Saturday, April 30, 2011

THE LIFE (2004-2005) – Miami Herald Review

Gary Waldman & Jamison Troutman, theater producers, presented The Life, a musical by Cy ColemanIra Gasman & David Newman at the Atlantis Playhouse, W. Palm Beach, FL (2004-2005) … the following is a review published in the Miami Herald, June 12, 2004:

 Sing a song about a prostitute

A musical melodrama recalls the seamy years before New York’s 42nd Street got it’s tourist-friendly makeover

BY CHRISTINE DOLEN

ALL HANDS: The cast of THE LIFE sings ‘Use What You Got.’
First, the caveat: The brassy musical that has just opened at the Atlantis Playhouse isn’t one of the Jewish-themed shows the company’s audiences have come to expect. Not by a long shot.
The Life, a 1997 Cy Coleman-Ira Gasman Broadway hit, is a down-and-dirty singing soap opera, an ode to the flashy hookers and slick pimps who worked on the edge of Manhattan’s theater district before Rudy Giuliani and company made the 42nd Street neighborhood safe for Disney shows, chain stores and restaurants.
Crucial to the success of any production of The Life are actors who can sick the heck out of Coleman’s score, a beguiling (if lyrically blunt) blend of jazz, blues and Broadway. Director Gary Waldman has found a killer 13-member cast, one that belts, brays and coos under Phil Hinton’s fine musical direction. They dance well too, working the Kevin Black-Jamie Cooper choreography with a tongue-in-cheek, provocative sass.
The quality of the acting is more erratic, though the melodramatic tone of the show’s script (by Coleman, Gassman and David Newman) makes both the weaker and over-the-top performances easier to forgive. The Life is an amusing, ultimately sobering fantasy about gals who work hard for the money and guys who never treat them right.
The show’s focal characters are Queen (the charismatic Jeanne Lynn Gray), a Georgia gal who’s turning tricks only until she can buy a better life, and her man, Fleetwood (Ben Bagby), a drug-addicted Vietnam veteran who’s increasingly (and exploitatively)pragmatic when it comes to his women.
Jojo (Dean Swann), the weasel of a narrator, is in cahoots with Memphis (Carl Barber-Steel), a fly pimp who works his girls hard and answers any rebellion with violence. Sonja (the wonderful Nadeen Holloway), his main gal, brings down the house with The Oldest Profession, an amusing take on just how wearying years of streetwalking can be. And Mary from Minnesota (Elizabeth King who makes way too many distracting faces), the just-off-the-bus “innocent,” proves that sleaziness comes in many guises.
As Queen, Gray turns her many solos (He’s No Good, I’m Leaving You, We Had a Dream)into aural gold. Her voice has ahoneyed warmth, and she projects the inherent dignity that makes Queen seem different from the other women.
Though it’s simple in design, with the actors moving against a graffiti backdrop on the raised platform of a stage, The Life at the Atlantis is an effectively escapist – if gleefully raunchy – piece of musical theater.
Christine Dolen is the Herald’s theater critic.

THE LIFE (2004-2005) - South Florida Tribune Review


Gary Waldman & Jamison Troutman, theater producers, presented THE LIFE, a musical by Cy ColemanIra Gasman & David Newman at the Atlantis Playhouse, W. Palm Beach, FL (2004-2005) ... the following is a review published in the South Florida Tribune, June 23, 2004 ...

Sensational New Musical showing at Atlantis Playhouse

By Al Price - TIMES ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

One of the great musicals of this -- or any -- season is the Broadway musical, "The Life," now showing at the Atlantis Playhouse. This 13-time Tony Award nominated musical was the hit of the Broadway 1997 season and earned accolades from the critics. At the time it was beaten out by “The Titanic” and “Chicago” but deserved to win as Best Musical – which it got from the Drama League and the Outer Critics Circle.

Producers Gary Waldman and Jamison Troutman fulfilled a dream for this show and have taken a giant step forward with this significant production for their small theater. The show never toured and has never been seen in South Florida.
Nadeen Holloway in THE LIFE at the Atlantic Playhouse


The Life” was written by Cy Coleman (“Sweet Charity” fame) with lyrics by Ira Gasman and has some 25 driving songs about the degradation on Times Square and 42nd Street in the ‘80s when pimps and prostitutes worked the streets. The music is brassy, jazzy and luscious and has a multi-ethnic cast of spectacular performers with exceptional voices that will thrill you.

The story is performed with stunning power and musicality. It’s about Sonja (Nadeen Holloway), a veteran hooker, who has seen better days and bemoans the wear and tear of her life with “The Oldest Profession” and her 15,000 tricks. Then there’s the younger Queen (Jeanne Lynn Gray) with her lover and pimp, Fleetwood, who dreams of power as he sings “A Piece of the Action” and she sings “Oh, Daddy, You Got Me.” He picks up the destitute Mary (Elizabeth King) with the help of hustler Jojo (Dean Swann) who sings “Easy Money” and the provocative “Use What You Got.” They’re at the bus station looking to turn Mary into a hooker.

Queen, resentful of Mary taking her man, Fleetwood, falls under the spell and control of Memphis (Carl Barber-Steele), a mean abusive pimp who sings the earlier dynamic showstopper “Don’t Take Much” and demands Queens work off $6,000 for a dress he gave her. He brutally sings and threatens her with its “My May or the Highway.”

Meanwhile Mary is being groomed for pornography and prostitution, which she readily accepts. It all comes to a tragic confrontation between Fleetwood and Memphis that Queen and Sonja can’t stop.

The show is full of show-stopping numbers that has audiences jumping out of their seats. Every song moves the action forward, and few musicals have the guts and grit of this production. The dark graffiti wall staging by Matthew Decker and the excellent accompaniment by Phil Hinton’s synthesized piano and recorded brasses give the production its full due.

The show has everything in humor, pathos and defiance. Waldman should tour it to other regional venues where a great show like this deserves to be seen.

The Life” is at the Atlantis Playhouse, 5893 S. Congress Ave., Shoppes of Atlantis at the intersection of Lantana Road and Congress Avenue. It runs through July 11. For tickets, call (561) 304-3212.


Thursday, April 28, 2011

FIVE GUYS NAMED MOE (2006) South Florida Tribune Review

Gary Waldman & Jamison Troutman, theater producers, presented the Five Guys Named Moe at Carmen's Supper Club, Boca Raton, FL (2006) … the following is a review published in The South Florida Tribune.



“Five Guys Named Moe” to delight with humor




By Al Price
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

There’s a new dinner theater in town – at the “Bridge Hotel” rooftop restaurant overlooking the Intracoastal. What a great atmosphere to see an enjoyable musical and eat sumptuous food by an award-winning chef.

Five Guys Named Moe was one of the most popular shows in cabaret history. Its off-Broadway show totaled 445 performances. It takes you back a bit, especially if you remember the big band sound. Six dynamic guys take off on Louis Jordan’s music from the ‘40s with high-powered song and dance. His musical style was called “The Big Bounce.” It took the swing-era jazz style, mixed it with rhythm and blues, and pushed it toward rock ‘n’ roll.

The five guys are Eat Moe, No Moe, Little Moe, Four-Eyed Moe and Big Moe, who sing and dance around the stage in an exuberance rarely seen on any stage in this area. It opens with a lovelorn Nomax (Gary Waldman), whose lady love is moving out of his life. The Moes suddenly appear to help Nomax out of his depression.

Carl Barber-Steele (“The Life”), Lorenzo Gutierrez, David Hughes, Christopher George Patterson and Dante Sterling dance and sing up a storm, performing some 24 of Jordan’s work’s including favorites like “Let the Good Times Roll,” “Is You Is or Is You Ain’t My Baby” and “Caledonia.”

They are an extraordinary group of performers, and as the show moves forward, each one is in perpetual motion, and each has the opportunity to sing a song and show his stuff. There is a distinct personality to each Moe as he sings and dances, which gets the audience toe-tapping – it’s infectious!

Choreographer Christopher George Patterson ahs his cast not only energetically dancing but has turned the show into an interactive event with audience members who participate with the performers in humor, dance and sing-alongs.

The Moes are costumed in classical striped Zoot suits that add to the hilarity of the evening; and the cast also seems to enjoy every moment on stage. Phil Hinton, who is the musical director, is a former Carbonnel and Curtain Up nominee for last season’s “The Life.”

Each one of the Moes has his own Louis Jordan specialty number with the others dancing around him. At one time Sterling leads the group with “I Like Them Fat Like That.” In “Safe, Sane and Single” each takes his turn in stanzas directed at the audience. And when Carl Barber-Steele has the audience prompt him in “Caledonia, Caledonia, What Makes Your Big Head So Hard,” the audience is suddenly part of the show.

Other fun songs are “Ain’t nobody Here But Us Chickens,” and “Choo Choo CH’Boogie.”

“Five Guys Named Moe,” directed by Gary Waldman, is a great way to spend an evening and enjoy a good dinner as well.


“Five Guys Named Moeis playing at Carmen’s Rooftop Restaurant at the Bridge Hotel, 999 E. Camino Real in Boca Raton. Open ended. For tickets, call 561-392-2744.

I WRITE THE SONGS (2004) - South Florida Tribune Review

Gary Waldman & Jamison Troutman, theater producers, presented the World-Premiere of I Write the Songs - A Celebration of the Music of Barry Manilow at the Atlantis Playhouse, W. Palm Beach, FL (2003-2004) … the following is a review published in The South Florida Tribune.


Manilow’s Magic at Work

By Al Price - January, 2004
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE
Leah Springer in I WRITE THE SONGS
Click image for video



The show at the Atlantis Playhouse proves once again, you don’t have to have elaborate sets and costumes to create an evening of great entertainment.

Producer Gary Waldman has taken some 25 songs from the body of work by Barry Manilow and staged an evening of wonderful song interpretations that would surely please the composer.

On a three-level stage a party is underway in which five attractive and splendid singers are gathered to enjoy each other’s company and sing their way through the Manilow compositions. Some 7 out of the 25 were not written by Manilow but apparently became associated with him over the years.

What makes it particularly appealing is the choice of Manilow songs devised so that it might develop a story line of love, romance, lost love and rediscovered romance.

With pianist and music director Phil Hinton and Jeff Hess on keyboard playing for the group, the accompaniment is excellent. Don Febbraio who just came off a stint in Barnum at the Stage Door Theater sings the solo When I Wanted You and is joined by Dean Swann in Big City Blues with excellent harmony.

Our three ladies include Sarah Wolter, a fine soprano who also recently appeared at the Stage Door Theater in Crazy for You and later as the wife Charity to Barnum. She sings When Love is Gone and Where Have You Gone as solos. Then there’s Rachel Klein who has a background of appearing in many musicals here and abroad. She sings Even Now and a duet with Dean Swann on Somewhere Down the Road. Leah Springer also has a stage musical background and sings Let Me Be Your Wings and does a wonderful trio rendition with Sarah and Rachel in Man Wanted.

Dean Swann has the moves choreographically when participating in the dance moments of the production. There is a great deal of ensemble singing in which all of the participants take part singly or in harmony with each other. The dancing was minimal but the movement of the singers in different positions of the stage made for an interesting tableau for many of the numbers they delivered.

This is an entertaining revue extolling the songs of Barry Manilow and delivered by an enthusiastic and fine group of singers. I was sorry not to have heard Copacabana one of Barry Manilow’s greatest hits. Perhaps it didn’t fit into the sequence of romantic songs.

I Write the Songs is showing through Jan. 25 at the Atlantis Playhouse, 5893 Congress Ave. 

Sunday, April 24, 2011

SOPHIE, TOTIE & BELLE (New York, 2000) Playbill Feature Story

Gary WaldmanJamison Troutman, Jay H. Harris and Kathi & Alan Glist opened an 8-week run of SOPHIE, TOTIE & BELLE off-Broadway at Theater4 on March 15, 2000. Here is a feature story published in Playbill Magazine.




Yiddishkeit & Raunch to Mix in OB's Sophie, Totie & Belle, March 15
Gwendolyn Jones, Kathy Robinson, Joanne Cunningham in SOPHIE, TOTIE & BELLE 
at Theater4, New York City                                                                Photo: STEVE SINGER

Yiddishkeit & Raunch to Mix in OB’s Sophie, Totie & Belle

15 Mar 2000
You wouldn’t ordinarily associate Jewish humor with earthy, raunchy comedy, but three comediennes of decades past weren’t above mixing the two. Sophie TuckerTotie Fieldsand Belle Barth all spiced old-fashioned ethnic comedy with racier material — at a time when even most male comics were still PG-rated. Fields faced even further obstacles later in her career, when diabetes forced the amputation of her leg.
You wouldn’t ordinarily associate Jewish humor with earthy, raunchy comedy, but three comediennes of decades past weren’t above mixing the two. Sophie TuckerTotie Fields and Belle Barth all spiced old-fashioned ethnic comedy with racier material — at a time when even most male comics were still PG-rated. Fields faced even further obstacles later in her career, when diabetes forced the amputation of her leg.
Now the styles of all three laugh-getting ladies are on view in a new Off-Broadway tribute show, Sophie, Totie & Belle, which started previews March 8 for an official opening March 15 for an open run at Theatre Four. Jay H. Harris, Gary WaldmanJamison Troutman,  and Kathi & Alan Glist are producing the piece, which stars regional actresses Gwendolyn Jones as Sophie, Kathy Robinson as Totie and Jo Ann Cunningham as Belle. Daniel Neiden plays “All the Men in Their Lives.”
Joanne Koch and Sarah Blacher Cohen’s penned the book for STB, which has the ticklesome trio meeting in the afterlife and reminiscing about their careers and personal difficulties. As such, we get to hear Tucker belt out her 40s-era hits, “Some of These Days” and “Red Hot Mama”; Barth tell her shamelessly naughty jokes; and Fields talks about her experiences with self-mocking humor.
Robert Craig Dawson choreographs, and Jon Delfin serves as musical director for the piece, which is staged by producer Waldman. Other plays by Koch include Safe Harbor, which was staged at Chicago’s Organic Theatre, and Nesting Dolls. Cohen collaborated with Isaac Bashevis Singer on the musical comedy, Schlemiel the First.
According to spokesperson Joan Spector, Sophie, Totie & Belle was a hit in Florida, playing three months in Deerfield Beach, followed by three more months at Fort Lauderdale’s Wilton Playhouse.
Spector said she was drawn to the material because, “These were three very strong women. They were all bawdy and tough on stage, but they all had difficult personal lives. Sophie was a torch singer of the first order. Belle used language — you were shocked. Back then, it was mindblowing that anybody talked that way. Both of them had ratty husbands. As tough as they all were on stage, they were marshmallows with their men. Totie — who was clean on TV but not in her nightclub act — had a very supportive husband, but she was heavy-set and hated herself. Her humor was very self-deprecating, and deep down, that probably didn’t make her too happy.”
Tickets are $40-$45. Theatre Four is located at 424 West 55th Street. For information, call (212) 239-6200.

THE LIFE (2004-2005) Sun-Sentinel Feature Story

Gary Waldman and Jamison Troutman presented the first ever regional production of  "The Life," the 1996 Tony Award-winning musical by Cy ColemanIra Gasman & David Newman. The following advance feature was published by theSun-Sentinel on June 11, 2004:

Cocky Atlantis Takes A Chance On Life

June 11, 2004|By Jack Zink Theater Writer


Gary Waldman and Jamison Troutman, purveyors of mostly feel-good ethnic theater for much of the last decade in South Florida, have wanted through most of that time to shake things up with a wickedly jazzy musical called The Life, which is about pimps and prostitutes in Times Square.

The Life is not about the midtown Manhattan of Guys & Dolls. It's set in the 1980s during the roughest hours of Times Square and 42nd Street's history. With co-writers Ira Gasman and David Newman, Cy Coleman musically evoked the same grit and snarl of movies like Superfly, Shaft and Coffy.


THE LIFE at the Atlantis Playhouse - Click for video
"It's got stuff in it that nobody would ever expect to see in here, like switchblades and shooting guns," director Waldman says. "Generally, someone's having a bowl of chicken soup.
"But as far as the style of music, I always go for the brassy stuff, and I think the score is totally something that people are going to go for."

Waldman and Troutman insist that their regular groups and subscribers like the brassier material that's shown up at theAtlantis and their previous venues in Wilton Manors and Deerfield Beach. Last summer was their best on record, with a revised version of Sophie, Totie and Belle -- about the three tart-tongued comedians, and an engagement by illusionistJim Bailey that was held over three times.

"That's what led us to say to ourselves that, since we always wanted to do this, you know what? You like brassy? Well, we're gonna give you brassy like you never saw in your life."

The first week's preview audiences seem to confirm the owners' suspicions, and hopes. Although the critics hadn't arrived yet, enthusiastic crowds in the 150-seat pocket-sized playhouse have calmed some of Waldman's nerves, and lightened Troutman's normal poker-faced expression into a wisp of a smile.
"We're the first people on the entire planet earth in seven years who've risked a dime on this show. It got 13 Tony Award nominations and won two. Since then, this little cocky theater is the first one that's had the guts to do it," Waldman says.

The Life also was named 1997's best musical by the Drama Desk and the Outer Critics Circle. That was the year Titanicupset the Tony's new musical categories and the revival of Chicago aced most of the rest.
Steel Pier did almost as well as The Life in the nominations but got totally blanked on awards night. It closed early, went on tour and has had a few regional productions since then.

The Life ran for another year on Broadway. But except for a college production shortly after its New York closing, The Life has remained in the vaults at the Tams-Witmark Musical Library. Troutman says the company's representatives have been eager to help the show find another audience.

Composer Coleman and lyricist Gasman have also offered advice.

Carl Barber-Steele portrays Memphis, the show's totally evil underworld overlord, the role for which Chuck Cooper won the Tony on Broadway. He played the same role as a guest artist in the New Jersey collegiate production and is happy to finally be able to tackle it again.

"I was elated when I got the call and asked if I was available. I would've walked here," Steele says. "This show is so real in so many respects. It's not your true musical comedy but there are some moments where you see glimpses of it.

"There's tragedy, depth, lightness, sorrow. That's all part of the beauty about how it was written."
Barber-Steele was in another show and arrived when the rest of the cast was heading into its second week of full rehearsals.

Among the others in the 13-member cast is Nadeen Holloway as Sonja, whose song The Oldest Profession helped give Lillias White the Tony in the Broadway production. Holloway commuted back and forth briefly from Germany, where she was wrapping up a European tour that played to audiences totaling a half-million people.

In The Life, Holloway says she interprets The Oldest Profession for its comic overtones, some of the only ones in the show. It's perhaps the lightest moment, and at times one of the brassiest, in the story.
Jeanne Gray, in the central female role of a young hooker trying to get away to a new life, was rehearsing The Life days and performing the lead female role in Ragtime at the Pembroke Pines Theatre of the Performing Arts. Ben Bagby, as her "man" Fleetwood, has appeared on Broadway in My One and Only.
Dean Swann, who appeared in the Atlantis' recent I Write the Songs, covers the role of JoJo, the conniving white hustler played on Broadway by Sam Harris.

The cast has been whittled down to 13 from the 33 on Broadway, which featured large chorus numbers. The authors shortened the story and removed some of the harsh language to make it more appealing for regional productions. But Waldman says it became a little too timid for South Florida, and he put back in some of the tough talk.

The Atlantis treatment of Coleman's score includes recorded performances of the brasses and other instruments, augmented by musical director Phil Hinton's piano and synthesized accompaniment.
"This show is melodically strong, but Coleman is a composer with a strong jazz background," Hinton says. "You can hear it in the harmonizing, the chords he uses.

"Where others would go for a straighter harmony, Coleman goes for jazzy, spicy chords. I'm terrible for jazzing up scores but this time, it's all there already."

Waldman says that a playhouse the size of the Atlantis could never afford such a show if live musicians had to be used. But unlike some theater and supper club operations that only use recordings, he says he insists on some live accompaniment to provide energy for the performers as well as the audience.
And that's the main thing he wants this unique production to re-create.

"I've never heard this kind of a mix of styles in a musical before or since," says Waldman, who saw the Broadway production. "It has everything from disco to gospel, standard show tunes and heart wrenching ballads, a very eclectic mix.

"I kinda get the feeling when he wrote this show, he wrote all the songs he ever wanted to write in his life."

THE LIFE

Where: Atlantis Playhouse, 5893 S. Congress Ave. (Shoppes of Atlantis at intersection with Lantana Road), Boynton Beach.
When: 8 p.m. Wednesdays-Saturdays; 2 p.m. Saturdays; 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays.
Tickets: $26.50-$29; 561-304-3212.