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Gypsy’s a smash at Westchester Broadway Theatre |
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Karen Mason as Rose Photo/John Vecchiolla / www.thecheappop.com
Gypsy’s a smash at Westchester Broadway Theatre
By Gary Chattman
“You Gotta Have a Gimmick” is a song in the show Gypsy, currently at
the Westchester Broadway Theatre, sung by Mazeppa, Electra and Tessie
Tura, and this production definitely has a gimmick: Her name is Karen
Mason, a 2002 Drama Desk winner, for Mamma Mia. This actress is a dynamo!
Whenever the actress is on stage, it is truly a show-stopper! You
get so caught up in the plot of this exceptional musical and forget you
are watching a play, because of this performance. Mason plays the part
of stage-mother Mama Rose, insistently driving her young daughters
through the fading vaudeville circuit of the 1920’s. Her favorite, Baby
June runs away and elopes, and she then turns her attention to the
“ugly” one—Louise. With the help of her agent/boyfriend Herbie (Rick
Hilsabeck), she tries to turn “untalented” Louise into a star, and
eventually Louise becomes the world-famous stripper, Gypsy Rose Lee.
This show, with book by Arthur Laurents, boasts one of the best
Broadway scores. Every song by Jule Styne and Stephen Sondheim is a
familiar one, from “Some People” to “Little Lamb” to “Let Me Entertain
You”, and finally to the show-stopping “Rose’s Turn” which electrifies
the audience because Mason electrifies the audience.
The quality of the shows performed in Elmsford by the Westchester
Broadway Theatre is often superior to the Broadway product of 2007, but
this performance even exceeds the recent Bernadette Peter Mama Rose
incarnation. There’s also a fine supporting cast. Rick Hilsabeck as
Herbie plays Rose’s foil to perfection; Kelli Barrett, as Louise,
blossoms from second fiddle to star because of her empathetic acting
and singing ability; Sarah Peak, as June; Jordan Nichols as Tulsa (who
runs away with Baby June) are terrific dancers, actors and singers. I
could go on to mention the other show-stopping moment, when Mazeppa
(Inga Ballard), Electra (Kathryn Kendall) and Tessie Tura(Ann Ngaire
Martin) teach Louise that in order to be a good stripper, “You Gotta
Have a Gimmick”. I could also mention the superlative direction and
choreography by Richard Stafford; the lighting (as usual) by Andrew
Gmoser; the costumes by Gail Baldoni, and the great set design by
George Puello and Steven Loftus. I could tell you to run, not walk, to
get tickets to see this show and I’ll do just that. Click here for more information.
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Everything's coming up Rose |
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Everything's coming up Rose
By PETER D. KRAMER
THE JOURNAL NEWS
Matthew Brown/The Journal News
Karen Mason, left, plays Mama Rose and Kelli Barrett as Louise, the girl who'll become the stripper Gypsy Rose Lee.
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Where: Westchester Broadway Theatre, 1 Broadway Plaza, Elmsford
When:
Through Aug. 4. Wednesdays through Sundays. Wednesdays and Thursdays,
lunch at 11:30 a.m., show at 1 p.m.; Thursdays through Saturday
evenings, dinner at 6, show at 8; Sunday matinees, lunch at noon, show
at 1:30 p.m.; Sunday evening, dinner at 5, show at 7.
Tickets: $55 to $73, plus tax. Ticket price includes a three-course meal.
Call: 914-592-2222
Web: www.broadwaytheatre.com
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The character Rose - the hard-charging, no-nonsense stage mother
to stripper Gypsy Rose Lee in "Gypsy" - has been played on Broadway by
Ethel Merman, Angela Lansbury, Tyne Daly and Bernadette Peters.
Only Peters was able to take the character beyond a browbeating battle-ax to introduce a degree of sex appeal.
At
Westchester Broadway Theatre through Aug. 4, a Rose by another name -
Broadway's Karen Mason - takes that approach and runs with it, putting
her own stamp on an indelible character.
She breathes life into
the stage mother from hell, and finds a sexier, somehow softer side to
the most formidable of roles. It is a performance with subtlety, nuance
and sophistication, three words one would never associate with Mama
Rose.
You'll know you're not in for the battle-ax treatment when
Mason, a celebrated cabaret performer, sings Rose's first solo, "Some
People" and croons the line "I had a dream."
Yes, this Rose croons.
Her voice is strong, soft and pitch-perfect, without a hint of the nasally attack of her predecessors.
For that reason, some may see this departure as too far afield, not the "real Rose."
But Mason is also a first-rate actress whose skills and razor-sharp timing raise Rose to new levels.
Her
11 o'clock number, "Rose's Turn," begins as a controlled rant and
develops a head of steam and a level of desperation that never gets to
the mental breakdown others have aimed for.
Mason is aiming elsewhere, at Rose's heart.
After the song - an emotional journey of bitterness and despair - there are tears. Rose has lost her bravado, she's broken down.
But it's her heart, not her head, that's broken. And Mason makes that moment work.
When she utters the revelation "I just wanted to be noticed," the words come as an apology.
It's not the Rose you know, but it's all the sweeter for the difference.
With
the casting of Mason and Rick Hilsabeck as Herbie, Westchester Broadway
Theatre has caught lightning in a bottle. These top-shelf veterans
raise the bar and put an emphasis on the "Broadway" in the dinner
theater's name, something too often missing.
Typically, the
theater fields a cast of kids looking for their big break. Director
Richard Stafford's cast is uniformly fine, from local kids as the
newsboys and Rose's young daughters to the supporting cast of fine
young talent.
Standouts include Sarah Peak as June, who handles
her character's acrobatics and vocals nimbly and adds a layer of depth
that fleshes out what in less capable hands could be a cardboard
character.
As Louise, the girl who'll become the stripper Gypsy Rose Lee, Kelli Barrett captures the role's many facets.
In
the sweet song "Little Lamb," she's the overlooked girl playing with
her stuffed animals. By the end of the show, she's a young woman who
has learned at the foot of the master to give the people what they want
- and make sure she gets what she needs.
During "The Strip," she
turns "Let Me Entertain You," played for laughs by her sister in the
first act, into a stripper's calling card.
At the press opening,
Barrett had to contend with a wardrobe malfunction - which, for a
stripper, means the clothes stayed on - but she handled it with aplomb
and moved right on like a pro.
Herbie is an unenviable role. He's
got the impossible task of trying to bell Rose the cat, who's actually
a mountain lion. Hilsabeck walks the line expertly, finding moments to
connect with Mason.
Therein is an important lesson for
Westchester Broadway Theatre: If you hire first-rate actors, they'll
deliver a first-rate production and make you believe that an ex-agent
candy salesman could fall for a mother schlepping her kids from
vaudeville houses to Elks lodges in search of top billing.
Hilsabeck makes the most of a difficult part.
As
the more experienced strippers who stop the show in Act 2 with "You
Gotta Have a Gimmick," Ann-Ngaire Martin (Tessie), Inga Ballard
(Mazeppa) and Kathryn Kendall (Electra) are a perfect mix of
world-weariness, pragmatism and direct current.
To his credit,
director Stafford wisely didn't try to pass off 20-year-old Paris
Hiltons as the tired Wichita strippers. These women looked the part,
thanks in part to Gail Baldoni's costumes.
The choreography, by
Stafford and Jonathan Stall, is as polished as seen at the dinner
theater in a few seasons. Of note are the numbers "Mr. Goldstone" and
the Broadway audition song by "Dainty June and her Farmboys." In both,
all members of the ensemble contribute fully.
The only weak spot
in the entire night seemed to be in the size of the pit orchestra,
whose eight pieces couldn't seem to muster, as the stripper Mazeppa
would say, "the uh and the uh and the uh, uh, uh," of a bigger crew.
It is a rare treat to have a star of Karen Mason's abilities on a local stage.
Don't miss it.
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It has been a long time since the last email.......Can it be June already???
The past few months have been amazing!
I did 2 SRO concerts in Barcelona at The Gran Teatro del Liceu;
Headlined for the 4th year at The Chase Room @ NJPAC;
Sang 4 concerts with the legendary Peter Nero and his brilliant orchestra, The Philly Pops;
And was presented with The 2007 MAC Board of Directors Award by my friend, the amazing Grammy-winner Julie Gold!
AND if this were not enough, I am playing Mama Rose in GYPSY for 2 months here in NY!
OPENING ON JUNE 8 at the WESTCHESTER BROADWAY THEATRE in Elmsford, NY!
The Director is Richard Stafford, the cast is amazing, and the theatre is a great place to see a show!! And the website is www.broadwaytheatre.com
Hope to see you there!
Have a great summer!
Love ya,
Karen
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