Face The Music
NY City Center Encores - April 2007
Review by John Kenrick
There is a new sub-genre of musical theatre -- the concert
reconstruction. In recent years, Encores and other series have
disinterred a number of neglected musicals from the archival vaults. In
some cases, audiences get faithful recreations of what was presented
decades ago, but more often a creative team decides to freshen things up
a bit, putting their own stamp on the material. Face the Music
had a then-healthy Broadway run of 165 performances back in 1932. It
underwent changes during its post-New York tour, and the results got an
additional month's run on Broadway in 1933. Some of the songs in Irving
Berlin's score became standards, most notably the breezy Great
Depression anthem "Let's Have Another Cop of Coffee"
("and Let's Have Anther Piece of Pie"). But the show -- which
teetered between being a book musical and a revue -- was never filmed,
and quickly faded from memory.
The staff at Encores, always on the lookout for likely
properties, found this one an irresistible challenge. There were various
versions of the joke-packed script by Moss Hart, and orchestrations for
several of the songs were impossible to find. Former Encores
musical director Rob Fisher got involved, and Urinetown director
John Rando took the helm. What they presented to adoring City Center
audiences may not have been exactly what audiences saw and heard back in
the early 1930s, but it was clearly the sort of thing most Encores
subscribers dote on. After all, how often does anyone get to see an
Irving Berlin musical for the first time these days? The alleged plot
of Face the Music involves a Broadway director looking for
someone to invest in his next show. His "angels" turn out to
be members of the New York Police Department who are looking for a place
to lose some of their hard-earned graft -- and where better to lose
money than in a Broadway musical? The musical gets scathing
reviews, so the cops take over and turn it into a nudie show. This does
wonders for business, but attracts the attention of the FBI. The ensuing
investigation leads to jail sentences, but a reminder that musicals must
have happy endings persuades the judge to dismiss the case as the final
curtain falls. Walter Bobbie kept 'em guffawing as the
unscrupulous producer with a knack for staging flops. Lee Wilkof (Little
Shop's original Seymour) proved a master of old style comic dialogue
as the top corrupt cop, and the glorious Judy Kaye had a field
day as his dizzy, amoral wife. It takes a great talent like Kaye to win
rolling laughs with lines like: "A grotto? Isn't that where the
Jews live?" Eddie Korbich and Mylinda Hull danced and
sang up a giddy storm as two vaudeville hoofers trying to make the big
time -- and gave the audience real cause to raise the roof with Randy
Skinner's inspired tap choreography. As the romantic ingénues, Meredith
Patterson and Jeffrey Denman were attractive and polished but
somewhat lacking in charisma, probably because they had so much material
to master in so short a rehearsal period. Felicia Finlay damn
near stole the show singing the forgotten and hilarious "Torch
Song," and Chris Hoch won laughs spoofing every stiff-limbed
tenor who has ever lumbered across a stage. The Encores
production team gave the proceedings usual sheen, with John Lee
Beatty's sets and Clifton Taylor's lighting particular
standouts. As a masterful interpreter of period music, Rob Fisher made
the overture and other orchestral sequences pure magic to the ear. Despite
its occasional creaks, Face the Music has more wit and melody
than most of the noise currently selling tickets on Broadway. Frankly, I
would have preferred to see the original material on its own terms,
without so many interpolations from other scores. But that is the
nitpicking of a hopeless musical theatre buff. This adaptation certainly
made for a dandy weekend at Encores, and any summer theatre or
amateur group with a large, nostalgic audience base might do well to put
this adaptation on their rosters -- but be warned, it will take
top-notch talent with a flair for period material to make this soufflé
rise.
Back to Musicals101.com Homepage
Back to Reviews |