Disney’s Newsies
Alan Menken (Music); Jack Feldman (Lyrics); Harvey Fierstein
(Book)
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The Newsies in Flight |
How better to get a packed audience, from first row to last seat
in the balcony, rip-roaring excited about a little-told piece of history than
through a stage full of high-jumping, midair-flipping, split-legging,
fist-pumping guys in perfectly coordinated dance and full-voiced song? Oh, and did I mention that while they gyrate
and fly in all directions, three mammoth structures -- each with three stacked
layers of Erector-Set-like, metal boxes connected with multiple-staircases -- are
moving in and out and rotating among the dancing boys? Just writing this, and my heart starts madly
pumping!
Welcome to the exuberant, testosterone-filled Disney’s Newsies in which Harvey
Fierstein’s book’s is based on an actual newsboys’ strike in 1899 New York
against the likes of newspaper moguls Pulitzer and Hearst, with the music of
Alan Menken and lyrics of Jack Feldman thrown in for electrifying results. Having seen the original 2012 Broadway show
with multiple Tony nominations (winning Best Score and Choreography), I can
fully attest that the current touring company hosted by Broadway San Jose fully
echoes the overall excellence, palpable excitement, and exiting audience
elation of the original.
The rousing, rambunctious opening number somewhat described
above, “Carrying the Banner,” introduces a dozen and a half boys who mostly
live on roof tops, fire escape landings, and alley ways of Lower Manhattan,
trying their best to ilk a few pennies per day to keep them fed and out of the
notorious juvenile detention center called “The Refuge.” With names like Romeo, Finch, Elmer, Race,
and Crutchie, these kids are selling their fifty or so papers a day and are
forming a brotherhood that is all the family most of them have. And still they sing, “Ain’t it a fine life,
carrying the banner, through it all!”
But a penny-pinching, filthy rich Joseph Pulitzer, owner of
the daily New York World, has figured out a
way to increase his declining readership and eek out more profits on the backs
of these newspaper-toting boys. He plans
to charge them sixty cents per hundred papers rather than fifty, forcing them
to sell more to stay even. Steve
Blanchard is the smartly dressed, diabolical Pulitzer who sings in both a rich
and treacherous tone in the midst of his morning hair trim, “Trim a bit here,
trim a bit there, just a modest adjustment can fatten the bottom line.”
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Joey Barreiro as Jack Kelly & the Newsies |
However, just as the poor street schmucks are about to give
in to their higher costs, Jack Kelly (fashioned after the real-life newsboy,
Kid Blink) steps forward to organize the boys into their own union and to go on
strike. With an inviting voice that
grows in fire and fury, Joey Barreiro brings a sense of destiny into his Jack
as he and his Newsies sing in “The World Will Know,” “And this ain’t for fun
... for show ... We’ll fight ‘em toe to toe to toe ... And, Joe (Pulitzer),
your world will ... know!”
Jack and his ragamuffins get strong support from two of the
unlikeliest of women. Like a Mae West
with her hip-swinging strut, wide-brimmed and feathered hat, and glittery and gaudy
gown, Bowery nightclub owner Medda Larkin brings heart and refuge to Jack and
his gang (and a location later for a city-wide rally of neighborhood Newsies). Aisha de Haas sings in a voice brimming with
personality, pizzazz, and power (with a capital “P”) and lights up the stage in
her “That’s Rich.”
But even more surprising is that Pulitzer’s own daughter,
Katherine -- a struggling arts reporter for a rival paper -- meets Jack
unexpectedly; is struck by his brashness, his contagiously cute smile, and this
flair for art (he sketches her); and becomes convinced this story of a
children’s campaign for justice is her road to serious journalism. Understudy Becca Peterson (stepping in
Opening Night for Morgan Keene) gives a wowing performance as Katherine,
spitting out with clarity rapidly sung words and notes as fast as she can type
in “Watch What Happens.” She then builds
in volume and confidence into full headline vocals, “The fight is on ... and
all I know is nothing happens if you give in ... It just so happens, we might
win.”
Katherine takes on the boys’ cause and also takes totally to
Jack. She and he will run smack dab into
her road-blocking father; but together they find inspiration to pursue and they
find, of course, each other. In
“Something to Believe In,” each has locked-eyes and pursed lips ready for that
first kiss as they beautifully sing, “I have something to believe in, now that
I know you believe in me.”
But these boys have other leaders that emerge from their
midst, too – also from unlikely places.
Two boys who actually have a mother, a father (who is now sick), and a
home keep the fires burning in the campaign at a point when Jack has some
second thoughts. Stephen Michael Langton
is a lanky, teenager named Davey who blasts to the forefront of his fellow Newsies
with a singing voice steeped in courage and charisma, singing, “Now is time to
seize the day, stare down the odds, and seize the day.” He, Jack, and the Newsies pull out all the
dance steps from ballet to Cirque du Soleil as they fly through air and slide
on floor in a truly magnificent “Seize the Day.”
Davey’s ten-year-old, kid brother -- the diminutive in stature but giant in spirit, Les – takes on bullies many times his size and often is the high-pitched voice that rises out of the gathered gang to inspire the next steps in the strike’s action. Turner Birthisel (alternating the role with Ethan Steiner) is a ball of energy and action and brings his own notable singing and stepping abilities to this outstanding cast.
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Newise in "King of New York" |
Number after number seems to out-do the previous in
electrifying the crowd; but one of the best of the evening has to be the Second
Act’s opening, “King of New York.” A
full cast, including Katherine and little Les, tap in their boots on tables and
floor of Jacob’s Deli while playing a full orchestra of spoons off their knees,
arms, and each other – and while also doing yet more leg splits on the floor
and high jumps with legs fully parallel to that same floor.
Many other cast members have their moments to leave a memory
in the audience’s banks. Andy Richardson
is Jack’s best buddy with a lame leg, Crutchie -- ever-cheerful and
ready-to-fight when needed. His “Letter
from the Refuge” is sung with quiet passion and persistent penchant of hope
against all odds. Jordon Samuels is just
one of many outstanding Newsies dancers; but as Specs, he time and again
totally astounds with high-air acrobatics.
Kevin Carolan is a Governor (Teddy) Roosevelt with the sort of bully
heroics that one would expect while Alex Prakken and Michael Gorman as the
Delancey Brothers are the kind of bullies one can imagine a Pulitzer might
always keep around him.
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The Costumes & Set of "Newsies" |
Jeff Calhoun directs this massive cast with an evident knowledge
of what it takes to whip up an audience and then lead them to a place to be
inspired by the bravery of these boys of 1899.
How much kudos would it actually take to acknowledge the mastery of
Christopher Gattelli’s choreographic leadership provided to this touring cast,
ensuring that the excellence awarded on Broadway by Tonys and Drama Desk alike,
continues night after night crisscrossing America? The spot-on lighting of Jeff Croiter and the
scene-and-time-period-setting projections of Daniel Brodie enhance the
impressive, ever-moving structures of this gigantic set designed by Tobin Ost. And 1899 comes to full life through the
costumes of Jess Goldstein.
As is often the case for a touring show, the stay is just
too short for a show as excellent as Broadway San Jose’s Newsies. With performances
only through this Sunday, May 15, now is the time to “Seize the Day” and buy
that ticket for this toe-tapping, finger-snapping production.
Rating: 5 E
Disney’s Newsies continues through May 15, 2016 at the San Jose
Center for the Performing Arts, 255 South Almaden Boulevard, San Jose. Tickets are available online at http://broadwaysanjose.com.
Photo Credit by Matthew Murphy
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