|
Reviewed By:
David
Finkle
|
|
 |
|
|
Christian Borle,
Laura Bell Bundy, and Richard H. Blake
in Legally Blonde
(© Paul Kolnik) |
Once upon a time, the Broadway musical was considered a
woman's province, with Ethel Merman, Mary Martin,
Gertrude Lawrence, Carol Channing, and Angela Lansbury
among the theater's brightest marquee names. But this is
2007, and things have changed somewhat. It's now
beginning to look as if the Broadway musical is what
some might call "girl-power territory," and the
time-honored tuner tradition is becoming a series of
morale-building chapters in "The Young Girl's Guide to
Growing."
Following in the hit footsteps of Hairspray
and Wicked comes Legally
Blonde, a boisterous adaptation of the smart and
saucy Reese Witherspoon chick-flick. The show, which
marks the directing debut of veteran choreographer Jerry
Mitchell, is as meticulously groomed as its
level-headed-despite-being-blonde protagonist, Elle
Woods, played just about perfectly by Laura Bell Bundy
(who starred in both Hairspray and Wicked).
In a world where musicals are being shaped for the
sort of adolescents and pre-adolescents who go around
saying things like "Omigod, you guys," it's no accident
that the opening number in the bubbly but not
bubble-brained Nell Benjamin-Laurence O'Keefe score is
called "Omigod You Guys." Even if some of the lyrics are
unintelligible as sung here, the canny kick-off
immediately shouts out to the Tracy Turnblad-Elphaba/Glinda-Elle
Woods wannabes in the audience, "This show's for you!"
The cheer when the number ends says, "We hear ya!"
This tune-heavy adaptation then sticks closely enough
to the film's screenplay -- which was wrought from
Amanda Brown's novel -- that young and old fans alike
will be delighted, as well as those attendees who missed
the film. The intuitively-bright Elle is dumped by
Harvard Law School-bound beau Warner Huntington III
(Richard H. Blake) during their senior year at UCLA, but
she longingly follows the cad to the Massachusetts
campus.
Once there, she discovers that he's courting
glass-ceiling threat Vivienne Kensington (Kate Shindle).
So, with the help of nice teaching assistant Emmett
Forrest (Christian Borle) and beauty salon booster
Paulette (Orfeh), she gets herself on the trial team
that cutthroat law professor Callahan (Michael Rupert)
puts together and sets out to prove the innocence of
fitness guru-accused husband slayer Brooke Wyndham
(Nikki Snelson).
Does Elle, with chihuahua Bruiser (Chico) tagging along,
prevail? Does librettist Heather Hach retain some of the
movie's funniest exchanges, such as when opportunist
Warner says to Elle, "You got into Harvard?" only to
have Elle reply, "What? Like, it's hard?" What do you
think? Has Hach deepened Elle's characterization? That's
a dicier question.
It's frequently difficult to enhance
characterizations when the dialogue is constantly being
stripped away in favor of giddy song and dance; and
there's certainly plenty of that amid David Rockwell's
multitudinous California-bright and Harvard-somber sets
and Gregg Barnes' costumes, which tend toward many
shades of pink when the pink-struck Elle is around.
Indeed, Legally Blonde may be a case of too
many songs and dances. Mitchell's obvious aim, which is
to keep things moving quickly, results in the kind of
perpetual motion machine that eventually turns the
musical into a blur of songs. While his dances are
unfailingly exuberant, especially the skip-rope "Whipped
Into Shape" routine that opens Act II, they are too Toni
Basil-Michael Peters video-based to be distinguished.
As for the score, the second act ditty "There! Right
There!" -- which asks the musical question "Gay or
European?" -- is lots of fun. So is the lyric "Why
bother with false modesty? Harvard's the perfect place
for me." Otherwise, lively as the songs are in
Christopher Jahnke's arrangements, few impress as
inviting a second listen.
In addition to Bundy, who looks so much like her film
predecessor that spectators sitting farther back than
the 10th row may think they're actually seeing
Witherspoon, the rest of the accomplished cast does what
they're asked to do with unflagging energy. Especially
fine are the likable Borle, the belting Orfeh, the
unctuous Blake, the haughty Shindle, and Leslie Kritzer
as hip-hitching sorority sister Serena, one-third of
Elle's very own Greek chorus.
Omigod, you guys. For better or worse, Legally
Blonde is a hit! |