Disney’s The Little
Mermaid
Alan Menken (Music); Howard Ashman & Glenn Slater
(Lyrics); Doug Wright (Book)
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The Cast of The Little Mermaid |
A stage-filling, blue screen full of bubbles that boringly
bobbled up and down a few inches in each direction as the packed audience
filled the San Jose Center for the Performing Arts should have been all the
evidence we needed. Unlike most recent
Broadway San Jose shows (including some by Disney), this show was unfortunately
going to look like a slimmed-down, rather hokey touring version ... and nothing
like the original 2008 Broadway show. More
bubbles (this time very evidently plastic) would make lots of undersea and
seashore appearances along with a ship that looked made of cardboard, an
underwater haven for a young mermaid’s treasures that had no magical feel, and
a castle’s interior walls that seemed to have roots growing on the wall paper
(left over from Sleeping Beauty?). I am
not sure what Broadway veteran scenic designer Kenneth Foy had in mind, but his
budget must have been slashed for this particular production.
That said, fortunately the music of Alan Menken along with
the lyrics of Howard Ashman and Glenn Slater are fun, hummable, and often quite
beautiful, making Disney’s The Little
Mermaid a perennial favorite for audience’s worldwide since the animated
version first appeared in 1989. Doug
Wright also has ensured that the musical’s book continues the Disney tradition
of including much humor that plays well across a wide spectrum of ages. There is no lack of groaner puns and lines of
humor that may be missed by the munchkins but will resonate with their
parents. And in this touring version,
there is a cast that overall does justice to the book and the music, providing
much squealing delight especially for all the little girls in their mermaid
outfits and the little boys who are trying ever so hard not to show how much
they are actually enjoying a story about a mermaid.
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Diana Huey |
Rising out of those fake-looking bubbles that are supposed
to represent waves on a shore, a young girl emerges. With long, red hair and a flowing outfit that
undulates her swimming motions as she explores “The World Above,” she
immediately proves that her wonder-filled voice is that familiar,
Disney-heroine voice we expect and want Ariel to have. The mermaid’s draw to the world of humans
above the sea’s surface comes to full light as she “swims” in flowing motions to
her secret, underwater trove -- showing off found treasures of “whozits”,
“whatzits,” and “thingamabobs.” The
little-girl tones of innocence and wonder that Diana Huey employs in the
beginning of “Part of Your World” give way to sustained notes showing more
power and confidence as she declares, “Out of sea, wish I could be part of that
world.”
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Eric Kunze |
Back on the surface of the ocean is a ship full of
big-voiced, harmonious sailors singing “Fathoms Above,” introducing us to a
prince named Eric who would rather be a seaman than a royal. His first notes sung also show great promise,
one that is more than fulfilled when later he sings in clarion, rich-toned
words, “Somewhere there’s a girl ... singing and her voice is meant for me”
(“Her Voice”). The handsome Eric Kunze
seems a bit old for the role of the Prince (his online bio on Wikipedia puts
him 45-46 years old). However, he does
bring some of the night’s best vocals in songs like “One Step Closer,” where he
tells the now-silent Ariel that “a dance is like a conversation ... you speak
as one, cheek to cheek, toe to toe, heart to heart.”
That Ariel has no voice is no surprise to Little Mermaid aficionados. Ursula, the evil sister of Ariel’s royal
father (King Tritan, played with much royal dignity by Steve Blanchard), seduces
Ariel to sign an underwater contract. In
doing so, Ariel trades her beautiful voice for three days in order to be a human
with legs instead of a mermaid with tail, with the threat of eternal damnation
unless Prince Eric kisses her before the third sunset.
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Brandon Roach, Jennifer Allen & Frederick Hagreen |
With a mouth wide as an ocean cave, hair with peaks like
underwater mountains, and eyes that cross and glare with the fury of an ocean
volcano, this red-lipped, purple-skinned Ursala particularly likes to use her
many tentacles to enlarge her menacing presence (when she is not lovingly
cuddling some of them in her arms). Jennifer
Allen’s throaty voice slides, slithers, and stretches up and down as she sings
“Daddy’s Little Angel” and “Poor Unfortunate Souls.” Her voice suddenly shifts and changes its
gears to rev out sounds that are reminiscent of Vaudeville, Saturday morning
cartoons, a cabaret stage, or a dozen other sources of song genres. When speaking, she suddenly goes from Lucille
Ball’s and Carol Burnett’s high, squeaky ranges to the deep, scary gravelly
levels of Joan Crawford and Bette Davis.
As in many Disney outings both on screen and on stage, the villainess –
in this case an underwater witch -- is the real star of the night.
Ursula is often joined by her slithery henchmen with their
electrified bodies sparking, Flotsam (Brandon Roach) and Jetsam (Frederick
Hagreen). Both skate around their watery
world singing with edgy, cartoonish voices their twosome version of “Sweet
Child.”
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The Cast of The Little Mermaid |
Disney’s original movie has a couple of memorable ‘big’
numbers most fans will quickly recall and look forward to seeing, whether on
screen or on stage. Choreographer John
MacInnis and Costume Co-Designers Amy Clark and Mark Koss have combined efforts
to produce an underwater panorama of colorful schools of fish, floating and
twirling crustaceans, and graceful jellies in “Under the Sea.” However, this version seems to have trouble
deciding with its black-light-lit psychedelic colors and fishes full of feathers
if it is Summer of Love, Carnivale, or Las Vegas that is occurring under this
sea.
Later, a big number that totally misses the boat is “Kiss
the Girl” -- a sequence when Ariel’s lobster friend, Sebastian, usually leads a
lake full of floating and flying creatures in a mesmerizing, romantic enticer
to lead the Prince toward Ariel’s lips.
In this production, there is little beauty engendered of a special
evening as the couple moves around in a motorized rowboat on a mostly blank
stage. Offstage, non-distinct voices
join Sebastian and a sea gull named Scuttle in what should be a winner of a
song but in this production, is quite underwhelming.
As Sebastian, Melvin Abston does get some of the best lines
of the night (“This is going to get me in real hot water” ... a place no
lobster wants to be), and Mr. Abston is great also in adlibbing along the way
(or at least appearing to do so). His
Jamaican accent could use more consistency, and his singing numbers are
adequate but not altogether noteworthy; but he does wonderfully move sideways
much like a real crustacean, snapping his claws along the way.
The show’s funniest scene involves Sebastian trying to
escape the carving knife of the deliciously hilarious Chef Louis (Dane
Stokinger). As he sings in comical
French style and then reprises “Les Poissons,” his line-up of suddenly disappearing,
white-aproned cooks find their match in a lobster who has no intention of being
the evening’s main course.
Scuttle the gull opens Act Two with one of several numbers
not in the original screen version: “Positoovity,” a word that falls in this
gull’s dictionary between “popcycle” and “pre-hysterical.” With him in harmony and in kick lines galore
are a group of squawking, fellow gulls that do some cute imitations of Jimmy
Durante with their cocked heads shaking along with feathered hands/wings
pulsing.
There are flaws aplenty in how cheesy this production often
looks -- especially in the fairly lame,
“non”-special effects such as when Ariel’s underwater haven is blown up by her
royal father or when Ursula finally is destroyed due to Ariel’s ingenuity. However, the constant ‘swimming’ effects that
occur in the movements of on-stage and in-flight mermaids, mermen, and other
sea creatures is extremely impressive, thanks to Paul Rubin.
While this Little
Mermaid does not overall match the quality and wow-effects of other Disney
productions that have made their way both to San Jose and San Francisco in
recent years, I must report that the San Jose audience – especially all those
little costumed girls and big-eyed boys – really did enjoy the opening
night. Along with their parents, the
cast received a sustained, enthusiastic, standing ovation. (I stood reluctantly.)
Rating: 3 E
Disney’s The Little
Mermaid continues through October 1, 2017, 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 Steve Wilson
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