Colin C. Pritchard as Billy Crocker and LeeAnn Payne as Reno Sweeney in Cole Porter's "Anything Goes" News-Progress photos by Keith Stewart |
Some get a kick from cocaine
I'm sure that if
I took even one sniff
That would bore me terr--ifically,
too
Yet, I get a kick out of you.
— “I Get a Kick Out of You” from “Anything Goes”
By Dan Hagen
Quick! What do Mickey Mouse, Mahatma
Gandhi, Pepsodent and a Waldorf Salad have in common?
They’re all made to order for Cole
Porter, of course. That Broadway genius could work any word into a lyric, up to
and including “tin-pan-tithesis.”
No pan this time, though, with
Little Theatre’s Kelly Shook directing and choreographing the Depression-era
sea froth “Anything Goes” as the theatre’s midsummer firecracker. Shook has
shaped an eclectic show from its various incarnations throughout a nearly
80-year history.
The absolute necessities are still
there, songs like “You’re the Top,” “I Get a Kick Out of You” and the
ever-truer title tune. But surprises are also featured to freshen things up,
numbers like the delightful afterlife dance craze “Heaven Hop” from a 1962
off-Broadway revival with Hal Linden.
Only one number in the second act,
“Take Me Back to Manhattan,” struck me as being extraneous. Didn’t seem to go
much of anywhere in terms of the show’s finish.
Although clearly of their time and
place, Porter’s best songs are durable, maybe indefatigable. They still deliver
a saucy wink to the audience, still smart, still charming. Listen to the bored
sophistication of “I Get a Kick Out of You,” or watch the passive-aggressive
progression of “Friendship,” in which protestations of mutual loyalty become
slyly hostile. Is there a song that beats “You’re the Top” as a delivery system
of simple, sunny joy? I think not. This is how it’s done.
Kelsey Andres as Bonnie: a low-class gal with high-octane charisma |
The story is a P.G. Wodehouse
farce, funny enough without demanding too much of the audience’s attention,
largely a structure on which to hang some great songs and dance numbers.
The boy is the able Colin C.
Pritchard as Billy Crocker, a protean American go-getter type. The girl he
loses and gets is Hope Harcourt, played by the sweet-voiced Kara Guy. The role
of her snobby mom is effectively Margaret Dumonted by Therese Kincade.
Particularly effective is Jared
Titus as the amiable, angular Englishman Lord Evelyn Oakley. He can get the
silly laughs, but also deliver his lines with a surprisingly subtle sincerity
when necessary. His song of wild abandon, “Let’s Misbehave,” is hilarious.
His partner in that number is the
immensely talented LeeAnn Payne as Reno Sweeney, the showstopper Ethel Merman
part. She rises to the occasion of the biggest and most satisfying songs in the
show — “Blow, Gabriel, Blow,” a rousing gospel tune that says one thing and
means another, and “Anything Goes,” the first-act curtain number and a
tap-dance avalanche.
The most consistent crowd pleasers
may have been Little vet Jack Milo as Moonface Martin, America’s friendliest
public enemy, and Kelsey Andres as his gun moll sidekick Bonnie.
Milo always knows how to tickle,
tease and string along a laugh, and his deadpan tweet-tweeting admonition to
“Be Like the Bluebird” is a strange wonder to behold. Andres plays a low-class
gal with high-octane charisma in the “Heaven Hop” and “Let’s Step Out” numbers.
Sitting behind us during dress
rehearsal was the Charleston High School cast of this spring’s musical,
“Anything Goes.” After my friend Matt Mattingly told one of the high school girls
that the Little Theatre cast and crew put this high-energy production together
in just two weeks, she exclaimed, “It's like they’re superheroes!”
It’s true. They’re the top, a Bendel
bonnet (that’s a hat), a Shakespeare sonnet (that’s art), they’re Mickey Mouse
(that’s a rodent, true, but an extremely popular one).
Incidental intelligence: The 1934 show “Anything Goes,” with music and
lyrics by Cole Porter, has a book by Guy Bolton, P.G. Wodehouse, Howard Lindsay
and Russel Crouse.
The cast includes Marc Pera, Melissa Jones, Rachel Perin, Ashley
Klinger, Mandy Modic, Matthew Glover, Matthew Schmidt, Colin Shea Denniston,
Andy Frank, Peter Marinaro, Karl
Skyler Urban, Amanda Johns, Sarah Ledtke and Connie Mulligan. The show has
lighting design by Greg Solomon, scenic design by Matthew J. Frick, costume
design by Matt Malone, stage management by Jeremy J. Phillip and musical
direction by Kevin Long.
Performances
will run through July 14. Tickets may be purchased by calling The Little Theatre
on the Square Box Office at (217)-728-7375 or online at www
.thelittletheatre.org.
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