Klea Blackhurst as Dolly

Dollypop
#1Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/17/13 at 6:53pm


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link


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)
Updated On: 7/18/13 at 06:53 PM

Dollypop
#2Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 5:16pm

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"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)

N2N Nate. Profile Photo
N2N Nate.
#2Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 5:24pm

Rosie O'Donnell??


So Lauren Bacall me, anything goes! *wink*

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wildcat
henrikegerman Profile Photo
henrikegerman
#4Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 5:39pm

Just when you thought Bette Midler might be more than pushing it agewise - MITZI GAYNOR?

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henrikegerman
#5Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 5:39pm

Just when you thought Bette Midler might be more than pushing it agewise - MITZI GAYNOR?

Dollypop
#6Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 6:24pm

Having been in Mitzi Gaynor's company several times, I can attest that she is astonishingly fit and can pass for a woman far younger than her actual years.


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)

#7Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 6:46pm

I saw Klea Blackhurst play Madam Rose and she blew the roof off the place. I'd love to see her Dolly.

Dollypop
#8Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/18/13 at 8:00pm

Tickets for the Goodspeed DOLLY are selling like crazy--especially for matinees. If you're interested in seeing the show, purchase your tickets now. (I'm not a shill. I had trouble getting seats for the dates we wanted.)


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)

wildcat Profile Photo
wildcat
#9Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/19/13 at 9:23am

Another rave, this time from Peter Filichia at Kritzerland.Com

As Rudolph Says, “Mrs. Levi! She’s back!” – This Time at Goodspeed

Why must two-and-a-half hours pass before Ephraim Levi sends a sign to his widow Dolly that says he’ll permit her remarriage? Now I finally understand. He doesn’t need time to adjust to the situation; he’s been watching Dolly’s adventures along with the rest of us, and he’s not going to prematurely stop what Walter Kerr accurately called “a musical comedy dream.”

As if anyone could stop Daniel Goldstein’s whirlwind production of Hello, Dolly! at the Goodspeed Opera House, anyway. This one speeds by so quickly that it accomplishes one of those rare theatrical miracles: Act One seems ten minutes long and Act Two seems more like five. If this were a film on a continuous loop, here’s betting that the enraptured audience would stay for another show.

The Goodspeed stage is a small one, so when the chorus comes out to sing “Call on Dolly,” there’s no room for one of those new horse-drawn open cars. So Goldstein has Klea Blackhurst enter from the back of the house, gaily dispensing her business cards to the audience. What’s wonderful is that Blackhurst is so natively warm that some audience members play along with her as if they really are potential customers. Or is it that they really are convinced that she could, as one card says, instruct them on the guitar and mandolin? Could be: Blackhurst makes Dolly such an excellent saleswoman that Sam Walton would buy from her -- retail.

She’s certainly selling the show, thanks to her confidence, charm, dazzling smile and, of course, her clarion voice. Irving Berlin once said of a performer surnamed Merman, “When you write lyrics for Ethel, they’d better be good, for if they’re bad, everybody’s going to hear them anyhow.” Lucky for Jerry Herman that he wrote an extraordinary set of lyrics for this show, because Blackhurst makes you hear every syllable. Even when she joins the chorus in “Put on Your Sunday Clothes,” her voice stands out – not in that obnoxious way that Julie Andrews sounds when she’s showing off at the end of “Edelweiss.” Blackhurst is simply being a good team player who’s doing her job in singing; can she help it if her voice just happens to be heard among the rest?

By the way, when Dolly opened nearly 50 years ago, many a critic remarked on how extraordinary the chorus sounded. It’s true here, too; from Maddy Apple down to Melodie Wolford, everyone does marvelous justice to Herman’s top-notch music.

The film of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum takes a lot of heat, but there is that strange and hilarious sound that Zero Mostel makes after he’s announced that he’s a soothsayer and that he’s about “to say the sooth.” After Vandergelder tells Dolly that he plans to march in the 14th Street Parade, Blackhurst makes a unique sound of her own, a little softer, a little subtler, but just as funny. What a lagniappe!

And speaking of Vandergelder, give both Goldstein and Tony Sheldon credit for completely reimagining the role. Many who have played the half-a-millionaire have been less than alluring, but Sheldon is handsome, trim, virile and with a healthy head of hair to boot. There’s even a bit of Alfred Drake in him – and what could be a better compliment than that? This may be the first Vandergelder on record who really would be a catch – at least physically speaking.

Of course, as we all know, looks aren’t everything. While other Vandergelders have been paper tigers, Sheldon seems to be a real carnivore. The actor makes the character so gruff and imperious not only to Barnaby and Cornelius but also to the staff at the Harmonia Gardens. The merchant of Yonkers isn’t going to be cowed by any New Yorkers, that’s for sure.

So is this Vandergelder too tough to be redeemed? Here’s where Sheldon and Goldstein offer their masterstroke. Watch Sheldon during “It Only Takes a Moment,” when he sees the love between Irene and Cornelius. His face expresses that he’s now finally discovered what’s been missing from his life. Oh, he’ll try to revert to his old self the next morning when he makes one last-ditch attempt to avoid the woman he knows he really wants. Finally, he admits his true feelings, and we start to believe that Dolly may have been wrong when she confided in Ephraim that she and Vandergelder “won’t have a marriage in the sense that we had one.” The love that seems to flow from both Blackhurst and Sheldon at the show’s final moment suggests that love is lovelier the second time around.

Lord knows how many angels in heaven jealously gnash their teeth every night when they hear Ashley Brown sing. Anyone who plays Irene has a tough task, for “Ribbons Down My Back,” after all, is the first soft and contemplative song in a show that’s been steadily accelerating. Brown makes us stop and hear the poignant lyrics while she caresses the melody as if she’s enjoying a gourmet-level chocolate. As Herman wrote in one of his other superb scores, “So who needs chocolates” when we have Ashley Brown?

She also acts the part to perfection. When she says one of script’s simplest but most potent lines – “The world is full of wonderful things!” she says it in a case-closed manner, that she won’t seriously entertain any dissenting opinion. Brown is also fetching in the way that she look embarrassed and yet pleased when Cornelius praises her in the courtroom.

Spencer Moses does well in the role, looking at first as if he could have posed for Grant Wood’s “American Gothic.” His “It Only Takes a Moment” offers many moments of bliss. Even the uproarious way that Frankie Paparone’s court clerk interrupts him can’t stop Moses and that aforementioned extraordinary ensemble from making the ballad a highlight.

Kelli Barclay’s choreography does borrow liberally from Gower Champion’s original, but her corps is precision-perfect. There’s that famous story about the original production of Lady in the Dark – that after Danny Kaye did “Tschaikowsky” the staff worried that Gertrude Lawrence wouldn’t be able to top him with “The Saga of Jenny.” But she did. Here, the same danger lurks after Barclay has her magnificent waiters do their gallop. (The words I think I’d use is all-star athletic.) Now – can Blackhurst and the waiters top it with that title song?

Yes. Part of the success was the genuine way that Blackhurst handles it. She proudly wants Manny to know that she remembers his name because she feels that he’s a person worth remembering. Special commendation, too, to another waiter, for when Dolly asks, “Lose some weight, Stanley?” his assertive nod makes clear that he’s been working on it and that he’s very glad that someone has finally noticed.

Dolly would seem to be a show that wouldn’t reduce well on the modest Goodspeed stage, but set designer Adrian W. Jones solves that potential problem with ease. Enhancing his wondrous two-level unit set are a few long rectangular boxes. They serve at one moment as display cases at Vandergelder’s shop and the next as benches on which everyone sits en route to New York – before enjoying plenty of other transmogrifications. Best of all, Jones hangs a drop behind Irene’s hat shop that shows so many ribbons in a rainbow of colors that you’d swear it’s the last Sunday in June on Fifth Avenue. This is an especially nice detail, because Michael Stewart’s dialogue establishes that Irene and her assistant Minnie know that this summer ribbons are in. Hmmm, given Irene’s good business sense, perhaps she would be right for Vandergelder after all.

No. Everyone winds up with the right person down to Jeremy Morse’s Barnaby and Catherine Blades’ Minnie – each of whom is wonderfully grounded and not there just to be silly.

In the end, Cornelius is right: there’s a world outside of Yonkers – and it’s not simply New York City. There’s East Haddam, Connecticut, especially now through September 8. Jerry Herman has been talking recently about who should play Dolly on Broadway. May I knock on his head and say “Hello, Jerry: let’s see Blackhurst and everyone else at the Broadhurst -- and send that musical that’s currently booked in there to be banished far away from us.”

— Peter Filichia

ajh
#10Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/19/13 at 3:16pm

She is terrific casting for this. Saw her cabaret in London and she is adorable: warm, feisty, funny, touching, you could imagine her being pretty pushy....all the qualities one would look for in a Dolly (and I did see Carol Channing way back in my youth). Would love to see Klea in a full musical. By the by, at this cabaret she did her big solo from THE NUTTY PROFESSOR....and she and it were wonderful, and perhaps the only point where she didn't remind of somebody else (Ethel Merman,mostly).

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Hanna from Hamburg
#11Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/19/13 at 4:12pm

Dollypop . . . have you seen Klea yet as Dolly? I've worked with her before and she is SUCH a sweetheart, incredibly talented, can do ANYTHING and never disappoints as a performer. I'm curious to know what you think of her performance.

Unfortunately, I cannot get to Goodspeed to catch this but I'm sure Klea will be a knockout. She always is!


". . . POP . . ."

Dollypop
#12Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/19/13 at 10:19pm

Hanna, I'm taking my granddaughter to this on August 3rd. As I said, I had a rough time getting tickets for the dates I wanted.

We're both looking forward to it.


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)

bk
#13Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/20/13 at 2:01am

A link to Peter's column is preferable to reprinting his entire review - which is not really kosher.

theCucumberSandwich
#14Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 7/20/13 at 9:17am

According to what law?

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Hanna from Hamburg
#15Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/3/13 at 8:04am

Dollypop, let me know how the show is and, more importantly, what you think of Klea as Dolly. If you go backstage, tell her Philip who did Oil City and Radio Gals with her says "hi and congrats!"


". . . POP . . ."

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macnyc
#16Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/3/13 at 10:14am

I saw her not long ago at the York doing Happy Hunting, and I loved her performance. She really is a force of nature!

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alterego
#17Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/3/13 at 10:25am

Yes, I too want to hear Dollypop's review.

Dollypop
#18Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/4/13 at 3:10pm

We saw the show yesterday afternoon and liked it very much. I was very impressed with how much of Gower Champion's original staging was retained in this production while finding novel ways to cope with the space limitations of the Goodspeed stage. I particularly liked the way the "train" was evoked for "Sunday Clothes". The appearance of the famed staircase got applause because it was so cleverly done.

Klea and Tony Shelton are particularly well cast as the two leads but with the exception of Ashley Brown, the supporting cast is disappointing. They sang beautifully but often didn't know how to use their personal energy on stage. That meant hands were often flopping at their sides and their postures were awkward. Minnie Fay was really sad. Her "cherries and feathers" monologue fell flatter than a leftover latke. Did she even know what she was talking about in that speech?

The costumes were attractive but were they really DOLLY costumes? "Sunday Clothes" didn't receive the applause it normally gets because the costumes didn't evoke the rainbow of colors that Freddy Wittop's originals did. The attire on this stage may have been more appropriate for THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST than DOLLY.

As for Klea, she was very, very good. She sang the hell out of the role and seems to be holding up with a schedule that calls for 9 performances a week. That said, she was never more than an actress who was PLAYING the role. Please remember, I've seen the immortal Carol in the role a gazillion times and she doesn't "play" Dolly. She BECOMES Dolly. With time, Klea may internalize the role more and inhabit the character more deeply.
I told her I plan to re-visit the show before it ends its run to see how much she grows in the role.

Yes, Hanna, we did visit with Klea afterwards (the backstage space at Goodspeed is so miniscule the cast can't receive visitors backstage, we chatted at a table outside). As I didn't see your message until just now, I couldn't relay your message. Why don't you drop her a line at the theater?

The bottom line is that my granddaughter absolutely loved the show and was dancing in the aisles during intermission--proving that despite my qualms, this DOLLY weaves a magical spell.


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)
Updated On: 8/4/13 at 03:10 PM

bk
#19Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/4/13 at 4:41pm

"According to what law?"

I don't know, perhaps the law of copyright. I know that doesn't mean anything to your generation but, you know, reality tells us otherwise. Any content on the website where Mr. Filichia's column appears is under copyright. it's kosher to link to the site, it's kosher to quote from the review, it is not so kosher to reprint it in its entirety, which is why you usually don't find people here reprinting a NY Times review in its entirety.

g.d.e.l.g.i. Profile Photo
g.d.e.l.g.i.
#20Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/5/13 at 6:33pm

^ Which is strange, because the more the NY Times website tightens free content, the more likely it should be that people do post wholesale.


Formerly gvendo2005
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joined: 5/1/05

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Dollypop
#21Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/7/13 at 4:11pm

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"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)

ullabelt
#22Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/7/13 at 5:00pm

bk is off her meds

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Melissa25
#23Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/19/13 at 9:08am

I still have goosebumps from catching "Hello Dolly" at the Goodspeed Opera House this past Saturday. The cast was outstanding, especially the leads Klea Blackhurst, Tony Sheldon and Ashley Brown. I thought the set design ingenious and creative. I am still singing the tunes two days later.

It was also my first visit to the Goodspeed and I was so excited by the experience. This is such a unique theater. I attended a matinee and to drive up to this theater almost felt dream-like. It is such a beautiful building in such a lovely scenic setting! One of my most memorable summer days of 2013!!!

Updated On: 8/19/13 at 09:08 AM

Dollypop
#24Klea Blackhurst as Dolly
Posted: 8/19/13 at 5:16pm

I'm glad you liked the show, Melissa.


"Long live God!" (GODSPELL)