Aladdin
Alan Menkin (Music);
Howard Ashman, Tim Rice & Chad Beguelin (Lyrics);
Chad Beguelin (Book)
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The Cast of Aladdin |
With exotic, kaleidoscopic colors of every hue imaginable,
Disney’s Aladdin bursts onto the SHN
Orpheum stage in a touring version that has more elaborate scene changes, more
dazzling costumes, and more jumping tumbling, and even flying cast members than
any traveling show in recent memory. As
the bustling market place of the Middle Eastern city of Agrabah comes to life
in the opening “Arabian Nights,” sword swallowers, belly dancers, and acrobatic
passers-by fill the stage amidst swirling robes and scarves, fast-moving
merchandise carts laden with fruits, and little buildings that have their own
way of dancing together – all awash with colors gone iridescently wild. And the bigger-than-life Genie wearing
seemingly dozens of yards of dazzling blue tucks and folds proclaims that in
Agrabar, “Even the poor people are fabulous.”
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The Cast of Aladdin |
If the packed audience (even the sourest and most cynical among
them now already smiling ear-to-ear) thinks that things will slow down to a
normal pace from here, they have sold way too short the fast-paced, eye-popping
direction and choreography of Casey Nicholaw; the immense, sparkling sets of
Bob Crowley that come and go in a blink of the eye; and the hundreds (let’s say
337) of costumes designed by Gregg Barnes – some with as many as 8,644
Swarovski rhinestones embedded (so says the program). And try to figure out how the members of the
huge ensemble are able to change those outfits of 2,019 different fabrics and
trims often in less than thirty seconds.
Even if the music of Alan Menkin and the lyrics of Howard Ashman, Tim
Rice, and Chad Beguelin were not potential earworms that will haunt audience
dreams for days (which they are), this is a musical that is unabashedly and
unapologetically full of wonder, magic, and sheer fun for kids 3 to 99. Warning: Do not come looking for
life-changing messages of any serious nature.
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Anthony Murphy |
As is now often the case for Disney, Aladdin started as a big-screen animation hit in 2011 before
transforming into its Broadway version in 2014.
At least two aspects of that NYC production seemed to be on everyone’s
lips who saw the show: The magic carpet
(“How does it fly like that?”) and the Genie as played by Tony-winner James
Monroe Iglehart (“How does that big man move that fast and in so many cool ways
as he dances, slides, and tumbles all over the stage?”). In this touring version, the carpet is still
a character with its own personality that leaves jaws open and heads scratching
as it swoops, dives, and flies with no noticeable devices or enablers – all the
while Aladdin and Princess Jasmine are on board. And the current Genie in this roadshow –
Anthony Murphy – more than fills Mr. Iglehart’s up-turned slippers as he takes
on a Cab Calloway persona in his moves, voice, and charisma. Together, they are worth the price of the
ticket, even forgetting all the other razzle and dazzle surrounding them.
Mr. Murphy’s Genie bubbles over with an alluring personality
that fills the vast stage. His humor is aided
greatly by Chad Beguelin’s pun- and one-liner-packed book, but he often appears
to be spontaneously generating his lines just for tonight’s audience. He sings robustly with a hint of gleeful
mischief in his wide eyes and uses every ounce of his large body to move in
ways beguiling.
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Anthony Murphy, Adam Jacobs & Cast of Aladdin |
After the Genie introduces the first scene, he disappears
until Aladdin finally rubs his lantern, bringing the “riff-raff” boy of the
streets the famed three wishes. That
Aladdin finds the lantern while entrapped in a mammoth cave of gold and jewels
is due to the show’s villain (always a must for a Disney story), the Sultan’s
Grand Vizier, Jafar. Played with just
enough evil to be a tad scary but also with a cartoonish air to be funny,
Jonathan Weir is the diabolical Jafar who convinces innocent-enough Aladdin to
go into the “Cave of Wonders” to get that lantern so that Jafar can make
himself ruler and can marry the beautiful Sultan’s daughter, Jasmine. (Jafar has been told by a magic spirit that
Aladdin is a “diamond in the rough” and the only one who can enter the cave
safely.) His diminutively sized
sidekick, Iago, (a delightful Reggie De Leon) is a bad guy who quickly becomes
a crowd favorite with his constant flow of silly jokes and with his ability to
roll around the stage with short legs moving a hundred miles an hour to keep up
with the much taller Jafar.
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Adam Jacobs |
Adam Jacobs, a local boy from Half Moon Bay, originated the
role of Aladdin on Broadway and continues this role in the national tour with
the same youthful exuberance, playful nature, and romantic looks and outlooks
that served him well on the Great White Way.
When he literally bumps into the Princess Jasmine in the city’s bustling
marketplace, the Romeo-Juliet moment is full of sparks flying between them,
setting up a storyline headed to that Disney-ending wedding everyone knows is
coming.
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Isabelle McCalla & Adam Jacobs |
Isabelle McCalla does not
disappoint in any aspect (vocals, gumption, or looks) the formula we all now
expect of a Disney princess. When she
and Aladdin sing together in two of the musical’s best-known numbers (“A
Million Miles Away” and “A Whole New World”), their blended abilities have that
Disney perfection that cannot help but wow and please, even if there is nothing
much different in either’s sound than is heard from almost any, modern Disney
show’s hero and heroine.
And that goes for the rest of this superbly talented and
highly diverse cast. Besides a the large
ensemble that both sings and dances with total aplomb, three chums of Aladdin
particularly stand out for their zany, reckless, and hilarious ways of
cavorting around the streets, alleys, and roofs of Agrabar. Zach Bencal, Philipe Arroyo, and Mike Longo
play Babkak, Omar, and Kassim respectively and prove their mettle time and
again when joining Aladdin, the Genie, and/or the entire ensemble in rousing,
stage-filling numbers. Both acts are
book-ended with crowded stages of variously clothed (or not) bodies doing
everything from tap dances to kick lines to body gyrations of every aerobic
description.
And with those numbers, as has been noted, come Mr. Barnes’ constantly
changing costumes that glitter with all the over-done but thoroughly enjoyable
flairs we often associate with a Las Vegas extravaganza. The fantastically striking lighting design of
Natasha Katz puts every costume and scene change into a storybook land of
wonderfully reflected color. The brassy,
sassy sounds of the large orchestra conducted by Brent-Alan Huffman awaken all
the aural senses to match the visual over-abundance of the stage show.
End-to-end, Aladdin
is just plain fun. Everything is
over-done, and we do not care. The
talented cast backed by a book full of laughs and songs that are hummable
appear to be having the times of their lives throughout. That energy is contagious, spreading
throughout the large Orpheum Theatre and leaving the entire audience with big satisfied
smiles as they exit.
Rating: 5 E
Aladdin continues
through January 7, 2018 at SHN’s Orpheum Theatre, 1192 Market Street, San Francisco. Tickets are available at https://www.shnsf.com.
Photo
Credits: Deen van Meer
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