Cry-Baby the Musical: a rollicking show that goes beyond the box!!
Cry Baby The musical A Theatre Kraken Production adapted from the film written and directed by John Waters , the book by Mark O’Donnell and Thomas Meehan, songs/music by David Javerbaum and Adam Schlesinger, incidental music by Lynne Shankel
Not since Tim Oberholzer* and his merry band of performers let loose at the Gladstone with their cult rock musical productions (The Rocky Horror Show and Hedwig and the Angry Inch), has the Gladstone theatre housed such an exuberant cult classic event . However, this one had a different twist and that is what brought the show up a notch . Pianist and artistic director Chris Lucas signaled to his six piece band and off went the overture making fun of the way those numbers end, by endless endings that always restart, signaling the beginning of this huge send-up that already had us giggling.
Class conflict at the teenage level, pits a group of wealthy snobby young ones with perfect morals, against a less fortunate group of apparent social misfits as the music reflects the social confrontation of the 195os . There is Baldwin and his band of squeaky clean do-gooders who always get vaccinated- remember the polio outbreak? They flee pinkos, weirdos, they wear pastel colours, go to the good schools and abhor that indecent rock music. They are confronted by the rebel rocker and devil himself (watch the lights change) Wade “Cry-Baby” Walker accompanied by his eccentric friends who can all sing and dance their way rings around the “correctly” brought up group.
They all meet at an anti-polio picnic, setting off a Romeo and Juliette /West side Story style of plot where forbidden-boy Cry-Baby meets beautiful good girl Allison and that first spark underlies the rest of the evening. Will Cry-Baby and Allison really get it on? Will they properly “infect”each other with their “inappropriate” cross-class feelings? The number of the Jukebox Jamboree at Turkey Point where Allison finally decides to escape the stifling Baldwin (an excellent interpretation Kenny Hayes) who hovers around her, is the turning point. She needs to prove she is not really such a “nice”girl after all. This seems to come out of Grease but nothing is that simple here because the book and the music turn all these events into parodies of themselves. There is an upward spiral of jokes that even the “good” bad guys are just as silly as the “bad” good-guys , where the prison romp is a send up of Elvis’ Jail house rock and where the Jamboree at Turkey Point becomes a perfect send up of that high school gymnasium dance in West Side Story . Note especially the magnificent voice of Steph Goodwin, known here as “Hatchet-Face” whose vocal power and singing ability should propel her onto greater things! Very High tenor Dupree W.Dupree was another strong voice that made its own special place in the crowd as he hurtles his upper notes around the theatre whenever the script gives him the chance. Emma Woodside as the shy beautiful Allison was perfectly infected with the spirit of parody as she switched from romantic longing to bad girl howling at the right point.
Apparently Act II makes changes by twisting the plot and adding new songs. For example, Act II also gave an excellent number to Mrs. Vernon-Williams, Allison’s conflicted grandmother – “I did something wrong once” – performed by Christine Drew whose guilt- ridden outbursts are well served by her tortured interpretation of that song in her beautifully tasteless comic rendition. And Lawrence Evenchick as the angry judge, spokesperson for the system that “cant be beat ” never stops eyeing the young ones, suggesting the time will come when it will be beat! His contribution is always impeccable.
The male lead , (poor orphan Wade “Cry-Baby” Walker) confirmed the immense talent of Nicholas Dave Amott . His vocal and corporeal mimic of Elvis was perfect but it also had a special personal touch because of his outpouring of charm and sex appeal which is very necessary to that role. This is an actor/singer capable of adapting to any role at all. We are lucky to have Amott in Ottawa but who knows how much longer he will be here before some agent grabs him!
What also worked strongly was the overall energy of this show, the excellent music under the direction of Chris Lucas, some of the group numbers choreographed by Brenda Solman who along with director Fex assured a breathtaking pace, tight performances and a fine group effort where they all worked beautifully and performed to their fullest. The fact is that this musical gives one the sense that you have already seen “that” somewhere before because of all the references but it is also thoroughly entertaining precisely because the borrowing is all turned on its head ; the way the performance style and all the brazen textual parody take us right into the world of so many popular musicals even including the angry Mel Brooks style humor of The Producers which is the epitome of bad taste becoming brilliant parody turned into social and political criticism.
Cry-Baby is not quite as brilliant as those other shows , but the intentions are there and most of the performances hit the spot especially as director Fex keeps it all boiling hot.
No doubt this company, given the extent of their current ambitions which they rightly pursue, and the more than 20 singing and dancing performers, needed a bigger stage! Some of those dance numbers clearly had to be downplayed because they had no room to expand freely and it looked as though the musicians felt crushed on the right. How does an actor feel with the music blasting in his/her ear? That is not the fault of the company but the problem with Ottawa, there is no affordable space for such companies who should be able to stage such an event in a proper venue! Even the electrical system in the Gladstone is old and we heard crackles from a sound system did not quite work the way it should although the glitch will not happen again!
What is the solution to all this? The Centrepointe Studio would have been an excellent venue but it’s too expensive. How is theatre supposed to grow if it is not encouraged by municipal grants that allow artists to produce their work in proper performance spaces especially if the productions are worthwhile like this one is? Should the NAC step in? Perhaps, but in the meantime, do try to see this. You are in for big surprise!
Cry-Baby, the musical adapted from the John Waters film . It runs from May 11 to 19 at the Gladstone.
Call 613-233-4523
A Theatre Kraken Production
Director………………………………………….Don Fex
Musical director…………………………………Chris Lucas
Set…………………Don Fex, Christine Hecker, Brenda Solman
Choreographer…………………………………..Brenda Solman
Lighting………………………………………….Cameron Macdonald
Sound…………………………………………….Jason Sonier
Cast:
Wade “Cry-Baby” Walker………………………Nicholas Dave Amott
Allison Vernon-Williams………………………..Emma Woodside
Baldwin Blandish………………………………..Kenny Hayes
Lenora Frigid……………………………………Samantha De Benedet
Dupree W. Dupree………………………………Axandre Lemours
Mona “Hatchet-Face” Mainorowsky……………Steph Goodwin
Wanda Woodward (Dance captain)……………..Alianne Rozon
Pepper Walker…………………………………..Abbey Flockton
Mrs. Vernon-Williams…………………………..Christine Drew
Judge Stone………………………………………Lawrence Evenchick
Whiffles………..…..Ian McMullen, Carley Richards, Cameron Wales
Ensemble…….Kiersten Hanly, Emma Hickey, Jason Hopkins, Katherine Nye,
Sydney Powell-Goldsmith, Brenda Solman
Band
Director/piano……………………………………Chris Lucas
Saxophones/flute…………………………………Tariq Amery
Guitars…………………………………………….John Corkett/Corey Thomas
Drums……………………………………………..Trevor Curtis
Bass/Double bass………………………………….Normand Glaude