The first national tour of The Wedding Singer,
produced by NETworks Presentations LLC and presented March 28-30
by Broadway Series
South in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium, is a
thoroughly entertaining PG-13-rated romantic comedy with an invigorating
1980s-style rock score, comprised of mostly forgettable songs by
composer Matthew Sklar and lyricist Chad Beguelin. The sassy script
by Beguelin and Tim Herlihy, who wrote the screenplay for the 1985
Adam Sandler/Drew Barrymore film, is the answer to the classic
Wendy’s TV commercial question, “Where’s the
beef?”
The tomfoolery of The Wedding Singer will
charm Triangle audiences, who probably won’t find themselves
whistling the show’s tunes as they exit the theater. The
high-octane musical staging of Broadway director John Rando and
choreographer Rob Ashford, robustly recreated on tour by director
Paul Stancato and choreographer Chris Bailey, combines with the
cleverly conceived sets of Scott Pask and the flashy Eighties fashions
by Gregory Gale to make The Wedding Singer look as good
as it sounds. The artistry of lighting designer Brian MacDevitt,
musical supervisor/coordinator/conductor John Mezzio and a small
but energetic orchestra, and sound designer Lucas J. Corrubia,
Jr. also enhance the show’s visual and aural appeal.
Merritt David Janes and Erin Elizabeth Coors give
charismatic characterizations as two incurable romantics: wedding
singer Robbie Hart and banquet waitress Julia Sullivan. They make
a cute couple and are perfect for each other, but take a long,
long time to shed their unsuitable significant others: Robbie’s
oversexed one-time fiancée Linda (Andrea Andert), who drops
him like a hot rock when his rock-star career goes in the toilet,
and Julia’s unscrupulous fiancé Glenn Guglia (Mark
Raumaker), who makes mountains of money from shady deals on Wall
Street and cheats on Julia every chance he gets.
Merritt Janes is delightful as Robbie, and Erin Coors is charming
as Julia. Both are quick with quips and sure-handed with the love
songs that chronicle their growing attraction to each other. Andrea
Andert has a great voice and transforms her cameo as Linda into
a high-wattage star turn, and Mark Raumaker is likewise effective
in bringing his handsome but slimy character’s least attractive
qualities to the surface for all to see.
Penny Larsen and John Jacob Lee give scene-stealing performances
as Robbie’s Grandma Rosie and Robbie’s gender-bending
keyboard player and vocalist George (a merciless sendup of Boy
George); Justin Jutras is a hoot as Robbie’s laidback best
friend bass player Sammy; and Sarah Peak is a scream as Julia’s
short sexpot cousin and Sammy’s former girlfriend Holly,
whose shameless pass at Robbie fails to connect.
The members of the show’s exuberant Ensemble,
all of whom perform multiple roles, also have their moments in
the spotlight. Perhaps the funniest of them is a hilarious scene
in which the unloved and unlovely “mutants at table 9” — Tommy
Martinez as the Bad Haircut Guy, Rebecca Lynn Miller as the Sideburns
Lady, Kevin Faraci as the Loser Guy, and Carrie Cimma as the Large
Lady — finally get their chance to be seen and heard on a
wedding day devoted to their more beautiful friends and relatives.
Although mostly set in Ridgefield, NJ, with brief detours to Wall
Street during the height of the junk-bond boom, The Wedding
Singer also gets bellylaughs when Julia and Glenn elope to
Las Vegas, with Robbie in frantic pursuit and determined to sabotage
their wedding in a kitschy chapel chock-full of hilarious celebrity
impersonators, including James Bould, Kevin Faraci, Susan Leilani
Gearou, Kimberly Marable, Rebecca Lynn Miller, Rebecca Riker, and
Jason Samuel.
The Wedding Singer may not have the most
memorable music and lyrics, but Wednesday night’s Broadway
Series South patrons thoroughly enjoyed the comic hijinks of this
Tony Award®-nominated Broadway version of the high-grossing
Hollywood film. Indeed, they rewarded Merritt David Janes and Erin
Elizabeth Coors, a strong supporting cast, and a crackerjack creative
team with a standing ovation.
Broadway Series South presents The
Wedding Singer Friday, March 28, at 8 p.m.; Saturday,
March 29, at 2 and 8 p.m.; and Sunday, March 30, at 2 and 7 p.m.
in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium in the Progress Energy Center
for the Performing Arts, 2 East South St., Raleigh, North Carolina.
$27-$68. Progress Energy Center Box
Office: 919/831-6060 or through the presenter's website. Student
Discount Program: Students with valid ID may purchase
any remaining seats for any show, except the Saturday evening
performance, for $20 each at the Progress Energy Center Box Office,
starting one hour before show time. Group Rates (for
parties of 20 or more): 919/857-4565 or group@raleighconvention.com.
Note: Arts
Access, Inc. of Raleigh, NC (http://www.artsaccessinc.org/)
will audio-describe the 8 p.m. March 29th performance. Broadway
Series South: http://www.broadwayseriessouth.com/. The
Tour: http://www.theweddingsingerontour.com/.
Internet Movie Database: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120888/.
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/show.asp?ID=402889.