The male vocalists come up short (pun Intended) in the current production
The Full Monty, playing June 7-10, 14-17, and 21-21 at Raleigh Little
Theatre. Jon
Karnofsky, who plays Jerry Lukowski, and James Ilsley, who portrays Lukowski’s
best friend and fellow out-of-work steelworker Dave Bukatinsky, struggle to meet
the modest vocal demands of their roles; and so do the other male members of
the cast. In fact, only RLT diva Rose Martin, who puts pizzazz into her performance
as Georgie Bukatinsky, really has the pipes for her role, although Marty Smith,
who plays as aging but still spunky rehearsal accompanist Jeanette Burmeister
does an adequate job on “Jeanette’s Showbiz Number.”
But when it comes to the comedy part of this musical comedy, Jon Karnofsky is
amusing as Jerry, an unemployed divorced husband struggling to pay child support
for and maintain his fatherly relationship with his teenage son Nathan (Dillon
Rust); and James Ilsley has his moments as Dave, whose growing depression over
his lack of a job is creating problems in the bedroom. (One of the big question
marks of this production is, how and why does Ilsley, who uses padding throughout
the show to play the overweight Dave, suddenly shed 30 or 40 lbs. in the show’s
climactic striptease number.)
Out of work indefinitely (18 months and counting), barely scraping by on their
skinny United Steelworkers strike benefit checks, and increasingly desperate
for funds, Jerry and Dave and the four other financially strapped Buffalo, NY
steel-mill employees — Timothy Corbett as former plant executive Harold
Nichols and Jaret Preston, Matthew-Jason Willis, and Warren Keyes as steelworkers
Malcolm
MacGregor, Ethan Girard, and Noah T. “Horse” Simmons, respectively — form
a male striptease group, which they dub Hot Metal, and set themselves off from
the slicker, slimmer, more physically fit Chippendales by going “the full
monty” — getting nekkid as proverbial jaybirds, in front of God and
just about everyone they know — in Tony’s strip club. Finding six
guys
who’ll strip down and prance around in skimpy red thongs, and then bare
all in the backlit climax (pun intended) of the striptease sequence is a tough
assignment for director Haskell Fitz-Simons. It’s just too bad that the
male cast cannot sing as well as they can cut the fool.
Timothy Corbett amuses as Harold the former stuffed-shirt boss who r
eally must
shed his inhibitions to play his part in Hot Metal, and Allison Lawrence is funny
as his spendthrift wife Vicki. Jaret Preston and Matthew-Jason Willis tastefully
handle the boy-meets-boy romance between Malcolm and Ethan, and Warren Keyes
is a hoot as Horse.
Rose Martin has some rib-tickling moments as the uninhibited Georgie, Marty Smith
is quick with a quip as vinegary but good-hearted showbiz veteran Jeanette, and
Dillon Rust is cute as the precocious Nathan. Eric Morales adds a cheeky cameo
(pun Intended) as gay male stripper Buddy “Keno” Walsh, and Kristen
McCabe is good as concerned ex-wife Pam Lukowski.
Director Haskell Fitz-Simons and choreographer Freddie-Lee Heath stage The
Full
Monty with the requisite chutzpah, and musical director Julie Florin and the
RLT orchestra provide energetic instrumental support. The cumbersome multilevel
set devised by scenic and lighting designer Rick Young sometimes proves to be
an impediment to the action; but the contributions of costume designer Su Jung,
properties master Jon Byers, and sound designer Becca Easley all enhance this
fundamentally flawed production.
Raleigh Little Theatre presents The Full Monty Thursday-Saturday,
June 14-16 and 21-23, at 8 p.m.; and Sunday, June 10, 17, and 24, at 3 p.m. in
RLT’s
Cantey V. Sutton Theatre, 301 Pogue St., Raleigh, North Carolina. $17 Thursday,
Friday, and Sunday ($13 students and seniors 62+) and $21 Saturday (all seats).
919/821-3111. Note: All shows are wheelchair accessible, and assistive
listening
devices are available for all shows. Raleigh Little Theatre: http://raleighlittletheatre.org/performances/fullmonty.html [inactive
7/07].
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/Show.asp?id=10302.
Internet Movie
Database: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119164/.
Note: For a Letter to the Editor concerning this review, click here.