December 2, 2008, Raleigh, NC: The original 1975
Broadway production of Chicago was
a delightfully decadent "Musical Vaudeville," directed
and choreographed by the legendary Bob Fosse, earned eleven 1976
Tony Award® nominations,
including one for Best Musical, but inexplicably won not a single
Tony. But the 1996 Broadway revival of Chicago
fared better; it won six 1997 Tony Awards, including the Tonys for
Best Revival of a Musical, Best Direction of a Musical (Walter Bobbie),
and Best Choreography (Ann Reinking recreating the "style" of
Bob Fosse).
The current national tour of Chicago,
produced by Barry and Fran Weissler and presented Dec. 2-7 by Broadway
Series South, is a sizzling
recreation of the 1996 revival, with director Scott Farris and choreographer
Gary Chryst recreating the dazzling musical staging of Bobbie and
Reinking, and scenic designer John Lee Beatty, costume designer
William Ivey Long, lighting designer Ken Billington, and sound
designer Scott Lehrer repeating the roles they played in the 1996
Broadway revival, which is still running, with 5,000 total performances
and counting.
Combine dynamic musical staging; exceptional production values;
an onstage orchestra, under the direction of Don York, that plays
like a house afire; and a cast, headed by Tom Wopat, that sparkles
like a super nova, and this terrific touring production creates its
own heat wave in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium. Chicago is
hot, hot, hot.
From the opening homage to Bob Fosse, with the spotlight softly
caressing his trademark bowler hat on a solitary chair audience left,
to the final high-octane production number, this wickedly funny musical
mercilessly lampoons not only the legendarily corrupt criminal justice
system in Prohibition-era Chicago, but also the legal hocus-pocus
that transforms today’s murderers into phony celebrities and
whips the print and broadcast news media into a feeding frenzy.
Headliner Tom Wopat is a crowd-pleasing
charmer as silver-tongued solicitor Billy Flynn, who literally helps
his clients get away with murder IF they can pony up his $5,000 fee;
and Wopat even lingers in the outer lobby before and after the show
and during intermission to sign souvenirs for his fans.
Terra C. MacLeod is
pretty — very
pretty — poison as former vaudevillian Velma Kelly, who broke
up her sister act with bullets when she came home unexpectedly and
found her sister and her husband in flagrante delicto; and
Bianca Marroquin is
a real scene-stealer as Billy Flynn's latest high-profile
client, beautiful former nightclub chorine Roxie Hart, who popped
her boyfriend
Fred Casely (Brent Heuser) when the louse caused her volcanic temper
to erupt by trying to walk out on her.
Ben Elledge milks his part as Roxie's hapless husband, auto
mechanic Amos Hart, for a gallon of laughs; and Roz
Ryan
is a pistol as jailhouse fixer Matron "Mama" Morton,
who always has her hand out and belts out Mama's big brassy
numbers with brio. D. Micciche adds a hilarious cameo as infinitely
gullible newspaper sobsister Mary Sunshine, who'd be reporting
for Fox News if she were alive today; and Drew Nellessen, as The
Jury, is a man of a dozen very funny personas whose gullibility rivals
that of Mary Sunshine.
Exuberant cameos by Shamicka Benn as Go-to-Hell Kitty and Velma
and the talented actresses playing Roxie's fellow inmates — Lindsay
Roginski as Liz, Melanie Waldron as Annie, Andrea Mislan as June,
Marla McReynolds as Mona, and especially Evelyn Cristina Tonn as
Hunyak — also add snap to the suspender-popping, head-bobbing,
shoulder-shrugging, cuff-shooting, and see-through-top- and fishnet-stockings-wearing
proceedings. They help make the latest edition of Chicago to
take up week-long residence in Raleigh Memorial Auditorium arguably
the best of the bunch and simply not to be missed.