By shadow i meant that when i left that show and only i only thought about Audra. I only remembered natashia when i was going through the B-roll Although it would be the opposite senario it is like Sherri Renne Scott in Little Mermaid that no matter how gr8 anyone else was it was sherri's show and the rest of the cast looked like ameraturs which
remembered natashia when i was going through the B-roll Although it would be the opposite senario it is like Sherri Renne Scott in Little Mermaid that no matter how gr8 anyone else was it was sherri's show and the rest of the cast looked like ameraturs which
im alos sure sherry ren scott thinks ur gr8, becoz shes not an ameratur lol
Listen, I don't take my clothes off for anyone, even if it is "artistic". - JANICE
Gee, this thread is called 'Evita Reviews' and yet it's turned into a Tony prognostication thread instead.
Anyway, Ricky Martin is above the title; he's the one who's selling the tickets. The Tonys will keep him eligible for Leading Actor in a Musical. They won't be bumping him down.
Although for the record, in the original 'Evita,' both Mandy Patinkin and Bob Gunton were both up for Featured Actor.
Several pages back, Ed Mottershead was asking about Tracie Bennett. Ed, in case you were referring my post, I did not mean to imply that Elena Roger would lose the Best Actress in a Musical Tony to Tracie Bennett (as Bennett is in what is considered a Play), but rather that Roger had the misfortune of opening three days after the powerhouse performance by Bennett, which I think, only underscored her shortcomings in the role.
Argh...what is with the influx of middle school posters!!??
If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it?
These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.
"Noel [Coward] and I were in Paris once. Adjoining rooms, of course. One night, I felt mischievous, so I knocked on Noel's door, and he asked, 'Who is it?' I lowered my voice and said 'Hotel detective. Have you got a gentleman in your room?' He answered, 'Just a minute, I'll ask him.'" (Beatrice Lillie)
I saw DeCicco, not Roger, so I can't speak to that, but Brantley hit the nail on the head. He articulated, almost exactly, everything I felt about this production.
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They won't have any problem selling the sh!t out of it, but I don't see it running and running and running.
Mediocre shows that are high-energy and paced excitingly -- WICKED, JERSEY BOYS, MAMMA MIA! -- those can run despite their shortcomings. This EVITA is both mediocre and plodding.
Then again, that model doesn't account for PHANTOM.
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PHANTOM has astonishing production values and brilliant stage pictures and a lush romantic score that you don't have to speak English to get the gist of. That's the reason for its appeal.
I think that logic explains maybe its first 15 years of success, but I don't think any of it holds up today -- well, except for the speaking English part. It is fantastically directed, though.
Then again, the last time I saw PHANTOM was in a high school, so perhaps I'm still reeling at how a terrible production really exposes the flaws in the material.
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And to its credit, PHANTOM is beautifully maintained; over the years whenever I've gone back and seen it I've always been really pleasantly surprised to see that the cast always feels fresh, the dancing is sharp, the direction is clean. That's saying a lot for a show that's been running as long as it has. And honestly, in terms of opulence, it just belongs to another era in Broadway producing; I can't imagine any producer today spending (or being able to afford) what Hal Prince put into PHANTOM and is still visible today. The costuming alone makes the recent production of FOLLIES look like something produced at the Carnation Players in comparison.
I'm glad that some reviewers are finally recognizing that Evita is a case of a terrific production (Prince's) fooling people into thinking the amateurish material is any good.
Listen closely to the lyrics - Tim Rice's work never says anything surprising, interesting, or remotely enlightening about Eva Peron, anyone in her life, Argentina, politics, or the power of celebrity. The show is bland children's theatre, like the entire Lloyd Webber/Rice oeuvre.
Not meaning to imply that the lyrics are exceptional by any standards, but I've noticed a lot of people -- professional critics and posters alike -- criticizing them specifically and have always felt that, between the lyrics and music, Rice's work is stronger than Webber's here. I never realized that was a minority opinion.
Then again, I'm a pretty big fan of Parker's film, so what do I know?
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Are these reviews on the whole worse than the ones for the original Bway production? I seem to recall that of the majors, only Clive Barnes in the Post really liked it (though I think most praised Prince's staging).
Yeah the original 1979 reviews hated the show and any praise was pretty much reserved for Hal Prince.
Regardless of how audiences take to this production, all I can say is, if Broadway doesn't like/want Elena Roger, both London and Buenos Aires are more than happy to welcome her back with open arms.
A question: did Patti and Mandy show up for opening night? Someone here posted they were attending (which surprised me as I thought they'd want to avoid it), but I haven't (yet) seen any pictures or reports of them there.
Tim Rice's work never says anything surprising, interesting, or remotely enlightening about Eva Peron, anyone in her life, Argentina, politics, or the power of celebrity.
That's not entirely true. I knew scant about Eva Peron or the Peronist regime before hearing the score. I got the gist of Eva's rise to power and the political machinations that fueled Peron's grip on the nation.
Of course when I turned to the history books it was more fleshed out and I easily made the connections between reality and themes Rice/Webber were touching upon in their musicalization of Eva Peron's story.
I think we're talking about two entirely different things - the musical may have spurred you to find out more about Eva, but you would get a lot more information and insight about her, Peron, and Argentina from a few Wikipedia paragraphs than the entire long show.
Rice's work is nothing more than a skeleton outline of events, filled in with banal, childlike rhymes.
Do any of you know how long Ricky Martin is contracted to be in the production for? I wonder if this show will continue to sell as well as it is now after Ricky leaves