Actor Robert Creighton, starring in
the Off-Broadway musical Cagney, is
the reincarnation of the multi-talented actor James Cagney. He looks, sings, and dances life the
legendary performer. Creighton has
the energy, charisma, and self-confidence to pull off what could be a daunting
task.
Book writer Peter Colley has
utilized the device of flashbacks to highlight the movie star’s career. We meet Cagney and studio mogul Jack
Warner waiting outside the auditorium of the 1978 Screen Actor’s Guild Awards. The actor, aged, but still full of
fire, is to receive a lifetime achievement honor and his old boss is to
introduce him. The two rivals,
partners in movie making, recount their often contentious relationship of
decades ago. These brief
encounters are the springboard for the relatively breezy and appealing
storyline that traces the major moments in Cagney’s life. We follow him from his beginnings on
the streets of New York City, through his time criss-crossing the country on
the vaudeville circuit to, finally, his arrival in Hollywood. Along the way famous move scenes are
recreated, he marries, and his support for the downtrodden, which get him in
trouble with Congress’ investigation of Communist sympathizers, are portrayed.
We see Cagney as the tough guy
hoodlum, the song and dance man and independent producer. Creighton, in a career defining role,
never lets up in his mission to captivate and dazzle the audience. The other actors and actresses—Jeremy
Benton, Josh Walden, Danette Holden, and Ellen Zolezzi—are impressive
through their vocal numbers and high-spirited dancing. Bruce Sabath as studio chief Jack Warner
is deliciously combative with an ego the size of Los Angeles.
Choreographer Joshua Bergasse has
created numerous crowd pleasing tap dance routines for the whole cast, Creighton
and Benton, in the guise of Cagney’s longtime friend Bob Hope, and individual
performers. The Act II opener is
full of bounce, muscle, and razz-ma-tazz.
Besides the now shuttered Dames at
Sea there is no better tap On or Off-Broadway this season.
The score, primarily by Christopher
McGovern, but also Robert Creighton as well as a few compositions by George M.
Cohan, is more serviceable within the production. This isn’t a criticism. The songs, tuneful and lovingly and humorously presented,
won’t have much of an afterlife, but work favorably within the activity on
stage.
Director Bill Castellino keeps the
action lively, loose, good-natured and engaging. Scenes flow easily into one another to form a satisfying
whole as opposed to a simple pageantry of events. The spotlight is smartly kept on Creighton, but Castellino
adroitly incorporates the ensemble, playing multiple roles throughout the show,
to give the musical a heftier feel.
Cagney, a showcase
for the talents of actor Robert Creighton as well as a thoroughly entertaining
piece of musical theater.
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