Showing posts with label The King and I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The King and I. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Broadway in a Box CD Review: The King and I (1964 Lincoln Center Theater Cast)

At Christmas a few years ago, Jeff gave me a copy of Broadway in a Box: The Essential Broadway Musicals Collection. He has now given me the opportunity to use his blog to share my impressions of each of the 25 cast recordings contained in the set, in alphabetical order. 


This week’s entry is about the 1964 Music Theater of Lincoln Center Cast Recording of The King and I.


Broadway in a Box CD Review:
The King and I (1964 LCT Cast)
 

Some shows, like How to Succeed… from a couple of weeks ago, lend themselves to cast recordings that stand on their own in terms of musical storytelling. I don’t think The King and I is one of those shows, and this competent but undistinguished Lincoln Center recording neither adds nor detracts from that impression.


Don’t get me wrong - this score is full of great songs, some beautiful, some quite fun, but most of them not very dramatic, in the sense of building a story and moving it forward. The first act, especially, is dominated by lush but slow-moving introspective ballads (one of which, “Hello, Young Lovers,” is one of my two favorite Rodgers and Hammerstein songs), plus a similarly textured love duet. This general homogeneity is not really a problem in the context of the larger story we’d see on stage, but it doesn’t make for a particularly exciting cast recording. The second act is much more dynamic, but also rather short on this CD, which omits several reprises of songs from the first act.



This recording boasts a huge and talented Lincoln Center chorus and orchestra - I could listen to the amazing overture all day long. Otherwise, most of the individual elements are polished but not particularly remarkable. This applies, first and foremost, to operatic soprano Risë Stevens (Anna Leonowens), who of course has the vocal abilities necessary to tackle this score, but does not add much in the way of personality. She’s at her most interesting when she attempts an early-Disney-princess sort of chirpiness in her jauntier numbers, like “Whistle a Happy Tune.”


Darren McGavin is similarly middle-of-the-road as the King, with an appropriately broad set of vocal gesticulations, but otherwise without much sense of really inhabiting the character; his accent is vague and sporadic. Of course, it’s hard to listen to a performance like this in 2022 without there being some kind of cringe factor at the lack of authenticity from both the writers and the performer. Along those same lines, I was slightly bothered by the fact that the chorus of the King’s wives and children would sing using the Queen’s English (“Getting to Know You”) or stereotypically strained syntax (“The Small House of Uncle Thomas”), depending on the momentary requirements of the story.



Despite my lack of enthusiasm for this recording, there were several highlights. The best vocal performances belong to Lee Venora (Tuptim) and Frank Porretta (Lun Tha), who deliver passionate versions of their two duets, “We Kiss in a Shadow” and “I Have Dreamed.” The recording also comes alive in the first part of the second act, beginning with a vivid performance, led by Patricia Neway (Lady Thiang), of the provocative “Western People Funny.” (Do the ironic lyrics here imply that the creators knew that there was something a little peculiar about people like them making a show like this?) Finally, “The Small House of Uncle Thomas,” always a highlight in this score, doesn’t disappoint here (cringe factor notwithstanding).


Next up is the 2002 Broadway Revival Cast Recording of Man of La Mancha.


Thanks for another great write-up. It is always interesting to look back at vintage recordings, consider how they are a product of their time, and to recognize what holds up and what doesn't. Looking forward to next week - Man of La Mancha was the very first show I was ever in! --Jeff


Wednesday, May 5, 2021

At This Theater: The Vivian Beaumont Theater at Lincoln Center

Tucked away in the back corner of the Lincoln Center campus, the Vivian Beaumont Theater is easily recognizable with its large plate glass windows and trademark neon logo-signs. Opened in 1965 and named for philanthropist Vivian Beaumont Allen, the theater has been home to a wide variety of plays and musicals. Revivals of Shakespeare, Moliere, Williams and Ibsen were the main attractions until 1972, when The Threepenny Opera became its first musical occupant. Since then, modern plays, major musical revivals, and original new musicals have taken their place alongside the classics.


At This Theater:
The Vivian Beaumont
Provided the director and designers truly understand how to take full advantage of the enormous thrust stage, there really isn't a bad seat in the house. Between the view and the relatively spacious seating with decent leg room, we really love going uptown to the Viv.

The Shows We've Seen There:  Anything Goes, Contact, South Pacific, War Horse, The King and I, My Fair Lady


How They Rate:

6. Contact  (2000) Although it really pushed the limits of what could be considered a "musical," and it raised more than a few eyebrows when it won the Tony Award for Best Musical, I really enjoyed this performance. I love watching great dancers, and the show was full of them. Add Boyd Gaines  and  Karen Ziemba, and it couldn't be that bad. What ever happened to the Girl in the Yellow Dress?

  

  

5. My Fair Lady  (2018) 
 I've always had a soft spot in my heart for this show, ever since 11th grade, when I played Pickering. This production was lavish, beautiful to look at, and made relevant once again with Bartlett Sher's smart direction. Not that it was perfect - I found Norbert Leo Butz to be as tedious as the constant moving in and out of that huge library set. Both were interesting the first time they came into view. After that, not so much.

   

   

4.  The King and I (2015)
I've seen so many professional productions of this show, you'd think it was my favorite by Rodgers an Hammerstein. It isn't - though "The Small House of Uncle Thomas" may be  the all-time great production number of any show I've seen. This production was a beautiful, sweeping epic, made all the more so because the design and direction took up every inch of the cavernous space (even when the stage was virtually empty). Kelli O'Hara was endearing, a brooding Ken Watanabe was charming, and both Ruthie Ann Miles and Ashley Park were captivating. And yet, the show didn't leave me on a high like the 1996 revival.
   
   

3. War Horse (2011)
The sheer magnitude of this production puts this show near the top of my all-time favorite plays. I mean, a sweeping, epic story performed live before my eyes?! But what makes this show so wonderful is the artistry of those amazing puppets, not only in their execution, but the way that the actors interacted with them, and how, as an audience member, they all elicited such emotion from me. It was a privilege to see this.
   

   

2. South Pacific (2008)
From the overture (the orchestra reveal...WOW!) to the finale, this gorgeous revival of my favorite Rodgers and Hammerstein musical did not disappoint. Some how, this production managed to be as big as the Pacific and as intimate as a quiet pond.  Paulo Szot, Loretta Ables-Sayre, Danny Burstein and Matthew Morrison were all amazing, each bringing a depth and vibrancy to their roles. This is the role Kelli O'Hara should have won the Tony for. She's never been better, and neither has this show.


   

1. Anything Goes (1987)
Let's face it. This title is old, somewhat problematic, and eye-rollingly cliche. Sure, it has a great Cole Porter score with some super opportunities for big dance numbers. (On paper, it is exactly the show that people who hate musicals would point to for proof of their hatred.) And yet, this revival was magnificent.  Patti LuPone was the definitive Reno Sweeney (sorry, Sutton), and Howard McGillin had the audience in full swoon with every impish grin, plot twist, and song. Brilliantly sung and danced, this revival knew what it was working with and made the most of it at every turn.

   
   
#2554

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Standing @ Zero: Jagged Little Pill's Kei Tsuruharatani

The ensemble of Jagged Little Pill plays an enormous part in nearly every aspect of the story and staging. As a group, they are extraordinary, but they are just as wondrous individually. One of those individuals stuck a personal chord with me during the song "Ironic." That person was Kei Tsuruharatani. His character in the scene is a classmate of Frankie's (Celia Rose Gooding), who calls her out for not actually being ironic. It hit me in a personal way because I, myself, have had that argument many times. From that point on, I kind of followed what he was doing as part of the ensemble. What a dancer! What an actor! I have a feeling he is going places.




Standing @ Zero
Jagged Little Pill's
Kei Tsuruharatani






In addition to JLP, his New York theater credits include the recent revivals of The King and I and Miss Saigon, as well as six seasons with the Metropolitan Opera. He has danced with several companies, is a freelance artist, and teaches mindfulness meditation.  Here he is in action:




In rehearsal with Kathryn Gallagher

JLP at A.R.T. (center front right)

At a JLP P.R. event (far right) 
JLP on Late Night with Seth Meyers (top left)



JLP - He's under the table!

#2275


Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...