The world premiere of Holiday Inn, now playing through
December 21st at the Goodspeed Opera House, has an abundance of memorable
Irving Berlin tunes and some marvelous production numbers. Based on the 1942 movie that starred
Fred Astaire and Bing Crosby, this is more an old-fashioned musical that, while
entertaining for much of the show, left me somewhat underwhelmed. My main issues were 1) how the scenes
blended into each other—from dynamic, full-throttle dance numbers to more
reserved and charming moments with just two or three of the central characters;
and 2) my disappointment with the scenic design. Goodspeed, with its incredibly small performance space, has
always done wonders with its witty and creative dance numbers (in full force
here) and their scenic savvy. But
for Holiday Inn the stage is rather
sparse for much of the show and left me wanting more.
The storyline of the musical,
written by Gordon Greenberg (who also directed) and Chad Hodge, follows the
film closely, adding some characters, tweaking the plot, and smartly adding a
number of classic Berlin tunes.
The scenes populated by a large number of characters are fast-paced and
fluid, especially those that include the ensemble of superb dancers. The more intimate portions of the show,
while well-played and necessary for the flow of the production, forces the show
to almost recalibrate, uneasily needing to shift gears.
What elevates Holiday Inn is the superlative number of songs from the Irving
Berlin songbook. There is, of
course, “White Christmas,” but the creators have wisely added such gems as
“Blue Skies” (originally from the Rodgers and Hart musical, Betsy), “Heat Wave” (from his revue, As Thousands Cheer, which also
introduced “Easter Parade”), “Stepping Out With My Baby” (from the film Easter Parade), and “Let’s Take An Old-Fashioned
Walk” (from Berlin’s 1949 stage musical, Miss
Liberty). These songs, along
with those written explicitly for the movie, provide a cornucopia of listening
pleasure. It also makes you wonder
why today’s composers can’t produce scores full of the simple, yet melodic
numbers that Irving Berlin and his contemporaries pumped out so consistently.
The talented cast delivers in both
song and dance. Tally Sessions has
an outstanding voice, but is a little understated in his role of Jim Hardy, the
nightclub performer who retires to a Connecticut farm he renames Holiday Inn. Noah Racey, Jim’s former nightclub
partner, is deliciously self-centered and one hell of a dancer. Patti Murin, who was so good as the head
cheerleader in the Broadway musical, Lysistrata
Jones, is more muted in her role of school teacher and former Broadway
hoofer Linda Mason. Murin can
light up the stage with her megawatt smile and dancing ability. Hayley Podschun, as Jim and Ted’s female
partner, Lila Dixon, demonstrates she can keep up with the boys in the singing,
dancing, and acting departments.
The very funny supporting cast
sometimes takes the spotlight away from the leading actors. Number one is Susan Mosher as the
fast-talking, wise-cracking fix-it woman, Louise. While on stage she always seems to inject some needed energy
into a scene. Noah Marlowe as the
young boy, Charlie Winslow, delivers his lines in such great dead-panned
fashion. His simple “Don’t touch
me” at one point during the show brought down the house. Lastly, Danny Rutigliano, was so
apropos as the squat, rough around the edges, and gruff theatrical agent Danny
Reed. He, as with Ms. Mosher,
always seemed to provide a spark plug to the production when needed.
Director Gordon Greenberg helms the
production that packs a lot of material into the musicals two and one-half hour
running time. He’s more successful
with the show’s pacing during the large group scenes. Meshing the more intimate with the more robust aspects of Holiday Inn will be one of the biggest
challenges if the musical is looking for an afterlife when this run has been
completed.
The choreography, helmed by Denis
Jones, once again shows why some of the best dance routines on a musical
theater stage are at Goodspeed.
Jones comes up with some wonderful production numbers such as the high
powered “Blue Skies” and “Shaking the Blues Away” numbers. They are inventive and full of energy
or graceful and elegant, all maintaining the style of the time period.
Alejo Vietti’s costumes are
sumptuous creations that must have had the Goodspeed dress shop working
overtime for the quality and quantity of outfits within the show.
Holiday
Inn, extended through December 21st, a handsome musical theater
treat that will please the many, but still needs some pruning and fixing to
elevate it to must-see status.
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