School of Rock
Julian Fellowes (Book); Glenn Slater (Lyrics); Andrew Lloyd
Webber (Music)
The Cast of School of Rock |
The man who began his celebrated, much-awarded career
writing a rock musical when he was twenty-two (Jesus Christ Superstar) returned to that genre to premiere in 2015 School of Rock, an electrically pounding
good time featuring this time not twenty-somethings, but kids aged
nine-to-twelve. Andrew Lloyd Webber (music)
once again has struck a resounding chord among theatregoers, with the Broadway
show (with book by Julian Fellowes and lyrics by Glenn Slater) now closing in
on its third year on the Great White Way, with a show soon to be two years in London’s
West End, and with a touring company making its way across the land, now at
SHN’s Orpheum Theatre. As over a dozen
of talented youngsters run and bounce all around the stage – while also acting,
singing, dancing, and often playing instruments – School of Rock zaps and zings with preteen energy and
effervescence. While the screaming and
screeching of their young, high-octane voices can be a bit much and their much
repeated jumping up-and-down soon wears its welcome out, their abilities to
play and look like pros with instruments often almost as tall as they in the
end ensure School of Rock gets a gold
star and a solid, passing grade.
But there are also cast members taller than four feet, and
it is one of these who is always center stage in School of Rock – a sloppy dressed, pooching-stomach middle-ager
most at home when rocking out on stage, sitting with a beer in hand, or lying in
a ball while sleeping late in bed. Out-of-work soloist and guitarist, Dewey
Finn, weasels his way to become the substitute teacher of all the
aforementioned fifth-graders, cheating his long-time best friend, Ned
Schneebly, out of the job ed was supposed to get.
Rob Colletti & Vincent Molden |
When Dewey arrives at the exclusive, private school
(tuition, $50K/year) – late and looking very hung over – he stumbles into his
class of munchkins as they are finishing music class, playing instruments like
cello, violin, and grand piano.
Immediately, wanna-be-rock-star Dewey recognizes how he might revenge
his recent booting from the band he started, No Vacancy. He is intent in beating them in an upcoming
Battle of the Bands with a new group composed of young, musical prodigies. All he has to do is turn classical aspirants
into hard rockers; do away with math and social studies and substitute rock
history and rock appreciation; and convince the stunned and skeptical kids to
spend most of their daily class time practicing while not drawing the suspicion
of the school’s strict and prudish principal, Miss Mullins.
During his first foray into song to accompany his flying
fingers on electric guitar, Rob Colletti lets loose his rough-edged, gravelly
vocals to blast forth Dewey’s rock-star dreams in “When I Climb to the Top of
Mount Rock.” As he half sings, half
screams lines like “At the top of Mount Rock, I’ll be blowing out amps playing
stadium shows on my sold-out galactic tour,” Dewey bends, struts, flops, and
slides his rather rotund stature over the entire stage, with no care of
possible bruises or bumps.
That Dewey could care less in the beginning about being a
teacher beyond the $950/week salary that will go a long way to pay his over-due
rent is quite obvious. However, once he
begins to recruit his students into a full range of roles from singers,
instrumentalists, security guard, lighting and costume designers, and even
manager (during a rousing, fun “You’re in the Band”), his Dewey becomes a full-speed-ahead
steamroller to ensure stardom is in each of the kid’s (and his) near-term
future. Rob Colletti is not the greatest
of singers, and he often seems like he just stepped out of an inane Adam
Sandler movie; but Dewey’s uncouth, unkempt, unabashed manners do begin to win
us over and to ease off enough to let us see the heart and caring that this
so-called teacher develops for his students.
Although academics have been tossed out the window, what
these students learn turns out to be the feel-good, inspiring message that
Andrew Lloyd Webber seems to want us to hear about the merits of music
education within today’s schools. In
this “pre-Harvard” elementary school, parents are mostly worried about their
kids’ high achievements, often ignoring their children’s true needs and desires. The students themselves protest this stance
as they sing the moving “If You Would Only Listen,” one of the night’s best
songs lyrically (but unfortunately delivered with a bit too much shrill stuck
in highest volume). But as Dewey pushes
and prods the students to discover their rock musical talents, he also helps them
unleash the parts of themselves that many of their parents have ignored; and
these awakenings become some of the most memorable moments of the musical.
Theo Mitchell-Penner |
Lawrence (Theo Mitchell-Penner) is a boy others have shunned
and sees himself as uncool; but behind the keyboards, he makes magic happen and
grooves to become cooler than cool.
Vincent Molden as Zack is a Mick-Jagger-in-the-making as his electric
guitar wizardry woos Dewey, his fellow students, and eventually his uptight,
controlling dad. Former cellist, now
calm-and-collected bassist Katie (Theodora Silverman) and once-too-rowdy
cymbalist, now rockin’/sockin’ drummer Freddy (Gilberto Moretti-Hamilton) also
transform right before our eyes and those of their parents. When all the students join in a number left
over from the 2003, Mike White film – the movie’s and this musical’s title song,
“School of Rock” – their voices finally back off of the collective near-scream
into beautiful harmonies with wonderfully expressed feelings (making me wish
Music Director Martyn Axe and/or Director Laurence Connor had made that
decision a dozen songs prior).
A girl named Summer is a headstrong, resistant force that
threatens at first Dewey’s keeping his band secret from the administration; but
when she is made band manager, Iara Nemirovsky sings forth, “Band, get ready
and let’s groove,” bringing strong vocals that fire up the group beautifully in
“It’s Time to Play.” Likewise, extremely
shy Tomika (Grier Burke) only needs to have a chance to be lead singer (not
back-up, thank you very much) when her “Amazing Grace” knocks the socks off
Dewey and an appreciative Orpheum audience, with that crowd-pleaser only being a
taste of what is to come later when her little voice rockets skyward with great
ease and power in a song she writes for the band, “Teacher’s Pet.” Both Summer and Tomika prove that these
highly talented kids sound their best when allowed not to screech and squeal.
Rob Colletti & Lexie Dorsett Sharp |
While W.C. Fields famously claimed “Never work with animals
or children,” fortunately Lexie Dorsett Sharp did not listen to him and decided
to give it a go with these dozen-plus kids in the role of the prim-and-proper
principal of Forest Springs Preparatory, Rosalie Mullins. Her sparkling, tongue-in-cheek “Queen of the
Night” aria from The Magic Flute is
the first time we see glimpses that there is some gaiety and gusto behind those
spectacles and conservative, blue dress.
When she loosens up at the local Roadhouse Bar with Dewey and lets loose
with “Where Did the Rock Go?,” Ms. Sharp then delivers the night’s best song
with a voice that shakes, rattles, and rolls.
Anna Louizos creates a wardrobe of costumes that define the
uptight parents, faculty, and principal; the sloppy but lovable Dewey; and the
uniformed cuteness of the kids. The
quickly appearing set pieces also designed by Ms. Louizos take us from band
stages to a classroom full of rolling desks to a faculty lounge paneled and
perfect. Natasha Katz’s lighting is full
of any band’s needed spots and beams while sparkling with the pizzazz of a rock
concert’s premiere. Sound designer Mick
Potter ensures that Martyn Axe’s background orchestra of a dozen-plus never
overpowers or drowns out the classroom rock band on stage.
With a book fairly shallow, there is never any doubt the
happy, feel-good way that School of Rock
will end. The show’s choreography is overall
repetitious and unimaginative. The music
is not Andrew Webber’s most memorable, and the delivery is too often (but
definitely not always) over-done (fault of director, not of actors). However, School
of Rock is in the end heart-warming and even inspiring. It is very often funny and always full of
fun. And by the sounds of the whoops and
whistles on opening night, this touring version of School of Rock now at SHN’s Orpheum Theatre is definitely a
crowd-pleaser – especially for the younger set.
Rating: 3.5 E
School of Rock
continues through July 22, 2018 at the
Orpheum Theatre, 1192 Market Street, San Francisco. Tickets are available at https://www.shnsf.com.
Photo
Credit: Matthew Murphy
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