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The Best:
1) Hairspray: Hairspray is a smart, funny and infectiously entertaining show that reinvented its 1988 John Waters inspiration. Likewise, the film version of the stage version of the film (confused yet?) was a new creation altogether, and all three succeed in proving that sometimes the Hefty Hideaway girl can get the guy!
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3) The Lion King: If you’re going to remake an animated movie about a lion cub with daddy issues (and big-time “uncle issues”), it helps to infuse the show with gorgeous ethnically diverse and respectful imagery that celebrates the beauty and wildlife of Africa. Like The Producers, I don’t particularly enjoy the film inspiration, but on stage only one word suffices: Wow!
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5) La Cage aux Folles: Okay, so it was a stage play before a film, but Jerry Herman and Harvey Fierstein’s ode to non-traditional families and “being who you are” definitely followed the film plot-wise, but burst forth with everything that is wonderful about Broadway musicals. "The Best of Times" indeed.
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6) Reefer Madness: So maybe it isn’t wise to try and turn Citizen Kane into a musical comedy (“Rosebud!”), but why not try and turn something terrible into something great? Reefer Madness takes the awful 1930’s Scare Film about the dangers of the demon weed and makes it sublimely hilarious. This time, the humor’s intentional!
7) Little Shop of Horrors: This selection could land anywhere on the list, but it replaces The Full Monty only because I enjoy the rest of the shows personally, regardless of their pedigree or lack of critical approval. This was the show that proved that films should be musicals, and that schlocky films about man-eating plants named Audrey II are a better source material than beloved classics (Breakfast at Tiffany’s, The Thin Man, High Society, et al).
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9) Catch Me If You Can: It’s too early to know how the show will evolve prior to its Broadway debut, but in Seattle it was a cool, cool night at the theater. A stellar cast including super-hot Aaron Tveit, Norbert Leo Butz and Tom Wopat really helped reinvent the 2002 Steven Spielberg film, and once again Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman and Terrence McNally prove that they know what works on stage.
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Of course, just because you can make a musical out of a movie doesn’t mean you should, and these are my worst ten musical mistakes, and the reasons I think so.
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10) Big: Remembering this show, which underwent huge rewrites prior to touring and is now considered a great show for schools to perform, I was reminded how much I enjoyed much of it. However, the bland Daniel Jenkins in the lead, and the dreaded “Happy Birthday Josh! Birthday Josh!” nightmare scenes will haunt me until I find a Zoltar Speaks machine to wipe out the memory.
9) Young Frankenstein: Lightning doesn’t strike twice, especially when the producers of Young Frankenstein exhibited the same hubris of their title character. Huge ticket prices, a cavernous theater and a lackluster score of unmemorable songs did not bring the film to life, even with a stellar cast that included Sutton Foster, Megan Mullally and Roger Bart.
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7) The Wedding Singer: The hallmark of poor film to stage adaptations is losing what made the film special, which in this case meant Drew Barrymore and the usually unbearable Adam Sandler. The completely unmemorable score and book make the show little more than a non-audience participatory Awesome 80s Prom.
6) High School Musical: This is what I call “Rice Cake Theater”, a show with absolutely no flavor or value intended simply to cash in on the goodwill generated by its small screen original. Still, it gets kids interested in live theater, although in this case, it could just as easily be HSM on Ice.
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5) Footloose: Take an 80’s movie without much going for it except its soundtrack, regurgitate it on stage with little or no originality and you’re ready to "cut loose, footloose". Believe me, when you watch it, you’ll think somebody cut loose.
4) Saturday Night Fever and Urban Cowboy: Apparently, if one John Travolta movie musical was successful (Grease), everything he did must be aching for the musical treatment. How else can you explain stage versions of Saturday Night Fever and its lesser cousin, Urban Cowboy? Fortunately, neither show inflicted itself on audiences very long.
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2) Singin’ in the Rain: I can’t tell you if this show is always as god-awful as the production I saw, but it definitely begs the question: “Why?! For Pete’s sake, why??!” It’s virtually impossible to cast leads as charismatic as Gene Kelly, Debbie Reynolds and Donald O’Connor, nor is the title song ever going to match Kelly’s splish-splashing high-kicking delivery. “All wet” is an understatement.
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1) Carrie: What part of this infamous catastrophe was worse? The malt shop scene where the kids dressed like leather bar habitués ? Lyrics like “It's a simple little gig, you help me kill a pig”? The death of Margaret White transported from Carrie’s grubby house in the film to some surreal “Stairway to Heaven”? The answer is “All of the above”. Carrie was quite simply the perfect storm of misguided musicals, which lives on in the hearts and minds of those few lucky or unlucky enough to witness it.
Click here for Chris' best and worst from screen to stage, and feel free to weigh in with your reactions and/or your personal picks in the comments section below!
Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.
2 comments:
Personally, I am a huge Mel Brooks fan so in my opinion, I believe that his movies should be at the top of the list. Young Frankenstein is one of the greatest and most classic comdey films of all time, and he keeps coming up with fantastic peices of work, like the Producers. I never was a broadway fan too much, but i enjoy almost any kind of movie. At the very least though, Mel Brooks is my favorite and i will go see anything that he has had something to do with.
What a wonderful blog! You obviously have great taste! (Especially your cinematic crushes and women you love.) You mentioned Gene Kelly above. Have you ever seen some of his sexy early photos? Gorgeous!! And what a build, especially from behind.
Thank you for a great site!
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