On
Broadway | Spamalot
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- (Shubert Theater, 2004-2005 season)
You don't have to be a Monty Python fan to
devour "Spamalot" - but it helps! With an absurd book, puns
and bawdy lyrics by Monty Python veteran Eric Idle, music by John Du
Prez and Mike Nichols' smart, screwball direction, it's laugh-a-lot
lunacy.
The lunatic opening number sets the zany, non-linear tone. A historian
appears with a map, intoning, "England 932 A.D., a kingdom
divided. To the West, the Anglo-Saxons. To the East, the French.
Above, nothing but Celts and some people from Scotland. Legend tells
us of an extraordinary leader who arose from the chaos to unite a
troubled kingdom...Arthur, King of the Britons." The scene then
erroneously cuts to Finland, where Scandinavian peasants are singing,
dancing and schlapping each other with dead fish in a mock musical.
Oops!
"I said, 'England!'" the historian corrects...as droll King
Arthur (Tim Curry) rides in on an imaginary horse, accompanied by his
lowly vassal Patsy (Michael McGrath). His merry medieval cohorts soon
appear: most memorably, cowardly Sir Robin (David Hyde Pierce) and gay
Sir Lancelot (Hank Azaria). Parody reigns as Sir Galahad (Christopher
Sieber) duets with the Lady of the Lake (Sara Ramirez) in "The
Song That Goes Like This," sending up Andrew Lloyd Webber
romantic arias, complete with chandelier, and a knight chorus line
apes "Fiddler on the Roof" with goblets on their heads,
culminating with "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,"
Credit Casey Nicholaw's choreography, Tim Hatley's crazy sets and
costumes, Hugh Vanstone's lighting and a superb ensemble cast. So if
you're in the mood for a stupendously silly, banal, merry old time,
head for a feudal farce known on Broadway as "Spamalot."
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