The fierce rivalry between cosmetic
titans Helena Rubenstein and Elizabeth Arden during the post-World War II era
seems like an unlikely subject for a big Broadway musical. But War
Paint, with two certified stars in the leads—Patti Lupone (Ms. Rubenstein)
and Christine Ebersole (Ms. Arden)—and the same creative team behind the Tony
Award winning Grey Gardens, proves to
be an engaging, captivating, and classy production.
The show examines the competition between
the two women who ruled corporate boardrooms when very few women were even in
the upper echelons of the business world.
The musical also looks at their individual empires and the ups and downs
of both their businesses and personal lives.
Librettist Doug Wright has fashioned a coherent narrative that, while
not perfect, manages to include a good deal of information in a dramatic and
entertaining manner. He also succeeds in
nimbly touching on a number of notable topics as sexism, classism, and anti-Semitism
without appearing so obvious or deliberate.
By covering such a significant amount of historical terrain, character
development has been somewhat compromised, more so with the men in the story
then the two female protagonists, but not to the detriment of the overall
production.
.
The high voltage women in the cast—Ms.
Lupone and Ms. Ebersole—are worth the price of admission. Both are seasoned musical theater veterans that
are able to embody the heart and soul of their characters. They are iron-willed, classy, sophisticated,
but also vulnerable and alone. Ms.
Lupone, who’s Russian émigré accent sometimes gets the best of her, nonetheless
is superb as Helena Rubenstein. Her
performance is bold, defiant, and self-assured.
Throughout the show, she delivers a number of very funny, sharp-witted
bon mots. Ms. Ebersole, as Elizabeth
Arden, presents a less hyperbolic portrayal.
She is well-poised and assured in her demeanor and possesses a
razor-like focus on her goals, no matter what the sacrifices and slights, both personal
and business. Douglas Sills (Harry
Fleming) and John Dossett (Tommy Lewis), the two men in Arden and Rubenstein’s
lives who serve as their creative directors, publicists and confidantes, give well-honed
performances within the limitations of their roles. The
primary focus is on the female leads and their story, which doesn’t allow the
necessary time for expanding and refining the Fleming and Lewis characters.
Director Michael Greif once again
succeeds in birthing a musical with two strong, independent-minded female leads
just as he accomplished with Grey Gardens. He has skillfully worked out a stage
management schema for Ms. Lupone and Ms. Ebersole to shine individually and in
tandem. He deftly guides the production
through its pace to create a series of tightly woven scenes that together form
a persuasively structured, unified whole as opposed to a series of
strung-together vignettes. Mr. Greif
also manages to successfully weave through the show feelings of sadness, humor,
triumph and defeat.
The score by Scott Frankel and Michael
Korie afford each star a chance to, literally, shine in the spotlight as well
as together. The songs are effective in
providing shading and nuance to the characters and moving the plot along its
many twists and turns. While none of the
numbers will be remembered once leaving the theater they are engaging, finely
written compositions well-suited within the confines of the show.
David Korins’ scenic design, along with
Kenneth Posner’s Lighting Design, has fittingly captured the essence of the two
corporate cultures and the world the women inhabit. They bring a stylish and polished look to
the production. The costumes by Catherine
Zuber are elegant, chic, and smart.
War Paint, a well-crafted
musical with two bona fide stars delivering tour de force performances.
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