Urinetown The Musical, which features
lively music by Mark Hollmann, acerbic lyrics by Hollmann and Greg
Kotis, and a biting book by Kotis, is a terrific musical satire with
a terrible title. Moreover, the current Raleigh Little Theatre production
of this splendid spoof of Broadway message musicals about the evils
of Capitalism is a big, big hit, thanks to snappy staging by RLT
artistic director Haskell Fitz-Simons, devilishly funny dance routines
by choreographer Nancy Rich, crisp comic characterizations and vibrant
vocals by the strongest RLT musical ensemble in many a year, and
exuberant accompaniment by musical director Linda Velto (piano) and
a peppy RLT pit band that kept the joint jumping. Together, the stellar
cast, crew, and musicians had last Friday’s opening-night audience
cheering wildly on virtually every number and rising as one at the
end of the show to hurrah the cast and crew with a prolonged standing
ovation.
Urinetown is set in a Gotham-like city in a bleak totalitarian
future in which perennial water shortages have outlawed toilets in
private homes and transformed all restrooms into government-regulated
privately-run public amenities. By hook and (mostly) by crook, the
Urine Good Company—a play on You’re in Good Company—and
its tight-fisted founder Caldwell B. Cladwell (Scotty Cherryholmes)
have taken over all the city’s restrooms and UGC charges the
public an onerous toll for their use.
When Old Man Strong (Brent Wilson) finds himself lacking the price
of admission to a public restroom and takes an unsanctioned leak
against the wall outside the public amenity run by tough-as-nails
Penelope Pennywise (Sandi Sullivan), she summons Officers Lockstock
and Barrel (Rob Jenkins and Jaret Preston), who manhandle him and
incite Strong’s heretofore docile son and Ms. Pennywise’s
erstwhile young assistant Bobby Strong (Zach Morris) to rebel against
a status quo that makes urination anywhere but in a government-sanctioned
facility a capital crime.
Zach Morris, who is a rising senior at West Johnston High School,
gives a star-making performance as Bobby; Sandi Sullivan adds a crusty
characterization of Ms. Pennywise; Jaret Preston and especially Rob
Jenkins, who also serves as the show’s smart-alecky narrator
with tongue planted firmly in cheek, are hilarious as Barrel and
Lockstock; and Scotty Cherryholmes is a veritable King of Mean as
the avaricious Mr. Cladwell.
Katherine Anderson is charming as Cladwell’s beautiful but
naive daughter Hope, who quickly falls in love with Bobby Strong,
and Melissa Patterson is a pip as precocious street urchin Little
Sally. Brent Wilson is amusing as Old Man Strong and, later, as Hot
Blades Harry; Andrew Britt is good as Cladwell’s yes man Mr.
McQueen; and Timothy Cherry is a pip as the cowardly and hopelessly
corrupt Senator Fipp.
RLT diva Rose Martin heads a superlative supporting cast that also
includes Kate Bowra, Curtis Brown, Lormarev Jones, Matthew Ryan Limerick,
and Mark Schwab; and scenic and lighting designer Rick Young, costume
designer Su Jung Lee, properties mistress Ruth Berry, and sound designers
Al Wolfheimer and Rick LaBach help make Urinetown The Musical look
and sound like the nasty negative utopia that the musical’s
creators have imagined.
When Triangle Top 10 lists for 2007 come out, early in 2008, this
exemplary RLT production of Urinetown is sure to occupy
a prominent place on them. Don’t you dare miss it.
Raleigh Little Theatre presents Urinetown
The Musical Thursday-Saturday,
Aug. 9-11, 16-18, and 23-25, at 8 p.m.; and Sunday, Aug. 12, 19,
and 26, at 3 p.m. in RLT’s Cantey V. Sutton Theatre, 301
Pogue St., Raleigh, North Carolina. $18 ($15 students and seniors
62+). 919/821-3111 or via etix @ the presenter's site. Note: All
shows are wheelchair accessible, and assistive listening devices
are available for all shows. Raleigh Little
Theatre: http://raleighlittletheatre.org/performances/07-08/urinetown.html.
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/show.asp?ID=10611.