Rejoice, Broadway audiences! Norbert Leo Butz is back on the musical
stage in the imaginative and fanciful show, Big Fish. Leo Butz is not the sole motivation for seeing the show, but
he is the main reason. His singing
voice is first-rate, his dancing superb, and acting sublime. When he helms the stage, theater magic.
Big Fish is based on the novel and
movie of the same name. It tells
the story of Edward Bloom, a traveling salesman who, throughout the years, has
regaled his son, Will, with tales of derring-do, the improbable, and the
romantic. During his formative
years, young Will had rejected his father’s stories as nothing more then
figments of his rather large imagination, a poor substitute for a boy growing
up most of the time without a father around. Now grown, about to be married and a child on the way, Will
finally looks to exorcise and confront his parent’s legacy just as one final chapter
is about to be written.
One of the strengths of Big Fish is the fantastic and diverting tales told by Edward (Norbert Leo Butz). They are strikingly brought to life
with imaginative story-telling, playful and dreamlike sets, rear screen
projections, and costumes. There’s
the time Edward encountered a witch in the swamps, befriended a giant, wrangled
with an assassin during a World War II USO show, two-stepped a school of fish
right out of the water, and was shot out of a canon hundreds of miles. The stories, Will (played by Bobby
Steggert) eventually learns, were not some aimless meanderings, but purposeful
chronicles meant to inspire a doubting, questioning young man.
Norbert Leo Butz is the focus of
Big Fish, playing Edward Bloom through many stages of his life. His character, a dreamer and romanticist,
leads us through a giddy ride until the melancholy finale. Leo Butz’s energy and passion easily
give him the moniker of hardest working actor on Broadway. Kate Baldwin, as his wife, Sandra, is
captivating and beautiful with an enchanting voice. Her role may not be as well-developed as her co-star, but her
matter-of-fact demeanor perfectly balances his more rambunctious predilections. Bobby Seggert’s Will is serious and
overly rational, a more one-dimensional character, who’s presence and
earnestness adroitly balances his more capricious father. Others deserving
mention are Ryan Andes as the giant, Karl; and Brad Oscar as the ringmaster,
Amos Calloway.
The score by Andrew Lippa is solid
without any memorable numbers.
Still, the songs can be touching, boisterous, full of heart and, more
importantly, help to move the storyline along.
The costumes by William Ivey Long,
primarily in Act I, are playful as well as otherworldly and further the overall
whimsical nature of the production.
For the sets, Scenic Designer
Julian Crouch and Projection Designer Benjamin Pearcy have collaborated to
conceive wondrous creations that fully complement each other. I am not a fan of projection
systems. Too often they call undue
attention to themselves, but with Big Fish the synergy is perfectly matched.
Director/choreographer Susan
Stroman provides a sure hand in guiding the musical through its paces. Whether in large scale production
numbers or in tender moments she carefully paces the show up to its emotional
finale. As with other shows she
has worked on, a touch of whimsy pops up.
This time with an elephant dance routine.
Big Fish—a big hit, now playing at
the Neil Simon Theatre.
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