I feel compelled to give two
reviews of Aladdin. The first is for families thinking
about taking small children or tweens to a Broadway extravaganza. From this perspective, the show will be
an enjoyable and entertaining outing.
The second critique is for everyone else (even though families are
allowed to peek) that might want an in-depth appraisal for a more adult
audience.
REVIEW ONE [For Families]--If you
are looking for a big, splashy, colorful Broadway musical that will amaze the
kids, have enough action and comedy for tweens, and plenty of spectacular dance
numbers for everyone else then Aladdin,
the latest Disney film to transfer to the Broadway stage, will be a perfect
choice. Based on the 1992 musical
fantasy, Aladdin has ample amounts of
charm, pizzazz, and wondrous effects that most Disney musicals possess. It is a crowd pleaser that will make
parents the heroes in their household.
REVIEW TWO [For Others]—My
expectations for Aladdin were, maybe
unrealistically, high since the only two previous occupants of the New
Amsterdam Theatre were Mary Poppins (November
16, 2006 – March 3, 2013) and Lion King (November
13, 1997 – June 13, 2006). Aladdin is solidly good, sometimes great
but, overall, enjoyable and energetically fine are apt descriptors. In the pantheon of Disney animated movies
converted into Broadway musicals it ranks below Lion King and Beauty and the
Beast, coming just ahead of Tarzan and
The Little Mermaid.
Unlike many musicals today, Aladdin begins with a sumptuous overture,
which serves as a primer for the audience to the Disney magic to come. The Genie (James Monroe Iglehart) then
enters the stage and welcomes the assembly with the large production number,
“Arabian Nights,” an introductory song in the mode of “Belle” from Beauty and the Beast. Soon the stage is alive with delirious
movement, colorful costumes, and fanciful sets of an Arabian land.
The Disney version of Aladdin is simple—boy (Aladdin) meets
girl (Princess Jasmine), boy loses girl, boy (now in the guise of a prince)
tries to woo girl and, finally, boy wins girl. Happy
ending. Along the way our hero,
his three knucklehead friends, and his newly acquired genie, must outwit the
sinister Royal Vizier, Jafar, and his squat henchman, Iago, who are plotting to
wrest control of the kingdom from Jasmine’s father, the Sultan.
Aladdin
is more cartoonish then its long-running predecessors, Beauty and the Beast and Lion
King. Those two musicals came
across as fully fleshed out animated features with depth and pathos. The current show doesn’t take itself as
seriously—the book by Chad Beguelin incorporates numerous puns and silly jokes--which
heavily influences the production’s pastiche of various styles and manners.
The real star of the show is James
Monroe Iglehart as the Genie. He
doesn’t appear that often on stage, but when he does hold onto your seats. In
the musical number, “Friend Like Me,” he gives an absolute tour-de-force
performance. With the full
Broadway razz-ma-tazz treatment and inspired zaniness you almost forget the
Robin Williams voiced character from the film.
The rest of the cast is first-rate. Adam Jacobs as Aladdin is handsome,
athletic, and posses a million watt smile. He has a charming and engaging playfulness that connects
wholeheartedly with the audience.
Courtney Reed’s role of Jasmine doesn’t really allow her to stretch her
acting talents, but it does give her the opportunity to portray a Disney
princess, one who is strong-willed, independent-minded and beautiful. She and Aladdin do make a dazzling
pair. Jonathan Freeman, a musical
theater veteran (and the only performer in history to voice a character in a
Disney film and then recreate the role on Broadway) plays Jafar with a comedic
malevolency as opposed to the usually quite frightening Disney villain. Don Darryl Rivera as his short, dumpy,
simpleminded sidekick, Iago, provides an amusing contrast to the ultra-serious
Jafar. The two make a wonderful
team. Aladdin’s three amigos—Babkak
(Brian Gonzales), Kassim (Brandon O’Neil), and Omar (Jonathan Schwartz)—are
funny, irreverent, and just plain goofy.
They provide periodic flippant interludes, which adds to the charm of
the show.
The score by Alan Menken, Howard
Ashman, and Tim Rice, is lively and bouncy. The standouts songs are the same from the film version, “Arabian
Nights,” “Friend Like Me,” and “A Whole New World,” which has Aladdin and
Princess Jasmine flying about the New Amsterdam Theatre stage on a magic
carpet. It is a stunning effect
and beautifully presented.
Director/Choreographer Casey
Nicholaw helms the musical with confidence and authority. The one thing you can’t say about the
show is it drags or isn’t energized enough. While there is more high-stepping production numbers then
all this season’s new musicals combined, the choreography, which starts out in
grand fashion, becomes simply routine and more repetitive and less original as
the show goes on.
Aladdin,
while charming and fun, lacks the enchantment and savviness of Disney’s most
notable theatrical productions.
2 comments:
Thank you for a fun review. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. Our entire family saw the show and as you said, there is something for everyone! We had a blast and how exciting it was to witness two ovations during the show.
If you want to be entertained with high energy dancing, big production numbers and magic, you shouldn't miss this show! Stu is right!
I have read the post and the information which you have shared that is really good and useful.
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