On
Broadway | Sweet Charity
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- "Break a leg" means good luck for
stage actors, but it almost felled Christina Applegate, who broke a
bone in her foot during an out-of-town tryout in Chicago. Determined,
she refused to give up and gamely managed to open on Broadway.
Tenacious, she is. Charismatic, she isn't.
The musical revolving around Charity Hope Valentine, a plucky taxi
dancer who keeps falling in love with the wrong guys, demands a
terrific actress, skilled dancer and strong singer. Gwen Verdon
originated the role back in 1966; Shirley MacLaine followed with a
1969 screen adaptation. Christina Applegate, best remembered as the
teenage Kelly Bundy in "Married...With Children, can dance but
her voice is thin, even reedy, and her acting is, charitably,
contrived.
With a score by Cy Coleman, lyrics by Dorothy Fields and a book by
Neil Simon (who was inspired by Federico Fellini's "Nights of
Calabria" about a sweet Italian prostitute), the musical really
relied on the eroticism contributed by its original
director/choreographer Bob Fosse.
In this revival, directed by Walter Bobbie and choreographed by Wayne
Cilento, that's gone - or softened into marshmallow fluff. The best
number remains "Big Spender" which still has the Fosse
flair. Janine LaManna and Kyra Da Costa spark as Charity's
friends/co-workers - who shine defiantly in "There's Gotta Be
Something Better Than This" - while Paul Schoeffler scores
as a self-absorbed actor, Denis O'Hare delivers as a shy, prissy
accountant and Ernie Sabella is amusing as Charity's
tough-but-tender-hearted dance-hall boss.
To put it bluntly, while Christina Applegate would make a splendid
road company Charity, she's simply not up to high Broadway standards -
and its high prices.
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