|
By
STEVEN OXMAN
Prospect
Pictures presentation of a
musical in one act with music by
various composers
and book by
Chris D'Arienzo. Directed by
Kristin Hanggi. Musical
direction, David Gibbs,
Kyle Puccia; choreography, R.J.
Durrell.
Sherrie Christian - Laura Bell
Bundy
Lonny Barnett - Dan Finnerty
Drew Dillenbeck - James Snyder
Dennis Dupree - Kyle Gass
Stacee Jaxx - Chris Hardwick
Justice Charlier - Michele Mais
Hertz Klinemann - David Holladay
Franz Klinemann - Tom Lenk
Mayor - Jeremy Rabb
Regina McKaig - Patty Wortham |

James Snyder and Laura Bell
Bundy work at a fictional club
in 'Rock of Ages,' a campy
homage to '80s bands like
Journey and REO Speedwagon.
|
On occasion, even a misconceived show can
work so hard at winning over its audience
that resistance to its efforts becomes
futile. If nothing else, the creative forces
behind "Rock of Ages" --- a concert/musical
comedy blend that camps to rock songs of
'80s "big-hair" bands like Journey and REO
Speedwagon -- take their concept and do it
up: The hair is big, the music is bigger,
and the performance style for its lame,
contrived plotlines is, well, humongous.
Seeking nothing more than to be a very
guilty pleasure, this celebration of '80s
tastelessness wears down defenses with an
ability to keep topping its absurdities.
The show struggles mightily early on, as
it tries to fuse its storytelling into the
music. Chris D'Arienzo's book is an exercise
in reverse engineering song lyrics into
cliche plot formulas; boy will meet, lose
and get the girl, and all their dialogue
will really be about setting up later songs.
Lead characters (Laura Bell Bundy and James
Snyder) work at a fictional 1980s club on
the Sunset Strip called Rock of Ages. Even
her name, Sherrie Christian, will cue two
songs, Steve Perry's "Oh Sherrie" and Night
Ranger's "Sister Christian." On top of that
tidbit, she's a small-town girl, he's a boy
from (probably south) Detroit. Those with
intimate knowledge of songs by Journey can
guess right now the tune that will
eventually serve as the climax in a story
about how dreaming is important even if it
leads one into a life of temporary
debauchery.
The debauchery, which is always a lot
more fun than the dreaming, is embodied by
the sleazy, coke-addled, narcissistic rock
star (is there another kind?) by the name of
Stacee Jaxx (Chris Hardwick). Before
embarking on a not-so-successful solo
career, he beds the adorable Sherrie to the
Foreigner tune "I Wanna Know What Love Is,"
while the plethora of dancers simulate an
orgy.
There are other archetypes here to play
out another plotline, the potential
demolition of Rock of Ages. This story
brings in the club owner Dennis Dupree (Kyle
Gass of Tenacious D), his right-hand
stagehand -- and occasional narrator --
Lonny Barnett (Dan Finnerty), the German
real estate developer Hertz (David
Holladay), the developer's
not-gay-just-European son Franz (Tom Lenk),
the corrupt mayor (Jeremy Rabb) and the city
planner hippie from Berkeley (Patty Wortham)
who fights against the evils of urban
renewal.
That's an awful lot of characters not to
care about. It's not as if D'Arienzo and
director Kristin Hanggi seek to find
sincerity in any of these songs, just an
excuse for the highly rocking six-man band
to play them and for the cast of seeming
thousands to belt them out at full volume.
If it never really connects dramatically,
the show is saved as a giant lounge act by
some fine production values (Ligia Morris'
costumes are as funny as they are lavish),
juicy performances and, most of all,
Hanggi's unreserved commitment to camp,
which manages to build some comic momentum.
If a couple of dancers doing a stupid
"Solid Gold"-like dance resembling a series
of figure skating lifts doesn't amuse, then
wait a little bit, and there will be a whole
bunch of couples doing a similar stupid
dance. If that still doesn't do it, wait for
the couple to climb up a ribbon and do a bad
dance in the air to the Damn Yankees song
"High Enough."
There does come a saturation point when
there's no choice but to laugh, feel
guiltily happy about it and maybe even sing
along to "Hit Me With Your Best Shot."
Set, Michael Cotten; costumes, Ligia
Morris; projections, Jason H. Thompson;
lighting, Dan Weingarten; sound, John
Zalewski. Opened and reviewed Jan. 28,
2006. Runs through Feb. 18. Running
time: 1 HOUR, 30 MIN.
With: William Belli, Ramona DuBarry, Elysa Gomez, Seana Harris,
Joseph Morales, Jonathan Redford,
Alistair Tober, Nayo Wallace, Zac
Brazenas, Suzanne Easter, LJ, Gina Katon,
Lachlan McCarthy, Leo Moctezuma, Preston
Mui, Rhapsody, Becca Sweitzer, Nikki
Tuazon, Kevin Wilson, Marcel Wilson,
Melissa Mendoza, Kevin Wilson.
Source:
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117929422.html?categoryid=33&cs=1
|