, just superb story-telling that opens a window onto the human condition.  Using a spare staging courtesy of director Tony Speciale (CSC’s Unnatural Acts), a minimum of props and projections by Matthew Sandager, and lovely and unobtrusive music by Tony-winner Duncan Sheik (Spring Awakening), Lecesne spins his tale the old-fashioned way.  He simply tells his story.  But the results are extraordinary, indeed.

www.dixonplace.org
www.jameslecesne.com

Sam Harris’ HAM – A Musical Memoir ★★★★☆

Theater 511 at Ars Nova
January 8th thru January 24th
Opened January 12th

Produced by Susan Dietz & Elaine Krauss
Written & Performed by Sam Harris with Todd Schroeder
Light & Sound Design by Matt Berman
Scenic Design by Reid Thompson
Costume Design by Hunter Kaczorowski
Musical Directed by Todd Schroeder
Directed by Billy Porter

If solo shows are self-indulgent fare, then, by their very nature, autobiographical solo shows must qualify as really self-indulgent.  Certainly, over the years there have been some terrific examples of the autobiographical show such as Lena Horne’s The Lady and Her Music (1981), but – as a general rule – these vehicles tend to be minefields fraught with peril.

With that said, how much you’ll enjoy Sam Harris’ newest entry into the solo genre, HAM – A Musical Memoir, will probably depend entirely on your previous knowledge of Harris and your connection to him as a singer and performer.  Full disclosure here: I’m a fan.  A big fan, actually, having followed him as a contestant on the original Starsearch in 1984 when he electrified the country with his phenomenal voice (a big, black diva trapped inside a tiny, white boy from Oklahoma) and outré fashion choices (an over-sized tailcoat and high-top sneakers), when he took Broadway by storm in Grease and The Life, appeared on television in The Class,  and as a cabaret and concert artist.  (To this day, An Intimate Evening with Sam Harris at the now-shuttered Arci’s Place in August of 2001 remains one of the greatest, live shows I’ve even seen.)  More recently in 2008, Harris, who’s always been an activist, adopted a little boy, Cooper, and married his partner of 19 years, Danny Jacobsen.   Today he’s proudly in the vanguard of openly gay celebrities who are raising families of their own – both a role model and an example of perseverance in our ever-changing world.

You get all of that and more in HAM, a deliciously fun, slightly sentimental, condensation of Harris’ life told in fast-paced song and dance.  Briskly directed with a steady hand by Billy Porter (yes, the Tony-winning Billy Porter), and accompanied by Todd Schroeder, Harris reenacts the highs and lows of his childhood including his first brush with the stage as a child-actor in South Pacific, discovering the world of gospel music on the other side of the tracks, breaking away from home, honing his act with the help of a manager, and – finally – getting his big break on Starsearch, a break that would open doors and change his life.  What’s surprising about HAM is the amount of seriously ‘dark’ subject matter Harris puts on display, talking freely about dealing with depression, alcoholism and a suicide attempt when he was still young and struggling with his sexuality.

Throughout the show, though his stellar voice is showing a tiny bit of wear (he’s 53 after all), Harris still sounds amazing as his parade of hits in HAM makes clear.  You’ll thrill to his childhood imitation of Anthony Newley (which is seriously good!), an electrifying rendition of “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ‘Round,” and his finale, “Broken Wing,” which Harris & Schroeder wrote together.  True, the end of HAM turns shamelessly manipulative, but I loved every minute of it and cried like a little girl as Harris sang a subdued version of his signature song, “Somewhere Over the Rainbow,” to his son, Cooper.  HAM is a love-fest that makes Harris a ‘ham’ in the best sense of the word.

558606_10152218526600031_379233515_n

www.samharris.com
www.arsnovanyc.com

(Note: The wonderfully hilarious graphic design for HAM is by David Edward Byrd, the brilliant artist behind some of the greatest theatre posters of all time, including the original Godspell and Follies posters – just to name a few!)

Lyrics & Lyricists – A Good Thing Going ★★★★★

A Good Thing Going:
The Stephen Sondheim and Harold Prince Collaboration

92nd Street Y
January 10-12, 2015

Artistic Director, Music Director, Writer & Host – David Loud
Stage Director – Noah Racey
Conductor & Pianist – Joseph Thalken
Lighting Designer – John Kelly

The 92nd St Y’s invaluable performance series Lyrics & Lyricists launched their 45th season in spectacular style last weekend with Good Thing Going: The Stephen Sondheim and Harold Prince Collaboration.  In just 5 all-too-brief performances, the erudite writer and host David Loud and an exceptional cast took audiences on a scintillating journey back in time to the 1970’s when Broadway basked in the brilliance of the greatest artistic partnership ever known: that of composer Stephen Sondheim and producer/director Harold Prince.

To this day, the names of the shows they created strike awe in the hearts and minds of theatre aficionados and can make grown men weep with nostalgia for the brilliance of what those incredible shows achieved musically and artistically.  Just listing them together in print together seems like a dream: Company (opened April 26, 1970), Follies (opened April 4, 1971), A Little Night Music (opened February 25, 1973), Pacific Overtures (opened January 11, 1976), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (opened March 1, 1979) and Merrily We Roll Along (opened November 16, 1981).  To have created even one of these shows would have ensured their place in Broadway history – but to have created them all, and within the space of a decade, enshrines them in the pantheon of musical theatre greats where they have no equals.  Whether they like it or not, Sondheim and Prince are gods of the theatre and their deification was celebrated with stylish flair by Loud’s beautifully conceived tribute last weekend.

Without question, the Lyrics & Lyricists shows are always charming and delightful, but A Good Thing Going has raised the bar for all future presentations.  Weaving perfectly annotated and insightful commentary from Loud with projections on an upstage screen and carefully chosen songs performed by a star-studded cast, A Good Thing Going achieved the level of  a polished Broadway-calibre review, not just a frivolous weekend entertainment.  Backed by a superb 6-piece orchestra led by Joseph Thalken at the piano, and magnificent arrangements crafted by Loud himself, the performers were able to shine in multiple numbers from each show.  But what performers!

The luxurious casting included (are you sitting down): Kate Baldwin singing ‘You Could Drive a Person Crazy” and “Could I Leave You?;” Heidi Blickenstaff taking on “Another Hundred People” and “Not a Day Goes By;” Liz Callaway essaying a heart-stopping “Send in the Clowns,” and “Old Friends/Now You Know;” James Clow singing “Sorry – Grateful” and “A Little Priest” (with Heidi); Jason Danieley crooning “Beautiful Girls” and “Johanna;” and, if you can believe it, Jeremy Jordan as a last minute replacement made “Being Alive” and “The God-Why-Don’t-You-Love-Me Blues” his own.  Each performer was in splendid voice, body-mic’ed and completely off-book – allowing them to execute Noah Racey’s pitch-perfect blocking and staging with ease and grace.  Indeed, some of the most moving numbers were group numbers, such as the iconic “Company” opening which sent chills down my spine and I wished for a moment the cast would continue with the entire show!  Or the naughty “Remember” from …Night Music, the haunting “Pretty Lady from Pacific Overtures, the stunning showcase that is “A Weekend in the Country,” which concluded act one, and the uplifting “Our Time” which brought the sumptuous production to a close in act two.  It was all rapturous and sublime – like going to church for musical theatre fans and, especially, Sondheim acolytes.

CONCERT_SLIDES_LL2015

Don’t miss the 92nd St Y’s upcoming Lyrics & Lyricsts productions:

February 7, 8, 9

HERE’S TO THE GIRLS!: HOLLYWOOD’S LEADING LADIES
Created by Charles Busch and Carl Andress

Charles Busch, Artistic Director and Host
Carl Andress, Stage Director
John McDaniel, Music Director
Cast: Nancy Anderson, Andréa Burns, Cady Huffman, Erin Maguire, Zakiya Young

They faced down studio heads, gossip columnists and shorter leading men, and they always came back a star! We bring you a cavalcade of stories and songs about the legendary women of Hollywood’s movie musicals from 1930 to 1960. Each studio had its own style and stars to match: MacDonald, Garland, Powell (Eleanor and Jane), Keeler, Rogers and Grable. Whether an MGM glamour girl or a Warner Bros. gold digger, these musical legends were made to be adored—and still are.

 

March 21, 22, 23

NEW YORK: SONGS OF THE CITY

Deborah Grace WinerArtistic Director and Host
John Oddo, Music Director
Mark Waldrop, Stage Director
Cast: Peter Cincotti, Darius de Haas, La Tanya Hall, Leslie Kritzer, Jeffrey Schecter (additional cast TBA)

There are eight million stories in the Naked City—and a song to go with each of them. For decades, songwriters like Porter, Rodgers & Hart, Ellington, Bernstein and Coleman have been fueled by this city’s places (“Manhattan”, “Lullaby of Broadway”) and roller coaster existence (“Sophisticated Lady,” “Another Hundred People”). A show for New Yorkers—or anyone who’s ever wanted to be one.

 

May 2, 3, 4

ALL DANCING! ALL SINGING! IRVING BERLIN IN HOLLYWOOD

Randy Skinner, Artistic Director, Stage Director and Choreographer
Cast: TBA, with Special Guests Sandy Duncan and Don Correia

We’re puttin’ on our top hats and brushin’ off our tails for a sparking celebration of Irving Berlin’s Hollywood in dance! Berlin wrote for more Astaire-Rogers films than any other composer. His songs were made for dancing and romancing, whether Fred & Ginger “cheek to cheek” in Top Hat, “a couple o’ swells” out for a walk inEaster Parade or a “sisters” fan dance in White Christmas. So step out with your baby and join us as we salute Irving Berlin at the movies—in our dancing shoes.

 

May 30, 31 and June 1

TO LIFE! CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF FIDDLER ON THE ROOF WITH SHELDON HARNICK

Rob Fisher, Artistic Director
Sheldon Harnick, Writer and Host
Gary Griffin, Stage Director
Cast: TBA

Generations all over the world have grown up with Fiddler on the Roof. The unforgettable songs, characters and conflicts in Fiddler offer universal insights into family, home, tradition and transformation, as we watch Tevye and his family live, love and ultimately leave the “intimate, obstinate” village of Anatevka. Lyricist Sheldon Harnick takes us inside the creation and history of this cultural landmark, revealing the twists and turns of the creative process he shared with Jerry Bock, Jerome Robbins and Harold Prince, and sharing his behind-the-scenes stories of how it became the show and score we love.

www.92Y.com

Alysha Umphress & Jeff Blumenkrantz ★★★★★

I’ve Been Played: Alysha Umphress Swings Jeff Blumenkrantz
on Yellow Sound Label
at Birdland – January 5, 2015

Produced by Jeff Blumenkrantz & Michael Croiter
Recorded by Michael Croiter & Matthias Winter at Yellow Sound Lab, NYC
Mixed by Chris Allen           Mastered by Randy Merrill
Design by Maria Delton     Photography by David Pearlman

She’s been paying her dues for years now, but it’s finally payback time for the sensational Alysha Umphress!  And nobody could be happier than her legions of fans who have been singing her praises all along.  Never has the phrase, “I told you so,” seemed so apt or felt so sweet.  So why all the fuss?  Well, following fast on the heels of her critically acclaimed performance as Hildy the love-starved cabdriver in the scintillating new revival of On The Town, Umphress’s sensational new CD I’ve Been Played: Alysha Umphress Swings Jeff Blumenkrantz was released on January 6th to fantastic reviews following a sold-out release concert at Birdland on January 5th.

They’ve been friends for years, but the chemistry between Umphress’s phenomenal voice and Blumenkrantz’s savvy music is truly remarkable.  A formidable performer himself, Blumenkrantz has been writing music for years with songs notably appearing on recordings by Audra McDonald, Victoria Clark, Lauren Kennedy and Megan Mullally, to name just a few.  Blumenkrantz’s songs are carefully crafted gems, complete with tuneful melodies coupled with sensitive and honest lyrics.  And in Umphress, he may have found both his definitive muse and his ultimate interpreter.

Boasting a brassy, sassy, dramatic-mezzo, Umphress has one of those rare instruments that can conquer any genre of music, though she seems particularly predisposed to music from the 1930’s, 40’s and 50’s.  Whether it’s a comic ditty about everyone putting in their “Two Cents,” or a poignant ballad asking the timeless question “Why Can’t I Kiss You?,” or a torch song like “I’ve Been Played” that serves as the title track, Umphress shapes the tone and timbre of her voice to perfectly serve the tone and essence of each lyric she’s bringing to life.  One minute it’s warm as brandy and the next it’s cold as ice – and all of it channeled through a bombshell of a woman who’s luscious curvaceousness conceals a will of steel and a talent she can barely contain.  Whatever Blumenkrantz’s lyrics call for – be it sexy, vulnerable, angry or girlish – Umphress inhabits them with an insouciant ease that’s as disarming as it is dazzling.

In addition to ten original tunes – all sparkling winners that sound like classics in the American Songbook canon – Blumenkrantz includes a clever arrangement (with some new lyrics) of “I Don’t Need Anything But You” from Annie for the two of them to sing as a duet, and a medley of “Spring Is Here” & “Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most” that Umphress turns into a heart-wrenching three-act play.  Additionally, Umphress & Blumenkrantz include a bonus track of “You Smell So Good,” a delicious bit of specialty material made famous by the legendary nightclub team of Jackie Cain & Roy Kral, that ends the disc with the perfect touch of silliness.  And while it’s true 2015 has just begun, it’s a sure bet I’ve Been Played: Alysha Umphress Swings Jeff Blumenkrantz will easily be one of the best new albums of the year!

www.alyshaumphress.com
www.jeffblumenkrantz.com
www.yellowsoundlabel.com

The New York Pops ★★★★☆

Kelli O’Hara, Steven Reineke and Matthew Morrison at The New York Pops (photo: Richard Termine)

Carnegie Hall presents The New York Pops
Kelli and Matthew: Home for the Holidays
December 19th & 20th

Music Director & Conductor: Steven Reineke
Guest Artists: Kelli O’Hara, Matthew Morrison (with Brad Ellis, Music Director)
and Essential Voices USA (with Judith Clurman, Music Director & Conductor)

Of all the concerts on their yearly calendar, The New York Pops holiday concert is easily the most anticipated of the season.  On December 19th & 20th, under the astute leadership of Steven Reineke, high expectations were met and surpassed with the shrewd inclusion of Broadway stars Kelli O’Hara and Matthew Morrison, reuniting again at Carnegie after having starred together in the ravishing The Light in the Piazza (2005) and the sumptuous South Pacific revival (2008) – both at Lincoln Center Theatre.

Clearly delighted to be performing together again, O’Hara & Morrison’s on-stage chemistry was in full bloom under Reineke’s baton.  They essayed their way thru the obligatory “Baby, It’s Cold Outside” (arr. Fred Barton) and a fun version of “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!” (arr. Chris Walden & Brad Ellis) before tackling some solos.  It was nice to hear Morrison sing ‘live’ again after his years on Glee and he progressively regained his Broadway chops with each song he performed.  A medley of “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” and “Mele Kalikimaka” (arr. Chris Walden) allowed him to pay tribute to Hawaii, a state he loves, has spent a lot of time in, and in which he just recently got married.  And though his jazzy arrangement of “Younger Than Springtime” (arr. Chris Walden) wasn’t to my taste, his sweet, mellifluous tenor sounded both lovely and assured.  For her part, O’Hara, stunning in two different gowns, was in exquisite voice on a wistful version of “I Wonder as I Wander” (arr. Steven Reineke) in act one, and brought the house down in an over-the-top rendition of “O Holy Night” (arr. David T. Clydesdale) that built to a jaw-dropping high D-flat which O’Hara sang with radiant brilliance.

Interspersed between solos were two more duets for the long-time friends in act two.  First the “Balcony Scene (Tonight)” from West Side Story and then “Believe” from The Polar Express (arr. Fred Barton & Jack Everly).  Now, what the classic balcony scene from West Side Story has to do with the holidays is anyone’s guess – but who cares!  With the glorious, symphonic Pops orchestra playing underneath their voices, O’Hara and Morrison made magic singing Bernstein & Sondheim’s achingly beautiful paean to young love.  It was interesting to hear Morrison audibly raise his game – vocally – in “Tonight”; he seemed to remember he’s done a lot of legit singing over the years and it all came back to him like riding a bike.  Together, their version was thrilling. Slightly less so with “Believe” which may work better as a solo (Josh Groban had a hit with it) than as a duet, despite the fact it’s a very pretty song.

For their part, Judith Clurman’s usually superb Essential Voices USA once again sounded wonderful, but their diction wasn’t as crisp as it usually is, especially their dental-ized consonants (d’s, t’s, k’s, etc.).  Yes, we all know songs like Jerry Herman’s “We Need a Little Christmas” (arr. Robert Wendel) and “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” (arr. Steven Reineke), but you’ve got to spit out those consonants if the words are going to be clear to the audience.  One notable exception was “Songs of Freedom: A Celebration of Chanukah” which was as lively as it was well enunciated.  It should also be noted that the soloist on the Chanukah medley, Arlo Hill, sang with a gorgeous lyric baritone that added enormously to the piece.

Throughout, the Pops played magnificently for maestro Reineke – as it always seems to do these days.  Their winter and spring programs should be circled in red on everyone’s calendars!

www.newyorkpops.org
Facebook: facebook.com/newyorkpops
Twitter: @newyorkpops

Friday, March 13, 2015 at 8:00 pm

One Night Only: Sutton Foster

Friday, April 10, 2015 at 8:00 pm
Let’s Be Frank with Tony DeSare, Storm Large, Frankie Moreno and Ryan Silverman

Monday, May 4, 2015 at 7:00 pm
The New Golden Age – Gala Concert at Carnegie Hall & Dinner Dance at Mandarin Oriental Hotel
with Music Honorees Kathleen Marshall & Rob Marshall

Allegro ★☆☆☆☆

Claybourne Elder and Elizabeth A. Davis in “Allegro” (photo: Matthew Murphy)

Classic Stage Company
November 1st thru December 14th
Opened on November 19th

Music by Richard Rodgers
Book & Lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II
Original Orchestrations by Robert Russell Bennett
Original Dance Arrangements by Trude Rittman
Orignal Choral Arrangements by Crane Calder
Directed & Designed by John Doyle
Musical Direction & Orchestrations by Mary-Mitchell Campbell

Rodgers & Hammerstein’s experimental musical Allegro (1947) divided the critics and was the team’s first indisputable ‘flop’.  Heavily influenced by Thornton Wilder’s Our Town,  Allegro tells the story of ‘everyman’ Joseph Taylor, Jr., from birth to adulthood, and it was the first musical to employ a singing and dancing ensemble to function as a Greek chorus, commenting on the action and the interior thoughts of the show’s protagonist.  Following R&H smashes Oklahoma (1943) and Carousel (1945),  Allegro had the largest advance of it’s day and ran almost a year.  But its preachy, moralistic tale about big-city success corrupting small-town values didn’t sit well with audiences and the songwriting team went on to future success with South Pacific (1949), The King & I (1951), Flower Drug Song (1958) and The Sound of Music (1959).

Allegro basically disappeared until it was included in the first season of City Center Encores! in 1994 starring Jonathan Hadary, Karen Ziemba, Celeste Holm and Stephen Bogardus.  And in 2009, to the delight of purists and and cast album collectors, Broadway Masterworks released the first complete recording of Allegro‘s score with a star-studded cast that included Nathan Gunn, Audra McDonald, Marni Nixon, Laura Benanti and Patrick Wilson.  With only one stand-out song in the show, “The Gentleman Is A Dope,” and three that are tuneful, “A Fellow Needs a Girl,” “So Far” and “You Are Never Away,” the rest of the score if dull and forgettable.  Couple that with the fact the story is plodding and devoid of dramatic tension means Allegro is a touch sell no matter what you do with it.

Classic Stage Company’s (CSC) misguided idea for a revival of Allegro has included hiring John Doyle to direct and the results are as pretentious as they are tedious.  As he did in Sweeney Todd  and Company, Doyle has hired a very talented cast who all play instruments and double as the show’s orchestra.  It may be a cost-savings for CSC but it does nothing for Allegro, especially the poor actors who are dragging around violins and cellos the entire show.  Doyle’s other decision, perhaps a wise one, was to eliminate an enormous amount of the score and book.  A 3-hour show is now a trim, intermission-less 90 minutes, but it still feels like 3 hours thanks to Doyle’s clunky staging and emotionless direction.

The CSC’s revival’s saving grace is its cast which is wonderful in spite of Doyle’s stripped-down production.  The handsome and charismatic Claybourne Elder plays Joseph Taylor, Jr., while Malcolm Gets (who also plays the piano for most of the show) is his father and Jessica Taylor Wright portrays his mother.  Though she’s saddled with a violin under her chin the majority of the show, Elizabeth A. Davis does her best to be Joseph’s love-interest Jenny Brinker.

For musical theatre completists who have never seen Allegro or don’t own the Masterworks recording, the CSC revival may be a necessity.  For everyone else, there are better ways to take a nap.

www.ClassicStage.org

The River ★★☆☆☆

Hugh Jackman as ‘The Man’ in Jezz Butterworth’s “The River” (photo: Richard Termine)

Circle in the Square
October 31st thru February 8th
Opened November 16th

Written by Jez Butterworth
Directed by Ian Rickson

Of course, a talent like Hugh Jackman – perhaps the only leading man on the face of the Earth who’s both a film superstar and a Tony-winning singer who can carry a Broadway musical – can choose any vehicle he wants in which to appear.  And I understand that, following The Boy from Oz (2003), A Steady Rain (2009) and Hugh Jackman, Back On Broadway (2011), it was time for him to do another straight play instead of a musical.  (Jackman doesn’t want to be pigeonholed into being only a song & dance man, and who can blame him.)  I only wish his taste in drama equalled his taste in musicals.  For despite a solid performance as a man battling memories, women and seatrout, his latest theatrical outing, Jezz Butterworth’s The River, is a waste of time – both his and ours.

Cush Jumbo in "The River" (photo: Richard Termine)

Cush Jumbo in “The River” (photo: Richard Termine)

It’s hard to describe The River without giving away too much of the plot – and nobody likes a spoiler, especially at these prices.  Directed on Broadway as it was at London’s Royal Court by Ian Rickson, who also helmed Butterworth’s Jerusalem with Mark Rylance in 2011, The River is an atmospheric production that takes place in a fishing cabin where a man played by Jackman is confronted by his latest girlfriend about the status of their relationship.  The dialogue alternates between mundane, conversational back-and-forth with symbolic imagery stuffed with lemon and herbs.  (The long 5-minute segment in which the audience watches Jackman prepare and cook a fish is the undisputed highlight of the evening!)  Butterworth’s writing is purposefully cryptic leading the audience to wonder: is this a mystery, a memory or a metaphor – or all three?  Unfortunately, there’s no dramatic or emotional payoff after the 85 intermission-less minutes.  Only the question as to why Jackman said ‘yes’ to this play instead of, well, anything else.

Laura Donnelly in "The River" (photo: Richard Termine)

Laura Donnelly in “The River” (photo: Richard Termine)

www.TheRiverOnBroadway.com

Lypsinka! The Trilogy ★★★★★

The goddess of show business, the fabulous Lypsinka (photo: Peter Palladino)

TWEED TheaterWorks at The Connelly Theatre
November 5th thru January 3rd
Opened November 13th

Lypsinka! The Boxed Set & The Passion of the Crawford
Soundtracks created by John Epperson
Engineered by Alex Noyes
Directed by Kevin Malony
John Epperson: Show Trash
Written by John Epperson w/ additional parody lyrics by Barry Kleinbort & Tom Orr
Directed by Barry Kleinbort

Shattering!  Cataclysmic!  Divine!  What puny adjectives to describe the goddess of show business, Lypsinka!  A singular creation of glitz, glamour and gorgeousness, Lypsinka – a.k.a. John Epperson –  has finally returned to New York after an absence of almost a decade to grace us with three shows running in repertory: Lypsinka! The Boxed Set (2000), The Passion of the Crawford (2005) and John Epperson: Show Trash (2004).  Individually they’re each a terrific entertainment, but together, as The Trilogy, they’re quite simply life-changing.

Lypsinka in "The Boxed Set" (photo: Austin Young)

Lypsinka in “The Boxed Set” (photo: Austin Young)

Lypsinka! The Boxed Set is a showcase for Epperson’s particular genius at channeling women on the verge, bringing them to life before our eyes with an intuitiveness that’s as dazzling as it is hilarious.  He makes it look effortless, but don’t be fooled.  What Epperson does takes meticulous work and practice on a scale that can’t be appreciated by mere mortal actors.  To watch his artistry is mesmerizing in its totality of lip-synch, character study and physical embodiment.  That Epperson changes from woman to woman in the span of a nanosecond makes his accomplishment all the more breathtaking.  There is simply no one else on the face of the earth who can do what Epperson does, which makes any appearance by Lypsinka an event to be devoured and cherished.  The Boxed Set is a particular jewel in his crown because of the spectrum of women he brings together as a comment on femininity, entertainment and show-business madness.  Epperson has a knack for selecting choice tidbits of grande dame over-acting and self-indulgence which he strings together into brilliantly edited soundtracks.  Whether it’s a film sound-bite featuring Bette Davis in Mr. Skeffington, Judy Garland in I Could Go On Singing, Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard, Faye Dunaway in Chinatown, Piper Laurie in Carrie or Elizabeth Taylor in BUtterfield 8, or a vocal cut from a singer like Shirley Bassey, Fay McKay, Ethel Merman, Penny Fuller, Frances Faye or the great Dolores Gray (Epperson’s heroine and Lypsinka’s icon), Epperson manages to celebrate the magnificence of these women while also acknowledging the camp value of such moments.  It goes without saying that technical elements for Lypsinka’s performances, specifically sound (by Matt Berman) and lighting (by Mark Simpson with Jeremy Owens), must be of the highest level in order to create the proper illusion and for her ‘magic’ to work.  Happily, all these elements align in this current incarnation of The Boxed Set to dizzying, delirious effect.

Lypsinka in "The Passion of the Crawdford" (photo: Francis Hills)

Lypsinka in “The Passion of the Crawdford” (photo: Francis Hills)

As one would imagine, the high-voltage actress Joan Crawford always features prominently in Epperson’s creations, including The Boxed Set.  Fortunately, back in the 1960’s and 70’s the publicist/writer/historian John Springer did a series of interviews with movie stars at The Town Hall in New York, including Myrna Loy, Lana Turner, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford.  That interview with Crawford, which occurred on April 8, 1973, serves as the cornerstone for Epperson’s The Passion of the Crawford, which is lip-synched in its entirety by Lypsinka as Crawford and Steve Cuiffo as Springer (w/ Scott Wittman playing Springer at select performances).  It’s a delicious, jaw-dropping ‘chat’ containing Crawford’s views and opinions on her career, Hollywood, politics and changing styles.  Epperson is particularly brilliant at embodying Crawford, complete with the furtive downcast glances and darting eyes to express her pleasure or displeasure with whatever Springer is saying to her.  Several times Springer reaches over to ‘touch’ Crawford and Lypsinka recoils in horror – and appropriately so.  Goddesses are for worshiping, not for touching!  The evening is capped by several ‘dramatic’ readings Crawford did, notably one on Hollywood Palace in 1967 from a stupefying poem by Milton Geiger called “The Dreamer” about Alice in Wonderland and Little Boy Blue that has to be heard to be believed.

John Epperson in "Show Trash" (photo: Steve Mann)

John Epperson in “Show Trash” (photo: Steve Mann)

The third show in The Trilogy‘s triumvirate may be the most telling and revealing of anything Epperson has ever done.   Entitled John Epperson: Show Trash, it’s a charming window into Epperson’s childhood growing up in the tiny town of Hazlehurst, Mississippi, and it’s being seen for the first time in New York in this production.  As a man sans make-up and gown, Epperson makes a compelling and delightful host.  An accomplished pianist and singer, he’s a natural storyteller and, aided by still photographs and home movies from his childhood, he weaves a sweet and fascinating tale of growing up gay, lonely and smitten with the glamour of show business.  His story of how he managed to transport himself to New York and create the mesmerizing persona that is Lypsinka, all while carving out a life for himself, could serve as a template for so many of us who made the same journey, albeit from different circumstances and without high-heels.  On the way to superstardom, there’s heartbreak and sadness coupled with triumphs and joys, and through it all Epperson battles – and continues to battle – with the burden of living with a creation as attention-grabbing as Lypsinka.  It’s a lovely combination of cabaret show and personal memoir that’s given added pathos because of all those friends and lovers we’ve lost over the last three decades who aren’t here to share it with us.

www.Lyp3.com

www.Lypsinka.com