MONTY
PYTHON'S
SPAMALOT
(National Touring
Company)
Book & Lyrics by
Eric Idle
Music by Eric Idle
and John Du Prez
Directed by Mike
Nichols
Choreography by
Casey Nicholaw
Presented by Dallas Summer Musicals at the Music Hall in Fair Park
REVIEWED 06/19/07
PERFORMANCE
______________________MONTY PYTHON'S SPAMALOT_____________________
It seems that a very
familiar tradition arrives each season on Broadway: That Musical whose
origins came from a motion picture. Just this past season we saw LEGALLY
BLONDE, HIGH FIDELITY, & MARY POPPINS land on the great white way, with two
still playing and one closing rather quickly.
But for every hit, you have some very expensive corpses of musical flops
lying around the alleys of Broadway houses. Let me remind you of the hits
and misses: THE PRODUCERS, HAIRSPRAY, THE COLOR PURPLE, FOOTLOOSE, SUNSET
BLVD, THE LION KING, BEAUTY & THE BEAST, TARZAN, SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER,
THROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE, THE FULL MONTY, BIG, & DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS.
From those listed above, some became big buffo hits at the box office and
with the critics, others also won Tonys, and some are still on Broadway. But
there are others that wheezed and gasped to survive on Broadway, only to
collapse and become road kill all over the rialto.
The new season is
just now getting started on the great white way and the first musical is
XANADU, based on the cult Olivia Newton John flop. Mind you, this musical
had its first hiccup with its original lead actor breaking his foot while in
rehearsal on roller skates. Now it has a new male lead and a new opening
date. And further up the road we have Mel Brooks' YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN
(opening in November) and Disney's THE LITTLE MERMAID in December.
But look beyond
that, there are still other "movies into musicals" coming down the pike.
They are either in the works or having out of town tryouts. Such as John
Waters' CRY BABY and Tim Burton's EDWARD SISSORHANDS.
It is a Herculean
task to churn out a hit from a movie. It takes the perfect balance of cast,
book, music, direction, and tons of luck to become both a financial and
artistic hit.

SPAMALOT is based on the motion picture, MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL,
which premiered in March 1975. Monty Python of course are those wacky brits
that became a cult sensation with their TV comedy show in the 1970s. They
started their TV success on the BBC in May 1969, but the TV show would not
cross over the pond and onto American television sets until 1974 via PBS.
The film follows
King Arthur and his band of Knights of the Round Table as they try to find
some dinnerware, specifically the Holy Grail. This film became an instant
hit with college crowds all over the world. Even after it first premiered,
thanks to the creation of the VCR (and later DVR), generations of college
students would sit in groups, guffawing from watching the hilarious film. I
personally have seen the film over fifteen times. It is so far out there,
and yet it retains its comedic brilliance after all this time.
Eric Idle (one of the stars and writers of the film, and an original MP cast
member) for years tried his best to get his fellow Python alumni to help him
create the film into a live musical. They all refused. Finally Idle decided
to take up the challenge on his own, writing both the book and the lyrics.
For the music he collaborated with John Du Prez (who wrote the scores for
many of Python's films).
SPAMALOT had its Broadway birth at the Shubert Theatre on March 17, 2005.
Its original stars consisted of David Hyde Pierce, Tim Curry, Hank Azaria,
Michael McGrath, and Christopher Sieber. The musical was knighted with
glowing reviews from the critics and would later go on to earn a staggering
fourteen Tony nominations. They would take home the "holy grail" of
Broadway-the Tony for Best Musical. The other nominees that year were DIRTY
ROTTEN SCOUNDRELS, THE LIGHT IN THE PIAZZA, and PUTNAM COUNTY SPELLING BEE.
Today it is still running after 900 performances and shows no signs of
slowing down. I personally saw SPAMALOT on Broadway in December 2006 with
most of its original cast still intact.
As with past reviews, when I see the original Broadway production and then
its national tour, I like to point out what changes have occurred. Because
sometimes there is some real stinkers that water down the eye candy in its
sets, costumes, lighting, cast members, etc.
I still shudder when I am reminded of the dreadful tours for TITANIC and
RAGTIME-so much was not there that was on the Broadway stage. Patrons were
so ripped off from what transpired between the Broadway stage and the tour's
final version.
Thus SPAMALOT was met with great glees of cheers from me when so much of the
original physical production was there on the music hall stage at Fair Park.
There are some changes though.
The two towers that stand on either side are full size set pieces at the
Shubert. The tour has a smaller, more flat design. Another difference was
the massive grail for the Lady of the Lake to stand in. The Broadway version
is an actual massive gold goblet that is bejeweled, the tour it is smaller
and a flat, painted piece. Those really were the two major changes I
actually noticed in the scenic department.
But the rest is all there intact! Tim Hatley's mouth watering, eye popping,
glittery costumes are all there. He must have depleted the entire stock of
rhinestones and beads from some factory that makes them in New York to
create these elaborate costumes. Many of the costumes are layered and
covered in eye blinding, dazzling glitter that it would make Bob Mackie
throw his patterns on the runway and say, "You win!"
Several of the gorgeous gowns that the Lady of the Lake wears are literally
dipped in glass beads, rhinestones, and sequins that glisten and shimmer in
the light. The knights wear classic armor that has authentic design of those
Middle Ages finery. Even the furs on some of the costumes look so realistic
you expect some sheep and buffalo to appear on stage naked, point to the
costumes and scream, "That knight is wearing my body!"
Hatley also designed the sets, which both pay homage to the film and also
remind us that it's a stage production. From the fluffy cotton candy clouds,
to the fantastic array of special set pieces that fly in from the rafters,
glide across the floor, or even spin around. These "fly in" set pieces help
bring home some of the jokes that occur on stage. I won't spoil the fun for
you here what they are though. But take a look in the Playbill, it even
tells you that a scene takes place in "A very expensive part of the forest."
And let's not forget the jaw-dropping floor to ceiling animation that
appears on stage, as well as on the clouds, and even trees! You will love
this animated design element!
Hugh Vanstone's lighting is sublime. His palette of colors, themes, special
gobos, and where he has lighting flooding in create true stage fantasia.
From the wacky colors of Camelot done up like garish Las Vegas, to the dark
enchanted forest, to a sleek gay discothèque-he creates magic with his
lighting design.
Here are some very interesting facts about SPAMALOT:
*There are over 100 wigs (including facial hair) in the show, all hand-tied
and made of human hair, yak hair, and synthetics supplied from New York,
California, and London.
*The mud make-up is a formula specially designed for SPAMALOT.
*The poorest peasants' costumes in the show are actually made of raw silk.
*3 feet of "blood" has to be ironed prior to each performance.
*There are over 100 undergarments in the show, including 30 pairs of men's
fishnets and 56 codpieces.
*Some of The Lady of the Lake's costumes are all comprised of hand-strung
glass beads.
*Among the props is a cow that weighs 45 pounds and it takes two stagehands
to catapult it over the castle.
*The "Feet of God" is the heaviest piece manually flown in, weighing 1700
lbs.
*The Orchestra uses a Spama-horn, an instrument specially developed for and
used only in SPAMALOT.
*It is a guarantee that one knight will lose their head each knight.
Even if you are not a fan of the film, this show is great for those who love
musical theater. Why? Because the show actually pokes fun at itself, the
musical. Both the good and the bad. There are some side-splitting references
to PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, LES MIZ, CHICAGO, FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, and even
WEST SIDE STORY. Sure, it is not politically correct, it even satires Jews
and Gays-but it's done in such a hysterical way it really doesn't offend.
Idle pokes fun at everything-from religion to the French, to the social
caste system.
After watching such magnificent comedic performances on Broadway I was a
little worried on how the tour company would match up. Thankfully the
majority of the cast do hold his or her own and create some new found
surprises within the roles that I did not see from the originals.
Michael Siberry is smashing as "Arthur, king of the Brits". His demeanor
truly is that of a King in search of wise knights and a cup. With great
comedic precision, he does some great comic takes to the audience. He
remains regal and royal, even if he's surrounded by a bunch of Looney
tunes. Siberry has great fun as well with his solo, "I'm All Alone."
The actor who gets to wear the scene stealing crown is Patrick Heusinger.
He is wickedly hilarious as the "French Taunter", in fact he does such a
terrific comedic interpretation of this role that he surpasses Hank Azaria
(who originated that role). Heusinger is a very talented actor (who
possesses a robust tenor voice) and earns huge laughs as "Sir Lancelot". The
comedic timing, pace, and delivery he provides for this role really shines
into comedy gold within the second Act. He also has the audience rolling in
the aisles as the "Knight of Ni" and "Tim the Enchanter". Each role is
unique and loaded with Heusinger's smashing comic talent. With this array of
wonderful, wacky roles, you can see why this brilliant actor stole
the show!
Sadly the same cannot be said for Anthony Holds as "Sir Galahad", the role
that earned Christopher Seiber a Tony nomination. I saw Seiber and he was
so, so funny as the handsome knight with flowing blonde locks that I almost
peed in my pants from laughing so much. Holds severely lacks a big, booming,
belting voice (which Seiber has in abundance). Thus this makes the duet "The
song That Goes like This" not as funny as it was intended to be. The lyrics
refer to key changes and the screeching of high notes, but Holds lacks the
vocal chops to make the song the gut busting number it was on Broadway.
Holds also portrays the "Black Knight", where he did do a much better job.
But I was puzzled as to why his legs did not fall off during the sword
battle with King Arthur. On Broadway, the Black knight puts his back against
the castle, where upon the King slices his legs away, where they flop and
land on stage. But Tuesday night this did not happen, thereby making the
famous film sword fight anti climatic on stage.
Robert Petkoff is just marvelous as "Sir Robin", the knight who is a major
chicken and tends to soil his knightly garb at the hint of danger. Petkoff
has a gorgeous tenor voice that turns his second act solo, "You Won't
Succeed on Broadway" into a major show stopper.
Finally in this colorful array of zany performances there is some
sensational comedic work provided by Christopher Sutton as the delicate,
fragile, and very pale "Prince Herbert" and Jeff Dumas as "Patsy",
the..um..horse of King Arthur. Dumas and Sutton both have soothing tenor
vocals that turn their solos into audience pleasing numbers.
I actually bought the SPAMALOT score way before I saw the original Broadway
production. So by then I had fallen into a hypnotic trance with Sara
Ramirez's mega power voice and interpretation of the material. But just a
mere few months after she won the Tony for Best Featured Actress in A
Musical as "The Lady of the Lake", she left the musical. TV audiences now
know her as one of the cast members of ABC's hit TV show, GREY'S ANATOMY.
When I saw the Broadway production, it would Lauren Kennedy portraying the
role, who was dreadful. She was too bland, stiff, and vocally boring in the
role.
Thus Tuesday night when the water princess first appeared on stage, I
immediately remembered Kennedy's performance and dreaded what will occur
here. This time it would be Esther Stilwell portraying the water nymph. She
too seems to have the same vocal problems with "The Song That goes Like
This" duet with Anthony Holds. She struggled with the modulation and the
booming belt the song so badly requires. But when it came for her to tackle
"Find Your Grail", she blossoms big time! Her voice became crystal clear
with a soaring belt. But she also achieved solid laughs with her great vocal
riffs and runs within the song (which is required in order to make it so
damn funny).
Ms. Stilwell then brings down the house with her 11:00 O'clock number, "The
Diva's Lament". Here she allows her voice to fill the elephantine music
hall. It would be Stilwell's divine performance that finally washed away the
memories of Kennedy's lackluster Broadway performance.
The problems with the show Tuesday had to do once again with the dreaded
sound system. The first forty minutes had body mics wheezing, popping,
cracking, and hissing around the various leads. It was so distracting and
sadly we lost a lot of the jokes and punch lines. The company number "I'm
Not Dead Yet" was a huge showstopper of a number on Broadway. But at the
Music Hall the body mics on the lead actors kept cracking and hissing so
much, that it just killed that number. Finally midway through Act One the
mic problem was fixed. However, at times the actors spoke so soft that their
body mics could not pick up what they were saying.
Another problem was the thick English and Cockney accents. Sometimes the
accents were so thick that they over powered the actor's voice. Resulting in
a hodge podge of mush mouth spilling over the orchestra pit. Because I knew
the film so well, I knew what "apparently" was said. But for a newbie I'm
sure they would be completely lost.
Even with its minor flaws, this still is a knee slapping, bending over in
laughter smash hit! It was a great delight in discovering new laughs, jokes,
physical gags, and puns that I missed when I saw it on Broadway. The
majority of the company is exceptional & the production design is simply
magnificent.
If you are a fan of the film, you will be howling in laughter even before
the lines are spoken. Then there are those of you who worship at the altar
of Musical Theatre, which means that you will find so many references of
past musicals in this one that you will be wiping tears of laughter from
your face.
If you are neither of the above, then just go and experience the comedy
genius of Monty Python. But if you don't go, I will for sure give your
address and cell phone number to the French Taunter. And trust me when I say
he will fart in your direction!
GRADE: A
____________________________________________________________________
SPAMALOT plays through July 8th at the Music Hall at Fair Park. Tickets on
sale at The Box Office at 542 Preston Royal Shopping Center, online at
Ticketmaster.com or charge-by-phone 214-631-ARTS. Presented by Dallas Summer
Musicals
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