Showing posts with label Lunt-Fontanne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lunt-Fontanne. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2021

At This Theater: The Lunt-Fontanne

Over the years, I've seen 11 shows at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, and they ran the gamut from cringe-worthy to worthy favorite. I've also had the opportunity to sit in pretty much every location, and despite its cavernous seating area, the only place I wouldn't recommend is the rear orchestra, where you miss anything at the top of the stage thanks to a low-hanging mezzanine. Interesting fact: Mike and I sat in the same exact seats (Orch J 10-12) for three different productions, and we really liked the view from there - the proscenium is wide. But I have to say my favorite locale is the front mezzanine, which affords an excellent view and still feels close. It also offers close proximity to the theater's best feature, the spacious mezzanine lounge/bar area, with room for to merch booths and room to move. The merch area behind the orchestra seats is ridiculous, especially after the show is over.

At This Theater:
The Lunt-Fontanne

So, of the 11 shows I saw there, I found something to like about all of them, but if I had to pick a "worst," it would have to go to The Little Mermaid, an ugly and mis-directed piece, simultaneously extravagant and cheap looking. The only good thing about it was Ariel herself, Sierra Boggess. Even the mega-flop The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public had its campy delights, including chorus girls in plexiglass cubes, the always reliable Dee Hoty, and a horse that took a dump during the curtain call. I could belabor the point, and name something good about the largely mediocre middle group, but instead, I'll just wax sentimental about my 5 favorites At This Theater.

# of Shows We Saw There: 11




Shows We Saw There:
Tina, Finding Neverland, Motown: The Musical, A Christmas Story: The Musical, Ghost: The Musical, The Addams Family, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Titanic, The Best Little Whorehouse Goes Public, Smile

The 5 Best Shows We Saw There:

          

5. Beauty and the Beast (1999
*)
Although it was downsized when the show moved from the Palace Theatre, it was still a pretty spectacular production, and it is still my favorite of all the Disney Broadway musicals. Of course, having a great story and an even better score doesn't hurt. I hear there's a revival in the works. I can't wait. 
* - Beauty and the Beast opened at the Lunt-Fontanne in 1999





4. Smile (1986)
 
I've said it before, and I'll keep saying it: they never should have "softened" the book to make it more "nice" for Broadway. The out of town try-out in Baltimore was opening night ready. Tuneful, ironically bright visually, smart and razor-sharp, the book had the heat of a jalapeno and the bite of snake. When I listen to the score (God, I wish they'd made a full-out cast recording!), I think of it in terms of the original book. Amazing how much more significant Howard Ashman's lyrics seem in that context...

     


3. Finding Neverland (2015) They had me from Tinkerbell's entrance and all the way through to the epic death scene. I tell you, I wept. Ugly cried. Though I know the show has its detractors, I found it charming, creative and heartfelt.








2. Tina (2019) So, I have a love-hate thing for bio-musicals. If the story is meh, I don't care how great the performances and songs are (Beautiful). If the story is interesting, the presentation creative and the songs are good, I'm much happier (On Your Feet!). But when the story is intelligently told, warts and all, beautifully staged, and has uniformly superb performances, I love it just as much as a "regular" musical. And that's Tina. What a production! And will all due respect to Ms. Warren, we were thrilled to see her alternate, Nkeki Obi-Melekwe, in a spectacular Broadway debut.




1. Titanic (1997) All four times I saw this gorgeous musical, the boat sank. And each time, I felt the human toll of the tragedy. Long before Rosie O'Donnell became its biggest fan, and crowds began flocking to it, I adored it. One of the things I like about it most, was the relative austerity of the show. Presented as a series of blueprint-like drawings (it is told from the ship's designer's point of view, after all), we were made to focus on the crew and passengers, lavishly costumed, instead of the grandeur of the ill-fated and oft-photographed passenger liner. The people were the point, not the set. Still, it was pretty jaw-dropping to watch the stage tilt and a grand piano slide by. But, in truth, the absolutely stunning score by Maury Yeston, played by a full orchestra and sung by a huge company was what kept me coming back. Revival, please.

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Thursday, December 26, 2019

Favorite Theater of the Year

Normally, we select a Broadway theater each year where we have had a particularly grand experience for our annual review. This year, we didn't select one whole theater, but rather the upstairs lobbies of two! If you've ever had mezzanine seats at either the Al Hirschfeld Theatre or the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, you probably understand what we mean.

Both exude a sense of history; one can envision the glamour of days gone by, patrons milling about, dressed to the nines, sipping champagne as they wait for the curtain or between acts. Both are spacious and elegantly appointed, and both are much more comfortable than the lobbies where you enter the building.

The Al Hirschfeld Theatre

The Byzantine-Moorish style of the building mandates the terracotta colors and iron-work aesthetic is punctuated with classic stained glass. In keeping with the theater's namesake, the walls up there are lined with Hirschfeld famous Broadway drawings. The spacious comfort is worth mentioning again.

The entrance.
Up the stairs to the spacious mezzanine lobby.

The wall, lined with the legendary drawings of Al Hirschfeld

There's even a fireplace! Can we just move in?

The Lunt-Fontanne Theatre

The theater itself is in the Beaux-Arts style, while the interior features 18th century-style appointments. The upstairs lobby is, by New York standards, enormous with room for a lot of people to stand comfortably, with a large bar and (usually) two merchandise booths. My favorite parts of the lobby are the gold leaf ceiling, the theater mural behind red velvet curtains and rope, flanked by metal palm trees. Somehow, it all works.

Up those unassuming stairs is the way to...

...metal palm trees, gold ceiling & chandeliers...

Note the hardwood floors, the mural to the right...

Do you have a favorite theater or part of a theater? Let us know! Maybe your pick will be our pick in 2020!

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