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PicksInSix Review: BOOP! The Musical - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

“BOOP! The Musical” Has It All!
PicksInSix® Gold Review | Ed Tracy

When the stunning new show “BOOP! The Musical” arrives on Broadway next year, a new generation will discover the iconic Betty Boop through the spellbinding performance of Jasmine Amy Rogers in the title role, and through the eyes of one of their own—16 year-old pop media phenom Angelica Hale, making her stage debut as Betty’s new pint-sized BFF.  

At the magical moment that Betty catapults into present day Comicon from her cartoon world of the 1930s, she is searching to both escape the adulation of her own time and to satisfy her yearning to discover an answer to the pivotal question: “Who am I?” Upon arrival, she finds a vibrant world in the radiant colors of the rainbow, none of which she knows by name. She also has a predilection to put an ‘L’ in everything, so her new marshmallow world is “plurple.”

It's the black, white and red-hot opening sequence of “BOOP! The Musical” with Rogers as the charming, charismatic, and confident heroine created by illustrator, animator and cartoon innovator Max Fleischer who revolutionized the graphic technology of the day, merging illustrations and live action to create whimsical cartoon series and shorts featuring Betty Boop, Popeye and a cavalcade of quirky characters who morph from inanimate objects to all forms of comic incarnations.

The world premiere of “BOOP!” opened Wednesday at Chicago's CIBC Theatre. After years in development, there is now a dream team in place for the Broadway-bound project directed and choreographed by multi-Tony Award winner Jerry Mitchell, the first musical venture by Grammy and Emmy award-winning composer/producer David Foster with lyrics by Susan Birkenhead (“Jelly’s Last Jam”) and book by Bob Martin (“Drowsy Chaperone,” “Elf”). The creative team includes a spectacular scenic design by David Rockwell that is beautifully enhanced by Finn Ross’s projections and Gareth Owen’s sound design, Philip S. Rosenberg’s lighting and the stunning costumes of Greg Barnes.

With big, boisterous dance numbers, tender ballads, an extraordinary scenic landscape and masterful illusions courtesy of Skylar Fox, “BOOP!” has it all. It's a love story—three actually—but even more it’s a free-spirited and endearing comedy that has a message for all of us about who we are and the impact we can make on the world and the people in it.

At Comicon, Betty collides with Dwayne (Ainsley Melham) a jazz musician and for maybe the first time, Betty senses an attraction. Overcome by her new surroundings, Betty forges a friendship with Trisha (Hale) a young fan and aspiring artist in need of a little confidence of her own. It doesn't take long before we find that Trisha lives with her aunt Carol (Anastacia McCleskey), who serves as manager for the New York City mayoral campaign of Raymond Demerest (Erich Bergen) and Carol’s brother, who just happens to be Dwayne. The hook is set and a youthful love story begins to unfold.

Back in early 30s, the studio directors, Aubie Merrylees and Ricky Schroder, are in a tizzy when they discover that Betty is nowhere to be found. Grampy (Stephen DeRosa) realizes that Betty’s absence will have a disastrous impact on their present and the future, so he embarks on a cross-dimensional journey of his own with his dog Pudgy (the brilliant marionette artist Phillip Huber). In Times Square he meets up with Valentina (Faith Prince) a retired NASA scientist who is still holding a torch for Grampy that was lit 40 years earlier. At first on a quest to find Betty before it’s too late, Grampy discovers that the fire is still smoldering between the two.

The cat’s out of the bag on the secret that Betty Boop is now alive in the present when she shows up and brings the house down at Nellie’s Place, the jazz club where Dwayne is trying to get a regular gig. Once the news is public, the corrupt Demerest, the King of Waste, tries to hitch his dump truck, and whatever else he has at his disposal, to Betty’s instant celebrity. But it’s Betty who turns the tables on the plan and as always, love wins out overall.  

Martin’s book moves briskly and effortlessly with zingers and easter eggs, old and new, along the way. Musically, Foster has infused the score with a plethora of styles from jazz and pop to some socko Broadway show tunes that allow Mitchell a full range of dance routines for the superb, multi-talented ensemble. Among the highlights, Rogers leads the ensemble in the opening “A Little Versatility,” “My New York” and “In Color,” and the show is at full throttle for the truly sensational Act I closer “Where I Wanna Be.”

World Premiere of “BOOP ! The Musical” at Broadway in Chicago’s CIBC Theatre through December 24, 2023.

Price and DeRosa shine in “A Cure for Love” and the touching “Together, You and Me.” Melham joins Schroder and Probst for “Sunlight” and delivers a blissful “She Knocks Me Out.” Hale’s powerful “Portrait of Betty” is a smash and the lovely “My Hero” with Rogers is one of the show’s many highlights.

It all comes down to Rogers though, whose radiant stage presence is all at once inquisitive, vulnerable and decisive as she evolves to the real version of who she will become: a loving role model of strength and independence.

Rogers’s charismatic performance of “Something to Shout About” is a showstopper. After taking center stage surrounded by a glistening celestial panorama, she steps decisively and defiantly forward and, in that one moment, appears larger-than-life, captivating the audience and signaling the presence of a star.

That she is.  

PHOTO|Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman

Broadway in Chicago
presents the
World Premiere of
BOOP! The Musical
CIBC Theatre
through December 24, 2023

TICKETS
SHOW WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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PicksInSix Review: The Who's Tommy - Goodman Theatre

 
 

Take A Trip Of Rock Absurdity!
PicksInSix® Review | Guest Contributor | Scott Gryder

The effusive level of pre-show chatter seamlessly fed off the whirring rush of interstellar white noise soundscape that filled the theater before the opening night performance of “The Who’s Tommy” at the Goodman Theatre. A packed house of patrons was pumped to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Des McAnuff and Pete Townshend’s musically psychedelic experience.

A rock opera-like concept album-turned-stage production, “The Who’s Tommy” tells the bizarre and unraveled story of Tommy Walker, a young man who becomes almost vegetative after witnessing a horrific tragedy as a child. Although Tommy loses his ability to speak or respond, no matter how the people around him test and manipulate him, the music of “The Who’s Tommy” is anything but muted or stilled. Whether you grew up listening to the 1969 LP or you are new to this musical device, this experiential event is not easily forgotten.

In a show that is so quickly paced that most characters resort to two-dimensional dynamics, “The Who’s Tommy” revolves around the traumatized and zombified life of Tommy Walker. Ali Louis Bourzgui delivers an enigmatic Tommy, who’s rageful yet warm rock baritone fits the score wholly; however, though he shines vocally and physically embodies a contorted delirium with dedication, Bourzgui lacks the enchanting charisma that could drive a troubled crowd to seek him out as their savior in the final moments. The most standout of the principals is Tommy’s mother, Alison Luff, whose Mrs. Walker so smartly and subtly adds compassion to each of her musical moments, devoting her cause to freeing her son from his tortured state. And it’s Bobby Conte as Cousin Kevin, who, although bullies Tommy in despicable ways, generously belts and riffs with an effortless rock-musical ability.

Although familiar with the 1975 film, I hadn’t grown up listening to the original concept album, and I was very eager to see how the team of director McAnuff and choreographer Lorin Latarro was going to bring this semi-delirious dreamstate of a concept musical back to the stage. What I found most challenging was the staging concept distorting the time period of the piece, ranging from the 1940s to the 1970s, and the stylings of the music. It was sometimes jolting that the song genres didn’t align with the time period of the story. Alternatively thinking, with a plot that sometimes sends one’s head spinning with its frenetic, drug-induced book, if one stripped away the repetitive, pop lyrics entirely, it’s feasible that “The Who’s Tommy” could easily transform into a passionate rock ballet. And it’s thanks to the genius of Latarro’s choreography that the ensemble moves as one communal organism, emphasizing the subtext of each scene by storytelling through movement, executed with power and grace.

Within the rapidly pinballing vignettes led by little plot-based lyric, “The Who’s Tommy” hardly allows for character development or discovery, and it’s the production’s creative team that provides the foundation for layers of emotional evolution. David Korin’s set designs literally pulse across the stage, sliding mechanically in and out, framing moments for emphasis to better communicate the wants and needs of characters. Combine that with the laser lighting design of Amanda Zieve and Peter Nigrini’s honed projections, and the essence of each scene is instantly captured through the visual narrator. Even more impressive is the balance between the bombastic voices and the rocking nine-piece band, which brings the sonorous strength of a full orchestra. Rick Fox’s music direction and Gareth Owen’s sound design truly satiate!

Although “The Who’s Tommy” is presented in a succession of pell mell, whirlwinding memorable melodic moments paired with snippets of searing plot, it does remind us to shatter the ring-lit mirrors of our own inhibitions brought about by the traumas of our past in order to clear our minds and live in the present; coming home to our true selves. In a time where being true to oneself can bring about literal violence from those who don’t agree or understand, it’s moving to remember how the power of the universal language of music can deliver a unifying force to bring an entire audience to its feet.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | SCOTT GRYDER received a Non-Equity Jeff Award for his performance in the one-man show BUYER & CELLAR. www.thescottgryder.com

PHOTO|Liz Lauren

GOODMAN THEATRE
presents
The Who’s Tommy
EXTENDED through August 6
Albert Theatre
170 N. Dearborn St.


(312) 443-3800

WEBSITE

For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago

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