Friday, August 23, 2024

The Drowsy Chaperone at the Grand Theatre

I love The Drowsy Chaperone and I don't think I will ever get tired of seeing it because not only is it a hilarious parody of the genre with every musical theatre trope you can think of but it is also a poignant ode to the power that musical theatre has to transport you away from from the real wold and all of your problems to a place where happy endings are possible for a few hours.  I had the chance to see it again at the Grand Theatre last night and I thoroughly enjoyed it!  Because Man in Chair (Jason Campbell) is feeling a little bit blue he decides to listen to the LP of the cast recording for his favorite musical The Drowsy Chaperone.  As he listens the musical comes to life in his apartment with frequent pauses for his commentary on the show which becomes more and more personal.  Mrs. Tottendale (Dawn Veree) and her Underling (Jeffrey Black) are hosting the wedding of oil tycoon Robert Martin (Clayton Barney) to a Broadway star named Janet Van De Graaff (Morgan Fenner) who is giving up her glamorous career for love.  Robert is leaving the wedding details to George (Luke Logan), his best friend and best man, while Janet's Chaperone (Lauren Slagowski), who gets drowsy when she drinks champagne, is charged with keeping the couple apart to avoid bad luck.  Broadway producer Feldzieg (Doug Caldwell) is unhappy about losing his biggest star and sets out to stop the wedding by hiring a Latin lover named Aldolpho (Dru) to seduce the bride.  An investor in the Feldzieg Follies is also worried about losing its biggest star and hires two gangsters (Steve Shoemaker and Kaltin Kirby), who are posing as pastry chefs, to stop the wedding bit a ditzy chorus girl named Kitty (Natalie Wren) is hoping to take Janet's place.  The happy ending is in doubt until Trix the Aviatrix (Kacee Neff) is enlisted to marry four couples on her plane while flying to Rio.  This production features the original Broadway version which does not have an intermission (it also omits "Message From A Nightingale" which usually happens at the beginning of Act 2) and I think it is delightful.  The choreography in the big song and dance numbers "Fancy Dress," "Show Off," "Toledo Surprise," and "I Do, I Do in the Sky" is really fun but I especially enjoyed the tapping (I always love to see tapping) in "Cold Feets," the roller skating in "Accident Waiting to Happen," and the Busby Berkeley-like sequence in "Bride's Lament."  I am always intrigued to see how the furniture and other items in the apartment are incorporated into the choreography and the use of a Murphy bed in "As We Stumble Along" is hilarious.  The entire cast is very strong but the stand outs for me are Dru, because not only is his performance completely over the top but he also has a beautiful voice (he might be my favorite Aldolpho), and Campbell, because it is so fun to watch him mimic the choreography while sitting in the chair.  I had a smile on my face from beginning to end and I highly recommend it (go here for tickets).  There are performances Thursday - Saturday until September 14.

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