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11th Annual

Gala

 

 

 
WICKED
 
 
2nd National Tour
Dallas Summer Musicals
 
 

REVIEWED 04/19/07 PERFORMANCE
 
 

Directed by Joe Mantello
Musical Staging by Wayne Cilento
Musical Direction by Bryan Perri
Scenic Design by Eugene Lee
Costume Design by Susan Hiferty
Lighting Design by Kenneth Posner
Sound Design by Tony Meola
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
CAST

Glinda.......................Christina DeCicco
Elphaba....................Victoria Matlock
Nessarose.................DeeDee Magno Hall
Boq...........................Josh Lamon
Madame Morrible........Barbara Tirrell
Doctor Dillamond........Tim Flynn
Fiyero........................Cliffton Hall
The Wizard.................P.J. Benjamin
 
 

____________________WICKED (2nd National Tour)________________

"For the first time.....I feel........wicked."
                               -Elphaba

Damn, what does a green girl have to do to get some nookie, her sister off her back, a PETA protest off the ground, and her blonde best friend to believe in her?

If your Elphaba, you grab hold of a magical book, get a total make-over, and an army of flying monkeys to do your bidding.

WICKED, the mega blockbuster hit returns for a second engagement at the Dallas Music Hall, which opened last night.

This would be my third walk down the yellow brick road that leads to this splashy, glitzy, glittery, spectacle. My first visit was the original production, the weekend after it had opened on Broadway in October 2003. This starred the magnificent Idina Menzel and the superb Kristen Chenoweth.

My second visit would be its first national tour here in Dallas a couple of years later in October starring Stephanie J. Block as "Elphaba" and Kendra Kassebaum as "Glinda".

Currently Ms. Block is the lead in the new Broadway musical THE PIRATE QUEEN, while at the Gershwin Ms. Kassebaum is in the bubble as "Glinda" on Broadway.

Last night was my third visit to Oz. We all know the story, so no need to replay that part again. A dangerous trend that comes with tours is that after the first national tour, the physical aspects of the production become victims at the hands of stingy producers who cut corners to save a few bucks. Sets become backdrops, costumes are modified, cast is slashed in half, and so on. A perfect example is BEAUTY & THE BEAST. The original national tour had all its bells and whistles intact, but when the 3rd national tour came around, it had only a couple of bells and a whimpering sound of a whistle.

Thus it was a sigh of relief to see that this current tour of WICKED still had every bell and whistle still attached. Mind you, the modifications and cuts from the Broadway production to the tour are still there from the first tour

Such as the opening. We still have the monkeys open the show, where as on the Gershwin stage in New York it is a massive, billowing witch's hat that takes front and center. The towering clock at the beginning of the show and the tiny buildings for Shiz University are still painted backdrops. On Broadway the clock and buildings are actual, physical 3-D set pieces. Another change is the costumes for the "Dancing Through Life" company number. The Broadway production contains these massive, billowing gowns for the Oz Ball, but the tour still only has the black and white costumes.

But the rest of the physical beauty of the original is still there in the tour to marvel at. There are Eugene Lee's towering, majestic epic sets that are a rarity in today's tours. Susan Hiferty's exquisite, marvelous costumes are all there. You really need to sit up close to marvel at the amazing detail on them. The various fabrics, stones, colors, patterns, and shapes she uses for coats, gowns, skirts, hats, and shoes are all gorgeous.

They seriously need to do a fashion show of these works of art done with cloth. Finally there is Kenneth Posner's mouth watering lighting design. So many amazing details, colors, gobos, and specials are splashed all over the grand sets. I still gasp and take it all in when it comes to WICKED's spectactular designs in set, light, and costume.

Here are some fascinating facts about the WICKED tour:

*Over 2.214 million people have seen the WICKED national tour over the span of 107 weeks (838 performances) since it launched in March 2005. That's an average of 2,642 people per performance.

*The WICKED tour has played to an average capacity of 99.5% per performance.

*The WICKED tour has gross over $155 million. That's 98% of its gross potential.

*During the week ending December 4, 2005 the WICKED national tour grossed $2.045 million in a single eight-performance week in St. Louis. This remains the highest weekly box office gross in North American touring history

*The four-week engagement of the show at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC sold out in a record seven hours.

*The Costa Mesa engagement at the Orange County Performing Arts Center sold out both weeks of performances (and setting house records for each of those performance weeks) without ever having gone on sale to the general public.

So how does this cast measure up to the original leads and the first tour? For the most part, pretty even.

As "Glinda", Christina DeCicco brings the same blonde bimbo overtones as the previous golden hair beauties, but it is her attack to the darker, more dramatic elements of the character that makes her performance both immensely moving and powerful to watch.

She finds some exciting, new, vivid shades to the emotional pain and betrayal she feels from her best friend (Elphaba) and beau (Fiyero). Both the book scenes and tragic, painful ballads that she performs in expose heartbreaking pain and dark pathos. Observe her brilliant work in "I'm Not That Girl" and "For Good". Her eyes overflow in tears as she bids farewell to her best friend will grasp hold of your heart and never let go. Her comedic skills are also terrific and hits the comic bulls eye every single time she's on stage. Her vocal range is sublime. She goes from an operatic coloratura to big, belting Broadway razzle-dazzle. Ms. DeCicco is phenomenal in this production. In fact, she's the first "Glinda" who steals the show from "Elphaba".

Victoria Matlock portrays "Elphaba", our heroine whose skin tone is granny smith apple green. Ms. Matlock brings a very different approach to "Elphaba" than what I've seen in previous productions. She has a more laidback, internal, passive approach to the characterization. The humor of the role comes to her like an afterthought. Which does work and results in some hysterical scene work. She possesses a terrific sense of comic timing that generates great laughs. She is a tall beauty covered in radiant stage presence. Her chemistry with her co-stars is vividly strong and honest.

It is her singing voice that I'm still on the fence about. She does have a sparkling set of vocal pipes. But she tends to sing more internally, quietly than previous witches. This is fine, except the sound balance of voice and orchestra is not always on her side. There were times when the bombastic crescendos coming from the pit would overpower her vocals. Examples of this include sadly her big Act One Finale, "Defying Gravity" and in the second act "No Good Deed".  For "Defying Gravity", she struggled and with a small hiccup of a crack to reach the big, belting, soaring soprano note that is needed for that number.

No one can match Menzel's powerhouse lungs (the original Elphaba); even Stephanie Block on the first tour didn't't exactly match that mega power note either. Now don't get me wrong, Ms. Matlock still does have a beautiful singing voice and she does do great work in the vocal department. It's just odd not to hear that big belting note that accompanies those big songs. It didn't help matters that the orchestra overpowered her here as well. Nonetheless she gives a terrific, brilliant performance.

One of the great surprises here is the performance of the actor portraying "Fiyero". On Broadway, Norbert Leo Butz sleepwalked through the role, making it forgettable. In the first tour, the actor portraying the romantic role of this spoiled prince was a little too fey and bland. This time around Cliffton Hall takes a firm, masculine hold of the role and delivers a dynamic, exciting, and vivid performance. This is first time ever that I actually enjoyed hearing the songs sung by this character. Hall has a pop tenor quality to his voice that worked magic on the songs. It's a powerful tenor voice that blended beautifully with his female co-stars on the duets. Hall has great stage presence and handsome features that is matched with solid acting chops. His chemistry in the second act with Elphaba is very sensual and exciting to watch unfold. Hall is splendid as the prince who falls for the witch.

Within in the large company also delivering exceptional work include Barbara Tirrell as the backstabbing "Madame Morrible"; Josh Lamon as Glinda's rejected suitor, the munchkin "Bog"; P. J. Benjamin as "The Wizard"; Tom Flynn as the compassionate "Doctor Dillamond" and Deedee Magno Hall as Elphaba's wheel chaired bound sister "Nessarose". Speaking of Ms. Hall, if you saw the first national tour of MISS SAIGON when it came through Dallas, then you saw her give a great performance as "Kim".

This tour of WICKED still looks immaculate and dazzling as the original, and within its sparkling center is an excellent cast delivering performances that still look pristine and vibrant.

Today's market no longer has grand epic tours like this anymore. To see grand musicals like this you have to go to New York and see them on the great white way. Here's your chance to see them in your own background!

GRADE: A+

___________________________________________________________________

 
WICKED performs through May 6th at the Music Hall at Fair Park.
 
 

WICKED ANNOUNCES LOTTERY FOR $25 BEST AVAILABLE SEATS PERFORMANCES BEGIN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18 AT THE MUSIC HALL AT FAIR PARK

A day-of-performance lottery for 20 best available seats will be held prior to each performance of WICKED, which will be performing from April 18-May 6 at the Music Hall at Fair Park as the Dallas Summer Musicals kicks off their 2007 season.

Prior to each performance, 2½ hours prior to show time, people who present themselves at the Music Hall at Fair Park box office will have their names placed in a lottery drum, and then 30 minutes later, names will be drawn for 20 best available seats at $25 each, cash only. This lottery is available only in-person at the theater's box office, with a limit of two tickets per person.

WICKED kicks off the Dallas Summer Musicals' 2007 season with performances April 18-May 6 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 talkinbroadway.com

Special Thanks to the Cooper Smith Agency for the photos used in this review.

 
 

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