The cast of "Footloose"
Some musicals translate well from
the screen to the stage and some don’t, and vice versa. “Rent” soared on
Broadway and bombed in the multiplexes; “Mamma Mia” and “Hairspray” were hits
in both mediums, and then there’s “Footloose,” the 1984 film starring Kevin
Bacon that reappeared as a musical on Broadway in 1998 to mixed reviews. This
surface treatment of teenage angst and small-town repression is now on the
boards at the Ivorytown Playhouse and though it pleases on several levels the
material itself limits the degree to which the audience can be drawn into the
story.
For those who are separated by more
than six degrees from Kevin Bacon, “Footloose” deals with a teenage boy, Ren
McCormack (Cody Ryan) who, after his father abandons him and his mother, Ethel
(Elise Arsenault), is forced to move to a Midwestern town called Bomont where,
five years ago, because of a tragic car accident, the town council, at the
urgings of Rev. Shaw Moore (Edward Juvier), passed numerous ordinances
including one disallowing any dancing within the city limits. Ren, however, is
something of a dancing fool, and soon he and the good Reverend come into
conflict. Rev. Shaw also has other problems – his righteousness has alienated
him from both his wife, Vi (Traci Blair) and his teenage daughter, Ariel (Zoe
Kassay), who, in full rebellion, is dating Chuck Cranston (Michael Wright), one
of the town’s low-lives. Thus the stage is set for a lot of parent-child
confrontations, pious pronouncements and pompous sermonizing that eventually
lead to reconciliation, remorse and redemption.
Oddly enough, in a show whose focus
is the sturm und drang of teenagedom, it’s the adults who come off the best,
for under Richard Amelius’s direction (he also choreographed the show) we have
two approaches to acting: the adults, by and large, play it straight, and are
effective, while the younger members of the cast are allowed to swing for the
stands, and, save for Patrick H. Dunn as Willard Hewitt, hit few home runs.
It’s billed as a rock-and-roll
musical, but it’s the more quiet numbers that work the best, especially
“Learning to be Silent,” sung by the two mothers, Ethel and Vi, and Vi’s “Can
You Find It in Your Heart,” and although Juvier lays it on a bit thick in his
opening sermon as he demonizes rock-and-roll, he settles nicely into his role
and, at the end of the show gives a moving performance with “I Confess.”
But it’s the kids, gull-dang-it,
who present problems (ain’t that just like kids?). By and large, they are just
too conscious of having to act like rebellious teenagers to be believable as
rebellious teenagers. The lead in this area is Wright, who seems to be
channeling Snidely Whiplash as he sneers and takes just a bit too much delight
in being nasty. Admittedly, there’s a
lot of energy up there on the stage but it often seems just a bit
uncoordinated. However, when it does come together, as in “Holding Out for a
Hero, “Let’s Hear it for the Boy” and “Mama Says” toes start to tap and heads
nod with the beat.
All in all, “Footloose” is a
pleasant enough way to spend a summer afternoon or evening. You won’t come away
overwhelmed, but there will be one or more tunes that you’ll find yourself
humming the next day.
“Footloose” runs through July 28.
For tickets or more information call 860-767-7318 or go to www.ivorytonplayhouse.org.
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