April 2, 2008, Raleigh, NC: In Betsy
Kelso’s zesty U.S. adaptation of British playwright Louise
Roche’s hilarious and, at times, poignant musical henfest, Girls
Night: The Musical, five fortyish female friends
let their hair down during a wild night at a karaoke bar. Last
night, this uproarious musical comedy, produced by Entertainment
Events Inc. and Robert Dragotta of New York City and presented
April 1-6 by Broadway
Series South, had the mostly female audience
in A.J. Fletcher Opera Theater rocking, from its opening number — Diana
Ross’ “Remember Me” (1971) — to its exuberant
encore of Gloria Gaynor’s 1978 chart-topper “I Will
Survive.”
Sisterhood is powerful, and some of the stock situations — relationship
problems, unwanted pregnancies, etc. — confronting these
four high-school friends are all-too-familiar. Sonya Carter as
rich but lonely Liza, Justine Hall as pill-popping Anita, Renée
Colvert as party-hearty-girl Carol, and Whitney Kathleen Vigil
as Carol’s nerdy little sister Kate rendezvous in the karaoke
bar to hold an impromptu bridal shower for the never-seen daughter
of their dead friend Sharon (Crystal Kellogg), who died ignominiously
22 years ago when she fell off a moped. Looking like a ghostly
disco queen with a pair of glitter-edged angel’s wings sprouting
from the back of her white jumpsuit, Sharon serves as the show’s
narrator and proves time and again that she’s no “angel” in
the Rev. Billy Graham sense of the word.
Crystal Kellogg’s irreverent impersonation
of Sharon; Renée Colvert’s wisecracking characterization
of Carol; and Sonya Carter’s touching portrayal of poor Liza,
the most desperate housewife of them all, royally entertained the
Wednesday audience. They saluted the show with a standing ovation
at the final curtain.
But it is Justine Hall as the overmedicated Anita
and Whitney Vigil as the ugly duckling-turned-beautiful swan Kate
who steal the show with their outrageous antics. Indeed, Vigil’s
goofy, gawky Kate is the most spastic dancer since Julia Louis-Dreyfus
played Elaine Benes on “Seinfeld” (1989-98). Kate’s
transformation, after a night of heavy drinking and bruising girl
talk, from an uptight Miss Goody Two Shoes into a shameless barroom
flirt is truly remarkable.
The evening’s musical highlights include robust
renditions of Theola Kilgore’s “The Love of My Man,” Patti
LaBelle’s “Lady Marmalade” (1974), and Melissa
Manchester’s “Don’t Cry Out Loud” (1978).
Director Jack Randle’s clever musical staging
helps the cast transform their predictable parts from caricatures
into truly unforgettable characters. The imaginative set of Shaun
L. Motley, which opens up to reveal more intimate conversations
in the bar’s ladies’ room, combines with the striking
costumes of Karl Ruckdeschel and lighting of Jennifer Kules to
make Girls Night: The Musical truly sparkle.
Broadway Series South presents Girls
Night: The Musical Thursday-Friday, April 3-4, at 8 p.m.;
Saturday, April 5, at 2 and 8 p.m.; and Sunday, April 6, at 2 and
7 p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Opera Theater in the Progress Energy Center
for the Performing Arts, 2 East South St., Raleigh, North Carolina.
$36-$41. Progress Energy Center Box Office: 919/831-6060
or through the presenter's website. Group
Rates (for parties of 20 or more): 919/857-4565 or group@raleighconvention.com.
Broadway Series South: http://www.broadwayseriessouth.com/.
The 2007-08 U.S. Tour: http://www.girlsnightthemusical.com/.
The 2006 U.K. Tour: http://www.girlsnight.info/.