Monday, October 27, 2008

Turn of the Century live performance at the Goodman Theatre


The last live musical performance I saw at the Goodman Theatre was Ain't Misbehavin', which I very much liked, so I was looking forward to a new musical play from the Goodman, featuring selections from the Great American Songbook in a production directed and choreographed by Tommy Tune, starring Broadway veteran Rachel York and film good-guy Jeff Daniels. But Turn of the Century was a disappointment from beginning to end when I saw it over the weekend.
This is basically a show that gets in the way of a lot of good music. The show tells the story of a pianist and a singer who get sent back one hundred years and make a name for themselves by "writing" many of the song standards that have yet to be written. We hear many of the most recognizable songs of the last one hundred years, usually in snippets.
Rather than a love story for the ages, this is a love story that takes ages. As my theater-going companion pointed out, there is no chemistry between Mr. Daniels and Ms. York, and while the later sings admirably in the several full songs she is given, often-times the over-blown arrangements get in the way. Mr. Daniels displays little of the charm that is his trademark on film. And while he is often very animated (particularly while miming playing the piano), he seems to just be being himself most of the time, which doesn't really reach very strongly across the footlights.
Joining these two on stage is an ensemble of 16 Chicago-based actors who back-up the two leads, but are given very little time in the spotlight themselves. One of the few times an ensemble member steps front and center is when Kevin Gudahl, as Harry Van Deusen the leading songwriter of 1900, sings one of the few original songs in the score--about Mr. Daniels getting his comeuppance and being outed as a fraud. Mr. Gudahl is an accomplished Chicago actor whom I have seen in mostly classical plays at Chicago Shakespeare Theatre. He can really sell it when called for--something Mr. Daniels should learn.
With the star-studded cast (well at least studded with two), a brand-name director, and a book by Brickman and Elice (of Jersey Boys fame), I'm sure this was pegged to transfer to Broadway following this try-out in Chicago. Dare I say without a much better book, better musical arrangements, and perhaps even a new lead to two, I think this show will not see the light of day after is goes dark in Chicago.
Turn of the Century
Music by everyone from Irving Berlin to Barry Manilow
Lyrics by the same
Book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice
Directed by Tommy Tune
Presented at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago through November 2
Cast: Jeff Daniels, Rachel York, Ron Orbach, Rachel de Benedet, Kevin Gudahl, Rebecca Finnegan, Johah Rawitz

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Do you know if Ron Orbach is related to Jerry Orbach? J.O. being one of my favorite actors - GO Law and Order! Your theater-going companion

Michael, Chicago IL said...

According to the movie database (www.imdb.com) Ron Orbach is Jerry Orbach's cousin. Ron was born in 1953 and Jerry in 1935--and sadly passed away in 2004. Both men played Billy Flynn in Chicago--Jerry in the original 1975 cast, and Ron as a replacement in the 1990s in the revival.