TOM TITUS -- THEATER REVIEW
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“Forbidden Broadway” is to the realm of musical theater what Mad
Magazine is to serious journalism -- a satiric, irreverent kick in the
shins, and sometimes higher, with a slam-bang, take-no-prisoners
attitude.
Creator-writer-director Gerard Alessandrini and his gang of merry
satirists have been taking potshots at the Great White Way for the better
part of two decades, updating their material with each Broadway season
and zeroing in on its hits and misses. If you loved a particular show,
such as “Annie” or “Cats,” you’ll cringe when you see how this troupe
vivisects it.
Long-deceased stars like Ethel Merman and Mary Martin have been
particular favorites for potshots, along with Patti LuPone. Of this trio,
only Merman shows up from the Great Beyond for the sendup’s arrival at
the Orange County Performing Arts Center, where it will be through Sept.
30.
In 90 intermission-less minutes, the troupe dissects several decades
of musical theater in the Center’s intimate venue of Founders Hall. From
“Fiddler on the Roof” to “Miss Saigon” and “The Lion King,” there’s no
business like spoof business.
Even the more familiar numbers from “Les Miserables” and “Phantom of
the Opera” have been scraped down and given a new coat of paint. And Liza
Minnelli’s hyperactive “Liza One Note” segment is expanded hilariously as
impersonator Gina Kreiezmar brings her impression one-on-one with the
audience.
Kreiezmar, who also has inherited the Merman mantle, is one-fourth of
a sensational cast that includes veteran Susanne Blakeslee, Jonathan
Hadley and Michael West. Blakeslee, an original member of several
“Forbidden Broadway” foursomes, absolutely nails impressions of divas
Barbra Streisand, Julie Andrews and Sarah Brightman.
Hadley virtually crucifies Mandy Patinkin in a self-glorifying solo
and headlines a still-funny rendition of “Tradition” from “Fiddler,”
which was one of the troupe’s original targets. West regales the audience
in his Harold Hill drum major garb from “The Music Man” as he decries the
current state of the Broadway theater (“Trouble with a capital T and that
rhymes with D and that stands for Dull”).
“Dull” is what “Forbidden Broadway” is anything but. Although the
show is designed for mix-and-match quartets, the current crop performs so
smoothly together that one would think they had been roasting the Great
White Way together for years. In Blakeslee’s case, they’d be right.
Master accompanist Brad Ellis also has a long track record with the
troupe.
Among the more hilarious moments in a show packed with them are
Kreiezmar’s over-the-hill Annie, almost as funny as her Liza, and her
claws-out duet with Blakeslee as fiery Latinas Chita Rivera and Rita
Moreno hissing at each other over whose Anita in “West Side Story” was
the better -- more than 40 years ago.
And, if you think you’re familiar with the “Forbidden Broadway”
routines from their numerous CDs, think again. Many of the numbers have
been altered, updated or simply fleshed out, such as the bits from
Broadway titans “Les Miserables”and “Phantom of the Opera.” The latter
sendup with Kreiezmar’s Ethel Merman coming back to haunt Hadley’s
Michael Crawford is a particular scream, culminating in a duet of two
numbers inspired by Merman’s ancient hit “Call Me Madam.”
Blakeslee socks it to Bob Fosse, along with dancers Hadley and West,
in a left-handed salute to “Chicago.” And “The Lion King” is suitably
tamed as Blakeslee and West appear in neck braces from the weight of the
costumes.
“Forbidden Broadway” is just the ticket for theatergoers wishing to
take their minds off the troubled world outside. It’s a wild, wacky,
wonderful evening of razor-edged satire that’s over all too quickly.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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