Warning: 'SPAMALOT' Contains Silly Shubbery

By: Jul. 14, 2009
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Monty Python's Spamalot book & lyrics by Eric Idle music by John Du Prez & Eric Idle directed by Mike Nichols Ahmanson Theatre through September 6

Monty Python and the Holy Grail meets Mel Brooks' History of the World Part I meets Mel Brooks' The Producers. Find the Holy Grail! No, find Jews to produce a Broadway show!  Is anyone left unscathed? Absolutely Ni, and there is enough silliness here to make us forget we're in the midst of a recession. If lots of sight gags, double entendres, and grotesque/crass behavior are your tea cup - and I mean, NO plotline - then Spamalot is for you! I frankly think a little of it goes a long, long way, but, naturally, I cannot overlook the splendiferous production values, luscious cast and ample time to laugh myself into a stuper.

John O'Hurley, straight from a two-year stint as King Arthur in Las Vegas, lends his tasty deadpan to a very merry band of knights in "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life". Merle Dandridge, as The Lady of the Lake, is a sumptuous feast all by herself. And...what a range of vocal versatility! Others worthy of praise include Jeff Dumas as lovely Prince Herbert, Rick Holmes daunting - and gay!~ as Lancelot, Ben Davis, divinely self-absorbed as Sir Dennis Galahad, Christopher Gurr a hoot as his butch mother and kudos to the entire ensemble for some spectacular tap dancing, with nifty choreography from Casey Nicholaw, and for the nonstop merriment.

Sets and costumes by Tim Hatley are colorful to look at, and Nichols' overall direction is a psychedelic knockout! I'm sure after all the heavy-handed plays he has directed over the last 40 some odd years, this project must have been a refreshingly fun change of pace.

When I first saw a scene from the film Porky's Revenge, I quickly switched channels. I might have done the same for Monty Python and the Holy Grail, had I seen it originally. But, alas... there is humor in the lame - how can one not smile at the Black Knight and his flesh wounds! or howl at the Frenchmen and their copious farting or guffaw at the oversized RABBIT and its ATTACK on the French or the Finnish and their fish slapping- and God knows, in this day and age, do we ever need laughter!!



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