On
Broadway | Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- (Imperial Theater 2004-2005 season)
The Con Men of the Riviera have hit Broadway!
Based on the 1988 movie about a pair of scam artists, it's got
deliciously unsavory characters and an antic plot with a tantalizing
twist.
The glittering opening number, "Give Them What They Want,"
sets the stage, as suave, sophisticated Lawrence Jameson (John
Lithgow), along with his droll aide-de-camp Andre (Gregory Jbara),
specializes in charming lonely women out of their fortunes from his
impeccable chateau on the French Riviera. Then along comes brash
Freddy Benson (Norbert Leo Butz), an American upstart who is eager to
learn the tricks of the trade. Blackmailed into teaching him, the
roguish Jameson takes the vulgar Benson along as he brazenly swindles
two willing marks (ditzy Joanna Gleason, pushy Sara Gettelfinger),
until the two men become competitive and bet who can wheedle $50,000
out of the newly arrived "American Soap Queen," bubbly
Christine Colgate (Sherie Rene Scott). But then, as another number
illustrates, "Love Sneaks In."
Once again, the collaborators of "The Full Monty," Jeffrey
Lane and David Yazbek, show their knack for adapting screenplays to
the Broadway stage with finesse and fun, not to mention relentlessly
clever lyrics. John Lithgow and Norbert Leo Butz inhabit the Michael
Caine/Steve Martin characters so completely that they recreate them in
their own campy image. Lithgow's preening, lighthearted persona and
debonair banter dominate, while Butz relies more on old-fashioned,
scene-stealing slapstick. Jack O'Brien's imaginative direction, Jerry
Mitchell's lively choreography, David Rockwell's enticing set design
and Gregg Barnes' glamorous costumes enhance the frivolous tone. This
stunning Broadway musical is worth the price of admission.
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