Dirty Rotten Scoundrel Norbert Leo Butz Delivers Hilarity
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels adds nothing new to the development of the American Musical Theatre. Its score for the most part is mediocre, the humor is of the variety which was considered old hat fifty years ago and the characters are two dimensional. However, all that is forgotten when you watch the lively National Touring Company which premiered in Dallas on October 3. The energetic cast puts over the uninspired material and it appears fresh and spontaneous leading to some rousing entertainment. The driving force responsible for nearly all of this exuberance can be summed up in three words: Norbert Leo Butz.
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels premiered on Broadway in 2005 and ran for a year and a half. Its creative team had previously been responsible for The Full MontyDavid Yazbek (Music and Lyrics), Jack O'Brien (Direction) and Jerry Mitchell (Choreography). The Book is by Jeffrey Lane. It was based on a 1988 film of the same namewhich was in turn a remake of the 1964 film Bedtime Story. The story is about two con artists on the French Rivera and their various misadventures.
As the younger of the two con men, Mr. Butz is charged with delivering most of the broad humor found in the proceedings, and boy, does he deliver! Whether portraying a foreign prince who is "special" or a Sergeant who requires emotional healing, his antics were priceless. He delivered double and sometimes even triple entendres with baby-like innocence that quadrupled their humor. His spills, pratfalls and various walks were worthy of a limbered acrobat. He displayed the kind of superior timing one would find in a Rolex. His facile performance totally dominated the evening's proceedings.Photo 1: Hollis Resnik, Norbert Leo Butz
Photo 2: Norbert Leo Butz, Tom Hewitt
Photo Credit: Joan Marcus

|
Rock of Ages Off-Broadway TexARTS Theatre & Academy (7/10-8/09) |
|
1776 Allen Contemporary Theatre (6/26-7/12) |
|
Titanic The Musical Plaza Theatre Company (6/12-7/11) |
|
West Side Story North Texas Performing Arts Repertory Theatre (6/19-6/28) |
|
Grease Repertory Company Theatre (6/19-6/28) |
|
C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters Wagner Noël Performing Arts Center (10/11-10/11) |
|
Bluey's Big Play Bass Performance Hall (9/19-9/20) |
|
KEN LUDWIG'S THE GODS OF COMEDY Irving Arts Center (6/12-6/27) |
|
Application Pending Theatre Three (8/20-8/30) PHOTOS |
|
THE LITTLE MERMAID Fredericksburg Theater Company (6/12-6/28) |









