At last a new musical I can
wholeheartedly recommend! Kinky
Boots, based on the 2005 movie, tells the story of young Charlie Price, next in
line to inherit his family’s venerable shoe factory. Being of the modern generation the twenty-something wants
nothing to do with the family business and, instead, heads to London with his
fiancée to start a life in the world of marketing. Before they can set-up house Charlie’s dad passes away and
the young man is back in Northampton, England as head of Price & Sons. Unfortunately, he quickly realizes the
firm is going broke, losing out to cheap, foreign shoe imports. A chance encounter with Lola, a drag
queen, inspires Charlie to ditch the stuffy men’s footwear and to manufacture
wildly flamboyant boots for the niche market of drag queens, cross dressers,
and others. He recruits Lola to
design glitzy, high-heeled boots as they scurry to save Price & Sons from
oblivion. Along the way Lola deals
with his own self-worth and the backlash and narrow-mindedness from the more
provincial employees. At the same
time he subtly and craftily inspires the staff, including Charlie, to face
their own prejudices and preconceived notions. Throw in a muddled romance or two and you have the storyline
for the show.
There are a number of reasons that
make Kinky Boots work. First,
there is the score by 80’s pop icon, Cyndi Lauper. Making her Broadway debut as a composer, Lauper ‘s songs are
buoyant, feisty, yet have a real Broadway traditional feel to them. While there are heartfelt ballads,
Lauper doesn’t neglect her rock roots, serving up a healthy dose of high-energy
numbers.
Playwright Harvey Fierstein won a
Tony Award for writing the libretto for another cross-dressing musical, La Cage
Aux Folles. In 1983, when that
show opened, drag queens prancing on the stage and the backstage love story was
considered a bit risqué and daring.
Fast forward thirty years and with the advent of reality television and
changing social norms Kinky Boots is now more a La Cage Aux Folles lite. While mirroring the film’s premise, Fierstein
slowly and effectively paints a portrait of two individuals—Lola and Charlie--on
the surface so different, but in reality so much the same. The book writer also knows how to pull
our heartstrings and by the time the first set of kinky boots rolls off the
assembly line the audience is cheering.
My one quibble with the book is the way Charlie’s fiancée, Nicola, is
integrated within the plot. Her
scenes seem more like an intrusion with the flow of the story.
The acting corps is led by Billy
Porter as the gutsy, lust for life drag queen, Lola. Porter embodies his over-the-top being, but also effectively
shows the pain and anguish he has dealt with all his life. When he begins work at the shoe factory
he nimbly transforms himself into his more “true-to-form,” sedate self as he
seeks to balance both sides of his persona.
While Porter can be seen as the
driving force of the production Stark Sands as Charlie provides a more
contemplative, matter-of-fact counterpoint to Porter’s colorful Lola. In a sense, the ying and yang of the
two give Kinky Boots a satisfying symmetry. Sands creditably portrays Charlie as a confused young man
searching for his identity and place in the world to a more take charge, knowing
individual by the musical’s finale.
Other notables in the cast include Annaleigh Ashford as the lovelorn
Lauren who delivers a comic gem in “The History of Wrong Guys;” and Daniel
Stewart Sherman as Don, a big lug of a man who eventually overcomes his boorish
mindset.
Director-Choreographer Jerry
Mitchell keeps the story flowing without too many wayward passages. The sexual nature of the musical’s
premise, while a central part of the show, is presented in a more family
friendly matter. He adroitly balances
the more rousing nightclub numbers with Lola and his back-up performers, The
Angels, as well as the Act I closing song, “Everybody Say Yeah,” with more
intimate moments such as Charlie and Lola’s plaintive “I’m Not My Father’s
Son.”
Kinky Boots, a winning musical to
celebrate and applaud.
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