Broadway Reviews Theatre Review by Matthew Murray - January 12, 2014
Beautiful: The Carole King Musical Book by Douglas McGrath. Words and music by Gerry Goffin & Carole King, Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil. Music by arrangement with Sony/ATV Music Publishing. Directed by Marc Bruni. Choreographed by Josh Prince. Scenic design by Derek McLane. Costume design by Alejo Vietti. Lighting design by Peter Kaczorowski. Sound design by Brian Ronan. Wig & hair design by Charles G. LaPointe. Make-up design by Joe Dulude II. Orchestrations, vocal and music arrangements by Steve Sidwell. Cast: Jessie Mueller, Jake Epstein, Anika Larsen, Jarrod Spector, Jeb Brown, Liz Larsen, Ashley Blanchet, E. Clayton Cornelious, Josh Davis, Alysha Deslorieux, Kevin Duda, James Harkness, Carly Hughes, Sara King, Rebecca LaChance, Douglas Lyons, Chris Peluso, Garbrielle Reid, Arbender J. Robinson, Rashidra Scott, Sara Sheperd, Melvin Tunstall.
That reason, of course, is Jersey Boys. Ever since it opened at the August Wilson more than eight years ago, the Four Seasons showcase has ruled the Broadway Jukebox Musical roost by being at once smart and theatrical. Though that show tells a fairly familiar warts-and-all story of how its quartet of ne'er-do-wells reached the heights of 1960s pop stardom, librettists Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice and director Des McAnuff structured and executed it so the inherently dull dramatic form was, at times, electrifying. Though Beautiful is ultra-slick and impeccably executed for what it is, electrifying it is not. It begins in the Brooklyn home of the 16-year-old Carole Klein (Jessie Mueller), where the girl is arguing with her mother about venturing to 1650 Broadway in Manhattan to sell a song she's written. Mom wants nothing of it but relents only after forcing Carole to promise that, if she doesn't sell this one, she'll let go of this dream and become a teacher. Once she gets into the office of exec Don Kirshner (Jeb Brown) and changes her name, she sells that song and her future is set. In short order she meets Gerry (Jake Epstein) at college, and he's writing lyrics to her music while teaching her about the ways of love. This leads to a pregnancy, a marriage, and a decade-long partnership that runs parallel to that of (and is in constant competition with) Barry and Cynthia, who are as fierce rivals as they are trusted friends. But Gerry's urge to run (and sleep) around gets the better of him, and it's not long before the spurred Carole is left wondering what to do and whether she can live her life alone. McGrath offers, in other words, nothing you haven't seen beforeand nothing that its still-living subjects could honestly object to. (As presented, King has only one negative quality: her desire to live outside of NYC.) Neither he nor director Marc Bruni compensates with original staging or song-spotting ideas, leaving the story drifting along speedily if awkwardly from plot point to plot point while each new number erupts in classic and-then-I-wrote variety. Even though every number is sung diegetically, this treatment becomes tiresome by the end of Act I, at which point there's still roughly an hour of stultifying non-story to come. Carole and Gerry's romance is tracked efficiently through the likes of Some Kind of Wonderful, Take Good Care of My Baby, and the ironically named Will You Love Me Tomorrow, while Cynthia and Barry croon to He's Sure the Boy I Love, You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling, and Walking in the Rain in exploring their own feelings toward each other (which involve a lot of sex but little early marriage). And the use of other tunes of the late-50s, early-60s era Splish Splash, Poison Ivy, Love Potion Number Nine, and so on) definitely place the dueling partnerships in the appropriate pop context, even if the vocal arrangements (by Steve Sidwell, who also orchestrated) occasionally sound distractingly contemporary.
Except for Epstein, who's likeable but stilted as Gerry, the supporting performances are game and effective, making the most of their threadbare material. Though Anika Larsen is drastically underutilized as Cynthia, her huge belt voice kept largely under wraps, she's nimble with a one-liner and exhibits fine romantic chemistry with Jarrod Spector, a spitfire as Barry. Don is rendered as little more than a functionary, but Brown imbues him with enough warmth; Liz Larsen does the same with Carole's wise and wise-cracking mother. Smaller roles are likewise well judged, with Kevin Duda (as Neil Sedaka and superstar producer Lou Adler) and Rashidra Scott (as one of the singers Gerry pines for) among the best of a solid bunch. It's Mueller, however, who has the largest task before herand the most difficulty executing it. Shown to varying advantage in the recent revivals of The Mystery of Edwin Drood (excellent), Into the Woods (ugh), and On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (somewhere in between), Mueller is a genuine talent who possesses a killer voice but iffy star quality. She handles her songs superbly, comfortably suggesting if never outright impersonating King, but registers none of the heat, passion, or heartbreak that made the real deal a chart-topper in the first place. If not for Mueller's punishing amount of stage time, she'd risk vanishing into the ensemble. This is troubling for any lead, but becomes a particular problem when Carole's big solo hits start appearing and you're left bewildered at how this ordinary, unassuming housewife became the icon she did. As hard as Mueller works, she lacks the charisma needed to transform this kid-gloves enterprise into something, well, beautiful. If Jersey Boys went to great lengths to detail the psychology that drove Frankie Valli and his cohorts to the topand, more important, made getting there more than half the funBeautiful's willingness to settle for bland hagiography rather than dangerous, exciting truth makes the natural woman it documents seem as unnatural as stage creations come. |