National Tour
Book by Fred Ebb &
Bob Fosse
Music by John
Kander. Lyrics by Fred Ebb
REVIEWED 06/05/07 PERFORMANCE
__________________________CHICAGO__________________________
CHICAGO. The musical
that arrived on Broadway in 1975 and was met with mixed critical reaction
and tepid box office. Then in 1996 we saw the birth of its arrival, which
was perfect timing for its rediscovery.
Back in 1975 the idea of scandal, murder, fame, and the justice system
simply did not strike a chord with theater audiences. Not for a jaded 1996
audience. We had the Mendez brothers and OJ Simpson for God's sake! We are
now in the hype of media overload with the tabloid TV shows and magazines,
gossip reporters grabbing tables at the Ivy near the stars, & of course
let's not forget the Internet! As I type this, on live TV we have the murder
trial of famed music producer Phil Spector, who is accused of shooting a B
list actress.
Since 1996, CHICAGO continues to be a juggernaut hit for Kander & Ebb. It
has even moved through three Broadway houses: The Richard Rodgers, the
Shubert, and the Ambassador-where it is still playing.
Let's not forget the film version that earned lots of Oscar gold (including
Best Pic) and was a major box office hit.
For myself, I have seen the revival on Broadway with its original cast (Bebe
Neuwirth, Ann Reinking) and over nine national tours. Besides Neuwirth and
Reinking, I have watched such luminous ladies as Sandy Duncan, Brooke
Shields, Deidre Goodwin, Stephanie Pope, Riva Rice, and Bianca Marroquin
portray our two Cook County murderesses.
It pains me greatly that I never got to see the two great legends of
Broadway, Chita Rivera and Gwen Verdon in the original `75 production.
One of the major components of CHICAGO that I never, ever get tired of
watching is that marvelous Fosse choreography. Those pops, the outstretched
arms and legs in an array of unique, precise contortions, the pop of the
head, the small flair and fan like position of the fingers, and all those
other signature Fosse movements. This show displays the majestic beauty of
choreography that we will never see in Broadway's future. Sure we do have
amazing choreographers working today (Susan Stroman & Jerry Mitchell), but
let's be honest here. We have yet to see the brilliance and unique craft of
dance like Fosse or Michael Bennett.
Even after nine viewings of CHICAGO, I still thoroughly enjoy watching the
brilliance of the combination of the "Razzle Dazzle" number that segues into
the courtroom scene. Or the artistic beauty of "Me and my Baby". Number
after number we once again get to enjoy the opulence of dance from the mind
of Fosse.
The current headliners for this tour are Lisa Rinna (DANCING WITH THE STARS,
MELROSE PLACE) and Tom Wopat (Tony nominee for ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, TV's
DUKES OF HAZZARD).
Ms. Rinna has been
with the show since its Portland stop, which was a week ago. She will stay
through the Dallas portion of the tour, then head for New York to do the
Broadway production along with her husband -Film/TV star Harry Hamlin.
Upon her first
entrance, Ms. Rinna seemed nervous, timid even. But look at it from an
actor's point of view. She has had only one week to work with complete
strangers, just one. Then to pick up, go to another city and a new
theater-that's a lot to handle. Thus I can empathize with the immense
pressure and stress it must be to try to find your connection with a new
cast, the rhythm of the acting of your co-stars, and so forth.
Once she did relax, Rinna sparkled like that rain of Mylar confetti that
falls onto the stage in the second act. Her portrayal of "Roxie" had an aura
of childlike innocence and naiveté to
the crime she just committed. She continues this thread of characterization
into the Cook County jail. But once there, Rinna transformed into one sexy,
cat like jail cell chick! She slithered and shimmied her way into her
lawyer's trust as well as those around her. Rinna took a unique approach to
the role, which I actually enjoyed immensely.
Having interviewed her personally, she has publicly stated that she has
never claimed to be a dancer, nor has she ever done theater. She is from the
world of TV and film, which is a more intimate art form, since you have a
camera only inches from your face. Rinna's dance technique is actually
quite good and very exciting to watch. Fosse is not easy by any means.
Period. It is very precise and every detail must be clean.
In our interview she stated she had to audition for the role, it was not
automatically offered to her. This was a major challenge for her, and she
took it on full force. The outcome is a wonderful success.
It took a couple of numbers under her belt to gel into the show, but once
she did, she ran with it. Her finest musical numbers were "Roxie", "We both
reached for the Gun", "My Own Best Friend", and "Me and My Baby".
Rinna is a very beautiful woman with one hot body, & these two elements
really give "Roxie" an aura of luxurious femme fatale that fits perfectly
with her characterization. But then to see how emotionally devastated she is
at the end, she truly connected artistically with her character arc. That
final scene before "Nowadays", Rinna shows great hurt and pain at the
outcome of her trial-completely ignoring her husband's pleas and affection.
It's intimate and deeply moving.
Rinna is extremely courageous to step outside of her comfort zone to tackle
live theater. There are many in this business that would just sit within
their familiar territory and be content. Not Rinna, she instead challenged
herself-and I personally think she came out a big winner in this production.
Tom Wopat portrays "Billy Flynn", the slick, handsome lawyer who is always
looking for the media spotlight. I had the pleasure of seeing Wopat several
years ago when he came through Dallas and debut his performance as "Flynn".
Upon a second viewing, Wopat has wrapped himself completely into Flynn's
characterization and having a ball on stage with it. With a robust, melodic
baritone voice that fills the Music Hall easily, Wopat works vocal magic
with such hit musical numbers as "Razzle Dazzle" and "All I Care About".

Wopat is masculine and commands the stage with strong stage presence. He
also has found new ways to add some great laughs within his
characterization. Wopat is a delight to see again on stage.
Then there is Terra C. Macleod, who portrays "Velma Kelly". There are hardly
any triple talents left, but Ms. Macleod is just that and more! A tall,
gorgeous beauty with raven hair and hypnotic blue eyes, this woman drips in
sex appeal. Then there's her dancer body! Muscled toned arms, stems that go
from the stage floor to the friggin fly rail space, all incased in skin
tight costumes. She has the ideal dancer's body that the stage lighting
picks up every muscle contort or flex. This woman is so friggin hot she'd
turn a gay man straight! That's how hot she is! Her body and dance technique
are built perfectly for Fosse's choreography. She does every pop, every
finger snap, and every leg kick with clean, precise, elegant dance. I bet
Fosse is smiling from Heaven at her.
Macleod has a booming, terrific set of pipes that does magical wonder with
her solos. She adds new sustaining notes and vocal inflections to the songs
that add delectable life and energy. Listen to those shimmering vocal chords
create musical gold with such songs as "All That Jazz", "Cell Block Tango",
"My Own Best Friend", "Class", and "Nowadays".
Macleod is wrapped in dazzling stage presence that never flickers out. And
that energy! She attacks every musical number with great gusto and
commitment. She turns "I Can't Do it Alone" and "When Velma takes the Stand"
into major showstoppers. Ms. Macleod is phenomenal in this production of
CHICAGO.
I saw the always reliable Carol Woods bring the house down on Broadway in
the revival of FOLLIES with her powerful voice in the number "Who's that
Woman?" in 2001. I have seen Ms. Woods as well twice before as "Mama
Morton", and the girl still brings the house down. But now she has taken a
completely new approach to her big solo, "When you're Good to Momma" that is
just magnificent. She has added some vocal riffs and then this amazing
modulation at the end that had the audience Tuesday night roar with
approval. Woods also provided some fun laughs with "Class" that again shows
why she continues to deliver scene stealing performances.
Rounding out this terrific company include outstanding performances by Eric
Leviton as "Amos Hart"; Ashley Yeater as "Hunyak (the "Not guilty"
cellmate); and R. Bean as the gossipy reporter "Mary Sunshine" who has one
hell of an operatic soprano voice!
However, there is a Dallas Texas native in the company, Kevin Steele. Mr.
Steele was an elementary teacher in Plano who now has gone on to work in
such national tours as THE PRODUCERS and BEST LITTLE WHORE -HOUSE IN TEXAS
with Ann Margaret. Steele is a perfect example of the kind of superb talent
we have here within the DFW theater metroplex. The tall, handsome blonde
dances beautifully and has some great comedic fun with his cameo roles as
"Sergeant Fogarty" & "The Judge". Steele's talent is used to great success
within this production. It always is a terrific pleasure to see our own
shine brightly in national tours, and Mr. Steele is just that.
This review would not be complete without offering kudos to a certain group
of individuals that stole the show-and that was the ensemble of CHICAGO.
They are the steel girders on which this musical rests on & rely upon night
after night. Their energy is completely infectious. They dance with such eye
blinding energy you wonder if they are being electrocuted backstage right
before they emerge into the stage lights! These guys and gals dance with
never ending energy, commitment, & technique - you would think it was their
first ever opening night!
Normally by now road companies like this are bored to tears, and you can
literally see them going through the motions. Not this awe-inspiring
ensemble! They attack each dance step, every vocal note, and every line like
superstars. Oh and by the way, they were all gorgeous to look at. Muscled
studs and hot mommas all dressed in sexy, black, tight costumes that show
every muscle. You feel like a pig for eating that damn snickers in the lobby
before the show started. Then these performers appeared on stage with those
amazing toned bodies. The bastards! Lol.
The cell block tango girls have a comedic field day with the number of the
same name. Each girl took a very unique, different approach to those oh so
familiar lyrics and dialogue and turned that number into a fantastic, new,
and hilarious showstopper! Those girls deserved to be mentioned: Nicole
Bridgewater, Ivy Fox, Theresa Coombe, Ashley Yeater, and Jill Nicklaus.
The men in the ensemble also provide some superb work on stage as well.
David Bushman, Stephenos Christou, and Eric McMillan-McCall do an exquisite
tap dance that is an homage to la great Fosse. They wear the trademark
bowler hats and smoke cigarettes, all bathed in white lighting. If you are
familiar with Fosse, the man always had a cigarette dangling from his lips
as he choreographed.
John Carroll and David Bushman (this guy is one HELL of a dancer!) frame
Lisa Rinna like two Greek statues for the number "Me and my Baby". Both
dance wonderfully and bring Fosse's dance to vivid life.
One of the best things about live theater is expect the unknown. Christophe
Caballero portrays "The Jury" in the second act. This role requires the
actor to become several members of the jury-both male and female. Caballero
is hilarious with his character detail to each role. But then he does this
down right hysterical line reading that had the audience roaring in
laughter. It was so funny; it even made Tom Wopat break character and start
laughing as well. Excellent work Caballero!
The other talented ensemble that puts this production in the success column
includes Kevin Neil McCready, John Carroll, Kevin Steele, and Kelly
Crandall.
I have now ten PLAYBILL programs as proof that I have seen CHICAGO that many
times. And I still love it. From the new interpretation of the material, to
that sublime Kander & Ebb score, and most importantly-the brilliance of
Fosse's choreography.
For those who have never seen it, you need to see this production. But if
you've seen it before, it still deserves a second or third viewing. It's
still that good!
GRADE: A
_______________________________________________________________
CHICAGO plays through June 17th at the Music Hall at Fair Park. Single
tickets, ranging from $32-$75, are on sale now at The Box Office, 542
Preston Royal Shopping Center. Tickets may also be purchased at area
Ticketmaster outlets, or by calling 214-631-ARTS, and are available online
at www.ticketmaster.com. For
groups of 20 or more, call 214- 426-GROUP.
John F. Garcia, Jr.
Executive Director/Producer, "THE COLUMN ONLINE"; Theatre Awards Editor &
Founder of THE COLUMN ONLINE; Texas Regional Theater Critic for
www.talkinbroadway.com